POPULARITY
Chris Price talks to Blake Rufino about Will Campbell and what sort of player the Patriots got with the No. 4 overall pick. Rufino, who has covered Campbell since the left tackle was a high schooler, breaks down Campbell's growth and development, his perceived arm length issues, and what Campbell needs to work on at the next level to be a success. Blake also has a scouting report on LSU pass rusher Bradyn Swinson, who was taken in the fifth round by New England.
João Cláudio Rufino no SantoFlow Podcast! Especial de Perguntas e Respostas sobre a Semana Santa.João Cláudio Rufino, católico, doutor em teologia, professor na Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo e fundador do Instituto Propagador da Palavra.Neste especial de perguntas e respostas sobre a Semana Santa, João Cláudio esclarece as principais dúvidas sobre esse período tão importante para os cristãos. Desde o significado dos ritos até a profundidade teológica da Paixão, Morte e Ressurreição de Cristo, você terá a oportunidade de enriquecer sua compreensão sobre os mistérios centrais da fé católica.O SantoFlow Podcast: O Podcast Católico Mais Acessado do MundoO SantoFlow Podcast é o podcast católico mais acessado globalmente, criado pelo missionário e apresentador Guto Azevedo. Com mais de 300 episódios já lançados, o programa traz a você uma rica diversidade de testemunhos de missionários, cantores católicos, padres, freiras, bispos e jovens, todos unidos por um mesmo propósito de evangelização, com diferentes carismas.São dois episódios semanais que o aproximam de Deus, apresentando histórias de fé, aprendizado, desafios, alegrias e, acima de tudo, confiança plena na providência divina.Agora, conheça um pouco mais sobre nossos patrocinadores, que tornam o SantoFlow Podcast ainda mais especial:SAÚDE! Conheça o poder da medicina natural de Santa Hildegarda! Produtos naturais para saúde, equilíbrio e muitos outros benefícios, inspirados em seus valiosos ensinamentos. Cuide do seu corpo, mente e alma com a força da natureza. Clique no link e descubra https://bit.ly/SantoFlowAssine a Arte PiedosaEntretenimento seguro e de qualidade para toda a família. Utilize o código "SANTOFLOW" e aproveite essa oferta exclusiva: https://www.artepiedosa.com/campaign/...Adquira a Liturgia Diária da Paulus: A PAULUS acredita que bons conteúdos transformam, ajudam as pessoas a revelarem aquilo que têm de melhor. Aproveite essa oferta exclusiva: https://bit.ly/3WnFGvuHallow: O Aplicativo de Oração Nº 1 do MundoReze todos os dias com o Hallow, o aplicativo de oração número um do mundo. Experimente 90 dias grátis através deste link especial: https://www.hallow.com/santoflowArtesanato Sacro: A Loja CostaO ateliê mais tradicional de arte sacra do Brasil oferece estatuetas católicas de altíssima qualidade. Compre sua estátua e adicione um toque de fé à sua casa. Use o cupom "GUTO10" para descontos exclusivos: https://www.loja.artesanatocosta.com.brCamisetas Sabatini: Moda e DevoçãoInspire-se com as camisetas católicas de alta qualidade da Camisetas Sabatini, que unem estilo e fé. Visite a loja online: https://www.camisetassabatini.com.br WhatsApp: (44) 99844-8545ACN Brasil: Ajude os Cristãos PerseguidosA ACN Brasil apoia os cristãos perseguidos no Paquistão e em outras partes do mundo. Com sua ajuda, muitos conseguem manter viva a fé, mesmo diante de adversidades extremas. Se você deseja se unir a essa missão de solidariedade, doe agora e faça a diferença:✅ Doe Agora: https://bit.ly/3odbeCi✅ Doe via PIX: caridade@acn.org.br
Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. Hoy se cumplen 1.136 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. 3 años y 41 días. Hoy es lunes 7 de abril de 2025. Día Mundial de la Salud. El 7 de abril se celebra el Día Mundial de la Salud, una fecha proclamada oficialmente en 1946 por parte de 61 miembros de Naciones Unidas. El Día Mundial de la Salud se celebra porque la salud es un derecho básico y universal y todos deberíamos poder acceder a una atención sanitaria de calidad en todas las regiones del mundo, especialmente en la población de escasos recursos. 1738.- Colocación de la primera piedra del Palacio Real de Madrid. 1795.- Revolución francesa. Establecido el sistema métrico decimal en Francia. 1823.- Entra en España el Ejército francés conocido como "los cien mil hijos de San Luis", para imponer el régimen absolutista de Fernando VII. 1936.- Las Cortes españolas destituyen al presidente de la República, Niceto Alcalá Zamora, al que sustituye Manuel Azaña. 1956.- España y Marruecos firman una declaración para la independencia de Marruecos. 1964: en Estados Unidos, la empresa IBM presenta el primer modelo de su serie 360. 1969: en Estados Unidos se publica el RFC 1; esta se considera la fecha simbólica del nacimiento de Internet. 1971: el presidente de los Estados Unidos Richard Nixon anunció el incremento en la retirada de tropas de Vietnam. 2006: el Congreso aprueba la 6.ª Ley de Educación. La nueva norma establece enseñanzas comunes al 55 %. La religión será optativa, de libre elección. Suma una nueva asignatura, la de educación para la ciudadanía. Los alumnos de secundaria no podrán pasar de curso con más de 3 suspensos. 2018: el expresidente de Brasil Lula da Silva, condenado a doce años de prisión por corrupción, pone fin a dos días de resistencia y abandona caminando el edificio en el que se encontraba atrincherado. Santoral para hoy 7 de abril: santos Juan Bautista de La Salle, Epifanio, Donato y Rufino. N. Sra. de los Dolores. Elon Musk contradice a Trump y pide un acuerdo de libre comercio entre Europa y Norteamérica. Le Pen aseguró ante miles de seguidores en París que no va a "bajar los brazos" pese a su inhabilitación. El papa Francisco reaparece en la plaza San Pedro dos semanas después de recibir el alta hospitalaria. Incertidumbre en los mercados financieros por la guerra comercial. EE.UU. prepara los aranceles del 20% a Europa: ¿cómo afectarán a la industria española? Belarra pide a Irene Montero que lidere una candidatura de izquierdas para las generales. Clavijo, reelegido como secretario nacional de CC para “afrontar los retos de Canarias” Su candidatura ha tenido un respaldo del 96,83% de los votos. CCOO y UGT avisan de que todavía hay tiempo para hablar de salarios y desconvocar la huelga de la hostelería. El líder de CCOO ha precisado que el crecimiento del PIB en Canarias no se traslada al conjunto de la ciudadanía a través de un reparto y unas condiciones razonables en los puestos de trabajo. La ULL es la universidad pública peor valorada por los estudiantes españoles, según un estudio. Así lo revelan los datos recogidos a más de 35.000 estudiantes del 99% de universidades del Sistema Universitario Español. Las peor valoradas por los estudiantes españoles son la ULL (3,13); la ULPGC (3,25). Cientos de personas se concentran en la capital grancanaria para exigir viviendas dignas: “Unos pocos se benefician del sacrificio de muchos” “De las afortunadas ya no queda nada”; “Barrio sí, guiris no”; “Ser casero no es un trabajo”, “Acabemos con el negocio de la vivienda”; “La Isleta lucha por el derecho a la vivienda”, “Salvemos Guanarteme. No especulación”... Son los lemas de las pancartas que se erigían sobre la multitud en la plaza de El Pilar. Llegan dos nuevos cayucos a Canarias en las últimas horas con 27 personas a bordo. Un día como hoy en 1915 nació Billie Holiday, cantante estadounidense de jazz.
Fue uno de los mejores arqueros de la historia del fútbol argentino, plenamente identificado con River Plate, donde fue nombrado presidente honorario. Amadeo Raúl Carrizo había nacido en Rufino, provincia de Santa Fe, el 12 de junio de 1926 y fue considerado un innovador por su rol para defender los arcos, lo que lo llevó a la Selección argentina. Ocupó ese lugar en el Mundial de Suecia en 1958 y en la Copa de las Naciones que la albiceleste obtuvo en 1964, en Brasil. Comenzó a jugar al fútbol en el arco del BAP de Rufino, en cancha del club San Martín; luego de pasar por Junín, debutó en River el 6 de mayo de 1945. Fue titular definitivo desde 1948 y totalizó seis títulos (1945, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956 y 1957), actuando en más de 550 partidos. Jugó 24 años con la camiseta del "Millonario" y cerró su carrera en Millonarios de Bogotá, en Colombia, donde jugó dos temporadas, para retirarse definitivamente a los 44 años. Aceptó dirigir a los colombianos, en su primera experiencia como DT, y también lo hizo en Deportivo Armenio, en el ascenso local (1973 y 1974), pero no reincidió en esa función. Falleció el 20 de marzo de 2020, a los 93 años, en Buenos Aires, tras soportar una prolongada y dura enfermedad. Lo recordamos a través de un retrato elaborado por el Área de Contenidos y conservado en el Archivo Histórico de Radio Nacional. Música: El tiempo es veloz (D Lebon) Mercedes Sosa y David Lebon [1991 del Álbum “De mí”] Blues del arquero (I Copani) Ignacio Copani [1997 del Álbum “Rivertidísimo”]
Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. El Gobierno de Canarias, a través de la Dirección General de Emergencias, declara la situación de prealerta por fenómenos costeros en las Islas, a partir de las 12:00 horas de hoy viernes, 28 de febrero. El Carnaval 2025 estará pasado por agua por una borrasca en Canarias. Las lluvias seguirán hasta mediados de la próxima semana. Hoy hace un año: Ábalos no renuncia y pasará al Grupo Mixto para defender su "honor": "Me hubiera gustado tener el apoyo de mi partido" El PSOE le ha suspendido de militancia después de que el lunes le diera un plazo de 24 horas para dimitir. Hoy hace un año: El Gobierno aprueba la ley que limita a tres minutos la espera de la atención telefónica. Las empresas deberán tener un servicio de atención al cliente las 24 horas los 365 días del año … Y hoya hace un año: Canarias perdió 600 millones de euros de fondos europeos durante el periodo 2014-2020. Gabriel Mato y Manuel Domínguez informaron de que el Archipiélago desaprovechó el 30% de las ayudas que llegaron a través del FEDER y del FSE. Hoy se cumplen 1.098 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. Hoy se cumplen 3 años y 4 días. Hoy es viernes 28 de febrero de 2025. Día Mundial de las Enfermedades Raras. Las enfermedades raras son enfermedades de baja frecuencia. Para ser considerada como rara, cada enfermedad específica sólo puede afectar a un número limitado de la población total, establecido para Europa en menos de 1 por cada 2.000 ciudadanos. Existen aproximadamente 8.000 enfermedades raras distintas. Por eso, aunque cada una de ellas sea infrecuente, en conjunto las enfermedades raras pueden afectar en torno a un 7% de la población. 1707.- Decreto de Felipe V por el que se organiza el Ejército español. 1789: Un decreto del rey permite el tráfico de esclavos africanos en Cuba. 1848.- Segunda revolución francesa: proclamación oficial de la República. 1943.- Los aliados bombardean Berlín durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial. 1958: Constitución del Parlamento Europeo bajo la presidencia de Robert Schumann. Tal día como hoy, 28 febrero de 1991, finaliza la guerra del golfo después de que Irak aceptara las 12 resoluciones hechas por las Naciones Unidas. El número oficial de muertos por la Guerra del Golfo fue de 50,000 soldados iraquíes, 148 soldados estadounidenses y 16 soldados británicos. 2002: La peseta (moneda española) deja de ser de curso legal. Años más tarde, 28 febrero de 2013 el Papa Benedicto XVI renuncia a su cargo «por falta de fuerzas», tras casi ocho años de pontificado. El anterior Papa que renunció por motivos personales y no políticos, fue Celestino V en 1294 tras cinco meses de papado. santos Justo, Rufino, Alercio, Macario, Teófilo, Román y Dositeo. Starmer afirma en su reunión con Trump que "Reino Unido está dispuesto a desplegar tropas y aviones en Ucrania" Trump anuncia que los aranceles a México y Canadá entrarán en vigor el 4 de marzo pese a prometer postergarlos. El papa sale del estado crítico aunque su cuadro clínico sigue siendo "complejo" tras 14 días hospitalizado. Montero considera que 'barones' del PP se plantean aceptar la condonación de deuda y califica su plantón de "lamentable". La mutualización de la deuda le cuesta 394 euros a cada canario. La fórmula ideada por la ministra de Hacienda es un mal negocio para los isleños: el endeudamiento público pasa de 2.973 a 3.367 euros per cápita. Canarias buscará en la UE una excepción para limitar la compra de vivienda. El informe del reto demográfico sale adelante con los votos del Gobierno. PSOE y NC emiten votos particulares y Vox vota en contra. Clavijo dice que la decisión de levantarse de la mesa de Asián fue «personal» El presidente canario cree que lo que hizo la consejera de Hacienda estuvo «más que justificado», aunque no lo comparte y asegura que «no se repetirá más» Canarias mantiene los contratos para la acogida de menores migrantes con una entidad investigada por malversación. El Gobierno regional justifica que no hay ninguna medida cautelar que les obligue a cerrar los centros gestionados por la Fundación Siglo XXI ni a dejar de pagar los servicios que presta. José Daniel Díaz asume el “reto” de presidir el Tenerife y de implicar a toda la sociedad. El vigésimo tercer presidente en la historia de la entidad, quien releva a Paulino Rivero, ha dicho a los medios oficiales del club que se siente "honrado" por la confianza que han depositado en él. Un 28 de febrero de 1925 nace Odón Alonso Ordás, director de orquesta y compositor. Hijo del también director de orquesta Odón Alonso González, fue uno de los más importantes directores de orquesta españoles de la segunda mitad del siglo XX. Tras pasar por el Conservatorio madrileño y la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, recaló en Siena, Salzburgo y Viena. En 1950 fue nombrado director musical del Coro de Cámara de Radio Nacional de España, y, siete años después, del Teatro de la Zarzuela. En 1960 se responsabilizó de la Orquesta Filarmónica de Madrid antes de incorporarse a la Orquesta Sinfónica de Radio Televisión Española. Falleció el 21 de febrero de 2011 en Madrid, a la edad de 85 años. El 22 de febrero de 2011, el Ayuntamiento de Soria acordó concederle la Medalla de Oro de la Ciudad y dedicar a su memoria el festival del que fue alma mater.
Bienvenidos a La Diez Capital Radio! Están a punto de comenzar un nuevo episodio de nuestro Programa de Actualidad, donde la información, la formación y el entretenimiento se encuentran para ofrecerles lo mejor de las noticias y temas relevantes. Este programa, dirigido y presentado por Miguel Ángel González Suárez, es su ventana directa a los acontecimientos más importantes, así como a las historias que capturan la esencia de nuestro tiempo. A través de un enfoque dinámico y cercano, Miguel Ángel conecta con ustedes para proporcionar una experiencia informativa y envolvente. Desde análisis profundos hasta entrevistas exclusivas, cada emisión está diseñada para mantenerles al tanto, ofrecerles nuevos conocimientos y, por supuesto, entretenerles. Para más detalles sobre el programa, visiten nuestra web en www.ladiez.es - Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. El Gobierno de Canarias, a través de la Dirección General de Emergencias, declara la situación de prealerta por fenómenos costeros en las Islas, a partir de las 12:00 horas de hoy viernes, 28 de febrero. El Carnaval 2025 estará pasado por agua por una borrasca en Canarias. Las lluvias seguirán hasta mediados de la próxima semana. Hoy hace un año: Ábalos no renuncia y pasará al Grupo Mixto para defender su "honor": "Me hubiera gustado tener el apoyo de mi partido" El PSOE le ha suspendido de militancia después de que el lunes le diera un plazo de 24 horas para dimitir. Hoy hace un año: El Gobierno aprueba la ley que limita a tres minutos la espera de la atención telefónica. Las empresas deberán tener un servicio de atención al cliente las 24 horas los 365 días del año … Y hoya hace un año: Canarias perdió 600 millones de euros de fondos europeos durante el periodo 2014-2020. Gabriel Mato y Manuel Domínguez informaron de que el Archipiélago desaprovechó el 30% de las ayudas que llegaron a través del FEDER y del FSE. Hoy se cumplen 1.098 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. Hoy se cumplen 3 años y 4 días. Hoy es viernes 28 de febrero de 2025. Día Mundial de las Enfermedades Raras. Las enfermedades raras son enfermedades de baja frecuencia. Para ser considerada como rara, cada enfermedad específica sólo puede afectar a un número limitado de la población total, establecido para Europa en menos de 1 por cada 2.000 ciudadanos. Existen aproximadamente 8.000 enfermedades raras distintas. Por eso, aunque cada una de ellas sea infrecuente, en conjunto las enfermedades raras pueden afectar en torno a un 7% de la población. 1707.- Decreto de Felipe V por el que se organiza el Ejército español. 1789: Un decreto del rey permite el tráfico de esclavos africanos en Cuba. 1848.- Segunda revolución francesa: proclamación oficial de la República. 1943.- Los aliados bombardean Berlín durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial. 1958: Constitución del Parlamento Europeo bajo la presidencia de Robert Schumann. Tal día como hoy, 28 febrero de 1991, finaliza la guerra del golfo después de que Irak aceptara las 12 resoluciones hechas por las Naciones Unidas. El número oficial de muertos por la Guerra del Golfo fue de 50,000 soldados iraquíes, 148 soldados estadounidenses y 16 soldados británicos. 2002: La peseta (moneda española) deja de ser de curso legal. Años más tarde, 28 febrero de 2013 el Papa Benedicto XVI renuncia a su cargo «por falta de fuerzas», tras casi ocho años de pontificado. El anterior Papa que renunció por motivos personales y no políticos, fue Celestino V en 1294 tras cinco meses de papado. santos Justo, Rufino, Alercio, Macario, Teófilo, Román y Dositeo. Starmer afirma en su reunión con Trump que "Reino Unido está dispuesto a desplegar tropas y aviones en Ucrania" Trump anuncia que los aranceles a México y Canadá entrarán en vigor el 4 de marzo pese a prometer postergarlos. El papa sale del estado crítico aunque su cuadro clínico sigue siendo "complejo" tras 14 días hospitalizado. Montero considera que 'barones' del PP se plantean aceptar la condonación de deuda y califica su plantón de "lamentable". La mutualización de la deuda le cuesta 394 euros a cada canario. La fórmula ideada por la ministra de Hacienda es un mal negocio para los isleños: el endeudamiento público pasa de 2.973 a 3.367 euros per cápita. Canarias buscará en la UE una excepción para limitar la compra de vivienda. El informe del reto demográfico sale adelante con los votos del Gobierno. PSOE y NC emiten votos particulares y Vox vota en contra. Clavijo dice que la decisión de levantarse de la mesa de Asián fue «personal» El presidente canario cree que lo que hizo la consejera de Hacienda estuvo «más que justificado», aunque no lo comparte y asegura que «no se repetirá más» Canarias mantiene los contratos para la acogida de menores migrantes con una entidad investigada por malversación. El Gobierno regional justifica que no hay ninguna medida cautelar que les obligue a cerrar los centros gestionados por la Fundación Siglo XXI ni a dejar de pagar los servicios que presta. José Daniel Díaz asume el “reto” de presidir el Tenerife y de implicar a toda la sociedad. El vigésimo tercer presidente en la historia de la entidad, quien releva a Paulino Rivero, ha dicho a los medios oficiales del club que se siente "honrado" por la confianza que han depositado en él. Un 28 de febrero de 1925 nace Odón Alonso Ordás, director de orquesta y compositor. Hijo del también director de orquesta Odón Alonso González, fue uno de los más importantes directores de orquesta españoles de la segunda mitad del siglo XX. Tras pasar por el Conservatorio madrileño y la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, recaló en Siena, Salzburgo y Viena. En 1950 fue nombrado director musical del Coro de Cámara de Radio Nacional de España, y, siete años después, del Teatro de la Zarzuela. En 1960 se responsabilizó de la Orquesta Filarmónica de Madrid antes de incorporarse a la Orquesta Sinfónica de Radio Televisión Española. Falleció el 21 de febrero de 2011 en Madrid, a la edad de 85 años. El 22 de febrero de 2011, el Ayuntamiento de Soria acordó concederle la Medalla de Oro de la Ciudad y dedicar a su memoria el festival del que fue alma mater. - En el programa ‘El Remate’ de La Diez Capital Radio, tuvimos el honor de entrevistar a Enrique Sancho, periodista internacional de referencia en el ámbito turístico y CEO de la agencia de comunicación Open Comunicación. Durante la conversación, analizamos el avance turístico de España en 2024, explorando las tendencias, desafíos y oportunidades que marcan la evolución del sector. Sancho destacó la recuperación del turismo tras los años de incertidumbre, señalando el crecimiento en la llegada de visitantes internacionales y la consolidación de España como uno de los destinos más atractivos a nivel global. Una entrevista imprescindible para comprender la evolución del turismo en nuestro país y los retos que se presentan. - En el programa ‘El Remate’ de La Diez Capital Radio, tuvimos el honor de entrevistar a Amos Lutzardo, presidente del CIT de El Hierro. Durante la conversación, analizamos el cultivo de la piña en la isla, explorando su importancia económica y los desafíos que enfrenta el sector agrícola. Además, abordamos la situación de la migración ilegal, evaluando su impacto en la isla y las medidas que se están tomando para gestionar esta realidad. También repasamos la situación turística de El Hierro, destacando las estrategias para potenciar el destino y atraer más visitantes. Para finalizar, hablamos sobre el Carnaval de los Carneros, una de las festividades más emblemáticas de la isla, con su riqueza cultural y su singularidad dentro del panorama festivo canario. Una entrevista imprescindible para comprender la actualidad de El Hierro desde múltiples perspectivas. - El maestro José Figueroa García entrevista a Mercedes Pullman vicepresidenta de la Sociedad de Antropología española e investigadora del fenómeno OVNI acerca de sus investigaciones del fenómeno en la antigua Unión Soviética, Ukrania y Rusia actuales , Mercedes será una de las ponentes del congreso OVNI y realidades ocultas que se llevará acabo en Madrid este 3 y 4 de mayo de 2025. - Sección en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital radio con el independentista, Alberto Díaz jiménez. Chalamos de la actualidad informativa bajo su singular prisma.
Cuando Ale le pide a Celeste que cuide a su mascota, Rufino, un dragón barbudo, ella acepta a pesar de su nerviosismo. A través de la música y el tiempo juntos, Celeste supera su miedo y descubre en Rufino a un nuevo amigo.
Espai dedicat a la música tango. Presentador: Enrique Telleria. Emissió: Dilluns a les 21.00h podcast recorded with enacast.com
Espai dedicat a la música tango. Presentador: Enrique Telleria. Emissió: Dilluns a les 21.00h podcast recorded with enacast.com
André Rufino sentiu que a crise de legitimidade que atinge hoje o Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) foi parar dentro da sala nas aulas que ministra como professor de Direito Constitucional do IDP (Instituto Brasileiro de Ensino, Direito e Pesquisa), em Brasília."Hoje em dia, quando se fala que há uma decisão de uma Corte Constitucional ou do Supremo Tribunal Federal em especial, parece até que você está colocando mais lenha na fogueira, porque pelo menos 30% da sala de aula vai dizer: 'Ah, não, mas aí é a decisão que aquele relator específico era o ministro'. E sempre tem uma predisposição, um preconceito", diz Rufino.Mas há um lado positivo neste cenário: o interesse pelo Direito Constitucional e o engajamento dos alunos em torno dos debates sobre a Constituição têm aumentado. "E isso é bom. Isso é bom, inclusive para o futuro da disciplina, para o futuro do ensino acadêmico do Direito Constitucional. Aquela velha história, em momentos de crise é que a gente vê novos desafios, novas portas se abrindo e novas oportunidades", afirma.Rufino descreve que seus os alunos - nos primeiros anos da faculdade - vêm carregados de preconceitos e de pré-concepções sobre os ministros do Supremo. "E aí fica realmente complicado para o professor às vezes dizer, não, mas esqueçamos o quem, vamos focar no argumento, a decisão do ponto de vista argumentativo, ela é correta por causa disso, disso e daquilo. Isso acaba demandando um esforço muito maior do professor no sentido de convencimento", afirma."Com essa polarização toda em torno desses temas mais polêmicos, isso acaba tornando difícil o trabalho do professor, de impor certos consensos, ou pelo menos, na verdade, não de impor, de construir certos consensos mínimos em torno de determinados entendimentos que já são consagrados pela jurisprudência ou pela doutrina", avalia Rufino.Como lidar com essas dificuldades e esses novos desafios? Em parte, recorrendo a outros campos de conhecimento: "Nos últimos anos eu tenho trazido cada vez mais a história e a ciência política para o ensino de direito constitucional. Especialmente a história, ela acaba demonstrando o equívoco de certos argumentos de forma muito mais clara do que do ponto de vista jurídico."O professor André Rufino é o segundo entrevistado da série do JOTA sobre os desafios de ensinar o Direito Constitucional no Brasil hoje.A série explora com professores renomados como é o ensino e a formação dos futuros operadores do Direito, em um cenário onde a Constituição é não apenas um texto jurídico, mas também um campo de inúmeras disputas sociais.
Feliz 2025 para todos! O calendário alinhou-se para que pudéssemos começar o ano a falar dos próximos lançamentos que mais nos entusiasmaram, mas também a ver todos aqueles que dissemos que íamos ler em 2024 e não chegaram até às nossas mãos. Livros mencionados neste episódio: - Earth, John Boyne (01:42 & 10:12) - The Breakup Tour (A Canção do Nosso Amor), Emily Wibberley & Austin Siegemund-Broka (05:17) - The Catch, Amy Lea (05:38) - Just Friends: On the Joy, Power and Influence of Friendship, Ryan Yankovich (05:56) - Expiration Dates (Prazos de Validade), Rebecca Serle (06:22 & 08:55) - Swift and Saddled (A Lua e a Maré), Lyla Sage (06:29) - The Age of Magical Overthinking, Amanda Montell (06:40 & 09:45) - Funny Story (Uma Boa História), Emily Henry (06:46 & 09:59) - Savor It (Quando o Verão Acabar), Tarah DeWitt (06:51) - Daydream, Hannah Grace (07:01) - Nothing Like the Movies, Lynn Painter (07:26) - One Thousand Words, Jami Attenderg (07:37) - The Fury, Alex Michaelides (08:21) - Come and Get It, Kiley Reid (08:46) - Mercury, Amy Jo Burns (09:24) - Fruit of the Dead, Rachel Lyon (09:35) - Blue Sisters (Irmãs Blue), Coco Mellors (10:01) - Voyage Home, Pat Barker (10:27) - O novo livro da Lénia Rufino (12:56) - O terceiro livro da Rita (13:59) - Reedições da Clarice Lispector (14:48) - Out of the Woods, Hannah Bonham-Young (16:04) - The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus, Emma Knight (17:51) - Dream Count, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (20:12) - All the Water in the World, Siren Caffall (21:28) - This Book Will Bury Me, Ashley Winstead (24:48) - May All Your Skies Be Blue, Fiona Scarlett (26:52) - Say You'll Remember Me, Abby Jimenez (29:36) - Great Big Beautiful Life, Emily Henry (30:34) - Atmosphere: A Love Story, Taylor Jenkins Reid (32:30) - The Emperor of Gladness, Ocean Vuong (34:09) - Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil, V. E. Schwab (35:40) - Katabasis, R. F. Kuang (36:37) - Sounds Like Love, Ashley Poston (39:13) - Hot Wax, M.L. Rio (41:00) ________________ Enviem as vossas questões ou sugestões para livratepodcast@gmail.com. Encontrem-nos nas redes sociais: www.instagram.com/julesdsilva www.instagram.com/ritadanova twitter.com/julesxdasilva twitter.com/ritadanova Identidade visual do podcast: da autoria da talentosa Mariana Cardoso, que podem encontrar em marianarfpcardoso@hotmail.com. Genérico do podcast: criado pelo incrível Vitor Carraca Teixeira, que podem encontrar em www.instagram.com/oputovitor.
Con nuestro chef Robin Food hablamos con Maite Urraca, responsable del catering encargado de preparar los menús en la Conferencia de Presidentes que se celebra hoy en Santander. Además, charlamos con la Yaya Elvira, de 92 años, que se ha hecho viral por los vídeos publicados por su nieta en TikTok, y con Leticia Sabater, que nos presenta su canción navideña 'El langostino Rufino'.
Con nuestro chef Robin Food hablamos con Maite Urraca, responsable del catering encargado de preparar los menús en la Conferencia de Presidentes que se celebra hoy en Santander. Además, charlamos con la Yaya Elvira, de 92 años, que se ha hecho viral por los vídeos publicados por su nieta en TikTok, y con Leticia Sabater, que nos presenta su canción navideña 'El langostino Rufino'.
Con nuestro chef Robin Food hablamos con Maite Urraca, responsable del catering encargado de preparar los menús en la Conferencia de Presidentes que se celebra hoy en Santander. Además, charlamos con la Yaya Elvira, de 92 años, que se ha hecho viral por los vídeos publicados por su nieta en TikTok, y con Leticia Sabater, que nos presenta su canción navideña 'El langostino Rufino'.
“A marriage…chemistry… [and] shared vision” is how Bain Capital partner Angelo Rufino described investments centered around a new asset class of hybrid capital that combines features of debt and equity in a conversation with Bloomberg Intelligence's Negisa Balluku that took place live at Beard Group's Distressed Investing Conference. As Head of Special Situations in North America as well as Head of Corporate Special Situations in Europe, Rufino shared his perspective on the bespoke nature and the “win-win” value proposition of a special situations product that provides both operational value-add and financing capital. (8:36) Prior to that, Noel Hebert, head of Bloomberg Intelligence's global credit strategy, and Philip Brendel, BI distressed-credit analyst, assessed the impact of an improved M&A environment in a Trump administration on distressed-debt supply. The podcast concludes with Negisa, Phil and Noel discussing the latest developments in Spirit Airlines, J&J's talc bankruptcy, Yellow, Hertz, Avon and Hearthside. (52:27)
Hablamos de violencia sexual desde el enfoque de los sonetos y la novela de Clara Rufino, El Vientre de Tara.
Rufino Tamayo fue uno de los artistas mexicanos más trascendentes del siglo XX. Junto con los considerados “Los Tres Grandes”: Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco y David Siqueiros. Su obra se destaca por los colores sobrios, por los lienzos sensuales, por la síntesis de sus formas… Un virtuoso en técnicas clásicas y un gran innovador, principalmente en el arte de la estampa. Fue también un artista que de forma consecuente promovió discursos de humanidad y de libertad. En este episodio elegimos dos cartas dirigidas a Olga, su compañera durante 57 años y a quien pintó en numerosos retratos. La primera carta es, casi, una oda a esa libertad, con postales de su infancia y del descubrimiento de la pasión por el arte. Y la segunda es casi un adiós a su pareja, cuando tenía 92 años. Lo hace con una frase bellísima: “Adonde me lleve la historia quiero estar a tu lado”, le dice. Lee el actor Enrique Cueva. * New York 1927 Olga mía, una vez dije que mi gran tesoro siempre estuvo retratado en cada cuadro. ¿Dónde?,me preguntaban asombrados, sin darse cuenta de que hablaba del gran sentido de libertad que me llevó a pintarlos. No sé si la palabra “libertad” signifique lo mismo para todos. Yo la veo como a un par de alas con las que puedo despegar al infinito. Las tuve desde siempre y estuvieron ahí para auparme en los peñascos de los que estaban a punto de caer. Recuerdo, por ejemplo, cuando nos mudamos con tía Amalia a la capital. Nunca antes había visto una ciudad tan grande, un cielo lacrimoso bajo el cual miles de personas iban y venían de todas partes. Me tocó vencer el gris con el que nos tiñe el miedo y caminar de la mano de la tía las cuadras que separaban el paradero de camiones de la casa. Tampoco le di oportunidad al miedo cuando trabajé en el mercado. Tía Amalia tenía un puesto de frutas en el que yo hacía los mandados, cuidaba, vendía. Todo un administrador, figúrate. Eso hasta los 17 años, porque entonces se me metió en la cabeza esta ola de hacerme pintor. ¿De dónde la habré sacado, mi Olga? Lo cierto es que ese deseo no llegó solo: lo acompañaba una terquedad invencible. Nada pudo detenerme en mi intento por crear. Sí, es cierto, había más de un profesor en la Escuela de Bellas Artes de San Carlos que me decía que mi trabajo era premonitorio. ¿En verdad?, preguntaba emocionado; “sí”, decían, premonitorio del fracaso. No les hice caso y cuando se pusieron más valerosos los dejé dentro de sus paredes. Renunciar a la Escuela no fue tan malo. Afuera, supe el valor de la disciplina propia para alcanzar las cosas que uno anhela. Levantarme temprano, leer hasta el mediodía, dibujar y pintar hasta que los ojos me ardieran como brasas, era parte de la rutina. Lo juro, mi Olga, así fueron apareciendo los primeros cuadros como milagros. Me dormía cansado en el taller y al amanecer la luz del nuevo día los desvestía para mostrármelos: formas, grietas, planicies, rostros que no tenían nada que ver con la realidad pero que en su deformación eran los rostros que había guardado en el alma. Creo que en alguna ocasión te lo conté, ahora mi recuerdo es un poco disperso por el calor que inunda la habitación, por eso me disculparás si vuelvo a inquietarte con esto: cuando me mudé a mi primer taller yo sentí un mal presagio. No podía creerlo, hasta en las cosas más mínimas me perseguía mi fantasma oaxaqueño: la ventana de aquel taller daba a una calle llamada “De la Soledad”. Cuando uno nace para maceta, decía mi madre, no sale del corredor. México D.F. 1990 Olga, tendido en esta cama no dejo de pensar en la paciencia. El tiempo que ahora me falta transcurre al otro lado de la ventana y lo veo alejarse con la resistencia de mi aliento. ¿Qué he tenido que aprender en estos 92 años? Adonde me lleve la historia quiero estar a tu lado. Se me ocurre, por ejemplo, descansar en un nicho ubicado en el museo que ambos fundamos, en la estela de una estrella, en el canto de un pájaro. En alguno de esos espacios que siendo eternos también son campos santos. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/epistolar/support
O escritor e professor Luiz Rufino fala sobre “Cazuá: onde o encanto faz morada”, que marca sua estreia na editora Paz & Terra, do Grupo Editorial Record. Apresentação: Simone Magno
Em tudo dai graças - Pr. Cláudio Rufino by Igreja Missionária Evangélica Maranata de JacarepaguáPara conhecer mais sobre a Maranata: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imemaranata/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/imemaranataSite: https://www.igrejamaranata.com.br/Canal do youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa1jcJx-DIDqu_gknjlWOrQDeus te abençoe
Gratidão à provisão divina - Pr. Cláudio Rufino by Igreja Missionária Evangélica Maranata de Campo GrandePara conhecer mais sobre a Maranata: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imemaranata/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/imemaranataSite: https://www.igrejamaranata.com.br/Canal do youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa1jcJx-DIDqu_gknjlWOrQDeus te abençoe
Fenômeno que está no cerne da formação da identidade e, principalmente, do povo brasileiro, a escravidão africana inciou-se em um contexto onde as potências europeias viam a colonização das terras recém descobertas do lado de cá do Atlântico apenas como um empreendimento extrativista em um primeiro momento, e mercantilista em uma segunda fase, quando potências como a Inglaterra se viram impelidas a conquistar novos mercados consumidores para os produtos que resultaram da sua revolução industrial. Patronato do SciCast: 1. Patreon SciCast 2. Apoia.se/Scicast 3. Nos ajude via Pix também, chave: contato@scicast.com.br ou acesse o QRcode: Sua pequena contribuição ajuda o Portal Deviante a continuar divulgando Ciência! Contatos: contato@scicast.com.br https://twitter.com/scicastpodcast https://www.facebook.com/scicastpodcast https://instagram.com/scicastpodcast Fale conosco! E não esqueça de deixar o seu comentário na postagem desse episódio! Expediente: Produção Geral: Tarik Fernandes e André Trapani Equipe de Gravação: André Trapani, Maria Oliveira, Marcelo Silva, Tágila Mendes Citação ABNT: Scicast #610: Escravidão Africana no Brasil 2: Formas de Resistência. Locução: André Trapani, Maria Oliveira, Marcelo Silva, Tágila Mendes. [S.l.] Portal Deviante, 20/09/2024. Podcast. Disponível em: https://www.deviante.com.br/podcasts/scicast-610 Fonte da imagem: Por Johann Moritz Rugendas - Desconhecido, Domínio público, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=24418 Referências e Indicações Sugestões de literatura: Um Rio Chamado Atlântico (2003), de Alberto da Costa e Silva. CARULA, Karoline; ARIZA, Marília B. A. Escravidão e maternidade no mundo atlântico: corpo, saúde, trabalho, família e liberdade nos séculos XVIII e XIX. Rio de Janeiro: Eduff, 2022. Caetana diz Não: histórias de mulheres na sociedade escravista brasileira (2002), de Sandra Graham FLORENTINO, Manolo. Tráfico atlântico, mercado colonial e famílias escravas no Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, c. 1790-c. 1830. História: Questões & Debates, [S.l.], v. 51, n. 2, dez. 2009. ISSN 2447-8261. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 21 jun. 2022. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.5380/his.v51i0.19985. Reis, João José; Gomes, Flávio dos Santos; Carvalho, Marcus Joaquim de. O alufá Rufino: tráfico, escravidão e liberdade no Atlântico negro (1822-1853) FERREIRA, Roquinaldo. Dinâmica do comércio intracolonial: Geribitas, panos asiáticos e guerra mo tráfico angolano de escravos (século XVIII). In: FRAGOSO, João; BICALHO, Maria Fernanda B.; GOUVÊA, Maria de Fátima S. (org.) O Antigo Regime nos Trópicos: a dinâmica imperial portuguesa (séculos XVI-XVIII). Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 2001. GILROY, Paul. O Atlântico Negro: identidade e dupla consciência. Rio de Janeiro: Editora 34, 2002. SCHWARTZ, Stuart B. Tropical Babylons. Sugar and the making of the Atlantic World, 1450-1680. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2005 VERGER, Pierre. Fluxo e refluxo: do tráfico de escravos entre o golfo do Benin e a Bahia de Todos os Santos. Salvador: Corrupio, 2002. Sugestões de filmes: “Guerra da independência na Bahia”, documentário de Renato Barbieri. (pt.1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1Yti74wZes pt.2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lo9USvuI0Wc ) Da África aos EUA - Uma Jornada Gastronômica - Série Documental da Netflix: (https://www.netflix.com/br/title/81034518) Sugestões de vídeos: Alberto Silva - A Escravidão na História e na África. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dn_2RIo4QJc) Sugestões de links: http://dami.museuimperial.museus.gov.br/handle/acervo/10247 https://www.geledes.org.br/historia-da-escravidao-negra-brasil/ https://www.iel.unicamp.br/sidis/anais/pdf/HARKOT_DE_LA_TAILLE_ELIZABETH.pdf http://m.acervo.estadao.com.br/noticias/acervo,a-destruicao-dos-documentos-sobre-a-escravidao-,11840,0.htm#:~:text=Em%201890%2C%20ministro%20Ruy%20Barbosa,documentos%20que%20tratassem%20do%20tema&text=Em%2014%20de%20dezembro%20de,de%20documentos%20referentes%20%C3%A0%20escravid%C3%A3o. http://multirio.rj.gov.br/index.php/estude/historia-do-brasil/america-portuguesa/8738-a-escravid%C3%A3o-africana http://www.multirio.rj.gov.br/index.php/estude/historia-do-brasil/america-portuguesa/80-ocupa%C3%A7%C3%A3o-litor%C3%A2nea/8740-escravid%C3%A3o-negocia%C3%A7%C3%A3o-e-conflito https://open.spotify.com/episode/0G0VZXSLvWYnsvoXmZQ1dr?si=Iu4IlRyIT-qcBSg1tzEitw - Episódio Especial do podcast Mamilos ocupando o feed do História Preta no 20 de Novembro - Ancestralidade: transformando o presente e inspirando o futuro. Storymap: “O cotidiano de Henriqueta nas ruas do Rio de Janeiro em 1850” https://www.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=82468bd1e5024198b9119234ddb322bc Comércio Transatlântico de Escravos - Base de Dados https://www.slavevoyages.org/voyage/database Dragão do Mar Centro de Arte e Cultura http://www.dragaodomar.org.br/institucional/dragao-do-mar-na-historia-do-ceara See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. El FBI investiga como un "posible intento de asesinato a Trump" el tiroteo en Palm Beach. Hoy se cumplen 935 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. Hoy es lunes 16 de septiembre de 2024. Buenos días Ucrania, Gaza e Israel. Día Internacional de la Capa de Ozono. El 16 de septiembre de 1987 se firmó el Protocolo de Montreal relativo a las sustancias que agotan la capa de ozono. En conmemoración a este acto, la Asamblea General de la ONU proclama cada 16 de septiembre Día Internacional de la Preservación de la Capa de Ozono. La capa de ozono es una franja de gas muy frágil que protege la vida en el planeta, de los efectos nocivos de los rayos solares y que está en peligro por el uso que se hizo durante años de determinados productos químicos. Un esfuerzo internacional conjunto ha permitido la eliminación y reducción del uso de estas sustancias que agotaban la capa de ozono y en la actualidad se ha reducido considerablemente la radiación ultravioleta del sol que llega a la Tierra protegiendo la salud humana y los ecosistemas. 1870.- Las Cortes Constituyentes españolas eligen a Amadeo de Saboya como rey de España. El reinado de Amadeo I fue el primer intento de poner en práctica la monarquía parlamentaria en el país. 1920: Miguel de Unamuno es condenado por la Audiencia de Valencia a ocho años de prisión mayor por injurias al rey. Tal día como hoy, 16 de septiembre de 1932 Mahatma Gandhi comienza su huelga de hambre en oposición a las nuevas leyes de separación de castas de Gran Bretaña. 1945.- Convocados en Londres 44 países por Francia y Reino Unido, se acuerda crear la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación la Ciencia y la Cultura (UNESO), que se fundó en 1946. 1955.- El rey Mohamed V de Marruecos vuelve del exilio en Córcega donde había sido deportado por las autoridades coloniales francesas. Al año siguiente el país recupera la independencia. 1960: Se anuncia el compromiso matrimonial del rey Balduino de Bélgica con la española Fabiola de Mora y Aragón. 1977.- El Congreso de los Diputados aprueba, por unanimidad, la adhesión de España al Estatuto del Consejo de Europa, el primer paso para el ingreso del país en este organismo europeo, que se materializó el 24 de noviembre. 1978.- Se firma en España el Real Decreto-Ley que adelanta la mayoría de edad de los 21 a los 18 años. Años más tarde, el 16 de septiembre de 1997 Steve Jobs regresa a Apple Computers, que había fundado para dirigir temporalmente la empresa durante la búsqueda de un líder permanente. 1998: ETA anuncia su primera tregua total, indefinida y unilateral en más de 30 años de terrorismo. 2003.- Debuta el delantero Leo Messi con el F.C. Barcelona en un encuentro amistoso contra el Oporto en esa ciudad portuguesa. 2010.- La UNESCO reconoce como Patrimonio Inmaterial el flamenco, la dieta mediterránea, los castellets catalanes, el canto de la Sibila mallorquín y la cetrería. Santos: Margarita de Escocia, Inés, Gertrudis, Edmundo, Marcos, Marino, Roque, Rufino y Valerio. El FBI investiga como un "posible intento de asesinato a Trump" el tiroteo en Palm Beach. Polonia pide que se ponga fin a las ayudas de la UE para ucranianos en edad de combatir. Decenas de heridos en un ataque aéreo ruso contra un bloque de apartamentos en Járkov. Exteriores desmiente "rotundamente" cualquier operación para desestabilizar Venezuela: "Los detenidos no son del CNI". El gran despliegue policial evita la entrada de migrantes en Ceuta: "No se ha registrado ninguna entrada irregular". Canarias será una de las regiones más perjudicadas por el ‘concierto’ catalán. Las comunidades con bajos niveles de renta, las más pobres, se verán especialmente afectadas por la pérdida de fondos para la nivelación autonómica. Canarias cierra el verano con más destrucción de plátano y ya suma en el año una ‘pica’ aprobada de 13 millones de kilos. Las marcas semanales de corte de fruta siguen por encima de los ocho millones de kilos y el mercado peninsular, algo recuperado, solo admite en torno a siete. La consejera de Turismo deja en manos de los ayuntamientos canarios establecer moratorias a la vivienda vacacional. Jéssica de León no es partidaria de hacerlo a nivel regional. 200 personas viven todavía en contenedores tres años después de la erupción del volcán de La Palma. A prisión dos policías locales de Tenerife que cobraban falsas multas a extranjeros. En los registros practicados fueron intervenidos “varias decenas de miles” de euros, “cientos” de boletines de denuncias impuestos a ciudadanos extranjeros y que no habían sido tramitados, así como otros efectos relacionados con los delitos investigados. Tres cayucos arriban a las costas canarias con 155 personas, algunas procedentes de Yemen. Una niña pequeña en los brazos de su madre o seis yemeníes que huyen de una guerra de más de diez años, entre los migrantes rescatados y atendidos en la jornada de este sábado en el Archipiélago. Un 16 de septiembre de 1963: Nace Richard Marx, cantante, compositor y productor estadounidense. Es conocido por éxitos como "Right Here Waiting" y "Hazard", que dominaron las listas de éxitos en las décadas de 1980 y 1990.
Sur les rives de la Vesdre, des habitants reconstruisent leurs maisons dévastées par l'inondation de l'été 2021. Leurs témoignages résonnent encore du fracas des flots qui ont emporté des maisons et des déceptions ou de la chaleur de l'aide reçue. Parfois, dans les sédiments remués et dispersés par le torrent, ou au détour d'un récit, l'histoire industrielle de la vallée refait surface et se mêle aux marques de la catastrophe récente. Après le Bruit cherche un chemin parmi ces héritages complexes de la vallée. Réalisation : Chedia Le Roij Accompagnement à la réalisation : Paola Stévenne Prise de son : Chedia Le Roij Prise de son additionnelle : Cyril Mossé Mise en onde et mixage : Roxane Brunet Avec les récits de Madeleine et Rufino de La Brouck, Jose de Nessonvaux, Gérarda et Alain de Fraipont, Carlo, Freddy, Lise, Florent. Une production de Par Chemins et Ruines Co-produit par l'Atelier Graphoui, soutenu par Gulliver et le Fond d'Aide à la Création Radiophonique de la Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles. Merci pour votre écoute Par Ouïe-Dire c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 22h à 23h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Par Ouïe-Dire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/272 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Sur les rives de la Vesdre, des habitants reconstruisent leurs maisons dévastées par l'inondation de l'été 2021. Leurs témoignages résonnent encore du fracas des flots… des maisons emportées, des déceptions, et de la chaleur de l'aide reçue. Certains récits retiennent aussi l'écho des premières machines industrielles qui, deux siècles plus tôt, ont fait subir une autre transformation brutale à la vallée et ses habitants. Dans les sédiments du torrent remués et dispersés par l'inondation, les traces de ce passé se mêlent aux marques de la catastrophe récente. Après le Bruit ouvre la question de nos héritages complexes dans cette période d'incertitude sociale et environnementale. Réalisation, prise de son : Chedia Le Roij Avec les récits de Madeleine et Rufino de La Brouck, Jose de Nessonvaux, Gérarda et Alain de Fraipont, Carlo, Freddy, Lise, Florent. Une production de Par Chemins et Ruines, co-produit par l'Atelier Graphoui, soutenu par Gulliver et le FACR Merci pour votre écoute Par Ouïe-Dire c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 22h à 23h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Par Ouïe-Dire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/272 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Rufino Nuñez, invitado habitual de "Las mañanas de Fusión Radio", comparte sus reflexiones sobre cultura, deporte y el fútbol local en Vélez-Málaga. Habla de un verano lleno de actividades, destacando eventos como "La Noche en Vela", que, según él, muestra la riqueza cultural de Andalucía, pese a las quejas de algunos empresarios por la concentración de actividades en un solo día. Rufino también comenta su trabajo con Miguel Botana y un proyecto de tributo a la Orquesta Almijara, subrayando la importancia de preservar el legado del rock andaluz. Elogia la capacidad del flamenco para adaptarse a otros géneros, como el proyecto "ABBA Flamenco". En cuanto al fútbol, es crítico con la gestión del club Vélez, señalando que, al ser una empresa privada, su destino depende de sus dueños y no del Ayuntamiento. Compara la situación con la NBA, donde los equipos pueden cambiar de ubicación según los intereses de los propietarios. Finalmente, Rufino expresa su escepticismo sobre la alarma por el calor en los medios, recordando que antes se manejaban las mismas temperaturas sin tanto dramatismo. Con su estilo directo, ofrece una conversación rica en opiniones y anécdotas, subrayando la necesidad de valorar más la cultura y las tradiciones locales.
Rufino Vigil González, conocido como "El rey del acero", es el noveno mexicano más rico, con una fortuna que ronda los 3,400 millones de dólares, según Forbes.
“Don't you agree that, on one's first visit to Florence, one must have a room with a view?” We watched the Merchant Ivory 1985 classic "A Room with a View" with our friend Rufino Cabang and excuse us as we faint in the arms of Julian Sands. Breaking American audiences to actors like Helena Bonham Carter, Julian Sands, Daniel Day Lewis, and Rupert Graves this movie was a huge cross over success in American that was nominated for eight Academy Awards, and won for its adaptation for the screen by Ruth Prater Jhabvala. 20 year-old Helena looks like a porcelain doll, swoon worthy men, and Maggie Smith is also here to talk some hot goss with Judi Dench. What more could you want in a costume drama! Also, the perfect cover for a movie to rent for young gay boys across the world, that features a famous skinny dipping scene with Julian Sands, Rupert Graves, and Simon Callow stripping down to their birthday suits for a dip. "A Room with a View" helped usher in the success of movies like Maurice, Remains of the Day, and Howard's End much to excitement of English Lit nerds, and all the boys who were "a joy to have in class." Thanks for listening and don't forget to subscribe, rate and review us on Apple Podcasts! www.patreon.com/moviesthatmadeusgay Facebook/Instagram: @moviesthatmadeusgay Twitter: @MTMUGPod Scott Youngbauer: Twitter @oscarscott / Instagram @scottyoungballer Peter Lozano: Twitter/Instagram @peterlasagna
WABC Host Curtis Sliwa joins Sid live in-studio to discuss how he rushed to the defense so of a one Lou Rufino yesterday, before he dives into the headlines dominating the news today.
Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. Hoy se cumplen 888 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. Hoy es martes 30 de julio de 2024. Buenos días Ucrania, Gaza e Israel. Día Internacional de la Amistad. El 30 de julio se celebra en todo el mundo el Día Internacional de la Amistad, en honor a ese sentimiento desinteresado que es capaz de unir a personas muy diferentes, romper fronteras y tender lazos de solidaridad. Es tan poderoso por su naturaleza misma de bondad e incondicionalidad. El reconocimiento oficial de esta efeméride ha sido iniciativa de la Asamblea General de Naciones Unidas en el año 2011, cuando proclamó el 30 de julio como el Día Internacional de la Amistad, a propuesta de la Cruzada Mundial de la Amistad. El objetivo de la ONU es transmitir este sentimiento como una herramienta para conseguir la paz, acabar con la violencia y la pobreza, contribuyendo a una sociedad más justa y sostenible. En definitiva, que haya armonía dentro de los pueblos y entre ellos. 1626.- Comienzan las obras de construcción de la Universidad de la Sorbona, en París. 1762.- Tropas inglesas ocupan la fortaleza del Morro, en La Habana, pese a la heroica resistencia que ofrecieron los españoles. 1808.- José Bonaparte abandonaMadrid precipitadamente al conocer la noticia de la victoria española sobre las tropas francesas en la batalla de Bailén. 1887.- Concluyen los trabajos de cimentación de la parisina torre Eiffel. 1910.- España suspende sus relaciones con El Vaticano, ante la actitud de la Santa Sede, consecuencia de la política de Canalejas en materia religiosa. 1913.- Se prohíben los juegos de azar en España. 1959.- Se constituye la Jefatura Central de Tráfico, embrión de la Dirección General de Tráfico en España. 1976.- El rey Juan Carlos I decreta una amnistía para los delitos políticos y de opinión en España. 1983.- Entra en vigor en España la ley de las 40 horas semanales de trabajo y 30 días de vacaciones al año. 2011.- "El Bulli" cierra sus puertas como restaurante después de 30 años para convertirse en una Fundación. 2020: La estadounidense Johnson & Johnson comienza a probar en humanos su vacuna experimental contra el COVID-19. Patrocinio del santo de cada día por gentileza de la Casa de las Imágenes, en la calle Obispo Perez Cáceres, 17 en Candelaria. Santoral para hoy, 30 de julio: santos Máxima, Pedro Crisólogo, Abdón, Senén y Rufino. Varios muertos en la represión de las protestas por los resultados de las elecciones en Venezuela. La oposición venezolana rechaza los resultados y la victoria de Maduro: "Ganamos y todo el mundo lo sabe". Gran parte de la comunidad internacional exige a Maduro transparencia en los resultados electorales. España no reconoce todavía el resultado electoral en Venezuela y reclama la publicación de las actas. El ministro de Exteriores, José Manuel Albares, menciona el descontento de la oposición y pide conocer “el detalle” del recuento y que “todo el mundo se sienta cómodo” con el escrutinio. El Consejo de Europa reprende a España por el límite máximo a la indemnización por despido improcedente. El Consejo de Ministros no validará este martes el decreto ley para el reparto de menores. Canarias se queda sin la última solución para el colapso del sistema de acogida antes del verano. Canarias trabajará en agosto para conseguir un decreto ley para la acogida de menores migrantes. El presidente regional, Fernando Clavijo, asegura que hay “espacio” y “tiempo” para alcanzar una solución antes del último cuatrimestre del año, cuando, según todas las previsiones, se espera un repunte de llegadas a las costas canarias. Los canarios afiliados a partidos políticos apenas superan los 10.000. La Agencia Tributaria revela que solo el 0,57% de los isleños pagan cuotas de militancia. Solo el 39% de niños canarios de dos años va a la escuela por el 65,3% estatal La tasa de escolarización en el archipiélago es la tercera más baja del país. A los 3 años ya es plena con el 93% frente al 96,4% estatal. El precio medio de la vivienda nueva en Canarias sube un 3,4% en junio, según la Sociedad de Tasación. El precio medio del metro cuadrado en las Islas se sitúa en 1.845 euros. La demanda para alquilar una habitación se dispara en Canarias La subida de los arrendamientos multiplica los interesados en compartir piso y la oferta aumenta por su mayor rentabilidad y el interés de sortear la Ley de Vivienda. Llegan 235 migrantes a El Hierro y Fuerteventura, entre ellos cinco niños. Ninguno de los ocupantes de las tres embarcaciones ha precisado traslado a ningún centro sanitario. Un día como hoy en 1941 nace Paul Anka, cantante canadiense.
Programa de actualidad con información, formación y entretenimiento conectando directamente con los oyentes en La Diez Capital radio. Dirigido y presentado por Miguel Ángel González Suárez. www.ladiez.es - Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. Hoy se cumplen 888 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. Hoy es martes 30 de julio de 2024. Buenos días Ucrania, Gaza e Israel. Día Internacional de la Amistad. El 30 de julio se celebra en todo el mundo el Día Internacional de la Amistad, en honor a ese sentimiento desinteresado que es capaz de unir a personas muy diferentes, romper fronteras y tender lazos de solidaridad. Es tan poderoso por su naturaleza misma de bondad e incondicionalidad. El reconocimiento oficial de esta efeméride ha sido iniciativa de la Asamblea General de Naciones Unidas en el año 2011, cuando proclamó el 30 de julio como el Día Internacional de la Amistad, a propuesta de la Cruzada Mundial de la Amistad. El objetivo de la ONU es transmitir este sentimiento como una herramienta para conseguir la paz, acabar con la violencia y la pobreza, contribuyendo a una sociedad más justa y sostenible. En definitiva, que haya armonía dentro de los pueblos y entre ellos. 1626.- Comienzan las obras de construcción de la Universidad de la Sorbona, en París. 1762.- Tropas inglesas ocupan la fortaleza del Morro, en La Habana, pese a la heroica resistencia que ofrecieron los españoles. 1808.- José Bonaparte abandonaMadrid precipitadamente al conocer la noticia de la victoria española sobre las tropas francesas en la batalla de Bailén. 1887.- Concluyen los trabajos de cimentación de la parisina torre Eiffel. 1910.- España suspende sus relaciones con El Vaticano, ante la actitud de la Santa Sede, consecuencia de la política de Canalejas en materia religiosa. 1913.- Se prohíben los juegos de azar en España. 1959.- Se constituye la Jefatura Central de Tráfico, embrión de la Dirección General de Tráfico en España. 1976.- El rey Juan Carlos I decreta una amnistía para los delitos políticos y de opinión en España. 1983.- Entra en vigor en España la ley de las 40 horas semanales de trabajo y 30 días de vacaciones al año. 2011.- "El Bulli" cierra sus puertas como restaurante después de 30 años para convertirse en una Fundación. 2020: La estadounidense Johnson & Johnson comienza a probar en humanos su vacuna experimental contra el COVID-19. Patrocinio del santo de cada día por gentileza de la Casa de las Imágenes, en la calle Obispo Perez Cáceres, 17 en Candelaria. Santoral para hoy, 30 de julio: santos Máxima, Pedro Crisólogo, Abdón, Senén y Rufino. Varios muertos en la represión de las protestas por los resultados de las elecciones en Venezuela. La oposición venezolana rechaza los resultados y la victoria de Maduro: "Ganamos y todo el mundo lo sabe". Gran parte de la comunidad internacional exige a Maduro transparencia en los resultados electorales. España no reconoce todavía el resultado electoral en Venezuela y reclama la publicación de las actas. El ministro de Exteriores, José Manuel Albares, menciona el descontento de la oposición y pide conocer “el detalle” del recuento y que “todo el mundo se sienta cómodo” con el escrutinio. El Consejo de Europa reprende a España por el límite máximo a la indemnización por despido improcedente. El Consejo de Ministros no validará este martes el decreto ley para el reparto de menores. Canarias se queda sin la última solución para el colapso del sistema de acogida antes del verano. Canarias trabajará en agosto para conseguir un decreto ley para la acogida de menores migrantes. El presidente regional, Fernando Clavijo, asegura que hay “espacio” y “tiempo” para alcanzar una solución antes del último cuatrimestre del año, cuando, según todas las previsiones, se espera un repunte de llegadas a las costas canarias. Los canarios afiliados a partidos políticos apenas superan los 10.000. La Agencia Tributaria revela que solo el 0,57% de los isleños pagan cuotas de militancia. Solo el 39% de niños canarios de dos años va a la escuela por el 65,3% estatal La tasa de escolarización en el archipiélago es la tercera más baja del país. A los 3 años ya es plena con el 93% frente al 96,4% estatal. El precio medio de la vivienda nueva en Canarias sube un 3,4% en junio, según la Sociedad de Tasación. El precio medio del metro cuadrado en las Islas se sitúa en 1.845 euros. La demanda para alquilar una habitación se dispara en Canarias La subida de los arrendamientos multiplica los interesados en compartir piso y la oferta aumenta por su mayor rentabilidad y el interés de sortear la Ley de Vivienda. Llegan 235 migrantes a El Hierro y Fuerteventura, entre ellos cinco niños. Ninguno de los ocupantes de las tres embarcaciones ha precisado traslado a ningún centro sanitario. Un día como hoy en 1941 nace Paul Anka, cantante canadiense. - Sección de actualidad con mucho sentido de Humor inteligente en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital radio con el periodista socarrón y palmero, José Juan Pérez Capote, El Nº 1. - Sección en el Programa El Remate de la Diez Capital radio con José Figueroa, Facilitador de crecimiento personal y especialista en Medicina holística, tradiciones ancentrales y maestro de Reiki intuitivo: Hoy trataremos los mundos paralelos y las puertas a otras dimensiones. - Sección en el programa El Remate con el Director de Capital Radio en Gran Canaria, Pepe Rodríguez. .Antonio Morales: «El Mundial va a mostrar al planeta las capacidades de Gran Canaria» «La inauguración del estadio en 2027 coincidirá con la terminación de Salto de Chira, la nueva Infecar o el Mueso de Bellas Artes» - ¡Hoy, en el último episodio de nuestra tercera temporada de “Sé feliz”! Haremos un recorrido por las emociones que hemos explorado en esta temporada y entenderemos su interconexión. Además, nos enfocaremos en cómo aplicar este conocimiento para disfrutar más y mejor de nuestras vacaciones. Acompáñanos en esta reflexión y descubre cómo nuestras emociones pueden ser aliadas en unas vacaciones plenas, felices y saludables. ¿Qué emociones hemos trabajado esta temporada? ¿Cuál es la importancia de reconocer y trabajar nuestras emociones? Nos vamos de vacaciones, ¿cómo podemos utilizar lo que hemos aprendido sobre nuestras emociones para disfrutar más de las vacaciones? ¿Qué importancia tiene estar en contacto con nuestras emociones durante las vacaciones?
Pancho es parte del equipo argentino de Vela en Paris 2024, y nos representara en Clase ILCA 7 (Laser). El oriundo de Rufino, desde Marsella, nos contó lo que será su participación en un nuevo Juego Olímpico.
___ Apresentação: Lizi Benites (https://www.instagram.com/lizibenites_/) Co-Host: Galego (https://www.instagram.com/galego.mbt/) Convidado: Arhur Rufino (https://www.instagram.com/arthurrufino/) ___ Siga o Positivamente em todas as nossas redes: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/positivamente.podcast/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/podcastpositivamente TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@positivamente.podcast Kwai: https://s.kw.ai/u/ubC1VrKP ___ Parcerias e publicidade: jumatias@nicolielo.com
WABC Host Curtis Sliwa joins Sid live in-studio to further discuss his gripe with the morning show crew, specifically board operator Lou Rufino, before he dives into the top local headlines of the day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Junte-se a nós para mais uma aula extraordinária com o mestre e doutor em Bíblia, João Claudio Rufino. Desta vez, vamos explorar em detalhes da Semana Santa, nos preparando para vivenciá-la de forma ainda mais profunda. Venha descobrir os aspectos e curiosidades dessa semana sagrada do ponto de vista bíblico, em uma conversa especial repleta de conhecimento. Vamos caminhar juntos pela narrativa da Paixão de Cristo e enriquecer nossa compreensão! Não perca essa oportunidade.
Our guest for TNR this Thursday is Jinno Rufino, Tunay Na International Rider. On this episode, we talk about his trips, his tips and all his adventures all around the world.
On this episode, my guest is David Bacon, a California writer and documentary photographer. A former union organizer, today he documents labor, the global economy, war and migration, and the struggle for human rights. His latest book, In the Fields of the North / En los campos del norte (COLEF / UC Press, 2017) includes over 300 photographs and 12 oral histories of farm workers. Other books include The Right to Stay Home and Illegal People, which discuss alternatives to forced migration and the criminalization of migrants. Communities Without Borders includes over 100 photographs and 50 narraatives about transnational migrant communities and The Children of NAFTA is an account of worker resistance on the US/Mexico border in the wake of NAFTA.Show Notes:David's Early YearsLearning about Immigration through UnionsThe Meaning of Being UndocumentedNAFTA and Mexican MigrationThe Source of Corn / MaizeBinational Front of Indigenous Organizations / Frente Indigena de Organizacaions BinacionalesThe Right to Stay HomeAndres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) CampaignThe Face & History of Immigration in the USAImmigration Reform and AmnestyThe Violence of Fortuna Silver Mines in OaxacaSolidarity, Change and OptimismHomework:The Right to Stay Home: How US Policy Drives Mexican MigrationIn the Fields of the North / En los campos del norteIllegal People: How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes ImmigrantsCommunities without Borders: Images and Voices from the World of MigrationThe Children of NAFTA: Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico BorderDavid's Twitter AccountDavid's Official WebsiteTranscript:Chris: [00:00:00] Welcome to the End of Tourism podcast, David. It's an honor to have you on the pod. To begin, I'd like to ask you where you find yourself today and what the world looks like for you there. David: Well, I live in Berkeley, here in California, and I am sitting in front of my computer screen having just what I've been up to today before talking with you. Chris: Hmm. Well, thank you so much for joining us, and thank you for your work. Perhaps I could ask you what drew you to the issues of labor and migration.David: Sure. Well, I come from a kind of left wing union family, so I knew about unions and workers and strikes and things like that from probably since before I can remember. And so I was kind of an activist when I was in high school, got involved in the [00:01:00] student movement in the 1960s at the University of California, got involved in the free speech movement, got tossed out by the university, actually, and wound up going to work after that, really, because I got married, had a daughter, and I got married, had a daughter, and, I needed to get a job and, you know, worked for quite a while as a a printer in the same trade that my father was, had been in went back to night school to learn more of the, of the trade, how to do different parts of it, how to run presses and so forth and then got involved, this is, you know, in the late 60s, early 70s got involved in the movement to support farm workers, really, and I was one of those people, you know, if you're my age, you remember this, if you're younger, you probably don't, but we used to picket supermarkets to try to get them [00:02:00] to stop selling the grapes and the wine and the lettuce that was on strike, and we would stand out in front of Safeway and other supermarkets with our red flags with the black eagle on them, And ask customers, you know, not to go into the store, not to buy the products that farmworkers were on strike against.And I got really interested in. I'm curious about the workers that we were supporting. You know, I grew up in Oakland and so I didn't know anything about farm workers, really. I didn't know anything about rural California, rural areas, didn't speak Spanish didn't know much about Chicano, Latinos.Oakland's a pretty diverse city, but in the area of Oakland where I grew up in you know, in our high school, you know, the students were African American or they were white, and that was a big racial question in, in school when I was in high school. So I grew up not knowing any of these things.[00:03:00] And Because I was involved in, you know, standing out in front of these stores and supporting workers, I, you know, began wondering, who are these workers that we're supporting? And eventually, I went to work for the union. I asked a lawyer friend of mine who was in their legal department if they needed any help, and of course he said yes.I went down to, Oxnard and de Santamaria began working for the union, originally taking statements from workers who had been fired because of their union activity. I didn't know much Spanish, so I had to learn Spanish on the job. Fortunately, you know, the workers were very patient with me and would help me learn, help me correct my still bad pronunciation and bad grammar.And, and I began to learn. And that process has been going on ever since, really. That was a, that was a formative time in my life. It taught me a lot of [00:04:00] things. It taught me about, you know, the culture of. farm workers who were mostly Mexican in those years, but there were still a good number of Filipino workers working in the fields.That eventually led me to the woman I eventually married, my wife, who was the daughter of of immigrants from the Philippines from a farm worker family. So I learned about that culture and I began learning about immigration, which I hadn't really known anything about growing up. Why people come to the U.S., what happens to people here. I, I saw my first immigration raid. When I was an organizer, I later became an organizer for the union as my Spanish got better. And I remember going to talk to a group of workers that I had met with the previous night, who were worked up in palm trees picking dates.And I went down to the date grove, this was in the Coachella Valley, and there was this big green van, and there were the [00:05:00] workers who I'd been talking to the previous night being loaded into the van. I was just You know, really shocked. The van took off. I followed the van all the way down to the Imperial Valley, to El Centro, where the detention center was.Stood outside the center trying to figure out what the hell is going on here. What am I going to do? What's going to happen to these people? And that was sort of an introduction to the meaning of being undocumented, what it meant to people, what could happen. And that made me an immigrant rights activist, which I've also been ever since, too.But also, over time, I got interested in the reasons why people were coming to the U. S. to begin with. You know, what people were finding here when people got here was very, very difficult work, low pay, immigration raids, police harassment, at least, and sometimes worse than that, poverty. You know, Why leave Mexico if this is what you're going to find?[00:06:00] And it also made me curious about the border. And so that also began something that has continued on in all those years since. I eventually went to the border, went to Mexico, began getting interested and involved in Mexican labor politics, supporting unions and workers in Mexico, you know, doing work on the border itself.After the Farm Workers Union, I worked for other unions for A number of years and they were generally reunions where the workers who were trying to join and we were trying to help were immigrants. So the government workers union, the women in the sweatshops sewing clothes or union for factory workers.And so my job was basically to help workers organize and. Organizing a union in the United States is like well, you know, people throw around this word, you know, this phrase class war and class warfare pretty freely, but it is like a war. You know, when [00:07:00] workers get together and they decide they want to change conditions and they want to you know, get the company to, speak to them and to deal with them in an organized way.They really do have to kind of go, go to war or be willing to, for the company to go to war with them. You know, really what people are asking for sometimes is pretty minimal, you know, wage raises or fair treatment at work or a voice at work. You know, you think, you know, what's wrong with that. But generally speaking when employers get faced with workers who want to do that they do everything possible to try and stop them.Including firing people and harassing people, calling them to meetings, threatening people, scaring people. You know, there's a whole industry in this country that consists of union consultants who do nothing but, you know, advise big companies about how to stop workers when they, when they try to organize.So that's what I did for about 20 years. Was help workers to get organized, form a union, get their bus to sit down and talk [00:08:00] to them, go out on strike, do all those kinds of things. And eventually I decided that I wanted to do something else. And I, I was already involved in, you know, starting to take photographs.I would carry a camera and I would take pictures of what we were doing as workers. We would joke about it, kind of. I would tell workers, well, you know, we're going to take some pictures here and you can take them home to your family and show them, you know, that you're really doing what's right here and 20 years from now you'll show your grandkids that, you know, when the time came, you stood up and you did what was right and people would joke with each other about it.And I discovered also that you could use them to get support for what we were doing. You know, we could get an article published in a newspaper somewhere. Some labor newspaper might run an article about us. You might get some money and some help or some food or something. But after a while, you know, I began [00:09:00] realizing that these photographs, they had a value beyond that.And that was that they were documenting this social movement that was taking place among immigrants and, and Latino workers, especially here on the West Coast of people basically trying to. Organize themselves for social justice in a lot of different ways, organizing unions for sure, but also trying to get changes in U.S. immigration laws, immigration policies those people who are citizens and able to vote, registering to vote, political change. You have to remember that if you go back to the 1960s or 1970s, Los Angeles was what we used to call the capital of the open shop. In other words, it was one of the most right wing cities in America.You know, the mayor Sam Yorty was a right wing Republican. The police department had what they called the Red Squad, whose responsibility it was is to go out and to deal with [00:10:00] people that wanted to change anything or to organize and Unions or strikes or belong to left wing political parties or whatever.And today, Los Angeles is one of the most progressive cities in the United States, and it has to do with what happened to those primarily Central American and Mexican and workers of color, women, who over time got organized and changed the politics of Los Angeles. And so, you know, I was really fascinated by it.This process, I was involved in it as an organizer and then later as a somebody taking photographs of it and writing about it that and so that's, that's sort of the transition that I made for the last 30 some odd years. I've worked as a freelance writer and photographer, basically doing the same kind of thing.I look at it as a way of organizing people, really, because the whole purpose of writing the articles and taking the [00:11:00] photographs is to change the way people think, and make it possible for people to understand the world better, and then to act on that understanding, which to me means trying to fight for a more just world, a more just society.And so. That's what, that's the purpose of the photographs, that's the purpose of the writing, is to, is to change the world. I think it's a big tradition in, in this country, in the United States of photography and of journalism that is produced by people who are themselves part of the movements that they are writing about or documenting, and whose purpose it is to sort of help to move forward social movements for social change.Chris: Amen. Some of the stories you were mentioning remind me of my mother who also worked for a labor union most of her life. And I was definitely still very much concerned with the state of affairs. I should [00:12:00] say that you know, I'm incredibly grateful as well to have a man of your stature and experience on the pod here to speak with us your work Has definitely opened my eyes to a lot of things I hadn't seen living here in southern Mexico, in, in Oaxaca.And one of these, these books, which I'd like to touch on a little bit today, is entitled, The Right to Stay Home. how U. S. policy drives Mexican migration. And we're actually at the 10 year anniversary of the publication of this book. So I feel honored to be able to speak with you in this regard about it.And, you know, it's, for me, someone who was a backpacker and a tourist, and then later a resident of this place, of Oaxaca, to come to understand much more deeply the complexities and nuances around migration, and especially in the context of Mexican migration to the United States. [00:13:00] What's left out of the conversation as someone who grew up in urban North America and Toronto, Canada very much on the left in my earlier years, in terms of organizing and, and and protesting, the, the, the dialogues and the conversations always seem to be around the the treatment of migrants once they arrived and, and not necessarily, as you said, why they left in the first place, the places that they left and the consequences to the places that they left.And so I guess to begin, I'm wondering if you could offer our listeners a little bit of background into How that book came to be written and what was the inspiration and driving factors for it? David: The book came to be written to begin with because I began going to Mexico and trying to understand how [00:14:00] the system of migration works in the context of the world that we live in, you know, people call it globalization or globalism, or you could call it imperialism.So I was trying to understand that from the roots of first having been involved with people as migrants once they had arrived here in the U. S. I was trying to understand Well, two things. One was why people were coming, and also what happens to people in the course of coming. In other words, the journey that people make.Especially the border. The border is the big And the border has very important functions in this because it's really the crossing of the border that determines what the social status of a migrant is, whether you have papers or not, whether you're documented or not, which is a huge, [00:15:00] huge, huge distinction.So as a result of that, and as a result of kind of listening to people listening to the movement in Mexico talk, about it, investigating, going to places like Oaxaca. I first wrote a book that tried to look at this as a system, a social system. It's really part of the way capitalism functions on a international or global basis in our era because what it does is it produces Displacement, the changes that are, you take a country like Mexico, and this is what the first book, the first book was called Illegal People.And what it looked at was the imposition on Mexico, for instance, it starts with NAFTA, the free trade agreement. In fact, the first book I ever wrote was about the border and was called The Children of NAFTA, the [00:16:00] North American Free Trade Agreement. But this book Illegal People, what it really tried to do is it tried to look at the ways in which People were displaced in communities like Oaxaca.And of course, for Oaxaca, Oaxaca is a corn growing state. It's a rural state. Most people in Oaxaca still live in villages and small communities. Oaxaca's a big city, and there's some other cities there, but, but most people in Oaxaca are still what you call rural people. And so NAFTA, among the many changes that it imposed on Mexico, one of the most important was that it allowed U. S. corn corporations, Archer Daniels Midland Continental Grain Company other really large corporations to dump corn in Mexico at a price that we were subsidizing through the U. S. Farm Bill, our tax money. In other words, we're, our tax money was being [00:17:00] given to these corporations to lower their cost of production.And that allowed them to go to Mexico and to sell corn at a price that was so low that people who were growing corn in a place like Oaxaca could no longer sell it for a price that would cover the cost of growing it. That had an enormous impact on people in Oaxaca because what it did was it forced people to basically to leave in order to survive.It's not that people were not leaving Oaxaca already before the agreement passed. There were other reasons that were causing the displacement of people in rural communities in Oaxaca. A lot of it had to do with this relationship with the U. S. even then, but certainly NAFTA was like pouring gasoline on all of that.And so three million people was the estimate that in a period of 10 years were displaced as corn farmers in Oaxaca. That's a huge percentage of the population of Oaxaca. [00:18:00] And so people were forced to go elsewhere looking for work. People went, you know, to Mexico City. You know, Mexico City, the metro system, the subway system in Mexico City was built primarily by workers who came from somewhere else.A lot of them from Oaxaca. Who wound up being the low cost labor that the Mexican government used to build a subway system. They went to the border, they became workers in the maquiladoras, in the factories that were producing everything from car parts to TV screens for the U. S. market. And then people began crossing the border and coming to the U.S. as either farm workers in rural areas of California or as low paid workers in urban areas like Los Angeles. So one of the big ironies, I think, of it was that here you had farm work, farmers who were being forced off their land. And remember that these are corn farmers, so [00:19:00] the Domestication of corn happened first in Oaxaca, and the first earliest years of domesticated corn, thousands of years old, have been discovered in archaeological digs in Oaxaca and caves near Oaxaca City to begin with.So here we have people to whom the world really owes corn as a domesticated crop, who are winding up as being wage workers on the farms of corporate U. S. agribusiness corporations in California, Oregon, Washington, eventually all over the United States. That was the migration of Oaxacan people. And so you could sort of see In this, as sort of a prism, what the forces were, what the social forces at work are, in other words, that in the interests of the profits of these big corporations, these trade agreements get negotiated between [00:20:00] governments, okay, our government, the U.S. government negotiates with the Mexican government, but that's like David negotiating with Goliath, or the other way around, rather, you know, The agreements are really imposed. It's not to say that the Mexican government of those years was opposed to it. It was a neoliberal government too, but the power in this negotiation is held by the U.S. government. And so that trade agreement in the interest of making Mexico a profitable place for, you know, Archer Daniels Middleton to do business gets imposed on Mexico. And then as a result of that, people get displaced and they wind up becoming a low wage workforce for other corporations here in here in the U.S. In fact, sometimes they Wind up working for the same corporation Smithfield foods, which is a big producing corporation [00:21:00] went to Mexico. It got control of huge areas of a valley called the Peralta Valley, not that far from Mexico city. And they began. Establishing these huge pork or pig raising facilities.In fact, that's where the swine flu started was because of the concentration of animals in these farms. Again, displacing people out of those communities. And people from the state of Veracruz, where the Perote Valley is located, many of them wound up getting recruited and then going to work in North Carolina at the huge Smithfield Foods Pork Slaughterhouse in Tar Heel, North Carolina.So that sort of tells you a lot about how this system works. It produces displacement. In other words, it produces people who have no alternative but to migrate in order to survive. And those people go through all the things that people have to go through in order to get to the United [00:22:00] States because there are no real visas for this kind of migration.And them wind up being The workforce that is needed by the system here, Smithfield Foods or other corporations like them in order for them to make high profits here. And in the process of doing this, I was developing a a relationship with a very unique organization in Mexico, in Oaxaca, a part of which exists in Oaxaca, called the Frente Indígena de Organizaciones Binacionales, which is the Binational Front of Indigenous Organizations.And this is an organization that was actually started by Oaxaca migrants in the U. S., in Los Angeles, and then expanded both into the Central Valley here in California and then expanded back into Mexico in Baja, California, where there are also big corporate farms where primarily Oaxaca, people from Oaxaca are the workforce, and eventually chapters in Oaxaca itself.[00:23:00] And so I would got to be friends with many people in this organization, and I would go and take photographs at their bi national meetings, they would have meetings in Mexico where people could come together and and talk about their situation. And, you know, I began, obviously, listening to what people were talking about.And, People developed this, I think, very kind of path breaking, unique analysis of migration in which they talked about a dual set of rights that migrants need and migrant communities need in this kind of world. And so, What they said was, on the one hand people need rights as migrants where they go.In other words, people, when they come to the United States, need legal status. People need decent wages, the ability to organize, you know, an end to the kind of discrimination that people are subject to. But, [00:24:00] people also need a second set of rights as well, which is called the right to stay home. And that is the title of the book, The Right to Stay Home.And what that means is that, People need political change and economic and social change in their communities of origin, which makes migration voluntary. So these are communities that are so involved in the process of migration that it would not make any sense to say that migration is bad, because In many cases, these are communities that live on the remittances that are being sent by migrants, by members of people's own families who are living and working in the United States.So the discourse in these meetings was sort of on the order of saying that people have the right to migrate, people have the right to travel, people have the right to leave, but they also have the right to stay home. They have the right to a decent future. A young [00:25:00] person who is growing up in Santiago, Cusco, Oaxaca in the Mixteca region of Oaxaca, for instance, has a right to a future in Oaxaca so that you can make a choice.Do you want to stay and have a decent life for yourself in Oaxaca, or do you want to leave and hopefully have a decent life for you and wherever you go, whether Baja California or California or Washington State? So in order to have a Right to stay home. What has to happen? What do people need? It's kind of a no brainer. People need well high farm prices to begin with. They need the ability to raise corn, tomatoes, Whatever crop it is that they need and sell it at a price that is capable of sustaining those families and communities. People need education.They need healthcare, but people also need political change because the Frente Indígena is a political organization. And so it was fighting [00:26:00] against the domination of Oaxaca by the old PRI, the party of the institutionalized revolution, which had been running Mexico for 70 years, trying to find a government that would begin to push for those kinds of social rights.And that was you know, a very important kind of eye opening for me was to hear people talking about the right to stay home, so much so that I said, you know, we need a book about this. So we're not just describing the system itself, how it works, but we are talking about what are people's responses to it?What do people think should happen here? And this was one of the most important developments of it. And it was not just. The people in Oaxaca, the more I did work on trying to investigate it and document it, there's part of the book, and also this was being done in people's [00:27:00] voices, the main voice in the right to stay home belongs to Rufino Dominguez, who was one of the founders of the Frente Indígena, who was my teacher in this, and so at one point they did knock the PRI out of power in Oaxaca and elected a governor, Gabino Cuei, who turned out to be not as good as people had hoped that he would be, but he was not the PRI.And he appointed Rufino, the head of the Oaxacan Institute for Attention to Migrants. So here was Rufino who had, was a left wing radical who spent his whole life opposing the government in Oaxaca, who then joined it for a while until he could no longer stomach what was going on there and had to leave.But. Pushing for that kind of political change in Oaxaca. There's another part of the book that talks about the miners in Cananea near the border with the United States. And their Effort to try to. win justice from this huge corporation that [00:28:00] was basically intent on destroying their union. And when they were forced out on strike, those miners also had to cross the border to Arizona to become workers in Arizona to survive.Again, you know, you see how the system is working here, but they also were talking about what kind of political change has to happen in Mexico for the right to stay home. to become reality. And that movement in Mexico grew strong enough so that, you know, after The Right to Stay Home was published, some years after, since it was, as you said, 10 years ago that Andrés Manuel López Obrador campaigned.He went all around the country speaking in every little tiny village that Mexico has, practically, in the course of four years. And one of the main things he talked about was the right to alternatives to forced migration. And I was there in Mexico City in the Zócalo when he took office. He finally won it.I don't want to go into all the things that had to [00:29:00] happen for Andrés Manuel López Obrador to win an election and become president of Mexico. But in his, in his inaugural speech as he was being sworn in, he talked about, we are going to make Mexico into a place where Mexicans can be happy living, where you don't have to go to the United States in order to survive, and I think you can talk about the, Things that the Mexican government has not been able to accomplish in the last four or five years.But I think one thing is beyond question and that is that that has been the main direction of the policy of the government of Mexico in that period of time because that's what got him elected. was this idea that, as he said, we are going to reject the liberal, neoliberal hypocrisy of the last six administrations in Mexico, meaning no more trade agreements like NAFTA, no [00:30:00] more opening Mexico up to U.S. corporations to come in and make money and as a result of which everybody's going to have to leave, that there had to be some kind of different direction in Mexico. So, in a way, I think that. Maybe that book, The Right to Stay Home, was like a little grain of sand that joined with other little grains of sand like it in helping to move forward that process of political change, because it happened on really on both sides of the border.Gosh, millions and millions of Mexicans who are living in the United States. So the process of political discussion that goes on about the kind of government Mexicans should have happens not just in Mexico, it happens here too. You know, part of Mexico is here on this side of the border. So you know, the book, and the book actually was published in Spanish and in Mexico as well too.So I think that it talked about things that were very important to people. [00:31:00] At the time, and that people are still debating about what has to happen in order for the right to stay home to be a reality. And I think it's something very important for people in this country to listen to and to think about as well, too, because in all the debates about migration that happen in here in the U.SThere's not a lot of attention that's paid to this whole idea of the two sets of rights, what has to happen. You know, certainly, you know, there are people like Trump and the right wing of the Republican Party that just, you know, never going to talk about anything like this. But even among Democrats, even in the Biden administration, you know, it's really too much about how to manage the border, you know, which basically boils down to how many people are we going to detain and deport.Rather than thinking about what kind of [00:32:00] world do we want to live in. Therefore, what kind of places migration going to have in it? ⌘ Chris Christou ⌘ is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Chris: Yeah, I mean, it's, it's it's been fascinating reading and rereading this book in, in, in part to be able to give voice to not just migrants and not just migration issues in the places that people move to or migrate to, but also in the places that they, that they leave behind and the voices of the people that they leave behind.And you know, I think for. Many North Americans, especially those who are first or second generation citizens of those countries of Anglo North America, of Canada and the United States, that these are, these are the stories these are the voices that that maybe they haven't heard of in their own families as well.And so, you know, you started to mention a little bit about this. the kind of superficiality, perhaps, if I'm, if I can say it in that, in those terms, of the [00:33:00] political conversation around migration in the United States, in Canada, and perhaps even in Mexico. And so I'd like to ask you about the reception and perhaps the fallout Once the book was published, and I'm curious how the declaration to the right to stay home or the right to not migrate has altered at all the political or social social landscape in rural Mexico, you know, at least in terms of the people that you know in these places.And also if there was any response, any, any ground shaking movements as a result of the book coming out among activists in the United States. David: Well, I think that the book contributed to an important change. In the immigrant rights movement in the United States here, because, you know, having participated in that movement as an activist [00:34:00] for, gosh, 40 some odd years now, maybe more, Immigration Reform and Control Act in 1986 with the so called amnesty law.Which not only gave amnesty to undocumented people, but also made it illegal for undocumented people to work in the United States after that and started the whole process of the border militarization. In fact, you know, the negative parts of that bill were so bad that many people like myself opposed the bill, even if it had amnesty in it, saying that it was not a this was not a good deal.And I think that over time. You know, history has proven that we were right not that amnesty was unimportant and not worth fighting for, but that the price that we paid turned out to be much higher than people were willing to give it credit for, you know, at the time. But what was also really missing from that debate, for instance, in [00:35:00] those years, was any sense that we had to really deal with and think about the causes of migration and the roots of migration, the displacement.It was really all about the status of people when they were here. You know, should it be legal or illegal for people to work? Should people get papers or should people not get papers? And that was a very limiting Conversation, because what really, what it really meant was that it could not acknowledge the fact that the migration from Mexico is not going to stop.For instance, the, in that, in that bill, the, the qualifying date for amnesty was January 1st, 1982, meaning. That if you came before that date, you could apply for the amnesty and get legalization, and if you came after that date, you couldn't get it. For people migrating from [00:36:00] Oaxaca, for instance, almost everybody came after.So all the Oaxacans who came to the United States, hundreds of thousands of people, millions of people really hardly anybody. Qualified for amnesty because of that bill, which is one reason why legal status is such an enormous question for the Oaxacan community here in the U. S. So it, the, the discussion of that bill didn't acknowledge that and also by setting that date, it was, I think, very cynical because Mexico had what was called the Peso Shock in 1982, where the economic crisis in Mexico got so bad that Mexico had to devalue its currency.And what that meant was that thousands, hundreds of thousands of people in Mexico lost their jobs and had to come to the United States. And by setting that date, January 1st of that year, what you were really saying is, none of those people are going to qualify for amnesty. So they were [00:37:00] already here. But also it didn't acknowledge that, you know, in the, that, that bill set up a a commission to study the causes of migration, supposedly.And that commission came back and recommended the negotiation of a trade agreement between the U. S. and Mexico. And it said, well, in the short run, maybe this would result in the displacement of a lot of people, but in the long run, it would lead to the economic development of Mexico, and then people would have jobs and they wouldn't have to come here.Well, that was another very, very cynical kind of thing, because the negotiations of NAFTA started not long after the report of that commission, and in fact, NAFTA did lead to the displacement of millions of people in Mexico. There were four and a half million migrants from Mexico living in the U. S.when NAFTA went into effect and by 2010 it was [00:38:00] 12 and a half million people. So an enormous increase in people and the rise in Mexican living standards. Never happened. Well, that's not true. When López Obrador finally came into office he began taking measures to raise wages and raise the living standards in Mexico, which previous administrations had resisted bitterly because they wanted to attract investment.And things have started to improve economically for workers and farmers in Mexico a little bit. But up until then, so being unable to face the roots of migration and its connections to corporate America and the way our government was on the one hand producing migration or doing things to produce migration on the other hand making The status of migrants, illegal criminalizing it here.It was a really, a very difficult debate for people in [00:39:00] the immigrant rights movement. As a result, a lot of organizations said, well, MSD, we need MSD. Let's just forget about a lot of other stuff. Let's just get down to seat on what we paid a really bad price for it. Today I think there is a lot more discussion in the immigrant rights movement about what happens in Mexico and Central America in particular that causes people to come to the United States.I think still there's not enough of a willingness to deal with the economic part of it. the poverty. So these days, the way it gets dealt with is mostly by talking about the violence in Honduras. For instance, San Pedro Sula, which is called the murder capital of the world. You know, I wrote a whole article about how did San Pedro Sula become such a violent place to begin with?And what did it have to do with U. [00:40:00] S. companies going and growing bananas in Honduras? But in any case it gets put down, I think too much to violence, to the exclusion of the causes of the violence. What is the, what is the root cause of violence in Central American countries? The Civil War in El Salvador was fought about who was fighting on what side, what kind of changes were people proposing.The more you unpeel it, the more you look at it, the more you see that this is really, again, about the economic and political relationship between the U. S. and China. Those countries. And so I think that books like Illegal People, like The Right to Stay Home, played a role in trying to get us to look more at this as a whole system, what produces migration, and then criminalizes migrants here.I think that it's a very [00:41:00] limited accomplishment. Because we still have an extremely unjust immigration system. You know, we all hated Trump and the detention centers and, and his racist orders. But the reality is, is that we have more people crossing the border this last year than any other previous time in our history.And we have thousands and thousands of people living in detention. In the United States in detention centers and in detention centers on the Mexican side of the border. And this is under a democratic administration. So, I think that we have to be real about how limited our impact has been up to now.But, having said that, I think it is still a big advance for us to be able to talk. in this country, in the United States, about the roots of migration, and also be able to reach out to organizations and people and communities in Mexico and talk about, well, [00:42:00] okay, what is our, what should our relationship be?Well, how do we work together? How are we going to be able to try and change this system together? I think those efforts are kind of only starting, really. I don't think there's nearly enough of it, but I think that's the future. That's where the change is going to come from. Chris: And I can't stress enough, you know, how devoid of complexity and nuance most any political conversation has these days, and that most people don't go looking for it, in part because You know, most people haven't been taught.So, you mentioned a little bit earlier, as you wrote in, in your book, The Right to Stay Home, about the consequences of mining companies, as an example, in, in Mexico. Foreign owned mining corporations. And Here in Oaxaca, it's very well known that these corporations undertake geological testing without the [00:43:00] consent of communities, that they lie to the communities about concessions when trying to push their way into the territory, and then sponsor community violence by dividing the people against each other through bribery, corruption.Intimidation, threats, and sometimes assassination. And so, I'm curious, first, if you could offer a little bit more of what you've seen in this regard, and secondly, why do you think that in this example that, you know, Canadians, in the context of the one particular mine here in the Central Valleys of Oaxaca, is a Canadian owned mine, why they have no idea that this is happening on foreign soil in their names?You David: know, I wrote a long article about San Jose del Progreso in the Vice Centrales in, in Oaxaca, and Fortuna Mine there, which is a Canadian, Canadian company. And I think this is [00:44:00] another way of seeing what this kind of, just to use shorthand, this free trade arrangement between the US, Canada and Mexico, what it really means for people on the ground.Mexico in previous administrations changed this mining law so that it became possible. And the purpose of to make it possible for foreign corporation to get a mining concession anywhere in Mexico and develop a mine without having to get the consent of the people who live in the community around it.Basically saying that, you know the Mexican government was entitled to sell off these concessions regardless of what the people there thought about it. And so the purpose of this was to, again, attract foreign investment into Mexico. This is part of the neoliberal policy that says [00:45:00] that the economic development policy of Mexico should be to sell pieces of Mexico to foreign investors, to foreign corporations.And supposedly this money is going to make life better. For people in Mexico well, first of all, it's a very corrupt system, so the selling of mining concessions involves, you know, millions and millions of dollars that wind up in the pockets of those people who grant the concessions. So it was a source of enormous corruption in the Mexican government in granting those concessions and in passing that change in the law to begin with.And then in fighting for changes in the legal system, the free trade set up, those mining corporations could then, basically, it gave them not only a kind of impunity against communities that protested about it, but in which they could even sue the Mexican government. If the Mexican government tried to stand in the way and say, well, you [00:46:00] can't develop the mine, then the mine could sue the Mexican government and say, well, you deprived us of potential profits and you owe us millions of dollars.And there were decisions like the metal cloud decision that allowed for this kind of thing to happen. So what this meant is on the ground, you have mining mining concessions sold and mines being developed all over Mexico. In the face of local opposition, and the mine in San Jose de Progreso is a really good example of that, where you have a Canadian company that comes in and says, okay, we are going to, in fact, they weren't the originators of the mine, they basically bought a mine that had been played out by previous owner.And so we are going to dump a lot of money into this and we are going to make it a producing mine and the impact on the community. We don't really care. And so the impact is really enormous. You know these are open pit mines. They're a scar on the land. They [00:47:00] contaminate the water, the aquifer, so that these farming communities can no longer support themselves in the same way.In order to develop the mine, what they do is they divide the communities. And so, as you said, in San Jose de Progreso, they bought off the town's, the town's government who basically gave the company permission to do whatever it wanted to in spite of local opposition. Then when local opposition got organized to, to oppose it, the company cooperated with the with the local leaders that it had bought off to basically go after those leaders in a very violent way.So, Bernardo Vazquez. who had was from this community. He had actually gone to the United States and become a farm worker in Petaluma, in California. And then seeing what was happening in his community, went back to San Jose de [00:48:00] Progreso and to and began leading the opposition. And he was then ambushed and assassinated.Other people in his, around him were also killed, and then the violence went both ways. People on the other side got killed. And so this whole community became a warring camp, camps against each other. You know, I remember when I visited there, there are two taxi companies in this community. There's a taxi company that's associated with the People who are pro mine and the taxi company is associated with people who are against it.And you better not get into the wrong taxi because you could, some terrible things could happen to you. I took pictures of these threats that were spray painted on the walls of, some of the irrigation canals there, Bernardo Vasquez, your time has come, you know that was before he was assassinated.A lot of the people who work in the mine come from somewhere else, some of them from Canada[00:49:00] but it takes a few of the jobs in hand somehow. to certain people in the community there as a way of buying them off and giving them a stake in the continuation of the mine. And so what happens is that you have a community that's a continuing, a continuous war with itself.And this happens all over Mexico. In fact, it's not just Mexico, this is happening in El Salvador, it's happening in Guatemala, and actually mostly by Canadian companies. So you ask, do people in Canada know about this? I think there are some journalists like Dawn Bailey who have Canadian journalists who have tried to write about it, and tried to make people in Canada aware of it.I don't think that most people in Canada have the faintest idea of what those corporations are doing, and that's because I think the corporate media in Canada has very little interest in showing that, partly because, you know, they have the same basic set of economic interests that the mining corporations themselves do.[00:50:00] Probably share, same shareholders, who knows? In any case That's something that could happen and that should happen if people in Canada became more aware of what these companies were doing and then began taking action in Canada to try to restrict them. I think it would have a big impact on the ability of these communities in Oaxaca to survive.I think that San Jose the Progresso is going to be a war with itself and this continuing political violence is going to happen. Until the company, basically until the company leaves, really. I don't see any other solution, I don't see how the mine can continue operating there under any ownership and not have this war taking place there.So, but I think that the way to get that company to leave is for people in Canada to take some action in cooperation and in solidarity with the people in that [00:51:00] community. So, maybe by Organizing delegations from Vancouver or Toronto down to San Jose del Progreso would be a way of helping that to develop.That's possibly something that might happen, but basically you need that relationship in order, I think, in order to stop this from happening. Chris: Hmm. Thank you. Yeah, and you know, of course it just ends up contributing to migration, right, and exile, displacement within those communities. And and so I'm curious, what do you think the right to stay home or the right to not migrate can offer us as modern people, as citizens or migrants in the context of the current crises and perhaps the crises to come?You know, you mentioned that Immigration the numbers, the number of people coming into the United States over the last year has just been unprecedented. The number of migrants [00:52:00] flowing through Oaxaca, for example, in Southern Mexico right now is unprecedented and it really seems, you know, like.not just my opinion, but in terms of statistics and predictions and all of these things, that it's only going to get more unprecedented. So I'm curious what you might, what you might think that this, this declaration, the right to stay home or the right to not migrate, might offer us going forward. David: Well, I think it offers us something to fight for.That it gives us a vision of what a future could and should look like in the communities where displacement is taking place. In San Jose de Progreso, for instance, the right to stay home means a community that's not at war with itself, which means that the mining operation has to end. But, Ending the mining operation doesn't necessarily mean that people are [00:53:00] going to have an educational system or a health care system that's capable of meeting their needs.So you need political change in Oaxaca, San Jose de Progreso, and Mexico in general, that is able to deliver those things. For people. I think we could take that same thing and and look at people coming from Venezuela. There are a lot of Venezuelan migrants who are crossing Mexico coming to the U.S. border. On the one hand, the U. S. government is sort of a little bit more friendly. to Venezuelan migrants, although it's still doing whatever it can at the border to try to keep people out. Because, you know, this gets used in the media in the U. S. as a way of saying, well, this is the proof that the socialist government in Venezuela is incompetent and corrupt and ought to be removed, which has been U.S. policy for a long time. But in reality, the economic problems in [00:54:00] Venezuela would certainly be a lot less if Venezuela wasn't subject to the U. S. sanctions regime, which is basically sought to strangle the Venezuelan economy. And so the people who are leaving Venezuela, whether they're middle class people who are, you know, fed up with the problems of Caracas or whether they're poor people who have you know, have to migrate in order to survive those are due to U.S. policy again. So really, the right to stay home means in the United States that people in the United States, progressive people especially, have to seriously take a look at what the impact of U. S. policies are on the people that are being subjected to them, and to begin with, cause no harm.That would be a good starting place to stop those policies that are actively producing migration. You know, the people who drowned in the Mediterranean, those 600 people who [00:55:00] drowned in that horrible boating accident, who were they? A lot of them were Afghans. A lot of them were Iraqis. Why were they leaving?What were they doing on that boat? They were the product of that U. S. war. Now, I was a very active, you know, opponent of, of the war. I went to Iraq twice to try to make connections with trade unionists and other people in Iraq who were trying to fight for kind of a progressive nationalist solution to the economic problems of Iraq in the wake of the occupation to end the occupation.But you know, that's kind of what we need. We need to take responsibility for the impact of what this government has done. When we take a look at what the, what is going to happen to the people of Palestine and Gaza, [00:56:00] Under the bombardment, you know, if people were able to leave Gaza, there would be literally hundreds of thousands of people going wherever they could.And the Middle East simply in order to get out from under the Israeli bombs. And those bombs are coming from where? They're coming from the United States, that military aid package. You know, you cannot have a military policy and a military aid package the way the U. S. passes them without its having enormous impacts on migration, on the displacement of people, and at the same time it also Produces impacts here in the U.S. that we also need to take a look at and see what the relationship are. You know, people migrate in the U. S. as well, too. We have factories to close when Detroit stopped being an [00:57:00] auto manufacturing center and the Factories in Detroit closed, the car factories, thousands and thousands and thousands of auto workers became migrants in the U.S., going from city to city to city, looking for. So the price of the economic crisis that exists for us isn't felt just by people in Mexico or Palestine or Iraq. It's felt here in the United States and in Canada too. These problems They require a political solution, you know, they require us to organize ourselves in a way that is strong enough to force political change on our government here, so that it takes responsibility for the past devastation.And the past displacement and also stops doing the things that are going to keep on causing it in the future. And then I think we can think about kind of repairing the world. I think we have to repair the world, too, after this. But the first thing we have [00:58:00] to do is we have to stop hurting it. We have to stop the damage, and that means having enough political courage and enough political power to make our government do that.That's a tall order. That's a tall order. I don't think it's something from today to tomorrow. But it's a long process. You know, I'm a, I grew up during the anti Vietnam War movement and the civil rights movement, and I saw this country at a time when it was possible and when we did it. So I'm the optimist.I believe that it's within our power to do this. But looking at where we are right now, I think we have a long way to go. And so, you know, if what I do contributes is granito de arena to it, you know, a lo mejor. Chris: Thank you so much, David. Yeah, it's definitely really, really important to hear words such as yours in a time of deep nihilism.[00:59:00] And, and also the absence and I think the disregard of, of Elder Voices in our midst and in our movements. So, I deeply appreciate your willingness to speak with me and, and to our listeners today. And just finally, before we depart, how might our listeners find out more about your work?How might they purchase your books? David: I have a blog and a lot of what I write and the pictures that I take are up there and I put them up there pretty regularly. And so the way to find it is to Google my name, David Bacon, and the blog is called The Reality Check. And so if you Google that together, you'll find it and that's how you can connect.Chris: Thank you so much, David. David: My pleasure. Thank you for having me. Get full access to ⌘ Chris Christou ⌘ at chrischristou.substack.com/subscribe
Roraima é o estado mais ao norte do Brasil, no meio da transição entre a campinarana e a Floresta Amazônica. Um estado cuja história recebeu influências de diferentes culturas ao longo dos séculos – desde as culturas indígenas milenares da região até a rítmica caribenha e os elementos da paisagem natural. Uma das expressões artísticas que mais contribuiu para a construção da identidade roraimense é a música. E dois dos principais artistas participantes dessa construção identitária são Eliakin Rufino e Neuber Uchôa. Nascidos em Boa Vista, ambos são cantores e compositores apaixonados pelo estado. Eliakin e Neuber fazem parte do Trio Roraimeira ao lado do cantor e compositor paraense Zeca Preto. O grupo é responsável pelo surgimento, na década de 1980, do Movimento Cultural Roraimeira, para a construção de uma identidade para o povo de Roraima. Eliakin Rufino e Neuber Uchôa são os primeiros convidados do especial “Pensando a Amazônia pela Música” no LatitudeCast. Ao longo do especial, vamos conversar com músicos e pesquisadores sobre a produção musical na e da Amazônia. Este programa é uma produção da Amazônia Latitude. Para mais informações, acesse http://amazonialatitude.com
Um episódio cheio de curiosidades e detalhes bíblicos sobre o Natal. O mestre e doutorando em bíblia, @joaocluadiorufino, é o convidado desta segunda-feira natalina. Na conversa, muitas perguntas e dúvidas serão esclarecidas sobre o Santo Natal. Manjedoura ou casa? Belém ou Nazaré? Reis magos ou pastores? Carpinteiro ou construtor? Um episódio imperdível.
No PODCAST do MHM de hoje, vamos falar com Lucas Rufino como as emoções afetam seu dinheiro. Como suas amizades e familiares podem afetar sua grana? Como lidar melhor com o seu dinheiro? No PODCAST do MANUAL do HOMEM MODERNO de hoje, Edson Castro fala com Lucas Rufino sobre dinheiro e emoções. Confira. Tudo que falamos com Lucas Rufino sobre dinheiro e investimento: 00:00 - Introdução 02:47 - Uso do emocional e do nosso dinheiro 07:50 - Como amizades e familiares afetam dinheiro 13:28 - Como começar a se organizar financeiramente 18:56 - O banco que eu estou faz diferença? 28:13 - Corretora de investimentos: qual a diferença de uma para outra? 32:26 - Daytrade é o maior erro com investimento? 40:48 - Crescimento do mercado de apostas 44:10 - Como lidar com as variações da SELIC 53:28 - Investir em dólar faz bem? 59:41 - Por que tantas empresas estão fechando no Brasil?
Beguiled by the anti-flatulent properties of Abernethy Biscuits, magazine editor Andy Lyons, writer Harry Pearson and host Daniel Gray discuss International Disappointments, from Pelé's poor predictions to the frustration of Ronny Martens via multiple Denilson stepovers. Magazine Deputy Editor Ffion Thomas previews WSC issue 437, Record Breakers brings us Rio rhythms, and we continue our sprightly feature The Final Third, in which a guest contributes a match, a player and an object to the WSC Museum of Football. Joining Dan as our visiting curator this time is retro football expert and Panini stickers author Greg Lansdowne.Support the showWould you like to hear twice as many podcasts and longer editions of these ones, and support our print magazine? You would? Then join the WSC Supporters' Club! Sign up here: www.patreon.com/whensaturdaycomes
Prepare-se para uma profunda imersão na teologia! Nosso convidado é o Prof. João Cláudio Rufino, mestre em teologia e professor na Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC). Ele é especialista em formação para pregadores e estudos bíblicos. Venha conhecer sua jornada de conversão e receba orientações valiosas sobre como aprofundar seu estudo das Sagradas Escrituras. Uma oportunidade única, não perca!
Neste episódio, os convidados são Jean Paulo Campos, JP Rufino e Debora Olivieri. JP Rufino relembra o dia em que foi brincar com um isqueiro e incendiou as fantasias da mãe. Jean Paulo, uma aventura de quadriciclos durante as gravações de "Carrossel". Já Debora, uma festa de "Chiquititas" em que um dos convidados começou a cometer furtos. Na plateia, a história de João Vitor que formou "quadrilha" com os primos para assaltar os cofrinhos. E a da animadora de festas Nathalia, que cometeu uma gafe num evento.
Hosts: Gus & Rommel Guest: Randall Rufino Production: Jan Wayne Swayze Randall Rufino: https://doodleboogie.com/ https://www.instagram.com/randallrufino/ Sponsored by: The Mochi Donut Shop Daly City https://www.instagram.com/themochidonutshop_dalycity/ Ronaldo Antonio, CPC, REALTOR® https://www.instagram.com/ron2d2/ https://canopyrealtygroup.com/
On this week's episode, host Caryn Antonini is joined by Rufino Rengifo, Area Vice President of Hospitality Strategy at Levy Restaurants. An award-winning chef, Rufino's illustrious culinary career includes a wide variety of well-known restaurants and hospitality establishments around the world, including Merchants Restaurants, Celebrity Cruises and currently, Levy Restaurants, where he runs the entire Food and Beverage operation at Miami-Dade Arena – home of the Miami Heat as well as Marlins Park for Miami Marlins. Rufino has elevated the sports entertainment dining experience by offering a variety of culinary choices in both concessions and premium areas. For more information:@chefrufinohttps://www.levyrestaurants.com/The Cultivated By Caryn Podcast is a presentation of Park City Productions 06604 LLC ###Get great recipes from Caryn at https://carynantonini.com/recipes/
On this week's episode we talk with Christie Ruffino. She shares how she learned the power of telling your story, and the lasting impact it can have on others. Listen today!For more information on Christie visit her websites right here: https://christieruffino.com/ https://overcomingmediocrity.org/Shedule a chat with Donna right here: https://www.ivibrantliving.com/appointment-with-me-2/
Recorded at the Convocation Hall of the University of Alberta, Canada, FROM BRAZILIAN NORTHEAST marks the debut of the solo career of Vladimir Rufino, a violinist born in the state of Paraíba. The album presents works by composers from Rufino's countrymen, in recordings that highlight the importance of chamber music that has been produced in Paraíba, as well as in the Brazilian northeast.Purchase the music (without talk) at:From Brazilian Northwest (classicalmusicdiscoveries.store)Your purchase helps to support our show! Classical Music Discoveries is sponsored by La Musica International Chamber Music Festival and Uber. @CMDHedgecock#ClassicalMusicDiscoveries #KeepClassicalMusicAlive#LaMusicaFestival #CMDGrandOperaCompanyofVenice #CMDParisPhilharmonicinOrléans#CMDGermanOperaCompanyofBerlin#CMDGrandOperaCompanyofBarcelonaSpain#ClassicalMusicLivesOn#Uber Please consider supporting our show, thank you!Donate (classicalmusicdiscoveries.store) staff@classicalmusicdiscoveries.com This album is broadcast with the permission of Bárbara Leu from Azul Music.
Dylan from Alabama asks why Jesse is still in California. Sacramento homeless out of control…; Rufino from Texas says his daughter ignores him and wonders if he should let go. —- Nate from Florida asks if it's ok to feel gratitude.
Hello Family,Thank you for joining today's Rosary prayer. This is day 35 of our 54-day Rosary Novena. Tuesday of the fourth week of Lent.I want to ask for your help to grow our Ministry. If the Holy Spirit leads you to support our Ministry, would you help pay forward on any links listed in the show notes? To access our donation page, you may also go to our website at 54daysofroses.com.You can also pay it forward on our Venmo account. Click Here: Support 54 Days of Roses - Season 6 - 54 days of roses Venmo: @Novena54daysofroses Zelle: prayers@54daysofroses.comFamily , you may also help us grow our Ministry by sharing the podcast with your family and friends. Day 35; Sorrowful Mysteries in ThanksgivingLet us pray the Sorrowful Mysteries in Thanksgiving. Blessed Mother, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, we ask that you intercede for us as we pray to have our hearts opened to the will of God.Blessed Mother, we pray for those seeking employment. We pray for all business owners, our workplaces, employers, and co-workers. We pray for those who are seeking clarity in their vocation and for those seeking spiritual direction. We pray for the vocation of all seminarians and religious.Our Lady, Queen of Peace, we pray for the people of Ukraine and Russia.We pray for the Intentions received by email, Instagram, and Youtube.We pray for the intentions of everyone listening to this rosary prayer.For: Edinah, Margaret, Bill, Kevin, Maria Tita, Rufino, Miguel Alonzo, Justin, and his kids, Abby, Emma, Paris, Lynn, Whitney, Euclid, Martin, Marie, Sebastian, Kat, Silvia, Johnathan, And ValentinaWith love,Maritza Mendez