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En quoi consiste la Mitsva du Ma'hatsit Hachékél ? En quoi ce don se distingue-t-il de celui que chaque volontaire a fait lors de la construction du Michkan ? Réponse à travers des propos du Sfat Émet.
Vă invităm să urmăriți un material cu totul extraordinar în care legenda rock Alice Cooper dimpreună cu soția sa Sheryl Cooper ne dă sfaturi foarte bune legate de viața de familie, sfaturi care provin din experiența lor foarte mare, cei doi fiind căsătoriți din 1976 (!), lucru care este o performanță extraordinară, mai ales pentru o vedetă de shock rock precum Alice Cooper.Vizionare plăcută!Pentru Pomelnice și Donații accesați: https://www.chilieathonita.ro/pomelnice-si-donatii/Pentru mai multe articole (texte, traduceri, podcasturi) vedeți https://www.chilieathonita.ro/
Welcome to our humility series. We're talking about thoughts that cause one to become humble. The Hovot Halevavot in the second gate, Shaar HaBechina, which looks into creation (chapter 5), says, " There's something that you should look into in creation. It applies to the greatest and smallest of creatures. It's something that's hidden, that you don't see with your regular senses. It's the constant of movement . Everything that's happening is happening because of movement. He says, without movement, nothing would come to be. And he quotes a statement. רב הטבעים עם התנועה /Most of natural events come about due to movement It's what makes the cells move . What makes your blood flow? What makes you able to walk and move your limbs? And he says, When you understand the secret of movement, you'll understand how spiritual it is . It's from the wonders of God. And you'll realize, Hashem's tremendous mercy on you . And you'll realize that all of your movements are connected to the will of your Creator. He's making everything move. The only thing that He left is certain things you have freedom of choice in. But otherwise, as we say in the morning, Hamechin Mitzader Gaver,/God sets up the steps of man . So pay attention to every movement you make and realize how He is connected to that movement. Be a little bit shameful of Him and give yourself over to His will because He's watching and looking and directing you. This is a very, very important point- we don't have our own independent energy. Hashem makes us move at all times. This is something to think about. On Rosh Hashanah there is a Piyut that Sephardim say, written by Rav Yehuda Halevi, the author of the Kuzari. It's called Ya Shimcha/Your name is Hashem. It says in the last stanza of that Piyut הִשְׁתּוֹנֵן, וְהִכּוֹנֵן, וְהִתְבּוֹנֵן בְּסוֹדֶךָ. וְהִבַּטְתָּ, מָה אַתָּה, וּמֵאַיִן יְסוֹדֶךָ. וּמִי הֱכִינְךָ, וּמִי הֱבִינְךָ, / Sharpen your mind and prepare yourself and delve into your secret (which refers to your soul) And realize what are you and what is your source of being? Who formed you? Who gave you wisdom? And now for the last three words, וְכֹחַ מִי יְנִידֶךָ. / Whose power animates you? Whose power makes you move? That's something that the Paytan is asking us to think about, specifically on Rosh Hashanah, the day of creation, the day that God breathed life into man. We should think about this every day, but especially on Rosh Hashanah- Who is energizing us? Who's giving us the strength to move? We will quote three different sources for this concept, each from a different shade of our religion. Working chronologically, we start with the Tomar Devorah, the famous sefer written by Rav Moshe, Cordovero, one of the great Kabbalists of Sfat. He lived from 1522 to 1570 and was actually one of the leaders of Kabbalah, even before the Arizal. In the first chapter of Tomar Devorah when talking about he first Middah of Hashem, he says, אֵין רֶגַע שֶׁלֹּא יִהְיֶה הָאָדָם נִזּוֹן וּמִתְקַיֵּים מִכֹּחַ עֶלְיוֹן הַשּׁוֹפֵעַ עָלָיו. /There's not a moment that a person is not sustained and exists from the heavenly force that is constantly granted upon him. That means we do not live because we're here as independent beings. We will explain further citing a quote from the Baal Shem Tov, Rav Yisrael ben Eliezer (c. 1700 to 1760), the founder of Hasidut , in his sefer Beer Mayim Chaim on Bereshit explaining the pasuk (Tehilim 119 89) לעולם ה' דברך נצב בשמים, /Forever Hashem, Your words are standing in the Shamayim The Baal Shem Tov explains that when a flesh and blood craftsman makes a vessel, he can walk away from the vessel and no matter what energy or wisdom he put into it, his ability no longer impacts it. It's going to stay forever. Why? Because he's made it yesh m'yesh/something from something. He took existing silver and crafted it into the vessel. But Hashem created the world yesh m'eyin/something from nothing. There was nothing there before Him. And therefore, if Hashem, even for a second, decides to cease to pump the energy into it, it will cease to exist. God has to constantly put that energy in to make it be. Thr Baal Shem Tov gives the example of the sun. Why is the sun there? Not just because it's there. No. If you were able to put on spiritual glasses, you'd see the words Yehi Or pumping into the sun. And if those letters Yehi Or went away, the sun would cease to exist. Hashem, every second, is pumping energy Yehi Rakia/let there be a firmament. That's why there's a sky. He says that's what it means L'Olam/Forever Your words are still in the heavens. That means the original ten statements that God said when He created the world are still standing there. And if your eyes were capable of seeing it, you'd see them still there. Lastly, we will quote the Nefesh HaChaim, Rav Chaim of Volozhin (1749 to 1821), the father of the Yeshiva movement. He was a student of the Gaon of Vilna and got everything from him. And he says almost the same thing. Why is Hashem called Elohim, which means the Source of all energy? Because God is different than a regular craftsman that builds a building out of wood, who didn't make the wood, he just formed it. When the craftsman goes away, he goes away. He makes the same point as the Baal Shem Tov: Hashem made something from nothing. And he says, from the time of creation, כל יום וכל רגע ממש. , Every day and every moment, God is keeping it going. And he says that's why Anshei Knessset HaGedolah said המחדש בטובו בכל יום תמיד מעשה בראשית / God renews in His goodness every day constantly, the creation. תמיד ממש כל עת ורגע. /literally every second . And as it says, לעושה אורים גדולים /God is making the great luminaries - in the present tense. Not He made . What does that have to do with us? Humility . In the words of the Hovot Halevavot and of Rav Yehuda Halevi- There's nothing that we do on our own. Our heart is pumping because God is making it pump. In Shir HaShirim 5,2 it says ק֣וֹל ׀ דּוֹדִ֣י דוֹפֵ֗ק / The voice of my beloved is banging , פִּתְחִ / Open up Our pulse is called defek cause the pulse bangs . It pulsates . I once saw a pshat that the pulse is called defek/ banging because Who's the One that's banging and pulsating through our body? It's ק֣וֹל ׀ דּוֹדִ֣י דוֹפֵ֗ק Hashem is making that happen. When we think these thoughts, we realize, What are we doing? Whatever we're doing, whether hitting a ball, making a cake, or making money, Who is energizing me? Who's pumping it into me? Imagine those huge blow up items that flail around in front of stores to get your attention, flapping back and forth. Imagine if it thought to itself, " Wow! look how powerful I am. I'm going back and forth. " Excuse me, sir. There's someone pumping the air into you. You'd be flat on the floor without that thing pumping air into you. And with us, it's even worse because we wouldn't even be that flat plastic on the floor if Hashem wasn't pumping energy into us. These kind of thoughts are humbling, and it's our responsibility to think about them.
En quoi ce monde est-il mensonger ? Pourquoi est-il tellement réconfortant de savoir qu'Hachem accorde bien plus d'importance à nos efforts qu'à nos résultats ? Qu'est-ce qui a choqué les frères de Yossef, lorsqu'il s'est dévoilé à eux en Égypte ? En quoi cela montre-t-il encore la valeur des efforts ? Sommes-nous, pour autant, autorisés à nous mettre nous-mêmes dans des difficultés ? Réponse à travers plusieurs exemples, et des propos du Sfat Émet.
Parfois, on envie les qualités de l'autre, ou ses facilités dans la vie. Pourtant, comme l'explique ce cours à travers des propos du Ari Hakadoch et du Sfat Émet, Hachem accorde à chacun les moyens exacts dont il a besoin, et il est important de chercher en nous ce qu'Hachem veut de nous.
La Guémara dit qu'à l'endroit où ceux qui ont fait Téchouva se tiennent, ceux qui n'ont jamais fauté ne peuvent pas se tenir. Ces propos ne sont évidemment pas un encouragement à fauter. Mais que signifient-ils, alors ? Réponse à travers des propos du Rambam et du Sfat Émet.
Peut-on être en exil même en Israël ? Pourquoi ? Quels sont les 5 malheurs dont parle la Guémara Ta'anit, et qui ont tous eu lieu le 9 Av ? En quoi la faute des explorateurs a-t-elle été particulièrement grave ? Réponse à travers des propos du Sfat Émet.
Qu'est-ce que le Séfer Hayétsira ? Que dit ce livre au sujet des mois de Tamouz et Av ? En quoi a consisté la faute des Méraglim (explorateurs) ? Comment la réparer ? Qu'est-ce que Tou Béav ? En quoi ce jour est-il spécialement joyeux ? Réponse à travers des propos du Gaon de Vilna et du Sfat Émet.
Invitații mei din acest episod sunt Mihaela Joița și Andrei Lasc, mințile creative de la agenția Poarta 9.Am luat la întrebări un Strateg de Marketing & Comunicare și un Art Director, ca să discutăm pe șleau și pe alocuri cu umor, într-o romgleză de care nu am putut și nici nu am vrut să ne ferim, care-i treaba cu Branding-ul bine făcut.O să-ți placă această conversație! E deschisă, e aplicată, e din experiența a 3 profesioniști și e una care surprinde Branding-ul din două perspective - cea a poveștii conceptuale din spatele lui și cea a traducerii ei în identitate vizuală.Mai jos sunt câteva dintre ideile care s-ar putea să-ți fie de folos. Audiție plăcută!
00:00 | Teaser 03:02 | Sundao - ceea ce este sau calea naturii 05:16 | Sunt succesorul unei descendente de lumina 06:39 | Orice traditie are propriile laturi ascunse 07:49 | Sinceritate, constientizare si iubire 12:31 | Industrie bazata pe nevoia disperata de abundenta, iubire si cunoastere 17:35 | Mintea este liniara 21:44 | Starea energetica a suficientei depline 25:56 | Trei respiratii pot vindeca o persoana 27:06 | Traiesc in centrul universului meu personal 28:26 | Este puterea fiintei noastere de a da un sens nou lucrurilor 30:15 | Ce este energia? 31:15 | Gandul poarta cu sine si emotii 37:25 | Copiii sunt precum o minte cosmica, omniprezenta, o constiinta dincolo de timp si spatiu 39:02 | Pierzi conexiunea cu tine 42:40 | Gandim cu mintea egoului 43:27 | Mananca cu apreciere, cu iubire, cu senzatia ca esti deja implinit 45:15 | Ce mananca Master Yu? 47:19 | Practica meditatiei 50:17 | Prezenta constienta in propriul corp, fundament al meditatiei 54:38 | Mintea egotica are tendinta de a fugi de trecut 55:00 | Proiectul de viata al sufletului 57:31 | Cercul vicios al insuficientei: timp, energie si bani 01:00:53 | Tehnologia manifestarii rezulta din puterea fiintei tale 01:04:26 | Ce mai pretioasa resursa pentru orice om este bucuria de a trai 01:05:39 | Sfat de final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 03:29 | Pasiunea pentru psihoterapie 07:00 | Suferinta ne uneste 09:52 | M-am cautat pe mine 13:36 | Eu sunt o persoana cititoare 17:14 | Asa nu se mai poate 18:07 | Daca eu sunt fericita si copii mei sunt fericiti 20:41 | Un psihoterapeut bun trebuie sa fie aliniat cu sine insusi 23:20 | Trauma se vede in modificari ale ADN-ului 25:56 | Am luat aurul din familia mea, partea buna a situatiei 28:23 | Triada neagra: narcisism, machiavelism si psihopatie 34:29 | Nu punem pret pe intuitie 35:33 | Explicatia deochiului 36:50 | Este credincioasa Adriana Bahmuteanu? 42:14 | Mama cu 2 baieti 43:49 | Cum e sa ai mama pe Adriana Bahmuteanu? 45:33 | Despre noua relatie 47:42 | Explozia de abuzuri 50:28 | Toxicitatea intr-o relatie 55:27 | Bullying-ul din scolile publice 58:48 | Unde se vede Adriana Bahmuteanu peste 5 ani 59:40 | Sfat de final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 01:42 | Intro 02:32 | Romanii asculta muzica populara 05:08 | Sunt mult mai romani 08:54 | Limba romana – estenta identitatii nationale 09:50| De ce avem atat de putine restaurante romanesti? 11:52 | Romani cumpara produse romanesti 14:19 | Fructe si legume de la tara 18:30 | Care sunt preferinte romanilor in materie de muzica 22:09 | De ce sunt romanii atrasi de muzica populara 25:20 | Muzica populara este in AND-ul romanilor 29:50 | Romania este o tara safe 30:40 | Problema reala a Romaniei este prezenta decalajelor intre resursele tarii 34:21 | P.I.B-ul Bucurestiului este mai mare decat P.I.B-ul Serbiei 36:10 | Top 3 produse romanesti 41:00 | Romania a intrat in spatiul Schenghen 44:20 | In cine avem cea mai mare incredere? 50:00 | Normalitatea mersului la terapeut 55:09 | Sfat final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
Dacă Biblia recomandă măsura mică la miere care, pe lângă fructoză (60%) și glucoză (40%), conține și mici cantități de betaină, colină, B9, B3, B6 și B2, cu cât mai mult la zahăr, care are doar… calorii. Citește acest devoțional și multe alte meditații biblice pe https://devotionale.ro #devotionale #devotionaleaudio
00:00 | Teaser 01:21 | Intro 02:31 | Drumul catre Dubai 05:21 | De cat curaj este nevoie sa incepi o afacere de success? 07:39 | In Dubai, barbatii incurajeaza femeile 09:10 | Cine sunt clientii Emax Dubai? 10:53 | Emax Dubai ofera toate serviciile 11:42| Tot ce trebuie sa stii daca vrei sa te muti in Dubai prin Emax 15:48 | Birocratia strica Romania 15:58 | Dubai, o tara pe repede inainte 17:21 | Peste 600 de clienti romani 18:58 | Pasii pentru achizitionarea unei locuinte in Dubai 22:24 | Andreea Popa, expert imobiliar 23:34 | Cea mai scumpa propietate – 24 milioane de euro 25:00 | Familia este pe primul loc 25:44 | Showroom Emax, in Romania 26:57 | Exista oameni alesi care sa reusesca 29:45 | Investesti in tine, doar daca ai ceva ce poate fi dezvoltat 34:26 | Despre excese 37:40 | Stilul de viata al Andreei Popa 40:50| Proiectarea viitorului 41:47 | Rezilienta emotionala a unui om de afaceri 45:32 | Dubai, o lupta pentru bani 49:14 | Despre credinta 50:44 | Viata de familie si viata de afaceri 53:23 | Sfat de final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Intro 01:05 | EverArt, o afacere din 1999 01:51 | Ce inseamna EverArt 02:28 | Alexandra, un antreprenor tanar 03:31 | Batalia generatiilor 05:58 | Instagram – cel mai important canal de comunicare 08:11 | Rezilienta emotionala 10:03 | Greutatile ne ridica 11:03 | Generatia actuala – o generatie sensibila 11:37 | "Am fost un spirit rebel” 12:32 | 2 luni in Indonezia 14:22 | Foamea de cunoastere de sine 16:15 | Cat de importanti sunt prietenii 17:46 | Cand esti singur, esti autentic 18:26 | Despre depasirea fricilor 21:02 | Importanta sportului 22:10 | Cum faci orice lucru mic, asa faci si orice lucru mare 23:48 | 11 zile, pe Silent 27:27 | 3 lucruri importante pentru o afacere de succes 30:41 | Traditia afacerii de familie 32:27 | Sfat final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 01:27 | Intro 02:19 | Cine este Leo de la Rosiori? 02:40 | Leo canta de la 7 ani 03:17 | Despre familia lui Leo 05:23 | Cariera muzicala a inceput la nunti 06:06 | Probleme de sanatate 07:43 | La 25 de ani a inceput schimbarea vietii lui Leo 08:09 | Manifestarea i-a adus la succesul 09:00 | ,,Am fost inconjurat de oameni care mi-au spus ca nu o sa fac nimic” 14:33 | Concurenta a existat din totdeauna 16:31 | Leo si educatia 18:20 | Trupa lui Leo a fost momentul de start in cariera de succes 20:20 |Dumnezeu e pentru toti 21:48 | Suferinta l-a ajutat sa inteleaga viata 25:14 | Universul ofera oglida gandurilor tale 30:20 | ,,Imi dau sufletul si inima pentru public” 32:28 | ,,Tu fa-ti treaba cum trebuie, ca bani vin de la sine” 35:18 | Despre credinta-lucrurile simple ma fac fericit 36:20 | Cred in Dumnezeu 37:23 | Leo de la Rosiori a trecut prin depresie 40:23 | Suferinta ne-o aducem singuri 42:30 | Despre terapie 49:23 | Leo a fost un copil marginalizat 52:40 | Frica transgenerationala 54:04 | Despre adictii 56:03 | Muntele ii aduce liniste 56:51 | Acceptarea prezentului 58:13 | Familia lui Leo, o familie tanara 58:46 | Planuri de viitor 1:00:46 | Ideea pleaca in constiinta colectiva 1:06:34 | Sfat final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:35| Intro 01:29 | Putina stiinta te indeparteaza de Dumnezeu, iar multa te apropie 03:14 | Schimbarea incepe cu noi 06:58 | Suntem aici pentru a invata 09:33 | Viata dupa viata 12:52 | Everything, Everywhere, All at Once 16:43 | Vrem sa ne asiguram viitorul 20:41 | Reusim daca ne organizam prea mult? 23:25 | Cum scapam de depresie/anxietate? 28:04 | Perfectionismul ne ucide 30:42 | Putem deveni iar tineri 39:45| Kefirul cel mai bun anti-tumoral 40:25 | Despre cancer 45:59 | Despre diabet 47:09 | Ce este bine sa mancam? 59:00 | Oboseala fizica si psihica 1:01:22 | Sfat de final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 01:27 | Intro 01:56 | Cine este Dragos Gardescu? 02:08 | Cand a inceput succesul lui Puya? 04:16 | Muzica inspirata din viata reala 06:14 | Muzica a salvat 08:09 | Ce semnifica “PUYA”? 09:23 | Cum arata acum Salajanul? 11:19 | Mai mult tigan decat roman 12:24 | Schimbarea muzicii rap 16:08 | Cand banii erau mai putini, fericirea era mai mare 17:07 | Baza muzicii trap 20:55 | Viata de cartier a fost ca in filme? 23:35 | La Familia si lautarii 29:14 | ”Eu nu am facut niciodată publicitate piesei” 30:15 | Manelele nu au murit 32:46 | Proiectul ,,Hardcore” 34:50 | 20 aprilie, Arenele Romane 37:08 | Despre turneu - 16 orase 37:43 | Dragos ca tata 40:18 | De la baiat de cartier, la tata de fete 42:15 | Puya, un tata strict 43:26| Diferenta dintre generatii 44:25 | Puya sta cu 5 femei in casa 45:05 |Despre stilul de viata 46:38 | Despre credinta 50:08 | Lucrurile rele te aduc pe calea cea dreapta 52:57 | Puya si social media 55:23| Puya un om real 58:23 | Un artist este o persoana complexa 1:00:38 | “Nu am avut timp de depresie” 1:05:09 | Nu exista colaborari intre trupele de rap 1:05:09 | Sfat de final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 1:27 | Intro 2:46 | Despre social media 5:52 | Importanta de a fi mereu impreuna in cuplu 6:04 | Oamenii cauta naturalete in online 8:14| Nisarea pe un anumit segment din comunitatea online 10:18 | A fi real, reteta succesului 11:40 | Gatitul, o alta forma de meditatie 15:14 | Primul salariu-100$ 16:00 | Top 3 feluri de mancare facute de Gabriela Cristea 17:50 | Business de familie 18:46 | Despre alimentatia copiilor 20:15 | Cum aratau intalnirile dintre Gabi&Tavi, la inceput 21:34| Despre muzica 24:22 | Tavi, un tata implicat 27:10 | Parenting 30:17 | Este nevoie de terapeut? 31:44 | Munca a fost terapeutul Gabrielei 36:00 | ,,Copilul niciodata nu e de vina” 37:56 | Cat de important este sa lasi copilul sa fie el 39:50 | Tavi, indragostit de fetele lui 40:49 | Cat de greu a fost sa ramana insarcinata Gabriela? 43:19 | Viata la casa 47:05 | Cum isi impart cei doi sarcinile de parinti 47:52 | Secretul unei casnicii fericite 50:16 | Ce ar schimba unul la celalat? 52:56 | Cine face curatenie? 55:36 | Cum arata casa Gabrielei si a lui Tavi 56:40 | Generatia prezenta si obsesia de social media 59:43 | Planuri de viitor 1:03:11 | Sfat final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
00:00 | Teaser 0:37 |Intro 1:56 | Cine este Mircea Baniciu? 2:18 | Copilăria lui Mircea Baniciu 2:56 | Începuturile carierei muzicale 8:50| Moni Bordeianu, primul care a plecat în America 11:08 | Mircea Baniciu, student la arhitectură 18:01 | ,,Toată lumea ne voia acasă la ei” 18:08 | Phoenix a durat 7 ani 26:34 | Cum au fugit membrii Phoenix din tara 31:18 | Mircea Baniciu dupa plecarea membrilor Phoenix 33:31| Baniciu acompaniat de o claviatura 35:05 | Despre primul album ,,Secunda 1” 41:30 | Vocea lui Baniciu de incontestat 45:26| Au existat si ani grei 54:44| ,,Nu trantiti usa!” 57:36| De la Pheonix, la Pasarea Colibri 59:51| Dupa 89' a urmat un turneu international 1:01:01 | Moartea lui Pitis 1:01:40| Dumnezeu e in noi 1:02:59| Mircea Baniciu va fi bunic 1:03:35| Ana, fiica lui Mircea Baniciu 1:04:03|Ana a urmat drumul tatalui ei 1:09:49| ,,Best of Mircea Baniciu” 1:11:59|Varsta ne aduce liniste 01:15:31| Sfat final pentru generațiile viitoare --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
Laura Cosoi, familia numeroasa si apropierea de Dumnezeu 00:00 | Intro 01:17 | Personajele din desene animate. Repere pentru cei mici. 03:03 | Cât de importantă este joaca pentru copii 04:25 | Laura Cosoi, mama a trei fete 05:00 | Frumusețea unei familii numeroase 07:21| Cine petrece mai mult timp cu fetele? 09:00 | Instinctul matern, mai presus de orice sfat din afară 10:46 | Copilăria Laurei i-a conturat personalitatea 11:35 | Despre fricile mamelor 14:39 | Diferențele dintre generații 19:41 | Părerea Laurei despre adopție 20:17 | Laura Cosoi, autoare a 3 cărți 25:23 | Cum a afectat-o boala mamei sale 29:10 | Există viață după moarte? 31:44 | Fiecare e venit cu o menire 34:00 | Noi, copiii, devenim părinți 36:48 | Mama, în viața noastră 37:43 | Mama Laurei Cosoi, o emblemă a feminității 41:27 | Frica. Cel mai puternic sentiment 44:15 | De ce suntem nefericiți? 45:28 | Acceptarea prezentului 47:04 | Ce este acceptarea? 50:00 | Luptăm până în ultima secundă 52:34 | Apropierea de Dumnezeu 53:47 | Momentele grele, te fac recunoscător pentru prezent 59:09 | Cazurile complicate te aduc la realitate 01:02:27 | Sfat final pentru generațiile viitoare --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
În culisele longevității muzicale: De la comunism la succesul global. 00:00 | Teaser 00:44 | Intro 1:31 | Holograf, la Sala Palatului 2:31 | 44 de ani de Holograf 3:15 | Secretul longevității 4:30 | Dan Bittman. 5 luni fără muzică 5:40 | Magia din piesele Holograf 7:29 | LIVE 11:14 | Edi și începutul vieții de toboșar 12:36 | Holograf, trupa cu spirit românesc 13:48 | Despre muzicanții școliți în străinătate 17:36 | Spiritul românesc păstrat în muzica pop 20:15 | Holograf în perioada comunistă 22:33 | Suișuri și coborâșuri 24:14 | Olanda i-a ținut uniți 25:02 | Cine e artist în ziua de azi? 27:17 | Definiția muzicianului 30:35| Muzica se simte prin text 31:29 | Manele vechi, actuale prin mesaj 33:52 | Soarta muzicii lăutărești 35:20 | Muzica în viața copiilor din familia Holograf 40:12 | Dan Bittman cea mai cunoscută voce 41:24 | Fără suflet nu ești muzică 42:07 | Suferința, inspirație pentru muzică 42:53 | Credință 44:54 | Ce îi ține uniți pe membrii trupei Holograf? 46:09 | Despre alcool și viața de artist 47:48 | Sfat final --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damiandraghici/message
Shownotes and Transcript The question 'who is indigenous' comes up a lot while discussing demographics and immigration. And no country has this been asked more than Israel. Brian of London joins us to discuss a Twitter/X post and article titled "Israel Palestine: Who's Indigenous?". For some reason this question is contentious. Brian breaks it down (according to anthropologist Jose R Martin-Cobo) under a series of headings of Land, Culture, Common Ancestry, Language, Religion and Blood. Basically we are looking at a historic continuity. Brian uses these headings to look at whether it is the Jews or the Palestinians that fit this indigenous definition Brian of London completed a PhD in Computational Fluid Dynamics just as the Web was emerging. But then he left academia to do management consulting and eventually moved to Israel to do business. Brian's working on the cutting edge of the new Podcasting 2.0 to make sure this relic of the early web, stays free from capture by the centralising forces of Web 2.0 and their dangerous desire to turn us all into dairy cows. Brian was also the admin on Tommy Robinson's Facebook account that had over a million followers before it was nuked! In his spare time, he assists with a gigantic class action lawsuit in Australia on behalf of the entire crypto industry. Interview recorded 2.1.24 Connect with Brian... X https://x.com/brianoflondon?s=20 Connect with Hearts of Oak... WEBSITE https://heartsofoak.org/ PODCASTS https://heartsofoak.podbean.com/ SOCIAL MEDIA https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Support Hearts of Oak by purchasing one of our fancy T-Shirts.... SHOP https://heartsofoak.org/shop/ *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin and on X https://twitter.com/TheBoschFawstin?s=20 Transcript (Hearts of Oak) And it's wonderful to have Brian of London join us once again. Brian, thanks so much for your time today. (Brian of London) Well, thank you very much for having me on. Not at all. There's lots to discuss in your neck of the woods, as they would say in the Brits, in your part of the world. And obviously we have had, we have a Tera Dahl who was just back from Israel. She'd been there three, four weeks for Real America's Voice reporting. We had Bridget Gabriel on actually discussing. But I think we want to go on a slightly different tact, and it was one of your tweets looking at, and I think part of it was from another article, Israel-Palestine, who's indigenous? and I've always had a very firm understanding because of biblical history and where I come at this from a Christian but even there's confusion amongst parts of the Christian world and community but that may mess this conversation up even more. But let's, Israel-Palestine, who's indigenous? Maybe tell us why this was of interest to you, and then we can go with some of the categories and how you define this term indigenous. Yeah, and I just realized I've got my window open. So if you're hearing background noise, tell me, otherwise I'll leave it open. I'm in my bomb shelter, which everyone should know. And fortunately, we actually haven't been in it for about 10 days now and the last major barrage of rockets was just to the south of us on midnight on new year's eve obviously they did the fireworks for us and that. We we had our Muslim mayor, Sadiq Kahn do the fireworks for us as well in London but it was different firework. Different and the thing with that was actually it was, they fired them. They always fire them at exactly on the hour. In fact, there's a joke that the guy controlling the missiles, his name is Abu Dekar. Dekar means on the minute. So we say, oh, Abu Dekar is firing again. Because they fire at exactly 12, so then the alarm goes at sort of 12.01, and the missiles arrive at sort of 12.01 or 12.02. Anyway, I didn't hear an alarm because it was south of me. I just heard the booms when we intercepted. But yeah, I'm in my bomb shelter. But what I sent you, I sent you an article which actually was published in 2014 by a friend of mine. And I helped get this published because Israeli Cool, the blog that it's on, the guy who runs that and me both found this guy who is a Métis Canadian indigenous person. Or they call them First Nations in Canada. That's the politically correct term. He doesn't mind being called an Indian. He's quite happy with that or whatever terminology, but he's Métis, which is a tribe that its original area was sort of somewhere in Canada. But he put out this article in a very obscure kind of place, and I just grabbed it and I said to him, can you just say all of this stuff again for the Israeli audience? And that's what we did. And because he has studied properly the way the UN came to regard what an indigenous person was. Because indigenous means something completely different from people than it does for plants and animals. Plants and animals are indigenous when they've been in the same place for thousands or millions of years. But people is a totally different beast. We have moved around the world ever since we were people. Vast migrations out of Africa. The term indigenous just doesn't mean anything. It doesn't mean the same thing for a person as it does for a plant. The kind of way that this is seen in the academic literature, and remember, this is infused with leftism, so we're picking and choosing here a little bit. And this guy, Jose Martinez Cobo, he came up with this definition. And this has stuck. And this really is the way the entire field looks at indigenous. And I'll just read or direct from the summary of his work what these rules are. Self-identification as indigenous peoples at the individual level and acceptance as a member by the community. Okay, so you have to actually feel that you're indigenous, okay? Historical continuity with pre-colonial and or pre-settler societies, okay? I'll read them off and then we'll sort of go through them and what they mean for Jews and Israel and what they mean for Palestinians, for example, and then we can sort of look at this in relation to Brits and Irish people and, you know, English, Welsh, Scottish, and, strong link to territories and surrounding natural resources, distinct social, economic, or political systems, distinct language, culture, and knowledge. I'm going to skip one, and then I'm going to say resolve to maintain and reproduce ancestral environments and systems as distinctive peoples and communities. Okay, this is anthropology language. But the basics are, and my friend summarizes them like this, land, language, culture, spirituality, and the last one is blood. And we'll get back to that because that's actually that's the one that's just the least important actually for Jews, especially for Jews. So Jews self-identify this is obvious it's like, we've been three and a half thousand years or so I mean the the numbers claim there's a book to my right, if you go full screen there's a book the atlas of Jewish history just behind me. And in that, this one here, the Atlas of Judaism, okay, we can go back to. If you go back to that, if you start looking for dates, Abraham kind of is dated at about 4,000 years ago, to 2,000 BC. He walked from Mesopotamia all the way down across the Middle East, Iran, Iraq. It's mixed up because none of those are real. Well, Iran and Persia became real soon, you know, later. Basically, none of it is what is there today. And he walked across that. And then he walked down through Israel. And he walked on a road that we have in Israel today called Highway 40. It's the road that runs down the backbone of what we call Judea-Samaria, what the Jordanians renamed the West Bank, that road follows the path that Abraham took and is described in the bible as the path that Abraham took and when you when you drive quickly down that road today you see the road signs in the order in which they appear in the bible. It's as real as that and that is 30 or 40 kilometres that way I'm pointing off to the east, the sea is that way that's my west, this stuff is real. Now, whether you believe the story of Abraham was real or not to the Jewish people, it is foundational. It is our ethnogenesis. It's the start of what led to being Jewish, but that's really. But I just want, actually, when you say it, it depends what you believe is real or or not, the level of documentation to actually prove that actually the Old Testament story and New Testament story is more documented than nearly any other historical event. And yet the world believes parts of history, but you've got this mountain of evidence and they say, oh no, that's just fables. So when you say, if you want to believe it or not, actually, it's there staring you in the face that there is no more evidence for the biblical events than there is for anything else in the world. Correct. And it's even more than the biblical events. It's that the book that was woven around it, the Hebrew Bible, it was something that Jews preserved through an enormous act of preservation that I don't think has a parallel in the world. Okay. The Torah, as we call it, the way it is passed down is we write it out by hand. And the people who write the Torah, they write it without making a mistake. And if they make a mistake, they throw it away and start again. And there's no tippex and there's no scratching it out and there's no backspace key. This is and this document is so unbelievably well preserved that when you dig up the dead sea scrolls that were that were, you know in the caves of Qumran for three thousand years or two and a half thousand years when you dig those up, actually I don't know they might be a bit more modern than that but when you dig them up I can go and look at them and my Hebrew is not great but I can read the words. Biblical Hebrew is different from modern Hebrew, but I recognize the words. And if I open a modern Torah, they are the same. The transcription errors down the Torah is… We have this record. Abraham ends up in Hebron. He buys a cave to bury his wife in. That purchase of the cave in Hebron again. It doesn't matter whether you believe it happened exactly. That purchase forms the basis of our property rights in the modern world. That purchase of a cave is the oldest recorded land transaction that follows the modern form of transactions, offer, consideration, acceptance. Our whole edifice of modern contract law is built around that cave purchase. And that's part of Judaism. Judaism, then, of course, and I'm no biblical scholar, but Joseph goes to Egypt, the children of Israel become numerous, they leave Egypt in a hurry, which is also a story of the emancipation of slavery. Again, Jews led the way in that. What's interesting about our civilization today is not that we had slavery. It's not that the Americans had slavery. It's that it was abolished, and Jews abolished slavery within their own systems a millennia before. What's interesting about the West is not having had slavery. What's interesting is having got rid of slavery. I'll put forward that that's a Jewish. You get that because eventually, and it took the South Africans a lot longer than anyone else to realize this, but when you read the Bible and you read all men are created in the image of God, you just have to get rid of slavery. It doesn't work. Again, a Jewish thing. All of these stories, and then the Jews come back to Israel, and yes, there's wars and stuff, and there's Canaanites and Philistines and battles and Jericho, and the walls come tumbling down. All of these phrases I can just throw at you. The majority of a reasonably educated Western populace, they just understand those cultural references in a way. I don't need to explain Jericho. You know, I don't need to explain a lot of this stuff. David and Goliath, that's David the Jew versus Philistine Goliath. It happened actually near Gaza. Well, in the hills, sort of inland from there. But Samson, Samson and Delilah, that story is in Gaza. All of these foundational stories for Jews, which Christianity also adopts, the whole of the Hebrew Bible is basically part of the Christian canon. That happens here. Those are place names. Into the New Testament, Armageddon is Megiddo. It's 80 kilometres that way. I can drive there. Yes, I think I can still drive there. It's not closed. We have such ties. We have our ancestors buried. The reason why Hebron is special today and why Jews want to live there is because there's a massive building that Solomon built. It's the same era as the famous Western Wall, the Temple Mount. That building is built on top of this cave that Abraham bought. That's why it's there. That's where we buried our matriarchs and our patriarchs. This is a, and you know when when Martinez talks about historical continuity and strong link to territories and surrounding natural resources, the strongest link you can have is ancestral burial sites, you know everybody sort of knows the kind of, from America, the you know, how, oh this is this is ancient burial lands, well Hebron is the burial site of Abraham's family, basically. Nablus, who is the modern name. The old biblical name is Shem. That's actually closest to me. That's literally inland from me now. That's the burial site of Joseph. There's a building there called Joseph's Tomb. Now, the Muslims sort of revere it because they stole our prophets and stuff. But they only revere it because we do. The site of the temple in Jerusalem is the site on which Abraham was supposed to sacrifice Isaac, where the whole story of the ram and the burning bush, the.. sorry, the ram caught in the bush, not the burning bush, that's Moses. That story happens on what is now today the temple mount. That was the position of the high holies. That's why we built the temple there, twice. That's why the Romans destroyed it. That's why the Muslims came along when they conquered it and built a mosque and a mausoleum on that spot, because it matters. Those are elements of colonization. These other components like distinct language, culture, and knowledge. Now, yes, we revived Hebrew as a modern language. That was controversial because some very religious Jews would say that Hebrew is the language of prayer. It's the language of the Torah. are we shouldn't use it for day-to-day stuff when we're going to be obscene and tell jokes and in fact what tends to happen is we use Arabic for the worst stuff but um, that was controversial but it was also hugely important that there is continuity that any Jewish child living in Israel, any Israeli child, can pick up an ancient scroll that was buried in the desert, and all the letters look familiar. That's amazing. Nobody reads hieroglyphics. The Roman Catholic Church teaches their clergy to read Latin, but it's not a day-to-day language anywhere. Hebrew is a day-to-day language, and it has biblical continuity back 3,000 plus years. Now, when I read through this list, which we'll post later, I missed one. I said I was going to miss one. In the UN, they've got this one line, status as a non-dominant social group. I can't help, and I've discussed this with Ryan. Ryan Bellerose is the Métis Canadian. That's almost like they had to put that in to try and find some way to make Jews not indigenous in Israel. Because we are, Jews are now the dominant social group in one place in the world, Israel. It's like we we won, we're the only ones actually, we're really the only indigenous people that lost our land and got it back and that is essentially, Zionism is that, it is the return of Jews to Zion, you know, by the rivers of Babylon, where, you know, that psalm, that's, what, 600 years BCE? That's Zionism. We've been trying to get back to Zion, Jerusalem, Israel, for thousands of years, ever since we were cast out by the Romans. I think the last time Jews really ran the place was up until when we revolted too much and the Romans kicked us out on 135 or 132 or whatever it was, and changed the name. And again, this is colonizer versus indigenous. What do colonizers do? They bring a new language, they try to crush whatever markers there are of indigenousness. And then they destroy, they build their new stuff on top of old stuff. They try and erase indigenous identities. And that's what's actually happened all over the world. You know, Native Americans cling on in America. Across Europe there are sort of lots of indigenous identities that were crushed by the Romans that never reappeared. I would say that the EU itself was trying to do this, it's it's trying to sort of flatten Europe and you all become Europeans in a horrible Marxist sense and I think that's one of the reasons why Israel is so hated by this globalist elite type thing, is that we are just this total exception. We are the indigenous people that came back, made it work, and made it work. And it doesn't mean, and let's just sort of circle back to the blood, and then I'll let you get a word in edge ways. Blood. This is the bit that gets thrown at us all the time on the internet. Okay? Every time I post indigenous, oh, you're from Europe. Well, actually, I was born in South Africa, so I'm African. You know, bite on that, you chumps. I'm second generation. My parents were born in Africa. I'm second generation African. So I don't know where you think I should go back to. I grew up in London. Yeah, that's true. My accent is London, but I never felt English actually. I've got my British citizenship, but am I English I don't think so. I'm Jewish, Jews belong here, so blood is uniquely unimportant to Jews for one good reason and the reason is Ruth, the story of Ruth in the bible is the story that actually to this day means that Jews accept converts. As soon as you accept conversion, it means blood doesn't matter. Now, we do not have an easy conversion process, okay? And in fact, you know, whenever I've, and I know some of my best friends here are converts, and they're more orthodox than me, more, you know, they observe of Sabbath, Shabbat, more than I do. And in many ways. But there's no hint or there's no feeling for me personally, or you don't find it anywhere in Israel, that if somebody has gone through the process of an Orthodox-recognized conversion, nobody here looks down upon them. In fact, many of us realize that's a lot harder than just being born. So blood. I don't know where his blood is from. In fact, I think the two converts I know the best, Australians and both, I think, from Catholic families, doesn't matter. So I don't care about blood. Now, it turns out I actually am Kohanim, and you can check, but there's DNA markers. But that's not what makes me Jewish. What makes me Jewish is self-identification, keeping the rituals, doing Shabbat dinners. And it doesn't even matter the level of observance. It's some level of observance and some recognition that it means something to be Jewish. So when they throw at you this Khazar crap and go back to Europe, and I mean, even that is ala panim, on its face. That doesn't mean the same thing. On its face, it's just ridiculous, because more than half the Jews in Israel are of Middle Eastern backgrounds. Algeria, Morocco, Yemen, Iran, Iraq, Syria. All of these places is where Jews came from. Right now, and Ethiopia, of course, we've airlifted them. All of these things mean that we're just a mongrel mix these days. And our kids are all meeting and intermarrying between different... There really isn't a level of racism that I can certainly recognize in America. So blood, what does blood mean? It doesn't... It's important. It's one of the markers. But it is not who makes you a Jew. Well, I think, yeah, there are a lot of points to pick up. For me, actually, it's the history. Abraham 4,000 years ago, David 3,000, establishing Jerusalem as the capital. So you've got 2,000 years of history on the land, in effect, before the Romans took over. The renaming of that land as Palestine to remove Israel off the face of the earth, just like Iran want to do.. That's deliberate.. Just exactly. Syria, Palestina and yeah of course the word came from the Greek from palash invaders from the sea, you can, it's like you can get you can get locked in all that crappy silly detail, it doesn't matter and it doesn't matter if it's Israel or the kingdom of David, it was or Judah or Samaria. Today it's Israel because when you form a modern nation, within the framework of modern nations that arose in the 1850s onwards. I can't remember the philosophical name for this, but Israel slots in within modern nationhood as the land of the Jews. Should there be a Kurdish nation? Yeah, sure. I just want to tell you something else about this. indigenous status is not zero sum, because there are indigenous people does not mean that nobody else is indigenous. Now, and I'm not coming to the Palestinians by any means next. We have Aramaic Christians living in the Galilee region. They are following a kind of Christianity that emerged very soon after Jesus died. And they are speaking Aramaic, or they're doing their liturgy in Aramaic. I've met one. There's a famous picture of Tommy Robinson standing next to a bearded guy with a big hat wearing his Mossad t-shirt. That's Father Nadav, and we went to meet him in Nazareth. That's in Nazareth. He lives there. There's a community of Aramaic Christians. The only place you can be an Aramaic Christian safely in the whole Middle East is Israel. And then we've got Druze. Druze is a kind of, it's wrong to call them completely Muslim. They're something else entirely. And their geographic region encompasses Syria and Lebanon and Israel. But where are they best off? Most of them, realize, in Israel. We've got some Baha'is who came from Iran, settled here. They're up in Haifa. We have Samaritans, actually. That's very close to me. This town of Nablus, okay? What's the Palestinian town of Nablus? Well, it comes from Neopolis, the Roman for new city. So even their name in Arabic of Nablus, it's a corruption of a Roman word. It's not Arabic. And you know this because Neopolis, anything with a P is not Arabic. So the P gets converted to a B. It's just like the Palestinians, when they say it, they call it a phalestini, because they can't say P, so they change it to E. So Nablus, which is the place of Shem, again, Romans, they knew Shem is in the Bible many times, but they have to rename the place Neopolis to assert Roman dominance, and that's what you do. The Samaritans live on a place called Mount Gruzine, which overlooks that. They're there. We've got Bedouin Arabs who have lived here for a long time, but Bedouins have moved across the whole Middle East for centuries. To call them indigenous, they have parts of their culture here, but it's not unique to Israel. That's the point, the Bedouin culture is across the whole of the Arab peninsula all the way out. So did any part of their culture arise in Israel? Not really. But they have something called rights of longstanding presence, for sure. And they serve in our armed forces, and we have all sorts of internal political disputes over where they live and how they live and what their place. But again, that's stuff we can deal with. It's not sort of virulent hatred all the time. But this point of, is Islam indigenous to Israel? No, nothing of it. The only bit that they talk about is the farthest, there's a passage in the Quran that talks about the farthest mosque, and that has been reinterpreted. And there's a very famous clip from Al Jazeera from years and years ago. Professor Mordechai Kadar, he went on Al Jazeera in Arabic and he asked the host, how many times is Jerusalem named in the Quran? And the Quran was written 700, 800 years after the Romans destroyed Jerusalem. Everybody in the whole world, the known, educated world, knew the name Jerusalem. But yet it does not appear once in the Quran. Not once. There's an oblique reference to a night journey by Muhammad to the furthest mosque. And he tied his horse up outside and ascended to heaven. That is the entire basis for Islamic claim to Israel and Jerusalem. Other than the fact that they assume everything. They're a replacement theology. So they brought in all of Christianity. They brought in all of Judaism. They then tell us we forged it to take out Muhammad. And they write their book, the Quran, which they then say, we're the corruptors of. Jews are worse than Christians because we went astray. Jews are the ones who went astray. Christians are the ones who were just led astray. You followed us instead of the Muslims so we're both cursed but Jews are cursed a bit more. But that's that's not the claim, that's the claim, that's what we're fighting over. And of course well yeah and of course you'd, you've got the period of the Romans and then the period of Arabs or Muslims from what 600... And crusaders, Sala in the Kurd, This history just goes, but all of it, the constant theme throughout is, one, there were Jews always here. Jews never left. There were Jews in Sfat. They came back in 1200 and 600. The only people who ever regarded this land as the place of genesis of their entire civilization is Jews. Yeah. And then you go through, you're right, all those histories with the Ottoman Empire, whatever morphing of Arabness or Muslimness there was on there. And then you're right that Muslims tie Jerusalem to a story about a flying donkey, but we'll not even go into that. We'll not have to base what you believe in that. But the issue, I guess, you have now is that the clash between Romans and the Jews living there was a land grab and dominance. It's something much deeper in terms of Islam, and I 100% believe that Islam was started. One of the main reasons is to eradicate who Jesus is. You can't say Jesus, son of God. You cannot, that he was simply a man. And at its heart, and that means at its heart is also hatred of the Jews and the Jewish people, because without Judaism, you do not have Christianity. It's impossible. But that hatred we have seen over the whole time, and 1948, it is an absolute miracle to see what happens. I think maybe the hatred is from, one, the hatred that Islam has against Judaism. That's one. But also there's a second hatred that I think the miracle of modern-day Israel, that many people cannot accept that, and they look for something darker. You know, Israel being the centre of everything, being in control. And they come up with this idea to remove any understanding that actually you can't explain. 1948, when you read about what happened, I've read it in 67, 73, and all of those, it is a miracle. It could not happen, should not happen. And yet Israel stands there as a proud country, hugely successful in the midst of basket cases of countries. But yeah, talk to us about that level of vitriol against Israel and against the Jewish people that exists not only in the Middle East, but actually exists in the media and across the world, really. Well, I, you know, every Jew does, you know, I guess my kids are starting to do it now. You start, you know, when you're brought up Jewish, eventually at some point you understand that this thing called the Holocaust happened. And what it does to a lot of us is you go through a phase where you try and, why? What's with the hatred? Why the hatred? And Islamic Jew hatred, I can see that in the Quran. I can see the hundred and whatever verses it is that mention Jews. And whereas we start off a little bit favourable in the early stuff, once Jews reject Muhammad and say no you're not a prophet we're done with our era of prophets, that was a thousand years ago, you're not one of them, once that happened he really then just goes on a the rest of his life is like, how can I f these Jews? And you know he kills a lot of Jews in Khaybar he takes their wives, their daughters, their and then also in Khaybar this other story, this very pivotal battle, after the battle when he kills all the men and he's got the women and one of the stories that's not well, it pretty authoritative, but again this doesn't matter whether it happened or not, it matters whether Muslims believe it, is that he was poisoned by this Jewish woman that he'd taken prisoner before he rapes her and that he died five years later from the poison he was was given then. Now, again, you get all sorts of scholars saying this is unlikely and it probably didn't happen. It doesn't matter. Do Muslims teach their children that a Jew killed Muhammad? Yes, they do. In large numbers, very large numbers. And so Jews rejected the prophet Muhammad. We don't call him a prophet. He isn't a prophet. He's their prophet. He's not our prophet. We rejected that. He fought lots of battles against us. He killed a lot of Jews, and eventually he was poisoned by a Jewess. These are not good things to teach your kids for coexistence. That's what they do. That kind of antisemitism, I understand that. That's ancient and it really hasn't changed. It can be dialled up or dialled down depending on the authoritarian rulers. UAE today might be dialling it down a lot. Great. In two or three generations, I'll feel a lot happier. Now, Nazi anti-Semitism, European anti-Semitism, again, Christianity had its creation stuff, and Christianity for a long time said that Jews killed Jesus. Despite Jesus being one of us, we, you know, and it took until, when did the Catholic Church change that? I mean, it was like in 1960 something or other, was the papal, you know, it's like, okay, thanks. It was the Romans. We can all agree on the Romans, but yes, Jews are stood accused of killing Jesus. That was one thing. Jews are successful. I don't know what it is. I personally have come to believe that Intel, the guy who founded Intel, Andy Grove, his autobiography was called Only the Paranoid Survive. I think Jews have been bred to be paranoid. There's other reasons which are genetically passed down. Whereas the Catholic Church, for a lot, makes its priests celibate, they become the most highly educated members of society, but yet they don't procreate. Jews did the opposite. You become a rabbi, the town supports the rabbi, and the smartest people who become rabbis then have 18 children. Perhaps that's the reason why we've got higher IQ. I don't know. We certainly value, as a culture, we value learning. We value books. We value, the fact that we've got troops in Gaza. What do they do at the weekends? Some of them, they drive armoured personnel carriers into Gaza with a gigantic Torah scroll so that they can stand in some house with bullet holes all around and do the Shabbat service with a real giant Torah scroll. First, they take in little ones, but once the roots are secure, what are we doing? Are we taking a book? This is the most ridiculous. And then what we do is, we do Talmudic rituals, as the Nazis and the anti-Semites would say. We're not doing it. It's not because, we're not out looking for the blood to drink and make my matzah. That's just utter crap. We're doing it because we value these traditions. We passed them down, and the continuity of Jews as a people has depended on us revering those words. That's why copying the Torah accurately for 3,000 years by hand, that's an astonishing cultural achievement that no culture on earth has managed. You know, Aborigines in Australia might have told stories orally, and that's a great sort of pass down. But we wrote it in a book, and the story of Abraham buying the cave becomes the root of Western civilization. So, you know, you can argue Judeo-Christian civilization for sure. And, you know, some people will say that democracy comes from the Greeks or whatever. Much more of our morality comes from the Jewish Hebrew Bible, the Ten Commandments, than any other foundational thing. And again, the Americans, I'll criticize the Americans and I'll criticize the West in a very specific way. Rights versus responsibility. Okay? If you read the Ten Commandments, what you are reading is not a charter of rights. You do not have the right to life. You do not have the right to property. You do not have the right to your wife. You read a responsibility. You read about honouring your parents. You read about not murdering people. You read about not coveting the other guy's ox or wife. Those are responsibilities. You follow those responsibilities within your tribe. Your rights are implied. And I think America and the whole Western notion of human rights and stuff, it puts the cart before the horse. What are your responsibilities? Your responsibility is not to lob rockets at civilian areas on midnight of new year's eve, your responsibility is not to break out through a fence and go murder and rape people in the most horrible way, if you follow the responsibility of not being complete and utter bleeps then you can have a right to life, we are going to remove we, you do not have a right to life when you commit those acts against us. That's what we're seeing now. We're not Christians, and the whole turn the other cheek thing, it's not in our book, and quite rightly. There's too much of that, and the modern Western Christianity has gone too far. Yeah. Yes. That's an interesting. Here, I'll not go down that route, but actually, I want to finish off with, I'm sure you've had, well, you face, I'm sure, a lot of abuse. And if you are a Zionist Shill, maybe you can share some of that, Brian, because I'll happily be a Zionist, but never get paid for it, which is a bummer. None of us get paid for this. It costs me a fortune living here. I know it would be much easier if we did get paid, but that's not how life works. But it's interesting what's happened. Maybe the backlash you get whenever you talk about Israel's existence and the history and that clash, and also what we are seeing at the moment. It's interesting, what's the term? Proportionality is the term that's used. And I always wonder, what's proportional to rape or murder of children? Do you really want to go down that? Because that's a very perverse path if you want to go down that. But yeah, tell us about that, the backlash, but also then Israel doing what it has to do to exist. And if other countries want to be peaceful, then that makes life a lot easier for everyone, including the Arab countries around. Well you know the backlash, first of all, hurty words on the internet doesn't doesn't hurt me, you know I'm very much a bit of a free speech absolutist, I'll block and I'll mute if they're boring. I mean but mostly I like, you know and I'll spar with a few of them you know. I'm just looking to my left, I've got a screen here, sort of one of these things that kicked this off was because someone said, so I get that a lot of Israeli Jews are scared right now. So here's an idea. Why don't we offer them refuge in our own countries? Invite them to Britain, the States, and Canada. It's a win-win. Israelis get to live somewhere they feel safe, and the locals get their land back. Now, after everything I've just said to you, firstly, we've tried living in other people's countries. It doesn't always go so well. You know, German Jews felt great in 1929, and Polish Jews felt great also. This was not a long-term, tenable solution. And so what I replied was, lol, no, we're home. When you dig up London, you find Roman stuff. When we dig up Jerusalem, we dig past that crap to the city of our Jewish King David. Pithy, short, you can't put all the history of the Middle East in a tweet or an x-post or whatever we're supposed to call it. Praise be to Elon. Now, so I get this back. This isn't how the world works. Just because you've owned something thing doesn't mean you always will. Also, the Celtic tribes inhabited London long before the Romans, and Canaanites existed in Palestine long before Israel. Well, as and when some Canaanites show up, and as long as they're not still doing the child sacrifice shit, we will give them a nice little bit of the country, and they can live and practice their whatever Canaanite religion. But the point is, there is no continuity of Canaanites, because probably because Jews genocided them, whatever, I don't care. Canaanite was absorbed into the Jewish tribes. That's what happened. There's nobody doing Canaanite today, so they don't exist. The Palestinians are not Canaanites. They're not Philistines either. They don't know anything about Canaanites or Philistines. But, you know, you get all of this stuff. David, this is a good one, actually. Chrissy, David was a corrupt criminal whose family came from Iraq. That's the Koran version of David. I was wondering. I missed that. I know. I know. That one's just brilliant. And it's just very simple. And it's with a little Canadian flag. And Chrissy is the name. Compassion, confidence, something about a sire. 170,000 followers. You kind of and then you know you get from sama Lebanese when you check your DNA it's east European, okay my yes yes my DNA did come a bit, because before South Africa we were somewhere in northeast Europe but again and then you know when I look through all of this telling me that I don't belong where I know I belong. Look, I came to Israel when I was 39 years old. I married my Israeli wife some years before that, tried to learn Hebrew in London. I'm crap at Hebrew, okay? I can barely read. I can sort of read, but more often than not, I'm copy-pasting into... Oh, Apple. Apple does not translate Hebrew by default. It's like not not one of their default languages. It's like, get with this. Anyway, I arrive in Israel as a 39-year-old PhD physicist, basically illiterate, but I feel more at home than I did in London. Explain that. I can't explain that. There's this woman, Eve Barlow, she's here visiting right now. She lands and she immediately feels at home. She lives in LA, She's a writer or she wrote, and writes about music. Why does she feel at home? And so many Jews you talk to, and this is a funny thing, when non-Jews come here and feel at home, they then start looking through their family tree and discover that four generations back, they are Jewish. And they start questioning their self. There's something that I can't explain to you that is is magical about being in Israel. Because it's tough. It is more comfortable to live in America and Britain. It really, it wasn't the easiest place to move to, but it just felt better. 100%. I think we'll finish it there. I think it's good to get a short conversation about this in Israel. And of course, you could take it wider into other countries. But that makes it very convoluted. And I think this perfectly fits to this current time. But, Brian, thank you so much. All the links for these will be in the description and our social media posts so people can follow the article and your post on it and have fun at the replies, which is sometimes the best part of Twitter posts. It certainly is. Anyway, yeah, we can do updates about the whole situation another time. But, yeah, thank you. This was really good. This is stuff I like talking about. This is positive. This is the reasons that people need to understand why Israel's not going anywhere. And that's the other. The last thing I'll say is this. You know, for 75 years, the Arabs have fought the correct, well, since 67 in particular, and through the 60s, basically, with the rise of Arafat and the PLO, which was a creation of the Soviet Union, the whole Palestinian identity. That's another point, but I'll just finish with this. They fought the correct battle to remove a colonial occupier from land. They fought the right battle that would have got the British out of India. Or the French out of Algeria, or half a dozen European countries out of bits of Africa. They fought the correct guerrilla warfare tactics, sort of terrorism, murders, all of this stuff. And it spectacularly fails to move Jews out of Jerusalem and Israel, because we are not colonial settlers. We will never be colonial settlers. The mindset, you know, and that's the other thing is, you know, when the Americans come here and tell us that we're not fighting the ground war in Gaza the correct way, and they're going to tell us how well they did in Iraq and Afghanistan, they were fighting thousands of miles from home. Our soldiers can actually stand at the top of a building with binoculars and see their homes. They go home, you know, if they're released at the weekend, they get taken to the border and they're home in 25 minutes. We are not projecting power as an imperial conquering army trying to make Iraqis be Democrats. It's not that. And so that the whole way in which the Palestinians are fought, encouraged by the entire world, encouraged by people shouting free Palestine from the river to the sea. When you do that, you encourage millions of poor Arabs to fight a war that they will never, ever win by the methods that they're fighting. They will never, ever win. They will never commit an act so atrocious that I will wake up in the morning and say, because believe me, October 7th was that act, that I will wake up in the morning and say, you know what? I think I'm going to go live in Berlin. That's not going to happen. You're not going to force me off my land with these acts. They don't work. it's wrong it's just totally the wrong approach, killing us doesn't matter, how many you rape, how many you kill, the only thing that will happen is the scale of our response and the sheer biblical nature of the response will come out, go read the story of Dinah, the men of Shechem, that's the story that's what's going on in Gaza right now, go read that story if you don't know your Bible. One woman was raped in the Bible. Dinah, go read that. Well, maybe those who live in Gaza, the Muslims or the Arabs, if they took this indigenous rights, then maybe they can move the refugee camp to Mecca. I'm sure it would be wonderful and they can enjoy that. Here's a little bit about Yemen. Yemen is Arabia, Arabs to Arabia.
SFAT Team Archangel completes their advice mission with Afghan National Army counterparts. Available in high definition.
What do we say to someone really tall who is sitting in front of us in the movie theater? And how do spies communicate with each other? Guy explains the Hebrew root ח.ב.א Hear the All-Hebrew Episode on Patreon New Words and Expressions: Machbo'im – Hide and seek – מחבואים Mesachkim be-machbo'im – We're playing hide and seek – משחקים במחבואים Machbo – Hideout, hiding place – מחבוא Mistor – Hiding place – מסתור Lehachbi – To hide – להחביא Lehastir – To hide – להסתיר “Tipim eich lehachbi mamtakim me-aba gargeran” – Tips on how to hide candy from a gourmand father – טיפים איך להחביא ממתקים מאבא גרגרן Lehachbi dvarim mi-mishehu – To hide things from someone – להחביא דברים ממישהו “Hu mastir sham mashehu elef achuz” – He's hiding something in there, one thousand percent – הוא מסתיר שם משהו אלף אחוז Hu mastir sod – He's hiding a secret – הוא מסתיר סוד Hu machbi et ha-kesefe mi-tachat la-mizran – He's hiding the money under the mattress – הוא מחביא את הכסף מתחת למזרן Lehachbi et ha-kesef mi-ganavim – To hide the money from thieves – להחביא את הכסף מגנבים Lehastir et ha-emet me-ima – To hide the truth from mom – להסתיר את האמת מאמא Slicha, ata mastir li, at mastira li – Excuse me, you're blocking the view – סליחה, אתה מסתיר לי, את מסתירה לי Hastarat aron hashmal – Concealing of the electricity panel – הסתרת ארון חשמל Hastarat mispar telefon – Concealing your telephone number when calling someone – הסתרת מספר טלפון Hastarat bechi be-rega – How to conceal that you've been crying – הסתרת בכי ברגע Seter – Hideaway, secret hiding place – סתר Haazanot seter – Wiretaps, secret recordings – האזנות סתר Sfat starim, safa sodit – Secret language – שפת סתרים, שפה סודית Ba-seter – Secretly, clandestinely – בסתר Hem nifgeshu ba-seter – They met secretly – הם נפגשו בסתר Matan ba-seter – Anonymous giving – מתן בסתר Ha-kesef muchba me-ahorei ha-aron – The money is hidden behind the closet – הכסף מוחבא מאחורי הארון Playlist and Clips: Tattoo – Machbo'im (lyrics) Eich lehabi mamtakim me-aba Hu mastir sham mashehu Hastarat bechi be-rega Ep. no. 346
În anul în care Timișoara este Capitală Culturală, am vorbit cu Valentin Mureșan despre experiența lui în a aduce la un loc oameni pentru a crea schimbare. Vali are două decenii de experiență ca antreprenor și, în anii din urmă, și-a folosit resursele și cunoașterea pentru a cofonda organizații care coagulează la rândul lor oameni și resurse în proiecte de comunitate în Timișoara: fondul de investiții Growceanu, hub-ul cultural Faber, BanatIT, Fundația Comunitară Timișoara, Grădinescu sau Timotion. Teoria lui vine din experiența în tehnologie: ce ai de făcut, spune, e să construiești o platformă care să devină infrastructura pentru implicarea celorlalți. Crede în puterea oamenilor bine intenționați și în a folosi diversitatea ca motor de progres. Valentin este cofondator al Movidius, o companie de tehnologie specializată în dezvoltarea de platforme software pentru drone. Movidius a dezvoltat un procesor capabil să vadă și să proceseze imagine și a fost cumpărată în 2016 de Intel. Până în 2020, Valentin a fost country manager pentru Intel în România. Din 2021 este consilier personal al primarului Timișoarei pentru probleme de digitalizare și smart city și este coordonatorul strategiei de transformare a orașului într-un ”oraș inteligent”. Am vorbit cu el despre cum lucrează cu ceilalți, cum își alege partenerii și mizele, care sunt principiile importante pentru a construi platforme de colaborare și schimbare, de ce avem nevoie de orașe inteligente și cum își vede rolul în tot acest angrenaj de organizații și inițiative. Am vorbit, de asemenea, despre grădinărit și de ce își investește banii și timpul în a crea focare de schimbare. **** Acest podcast este susținut de Dedeman, o companie antreprenorială 100% românească ce crede în puterea de a schimba lumea prin ambiție, perseverență și implicare. Dedeman susține ideile noi, inovația, educația și spiritul antreprenorial și este partener strategic al The Vast&The Curious. Împreună, creăm oportunități pentru conversații cu sens și întrebări care ne fac mai buni, ca oameni și ca organizații. **** Podcastul Vast&Curious este susținut de AROBS, cea mai mare companie de tehnologie listată la bursă. AROBS este o companie românească fondată acum 25 de ani la Cluj, cu birouri în opt țări și parteneri și clienți în Europa, America și Asia. AROBS crede într-o cultură a implicării, a evoluției continue și a parteneriatului pe termen lung. Este una dintre puținele companii românești care oferă fiecărui angajat acțiuni gratuite în pachetul obișnuit de beneficii. **** Note, un sumar al conversației, precum și cărțile și oamenii la care facem referire în podcast se găsesc pe andreearosca.ro Pentru a primi noi episoade, vă puteți abona la newsletter pe andreearosca.ro. Dacă ascultați acest podcast, vă rog lăsați un review în Apple Podcasts. Durează câteva secunde și ne ajută să îmbunătățim temele și calitatea și să intervievăm noi oameni interesanți.
Von Sulzbürg in der Oberpfalz über Eichstätt in Oberbayern nach Nashville, Tennessee. Unsere Autorin Anna Giordano erzählt, wie ein kleines jüdisches Gebetbuch aus der Bibliothek der Katholischen Universität den Weg zu seinem rechtmäßigen Besitzer gefunden hat.
En quoi le premier Passouk de Parachat Vayétsé est-il étonnant ? En quoi montre-t-il, selon le Steïpeler, l'importance pour un jeune homme (surtout de nos jours) d'aller à la Yéchiva ? En quoi rappelle-t-il, d'après le Hida, le débat mentionné dans la Guémara sur la question : "Vaut-il mieux aller à la Yéchiva puis se marier, ou l'inverse" ? Combien de pierres y avait-il sous la tête de Ya'acov Avinou ? Que dit le Eliya Rabba en suivant l'opinion qui dit qu'il y en avait douze ? Pourquoi certains disent qu'il y avait douze pierres, alors que d'autres affirment qu'il y en avait une seule ? Dans la vie, en quoi est-il si important de faire des efforts dans le bien, quel qu'en soit le résultat ? Que dit le Sfat Émet à ce sujet ?
Fresh off of his historic victory at The Big House 10, aMSa joins Toph and PPMD for this week's Radio Melee! 0:00 - Intro 22:20 - Community Voice: What makes SFAT's Fox so good? 31:22 - Caller 1: Now that you've won, in what way do you think players are going to improve against Yoshi?/where do you think Yoshi's limitations lie? 38:34 - Caller 2: Do you think that you proved that a major can be won with any character? 47:15 - Caller 3: What's one thing you wish commentators knew better about Yoshi? 57:19 - Caller 4: What did you do in preparation for Summit 12? 1:16:37 - Community Voice Don't Miss the Latest Content: http://bit.ly/SubscribeGGMelee Follow: https://twitter.com/goldenguardians https://twitter.com/PPMD https://twitter.com/ZainNaghmi https://twitter.com/n0ned https://twitter.com/toph_bbq Merch: https://goldenguardians.whatsneu.gg/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/radio-melee/message
On this week's episode of Radio Melee, Toph and PPMD are joined by SFAT! The gang discuss the current state of doubles and the future of tournament formats. 0:00 - Intro 09:27 - Community Voice: Why is Pipsqueak portrayed as a villain? 14:51 - Caller 1: Are there contentious feelings between the Melee and Ultimate communities? 30:05 - Caller 2: How could we bring Melee doubles back in the spotlight? 43:50 - Caller 3: What is the coolest/favorite local scene you've been to/been apart of? 56:54 - Caller 4: Could we divide tournament brackets into divisions? (Beginner, Intermediate, Pro) 1:41:42 - Community Voice Don't Miss the Latest Content: http://bit.ly/SubscribeGGMelee Follow: https://twitter.com/goldenguardians https://twitter.com/PPMD https://twitter.com/ZainNaghmi https://twitter.com/n0ned https://twitter.com/toph_bbq Merch: https://goldenguardians.whatsneu.gg/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/radio-melee/message
Playlist: IDK - BreatheIcarus , featuring Galliano - Lovebirds (Tall Black Guy Remix)K Le Maestro, featuring Amaria - Out LateTanika Charles - Two StepsEllison - Dinner PartyLucky Daye - Late NightSlakah the Beatchild - B-Boy BeefJacob Collier , featuring Daniel Caesar - Time AloneThe Radiant Children - MariposaMiles Jones - AgainDarnell Coates - B.O.A.T.SFat and Slim Kid - StayTeekay - RotationsOzay Moore & Stro Elliot - Crowd ReactKabuki feat. Sadat X - Any way, Any Day
A freaky and far-out smattering of heavy duty 60s and 70s platters.
THE KOHENET HEBREW PRIESTESS INSTITUTEFeaturing: Keshira HaLev Fife, Executive DirectorMission: Kohenet Kavannah (Organizational Intention): Kohenet Hebrew Priestess Institute reclaims and innovates embodied, earth-based feminist Judaism. Kohenet's spiritual leadership training, ordination programs, publications and community offerings center ritual as transformative practice. They draw from ways women and other marginalized people have led across time - shrinekeepers, prophetesses and wise women of the Hebrew Bible and beyond. Kohenet honors the ways in which Shekhinah appears to them through traditions, imaginations, prayers, dreams, ancestors, and role models throughout Jewish history. They celebrate the sacred in the body, the earth and the cosmos. Kohenet is a training program, a sacred community, and a movement changing the paradigm of Jewish spiritual leadership. Kohenet Shabbat, holidays, and Virtual Temple / online classes are open to all.The three-year Kohenet training and ordination program welcomes applications from trans women, cis women, and nonbinary people, who are drawn to Kohenet's kavannah (intention). Kohenet's Why:The first known poet, Enheduanna, served as a priestess of Inanna in Sumer, and there were priestesses in many cultures throughout the known world. Yet the title of priestess does not appear to exist in the Hebrew Bible, and indeed, the patriarchal authorities who compiled the Bible eliminated most references to women's spiritual leadership. However, some aspects of women's spiritual power shine through. From these hints, we can deduce how women participated in the sacred cult of the Israelite nation: as mothers, prophetesses, and even ritual officiants. We know, for example, that women baked cakes for the Queen of Heaven as part of a sacred rite honoring the Divine feminine. Our later Jewish foremothers did not entirely abandon the priestess role even after it was written out out of the tradition. The title "priestess" appears several times on Jewish gravestones during the Roman period. Other titles such as "eldress" "mother of the synagogue," and "head of the synagogue" on similar gravestones lead one to believe that women served in leadership functions in pre-Talmudic and Talmudic times. However, following this period the title fell entirely out of practice. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, women served as dreamers and diviners in communities of Jewish mystics in Sfat and elsewhere. In their names, we seek to re-establish this sacred tradition.Definitions and ClarificationsBrit Shalom-lit. Covenant of peace; alternative to medical circumcision, welcoming a baby into Jewish traditionKohain- priestKohenet/ Kohenot- priestess / priestessesm'beit- from the house ofMizrahi (s) / Mizrahim (pl) - A Jewish member or descendant of the Jews who lived in North Africa and the Middle East and whose ancestors did not reside in Europe.Pogram- an organized massacre of a particular ethnic group, in particular that of Jewish people in Russia or eastern Europe.Safardi(s) / Safardim (pl) - a Jewish person of Spanish or Portuguese descent. They retain their own distinctive customs and rituals, preserving Babylonian Jewish traditions rather than the Palestinian ones of the Ashkenazim; any Jew of the Middle East or North Africa.Shoah - HolocaustTashlich- Jewish religious ceremony that entails visiting a body of water following the afternoon service on Rosh HashanahVisit The Kohenet Hebrew Priestess Institute here. Follow Kohenet on Facebook , andSupport the show (https://www.bridges613.org/donate)
— 02x54 Notes — SFAT appears to talk about summer Melee, current life, reacting to Mango's Fox vs Zain's Marth on FD, avoiding burn out, online vs offline Melee, and more! SFAT's Twitter: https://twitter.com/sfat?s=21 SFAT's twitch: https://twitch.tv/sfat17 SFAT's insta: https://www.instagram.com/sfat.smash/?hl=en — About the pod — Bottom of the Smash Mountain is a podcast created, hosted, produced, edited, and otherwise run by Jesse “cyfer003” Wall (he/him), aka yours truly. That's right, I even write this whole thing out. A couple of things about me: I love the Super Smash Bros. franchise, especially Melee. My wife, Jen, is my biggest supporter and I would not be here without her. To our two children, Ellie and Ezra, I'm proud to be your Daddy. Jen and I believe in the gospel of Jesus, which declares: “but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” Romans 5:8 ESV As of the beginning of Season 2, this is what my relationship to Melee looks like: I am only a spectator and podcaster. I have no internet at the apartment, so until we move I shall spectate and support via podcasting about Melee and the community. One of my main goals for this podcast is to emulate what I hope to see in the Smash Community at large: a welcoming and safe environment. One example is that I'm not going to swear that much, although my guests might swear slightly more often so that is why this podcast is marked as explicit content, or at least it should be. Anchor is confusing sometimes. The point is, I want listeners and guests alike to feel welcome and safe while they're here, so aside from occasional swearing I will try to limit explicit content to accomplish that. Trigger warnings and heads-up type stuff will be used as I see fit. Don't get your hopes up for time-stamps, because this is a bit of a lazy podcast as well. Despite that, I try my best to give credit where credit is due in regards to sources and such. I also make a concerted effort to avoid ripping other people's content, but if anyone feels that I did that kind of stuff, my DM's are open on Twitter; we can get it figured out. Did I say something that offended you? Usually I am trying not to be offensive to anyone, but my attempts at humor might result in that. Either that or I'm being dumb. Either way, feel free to reach out and educate me so that you and I can level up :) Jesse's Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/cyfer003 BSM Twitter: https://twitter.com/bsmpod?s=21 #BSMPod — Credits — Podcast Logo: original artwork by Blake Wall; used with permission. If you want him to do art for you just DM me on Twitter, because Blake has no social media presence. Intro: Travelogue by Chords of Orion, off of the Rumination album. Used with permission. Please support Chords of Orion by visiting their website: http://chordsoforion.com Outro: Travelogue by Chords of Orion, off of the Rumination album. Used with permission. I already linked the website, so please check out the YouTube as well: https://youtube.com/c/chordsoforion This podcast was made with an iPhone using Anchor, which you can download onto your iOS here: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/anchor/id1056182234 I have been using Discord and Craig to record interviews for most of Season 1 and now Season 2. Here is a link to discord: https://discord.com And to Craig: https://craig.chat/home/ I also have a windows laptop, Samson Q2U microphone, and Audacity, which you can install on your computer by following this Link: https://www.audacityteam.org Shiggles did the YT overlay for interviews: https://twitter.com/shig_bot?s=21
Come and join Scar, Toph and Sfat while we talk the state of Melee!
Secret (Original & Dub Mix &`& SFat Mushup!!!)TeddyLoid feat. 池田智子 from Shiggy Jr.自己混音~ 原版与Dub mix的结合体!!我真的太爱这首歌了!!!!Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:suisuirevolutionOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
Pipo Password(☆Taku Takahashi Remix)TeddyLoid feat.ボンジュール鈴木Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com銀河を超えて 君を探すの 跨越银河 寻找你的踪迹行ったり来たり 来来 去去PiPoPa☆私の恋の電波を PiPoPa☆我的恋爱电波ねぇ キャッチして 呐 请你将它抓住フワフワと漂う 轻轻飘浮着無限の宇宙で 在这无限的宇宙之中そのハートに今 Lock on!现在将那颗心锁定!逃げられないでしょ? 你就逃不掉了吧?この手ギュっと繋いで 这只手紧紧抓住回りだすメリーゴーランド 开始回旋的旋转木马君にキュンてしちゃって 对你怦然心动カラフルに世界が染まるの 我的世界染上了缤纷色彩時空の馬車で 君へ向かうの 坐上时空的马车 向你的方向前进猛スピードで 风驰电掣PiPoPa☆秘密のパスワードを PiPoPa☆秘密的passwordねぇ 受信して 呐 请你把它接收ユラユラと浮かぶの 摇摇晃晃地漂浮月の引力で 在月亮的引力下でもハートのロケット 但是芳心的火箭空回りしてる 却在徒劳空转ずっと傍にいたいの 想要永远在你身边止めないでメリーゴーランド 请不要停下 旋转木马甘い色を重ねて 将甜蜜的颜色叠加カラフルに包んであげるよ 用缤纷色彩将你包裹この手ギュっと繋いで 这只手紧紧抓住回りだすメリーゴーランド 开始回旋的旋转木马君にキュンてしちゃって 对你怦然心动カラフルに世界が染まるの 我的世界染上了缤纷色彩ずっと傍にいたいの 想要永远在你身边止めないでメリーゴーランド 请不要停下 旋转木马甘い色を重ねて 将甜蜜的颜色叠加カラフルに包んであげるよ 用缤纷色彩将你包裹
Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
这是一首歌但找不到原名也找不到是谁Remix只能用Track(音轨)来作为名称如果有人知道名字 请私信或评论我会在第一时间修改。Thanks for listening!If you like this podcast! ! ? Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo : nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
这是一首歌找到原名却找不到是谁Remix只能用Track(音轨)来代替他们的名字如果有人知道名字 请私信或评论我会在第一时间修改。Thanks for listening!If you like this podcast! ! ? Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo : nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
这是一首歌但找不到原名也找不到是谁Remix只能用Track(音轨)来作为名称如果有人知道名字 请私信或评论我会在第一时间修改。Thanks for listening!If you like this podcast! ! ? Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo : nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
Thanks for listening!If you like this podcast! ! ? Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo : nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
07年的老曲,这么多年了还是听不厌~Thanks for listening!If you like this podcast! ! ? Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo : nekosuiOfficial Website:nekosui.lofter.com
SFat Feel ~6th Anniversary~ Love, Day After Tomorrow China Beat Mix [Chinese Special Bonus Track] 中国独家曲目!! Thanks for listening! Remember to subscribe! ~ Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received! Weibo:nekosui 什么时候你才会说爱我? What are you hoping for 为了你忘记了自我,你舍得我笑含泪我独演一起微笑喔 你念念多悲惨的眼睛 and hand me ring 心动全都为你 想念小心又不安不定 寻找你让我变得坚定 Don't ask me why 留下我好忧郁 You're the first thing on my mind Love, day after tomorrow... I wish you knew 暖味に饰った言叶は要らない Love, day after tomorrow... I need you back ただ君と同じ速さで步きたいから 从没感到你像这样的无情 You never look at me this way 你的眼睛茫茫哀意 告诉我两颗心分享彼此秘密 你让我放纵喔 点点星灯讲一句“对不起” 守护往往多坚定 看着眼泪怪自己怜惜 Don't ask me why 留下我好孤寂 I can't see the world, walking through Love, day after tomorrow... I wish you knew 迷わずに进みたい どんな暗も Love, day after tomorrow... I need you back 今 君と同じ光を目指しているから 多想寂独的夜始终时常有雨 我都不想蓝天的雨滴 带你的戒指你的心感觉我爱你的决定 多想说 Oh, stay with me Oh~ Stay with me~ Love, day after tomorrow... I wish you know I'm still in love, But you're gone And now my heart is breaking Love, day after tomorrow... I need you back My heart is waiting for your love L.O.V.E. one more day
SFat Feel ~6th Anniversary~ DAOKO × スチャダラパー ハイセンスパイセン × ファイアーエムブレムメインテーマ (Ver. Heroes) anima × DAOKO × ドラガリアロスト! SFat Mushup!!!!!! 继上次DAOKO with TeddyLoid - ダイスキ (Album-V.S-RELOADED SFat Mushup!!)的再度混音DAOKO!!乖乖我真的爱惨带点性冷淡风的DAOKO了!!不过封面失落的龙约我终究是玩不下去啊233333,但歌好听是真的!在anima专辑发布之后我也是脑子里想着一定要把这两首合在一起!!果然混音后的听感简直完美!!嘛如果觉得不戳的话就给个订阅吧!~ Thanks for listening! Remember to subscribe! ~ Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!
Thanks for listening! Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosui
Lento Violento NO.1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Thanks for listening! Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosui
Thanks for listening! Remember to subscribe! ~Note: This podcast is a favorite music collection of sfat. All tracks in the podcast are uploaded personally and will not involve any commercial activities. If there is any infringement in the song, please inform me immediately! sfat will be removed from stock as soon as it is received!Weibo:nekosui