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Welcome to the opening discussion of this past week's thought-provoking salon on The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Though often labeled a children's book, The Little Prince, translated into over 500 languages and dialects, second only to the Bible, sparked a wide-ranging discussion that revealed its deeper, more political dimensions. In our discussion, Gaslit Nation listeners drew connections between the book's themes and the current tragedy and disinformation war on Gaza, while others reflected on the absurdity of adulthood depicted in the story. Our conversation touched on the divine feminine, the corrupting influence of institutional power, especially within the Catholic Church, and the existential weight behind Saint-Exupéry's deceptively simple prose. We began by exploring the historical context in which the book was written: a time of fractured resistance to fascism, eerily reminiscent of our own era. Just as the French Resistance struggled with internal divisions and the desperate need for leadership, so too does America today, caught between rising authoritarianism and a detached political establishment. Most amazingly, this conversation took place on July 31st: the 81st anniversary of Saint-Exupéry's death during a reconnaissance mission off the coast of Marseille. His little plane crashed into the sea, just two months before the liberation of Paris. UPCOMING BOOK CLUB EVENTS: August – The Lives of Others and I'm Still Here Two films where art challenges dictatorship—from East Germany to Brazil. Book club: August 25 4pm ET September – Harriet, the Moses of Her People by Sarah Hopkins Bradford Harriet Tubman's story, in her own words based on interviews with The General herself. Book club: September 29 4pm ET October – Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky + Total Resistance by H. Von Dach Poetry and guerrilla strategy: tools for survival and defiance. Book club: October 27 4pm ET November – Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer Indigenous wisdom and science for reconnection and gratitude. Book club: November 24 4pm ET December – The Forest Song by Lesya Ukrainka An eco-feminist Ukrainian play that sings of love, rebellion, and resilience. Book club: January 29 Get the full story and support independent journalism! Join our community at Patreon.com/Gaslit to hear the complete discussion and unlock exclusive benefits. As a member, you'll enjoy ad-free episodes of Gaslit Nation, bonus shows, behind-the-scenes content, Q&A sessions, access to our private group chats, invites to live events like our weekly political salons every Monday at 4 PM ET on Zoom, and so much more. Become a patron today at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
Congratulations to friend of the show Deborah Hyde who has been appointed patron of Humanists UK! In TWISH we hear about to unsolved mystery of the disappearance of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry and after that, we dig into the news:IRELAND: Excavation of mass grave of infants in Irish “mother and baby home”INTERNATIONAL: YouTube and Meta seem to finally crack down on political disinformationUKRAINE: Zelensky's new law mandates regular lie detector testsSCOTLAND: Trump caught on tape cheating in golf?DENMARK / INTERNATIONAL: No link between aluminum in vaccines and chronic diseaseUK / INTERNATIONAL: Nominations for the Ockham Awards are now open!Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK and general spreader of disinformation, is demonstrably lying about the crime situation in the UK, and for that he gets this week's award for being Really Wrong.Enjoy!https://theesp.eu/podcast_archive/theesp-ep-490.htmlSegments:0:00:27 Intro0:00:51 Greetings0:14:50 TWISH0:29:34 News1:01:11 Really Wrong1:07:30 Quote1:09:17 Outro1:10:39 Outtakes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We opened with the trailer from Andor, a series that's earned a top spot on the watch list of this week's guest: the fearless Erin Reed, a real-life member of the Rebel Alliance and one of the most essential journalists working today. Erin is the creator of Erin In The Morning, the go-to source for breaking news on LGBTQ+ rights, trans healthcare, and the rising tide of attacks on civil liberties across the country. Her reporting has exposed the truth behind anti-trans legislation, tracked authoritarian policies in real time, and armed millions with the facts they need to fight back. Her courage, clarity, and compassion make Erin one of the most vital voices in the resistance, and we're honored to have her on the show. Want to join the conversation? Come to the Gaslit Nation Salon, live every Monday at 4pm ET. It's a community of listeners, activists, and fellow travelers where we unpack the headlines, share strategies, vent our frustrations, and build a living archive of this moment in history. Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit. Annual memberships are discounted, and your support keeps our show alive. Thank you to everyone who helps make Gaslit Nation possible. Looking for a summer read that pairs rage with laughter? Check out the Gaslit Nation graphic novel, Dictatorship: It's Easier Than You Think! Follow our delightfully shady narrator, Judge Lackey, as he stumbles through a step-by-step guide to seizing and holding power, dodging accountability, and panicking over activists and journalists. Grab it at your local library or at BookShop.org. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
In a world awash with disinformation and fear-based politics, what cuts through the noise isn't perfection; it's authenticity. As Erin Reed, a trailblazing journalist and trans rights advocate, puts it: the most effective leaders and allies are the ones who show up with sincerity, values, and courage. Reed knows this from experience. Alongside her wife, Montana state legislator Zooey Zephyr, they've faced the harshest forms of political repression, from being silenced in state chambers to watching harmful laws passed in the name of "protecting" sports or children. And yet, their fight continues, fueled by love, clarity, and hope. So how can you support the trans community in meaningful ways? Stand Firm in Your Values – Democratic Party leaders especially shouldn't be “Republican-lite” or speak through the filter of 12 consultants. Speak from the heart, like Kentucky's Andy Beshear, who stood up for trans rights and still won big in a deep red state. Educate Yourself and Others – Learn the real facts. Trans athletes aren't “cheating.” They're barely even represented in elite sports. Medical care for trans youth isn't a free-for-all; it's cautious, professional, and consent-driven. And no, no one is performing surgeries in school cafeterias. Be Visible. Be Vocal. – When institutions cave to pressure and erase diversity programs, allies must speak up. Trans people aren't always in the room, but you might be. Build Solidarity – Globally and locally. Anti-trans disinformation spreads across borders. So should our support. Reach out to advocate groups abroad and build an international coalition of support and solidarity. History is watching. As Reed reminds us, this is our civil rights moment. Whether you're an activist, a parent, a lawmaker, or a friend, your genuineness, your voice, and your love can help shape a more just future. All it takes is a spark. The song you heard in this week's Gaslit Nation is “Tear the Fascists Down” by Deena Marie. Check out her music here: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2CuUJiaLhVF4x8WlZGLjRJ If you have a song to share on our show, submit your music to us at Gaslit Nation – we love hearing from you! More info: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1-d_DWNnDQFYUMXueYcX5ZVsA5t2RN09N8PYUQQ8koq0/edit?ts=5fee07f6&gxids=7628 Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit! EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community
John 15:9-17 On this last Sunday of Melissa's pastoral ministry with us at RMC, she spoke from this scripture passage that Jesus shares with his disciples toward the end of his ministry. Unlike clubs and societies, the foundation of our friendship as the church isn't a shared interest, but a shared good. Friends pursue the good together. And with Christ at our center, the church creates space for those who are vastly different to find out what the good is, and to go after it. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry said it this way: "Love doesn't consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward in the same direction." In the friendship of the church we don't look at each other, but we… stand side by side, so that we're all looking where we're going next. Church is the kind of friendship that says, "I actually think we all need to look at this thing happening here, in this direction and figure out where the path is to get there." We can discern together when God is calling us towards needs that have been overlooked. When there is something that we need to work out in order to find out where we're going together. We learn to pay attention to people who have been ignored or overlooked. We gather on streets to protest wars and to speak against genocide, to raise our voices for our church members, because our first loyalty is to Jesus, in whom there is no violence and no vengeance, and no hatred. We care for one another because when we do we see the face of God.
We opened with “Papaoutai” by Belgian artist Stromae, a powerful performer who inspires this week's guest, Jamila Raqib. She once saw him live in an unforgettable setting: the ancient Roman ruins of Carthage, Tunisia. Jamila Raqib is a powerhouse for peace and democracy. As Executive Director of the Albert Einstein Institution, she has spent years training people across the globe in militant nonviolent resistance. Her work fuels the kind of courage that topples dictators and changes the course of history. She trained under legendary activist Gene Sharp whose book From Dictatorship to Democracy the Gaslit Nation Book Club read back in March, brought the fight for freedom to the frontlines, and she's just getting started. Want more bold conversations like this? Join the Gaslit Nation Salon, live every Monday at 4pm ET. Meet fellow listeners, unpack the news, share strategies, vent, and build a real-time record of this moment in history. Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit. Annual memberships are discounted, and you can even give the gift of membership. If you're packing for the beach or hiding from the heat, take along a little inspiration. Dictatorship: It's Easier Than You Think! is our graphic novel starring the delightfully dodgy Judge Lackey. He'll walk you through the do's and don'ts of becoming a dictator and staying one, all while trying to outwit the pesky activists and journalists out to ruin his grip on power.Grab your copy at your local library or at Bookshop.org. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
They want us to believe that silence is strength. That if we keep our heads down, the storm will pass. But we are the storm. And our storm doesn't need fists. It needs strategy, courage, and the fire of militant nonviolence. In the latest episode of Gaslit Nation, Jamila Raqib, the executive director of the Albert Einstein Institution, delivers a masterclass in radical defiance without a single weapon raised. Raqib doesn't just talk resistance. She teaches the art of war, the nonviolent kind, built on discipline, planning, and unshakeable conviction. She carries forward the torch of Gene Sharp, the quiet revolutionary whose writings, like From Dictatorship to Democracy, which the Gaslit Nation Book Club read in March, have armed movements from Serbia to Syria. His ideas are dangerous, not because they incite chaos, but because they illuminate how to take power back without bloodshed. And dictators fear that more than any rifle. This is militant nonviolence. It's strategic. It's disruptive. And when practiced with precision, it brings regimes to their knees. Blueprint for the Battle Ahead Raqib outlines a crucial truth: power is not monolithic. It comes from the obedience of people, workers, civil servants, police, students. Withdraw that obedience, and even the strongest tyrant collapses. Take Serbia. Take Bangladesh. The world keeps giving us proof that nonviolent action isn't weak; it's lethal to authoritarianism when wielded with discipline. These movements succeeded not because they were polite, but because they were strategic. Organized. Defiant. This is how repression backfires. Every crackdown becomes fuel. Every jail cell, every bullet, every propaganda campaign becomes a rallying cry, if activists know how to use it. Weapons of the Peaceful Warrior Raqib reminds us that art is a weapon. Culture is armor. Community is infrastructure. And technology is a battlefield. Whether it empowers or undermines you depends on how well you understand it. Movements rise and fall on logistics, not just slogans. Fear will always be there. That's normal. But as Raqib insists, fear doesn't mean stop. It means go smart. Fear is a compass, if it scares the regime, you're probably doing something right. Nonviolence is Not Passive. It's Precision. This conversation isn't about kumbaya. It's about battle-readiness. It's about studying the terrain of power, exploiting the cracks, and toppling giants with the slow, grinding force of disciplined resistance. Nonviolence doesn't mean surrender. It means refusing to give your enemy the war they want. It means winning on your terms. And in a time of rising fascism, digital surveillance, and global despair, we must turn to the tools that have worked, again and again. So study Gene Sharp. Listen to Raqib. Organize like your life depends on it, because it does. This is not the time for feel-good hashtags. This is the time for public education, mass mobilization, and strategic action. Nonviolent resistance is not soft. It's the hardest fight there is. But it's the one that wins. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
Welcome friends! Today Kate, Sheila, and the boys dive into a classic from 1943, The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. As a child the narrator drew two pictures that received heavy criticism from adults. So he became a pilot instead of an artist. When his plane crashed as he was flying over the Sierra Desert the pilot meets the little prince. As Titus pointed out, the telling of this story gives the reader the child's viewpoint (Little Prince) and the adult's from the pilot's point of view simultaneously. The Prince lives on a small asteroid, B-612, where he takes care of his rose and 3 volcanoes and pulls up baobabs before they take a hold and become unmanageable. “It is a question of discipline.”We uncovered a plethora of powerful quotes! Here's a few:“Well, I must endure the presence of a few caterpillars if I wish to become acquainted with the butterflies.”“Words are the source of misunderstandings.”“It is much more difficult to judge oneself than to judge others. If you succeed in judging yourself rightly, then you are indeed a man of true wisdom.“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”Little Prince: What do you mean tame? Fox: It means to establish ties. If you tame me then we shall need each other. To me, you will be unique in the world. To you, I shall be unique.This book had an unexpected ending and a lot of life lessons. Maybe because it was written during WWII or maybe it was written back when people pondered more. This story has many layers.Won't you join us and meet The Little Prince? Blessings dear friends! For more book information check out our website at https://recapbookchat.com/page/2/
We opened with the legendary James Baldwin, because this week, we're passing the mic to someone walking boldly in Baldwin's footsteps: Amber Wallin, Executive Director of the State Revenue Alliance and a fearless fighter for tax justice, equity, and economic power from the ground up. Whether she's calling out lawmakers, organizing communities, or reshaping policy, Amber is part of a new generation of leaders who refuse to back down. Here she shares the thinkers, art, and music that inspires her in the fight as she takes the Gaslit Nation Self-Care Q&A. Because self-care is an act of resistance. Want more fierce, unfiltered conversations like this? Join the Gaslit Nation Salon, live every Monday at 4pm ET. It's our weekly dose of truth, strategy, and righteous rage with listeners from around the world. Sign up now at Patreon.com/Gaslit. Annual memberships are discounted, and your support keeps us going. Hitting the beach or binging podcasts from the couch this summer? Take along our graphic novel: Dictatorship: It's Easier Than You Think! Follow our corrupt narrator, Judge Lackey, as he bungles his way through authoritarianism, dodging activists and desperately clinging to power.Grab it at your local library or at BookShop.org. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
We are told that if we tax the rich, that jobs will disappear. That prosperity will dry up. But the numbers tell a different story. In the latest Gaslit Nation, Amber Wallin, executive director of the State Revenue Alliance, joins Andrea to expose the lie at the heart of our economic system. The rich are not fleeing. They are flourishing. And when we make them pay their fair share, everyone flourishes. Wallin comes armed with data and clarity. She dismantles the disinformation that has allowed the ultra-wealthy to hoard billions while public schools crumble and hospitals close. States that tax high-income earners are not bleeding millionaires. They are gaining revenue and creating more millionaires. They are investing in their people. They are proving what we already know deep down: we can tax the rich and build a society that works for everyone. The Battle Behind the Budget For decades, tax policy in America has been a weapon wielded against working people. It has been shaped by lobbyists, shielded by myths, and sold to the public as necessary sacrifice. But history shows us something else. It shows how tax codes have been intentionally designed to protect wealth at the top and starve communities at the bottom. Wallin makes it clear. We are not fighting numbers. We are fighting a system that tells us scarcity is natural while billionaires pay less in taxes than teachers. Tax Justice Is Democracy in Action Economic inequality is a threat to democracy. When wealth concentrates, power concentrates. And when power concentrates, freedom erodes. That is why taxing the rich is not a fringe idea. It is a democratic emergency. Wallin also emphasizes something often ignored in these conversations: gender equity. Women, especially women of color, are hit hardest by unfair tax systems. Correcting that is not just about fairness. It is about building systems that's humane. No One Is Coming to Save Us. We Are the Movement. This conversation is a call to action. States hold tremendous power to reshape the economy. Community organizing, public pressure, and clear messaging can push forward tax reforms that fund schools, roads, housing, and healthcare. Essential services are not luxuries. They are rights. And the money to pay for them exists. The only question is whether we have the courage to demand it. Wallin says it best: free markets are not free. They are designed by and for the wealthy, unless we intervene. Tax policy is not boring. It's political warfare. And the sooner we treat it that way, the sooner we win. We are in a moment of extraordinary possibility. Trust your instincts. Trust the data. And above all, trust the power of the people to build wealth and power for everyone. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit!
Pendant 60 ans, les circonstances précises de la disparition du grand écrivain Saint-Exupéry sont restées un mystère. Au début de ce siècle, l'exploration de l'épave de son avion a permis de relancer l'enquête… Mention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Chrissy Stroop, a leading voice in the #Exvangelical movement, brings historical insight and personal experience to a conversation that traces the Christian right's rise to power from the Reagan era to its disturbing alignment with Russian authoritarianism today. This week's bonus show explores how evangelical leaders used strategic alliances, particularly the anti-abortion movement, to unite conservative Christians and Catholics under a single political banner. Stroop explains how this coalition gained momentum during Reagan's presidency and has since embedded itself deeply into U.S. policymaking. Particularly troubling is the influence of Christian nationalists on education through the deregulation of homeschooling, often leaving children vulnerable due to lack of oversight. Stroop also highlights how Christian nationalism, once cloaked in calls for "religious freedom," now openly embraces authoritarian tactics. The alignment with Vladimir Putin's regime, admired by many on the far right, underscores a global trend toward anti-democratic ideologies under the guise of defending “traditional values.” Yet, amidst the bleak realities, Stroop points to reasons for hope. Grassroots activism is on the rise, as communities across the country push back against oppressive legislation and public protests grow more frequent. Organizers are working tirelessly to safeguard democracy and protect civil liberties, especially for marginalized groups targeted by these far-right movements. The episode is a sobering reminder of how deeply Christian nationalism is embedded in American history, but also a call to action. As this bonus show emphasizes, defending democracy requires vigilance, public engagement, and an unwavering commitment to truth. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit! Show Notes: Chrissy Stroop is a co-founder of the independent media site The Flytrap: https://theflytrap.beehiiv.com And she writes the newsletter The Bugbear Dispatch: https://www.bugbeardispatch.com/ Check out her work there Right-wing extremism and homeschooling go hand in hand by Chrissy Stroop https://flux.community/chrissy-stroop/2023/08/right-wing-extremism-and-homeschooling-go-hand-in-hand/ Washington Post Editorial Board: Donald Trump's weapons freeze on Ukraine could bring catastrophe https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/07/02/ukraine-russia-war-trump-weapons-freeze-missiles/ Palantir's Builds Big Brother for Trump: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/30/technology/trump-palantir-data-americans.html?unlocked_article_code=1.Tk8.on-Q.rokoAAstmOw5&smid=url-share
What if the American Revolution wasn't a noble birth of liberty, but a costly wrong turn? Before muskets were raised at Lexington and Concord, the British Empire was already inching toward something remarkable: the abolition of slavery. In 1772, just three years before the war began, the landmark Somerset decision in England ruled that slavery had no basis in common law. While it didn't outlaw slavery across the empire, it signaled growing discomfort with the institution. British abolitionists like Granville Sharp and Thomas Clarkson were building momentum. By 1807, Britain banned the slave trade; by 1833, it abolished slavery entirely. Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the American colonies, especially in the South, were deeply entrenched in slavery. Many of the Revolution's leading voices were enslavers who feared that continued British rule might imperil their human property. In fact, during the war, the British offered freedom to enslaved people who escaped and joined their forces. The Americans, despite their soaring rhetoric about liberty, were far more reluctant to do the same. In this light, the Revolution was not just a fight for freedom: it was also, for some, a fight to preserve slavery. Had the colonies remained within the empire, they likely would have been pulled along Britain's abolitionist trajectory. Slavery might have ended decades earlier, without the catastrophic toll of a Civil War. Instead, the United States forged its identity through violent rupture, glorifying revolution and enshrining ideals it could not yet fulfill. America's foundational rebellion may have delayed justice rather than advanced it. Peace, reform, and patient negotiation–Canada's path–might have built a fairer, stabler society. Liberty, contrary to our cherished American myths, isn't always won on the battlefield. Sometimes, it's secured by fighting for reform and changing from within. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit! Show Notes: Slave Nation: How Slavery United the Colonies & Sparked the American Revolution https://www.zinnedproject.org/materials/slave-nation/ We Could Have Been Canada: Was the American Revolution such a good idea?https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/05/15/we-could-have-been-canada Bernie Sanders clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZWzADxM_kw
Pour la saison estivale, plongez-vous dans des récits qui vous feront voyager en terre inconnue. Découvrez l'amour sous un nouveau jour. Il était un homme trop rêveur pour rester sur terre. Elle était sa rose. Consuelo et Antoine de Saint Exupéry ont souvent vécu loin l'un de l'autre. Mais ils n'ont jamais cessé de s'écrire et de se déclarer leur flamme. Pour eux, aimer c'est se dire au revoir. C'est supporter l'absence en l'honneur d'un amour unique. Un podcast Bababam Originals Ecriture et voix : Alice Deroide Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
durée : 00:03:25 - Isabelle Nicolas, professeure des écoles - Comme tous ses collègues, Isabelle Nicolas, enseignante à l'école élémentaire Saint-Exupéry à Maxéville, va vivre ce vendredi 4 juillet sa dernière journée de l'année scolaire avec ses élèves. Entre joie, émotion et cadeaux. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
Trump's “Big Evil Bill” sped through Congress, to sell off public lands, gut healthcare, destroy rural hospitals, outlaw state AI regulation for a decade, make it harder to take out loans to go to college, and unleash an immigration enforcement regime bigger than anything we've ever seen. ICE will now have a budget bigger than the FBI, DEA, U.S. Bureau of Prisons combined. This is an oligarchy fever dream that will painfully backfire on everyone. Trump's Big Evil Bill is the blueprint of Project 2025 in action: a theocratic, authoritarian takeover of our democracy. This bill will expand presidential powers, weaken the lower courts, and crush humanitarian protections and put our already militized police state on Russian Olympian super steroids. Russell Vought, Trump's OMB Director and the architect of Project 2025, made sure the money was there to turn July 4th into a funeral for the American Revolution by installing a mad king. But here's the truth hiding in the despair: the more pain this bill causes, the more people it radicalizes. Just as past generations rose up during times of injustice, many Americans, especially those who embraced Trump's con, like those manosphere-brain rotted Gen Z men, will be forced to wake up. They'll see the betrayal. They'll feel it. And some will finally fight back. The far-right had a 40-year plan. We need ours. One model: The Gay Revolution by historian Lillian Faderman. It's the story of how love, courage, and relentless organizing by small groups of determined people, many forced to become activists because of state cruelty like the kind we're now seeing, and won against impossible odds. The Gay Revolution is our roadmap of hope, and it pays tribute to the countless men and women, many who risked everything, many whose names we may never know, to cast out the darkness with love and defiance. Go to the Gaslit Nation's Action Guide and choose action. Choose empathy. Choose to be the liberation this moment demands. EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit! Show Notes: The song featured in this episode is First They Came for Queers by Mr. Madam Adam. Find more of their music here: https://music.apple.com/us/album/first-they-came-for-queers/1690696748?i=1690696753 How to Protect Your Community from ICE: https://www.teenvogue.com/story/ice-watch-programs-immigrants-how-to-start How Trump's bill will supercharge mass deportations by funneling $170bn to Ice https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/02/immigration-trump-big-beautiful-bill Donald Trump's weapons freeze on Ukraine could bring catastrophe https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/07/02/ukraine-russia-war-trump-weapons-freeze-missiles/ Pardoned Jan. 6 Rioter Who Threatened Police Joins Justice Dept. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/01/us/politics/justice-department-rioter-weaponization.html House taking key vote on Trump's "big, beautiful bill," after GOP holdouts threaten final passage https://www.cbsnews.com/news/house-vote-big-beautiful-bill-rules-committee/
This week on Gaslit Nation, we're joined by the fearless, brilliant Carter Sherman, an award-winning journalist at The Guardian and one of the sharpest voices covering reproductive rights and sexual politics. Her new book, The Second Coming: Sex and the Next Generation's Fight Over Its Future, is a battle cry for Gen Z, a generation navigating the fallout of a stolen Supreme Court, Me Too, incel culture, and a pornified internet. We dive into how young people are rewriting the rules of intimacy in the face of political oppression. Carter's reporting brings us inside the bedrooms and minds of Gen Zers who are coming of age in a country where Roe v. Wade was overturned exactly as we knew it would be. A generation told they're free is now wrestling with the reality that their rights are under siege, and for many, that anxiety has become physical. As one woman told Carter, she couldn't even have sex without being hounded by Kavanaugh's voice in her head. This isn't just a story of fear; it's one of resistance. Carter shares how young people are pushing back, from Kansas voters defending abortion rights to college students canvassing in swing states. But she also warns of the growing threat: the rise of the Manosphere, where boys are radicalized by algorithm and learn to hate women before they can legally drink. What can young women and young men agree on? That the Democratic Party brand is toxic, because it's Republican Lite. The Second Coming is a deeply reported, fiercely human portrait of a generation caught between tech, trauma, and tyranny. This week's bonus show will look at the horror of Trump's Big Evil Bill passing through Congress, and our discussion of Lillian Faderman's landbook book The Gay Revolution–a resistance blueprint for us today. Thank you to everyone who supports Gaslit Nation–we could not make this show without you! Want to enjoy Gaslit Nation ad-free? Join our community of listeners for bonus shows, exclusive Q&A sessions, our group chat, invites to live events like our Monday political salons at 4pm ET over Zoom, and more! Sign up at Patreon.com/Gaslit! EVENTS AT GASLIT NATION: NEW DATE! Thursday July 31 4pm ET – the Gaslit Nation Book Club discusses Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince written in the U.S. during America First. Minnesota Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Vermont Signal group for Gaslit Nation listeners in the state to find each other, available on Patreon. Arizona-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to connect, available on Patreon. Indiana-based listeners launched a Signal group for others in the state to join, available on Patreon. Florida-based listeners are going strong meeting in person. Be sure to join their Signal group, available on Patreon. Have you taken Gaslit Nation's HyperNormalization Survey Yet? Gaslit Nation Salons take place Mondays 4pm ET over Zoom and the first ~40 minutes are recorded and shared on Patreon.com/Gaslit for our community
Ayelet Gundar-Goshen zeichnet in «Ungebetene Gäste» ein tiefschürfendes Psychogramm der israelischen Gesellschaft. Der Deutsche Juan S. Guse seziert in «Tausendmal so viel Geld wie jetzt» die verführerische Macht von Krypto-Währungen. In ihrem neuen Roman «Ungebetene Gäste» erzählt die israelische Autorin Ayelet Gundar-Goshen eindringlich von Schuld, Schweigen und moralischer Zerrissenheit in Israels Gesellschaft. Es beginnt damit, dass ein Kind mit dem Hammer eines arabischen Bauarbeiters spielt. Der Hammer fällt vom Balkon und trifft einen Teenager tödlich. Verhaftet wird jedoch der Arbeiter. Die Mutter des Kindes kennt die Wahrheit – und schweigt. Der psychologisch dichte Roman stelle das tiefe Misstrauen zwischen arabischer und israelischer Bevölkerung im heutigen Israel dar, sagt Jennifer Khakshouri. Das Buch sei damit «politisch hoch aktuell» und überdies «ein Pageturner». Der 1989 geborene deutsche Schriftsteller und Autor Juan S. Guse hat sich ein Jahr lang mit Männern getroffen, die mit Kryptowährungen wie Bitcoin reich geworden sind. Sie waren zur richtigen Zeit am richtigen Ort. Guse beneidet sie um ihr Geld-Glück. Der Neid bot Guse die Inspiration zu seinem Buch «Tausendmal so viel Geld wie jetzt»: eine Sammlung literarischer Portraits der Krypto-Millionäre. Die Texte würden erkunden, «wie sehr der plötzliche Reichtum die Männer verändert hat» – und bildeten «eine soziologische Kleinstudie in Literaturform», findet Katja Schönherr. Jubiläums-Lesetipp: Vor 125 Jahren wurde der französische Autor und Pilot Antoine de Saint-Exupéry geboren. Seine märchenhafte Erzählung «Der kleine Prinz» wurde rund 140 Millionen Mal verkauft und ist damit eines der erfolgreichsten Bücher der Welt. Tatsächlich sei das Werk von «zeitloser und bezaubernder Lebensklugheit», sagt Felix Münger. Es eigne sich damit auch zum Wiederentdecken. Buchhinweise: Ayelet Gundar-Goshen. Ungebetene Gäste. Aus dem Hebräischen von Ruth Achlama. 320 Seiten. Kein & Aber, 2025. Juan S. Guse. Tausendmal so viel Geld wie jetzt. 190 Seiten. S. Fischer, 2025. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Der Kleine Prinz (diverse Ausgaben)
After Trump's return to power in January 2025, Gaslit Nation launched a book club not just to inform, but to fortify. Each selection is a lifeline offering strategy, moral clarity, and community in an age of disinformation and despair. This isn't just a book club. It's a survival toolkit for our time. Read with us. Build with us. Let's overcome the chaos together. Join us on the last Monday of every month at 4 PM ET at the Gaslit Nation Salon for a live discussion of that month's book or film. Recordings are available on Patreon, along with bonus shows, ad-free episodes, and more, at Patreon.com/Gaslit. Discounted annual and gift memberships available. Check out our schedule below: February – Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl and The Stranger by Albert Camus Survival and absurdity under totalitarianism: one man finds purpose in a concentration camp, another questions meaning under occupation. (Book club recording here). March – From Dictatorship to Democracy by Gene Sharp A handbook of nonviolent action, this foundational text offers strategic tools for dismantling authoritarian regimes. (Book club recording here). April – Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler A near-future America unravels. A young Black woman builds a new belief system—and a movement—amid societal collapse. (Book club recording here). May – Stride Toward Freedom by Martin Luther King Jr. How the Montgomery Bus Boycott was won. MLK's essential guide to grassroots organizing. (Book club recording here). June – The Gay Revolution by Lillian Faderman The LGBTQ+ rights movement through the stories of those who led it, showing small groups of people make the difference. Book club this coming Monday June 30 4pm ET. July – Le Petit Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry A wartime allegory on wonder, loss, and resistance. Book club: July 28 4pm ET August – The Lives of Others and I'm Still Here Two films where art challenges dictatorship—from East Germany to Brazil. Book club: August 25 4pm ET September – Harriet, the Moses of Her People by Sarah Hopkins Bradford Harriet Tubman's story, in her own words based on interviews with The General herself. Book club: September 29 4pm ET October – Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky + Total Resistance by H. Von Dach Poetry and guerrilla strategy: tools for survival and defiance. Book club: October 27 4pm ET November – Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer Indigenous wisdom and science for reconnection and gratitude. Book club: November 24 4pm ET December – The Forest Song by Lesya Ukrainka An eco-feminist Ukrainian play that sings of love, rebellion, and resilience. Book club: January 29
Jan Liphardt is the founder of OpenMind, where they're building an operating system for intelligent machines. He is an associate professor at Stanford and was previously an associate professor at UC Berkeley. He got his PhD from University of Cambridge.Jan's favorite books: The Little Prince (Author: Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)00:01 — Introduction00:32 — Gap Between Movie Robots and Real-World Robotics02:35 — Vision for a New Robotics OS07:14 — Robotics OS Stack Breakdown11:01 — Biggest Technical Challenges in Robotics15:06 — Data Volume, Processing, and Cloud vs. Local19:09 — Shared Intelligence Layer: What is Fabric?23:15 — Filtering Good vs. Bad Ideas in a Robot Network26:06 — Business Model for Robots and Machine Economy29:55 — Standards and Interoperability in Robotics33:14 — Most Exciting AI Advancements Today35:00 — Rapid Fire Round --------Where to find Jan Liphardt: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jan-liphardt/--------Where to find Prateek Joshi: Newsletter: https://prateekjoshi.substack.com Website: https://prateekj.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/prateek-joshi-91047b19 X: https://x.com/prateekvjoshi
In which Robert & Amy give you One Simple Trick to be Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise! Also, your questions (and answers) ... we give a posthumous Thank You! to Antoine de Saint-Exupéry ... and you help us with our pre-travel equipment check!
Zum 125. Geburtstag des Autors „Der kleine Prinz“ von Antoine de Saint-Exupéry ist ein zeitloses Märchen für Jung und Alt. Die Geschichte entführt Sie in eine zauberhafte Welt voller Weisheit und Fantasie. Es gilt als eines der meistverkauften Bücher aller Zeiten. Mit: Heinz Stoewer, Ruth Hellberg, Martin Held, Gudrun Gewecke, Fritz Saalfeld u. a. Bearbeitung: Harald Umbehr Regie: Rudolf Rieth Komposition: Heinz Schröter hr 1951 | ca. 77 Min.
Am 29. Juni 1900 kam Antoine Marie Jean-Baptiste Roger de Saint-Exupéry in Lyon zur Welt. Weltberühmt wurde der Autor und Pilot mit seiner Geschichte vom kleinen Prinzen. In der Sendung «Treffpunkt» schauen wir auf das Leben Saint-Exupérys zurück. Die Fliegerei prägte Antoine de Saint-Exupéry sein ganzes Leben. Bereits mit 12 Jahren konnte er erstmals in einem Flugzeug mitfliegen, was 1912 nicht selbstverständlich war. Er wurde später Pilot unter anderem auch bei der Air France. Auch seinen Tod fand Saint-Exupéry in einem Flugzeug. Von einem Aufklärungsflug über Korsika während des zweiten Weltkrieges kehrte er nicht wieder zurück. Bis heute ist nicht restlos geklärt, was genau passierte. Erst vor gut 25 Jahren fand man Wrackteile des Flugzeuges im Meer und geht seither davon aus, dass Saint-Exupéry von einem deutschen Flugzeug abgeschossen wurde. Den Durchbruch als Autor gelang ihm mit seinem ersten Roman «Nachtflug» im Jahr 1929. Schon zuvor, als 25-Jähriger, veröffentlichte er sein Erstlingswerk, die Novelle «Der Flieger». Weltbekannt wurde Saint-Exupéry dann mit seinem illustrierten Büchlein «Der kleine Prinz», das ein Jahr vor seinem Tod veröffentlicht wurde und als eines der meistübersetzten und meistverkauften Bücher überhaupt gilt.
Novena temporada de Librero SonoroEpisodio 20 Conducción: Gabriela Gutiérrez y Violeta MoralesAntoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900–1944) fue aviador, narrador, poeta y humanista. Su vida y su obra se tejieron entre las alturas del cielo y las profundidades del alma. En el 125 aniversario de su nacimiento, recordamos al autor de El Principito, una de las obras más traducidas y leídas del mundo; pero también al piloto que escribió sobre la soledad, la fraternidad y la fragilidad humana en libros como Vuelo nocturno y Tierra de hombres. Saint-Exupéry convirtió el vuelo en metáfora de existencia y el desierto en escenario de revelaciones esenciales. Este episodio es un viaje por su legado: entre estrellas, palabras y preguntas que aún nos interpelan con la inocencia sabia del niño que nunca dejó de mirar el mundo con asombro.Pistas utilizadas:1- Biblioteca compuesta por Ana Leyva Luna y Amaury Pérez Vega.2- "Juan Sánchez - Blue Nights" está bajo una licencia Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0) Música promocionada por Breaking Copyright: https://bit.ly/bkc-blue-nights
Jörg Albrecht www.deutschlandfunk.de, Corso
Qui, mieux que Stan Rougier, pour nous aider à réveiller l'enfant qui dort en nous ? Pour le rejoindre dans la vie de l'amour éternel où il s'élève à l'Ascension, Jésus nous invite : « Le Royaume des Cieux appartient aux enfants et à ceux qui leur ressemblent. » Stan Rougier est un des meilleurs guides, pour nous aider à libérer en nous nos cœurs d'enfants. Depuis sa jeunesse, il s'appuie sur l'un des plus grands écrivains de la langue française, celui qui mieux que personne exalte l'enfance, la relation avec l'autre, le don de soi, les liens avec l'invisible, et avec ce nœud divin qui noue toutes choses et qu'il appelle Dieu. Au cours de cette nouvelle rencontre avec Stan Rougier, nous explorons d'autres dimensions qui disent la profondeur, la beauté et la portée de l'œuvre d'Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Nous découvrons comment parfois un écrivain, à l'exemple de l'aviateur mystique, peut nous mener à Dieu mieux que les religions. Comme chaque année à l'Ascension depuis déjà cinq années, nous retrouvons cet homme aussi inspiré qu'émouvant, et qui nous révèle, dans la floraison de ses 95 printemps, à quel point la grande vieillesse peut être le magnifique miroir de la grande enfance. Pour lire Prier 15 jours avec Antoine de Saint Exupéry, le livre de Stan Rougier co-écrit avec Béatrice Guibert, cliquer ici. Réveiller l'enfant qui dort en nous Chers amis, chers auditeurs de Zeteo, Comme chaque année, nous sommes allés chez Stan Rougier. Nous avons la grande joie de diffuser dès aujourd'hui notre huitième rencontre avec lui, la cinquième pour la fête de l'Ascension ! Jusqu'alors, nous n'avions pas vu le lien aussi fort qui rapprochait l'Ascension de ce prêtre écrivain prolifique, globe-trotteur, champion de la tendresse, de la liberté intérieure, de la vie spirituelle. Lui-même nous confiait que dans sa vie, cette fête n'avait pas suscité chez lui autant de curiosité que d'autres grands moments de la vie de Jésus. C'est cette année que le lien nous est apparu plus manifestement qu'avant, dans une force et un éclat que vous allez très probablement ressentir en écoutant cet épisode. Stan Rougier est un prophète de l'enfance, celle à qui appartient le Royaume des Cieux, où nous sommes invités à rejoindre le Christ et toute l'éternité divine. Avec Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, qui est comme son grand-frère, Stan Rougier nous apprend à réveiller l'enfant qui dort en nous et ainsi, d'entrer à notre tour dans le Royaume. L'année dernière déjà, nous avions recueilli des paroles très personnelles et bouleversantes de sa part. Cette fois encore, Stan Rougier nous ouvre grand son cœur. Ce sont ses battements qui, en nous faisant vibrer, entraînent nos propres cœurs à rêver, désirer et aimer aussi fort. Nous exprimons notre immense gratitude à ce grand compagnon de Zeteo, comme de tant d'hommes et de femmes qui ont eu la joie de le rencontrer dans leurs vies. Nous exprimons notre gratitude pour ceux que nous avons rencontré ces derniers jours, invités et auditeurs. Comme pour ceux qui, en faisant un don à Zeteo, ont permis d'ouvrir de nouvelles pages aussi belles que celle d'aujourd'hui. Et pour ceux qui vont faire un don dès maintenant, ou demain. C'est grâce à eux, si Dieu le veut, que d'autres pages pourront s'ouvrir, dont la prochaine avec Hervé, dès dimanche prochain, qui promet d'être magnifique… Belle fête de l'Ascension ! Guillaume Devoud Pour faire un don, il suffit de cliquer ici pour aller sur notre compte de paiement de dons en ligne sécurisé par HelloAsso. Ou de cliquer ici pour aller sur notre compte Paypal. Vos dons sont défiscalisables à hauteur de 66% : par exemple, un don de 50€ ne coûte en réalité que 17€. Le reçu fiscal est généré automatiquement et immédiatement à tous ceux qui passent par la plateforme de paiement sécurisé en ligne de HelloAsso Nous délivrons directement un reçu fiscal à tous ceux qui effectuent un paiement autrement (Paypal, chèque à l'association Telio, 116 boulevard Suchet, 75016 Paris – virement : nous écrire à info@zeteo.fr ). Pour lire d'autres messages de nos auditeurs : cliquer ici. Pour en savoir plus au sujet de Zeteo, cliquer ici. Pour en savoir plus au sujet de Bethesda, cliquer ici. Pour en savoir plus au sujet de Telio, cliquer ici. Pour lire les messages de nos auditeurs, cliquer ici. Nous contacter : contact@zeteo.fr Proposer votre témoignage ou celui d'un proche : temoignage@zeteo.fr
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry war Schriftsteller und Pilot. Von dieser Leidenschaft fürs Fliegen erzählt das Biopic „Saint-Exupéry – die Geschichte vor dem kleinen Prinzen“. Und davon, wie den Franzosen eine ganz besondere Freundschaft vielleicht zu seinem berühmten Buch inspiriert hat.
“Around the swimming beagles, bright stars danced on rippling waters like a thousand little fishes of light scurrying in a sea of darkness.Can there be a more beautiful sight than when sky meets ocean in the black of night?” The lawyer whispered to himself, the beagles, and the sea as the soft blanket of summer wrapped them all in her warm embrace.Night is a time of reflection. Not of stars in water only, but of times past and times to come. And such a night was this.”– Beagles of Destinae, chapter 4Ideas pour into the dark waters of the unconscious mind, sparkling like reflected stars. As above, so below. The natives always said it was so.But as Gemini sat on the throne of Aquarius, a dragonfish was born. And thus our story begins.The twins did not mean to unleash a dragonfish, but they had never promised not to, either. And besides, a dragonfish is an adventure.Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea,and frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honalee.Little Jackie Paper loved that rascal Puff,And brought him strings, and sealing wax, and other fancy stuff.Together they would travel on a boat with billowed sail,Jackie kept a lookout perched on Puff's gigantic tail.Noble kings and princes would bow whenever they came,Pirate ships would lower their flags when Puff roared out his name.A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys,Painted wings and giant's rings make way for other toys.One gray night it happened, Jackie Paper came no more,And Puff, that mighty dragon, he ceased his fearless roar.“Puff the Magic Dragon” with lyrics by Leonard Lipton and music by Peter Yarrow appears on the 1963 Peter, Paul and Mary album, “Moving.” An urban myth soon arose that the song was about drugs. It's really a backward look at childhood, and all that was left behind.“The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart. All grown-ups were once children… but only few of them remember it.”– Antoine de Saint-Exupéry“He saw two boats standing by the lake; but the fishermen had gone from them and were washing their nets. Then He got into one of the boats, which was Simon's, and asked him to put out a little from the land. And He sat down and taught the multitudes from the boat. When He had stopped speaking, he said to Simon, ‘Launch out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.'”– Luke, ch. 5The book “Peter Pan” was written only after the 1904 play became a huge success.On opening night, Mrs. Snow spoke to the playwright and author, J.M. Barrie about her late husband…“And he would so have loved this evening. The pirates, and the Indians; he was really just a boy himself, you know, to the very end. I suppose it's all the work of the ticking crocodile, isn't it? Time is chasing after all of us. Isn't that right?”“It is not true that people stop pursuing dreams because they grow old; they grow old because they stop pursuing dreams.”– Gabriel Garcia Marquez“The secret of The Muppets is they re not very good at what they do. Kermit's not a great host, Fozzie's not a good comedian, Miss Piggy's not a great singer… Like, none of them are actually good at it, but they love it. They're like a family, and they like putting on the show. And they have joy. And because of the joy, it doesn't matter that they're not good at it. That's what we should all be. Muppets.”– Brett Goldstein“All the world is made of faith, and trust, and pixie dust…If growing up means it would be beneath my dignity to climb a tree, I'll never grow up.”– Peter
"Wat de woestijn zo mooi maakt, is het feit dat hij ergens een waterput verschuilt." - Stine deelt een levenswijsheid van piloot en schrijver Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry nació en Lyon el 29 de junio de 1900. El 31 de julio de 1944 despegó de un campo de aviación de Córcega para cumplir una misión de la que no regresaría jamás. Escribió 'El principito', novela por la que siempre se le recordará, pero también es autor de novelas como 'Correo del sur', 'Tierra de hombres', 'Piloto de guerra' y 'Ciudadela', publicada póstumamente. 'Vuelo nocturno' se publicó en 1931.
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry nació en Lyon el 29 de junio de 1900. El 31 de julio de 1944 despegó de un campo de aviación de Córcega para cumplir una misión de la que no regresaría jamás. Escribió 'El principito', novela por la que siempre se le recordará, pero también es autor de novelas como 'Correo del sur', 'Tierra de hombres', 'Piloto de guerra' y 'Ciudadela', publicada póstumamente. 'Vuelo nocturno' se publicó en 1931.
De 'Un libro, una hora' en la radio a la publicación de 'Cien libros, una vida" (Aguilar) . Nuestro bibliotecario Antonio Martínez Asensio presenta su libro con cien títulos que le han marcado en Hoy por Hoy. No repite ningún autor o autora y los ha dividido en cuatro grupos: 'Los clasicazos", "los clásicos modernos", "Serán clásicos" y "Mis lecturas más personales" . Es una guía literaria o una macro lista vital del mejor contador de libros de este país. De los 100 le hemos obligado ha donarno los tres que para él son los más importantes en su vida lectora y nos ha dejado : 'El soldado de porcelana' de Horacio Vázquez Rial (Verticales de Bolsillo) , 'Los seres felices' de Marcos Giralt Torrente (Anagrama) y 'Mentira' de Enrique de Hériz (Edhasa) . Además, en su función de bibliotecario radiofónico nos dejó los libros que le inspiró la actualidad de la semana: 'Solenoide' de Mircea Cartarescu (Impedimenta) , 'Los memorables' de Lidia Jorge (La umbría y la solana), 'Un polaco en la corte del Rey Juan Carlos" de Manuel Vázquez Montalbán (Alfaguara), 'La democracia amenazada' de Jesús A. Martínez (Cátedra) y 'Como los ricos saquean el planeta y cómo impedírselo' de Hervé Kemppf, ilustrado por Juan Méndez (Garbuix Books) . por útimo dejó el libro que nos contará en 'Un libro , una hora' 'Vuelo nocturno' de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (Anaya) . El empleado de la Biblioteca de Hoy por Hoy Pepe Rubio nos trajo las novedades: 'Valentina' de María Zabay (Suma) y 'La toffana' de Vanessa Monfort (Espasa). Pascual Donate volvió a rescatar un libro perdido en la redacción de la SER y, ojo, encontró uno de sexo: 'Sexamor' de Silvia Sanz (Aguilar) . Y finalmente las donaciones de los oyentes: 'Cuerpos y almas' de Maxence Van Der Meersch (DeBolsillo), 'Mujer de rojo sobre fondo gris' de Miguel Delibes (Destino) , 'Celia lo que dice' y 'Celia en la revolución' de Elena Fortún (Renacimiento)
De 'Un libro, una hora' en la radio a la publicación de 'Cien libros, una vida" (Aguilar) . Nuestro bibliotecario Antonio Martínez Asensio presenta su libro con cien títulos que le han marcado en Hoy por Hoy. No repite ningún autor o autora y los ha dividido en cuatro grupos: 'Los clasicazos", "los clásicos modernos", "Serán clásicos" y "Mis lecturas más personales" . Es una guía literaria o una macro lista vital del mejor contador de libros de este país. De los 100 le hemos obligado ha donarno los tres que para él son los más importantes en su vida lectora y nos ha dejado : 'El soldado de porcelana' de Horacio Vázquez Rial (Verticales de Bolsillo) , 'Los seres felices' de Marcos Giralt Torrente (Anagrama) y 'Mentira' de Enrique de Hériz (Edhasa) . Además, en su función de bibliotecario radiofónico nos dejó los libros que le inspiró la actualidad de la semana: 'Solenoide' de Mircea Cartarescu (Impedimenta) , 'Los memorables' de Lidia Jorge (La umbría y la solana), 'Un polaco en la corte del Rey Juan Carlos" de Manuel Vázquez Montalbán (Alfaguara), 'La democracia amenazada' de Jesús A. Martínez (Cátedra) y 'Como los ricos saquean el planeta y cómo impedírselo' de Hervé Kemppf, ilustrado por Juan Méndez (Garbuix Books) . por útimo dejó el libro que nos contará en 'Un libro , una hora' 'Vuelo nocturno' de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (Anaya) . El empleado de la Biblioteca de Hoy por Hoy Pepe Rubio nos trajo las novedades: 'Valentina' de María Zabay (Suma) y 'La toffana' de Vanessa Monfort (Espasa). Pascual Donate volvió a rescatar un libro perdido en la redacción de la SER y, ojo, encontró uno de sexo: 'Sexamor' de Silvia Sanz (Aguilar) . Y finalmente las donaciones de los oyentes: 'Cuerpos y almas' de Maxence Van Der Meersch (DeBolsillo), 'Mujer de rojo sobre fondo gris' de Miguel Delibes (Destino) , 'Celia lo que dice' y 'Celia en la revolución' de Elena Fortún (Renacimiento)
(0:00) Intro(1:37) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel(2:24) Start of interview(3:10) Alex's origin story(5:56) His advisory boards and other board positions. On the importance of the academic practitioner nexus.(7:02) About his book May Contain Lies (2024)(10:07) About confirmation bias, relevant to corporate directors.(11:48) About black and white thinking (binary thinking).(14:44) Dissent in the boardroom. How in the UK directors don't have "skin the game" (no equity compensation).(21:59) On his "ladder of misinference": helps understand how misinformation can be perpetuated by misinterpreting the steps in a logical argument. The four key stages are: a statement is not fact, a fact is not data, data is not evidence, and evidence is not proof.(27:27) On his book "Grow the Pie" and the shareholder and stakeholder debate.(30:13) On the pushback against ESG in the US ("pushback is better than backlash"). His paper The End of ESG (2023)(32:53) On the use and misuse of board diversity data. His paper: (Diversity) Equity and Inclusion (2023)(40:34) On AI and the boardroom(44:15) On Public Benefit Corporations (PBCs). (49:23) The value of scientific research for boards(50:27) Books that has greatly influenced his life:The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey (1989)The Little Prince by Antoine to Saint-Exupéry (1943)The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho (1988)(53:12) His mentors:His dadWilliam Chalmers (CFO at Lloyds Banking Group, ex boss at Morgan Stanley)Learning from every situation(54:25) Quotes that he thinks of often or lives his life by: "You can do everything you want to and be everything you want to be but not all at once" (Laurie Hodrick). "You don't know how many times you'll get to play in your life so if you do get the chance you've got to rock it big time" (Tony Mortimer, East 17)(56:53) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that he loves: exercising daily.(59:06) The living person he most admires: Stuart Pearce.Alex Edmans is a Professor at London Business School, Fellow of the British Academy; and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. You can follow Evan on social media at:X: @evanepsteinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/__To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/__Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Pennie and I had a difficult week a long way from home.It began with a piece of gravel that cracked her windshield.Looking back, we should have just lived with it. But we didn't know that at the time.We dropped her car off at the appointed time on the appointed day. When Pennie picked it up, the upper-left corner of her new windshield whistled loudly at speeds above 30mph. She called the windshield people. They gave her a new appointment.When we picked it up for the second time, the whistle was a little less loud than it had been, but she decided to live with it. There are a lot of things in life more annoying than a whistling windshield.We didn't know it, but we were about to experience several of them.Driving for 4 hours in a rainstorm to see your mother in the hospital is not a bad experience unless your previously-whistling windshield is now pouring quarts of water into your car.Things went downhill from there for several days.I won't bore you with the details because the real purpose of this note is to tell you what happened that turned everything around for us.We discovered a wonderful French cafe just two blocks from Clearfork Hospital in Ft. Worth. Halfway through the meal, I went to their website to see if they had a location in Austin. They don't, but I'm sure they soon will.Meanwhile, Pennie went to romanticspotsfortworth.com to see if Clarissa had discovered and listed this amazing cafe.Of course, she had. Clarissa is really good at her job.Angela brought our next course to the table.I said, “We found out about you at romanticspotsfortworth.”To our delight, Angela said, “Yes! They sent us an award with the cutest logo on it! Everyone was excited.”Pennie and I chose not to mention that we own the romanticspots websites.When Angela departed, I scrolled all the way to the bottom of the cafe's website where I encountered a carousel of remarkable quotes. “People who love to eat are always the best people.”– Julia Child“If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.”– J.R.R. Tolkien, from “The Hobbit”, spoken by Thorin Oakenshield“No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.”– Aesop, “The Lion and The Mouse”“Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it.”– Andre GideHaving been distracted by every bad thing that had happened since our 4-hour trip in a flooded car, these next two quotes hit me pretty hard.“You'll miss the best things if you keep your eyes shut.”– Dr. Seuss“The flower that blooms in adversity is the most beautiful of all.”– Walt DisneyEach of the remaining quotes at the bottom of that menu lifted me a little bit higher.“All grown-ups were once children… but only few of them remember it.”– Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, “The Little Prince”“Where you tend a rose, my lad, a thistle cannot grow.”– Frances Hodgson Burnett, “The Secret Garden”“True love is like a fine wine, the older the better.”– Fred Jacob“It is better to know how to learn than to know.”– Dr. Seuss“The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart.”– Antoine de Saint-ExupéryAnd then this line lifted from “A Room of One's Own” by Virginia Wolf made me smile and remember where I was.“One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.”And then Andre Gide encouraged me to quit looking at what was behind me.“Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the...
Jean Shinoda Bolen, M.D. is a psychiatrist, Jungian analyst, and an internationally known speaker. She is a former board member of the Ms. Foundation, an advocate for a 5th UN World Conference on Women, a convener of the Millionth Circle Initiative, as well as a permanent representative to the UN representing the NGO, Pathways to Peace. She is the author of many books, including Goddesses in Every Woman: Powerful Archetypes in Women's Lives (Harper Paperbacks 2004) and Like a Tree: How Trees, Women, and Tree People Can People Can Save the Planet (Conari Press 2010) and Ever Widening Circles and Mystical Moments (Chiron Publications 2025) Interview Date: 1/26/2011 Tags: Jean Shinoda Bolen, Trees, heartsoul, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Ralph Waldo Emerson, heartsoul, tree people, boreal forests, global warming, interdependent, Amazon, commodity, Wangari Maathai, activism, life assignment, Commission on the Status for Women, CSW, United Nation. Michelle Bachelet, circles, walking meditation, mystical source, Ecology/Nature/Environment, Social Change/Politics
The Little Prince has been enchanting readers of all ages since 1943, when French aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry first introduced the boy from a distant planet. Inspired by his own life and a desert crash landing, this poetic tale has become one of the most translated and best-selling books in the world. In this episode, we begin a two-part look at The Little Prince on stage and screen—both versions produced by Joseph Tandet. There's the ambitious 1982 Broadway-bound musical starring Michael York and a young Anthony Rapp, which never made it past previews. And before that, the 1974 movie musical directed by Stanley Donen and featuring Lerner and Loewe's final collaboration—complete with Bob Fosse, Gene Wilder, and a surprisingly rocky production history. Theme Music created by Blake Stadnik. Click here for a transcript and list of all resources used. Produced by Patrick Oliver Jones and WINMI Media with Dan Delgado as co-producer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
J. A. Jackson, chair and professor of English at Hillsdale College, delivers a lecture on how to teach The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. This lecture was given at the Hoogland Center for Teacher Excellence seminar, “The Art of Teaching: Children's Literature” in September 2024. The Hoogland Center for Teacher Excellence, an outreach of the Hillsdale College K-12 Education Office, offers educators the opportunity to deepen their content knowledge and refine their skills in the classroom.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dos obras universales, “El Principito” de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry y “El Criticón” de Baltasar Gracián vuelve a las librerías estos días y lo hacen con dos ediciones llenas de originalidad. La primera, porque se publica en aragonés, en una edición que firma Xordica y traducida del original francés por Raul Usón. La segunda, porque Prames presenta una edición reducida abreviada por Pilar Sanchez Laílla e ilustrada por Jose Luis Cano. De ambas hablamos esta tarde en La Torre de Babel.
¡Sean ustedes bienvenidas al episodio 98 de esta temporada! El día de hoy hablaremos de los personajes restantes de: “El Principito”, obra de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. ¿Podemos identificar los vicios que hacen miserable nuestra vida? ¿Qué pasa si estos vicios están lejos de ser los más nombrados en nuestra sociedad?¡Muchas gracias por ser parte de esta comunidad! No lo olvides. ¡Estamos juntas en esto!Todos los derechos reservados. Copyright 2025 © Estíbaliz Delgado Amaya
Derrière le nom "French With Panache", il y a Nathan et Violaine, journalistes de formation et maintenant spécialistes du français étrangère. Ils transmettent leur passion pour l'enseignement
The Find Your Leadership Confidence Podcast with Vicki Noethling
A daily quote to inspire the mind, gratitude to warm the soul, and guided breathing to energize the body. Quote: “Life has a meaning only if one barters it day by day for something other than itself.” - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry Gratitude: An Internet Connection. It's hard to believe how easy it is to take the internet for granted, seeing how none of us had just a couple of decades ago. Guided Breathing: Equal Breathing. Visit TheDailyRefresh.com to share your unique piece of gratitude which will be featured on an upcoming episode, and make sure to watch the tutorial of how to make The Daily Refresh part of your Alexa Flash Briefings! Call to action: If you're interested in launching your very own Podcast, visit FreePodcastCourse.com/ and this completely free training will teach you EVERYTHING you need to know! So visit FreePodcastCourse.com.
¡Sean ustedes bienvenidas al episodio 97 de esta temporada! El día de hoy hablaremos de los primeros personajes de: “El Principito”, obra de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. ¿Qué pasa si quitamos al ego de nuestra vida?¡Muchas gracias por ser parte de esta comunidad! No lo olvides. ¡Estamos juntas en esto!Todos los derechos reservados. Copyright 2025 © Estíbaliz Delgado Amaya
Có một cuốn sách được tôn vinh là đã chạm đến trái tim con người từ 9 đến 99 tuổi.Cuốn sách ấy được dịch sang hơn 260 ngôn ngữ, xuất bản trên toàn cầu, và trở thành tác phẩm bán chạy thứ hai trong lịch sử nhân loại.Đó chính là Hoàng Tử Bé của Antoine de Saint-Exupéry – một tác phẩm kinh điển vượt thời gian. Nó không chỉ đơn thuần là một cuốn sách dành cho thiếu nhi, mà còn là một câu chuyện ngụ ngôn sâu sắc, gửi gắm những bài học ý nghĩa cho người trưởng thành.Hôm nay, một lần nữa, mình muốn chia sẻ về tác phẩm này, bởi mỗi lần đọc lại, nó đều mang đến những suy ngẫm mới mẻ. Hoàng Tử Bé giống như một hành trình trưởng thành của chính chúng ta: luôn không ngừng trải nghiệm, suy ngẫm, và nhìn lại bản thân.Mời bạn cùng lắng nghe!-------------------------Nếu bạn muốn mua sách giấy để đọc, có thể ủng hộ Better Version bằng cách mua qua đường link này nhé, cám ơn các bạn! ❤️ Link tổng hợp các cuốn sách trong tất cả video: https://beacons.ai/betterversion.vn/b... ❤️ ỦNG HỘ KÊNH TẠI: https://beacons.ai/betterversion.donate