use of land by a tenant in return for a share of the crops produced
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Join us in this episode of the Embellish podcast as we dive into the fascinating story of Delta Dirt Distillery with Harvey Williams. Located in the heart of Arkansas, Delta Dirt is not just a distillery; it's a family legacy rooted in agriculture and innovation. In this episode, Harvey shares the rich history of the Williams family, tracing back to his great-grandfather, Papa Joe, who began farming in the late 1800s. Discover how the family's journey from sharecropping to owning their land led to the creation of unique spirits, including their award-winning Sweet Potato Vodka, Tall Cotton Gin, and the innovative Arkansas Brown whiskey. We'll explore the challenges and triumphs of transitioning from traditional farming to specialty crops, the importance of community and tourism in Helena, and the exciting future of Delta Dirt Distillery. Harvey also discusses the distillation process, the significance of using local ingredients, and the vision for expanding their product line and visitor experience. Whether you're a spirits enthusiast or just curious about the intersection of agriculture and distilling, this episode is packed with insights and inspiration. Don't forget to subscribe for more stories from the world of craft distilling! Links: Delta Dirt Distillery: https://deltadirtdistillery.com/ Delta Dirt Youtube: @DeltaDirtDistillery Delta Dirt Instagram: @deltadirtdistillery Follow us on Instagram and TikTok: @embellishpod Email: embellishpod@gmail.com Timestamps: 00:00 - Introduction 00:40 - The Williams Family History 01:27 - Transitioning from Sharecropping to Distilling 05:24 - Overcoming Barriers in Agriculture 07:13 - Tying Family History to Distilling 09:20 - Specialty Crop Farming 12:31 - The Journey to Starting a Distillery 19:15 - The Distillery Experience and Cocktails 22:22 - Awards and Recognition 27:00 - Future Plans for Delta Dirt Distillery 32:06 - Community and Tourism in Helena 39:29 - Conclusion Thank you for tuning in!
The Chitlin Circuit along with The Great Migration gave especially “black people,” the ability to move away from “Sharecropping,” just another form of slavery, to chase their dreams. The 1920s were roaring, and people forgot that “what goes up must come down.” And after ten years of awesomeness, came ten years of hardship and suffering. And because of Jim Crow, black people suffered hardest. America is the Land of Opportunity!” Still, the wheels of change rolled slowly for black people. From 1870 to 1970 black people were forced to endure, and life as a black entertainer was as dangerous as it was expensive. The Chitlin Circuit wasn't just black people singing and dancing for ‘Soul Food,' the Chitlin Circuit created entrepreneurs during the height of suppression and oppression for blacks in general, while at the same time, offering black entertainers safety, security and opportunity. And I would love to tell you about it.Tonight in Muzik Detention, we will discuss and maybe debate The Chitlin Circuit, and black life during the years of Jim Crow. Open your ‘muzik' history books and press play.
Sheletta Brundidge joins us for an extra Feisty Friday with a lot of talk about her decision to leave social media behind and deliver her content with a newsletter.
They were farmers, had 8 children. The oldest son (second child) was sent out to get bullets or shot and missed his fathers rampage, wiping the whole family out, including himself, on Christmas day in 1929.Its about 60 years later that a motive comes to light but even now, its not confirmed that it is true.This week we discuss: Murder, Motive, Serial Killer, The Great Depression, Sharecropping, Family Anihilator, FamilicideSources:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_the_Lawson_family#See_alsohttps://the-line-up.com/lawson-family-massacrehttps://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/secret-behind-photo-in-lawson-family-christmas-day-massacre-when-seven-people-died/news-story/080cd6dcee54a210d70098ca45dc3851https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/the-murder-of-the-lawson-family-the-true-events-behind-folk-musics-scariest-murder-ballad/https://www.amazon.com/White-Christmas-Bloody-Christmas-Finally-Murders/dp/0962810800https://www.amazon.com/Meaning-Our-Tears-Murders-Christmas-ebook/dp/B01EKOU42Uhttps://www.amazon.com/Death-North-Carolinas-Piedmont-Suicide/dp/1596291966#customerReviewshttps://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30065567-the-meaning-of-our-tearshttps://horrorobsessive.com/2020/12/21/christmas-mass-murder-the-lawson-family/https://www.newsweek.com/28-days-haunted-madison-funeral-parlor-lawson-family-murders-1754536https://myfox8.com/miniseries/hauntings-in-the-piedmont/disturbing-photos-taken-at-cemetery-link-back-to-one-of-north-carolinas-greatest-ghost-stories/https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7944187/Charlie_davis-lawsonhttps://www.findagrave.com/memorial/50653435/james_arthur_lawsonhttps://murderpedia.org/male.L/l/lawson-charles-davis.htmSupport the showPatreon https://www.patreon.com/MMoMEmail: murdermeonmondaypodcast@gmail.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MMonMonday Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murdermeonmondaypodcast/ Theme Tune is published under license from: Tribe of Noise – Awkward Mystery https://prosearch.tribeofnoise.com/artists/show/29267/32277
Sharecropping in southern Tuscany: a micro-analysis of the ‘Fattoria' production system (1858-1889). Historia Agraria, 92, Abril 2024, pp. 35-59. Doi 10.26882/histagrar.092e01z. Autor: Giacomo Zanibelli, Assistant Professor (RTD-A) of Economic History at the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) orcid.org/0009-0001-4622-5163 Breve Nota Bibliográfica del autor Giacomo Zanibelli es doctor en Historia Económica por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (directora de tesis profesora Eva Fernández Garcia). Actualmente es assistant professor de Historia Económica en el Departamento de Ciencias Económicas y Estadísticas de la Universidad de Nápoles Federico II. Está especializado en la historia económica de la agricultura italiana y en particular en sistema contable, en la gestión y producción de las explotaciones agrícolas de la aparcería toscana. Recientemente extendió su investigación sobre la aparcería también al Sur de Italia. Además, desde 2021 trabaja con la profesora Alessandra Bulgarelli en la realización de un censo a nivel municipal de los bienes comunales en Campania. Ha participado en conferencias internacionales de historia de la agricultura y es miembro del comité directivo de Rural History en representación de las organizaciones afiliadas (AgrHistory Lab). Resumen del artículo Este artículo estudia los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de 1880 a nivel micro y los cambios estructurales de la agricultura toscana. Examina el sistema de aparcería de la Toscana meridional de 1858 a 1889 observando la política estratégica de gestión, la producción y la evolución del mercado de una gran propiedad (Canonica), situada en Certaldo (Toscana), una localidad entre Siena y Florencia. Los resultados obtenidos muestran que la Canonica no sufrió los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de los años 1880, sino que tuvo un aumento de la producción de trigo, maíz, aceite y, sobre todo, vino. También hubo un incremento en el uso de fertilizantes que condujo a un crecimiento en los rendimientos de los cereales. La comparación entre la producción agregada de las provincias de Siena y Florencia y la región de Toscana ha llevado a la conclusión de que Canonica presentó una tendencia productiva similar a la de la provincia de Siena. Una respuesta eficaz al choque exógeno fue posible gracias a una correcta estructura contable y al desarrollo de estrategias de gestión específicas por parte del propietario y los agentes agrícolas (fattori). Presenta Elena Catalán Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharecropping in southern Tuscany: a micro-analysis of the ‘Fattoria' production system (1858-1889). Historia Agraria, 92, Abril 2024, pp. 35-59. Doi 10.26882/histagrar.092e01z. Autor: Giacomo Zanibelli, Assistant Professor (RTD-A) of Economic History at the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) orcid.org/0009-0001-4622-5163 Breve Nota Bibliográfica del autor Giacomo Zanibelli es doctor en Historia Económica por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (directora de tesis profesora Eva Fernández Garcia). Actualmente es assistant professor de Historia Económica en el Departamento de Ciencias Económicas y Estadísticas de la Universidad de Nápoles Federico II. Está especializado en la historia económica de la agricultura italiana y en particular en sistema contable, en la gestión y producción de las explotaciones agrícolas de la aparcería toscana. Recientemente extendió su investigación sobre la aparcería también al Sur de Italia. Además, desde 2021 trabaja con la profesora Alessandra Bulgarelli en la realización de un censo a nivel municipal de los bienes comunales en Campania. Ha participado en conferencias internacionales de historia de la agricultura y es miembro del comité directivo de Rural History en representación de las organizaciones afiliadas (AgrHistory Lab). Resumen del artículo Este artículo estudia los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de 1880 a nivel micro y los cambios estructurales de la agricultura toscana. Examina el sistema de aparcería de la Toscana meridional de 1858 a 1889 observando la política estratégica de gestión, la producción y la evolución del mercado de una gran propiedad (Canonica), situada en Certaldo (Toscana), una localidad entre Siena y Florencia. Los resultados obtenidos muestran que la Canonica no sufrió los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de los años 1880, sino que tuvo un aumento de la producción de trigo, maíz, aceite y, sobre todo, vino. También hubo un incremento en el uso de fertilizantes que condujo a un crecimiento en los rendimientos de los cereales. La comparación entre la producción agregada de las provincias de Siena y Florencia y la región de Toscana ha llevado a la conclusión de que Canonica presentó una tendencia productiva similar a la de la provincia de Siena. Una respuesta eficaz al choque exógeno fue posible gracias a una correcta estructura contable y al desarrollo de estrategias de gestión específicas por parte del propietario y los agentes agrícolas (fattori). Presenta Elena Catalán Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharecropping in southern Tuscany: a micro-analysis of the ‘Fattoria' production system (1858-1889). Historia Agraria, 92, Abril 2024, pp. 35-59. Doi 10.26882/histagrar.092e01z. Autor: Giacomo Zanibelli, Assistant Professor (RTD-A) of Economic History at the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) orcid.org/0009-0001-4622-5163 Breve Nota Bibliográfica del autor Giacomo Zanibelli es doctor en Historia Económica por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (directora de tesis profesora Eva Fernández Garcia). Actualmente es assistant professor de Historia Económica en el Departamento de Ciencias Económicas y Estadísticas de la Universidad de Nápoles Federico II. Está especializado en la historia económica de la agricultura italiana y en particular en sistema contable, en la gestión y producción de las explotaciones agrícolas de la aparcería toscana. Recientemente extendió su investigación sobre la aparcería también al Sur de Italia. Además, desde 2021 trabaja con la profesora Alessandra Bulgarelli en la realización de un censo a nivel municipal de los bienes comunales en Campania. Ha participado en conferencias internacionales de historia de la agricultura y es miembro del comité directivo de Rural History en representación de las organizaciones afiliadas (AgrHistory Lab). Resumen del artículo Este artículo estudia los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de 1880 a nivel micro y los cambios estructurales de la agricultura toscana. Examina el sistema de aparcería de la Toscana meridional de 1858 a 1889 observando la política estratégica de gestión, la producción y la evolución del mercado de una gran propiedad (Canonica), situada en Certaldo (Toscana), una localidad entre Siena y Florencia. Los resultados obtenidos muestran que la Canonica no sufrió los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de los años 1880, sino que tuvo un aumento de la producción de trigo, maíz, aceite y, sobre todo, vino. También hubo un incremento en el uso de fertilizantes que condujo a un crecimiento en los rendimientos de los cereales. La comparación entre la producción agregada de las provincias de Siena y Florencia y la región de Toscana ha llevado a la conclusión de que Canonica presentó una tendencia productiva similar a la de la provincia de Siena. Una respuesta eficaz al choque exógeno fue posible gracias a una correcta estructura contable y al desarrollo de estrategias de gestión específicas por parte del propietario y los agentes agrícolas (fattori). Presenta Elena Catalán Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sharecropping in southern Tuscany: a micro-analysis of the ‘Fattoria' production system (1858-1889). Historia Agraria, 92, Abril 2024, pp. 35-59. Doi 10.26882/histagrar.092e01z. Autor: Giacomo Zanibelli, Assistant Professor (RTD-A) of Economic History at the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) orcid.org/0009-0001-4622-5163 Breve Nota Bibliográfica del autor Giacomo Zanibelli es doctor en Historia Económica por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (directora de tesis profesora Eva Fernández Garcia). Actualmente es assistant professor de Historia Económica en el Departamento de Ciencias Económicas y Estadísticas de la Universidad de Nápoles Federico II. Está especializado en la historia económica de la agricultura italiana y en particular en sistema contable, en la gestión y producción de las explotaciones agrícolas de la aparcería toscana. Recientemente extendió su investigación sobre la aparcería también al Sur de Italia. Además, desde 2021 trabaja con la profesora Alessandra Bulgarelli en la realización de un censo a nivel municipal de los bienes comunales en Campania. Ha participado en conferencias internacionales de historia de la agricultura y es miembro del comité directivo de Rural History en representación de las organizaciones afiliadas (AgrHistory Lab). Resumen del artículo Este artículo estudia los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de 1880 a nivel micro y los cambios estructurales de la agricultura toscana. Examina el sistema de aparcería de la Toscana meridional de 1858 a 1889 observando la política estratégica de gestión, la producción y la evolución del mercado de una gran propiedad (Canonica), situada en Certaldo (Toscana), una localidad entre Siena y Florencia. Los resultados obtenidos muestran que la Canonica no sufrió los efectos de la crisis de los cereales de los años 1880, sino que tuvo un aumento de la producción de trigo, maíz, aceite y, sobre todo, vino. También hubo un incremento en el uso de fertilizantes que condujo a un crecimiento en los rendimientos de los cereales. La comparación entre la producción agregada de las provincias de Siena y Florencia y la región de Toscana ha llevado a la conclusión de que Canonica presentó una tendencia productiva similar a la de la provincia de Siena. Una respuesta eficaz al choque exógeno fue posible gracias a una correcta estructura contable y al desarrollo de estrategias de gestión específicas por parte del propietario y los agentes agrícolas (fattori). Presenta Elena Catalán Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Did you know that for some enslaved Africans, small plots of land became ways to maintain culture and heritage- and even pathways to freedom? Soul Food Scholar, Adrian Miller joins us to share stories that tie land to belonging and survival. Amanda Henderson and Adrian Miller dive deep into the stories about navigating the ways of the land to cultivate food sovereignty within African American communities, despite forced migration and slavery in the United States. As they discuss the truths about the ongoing struggle of food injustice for marginalized communities and the rise of consciousness towards food sovereignty, we learn the importance of connecting and adapting to the land as a means of survival. GUEST: Adrian Miller is a food writer, James Beard Award winner, attorney, and certified barbecue judge who lives in Denver, Colorado. Adrian received an A.B in International Relations from Stanford University in 1991, and a J.D. from the Georgetown University Law Center in 1995. From 1999 to 2001, Miller served as a special assistant to President Bill Clinton with his Initiative for One America – the first free-standing office in the White House to address issues of racial, religious and ethnic reconciliation. Miller went on to serve as a senior policy analyst for Colorado Governor Bill Ritter Jr. From 2004 to 2010, he served on the board for the Southern Foodways Alliance. In June 2019, Adrian lectured in the Masters of Gastronomy program at the Università di Scienze Gastronomiche (nicknamed the “Slow Food University”) in Pollenzo, Italy. He is currently the executive director of the Colorado Council of Churches and, as such, is the first African American, and the first layperson, to hold that position. Miller's first book, Soul Food: The Surprising Story of an American Cuisine, One Plate at a Time won the James Beard Foundation Award for Scholarship and Reference in 2014. His second book, The President's Kitchen Cabinet: The Story of the African Americans Who Have Fed Our First Families, From the Washingtons to the Obamas was published on President's Day 2017. It was a finalist for a 2018 NAACP Image Award for “Outstanding Literary Work – Non-Fiction,” and the 2018 Colorado Book Award for History. Adrian's third book, Black Smoke: African Americans and the United States of Barbecue, will be published Spring 2021. Sharecropping, Black Land Acquistion, and White Supremacy (1868-1900) Food Sovereignty Growing Your Own Food: Resources and Tools Talking Trash: Five Easy Steps to Reduce Food Waste
Mark Smith sits down with Mercer University professor David A. Davis, author of the new book Driven to the Field: Sharecropping and Southern Literature, to discuss the development of sharecropping, a labor that shaped so much of the rural South, both black and white, for the 100 years after the Civil War, and its representation in Southern literature.
Der Amerikanische Bürgerkrieg endete im Frühjahr 1865 und mit ihm auch die Sklaverei in den USA. Oder zumindest hätte sie das sollen ... So hatte Präsident Abraham Lincoln doch schon in seiner Emancipation Declaration drei Jahre zuvor allen Sklaven und Sklavinnen des Südens die Freiheit versprochen. Diese wurde nun nach Kriegsende im 13. Zusatz auch in die US-Verfassung aufgenommen. Und dennoch: Schon nach kurzer Zeit fanden die alten weißen Machthaber des Südens wieder neue Möglichkeiten, ihre Vormacht zu zementieren. Mithilfe von Black Codes stellten sie sicher, dass Schwarze nach wie vor Menschen zweiter Klasse blieben. Durch Praktiken wie das Convict Leasing und Sharecropping kam sogar die Sklaverei selbst irgendwie zurück ...Déjà-vu Geschichte ist Mitglied des Netzwerks #Historytelling. Diese Episode findest du auch auf ralfgrabuschnig.com. Hinterlasse mir dort gerne einen Kommentar mit deinen Gedanken. Und wenn dir der Déjà-vu Geschichte Podcast gefällt, abonniere ihn doch bitte, wo auch immer du ihn hörst.Links zur EpisodeZu den Fotos der ReiseFolge 1 zur Geschichte der Sklaverei in den USADie verstörende Postkarte vom Lynching in GadsdenZum Déjà-vu NewsletterZum Club auf SteadyAlle Infos aus der WerbungQuellenCody Marrs: Not Even Past. The Stories We Keep Telling about the Civil WarEdward H. Bonekemper: The Myth of the Lost Cause. Why the South Fought the Civil War and Why the North WonKnowing Better: The part of history you've always skipped (Neoslavery) (YouTube)Tags: USA, Amerika, Nordamerika, Späte Neuzeit Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hi bbs! Since we are really hyping up the upcoming SOUL FOOD GENIUS course, we thought it would be fun to bring back one of our favorite episodes: da piggy bank. Join us as we explore our love and respect for the great pig! If you haven't yet signed up for the Soul Food Genius Course, please do so here! Mentions on the show: (IG Page) New Years Hoodoo @_jaylouise_ Sharecropping (book) How to Eat to Live (reference) Fannie Lou Hamer Follow us on social: @pettyherbalist @bonesbugsandbotany Join the Patreon Community to fund this amazing POD: https://www.patreon.com/pettyherbalist Rate us to show your support! Thank You! #StayReady #BePetty --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pettyherbalist/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pettyherbalist/support
Step 3 in the Minor Touches Major Impact fundraising method: Establish Your Platform.Very simply, a platform is the thing you have to stand on to get heard. It's your stage. But unlike a stage in the theater, today's platform is not built of wood or concrete or perched on a grassy hill. Today's platform is built of people. Contacts. Connections. Followers.Michael HyattYou can connect with David at www.davidoaks.net Instagram LinkedIn Thanks to Helen Miller Music for permission to use I Won't Let You Fall.
Sharecropping doesn't get you very farAkimbo is a weekly podcast created by Seth Godin. He's the bestselling author of 20 books and a long-time entrepreneur, freelancer and teacher.You can find out more about Seth by reading his daily blog at seths.blog and about the podcast at akimbo.link.To submit a question and to see the show notes, please visit akimbo.link and press the appropriate button. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sharecropping
Mich Bondesio interviews Robert Riggs of the True Crime Reporter™ Podcast about his life lessons from working as a TV news reporter and war correspondent. We cover how our approaches to mindset, business and wellbeing can help us prepare for our transition to Web3.For season 7, Mich Bondesio considers how emerging technology is helping us in our work and wellbeing, with the help of people who are at different stages of engaging with this technology in their lives and businesses. Resources referenced in the episode can be found in the show notes transcript at https://creatingcadence.co/episodesSign up to the Cadence newsletter for more thoughts and resources relating to topics covered this season. It's free to subscribe, plus you get a free audio training resource: https://creatingcadence.co/subscribe/ Creating Cadence is available on all major podcast platforms and several pod players. Don't forget to subscribe and rate the show so others can find Creating Cadence too. :)Podcast Production by Bondesio C&CMusic: "Changing Their Minds" By Klimenko Music (Premium Beat)Podcast Banner Background Image: Ivan Mercado (Unsplash)
After the war, most former slaves had no other way of making a living other than sharecropping or tenant farming, basically a system in which land owners would lend land to poor farmers in return for either regular rent payments, or half of their crop yield every season. As author and New York Times contributor Phillip Leigh writes, “Sharecropping was not a choice freely made by Southerners after the Civil War.…It was compelled by a regional capital shortage when the only alternative was starvation.” He also writes "If not chattel [legal] slavery, it was a peonage system that enslaved the cropper to a cycle of annual debts and perpetual backbreaking labor. Children as young as four regularly worked in the fields. Poor health was a consequence.”Follow me on:Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/3SgJIq54ZZ0O/Odyssee: https://odysee.com/@vice_signal:5?r=hMkwyZNi3fs2HJ6F96QhBHqF8MWnQqnFRumble: https://rumble.com/account/content?type=allTwitter: https://twitter.com/cancellincolnFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/cancelproofideas/?ref=page_internal
Dr. Erica Joseph grew up on the Allendale Plantation (former slave quarters) in Port Allen, just outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana, with her single-mother and grandparents. They made their living as sharecroppers picking cotton in a rural community where modern health care was inaccessible and folk relied on home remedies to treat most ailments. (Sharecropping is a type of farming in which families rent small plots of land from a landowner in return for a portion of their crop, to be given to the landowner at the end of each year.)Dr. Joseph's grandmother was particularly adept as a healer, sharing her knowledge and skills for the good of the community. In her later years, however, the impact of chronic diabetes, which remained undiagnosed and without appropriate treatment until it was too late, forced the amputation of her grandmother's legs. Dr. Joseph credits the community-service oriented values instilled by her family, and her time helping with her grandmother's care, for guiding her towards a career in health care. The realization that had her grandmother been diagnosed and received care sooner she might not have lost her legs, provided additional motivation to focus on improving access to health care in marginalized communities.Today, SAMHSA Minority Fellowship Program at the American Nurses Association alumni, Dr. Erica Joseph, is a DNP and Ph.D. trained psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner and scientist serving as Intensive Case Management (MHICM) Co-Lead at the Southeast Louisiana Veterans Healthcare System. Her research interests include suicide prevention and examining the risk and protective factors of suicide among African American veterans, which comes at a critical moment with suicide rates among African American youth and men on the rise. Dr. Joseph continues to build on the community service legacy of her family by providing increasingly in-demand counseling and mental health awareness promotion in the parishes of rural Louisiana. She remains a stalwart advocate for ending health care disparities, and has contributed to the National Commission to Address Racism in NursingTune in to Season 2, Episode 12 of Mental Health Trailblazers, Psychiatric Nurses Speak Up! to hear Dr. Erica Joseph's triumphant story of grit, resilience, and fortitude that propelled a young girl growing up on a former slave plantation to becoming an accomplished psychiatric mental health nurse scientist making a difference for marginalized groups, including America's war-hero veterans, in her community and beyond. You can learn more about Dr. Erica Joseph at https://emfp.org/mfp-fellows/erica-joseph.
“I don't believe we can get to the shores of sustainability with environmental stewardship alone. We must marry justice into this conversation. And until we do, we really won't get where we all believe we desperately need to get to.” -Michael Sligh This week, Ron has a conversation with Michael about promotion of agro-biodiversity, organic, competitive markets, food justice, and more. At the time of this interview, Michael was a program director for Rural Advancement Foundation International (RAFI-USA). He managed the above plus policy, research, and education regarding agricultural best practices, fair trade and other value-added food labeling, policy, and marketing issues. He also helped coordinate the Seeds and Breeds Coalition for the 21st Century aimed at reinvigorating public cultivars to meet the challenges of climate change and organic/sustainable market demands. Michael has been involved in domestic and international agricultural policy development, organizing, food labeling, standards, certification and accreditation work for over 35 years including: founding chair of the USDA/ National Organic Standards Board; a founder of Domestic Fair Trade Association, National Organic Coalition, and Southern Sustainable Agriculture Working Group; founding members of National Family Farm Coalition and National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition; board member of the International Organic Accreditation Service; former NGO delegate to UN Codex/FAO/WHO Food Labeling Commission and WTO; founding partner of Agricultural Justice Project, which has developed domestic fair trade standards for North America. He is a part-time family farmer and a trained anthropologist who lives, farms, and works from North Carolina. The interview was conducted on Dec. 4, 2017. Additional links this episode: National Sustainable Agriculture Oral History Archive “The New Deal's Impacts on Sharecropping and Tenant Farming in the US South: A History” -------- Liked this show? SUBSCRIBE to this podcast on Spotify, Audible, Apple, Google, and more. Catch past episodes, a transcript, and show notes at cfra.org/SustainbleAgPodcast.
It's been a little over two years since the tragic murder of George Floyd, and what was arguably the largest civil rights protests in United States history. Since May of 2020, hashtags and icons have been used to commemorate him, but he was so much more than a face on a mural. He was a father, partner, athlete, and friend who constantly strove for a better life, as chronicled in “His Name Is George Floyd: One Man's Life and the Struggle for Racial Justice.” The book builds off of a series in The Washington Post in October 2020 called “George Floyd's America.” Robert Samuels, a national enterprise reporter at The Washington Post, co-wrote the book with colleague Toluse Olorunnipa, a political enterprise and investigations reporter. Samuels joins WITHpod for a personal look at how systemic racism impacted Floyd's life, his family's social mobility, his legacy and more. Samuels also discusses how even despite all of the seemingly endless challenges Floyd faced, he still held on to his vision for a better world.
We are unlocking a premium episode in which we discuss Ed's new reporting on the political economy of play-to-earn games, focusing on Axie Infinity and its super-exploitative system of “managers” and “scholars.” Surprise, surprise – the technological and financial foundation of Axie Infinity is just a house of cards built on a bed of sand. Its failure is inevitable. The question is: how much damage will it do along the way? Some stuff we reference: ••• The Metaverse Has Bosses Too. Meet the ‘Managers' of Axie Infinity | Ed Ongweso Jr. https://www.vice.com/en/article/88g3ag/the-metaverse-has-bosses-too-meet-the-managers-of-axie-infinity ••• Miami Mayor Unveils Laser Eyes Robot Bull Statue at Bitcoin Conference https://www.vice.com/en/article/g5q9wm/miami-mayor-unveils-laser-eyes-robot-bull-statue-at-bitcoin-conference Subscribe to hear more analysis and commentary in our premium episodes every week! patreon.com/thismachinekills Grab fresh new TMK gear: bonfire.com/store/this-machine-kills-podcast/ Hosted by Jathan Sadowski (twitter.com/jathansadowski) and Edward Ongweso Jr. (twitter.com/bigblackjacobin). Production / Music by Jereme Brown (twitter.com/braunestahl)
We discuss Ed's new reporting on the political economy of play-to-earn games, focusing on Axie Infinity and its super-exploitative system of “managers” and “scholars.” Surprise, surprise – the technological and financial foundation of Axie Infinity is just a house of cards built on a bed of sand. Its failure is inevitable. The question is: how much damage will it do along the way? Some stuff we reference: ••• The Metaverse Has Bosses Too. Meet the ‘Managers' of Axie Infinity | Ed Ongweso Jr. https://www.vice.com/en/article/88g3ag/the-metaverse-has-bosses-too-meet-the-managers-of-axie-infinity ••• Miami Mayor Unveils Laser Eyes Robot Bull Statue at Bitcoin Conference https://www.vice.com/en/article/g5q9wm/miami-mayor-unveils-laser-eyes-robot-bull-statue-at-bitcoin-conference Subscribe to hear more analysis and commentary in our premium episodes every week! patreon.com/thismachinekills Grab fresh new TMK gear: bonfire.com/store/this-machine-kills-podcast/ Hosted by Jathan Sadowski (twitter.com/jathansadowski) and Edward Ongweso Jr. (twitter.com/bigblackjacobin). Production / Music by Jereme Brown (twitter.com/braunestahl)
Jerusalemites vs villagers, Sharecropping land vs trees
On Episode 34 of the “What Up, Bul?” Podcast I talk about History. From what is History? To Gladiator Distraction vs Modern Entertainment. Sharecropping vs High Interest Debt & what we can do. Join in on the conversation & Please leave a rating & review. Also follow the journey on IG @whatupbul share, comment & like. Lastly if you wanna contact me directly with any questions, concerns or any topics you want me to discuss email me ~> whatupbul@gmail.com #BlackLuv #Whatupbul #whatupbulpodcast #blackmen #men #blackexellence #blackbusiness #blackbusinesses #blackbusinessowner #blackbusinessmen #blackownedbusiness #blacklove #blackculture #blackwork #blackpower #blackbeauty #blacklabrador #blackowned #black #value #values #brainwashed #slavery #blackwomenentrepreneurs #blackwomenempowerment #podcasts #media #respect #b1 #blackfirst --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whatupbul/message
Happy New Year, Petty Betties! We're so happy you're here with us in 2022! Your fave petty, bougie aunties are back at it with the Meat As Medicine series, and this time we're talking about pork/pigs! Asia is our resident expert, and she is ready to educate all of us. Stay ready, so you don't have to get ready… this episode is a good one! Enjoy, bbs! Sources and Topics Discussed (herb) Hawthorn (Crataegus) Tincture and just hanging out with the plant :) (herb) Motherwort (Leonurus cardiaca) Tincture Acupuncture (TCM) Massage (IG Page) New Years Hoodoo @_jaylouise_ Sharecropping (book) How to Eat to Live (reference) Fannie Lou Hamer Follow us on social: @pettyherbalist @bonesbugsandbotany Join the Patreon Community to fund this amazing POD: https://www.patreon.com/pettyherbalist Rate us to show your support! Thank You! #StayReady #BePetty --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pettyherbalist/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/pettyherbalist/support
The most LUCRATIVE capitol AND labor in American history are Black Men. If Black Men made their own money, America would go bankrupt - after Emancipation & today. This has nothing to do with spirit or work ethic, and everything to do about a system setup to discredit him and position him as a natural born criminal. In the early 1800s, enslaved People of African ancestry were considered loyal and nonthreatening; after 1865, they were considered criminals. Today, our systems are still designed to keep Black Men broke and working for free or very little, with a price tag attached for success. Dr. Venus discusses how when we're talking about race, what we're missing is dealing with economics. She reveals the ways Black Men are positioned to stay financially handicapped, from sharecropping to convict leasing, foster care to jail pens. Black Men are not broke because they are trifling or lazy. They're broke because their hands are tied and they've been checkmated by a series of systems that they are born into. How do we begin to heal? Let's talk. Key Takeaways: [3:03] Most people do not understand the word system. Dr. Venus defines it as nothing more than a series of actions, practices, and procedures that are invisible to you that impact your behavior. You don't have to see a system to feel it or be affected by it. [5:00] As Dr. Venus applies her brain on Black Men, she is dealing with the brutal brilliance of White Supremacy. While we are focusing on race, they are focusing on profit and keeping the money machine going for White Supremacy. [8:13] Dr. Venus breaks down the tricky manner in which they created many different ways to keep Black Men poor and criminals, all the way up to the 1940's. Peonage is when you do a lot of work for a little bit of money, in order to work off a debt. It wasn't just Black people affected by this and who couldn't get ahead, it was White poor people as well. Sharecropping is a system where the landlord would allow the tenant to use the land in exchange for a share of the crop, but the tenant would struggle to profit or leave due to inflation and a never ending list of labor. [10:45] Convict leasing was also another way to replace slavery. They worked men to the bones, and when they died, they just replaced them with another convict. Dr. Venus needs you to get this: it's the exact same system we have today - White Supremacy making money off Black Men and benefiting from free labor, most obviously through the prison industrial complex. [20:38] If you don't know a White person who has the same kind of values that you have, you won't make it through the system. There's no Black person who has made it through any American systems without some type of support or help from some kind of abolitionist in whatever language they use. Black Men don't have that type of help more readily than Black Women, and there's always a price tag for the ones that do. Do not be seduced when they say there are Black millionaires and billionaires. Relative to how many White millionaire and billionaires there are, we're talking less than 1%. [24:55] If you take away the people who helped you, you would not be here whether it's a teacher, reverend, friend, etc. Black Men don't have the same type of help, and the ones who do always have a giant price tag attached to their success. [25:19] Black Men are caught in a cycle created by White Supremacy where from a young age they may get expelled from school, not able to further their education and land a job. To get by this may lead them to become a felon, and now they are in jail working for free. [27:22] Slavery had nothing to do with race and everything to do with profit and economics. If a Black Man has his own money, he doesn't have to go into racist structures to try to make money. [29:13] Black Women have become the voice of White Supremacy in our relationship to Black Men. We hold them in every way to the standard White people have set for them, but don't contend with the target on their back or think about their struggles and what they've done to protect us. Dr. Venus knows we have been hurt by Black Men, that is clear. However, none of that negates the structures he has to deal with, his humanity, fears, phobias, and a right to heal. [30:12] While Black Women are the most educated group in North America, Black Men are the least. Why is that? [33:42] When we talk about history, we talk about how we tended to him. We don't talk about what he gave up to protect us. [35:55] If we want to have love on the other side of trauma and have thriving Black families, we have to address the humanity of our Black Men and really be there to heal with them. Quotes: “You don't need to see a system to feel the impact of it.” “If you take away the people who have helped you, you would not be here. I promise you. It could be a teacher, Reverend, a friend.” “America is set up to have felons work for free, because that is how they replace slavery.” “Black Men are brilliant. They're strong and they have a willpower that is ridiculous.” “When we talk about history, we talk about how we tended to him. We don't talk about what he gave up to protect us.” “Black Men are not broke because they are trifling or lazy. They're broke because their hands are tied and they've been checkmated by a series of systems that they are born into.” Mentioned: Dr. Venus Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram “Hot Mess Millionaire” Amazon Pilot “Hot Mess Millionaire” Complete Series (https://www.youtube.com/c/DrVenusOpalReese) Free Gift When You Join The Truth Tribe The Black Woman Millionaire Hot Mess Edition RESOURCES PRISON SYSTEM: Report Finds Two-Thirds of Private Prison Contracts Include “Lockup Quotas” Private Prison Quotas Drive Mass Incarceration and Deter Reform, Study Finds Private Prisons Punish States for not Having Enough Prisoners FAMILES AND FATHERS Government policies based on racist myths help dissolve black families The War On Drug's Ongoing Impact On Black People 10 REASONS TO OPPOSE "3 STRIKES, YOU'RE OUT" MOVIES Driving While Black Race: The Power Of An Illusion Amend: The Fight for America The 13th Slavery By Another Name Reconstruction: America After The Civil War
Better late than never, as they say! Mr. O'Heney also coaches hockey, and now that the hockey season is up and running it has been a little more difficult to schedule time for the podcast. But here we are with another episode, and this week we are talking Reconstruction. Let's roll! In this week's episode we cover everything from Congressional plans for Reconstruction to the life of the post-Civil War South. We talk Freedmen's Bureau, Constitutional Amendments, Hiram Revels, Sharecropping, the Election of 1876, and the Compromise of 1877. I think we kept it fairly on task this week, but here we are again with another long episode. I'll learn how to summarize better next week...or maybe next year. Either way, I hope you enjoy, and you know where to find me if you have any questions. Mr. O'Heney
How would you feel if you signed up to be part of a medical test group, hoping to get better, only to find out that instead of trying to cure your illness, they simply wanted to observe you suffering from it? You would be pretty dismayed am sure. You would also probably develop an extremely deep-seated distrust of medical professionals. Today on The Secret Sits, we are going to discuss this exact situation, which took place during the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, I'm John Dodson, welcome to The Secret Sits.Don't forget to leave us a Rating and Review on Apple Podcast.Support the showhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSitsSend show suggestions to:TheSecretSitsPodcast@gmail.comFollow us on our social media at:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwnfvpNBYTo9BP1sVuFsfGQTheSecretSitsPodcast (@secretsitspod) / Twitterhttps://www.instagram.com/thesecretsitspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/TheSecretSitsPodcasthttps://www.tiktok.com/@thesecretsitspodcast?lang=enYou can find our podcast on:Apple PodcastsStitcherSpotifyBuzzsprout.comGoodpodsGoogle PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeart RadioPandoraPodcast AddictPodchaserPocket CastsDeezerListen NotesPlayer FMPodcast IndexOvercastCastroCastboxPodfriend#TuskegeeSyphilisExperiment #Tuskegee #Syphilis #MaconCounty #Alabama #Sharecropping #PeterBuxton #TheTuskegeeInstitute #EuniceRivers #TheDrum #CDC #NAACP #BillClinton #LegacyMuseum #Discrimination #HumanResearch #PodcastSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSits)
How would you feel if you signed up to be part of a medical test group, hoping to get better, only to find out that instead of trying to cure your illness, they simply wanted to observe you suffering from it? You would be pretty dismayed am sure. You would also probably develop an extremely deep-seated distrust of medical professionals. Today on The Secret Sits, we are going to discuss this exact situation, which took place during the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, I'm John Dodson, welcome to The Secret Sits.Don't forget to leave us a Rating and Review on Apple Podcast.Support the showhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSitsSend show suggestions to:TheSecretSitsPodcast@gmail.comFollow us on our social media at:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwnfvpNBYTo9BP1sVuFsfGQTheSecretSitsPodcast (@secretsitspod) / Twitterhttps://www.instagram.com/thesecretsitspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/TheSecretSitsPodcasthttps://www.tiktok.com/@thesecretsitspodcast?lang=enYou can find our podcast on:Apple PodcastsStitcherSpotifyBuzzsprout.comGoodpodsGoogle PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeart RadioPandoraPodcast AddictPodchaserPocket CastsDeezerListen NotesPlayer FMPodcast IndexOvercastCastroCastboxPodfriend#TuskegeeSyphilisExperiment #Tuskegee #Syphilis #MaconCounty #Alabama #Sharecropping #PeterBuxton #TheTuskegeeInstitute #EuniceRivers #TheDrum #CDC #NAACP #BillClinton #LegacyMuseum #Discrimination #HumanResearch #PodcastSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSits)
Fran and Alvin discuss Sharecropping, The Titanic, and the latest internet craze, the milk crate challenge.Merch Links!!!!NEW AFFIRMATIVE MURDER MERCH AVAILABLE FOR A LIMITED TIME! CONTACT US ON SOCIAL MEDIA IF INTERESTED :)Good Vibes apparel: https://www.bonfire.com/good-vibes-apparel-160/"I Know What I Said" Mugs: https://www.bonfire.com/i-know-what-i-said-mug/Want more Affirmative Murder? https://www.patreon.com/affirmativemurderAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
I first read Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry when I was about 11 or 12 years old. It's the book that introduced me to racism, and it deals with this tricky topic so…. humanely. It's clear and sharp and true - but also compassionate. Get Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor here (affiliate link):https://bookshop.org/a/54551/9781101993880Subscribe to the podcast for more books!https://bookwormpod.com/subscribe
Steve Stoute Compares Record Deals To Sharecropping Are Record Deals Bad? Steve Stoute Compares Record Deals To Sharecropping When your paycheck gets deposited in your account, do you share that money with anyone? Maybe your family. Or your kids. But that money stays in your account because you earned it. The company you work for already took their share and now it's yours. But what if they charged you for the coffee you drank every morning? What if they charged for the repairs they have to make to the parking lot because your car weighs over 5,000 lbs? What if they charged you for the new seats/desks/computers that you need to do your job but have started to break down because of wear and tear? All of these things happen with any business, but your biweekly payment remains the same. Not if you're a sharecropper Not if you are in the music business. You're on the hook for every expense in exchange for a parcel of land (sharecropping) or marketing for your music (Record deal). Is this a fair deal? Yes, you are using their services. But these expenses are going to be theirs anyway. Why would they pass that on to you and take your profits? Why are you on the hook for their business overhead? What other business does this happen? Sell My Course and I'll Pay You $500 No Cap
Today’s show is a repeat of “Roll Jim Crow” (April 30, 2019) about the very intentional practice of white supremacy by the corporate managers of the American Tobacco Company and how, via corporate imperialism, that same racial project found expression in countries all over the world, most notably China. Some of the topics covered are: …
Stories are the currency that nonprofit leaders collect in order to pay their donors (Read more here). But what do you do when you are shut down and you don't have stories to tell? Answer: You make ‘em up!That is the strategy I used in my last email to our donors to The Bethlehem International School Foundation.Most of the stories you will use in fundraising and team building will be true stories of actual people and the impact your mission has had on their lives. But, there is a place for made up stories as well.This technique helps your followers to appreciate why it is important to listen, understand, and adopt any changes in your mission strategy and plans. This storytelling technique can turn what might seem boring into something readers are eager to hear and assimilate.The goal is to take your readers from seeing your current situation as ordinary to visionary.Of course, the very first goal is to get your followers to pay attention! But once they are paying attention, your visionary super-powers kick in! Remember, visionaries rule the world. Visionaries always get the resources they need. Visionaries change the world (for a refresher in vision, (READ HERE).This is where storytelling really works for you. This story, when well crafted, will create a picture of the future so inspiring that it drives people to action. One VERY important thing, the story must be personal to the readers. They need to see themselves in the future you describe. Get my free resource: A Boring Vision, The Biggest Thing That Will Keep You From Becoming Your Donor's Favorite Charity has helped them. I made it with you in mind, AND it's free! GET IT HERE. MORE POPULAR POSTS FROM DAVID L OAKS:How To Write A ‘Thank You' Like A BossCovid-19, Race, Unemployment And A Bridge In Honduras: What Can Nonprofits Learn? TO LISTEN! Why Your Nonprofit MUST Be Able To Describe A World Where It Is NOT NeededJust Say Thank You40 Acres, A Mule, Sharecropping & Your Nonprofit GET NEW WSD NONPROFIT POSTS IN YOUR EMAILAll Rights Reserved, 2021 WorldStage Development
Get my free download: Getting That Elusive Second Gift By Writing Better Thank You's CLICK HEREDavid Oakswsdevelop.comwww.wsdevelop.comMORE POPULAR POSTS FROM DAVID L OAKS:How To Write A ‘Thank You' Like A BossCovid-19, Race, Unemployment And A Bridge In Honduras: What Can Nonprofits Learn? TO LISTEN!Why Your Nonprofit MUST Be Able To Describe A World Where It Is NOT NeededJust Say Thank You40 Acres, A Mule, Sharecropping & Your NonprofitGET NEW WSD NONPROFIT POSTS IN YOUR EMAIL©2021 WorldStage Development - David L. Oaks
Sonia Simone of Copyblogger calls digital sharecropping “the most dangerous threat to your online marketing.”In Robots Make Bad Fundraisers, Steven Shattuck explains how that digital sharecropping happens when a nonprofit uses someone elses "land" to grow their "crops" and how it keeps the sharecropper in bondage. It is a relationship where the landowner ALWAYS gets the best part of the deal and the sharecropper ALWAYS gets the worst part.STOP sharecropping, get my free download today:My Bulletproof, 5 Step Process To Create Alluring Lead Generators For Your Business
Serien om afroamerikaners kamp för medborgerliga rättigheter fortsätter. Det kommer att handla om sharecropping, utbildning i södern, Freedmens Bureau, Fallet Ex Parte Milligan, Sea Island experimentet, 40 acres and a mule, Southerns Homestead Act och en afroamerikansk sparbank. Glöm inte att prenumerera på podcasten! Ge den gärna betyg på iTunes! Följ podden på Facebook (facebook.com/stjarnbaneret), twitter (@stjarnbaneret) eller Instagram (@stjarnbaneret) Kontakt: stjarnbaneret@gmail.com
This week Beth and Wendy get into part 2 on the case of Eddie Lee Mosely, a Floridian serial killer and rapist. He was responsible for the sexual assaults and murders of somewhere around 8 to 100+ black women and girls, and two innocent black men were wrongfully convicted for some of those rapes and murders. If you have not heard part 1 of this case, we recommend you stop right now, go back and give it a listen. We will be here when you come back, we promise. (note: time stamps are without ads & may be off a little) We thank y’all for your support and for listening (7:43) then jump right on into the rest of the timeline (11:14). Then, we get into the investigation & arrest (33:05) followed by "Where are they now?"(39:36). We get into our Take Aways and what we think made the perp snap (46:05). As usual we close out the show with some tips on how not to get murdered (55:41) and some shout outs (58:36). Thanks for listening! This is a weekly podcast and new episodes drop every Thursday, so until next time... look alive guys, it's crazy out there! Sponsors (33:06) And Still I Votehttps://andstillivote.org/your-story-matters/ Where to find us: Our Facebook page is Fruitloopspod and our discussion group is Fruitloopspod Discussion on Facebook; https://www.facebook.com/groups/fruitloopspod/ We are also on Twitter and Instagram @fruitloopspod Please send any questions or comments to fruitloopspod@gmail.com or leave us a voicemail at 602-935-6294. We just might read your email or play your voicemail on the show! Want to Support the show? You can support the show by rating and reviewing Fruitloops on iTunes, or anywhere else that you get your podcasts from. We would love it if you gave us 5 stars! You can make a donation on the Cash App https://cash.me/$fruitloopspod Or become a monthly Patron through our Podbean Patron page https://patron.podbean.com/fruitloopspod Articles/Websites Wikipedia contributors. (10/15/2020). Eddie Mosley. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12/03/2020 from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eddie_Mosley&oldid=983704609 Murderpedia. (n.d.). Eddie Lee Mosley. Retrieved 12/04/2020 from https://murderpedia.org/male.M/m/mosley-eddie-lee.htm King, Jonathan. (10/30/1988). KILLER AFTER A DOZEN MURDERS, 40 RAPES AND THE SPORADIC PURSUIT OF PRIME SUSPECTS, DID THE FORT LAUDERDALE POLICE FINALLY GET THE RIGHT MAN? The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1988-10-30-8803030625-story.html Baitinger, Brooke. (05/29/2020). South Florida serial killer Eddie Lee Mosley, accused of raping and killing dozens of women, dies in Panhandle hospital. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/coronavirus/fl-ne-serial-killer-eddie-mosley-dies-20200530-zsfl3pgwivalzdkzdzzkjwb5yy-story.html McMahon, Paula; Burstein, Jon. (09/22/2009). $2 MILLION FOR MAN THAT DNA CLEARED. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-2009-09-22-0909210440-story.html Connelly, Michael. (04/27/1985). 25 Years Later, 2nd Relative is Murdered. Fort Lauderdale News. Retrieved 12/06/2020 from https://www.newspapers.com/image/236431352/ The Miami Herald. (02/06/1986). Death penalty asked for killer. Retrieved 12/06/2020 from https://www.newspapers.com/image/642627975/ Wellman, A.M. (2019-2020). Nehomia Gamble: A nonfiction work in progress. Facebook. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://www.facebook.com/nehomia.gamble.1957.1973/ Victims https://www.facebook.com/nehomia.gamble.1957.1973/posts/this-page-is-an-online-repository-of-research-into-the-victims-of-florida-serial/283373803069227/ Innocence Project. (n.d.). Jerry Frank Townsend. Retrieved 12/08/2020 from https://innocenceproject.org/cases/jerry-frank-townsend/ Innocence Project. (n.d.). Frank Lee Smith. Retrieved 12/08/2020 from https://innocenceproject.org/cases/frank-lee-smith/ FSU College of Law. (n.d.). Frank Lee Smith v The State of Florida. Retrieved 12/11/2020 from https://fall.fsulawrc.com/flsupct/75038/75208app.pdf Norman, Bob. (07/26/2001). Captain of Deceit. New Times Broward-Palm Beach. Retrieved 12/11/2020 from https://www.browardpalmbeach.com/news/captain-of-deceit-6323514 Rosenberg, Howard. (04/18/2002). Justice, and Its Bitter Aftertaste. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 12/12/2020 from https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2002-apr-08-et-rosenberg8-story.html Books Sarat, Austin. (2009). When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriages of Justice. New York City, NY: NYU Press. Video Renee, Kasey. (6/9/2020). A Web of Injustice | Jerry Frank Townsend, Frank Lee Smith and Eddie Lee Mosley. YouTube. Retrieved 12/2/2020 from https://youtu.be/SWI_66HBJW0 Bikel, Ofra. (04/11/2002). Frontline: Requiem for Frank Lee Smith. PBS.https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/smith/ History Soul of America. (n.d.). Fort Lauderdale History. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.soulofamerica.com/us-cities/fort-lauderdale/fort-lauderdale-history/ Joseph, Teresa. (02/02/2018). Civil Rights Activist Eula Johnson's ‘Wade-Ins' Ended Segregation in Fort Lauderdale Beach. NBC Miami. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/civil-rights-activist-eula-johnsons-wade-ins-ended-segregation-in-fort-lauderdale-beach/137565/ Fleshler, David. (04/13/2015). Wade-ins ended beach segregation. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/broward/fl-brow100-beach-segregation-20150408-story.html Florida Conservation Voters. (02/17/2020). Beach Wade-Ins Inspired Civil Rights Action. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://fcvoters.org/2020/02/17/beach-wade-ins-inspired-civil-rights-action/ Christensen, Dan. (6/4/2020). Amid nationwide racial unrest, renewed interest in Broward’s most horrific miscarriage of justice. FloridaBulldog.org. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://www.floridabulldog.org/2020/06/amid-nationwide-unrest-interest-again-in-broward-miscarriage-of-justice/ Jackson County Times Staff. (6/5/2020). Obituaries - Eddie Lee Mosley. Jackson County Times. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://jacksoncountytimes.net/eddie-lee-mosley/?fbclid=IwAR3pBlyZXrOIzmaAZEmgGdfDiLHNuTpnwun8rVkF5nm0R44OKQ994bWXk4A History.com Editors. (6/24/2010). Sharecropping. History.com. Retrieved on 12/6/2020 from https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/sharecropping How Not to Get Murdered (tips) Safety apps for encounters with law enforcement Legal Equalizer apphttps://www.legaleqapp.com/ Shout Outs Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America by Ijeoma Uluohttps://www.amazon.com/Mediocre-Dangerous-Legacy-White-America/dp/1580059511 Prom on Netflixhttps://www.netflix.com/title/81079914 Something Was Wrong podcasthttps://www.somethingwaswrong.com/ Music "Abyss" by Alasen: ●https://soundcloud.com/alasen●https://twitter.com/icemantrap ●https://instagram.com/icemanbass/●https://soundcloud.com/therealfrozenguy●Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License "Second Chance" by Saibysed https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoyDwrTWfhlv_yBm84WXXBgLicensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Born Again" by Jorge Hernandezhttps://youtu.be/DLHtFN_hr_sLicensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Furious Freak" by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3791-furious-freakLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Connect with us on: Twitter @FruitLoopsPod Instagram https://www.instagram.com/fruitloopspod Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Fruitloopspod and https://www.facebook.com/groups/fruitloopspod
This week Beth and Wendy discuss the case of Eddie Lee Mosely, a Floridian serial killer and rapist. This case has also been called the Broward County Miscarriage of justice because Mosley managed to slip through the hands of justice for 15 years, and in that time he was responsible for the sexual assaults and murders 8-100+ black women and girls, and two innocent black men were wrongfully convicted for some of those crimes. This will be a two parter because there’s just so much to the story. Thanks for listening! This is a weekly podcast and new episodes drop every Thursday, so until next time... look alive guys, it's crazy out there! Sponsors (24:22) And Still I Votehttps://andstillivote.org/your-story-matters/ Where to find us: Our Facebook page is Fruitloopspod and our discussion group is Fruitloopspod Discussion on Facebook; https://www.facebook.com/groups/fruitloopspod/ We are also on Twitter and Instagram @fruitloopspod Please send any questions or comments to fruitloopspod@gmail.com or leave us a voicemail at 602-935-6294. We just might read your email or play your voicemail on the show! Want to Support the show? You can support the show by rating and reviewing Fruitloops on iTunes, or anywhere else that you get your podcasts from. We would love it if you gave us 5 stars! You can make a donation on the Cash App https://cash.me/$fruitloopspod Or become a monthly Patron through our Podbean Patron page https://patron.podbean.com/fruitloopspod Articles/Websites Wikipedia contributors. (10/15/2020). Eddie Mosley. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12/03/2020 from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eddie_Mosley&oldid=983704609 Murderpedia. (n.d.). Eddie Lee Mosley. Retrieved 12/04/2020 from https://murderpedia.org/male.M/m/mosley-eddie-lee.htm King, Jonathan. (10/30/1988). KILLER AFTER A DOZEN MURDERS, 40 RAPES AND THE SPORADIC PURSUIT OF PRIME SUSPECTS, DID THE FORT LAUDERDALE POLICE FINALLY GET THE RIGHT MAN? The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1988-10-30-8803030625-story.html Baitinger, Brooke. (05/29/2020). South Florida serial killer Eddie Lee Mosley, accused of raping and killing dozens of women, dies in Panhandle hospital. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/coronavirus/fl-ne-serial-killer-eddie-mosley-dies-20200530-zsfl3pgwivalzdkzdzzkjwb5yy-story.html McMahon, Paula; Burstein, Jon. (09/22/2009). $2 MILLION FOR MAN THAT DNA CLEARED. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-2009-09-22-0909210440-story.html Connelly, Michael. (04/27/1985). 25 Years Later, 2nd Relative is Murdered. Fort Lauderdale News. Retrieved 12/06/2020 from https://www.newspapers.com/image/236431352/ The Miami Herald. (02/06/1986). Death penalty asked for killer. Retrieved 12/06/2020 from https://www.newspapers.com/image/642627975/ Wellman, A.M. (2019-2020). Nehomia Gamble: A nonfiction work in progress. Facebook. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://www.facebook.com/nehomia.gamble.1957.1973/ Victims https://www.facebook.com/nehomia.gamble.1957.1973/posts/this-page-is-an-online-repository-of-research-into-the-victims-of-florida-serial/283373803069227/ Innocence Project. (n.d.). Jerry Frank Townsend. Retrieved 12/08/2020 from https://innocenceproject.org/cases/jerry-frank-townsend/ Innocence Project. (n.d.). Frank Lee Smith. Retrieved 12/08/2020 from https://innocenceproject.org/cases/frank-lee-smith/ Video Renee, Kasey. (6/9/2020). A Web of Injustice | Jerry Frank Townsend, Frank Lee Smith and Eddie Lee Mosley. YouTube. Retrieved 12/2/2020 from https://youtu.be/SWI_66HBJW0 Bikel, Ofra. (04/11/2002). Frontline: Requiem for Frank Lee Smith. PBS.https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/smith/ History Soul of America. (n.d.). Fort Lauderdale History. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.soulofamerica.com/us-cities/fort-lauderdale/fort-lauderdale-history/ Joseph, Teresa. (02/02/2018). Civil Rights Activist Eula Johnson's ‘Wade-Ins' Ended Segregation in Fort Lauderdale Beach. NBC Miami. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/civil-rights-activist-eula-johnsons-wade-ins-ended-segregation-in-fort-lauderdale-beach/137565/ Fleshler, David. (04/13/2015). Wade-ins ended beach segregation. The Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/broward/fl-brow100-beach-segregation-20150408-story.html Florida Conservation Voters. (02/17/2020). Beach Wade-Ins Inspired Civil Rights Action. Retrieved 12/05/2020 from https://fcvoters.org/2020/02/17/beach-wade-ins-inspired-civil-rights-action/ Christensen, Dan. (6/4/2020). Amid nationwide racial unrest, renewed interest in Broward’s most horrific miscarriage of justice. FloridaBulldog.org. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://www.floridabulldog.org/2020/06/amid-nationwide-unrest-interest-again-in-broward-miscarriage-of-justice/ Jackson County Times Staff. (6/5/2020). Obituaries - Eddie Lee Mosley. Jackson County Times. Retrieved on 12/5/2020 from https://jacksoncountytimes.net/eddie-lee-mosley/?fbclid=IwAR3pBlyZXrOIzmaAZEmgGdfDiLHNuTpnwun8rVkF5nm0R44OKQ994bWXk4A History.com Editors. (6/24/2010). Sharecropping. History.com. Retrieved on 12/6/2020 from https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/sharecropping How Not to Get Murdered RAINNhttps://www.rainn.org/800-656-hope (4673) Safe Helplinehttps://safehelpline.org/877-995-5247 Shout Outs The Nutcracker and The Four Realmshttps://www.disneyplus.com/movies/the-nutcracker-and-the-four-realms/5dYD1WTOdnZm Timehttps://www.amazon.com/Time-Fox-Rich/dp/B08J7DDGJY Dr. Deathhttps://wondery.com/shows/dr-death/ Music "Abyss" by Alasen: ●https://soundcloud.com/alasen●https://twitter.com/icemantrap ●https://instagram.com/icemanbass/●https://soundcloud.com/therealfrozenguy●Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License “Streets” and “One Way” by Yung Kartzhttps://freemusicarchive.org/music/Yung_KartzLicensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License “Furious Freak” by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3791-furious-freakLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Connect with us on: Twitter @FruitLoopsPod Instagram https://www.instagram.com/fruitloopspod Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Fruitloopspod and https://www.facebook.com/groups/fruitloopspod
Today, we look at how effective different pieces of legislation for Reconstruction were, and what sharecropping is! Plus, Mr. Meyer does an ad read about candy canes!
Things we can't live without; Immigration systems; Why education will never be free; How to save on groceries; Great White; Chicken farmers; How to win at Democracy... and much more? / Musical Credits: "Savin' The Day" - Alessi © 1984 Arista / MLC on the web: www.mlcraver.com / www.facebook.com/MichaelLCraver
In this episode of As In Heaven, Jim Davis and Justin Holcomb welcome back Ligon Duncan for the second of a two-part discussion of the history of black people in America. Duncan began with the onset of chattel slavery in 1619 up to the Civil War in the last episode. In this episode, he addresses the sordid practices of peonage, vagrancy laws, and sharecropping and how they helped pave the way for Jim Crow laws in America. Understanding these historical realities will help white believers understand how they still play a part in our cultural moment and grow a greater empathy for our black brothers and sisters. The group discusses:Reconstruction and its flaws, a lesser known era (2:00)Black Codes and Reconstruction (9:57)Sharecropping and its abuses (18:20)Self-perpetuation of “slavery by another name” (20:57)Discouraging Black people from voting (24:07)A horrific legacy outside the law (26:30)The Cloistering of Black people (34:22)Isn’t it all just history? (38:25)Dr. Ligon and changing the Mississippi flag (43:01)Explore more from TGC on the topics of Race and Slavery.DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:1. What narrative did you learn about the period following the Civil War, especially reconstruction? What are differences from that narrative from the narrative that Dr. Duncan shares?2. What are some major events and policies from this era that created or maintained oppressive systems towards black Americans? How did those policies and events shape the future?3. What are things from this era that have had a profound effect on America today? What about the church today?4. Why might the histories presented in these first two episodes on the history of race in America be important conversations for the church to have today?
Kamala Harris has been selected to be Joe Biden’s Vice President and we air out all of our grievances over the Kamala Harris VP selection, not over the pick, but from the toxic responses within our own faction of the party on this historic moment, with so much at stake. We sound the alarm reminding folks of the big picture, and bring the receipts on Kamala’s record, what this means to us having her on the ticket, and what it should mean for all of us, the root of why it is that maybe having an issue with this selection, and our strategy for getting folx on board. Plus James has a progressive purity test? In the main event, we're still trying to find the right words to describe Melania with being disrespectful (sorry Akon, sorry Michelle we are going low) but James is on his Farmers apology tour. James went in hard on farmers a few years back, so he's giving Black farmers, the tribute and respect they deserve as we explore their history from slavery to sharecropping to farming. We also discover why there are so few black farmers, and why George Washington Carver was more than just Mr. Peanut. Black Farming & SharecroppingCNN - https://cnn.it/3fYA6YtPlotline - https://bit.ly/3fWVCgnMother Jones- https://bit.ly/2PRZCUGKamala Harris How Liberal is She? https://bit.ly/30UP79fHer Chief of Staff Pick https://bit.ly/3gXq8rEHer Record: https://cnn.it/2E5FmvXHer Record on Climate: https://bit.ly/30XIdAqCONTACT USTwitter: @minoritykornerEmail: minoritykorner@gmail.comIG: @minoritykornerJames Arthur M: TW: @JamesArthur_M, IG: @JamesArthurMNnekay FitzClrke: TW: @mizzfitzie, IG: @nnekay
On this week's episode, Jon Zellar and Pastor Toby Schmidt continue the conversation with Pastor Gerard Bolling and cover topics like systemic/systematic/institutional racism, white privilege, and the beautiful diversity found in Scripture.Cross View Voices is the official podcast of Cross View Lutheran Church, Edina, MN. Connect with us at cvvoices@crossview.net.Show Notes:When Helping Hurts - Corbett & Fikkerthttps://www.amazon.com/When-Helping-Hurts-Alleviate-Yourself/dp/0802409989/What is Sharecropping?https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/sharecroppingWhite Privilege Grocery Store Video - Joy DeGruyhttps://www.world-trust.org/cracking-the-codesThe Third Option - Miles McPhersonhttps://www.amazon.com/Third-Option-Racially-Divided-Nation/dp/1501172204/
In Part I of their first episode, Jamie and Sofia discuss the very sparkly 1999 film Ever After: A Cinderella Story. Join them to learn new and exciting things about Leonardo da Vinci, codpieces, and selling servants to pay debts. Sources: Ever After. IMDB. Susannah Grant, "Success Feels Better, But It Doesn't Necessarily Make You Better," Medium. Leonardo da Vinci: Mona Lisa, The Met. Mona Lisa, The Louvre. The Codex Atlanticus. "Flying Machine," LeonardodaVinci.net Leonardo da Vinci's Codex on the Flight of Birds. Smithsonian. Leonardo da Vinci, Head of a Woman, The Met. Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance. PBS. Leonardo da Vinci, Thoughts on Art and Life. trans. Maurice Baring, 1906. Jonathan Jones, "And the Winner Is," The Guardian. "The Other Vitruvian Man," Smithsonian Magazine. Codpieces: Grace Q. Vicary, “Visual Art as Social Data: The Renaissance Codpiece,” Cultural Anthropology 4, 1 (February 1989) pp. 3-25. “What Goes Up Must Come Down: A Brief History of the Codpiece.” Selling People to Pay Debts: Henry Heller, "Bodin on Slavery and Primitive Accumulation," The Sixteenth-Century Journal Robert Kalas, "Noble Widows and Estate Management during the French Wars of Religion" Hoffman, "The Economic Theory of Sharecropping in Early Modern France"
Julius Tillery has innovative thoughts on Cotton.... On his website, he says "Black Cotton, a company that is going to change the game for you, me, all of us. Black Cotton comes from us, and is meant for us! For many years, cotton was the number one crop our people produced in the South, by our hands and feet, for no wage or compensation. After the Emancipation Proclamation, many of our ancestors made mere pennies off of the cotton produced from sharecropping. What’s worse, for the amount of money that’s made in the same industry today, black cotton farms are still making just pennies compared to the billions earned by their counterparts.I grew up in this system of poverty cotton farming. My farm home county of Northampton County in North Carolina is one of the poorest performers of economic health in the state by county, but it’s also ranked number two in the state for cotton production. Are we raising crops for our communities to suffer? As a black farmer, it has been depressing to see each year go by with farming communities struggling and deteriorating, while our efforts continue to be exploited across the world for others to profit." we look forward to our discussion about how business is going, and what he feels the future is like for Black Farmers... The number to call is 6466688393 and we hope that you wil tell your friends and family to join us in this discussion on black farming and it's merits and benefits...Who knows we might even motivate someone into farmingAlso joining us will be Charles Phaneuf of one of our premiere theatre companies....I first met Charles when he was a student from D.C. coming down to work at Durham Arts Council and have been impressed by his work ever since..
Julius Tillery has innovative thoughts on Cotton.... On his website, he says "Black Cotton, a company that is going to change the game for you, me, all of us. Black Cotton comes from us, and is meant for us! For many years, cotton was the number one crop our people produced in the South, by our hands and feet, for no wage or compensation. After the Emancipation Proclamation, many of our ancestors made mere pennies off of the cotton produced from sharecropping. What’s worse, for the amount of money that’s made in the same industry today, black cotton farms are still making just pennies compared to the billions earned by their counterparts.I grew up in this system of poverty cotton farming. My farm home county of Northampton County in North Carolina is one of the poorest performers of economic health in the state by county, but it’s also ranked number two in the state for cotton production. Are we raising crops for our communities to suffer? As a black farmer, it has been depressing to see each year go by with farming communities struggling and deteriorating, while our efforts continue to be exploited across the world for others to profit." we look forward to our discussion about how business is going, and what he feels the future is like for Black Farmers... The number to call is 6466688393 and we hope that you wil tell your friends and family to join us in this discussion on black farming and it's merits and benefits...Who knows we might even motivate someone into farmingAlso joining us will be Charles Phaneuf of one of our premiere theatre companies....I first met Charles when he was a student from D.C. coming down to work at Durham Arts Council and have been impressed by his work ever since..
This Podcast talks about Scottie Pippen and the Chicago Bulls. Scottie was an all American NAIA player in Central Arkansas before being drafted by the Chicago Bulls. Scottie was drafted by Jerry krause and the Chicago Bulls, and offered a contract for 18 million for ten years. The Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf told Scottie "if I were you I wouldn't sign that contract." But Scottie not really knowing the game of big time sports and money, took the for sure deal. In this podcast we talk about the pimping that occurred by the Bulls in signing Scottie. We also discuss why Scottie may have taken the forsure money, and why the Bulls took advantage of Pippen in his ten year deal. Blog Site - ishiphopdead.comHome Site - thedigitaldopeman.com
In the last 100 years Black Farmers have "lost" over 12 Million Acres of Farmland in America. From Slavery and Sharecropping to the present day this episode discusses the Federal Government's role in this tragic reality. There are too many layers to this subject to address in one episode but we need to support those Black Farmers who are fighting to retain their Farms. Teach Tha Babies --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/teachthababies/support
Sharecropper : a tenant farmer especially in the southern U.S. who is provided with credit for seed, tools, living quarters, and food, who works the land, and who receives an agreed share of the value of the crop minus charges (definition provided by Merriam-Webster) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
After stepping into the '90s last episode, Episode 9 highlights the backward looking glance of that decade: via its garage punk revival, and notions of 'discovery.' We look at R.L. Burnside, a unique Hill Country blues player who performed for decades in small-town Mississippi, becoming a household name after collaborating with the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion 50 years after his first gig. Then we turn to the most resilient underdogs of the '90s garage revival: a band from Boston called Cheater Slicks, who didn't languish in obscurity...but reveled in it. Barely Human is written and hosted by Max Easton, and produced by Jason L'Ecuyer and Output Media. Visit the website for show notes featuring extra discussion, sources, further reading and detailed credits at: https://www.barelyhuman.info/2020/03/ep-9-dead-inside-i-like-rl-burnside-and.html. The accompanying playlist called 'The Hill Country Revival' can be found here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1tkltr0SbVOdEPmZssueOb Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, all @barelyhumanpod
Tim reflects on this past year and shares some of his favorite clips over the past year, including interviews with baseball pitcher John Smoltz, daredevil Nik Wallenda, actress/singer Jodi Benson, author Gil Mentz, former mayor of Philadelphia Dr. W. WIlson Goode Sr., and the Beach Boys's Mike Love. Tim also speaks with a special caller, the hardest working producer in radio, Joe Harnett, who retired a few weeks ago. Tim can't wait to see what 2020 has in store! Music ft: Outro: Happy New Years (KJ-52, Spechouse) Listen to the show live 4-5 pm ET weekdays on AM 560 WFIL.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jon Workman is Vice President - Industrial Hemp Business Development at American Cannabis Company and President - Arkansas Hemp Assoc. He has had a long career in the industry, starting out growing up on a farm in Arkansas, getting into the finance industry in California, having much success, then a random snowboarding accident revealed he had multiple myeloma. Given 3 years to live, he was hit with another disease called TTP ( Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura). He shares, "I was in the hospital for over 60 days at City of Hope in Los Angeles, I was down to about 139 pounds. I'm six-one and it didn't look real real good on me. In fact, I was scared I was going to not make it out of there. So I I took it upon myself to bring in some assistance in the form of cannabis edibles" While Jon would not say cancer cured him, it definitely helped ease his recovery and he's gone on to be in remission since shortly after his last bone marrow transplant to address his TTP. In his own words, "I am a stage 2 cancer survivor of multiple myeloma bone marrow cancer. After two bone marrow transplants and countless hours in the infusion room getting the poison they call chemotherapy I can say I didn't know if I was going to survive. Fast forward 19 years later and looking back I see with clarity that my survival was comforted by the use of medicinal cannabis. Now I am here to share my story in an industry that is growing like a weed (bad joke)." Jon discusses his entrance into the hemp and cannabis industry, moving back to his home state of Arkansas, being inspired and encouraged by a childhood best friend to enter the cannabis industry; "at the end of the day, I came to think that it's what brought me to where I am, it saved me in some ways, and it's a message. I think that it's something God really wants me to do. I really you're put in places in your life and sometimes it's just opportunistic, but at the same time, I think it's a thing called luck. What is luck? I think John Wooden called it "when opportunity meets preparation meets opportunity" ". Jon describes his current role with American Cannabis Company; "with what happened in 2018 with the new farm bill, at the beginning of this year it transitioned my role at American Cannabis Company to the role I'm in now, which is the Vice President of Hemp Business Development. And so throughout this year, I've been working with farmers throughout the country to basically offer the same services we did with our marijuana but, but more for outdoor applications, then of course, indoor and there are quite a few greenhouse operations that we consult with as well for hemp, but we've been involved with quite a few different states and in these states are university pilot programs. In fact, just this morning, about two hours ago, we got the release of the USDA interim rules on hemp cultivation, for 2020. crop year. This is the first USDA rules we've had since well since 1937" Jon continues to outline his extensive involvement in the cannabis industry," I also work with a team of cannabis industry professionals to help individuals and organizations gain entry into the legal recreational and medical marijuana industry. We provide business to business consultative services for dispensaries, grow operations and extraction facilities. Our team is dedicated to providing real-world solutions for the ever-changing cannabis markets in the U.S. and abroad." There's much more within this rich episode. Thanks so much to Jon Workman for this education on overcoming adversity and finding inspiration and motivation within and without the cannabis industry; "When people I meet ask me what I do in the industry, I usually reply with, "I connect the dots for those that are trying to start an industrial hemp business as well as find markets for them to sell their product." Simply put my approach is to provide my customers with Best of Class products and service which I do on a daily basis." Thank you Jon! Here are Jon's links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonworkman/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jsworkman63 Press Release: https://americancannabisconsulting.com/american-cannabis-company-inc-announces-hemp-business-development-appointment-of-chief-operations-officer/ Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/20938691 American Cannabis Company: https://americancannabisconsulting.com/ Thanks for listening! Reviews on our FB page, or ITunes are much appreciated! https://tscatlks.com FB: https://www.facebook.com/tsctalks/
Jon Workman is Vice President - Industrial Hemp Business Development at American Cannabis Company and President - Arkansas Hemp Assoc. He has had a long career in the industry, starting out growing up on a farm in Arkansas, getting into the finance industry in California, having much success, then a random snowboarding accident revealed he had multiple myeloma. Given 3 years to live, he was hit with another disease called TTP ( Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura).He shares, "I was in the hospital for over 60 days at City of Hope in Los Angeles, I was down to about 139 pounds. I'm six-one and it didn't look real real good on me. In fact, I was scared I was going to not make it out of there. So I I took it upon myself to bring in some assistance in the form of cannabis edibles" While Jon would not say cancer cured him, it definitely helped ease his recovery and he's gone on to be in remission since shortly after his last bone marrow transplant to address his TTP. In his own words,"I am a stage 2 cancer survivor of multiple myeloma bone marrow cancer. After two bone marrow transplants and countless hours in the infusion room getting the poison they call chemotherapy I can say I didn't know if I was going to survive. Fast forward 19 years later and looking back I see with clarity that my survival was comforted by the use of medicinal cannabis. Now I am here to share my story in an industry that is growing like a weed (bad joke)."Jon discusses his entrance into the hemp and cannabis industry, moving back to his home state of Arkansas, being inspired and encouraged by a childhood best friend to enter the cannabis industry; "at the end of the day, I came to think that it's what brought me to where I am, it saved me in some ways, and it's a message. I think that it's something God really wants me to do. I really you're put in places in your life and sometimes it's just opportunistic, but at the same time, I think it's a thing called luck. What is luck? I think John Wooden called it "when opportunity meets preparation meets opportunity" ".Jon describes his current role with American Cannabis Company; "with what happened in 2018 with the new farm bill, at the beginning of this year it transitioned my role at American Cannabis Company to the role I'm in now, which is the Vice President of Hemp Business Development. And so throughout this year, I've been working with farmers throughout the country to basically offer the same services we did with our marijuana but, but more for outdoor applications, then of course, indoor and there are quite a few greenhouse operations that we consult with as well for hemp, but we've been involved with quite a few different states and in these states are university pilot programs. In fact, just this morning, about two hours ago, we got the release of the USDA interim rules on hemp cultivation, for 2020. crop year. This is the first USDA rules we've had since well since 1937"Jon continues to outline his extensive involvement in the cannabis industry," I also work with a team of cannabis industry professionals to help individuals and organizations gain entry into the legal recreational and medical marijuana industry. We provide business to business consultative services for dispensaries, grow operations and extraction facilities. Our team is dedicated to providing real-world solutions for the ever-changing cannabis markets in the U.S. and abroad."There's much more within this rich episode. Thanks so much to Jon Workman for this education on overcoming adversity and finding inspiration and motivation within and without the cannabis industry; "When people I meet ask me what I do in the industry, I usually reply with, "I connect the dots for those that are trying to start an industrial hemp business as well as find markets for them to sell their product." Simply put my approach is to provide my customers with Best of Class products and service which I do on a daily basis." Thank you Jon! Here are Jon's links:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonworkman/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jsworkman63Press Release: https://americancannabisconsulting.com/american-cannabis-company-inc-announces-hemp-business-development-appointment-of-chief-operations-officer/Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/20938691American Cannabis Company: https://americancannabisconsulting.com/Thanks for listening! Reviews on our FB page, or ITunes are much appreciated! https://tscatlks.com FB: https://www.facebook.com/tsctalks/
A look at the origins of sharecropping and the free labor ideology.
This week Paula Tavares takes us 350 miles off the West coast of Africa, to the Cape Verde islands. Paula speaks 4 languages, each of them representing her family’s journey from Cape Verde, to Angola, to Boston, Miami and now Raleigh. Working in business and technology, and experiencing immigration and poverty inform Paula's work in the medical field with high-risk patients. She gladly continues a Cape Verdean cultural tradition of raising children of relatives in addition to her own. This large beautifully blended family is part of our city now as they get to know her husband's NC roots.
#LETSTALKABOUTIT Rams trade Marcus Peter's to the Ravens for Kenny Young & a draft pick Rams then trade for Jalen Ramsey by giving up two firsts & a fourth round pick. (KENNY CALLED IT WEEKS AGO) Mahomes injured knee against the Broncos. Raiders right tackle Trent Brown states his innocence against domestic violence suit by his ex girlfriend NEW SEGMENT: #WHATSTHEIMPACT Ravens lose Tony Jefferson but get Marcus Peters & Earl Thomas in the same secondary. Jalen Ramsey saves the Rams season? Mahomes ankle injury history Terrible officiating rears its head again in Packers/Lions game College Football News Penn State alum sends racist letter to black player about his hair & tattoos & then doubles down on it when called out. Players respond with shirts that school officials make take off during warm ups. Mike Leach bans his players from using social media the entire season. (That's a first amendment violation btw) LSU blew out Florida & everyone should be afraid. 12 undefeated teams left. - Alabama (vs. Tennessee) - Appalachian State (vs. LA Monroe) - Baylor (at OK State) - Boise State (at BYU) - Clemson (at Louisville) - LSU (at Miss. State) - Minnesota (at Rutgers) - Ohio State (at Northwestern) - Oklahoma (vs. WVU) - Penn State (vs. Michigan) - SMU (vs. Temple) - Wisconsin (at Illinois) Take or Tangent Random dumbass person takes a picture with Myles Garrett & then punches him in the face. Demaryius Thomas calls Patriots trading him to Jets after resigning him disrespectful Zach Brown trash talks Kurt Cousins before Eagles/Vikings game & then gets washed. Eagles cut him. Unnecessary Toughness rants
#LETSTALKABOUTIT Rams trade Marcus Peter's to the Ravens for Kenny Young & a draft pick Rams then trade for Jalen Ramsey by giving up two firsts & a fourth round pick. (KENNY CALLED IT WEEKS AGO) Mahomes injured knee against the Broncos.Raiders right tackle Trent Brown states his innocence against domestic violence suit by his ex girlfriend NEW SEGMENT: #WHATSTHEIMPACTRavens lose Tony Jefferson but get Marcus Peters & Earl Thomas in the same secondary.Jalen Ramsey saves the Rams season?Mahomes ankle injury historyTerrible officiating rears its head again in Packers/Lions gameCollege Football NewsPenn State alum sends racist letter to black player about his hair & tattoos & then doubles down on it when called out. Players respond with shirts that school officials make take off during warm ups.Mike Leach bans his players from using social media the entire season. (That's a first amendment violation btw)LSU blew out Florida & everyone should be afraid.12 undefeated teams left. - Alabama (vs. Tennessee)- Appalachian State (vs. LA Monroe)- Baylor (at OK State)- Boise State (at BYU)- Clemson (at Louisville)- LSU (at Miss. State)- Minnesota (at Rutgers)- Ohio State (at Northwestern)- Oklahoma (vs. WVU)- Penn State (vs. Michigan)- SMU (vs. Temple)- Wisconsin (at Illinois)Take or Tangent Random dumbass person takes a picture with Myles Garrett & then punches him in the face.Demaryius Thomas calls Patriots trading him to Jets after resigning him disrespectfulZach Brown trash talks Kurt Cousins before Eagles/Vikings game & then gets washed. Eagles cut him. Unnecessary Toughness rants
Översiktsserien sätter fart igen. Det kommer att handla om fredens problem, Andrew Johnson, att kunna ignorera veton, Sharecropping, landets första riksrätt av en president, Spike Lee, Freedmens Bureau, medborgerliga rättigheter och rasupplopp. Glöm inte att prenumerera på podcasten! Ge den gärna betyg på iTunes! Följ podden på Facebook (facebook.com/stjarnbaneret), twitter (@stjarnbaneret) eller Instagram (@stjarnbaneret) Kontakta oss på: stjarnbaneret@gmail.com
Interview of Julia Simon about her book, Time in the Blues, on the Music Preserves Foundation Stage at the Doheny Blues Festival in May 2019. The interview covers sharecropping, Parchman Farm, convict labor and how they shape time in the blues.
Julius Tillery has innovative thoughts on Cotton.... On his website, he says "Black Cotton, a company that is going to change the game for you, me, all of us. Black Cotton comes from us, and is meant for us! For many years, cotton was the number one crop our people produced in the South, by our hands and feet, for no wage or compensation. After the Emancipation Proclamation, many of our ancestors made mere pennies off of the cotton produced from sharecropping. What’s worse, for the amount of money that’s made in the same industry today, black cotton farms are still making just pennies compared to the billions earned by their counterparts.I grew up in this system of poverty cotton farming. My farm home county of Northampton County in North Carolina is one of the poorest performers of economic health in the state by county, but it’s also ranked number two in the state for cotton production. Are we raising crops for our communities to suffer? As a black farmer, it has been depressing to see each year go by with farming communities struggling and deteriorating, while our efforts continue to be exploited across the world for others to profit." we look forward to our discussion about how business is going, and what he feels the future is like for Black Farmers... The number to call is 6466688393 and we hope that you wil tell your friends and family to join us in this discussion on black farming and it's merits and benefits...Who knows we might even motivate someone into farmingAlso joining us will be Charles Phaneuf of one of our premiere theatre companies....I first met Charles when he was a student from D.C. coming down to work at Durham Arts Council and have been impressed by his work ever since...........
How to make sure you are an owner in the Digital world not a Digital Sharecropper, . Hint: Using free tools, working for Free , on someone else's Social media platform will not lead to ownership. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wakeuplearn/support
Have you heard? Facebook, Tumblr, Patreon are going through some changes and in the process some folks are getting left out in the cold. Now, lot's has been said about this from a political perspective, but there's a big lesson in there for entrepreneurs, businesses, and marketers. So, pull up a chair, pour a drink, and settle in.
CutToTheChase Business, Marketing and Tech Hacks for Entrepreneurs and Digital Creators
Sharecropping, by definition, is "a system of agriculture in which a landowner allows a tenant to use the land in return for a share of the crops produced on their portion of land." And building your business on a third-party platform, where they own the platform, they control the sales, and then they pay you a portion of the profits, is generally referred to as "Digital Sharecropping." It can work for many businesses – like this show is being distributed on third-party platforms like Amazon, Apple and Spotify, to name a few. My Kindle books are sold on Amazon and will probably make the most sales on that platform. However, that doesn’t stop me from selling this book on my own web site, or through other eBook platforms. And that is why my book sales will not get entirely shut down if Amazon decides to not allow my book to be sold there. It is not the end of the world. However, if you are building your online business on a third-party platform, and something goes wrong with your account or your product, or the platform itself shuts down or gets bought out by another company that maybe absorbs the talent and shuts the business down, then all of your content, your members, their recurring billing profiles – everything disappears overnight. To learn more about creating membership sites and online courses, check out my full-length podcast at https://SubscribeMe.fm And to listen to older episodes of this show, go to https://CutToTheChase.fm
Enslavement didn’t end with Emancipation. Historian James Brewer Stewart discusses modern-day slavery happening across the world—and right here in the U.S. – showing educators how to connect the past with the present. With host Hasan Kwame Jeffries. (Teaching Tolerance / Southern Poverty Law Center)
Sharecropping doesn’t get you very farAkimbo is a weekly podcast created by Seth Godin. He's the bestselling author of 19 books and a long-time entrepreneur, freelancer and teacher.You can find out more about Seth by reading his daily blog at seths.blog and about the workshops at akimbo.com.To submit a question and to see the show notes, please visit akimbo.link and press the appropriate button. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The HOBI Gang welcomes Number One Fan Doug into the BOB Studios to talk his latest visit to Disney World and Pandora, aka AvatarLand and to teach the gang some Disney history! The guys are hating on Transformers even before it is released, Blake hates the fake news surrounding Wonder Woman while Jason lightens the mood with impressions of celebrity siblings! The gang is scared of Bat-nipples, Jeff gets angry at people that don't understand Lost while Doug is only interested in a new Atari console if it has the dirty games from the old system! The guys list their Top 5 Favorite Fictional Fathers and HOBI has two Bad Ideas of the Week this time! This episode is sponsored by the Cincinnati Comic Expo!
SubscribeMe Online Courses, Membership Sites, Content Marketing and Digital Marketing
Hosting your membership site on a third-party marketplace - like Udemy.com and SkillShare.com On Udemy, it is free to create a course. And whatever price you end up charging for it, if you do the marketing and send buyers to your own course page on Udemy.com, and the visitor buys your course using a coupon that YOU have provided them with, then you keep 100% of the revenue from the sales. Of course, they deduct about 3% for processing fees, but still, that's 100% of the actual revenue. If Udemy sends you customers via their own marketing efforts, then they get 50% of the sale. They have other service add-ons to help you with marketing, and opting in to those would net you less on each sale, but you can reach a wider audience because of the increased exposure your course would get from Udemy’s marketing efforts. There are a number of other course-creation platforms, and each one has its own place in the industry. But probably the most popular one, that I myself have purchased a course from in the past, is Udemy. Digital Sharecropping Sharecropping, by definition, is "a system of agriculture in which a landowner allows a tenant to use the land in return for a share of the crops produced on their portion of land." And building your business on a third-party platform, where they own the platform, they control the sales, and then they pay you a portion of the profits, is generally referred to as Digital Sharecropping. It can work for many businesses – like my book SubscribeMeBook.com is being sold on Amazon Kindle and will probably make the most sales on that platform. However, that doesn’t stop me from selling this book on my own web site, or through other eBook platforms. And that is why my book sales will not get entirely shut down if Amazon decides to not allow my book to be sold there. It is not the end of the world. However, if you are building your membership business on a third-party platform, and something goes wrong with your account or your product, or the platform itself shuts down or gets bought out by another company that maybe absorbs the talent and shuts the business down, then all of your content, your members, their recurring billing profiles – everything disappears overnight. That thought makes most membership site owners nervous, which is why a building your own self-hosted membership platform using WordPress and a membership plugin like DigitalAccessPass.com (DAP), is a great idea for most people. All this and more in today's episode #16. Show notes available at http://SubscribeMe.fm/16/
Hosts: Dickson Despommier and Vincent Racaniello Guest: Caleb Harper Dickson and Vincent speak with Caleb Harper about the Open Agriculture initiative at the MIT Media Lab. Links for this episode CityFARM MIT Media Lab Growing data will be hosted at openag.mit.edu (not yet live) Caliber Biotherapeutics Caleb Harper on Twitter, Instagram MIT Open Agriculture on Twitter Send your questions and comments to urbanag@urbanag.ws
We talk about sharecropping in the Reconstruction Era and what it had to do with the failures of the post Civil War society. What did sharecropping have to do with land and labor? Thank you again for your continued support, here is the link to the album fundraiser, for the podcast: https://itunes.apple.com/ng/album/coolidge-metaphor-for-contradiction/id813759717 You can also find exclusive content on the show's youtube page: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYjULbrvVepZ04KaeyxjMyA Further you cab leave comments on our Itunes page: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/history-with-james-ipod/id373747636?mt=2
The Great Depression plunged the United States, and much of the world, into crisis. As the depression deepened, people looked to President Roosevelt for answers. Roosevelt pledged a “New Deal” for the American people, but despite having one name, the New Deal did not have a coherent economic philosophy. The New Deal experimented with policy, unleashing a torrent of legislation directed at almost all areas of the economy.
We look at the ways industrialism developed in the South, examining the everyday practice of white supremacy as it developed.
Lounett Gore remembers sharecropping and the great migration during World War I.