Podcast appearances and mentions of Edward Snowden

American whistleblower and former National Security Agency contractor

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Latest podcast episodes about Edward Snowden

Daniel Ramos' Podcast
Episode 516: 25 de Febrero del 2026 - Devoción matutina para menores - ¨Héroes y villanos¨

Daniel Ramos' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2026 4:46


====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA MENORES 2026“HEROES Y VILLANOS”Narrado por: Tatania DanielaDesde: Juliaca, PerúUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church25 de Febrero¿Héroe o villano? - Tercera parte«La violencia entorpece al sabio, y el soborno corrompe su carácter» (Eclesiastés 7: 7).En el mundo de la información y de la transparencia, hay figuras que desafían los límites y se convierten en voces valientes en la lucha por la verdad. Uno de estos personajes es Julian Assange, un jáquer y activista australiano que fundó WikiLeaks, un sitio web dedicado a la publicación de documentos filtrados de interés público. Con su valentía y determinación, Assange se convirtió en un símbolo de la libertad de expresión y de la rendición de cuentas de los gobiernos y las instituciones poderosas.Julian Assange saltó a la fama por su papel en la difusión de información confidencial que revelaba abusos de poder, corrupción y violaciones de derechos humanos en todo el mundo. Uno de los momentos más impactantes fue la publicación de documentos clasificados sobre las guerras en Irak y Afganistán y cables diplomáticos de Estados Unidos, los que expusieron crímenes de guerra y violaciones de derechos humanos cometidos por las fuerzas militares.Pero la historia de Assange no es solo la de un hombre enfrentándose a los molinos de viento del poder. También es la historia de un individuo que pagó un alto precio por su lucha. Perseguido por los gobiernos y acusado de espionaje y otros delitos, Assange pasó años viviendo en la clandestinidad y refugiado en la embajada de Ecuador en Londres.Edward Snowden y Julian Assange tienen algo en común: para algunos son héroes, mientras que para otros son villanos. Assange desafió a los poderosos y luchó por la verdad y la transparencia, enfrentando persecuciones y amenazas para proteger el derecho del público a conocer la información que afecta sus vidas. ¿Es esto digno de calificar de heroísmo? Ciertamente, lo es. Pero eso no es todo.Snowden, cuando trabajaba como contratista para la NSA de Estados Unidos, había firmado acuerdos de confidencialidad y había jurado proteger la información clasificada a la que tenía acceso en el desempeño de su trabajo. Al filtrar información clasificada a los medios de comunicación, Snowden violó estos compromisos de privacidad y seguridad. Además, las filtraciones de Assange han sido consideradas por muchos como una violación de la privacidad y de la seguridad nacional, ya que han expuesto información sensible que podría comprometer la seguridad de individuos y naciones.¿Cuál actividad es más grave: asesinatos extrajudiciales, tortura rutinaria de prisioneros y vigilancia y espionaje masivos o exponer esas acciones, publicando detalles filtrados ilegalmente de cómo, dónde, cuándo y por quién fueron cometidos? ¿No necesitamos al Espíritu Santo para decidir qué hacer? 

Daniel Ramos' Podcast
Episode 516: 24 de Febrero del 2026 - Devoción matutina para menores - ¨Héroes y villanos¨

Daniel Ramos' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2026 4:37


====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA MENORES 2026“HEROES Y VILLANOS”Narrado por: Tatania DanielaDesde: Juliaca, PerúUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church24 de Febrero¿Héroe o villano? Segunda parte«Esto ha dicho el Señor: "A los pobres y débiles se les oprime y se les hace sufrir. Por eso voy ahora a levantarme, y les daré la ayuda que tanto anhelan"» (Salmos 12:5).En estos días, mientras escribo estas líneas, el nombre de Edward Snowden resuena en los noticieros. ¿Quién era este hombre? No era un superhéroe con capa ni un genio multimillonario, pero sus acciones sacudieron al mundo entero.Cuando tenía 29 años, Edward Snowden era un joven empleado de la Agencia de Seguridad Nacional de Estados Unidos (NSA, por sus siglas en inglés). Fue un analista de sistemas que se convirtió en un símbolo de valentía y sacrificio. Su contribución más notable fue la revelación de programas secretos de vigilancia masiva y espionaje llevados a cabo por el gobierno estadounidense que violaban la privacidad de millones de personas en todo el mundo.Desde su posición privilegiada dentro de la NSA, Snowden descubrió la verdad oculta tras los velos de la seguridad nacional. En lugar de quedarse callado, decidió alzar la voz en nombre de la privacidad y de la libertad individual. Su decisión de filtrar información clasificada a los medios de comunicación fue un acto de desafío contra un sistema que consideraba corrupto y opresivo, sistema que lo califica ahora como traidor.Snowden difundió la información filtrando documentos clasificados a periodistas de renombre como Glenn Greenwald y Laura Poitras, quienes colaboraron en la publicación de las revelaciones en medios de comunicación como The Guardian, The Washington Post y Der Spiegel. A través de estas filtraciones, Snowden expuso al mundo la magnitud de la vigilancia masiva y la falta de transparencia de los gobiernos en materia de privacidad y derechos civiles.Snowden se convirtió en un fugitivo internacional desde 2013, buscado por las autoridades de su propio país. Pero su historia no es solo la de un hombre en fuga; es la historia de un individuo dispuesto a sacrificar todo por lo que cree justo y verdadero. Ese compromiso con la ética y su valentía y determinación nos recuerdan a la historia de Moisés, quien desafió al faraón egipcio y lideró a su pueblo hacia la libertad. Para algunos, Snowden es un héroe que enfrentó la adversidad y la persecución para liberar a otros.El legado de Edward Snowden nos recuerda que un solo individuo puede marcar la diferencia, incluso cuando enfrenta enormes desafíos. Hay ocasiones en las que no podemos quedar callados. Que Dios nos dé sabiduría para saber cuándo levantar la voz, cuándo desafiar el statu quo y luchar por un mundo donde la verdad y la libertad sean derechos inalienables para todos. 

Guitare, guitares
Laura Snowden. Le Live "Guitares de légende" : Raphaël Feuillâtre

Guitare, guitares

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2026 59:07


durée : 00:59:07 - Laura Snowden / Raphaël Feuillâtre - par : Sébastien Llinares - Deux générations, deux visions de la guitare. Laura Snowden, héritière libre et créative de Julian Bream, déploie un univers sensible et contemporain. Raphaël Feuillâtre, prodige français du label DG, conjugue virtuosité, élégance baroque et intensité. - réalisé par : Patrick Lérisset Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Cage Match
Snowden

Cage Match

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2026 51:42


Ohh boy, we're back with more Oliver Stone. This time instead of 9/11 we're tackling DHS and NSA hellscapes! Joining the party are Freeman and Elizabeth who lend their insights into data security and selling marketing. Don't worry though, it's not all bleak spooks tracking us, we get the usual nonsense in the mix too. This is Cage Match.Intro music by: Bill Panks

Your Energy First
Immobile to Walking through EFT with Corey Snowden

Your Energy First

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2026 39:56


The impact of EFT tapping is far reaching.In this special episode, Emily welcomes Corey Snowden, a certified and professionally trained EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) practitioner, for a powerful and honest conversation about healing, trauma, and transformation.Corey shares her personal journey with EFT—how she discovered tapping, what it shifted in her own life, and how it supported her move from immobility to walking again. She also discusses the common emotional patterns she's seeing in clients right now and how EFT can gently release stored stress, trauma, and subconscious blocks.You'll hear practical insight into how EFT tapping works, experience a guided tapping session during the episode, and learn about a newly discovered meridian point by Corey's colleagues.This episode is for anyone curious about energy healing, nervous system regulation, trauma recovery, or practical tools for emotional resilience.Learn more about Corey's work HEREFor ways to work with Emily: connect HEREFollow Emily on Instagram for insights & illuminated shares

We The Patriots Podcast
Conspiracies Of The 21st Century | WTP #144

We The Patriots Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2026 36:27


Once "crazy conspiracies" are now undeniable facts—Sal Assante exposes how dismissed theories became reality. Food industry manipulation of dietary guidelines fuels obesity crises; Epstein scandal's elite ties (powerful names in 2026 releases) shield pedophiles over victims. COVID lab leak gains traction amid debated origins; Iraq's fake WMDs justified endless war; NSA's mass surveillance (Snowden-proven, ongoing FISA fights) erodes privacy in a "surveillance economy." "We are the product"—government protects itself, not us. Time for real accountability and transparency to rebuild trust.

The Uncover Up Conspiracy Cast
The NSA Surveillance Program

The Uncover Up Conspiracy Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2026 50:38


Edward Snowden blew the whistle on a program of terrifying overreach by the NSA. Lee is of the opinion that people aren't as worked up by these revelations as they should be, and so on this episode he gets worked up about them..

nsa edward snowden nsa surveillance
During the Break
Chas Snowden BACK In-Studio! Talking Her New Podcast - Food - Coaching - Being Active - LIFE!

During the Break

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2026 29:56


Chas Snowden BACK In-Studio! Talking Her New Podcast - Food - Coaching - Being Active - LIFE! ===== THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Nutrition World: https://nutritionw.com/ Vascular Institute of Chattanooga: https://www.vascularinstituteofchattanooga.com/ The Barn Nursery: https://www.barnnursery.com/ Optimize U Chattanooga: https://optimizeunow.com/chattanooga/ Guardian Investment Advisors: https://giaplantoday.com/ Alchemy Medspa and Wellness Center: http://www.alchemychattanooga.com/ Our House Studio: https://ourhousestudiosinc.com/ Team Montieth Real Estate - Lori Montieth: https://www.findchattanoogarealestate.com/ Ballinger and Associates - Risk Management: https://ballingerandassociates.com/ AirSpace Acoustics: https://www.airspaceacoustics.com/ ALL THINGS JEFF STYLES: www.thejeffstyles.com PART OF THE NOOGA PODCAST NETWORK: www.noogapodcasts.com Please consider leaving us a review on Apple and giving us a share to your friends! This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm

Conectando Puntos
Episodio 251: El ratón que susurraba a los hackers

Conectando Puntos

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2026 36:58


¿Y si te dijéramos que, mientras escuchas este episodio, tu ratón podría estar escuchándote a ti? Un experimento con un ratón gaming de 30 euros, la historia secreta de Léon Theremin espiando embajadas en plena Guerra Fría y las técnicas actuales que usan bombillas y WiFi para ver a través de paredes se cruzan con apps que predicen fallos cardíacos 18 días antes y sistemas que monitorizan pacientes sin tocarlos. En este episodio seguimos el hilo de una misma tecnología que nació para vigilarlo todo y hoy puede salvar miles de vidas, y te dejamos con una pregunta incómoda: ¿quién decide en qué lado de la historia se queda tu escritorio conectado? Para seguir conectando puntos: Mic-E-Mouse: tu ratón como micrófono inadvertido Investigadores han demostrado que un ratón óptico de consumo puede aprovechar las vibraciones diminutas de la superficie de la mesa para reconstruir parte del audio de una conversación, siempre que el equipo esté comprometido con malware. Este trabajo ilustra cómo cualquier periférico suficientemente sensible se convierte en un potencial transductor de información, y nos obliga a revisar la falsa sensación de seguridad que nos dan gestos como tapar la webcam mientras ignoramos todo lo demás que hay sobre el escritorio. https://www.elladodelmal.com/2025/10/ataque-mic-e-mouse-como-pueden-escuchar.html Lamphone: escuchar conversaciones a través de una bombilla El equipo de la Universidad Ben-Gurion volvió a descubrir, casi un siglo después, la intuición de Theremin: el sonido deja su huella en los objetos. Apuntando un telescopio con un sensor electroóptico a una bombilla a 25 metros de distancia, consiguieron reconstruir música y discursos a partir de microvariaciones en la luz, con un montaje por debajo de los 1.000 euros. Es un ejemplo perfecto de cómo la vigilancia acústica de élite se está democratizando y pasando del terreno de las agencias de inteligencia al del investigador curioso… o del actor malicioso. https://www.adslzone.net/noticias/seguridad/lamphone-espiar-conversaciones-bombillas/[adslzone]​ WiFi que ve a través de paredes Varios grupos de investigación han logrado utilizar señales WiFi comerciales para detectar presencia, postura e incluso el movimiento de personas a través de paredes, con precisiones cercanas al 99% en la detección y una granularidad que permite reconstruir esqueletos en 3D. Esta línea de trabajo abre la puerta a sistemas de vigilancia invisibles, pero también a aplicaciones sanitarias como la monitorización de caídas en personas mayores o el seguimiento de la respiración sin necesidad de cables ni sensores adheridos al cuerpo. https://www.adslzone.net/noticias/seguridad/lamphone-espiar-conversaciones-bombillas HearO y la voz como biomarcador cardíaco La startup israelí Cordio Medical ha desarrollado una aplicación capaz de analizar la voz de pacientes con insuficiencia cardíaca y anticipar descompensaciones hasta 18 días antes de que aparezcan los síntomas, con una precisión cercana al 80%. Programas piloto en hospitales como el de Bellvitge exploran cómo integrar este tipo de biomarcadores acústicos en la práctica clínica habitual, cambiando visitas de urgencia por ajustes preventivos de medicación en casa.phmk+2[ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws]​ https://www.phmk.es/tecnologia/hearo-una-aplicacion-que-monitoriza-la-insuficiencia-cardiaca-mediante-la-voz Monitorización sin contacto en tiempos de COVID-19 Durante la pandemia, varios equipos aprovecharon sensores, wearables y redes inalámbricas para vigilar constantes vitales de pacientes en aislamiento, reduciendo la exposición del personal sanitario y el consumo de equipos de protección. Estas experiencias muestran cómo las mismas técnicas que permiten ver a través de paredes pueden convertirse en sistemas de soporte vital discretos, capaces de detectar deterioros respiratorios sin cruzar el umbral de la habitación. http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0028-37462021000200132[ Theremin, el músico que inventó la vigilancia invisible Más allá del instrumento que lleva su nombre, la biografía de Léon Theremin encarna la cara oscura de la innovación tecnológica en tiempos de totalitarismo. Sus micrófonos pasivos, como el famoso dispositivo oculto en el Gran Sello de Estados Unidos, anticiparon buena parte de las técnicas modernas de espionaje acústico, y su vida nos recuerda que quienes abren caminos científicos no siempre controlan el uso que otros harán de ellos. https://www.bbc.com/mundo/vert-cul-55520447 Mark Klein y la sala 641A: la infraestructura ya estaba aquí El testimonio de Mark Klein sobre la sala 641A de AT&T en San Francisco mostró que la captura masiva de comunicaciones no era una distopía, sino una realidad física instalada en edificios muy concretos. Su historia, confirmada y ampliada después por Snowden, sirve de contrapunto histórico a los sistemas actuales de monitorización: la pregunta no es si podemos recogerlo todo, sino quién tiene la llave de esas tuberías y con qué límites legales y éticos. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/03/memoriam-mark-klein-att-whistleblower-about-nsa-mass-spying Conecta, conectante Para contactar con nosotros, podéis utilizar nuestra cuenta de twitter (@conectantes), Instagram (conectandopuntos) o el formulario de contacto de nuestra web conectandopuntos.es.[conectandopuntos]​ Nos podéis escuchar en iVoox, en iTunes o en Spotify (busca por nuestro nombre, es fácil).[conectandopuntos]​ Damos crédito, porque nos parece importante Intro: Stefan Kanterberg ‘By by baby‘ (licencia CC Atribución). Cierre: Stefan Kanterberg ‘Guitalele's Happy Place‘ (licencia CC Atribución). Foto: Creada con IA Gemini ¿Quieres patrocinar este podcast? Usamos los patrocinios para cosas como mejorar nuestros materiales de grabación y aumentar nuestra visibilidad, porque sabemos que ahí fuera existen muchos más puntos con los que conectar. Si quieres ayudarnos con un patrocinio, puedes hacerlo a través de este enlace La entrada Episodio 251: El ratón que susurraba a los hackers se publicó primero en Conectando Puntos.

Les matins
Meredith Whittaker, présidente de Signal : "L'IA n'est qu'un slogan marketing"

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 39:30


durée : 00:39:30 - L'Invité(e) des Matins - par : Guillaume Erner, Yoann Duval - Quel est le point commun entre JD Vance et Edward Snowden ? Ils utilisent tous les deux la messagerie cryptée Signal. Aujourd'hui, Meredith Whittaker, présidente de cette messagerie chiffrée, est notre invitée. Elle nous parle de surveillance, de pouvoir et de la vraie nature de l'IA. - réalisation : Félicie Faugère - invités : Meredith Whittaker Présidente de la messagerie chiffrée Signal

Matt Marney Fitness Show
Episode 158: From Hero to Human – High performance at work starts with how you treat your people. Guest: Magda Snowden, Transformational Coach & Former Healthcare Leader

Matt Marney Fitness Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 61:44


In this episode, Matt speaks with Magda Snowden, a transformational coach with over 20 years of experience in healthcare leadership. Magda now uses her leadership experience to help organisations build stronger teams, develop better leaders, and improve performance at both individual and organisational levels.Together, they explore what really happens when organisations shift from “hero leadership” to human-centred leadership.In this conversation, they explore:What psychological safety actually is and why it mattersThe real meaning of engagement and how it shows up in teamsWhy allowing staff to make mistakes improves learning, innovation, and teamworkHow psychologically safe environments drive collaboration, cooperation, and new ideasWhy treating staff well is not just ethical, it is good for the bottom lineWhy gaining buy-in from senior leadership can be challengingPractical strategies for teams to create safer, more supportive working environmentsHow purpose, communication, and trust drive performanceWhether you are leading an organisation, managing a team, or influencing culture from the middle, this episode offers practical insight into how better people practices lead to better business outcomes.Want to connect with Magda. Details below:https://directory.cpdstandards.com/providers/thriving-together-llc/http://magdasnowden.com/ If you have a question for the podcast or are interested in working with Matt, you can reach out at: • Email: info@wellnesseducationdubai.com • Website: www.wellnesseducationdubai.com • Instagram: @wellness_education_dubai • Facebook: @mattmarneyfitness • LinkedIn: Matt Marney (Wellness Education Dubai)  Bottom of Form 

The David Knight Show
THIS Is What The Gov't Learned From Jade Helm

The David Knight Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 40:03 Transcription Available


This deep-dive revisits Jade Helm not as a failed “conspiracy,” but as a PSYOP and stress test that acclimated the public to militarized policing, mass surveillance, and domestic occupation. Tracing a straight line from 2015 drills and Snowden-era surveillance to today's ICE shootings, DHS kill authority, and urban warfare doctrine. Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHT Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

All Horror Radio
Tulsi Gabbard, What Have You Done?!

All Horror Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 36:17 Transcription Available


The Director of National Intelligence showed up to an FBI raid on a Georgia elections office. Then she put the President on speakerphone with the agents. Then we found out she's been sitting on a whistleblower complaint about herself for eight months. This week, we're talking about Tulsi Gabbard, the woman who went from Bernie Sanders endorser to Democratic presidential candidate to Fox News guest host to Trump's spy chief in one of the most cynical political transformations in modern American history. We're talking about the Fulton County raid, the classified complaint locked in a safe, her documented history of consuming Russian state media, her secret meeting with Assad, and why Russian state TV calls her "Russia's girlfriend." I'm not going to dance around it: I think Tulsi Gabbard is a Russian asset. And I'm going to tell you exactly why.  Buckle up.KEY POINTSOn January 28, 2026, FBI agents seized 700 boxes of 2020 election materials from Fulton County, Georgia. DNI Tulsi Gabbard was physically present, at Trump's specific direction.The day after the raid, Gabbard visited the FBI's Atlanta field office and put Trump on speakerphone with the agents. He gave them a "pep talk" for investigating the election he lost.Former FBI officials called this "unprecedented" and said there is "unanimous disgust" across current and former agents.A whistleblower complaint about Gabbard has been locked in a safe for eight months. Federal law requires transmission to Congress within three weeks.Three former aides told ABC News that Gabbard regularly read and shared articles from RT, the Kremlin's principal propaganda outlet.In 2017, Gabbard took a secret trip to Damascus and met with Assad for nearly three hours. Congressional staffers later worried she might leak information about a Syrian defector.A former U.S. ambassador to NATO called Gabbard's 2017 foreign policy memo "basically the Russian playbook."At her confirmation hearing, Gabbard refused to call Edward Snowden a traitor. Senator Bennet responded: "Apparently, you don't understand how critical our national security is."Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/we-saw-the-devil-crime-political-analysis--4433638/support.Website: http://www.wesawthedevil.comPatreon: http://www.patreon.com/wesawthedevilDiscord: https://discord.gg/X2qYXdB4Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/WeSawtheDevilInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/wesawthedevilpodcast.

The REAL David Knight Show
THIS Is What The Gov't Learned From Jade Helm

The REAL David Knight Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 40:03 Transcription Available


This deep-dive revisits Jade Helm not as a failed “conspiracy,” but as a PSYOP and stress test that acclimated the public to militarized policing, mass surveillance, and domestic occupation. Tracing a straight line from 2015 drills and Snowden-era surveillance to today's ICE shootings, DHS kill authority, and urban warfare doctrine. Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHT Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-real-david-knight-show--5282736/support.

GREY Journal Daily News Podcast
Can the EU Break Free from US Tech Dominance?

GREY Journal Daily News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 3:16


The European Union is restructuring its digital infrastructure to reduce its 80% reliance on non-EU technology providers, addressing vulnerabilities from extraterritorial jurisdiction and economic sanctions. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen emphasizes the need for technological autonomy to maintain operational continuity. Concerns about data privacy and US surveillance, highlighted by the Patriot Act and Edward Snowden's revelations, drive this initiative. The EU's digital market is concentrated, with US companies dominating cloud computing. To mitigate risks, EU nations are adopting open-source software and developing domestic platforms. The European Parliament directs the European Commission to reduce reliance on foreign providers, aligning with the upcoming Cloud and AI Development Act.Learn more on this news by visiting us at: https://greyjournal.net/news/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey
#377 - "First Kill!" - Palantir, Nuclear War, Bio-Hybrids & AC-130 Bombing | Jesse Hamel

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2026 166:25


SPONSORS: 1) MIRACLE BRAND: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made—go to https://trymiracle.com/julian and use code JULIAN to save over 40% and get a free 3-piece towel set. 2) AMENTARA: Go to https://www.amentara.com/go/JULIAN and use code JD22 for 22% off your first order. JOIN PATREON FOR EARLY UNCENSORED EPISODE RELEASES: https://www.patreon.com/JulianDorey (***TIMESTAMPS in description below) ~ Jesse Hamel is a former Air Force Lt. Colonel & AC-130 Gunship Combat Aviator. He is now CEO of Victus Technologies, a drone warfare company he founded while studying at MIT. JESSE's LINKS: X: https://x.com/jhMITgunship VICTUS: https://www.getvictus.ai/ FOLLOW JULIAN DOREY INSTAGRAM (Podcast): https://www.instagram.com/juliandoreypodcast/ INSTAGRAM (Personal): https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey/ X: https://twitter.com/julianddorey JULIAN YT CHANNELS - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Clips YT: https://www.youtube.com/@juliandoreyclips - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Daily YT: https://www.youtube.com/@JulianDoreyDaily - SUBSCRIBE to Best of JDP: https://www.youtube.com/@bestofJDP ****TIMESTAMPS**** 0:00 – Intro 01:22 – Jesse's Air Force Background, 9/11, AC-130 Gunship, Combat Years 12:35 – Warfighters & Technology, Drones vs Human Trust, The Agentic Age 23:56 – West Coast Tech Power, CCP Exploiting Open Systems, Planning for 6G 34:31 – 6G, Humans & Machines, AI, Bio-Hybrid Hellscape 48:33 – AI Arms Race: U.S. vs China, Nuclear War 59:25 – Zooming Out on Power, Governance Problems, 1984, Corruption, Term Limits 01:12:20 – Palantir, War Has Changed, Bringing Our Team Home 01:22:00 – Snowden, Moral Tradeoffs, Combat, Mission Planning, Risk of Inaction 01:31:41 – Founders & Stress, Military, Resilience, Suffering, Slaying the Daily Dragon 01:41:45 – Turning Suffering Into Growth, Anxiety, CNS Limits, Breaking Bad Habits 01:57:03 – Mortality, Meaning, Being vs Doing, The Arc of Change 02:06:38 – AC-130 Squadrons, Dawn of Drone Warfare, Afghanistan, MQ-9 Integration 02:16:54 – Predators & Reapers, Psychological Cost of Killing, First Kill 02:27:21 – Moral Injury, The Charring of the Conscience, Faith, Kierkegaard, Purity of Heart 02:37:08 – Never Arriving at the Truth, Lifelong Learning 02:40:18 – Next Ep CREDITS: - Host, Editor & Producer: Julian Dorey - COO, Producer & Editor: Alessi Allaman - https://www.youtube.com/@UCyLKzv5fKxGmVQg3cMJJzyQ - In-Studio Producer: Joey Deef - https://www.instagram.com/joeydeef/ Julian Dorey Podcast Episode 377 - Jesse Hamel Music by Artlist.io Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Chatterbox Reds: Cincinnati Reds Daily Game Recaps
Interview with Clay Snowden of Just Baseball (Cincinnati Reds Off-Season Grade)

Chatterbox Reds: Cincinnati Reds Daily Game Recaps

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 20:08


Clay Snowden from Just Baseball stops by Off The Bench to hand out grades for the Cincinnati Reds' offseason, discuss how the new TV deal changes the game, and cover plenty more Reds talk. A must-listen for Reds fans.   Go to https://www.OmahaSteaks.com to get an extra $35 off with promo code CHATTER at checkout. Minimum purchase may apply. Thanks to Omaha Steaks for sponsoring us!   Today's Episode on YouTube: hyoutube.com/watch?v=n_kjsUQW7rY&feature=youtu.be      OTHER CHATTERBOX PROGRAMING:   Chatterbox Bengals: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/chatterbox-bengals-a-cincinnati-bengals-nfl-podcast/id1652732141  Chatterbox Bearcats: https://chatterboxbearcats.podbean.com/  The Stone Shields Show: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/west-4th-and-long/id1828384424  Off The Bench: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/off-the-bench-by-chatterbox-sports/id1643010062  The Flyin Lion (FC Cincinnati): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-flyin-lion-fc-cincinnati-podcast/id1701368522  513 Golf: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjPJjEFaBD7VUSfdVvGjbr1_CmCepLWpr    DSC Commodities: https://deepsouthcommodities.com/  CALL OR TEXT 988 FOR HELP DAY OR NIGHT: https://mantherapy.org

Truth Unrestricted
Snowden Bishop's Receipts

Truth Unrestricted

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2026 50:55


Send us a textLast week's episode (An Open Letter To Alex Hale) left some unanswered questions. Those questions are answered here.LinksQuorac's Nov 8th Twitter space which is referenced several times in this episode. The relevant section starts shortly after the 2 hr mark.https://x.com/AlteredEggoEgo/status/1987015544298701112?s=20

Off The Bench with Thom Brennaman
Cincinnati Reds Rumors With Clay Snowden, NFL Postseason Buy Or Sell?

Off The Bench with Thom Brennaman

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 59:05


The Cincinnati Reds have been quietly linked in recent MLB offseason buzz to potential reunions with two familiar faces: third baseman Eugenio Suárez and outfielder Austin Hays. According to multiple reports, Cincinnati's front office is exploring ways to bolster its lineup ahead of the 2026 season, and both players represent intriguing options for a club that is trying to balance competitiveness with cost and roster flexibility. Suárez, a veteran slugger who spent the bulk of his most productive years with the Reds before moving on to the Arizona Diamondbacks, has been connected to Cincinnati in trade chatter. At the 2025 trade deadline there was mutual interest reported between Cincinnati and Arizona in a deal to bring Suárez back to Cincinnati, where he once provided significant power from the hot corner. Sources have described his potential return not just as a nostalgic move for fans, but as a real way to add middle-of-the-order pop to a lineup that struggled to produce big offensive numbers. On the free-agent side, Austin Hays is another name the Reds could target. Hays played for Cincinnati in 2025 after the club declined his mutual option for 2026, making him a free agent this winter. He slashed a respectable line with 15 home runs and provided solid outfield defense, and Reds management is reportedly considering whether a reunion would make sense if the two sides can find agreeable terms. While neither move is confirmed, and financial or roster implications remain key factors in any decision, the interest suggests the Reds are eyeing a mix of proven veterans and internal youth as they shape their 2026 roster around young stars like Elly De La Cruz and Noelvi Marte. Music from #InAudio: https://inaudio.org/ Track Name Holy (Trap). Music from #InAudio: https://inaudio.org/ Track Name Exercise (Rock). #Bengals #NFL #OffTheBench

MGoBlog: The MGoPodcast
MGoPodcast 17.20: The Bracy Conspiracy

MGoBlog: The MGoPodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 130:09


2 hour and 10 minutes The Sponsors Thank you to Underground Printing for making this all possible. Rishi and Ryan have been our biggest supporters from the beginning. Check out their wide selection of officially licensed Michigan fan gear at their 3 store locations in Ann Arbor or learn about their custom apparel business at undergroundshirts.com. Our associate sponsors are: Peak Wealth Management, Matt Demorest - Realtor and Lender, Ann Arbor Elder Law, Michigan Law Grad, Human Element, Sharon's Heating & Air Conditioning, The Sklars Brothers, Champions Circle, Winewood Organics, Community Pest Solutions, Venue by 4M where record this, and Introducing this season: Radecki Oral Surgery, and Long Road Distillers. 1. Transfer Portal - Offense Starts at :51 The portal is closed! The only windows remaining are for a coaching change and for Indiana/Miami after the national championship game. Transfers, NIL, and contracts have been weird this cycle. Will Diego Pavia be in college until he's 45?? Thank you Davis Warren for beating Ohio State in the Funniest Game Ever. Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi is your backup QB out of Colorado State where he threw for over 7,000 yards. That's a "we don't practice f*cked" pick-up. Jadyn Davis's recruiting profile was a huge miss. Georgia Tech is a cool place for Justice Haynes, we're still not sure if Kuzdzal is returning. Taylor Tatum comes in from Oklahoma after a case of fumble-itus and several other ailments. Now he might actually have a good running backs coach. They retained Andrew Marsh - massive. The wide receiver room looks great, the only thing missing is a dedicated slot receiver but Michigan hasn't really utilized the role in a while anyways. Marlin Klein declared for the NFL draft but is he going to get drafted? The remaining tight ends and fullbacks should be good and viable options, they didn't get anyone out of the portal. JJ Buchanon doesn't count since he's being listed as a wide receiver. The offensive line is mostly retained which has star power potential. Overall the offensive line held serve besides losing Haywood, overall an A-grade. Would you give the offensive portal recruiting/retention an A all across the board? Could this become a... top ten offense?  2. Transfer Portal - Defense Starts at 41:41 Defensively is more of a mixed bag. Defensive end lost a lot of guys to graduation but only Devon Baxter to the portal. John Henry Daley is questionable based on his health, but if he's healthy you get Derrick Moore (but who actually plays more). Defensive tackle doesn't lose anyone noteworthy to the portal. You get back Trey Pierce and Enow Etta. Jonah Leaea was like a young Mo Hurst, he needs another 20 pounds. Defensive tackle has depth, just not star power, this wasn't a spectacular portal season for them either. This gets a solid B. Linebacker is the trouble spot. They lose Ernest Hausmann to eligibility/spirit quest, Cole Sullivan to Oklahoma, and Jimmy Rolder to the draft. The guys they bring in are uhhhhhh. Aisea Moa knows Jay Hill's system so he could possibly play but doesn't seem like he'll be all-Big Ten. This is a D, it's close to an F. At cornerback, you get Jyaire Hill, Zeke Berry, and Snowden. Jayden Sanders to Notre Dame stings. Let's.... talk about the allegations of sabotage and blackmail? Cornerbacks situation gets a... C+. Safety loses Brandyn Hillam and Elijah Dotson. Is Bryce Underwood the only guy to come from Belleville and last for over a year? Is Rod Moore going to play? Who knows. Chris Bracy comes in from Memphis, who comes in with a historic tale of a fabled fumble. Safety starters could be Bracy and Rod Moore, Mason Curtis to linebacker. You have six safeties? How many are going to play in a Cover-1? Defense overall gets a C, they probably didn't get better or worse. How much of the Wink disdain will have been warranted? If Daley doesn't get healthy who is going to be the star on this defense? Maybe they'll be like the offense last year - lots of potential but not quite there yet.  3. Hot Takes and Basketball vs Washington and Oregon Starts at 1:23:58 Takes hotter than Utah's athletic director on Twitter. Michigan basketball sweeps their west coast tour, they don't dominate but give a solid beating in both games to not-great teams. Michigan and Oregon were close to identical at the rim. You're starting to see the cracks in the armor of this team. Sean Stewart is an elite flopper. What did Dusty possibly say to warrant a technical? Elliot Cadeau was pretty efficient but gets too close to the face of guys on the perimeter and then gets beaten. He tries things that are just a little too ambitious too often, these things usually don't work. Indiana doesn't match up with Michigan at all, Trey Burke to get honored at the Ohio State game. It's about to get real for Nebraska.  4. Hockey vs Minnesota Starts at 1:54:54 Michigan gets an almost-sweep of Minnesota getting 5 of 6 points. It's hard to believe this is what Minnesota's hockey team looks like, they've fallen a long way. Minnesota didn't go into the portal or the CHL and just doesn't have the same talent as they used to. Even the announcers were saying "oh, don't do that!" Seven saves in one minute is pretty incredible. Michigan State is still the one team that can match up with Michigan. Michigan is probably in the best spot since the 2022 team when they were number 1. Is there anything Warde Manuel has done that makes you think Michigan hockey will be on a local television station? Four Big Ten teams are in the top 10 of NPI.  MUSIC: "Secret Loving"— Dry Cleaning "Dancing In The Club"— This Is Lorelei & MJ Lederman "Random Rules"— Silver Jew “Across 110th Street”—JJ Johnson and his Orchestra   

Hans & Scotty G.
HOUR 1: Smith Snowden leaves for Michigan | Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge on player evaluation and Ryan Smith hole-in-one at Pebble Beach + MORE

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 44:14


Starting Lineup: Smith Snowden headed to Michigan Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge

Hans & Scotty G.
FULL SHOW: Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge on Lauri Markkanen's All-Star level play and just how difficult it is to make the team | Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden talks about his son Smith Snowden's recruitment process and decision to go to Michigan

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 113:57


Hour 1 Starting Lineup: Smith Snowden headed to Michigan Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge Hour 2 Altitude Sports radio host Mike Sanford Jr. Good, Bad & Ugly Whole World News Hour 3 Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden

Hans & Scotty G.
HOUR 3: Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden discusses the process of Smith Snowden entering transfer portal and ultimately choosing Michigan | CFB & transfer portal latest + MORE

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 32:14


DJ & PK
Smith Snowden is the latest Ute to leave for Michigan. How are you feeling about Kyle Whittingham's Utah legacy?

DJ & PK

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 9:50


DJ & PK talked about the moves Kyle Whittingham has made in taking coaches, staff members and players from Utah and how it affects his legacy in Salt Lake City.

KSL Unrivaled
HOUR 1 | Utah has their quarterbacks locked in for 2026: Devon Dampier and Byrd Ficklin are running it back for Utah | The Utah to Michigan pipeline continues to grow with Smith Snowden committing to Ann Arbor | Would You Rather?

KSL Unrivaled

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 46:05


Hour 1 of JJ & Alex with Jeremiah Jensen and Alex Kirry. Devon Dampier announces his return to Utah for 2026 Smith Snowden is heading to Michigan Would You Rather?

Novara Media
Downstream: Venezuela, China and the End of the Dollar w/ Glenn Greenwald

Novara Media

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2026 79:42


It has been a bellicose start to 2026, with the US army kidnapping Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and threatening to annex Greenland, putting many more nations, including Mexico and Colombia, on high alert. On Downstream this week is investigative journalist Glenn Greenwald, who's best known for helping Edward Snowden's disclosures about the NSA's global surveillance […]

Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle (BYU)
1-9-26 - Will Snowden - Alpha Recruits - Why does Will believe 4-star tight end Walker Lyons was ‘a really good get' out of the portal?

Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle (BYU)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2026 21:32 Transcription Available


Ben Criddle talks BYU sports every weekday from 2 to 6 pm.Today's Co-Hosts: Ben Criddle (@criddlebenjamin)Subscribe to the Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle podcast:Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/cougar-sports-with-ben-criddle/id99676

Tom Nelson
Chris Snowdon: “The Nanny State” | Tom Nelson Pod #364

Tom Nelson

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2026 64:48


Chris Snowden discusses the realistic view he holds towards public health regulations, particularly focusing on vaping, alcohol, and the nanny state. He criticizes the misinformed and overly restrictive policies, such as Australia's vaping ban and public health misinformation, positing that these are driven by zealots and not based on true public health benefits. Snowden also addresses the unintended negative consequences of these policies and proposes a more libertarian approach, advocating for individual choice and regulation that ensures basic consumer safety rather than outright prohibition.00:00 Introduction to Chris Snowden and the Nanny State00:23 The Debate on Vaping Regulations00:56 Public Health and Misinformation on Vaping05:00 Global Perspectives on Vaping Bans08:02 Nicotine: Myths and Potential Benefits12:01 COVID-19 and Nicotine: Unexpected Findings16:02 Nanny State Regulations and Public Health18:35 The Economics of Public Health Policies28:17 The War on Obesity and COVID-1932:00 Anti-Obesity Policies and Advertising Bans32:56 Public Perception of Advertising34:30 Supermarket Calorie Regulations37:39 Tobacco Prohibition and Smoke-Free Generation39:44 Political Shifts and Public Sentiment43:02 Net Zero and Climate Policies45:00 The War on Pubs51:27 Moderate Drinking vs. Public Health Dogma54:45 Public Health Overreach and Ideology01:04:23 Conclusion and Book Plughttps://www.christophersnowdon.com/https://x.com/cjsnowdonhttps://snowdon.substack.com/https://nannystateindex.org/Killjoys: A Critique of Paternalism: https://a.co/d/7sDeNkq=========Slides, summaries, references, and transcripts of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summariesMy Linktree: https://linktr.ee/tomanelson1

World of Wisdom
283. Dave Snowden - Complexity, Coherence and Agency

World of Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 65:09


This conversation with Dave Snowden (LI) and founder of the Cynefin Co came on the podcast and we spoke of complexity. Discerning it from systems thinking, why he's been so critical of the inner development goals, getting the critique on experts right. We spoke of change, direction, working with the substrate. Why workshops are suboptimal or even damaging, why practice is what makes perfect. We spoke about waymaking, micro-empathic moments. We spoke of agency, affordance and assemblage, patterns over precision and much much more. This conversation is an excellent primer for those curious about complexity as well as those that consider themselves well versed. We speak of the fundamentals and the essentials in very practical ways. Enjoy!

Nic Cage Cast
70: Army Of One (2016) vs. Snowden (2016)

Nic Cage Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2026 55:09


Army Of One is weird voice Cage versus barely in it Cage. Both 2016 I guess is the connection.LIWstudios.com

Monero Talk
MoneroTopia26 Artist ULYXYZ! | EPI 245

Monero Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2025 126:36


47e6GvjL4in5Zy5vVHMb9PQtGXQAcFvWSCQn2fuwDYZoZRk3oFjefr51WBNDGG9EjF1YDavg7pwGDFSAVWC5K42CBcLLv5U OR DONATE HERE: https://www.monerotalk.live/donate GUEST LINKS: https://uly.xyz TIMESTAMPS (00:00:00) Monerotopia Introduction. (00:03:34) Monerotopia Price Report Segment w/ Bawdyanarchist. (00:44:43) Monerotopia Guest Segment w/ Ulysses XYZ. (01:18:10) Monerotopia News Segment w/ Doug. (01:18:35) Nic Carter post. (01:22:59) XMR is the 10th biggest spot pair on Hyperliquid. (01:23:24) XMR retail store. (01:24:35) Trump Administration is in talks with former inteliggence analyst Edward Snowden. (01:27:50) Riccardo Spagni post. (01:29:40) Free Software Foundation receives historic private donations. (01:31:01) Minnesota fraud. (01:36:51) Monerotopia Viewers on Stage Segment. (02:06:13) Monerotopia Finalization. NEWS SEGMENT LINKS: https://x.com/niccarter/status/2002097950462447969?s=46 https://x.com/perpetualcow/status/2002260567424131559?s=46 https://x.com/slowbeardigger/status/2002836541350265293?s=46 https://x.com/joshhall2024/status/2003236267249529114?s=46 https://x.com/fluffypony/status/2002681386462052635?s=46 https://x.com/monero/status/2004278002876637414?s=46 https://x.com/douglastuman/status/2004271811601879120?s=46&t=WeY1AyuT6Ir1FNBKKqBeg https://repo.getmonero.org/monero-project/ccs-proposals/-/merge_requests/635 SPONSORS: PRICE REPORT: https://exolix.com/ GUEST SEGMENT: https://cakewallet.com & https://monero.com NEWS SEGMENT: https://www.wizardswap.io XMR.BAR: https://xmr.bar Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE! The more subscribers, the more we can help Monero grow! XMRtopia TELEGRAM: https://t.me/monerotopia XMRtopia MATRIX: https://matrix.to/#/%23monerotopia%3Amonero.social ODYSEE: https://bit.ly/3bMaFtE WEBSITE: monerotopia.com CONTACT: monerotopia@protonmail.com MASTADON: @Monerotopia@mastodon.social MONERO.TOWN https://monero.town/u/monerotopia Get Social with us: X: https://twitter.com/monerotopia INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/monerotopia DOUGLAS: https://twitter.com/douglastuman SUNITA: https://twitter.com/sunchakr TUX: https://twitter.com/tuxpizza

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 397 – Unstoppable Purpose Found Through Photography with Mobeen Ansari

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2025 66:24


What happens when your voice is built through visuals, not volume? In this Unstoppable Mindset episode, I talk with photographer and storyteller Mobeen Ansari about growing up with hearing loss, learning speech with support from his family and the John Tracy Center, and using technology to stay connected in real time. We also explore how his art became a bridge across culture and faith, from documenting religious minorities in Pakistan to chronicling everyday heroes, and why he feels urgency to photograph climate change before more communities, heritage sites, and ways of life are lost. You'll hear how purpose grows when you share your story in a way that helps others feel less alone, and why Mobeen believes one story can become a blueprint for someone else to navigate their own challenge. Highlights: 00:03:54 - Learn how early family support can shape confidence, communication, and independence for life. 00:08:31 - Discover how deciding when to capture a moment can define your values as a storyteller. 00:15:14 - Learn practical ways to stay fully present in conversations when hearing is a daily challenge. 00:23:24 - See how unexpected role models can redefine what living fully looks like at any stage of life. 00:39:15 - Understand how visual storytelling can cross cultural and faith boundaries without words. 00:46:38 - Learn why documenting climate change now matters before stories, places, and communities disappear. About the Guest: Mobeen Ansari is a photographer, filmmaker and artist from Islamabad, Pakistan. Having a background in fine arts, he picked up the camera during high school and photographed his surroundings and friends- a path that motivated him to be a pictorial historian. His journey as a photographer and artist is deeply linked to a challenge that he had faced since after his birth.  Three weeks after he was born, Mobeen was diagnosed with hearing loss due to meningitis, and this challenge has inspired him to observe people more visually, which eventually led him to being an artist. He does advocacy for people with hearing loss.  Mobeen's work focuses on his home country of Pakistan and its people, promoting a diverse & poetic image of his country through his photos & films. As a photojournalist he focuses on human interest stories and has extensively worked on topics of climate change, global health and migration. Mobeen has published three photography books. His first one, ‘Dharkan: The Heartbeat of a Nation', features portraits of iconic people of Pakistan from all walks of life. His second book, called ‘White in the Flag' is based on the lives & festivities of religious minorities in Pakistan. Both these books have had two volumes published over the years. His third book is called ‘Miraas' which is also about iconic people of Pakistan and follows ‘Dharkan' as a sequel. Mobeen has also made two silent movies; 'Hellhole' is a black and white short film, based on the life of a sanitation worker, and ‘Lady of the Emerald Scarf' is based on the life of Aziza, a carpet maker in Guilmit in Northern Pakistan. He has exhibited in Pakistan & around the world, namely in UK, Italy, China Iraq, & across the US and UAE. His photographs have been displayed in many famous places as well, including Times Square in New York City. Mobeen is also a recipient of the Swedish Red Cross Journalism prize for his photography on the story of FIFA World Cup football manufacture in Sialkot. Ways to connect with Mobeen**:** www.mobeenansari.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/mobeenart  Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mobeenansari/ Instagram: @mobeenansariphoto X: @Mobeen_Ansari About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson  00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson  01:20 Well, hi everyone, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. I am your host. Michael Hingson, we're really glad that you are here, and today we are going to talk to Mobeen Ansari, and Mobeen is in Islamabad. I believe you're still in Islamabad, aren't you? There we go. I am, yeah. And so, so he is 12 hours ahead of where we are. So it is four in the afternoon here, and I can't believe it, but he's up at four in the morning where he is actually I get up around the same time most mornings, but I go to bed earlier than he does. Anyway. We're really glad that he is here. He is a photographer, he speaks he's a journalist in so many ways, and we're going to talk about all of that as we go forward. Mobin also is profoundly hard of hearing. Uses hearing aids. He was diagnosed as being hard of hearing when he was three weeks old. So I'm sure we're going to talk about that a little bit near the beginning, so we'll go ahead and start. So mo bean, I want to welcome you to unstoppable mindset. We're really glad that you're here. Mobeen Ansari  02:32 It's a pleasure to be here, and I'm honored to plan your show. Thank you so much. Michael Hingson  02:37 Well, thank you very much, and I'm glad that we're able to make this work, and I should explain that he is able to read what is going on the screen. I use a program called otter to transcribe when necessary, whatever I and other people in a meeting, or in this case, in a podcast, are saying, and well being is able to read all of that. So that's one of the ways, and one of the reasons that we get to do this in real time. So it's really kind of cool, and I'm really excited by that. Well, let's go ahead and move forward. Why don't you tell us a little about the early Beau beam growing up? And obviously that starts, that's where your adventure starts in a lot of ways. So why don't you tell us about you growing up and all that. Mobeen Ansari  03:22 So I'm glad you mentioned the captions part, because, you know, that has been really, really revolutionary. That has been quite a lifesaver, be it, you know, Netflix, be it anywhere I go into your life, I read captions like there's an app on my phone that I use for real life competitions, and that's where I, you know, get everything. That's where technology is pretty cool. So I do that because of my hearing does, as you mentioned, when I was three weeks old, I had severe meningitis due to it, had lost hearing in both my ear and so when my hearing loss were diagnosed, it was, you know, around the time we didn't have resources, the technology that we do today. Michael Hingson  04:15 When was that? What year was that about? Mobeen Ansari  04:19 1986 okay, sorry, 1987 so yeah, so they figured that I had locked my hearing at three weeks of age, but didn't properly diagnose it until I think I was three months old. So yeah, then January was my diagnosis, okay. Michael Hingson  04:44 And so how did you how did you function, how did you do things when you were, when you were a young child? Because at that point was kind of well, much before you could use a hearing aid and learn to speak and so on. So what? Mobeen Ansari  05:00 You do. So my parents would have a better memory of that than I would, but I would say that they were, you know, extra hard. They went an extra mile. I mean, I would say, you know, 100 extra mile. My mother learned to be a peace therapist, and my father. He learned to be he learned how to read audiogram, to learn the audiology, familiarize himself with hearing a technology with an engineer support. My parents work around me. David went to a lot of doctors, obviously, I was a very difficult child, but I think that actually laid the foundation in me becoming an artist. Because, you know, today, the hearing is it fits right into my ear so you cannot see it, basically because my hair is longer. But back then, hearing aids used to be almost like on a harness, and you to be full of quiet, so you would actually stick out like a sore thumb. So, you know, obviously you stand out in a crowd. So I would be very conscious, and I would often, you know, get asked what this is. So I would say, this is a radio but for most part of my childhood, I was very introverted, but I absolutely love art. My grandmother's for the painter, and she was also photographer, as well as my grandfather, the hobbyist photographer, and you know, seeing them create all of the visuals in different ways, I was inspired, and I would tell my stories in form of sketching or making modified action figures. And photography was something I picked up way later on in high school, when the first digital camera had just come out, and I finally started in a really interacting with the world. Michael Hingson  07:13 So early on you you drew because you didn't really use the camera yet. And I think it's very interesting how much your parents worked to make sure they could really help you. As you said, Your mother was a speech you became a speech therapist, and your father learned about the technologies and so on. So when did you start using hearing aids? That's Mobeen Ansari  07:42 a good question. I think I probably started using it when I was two years old. Okay, yeah, yeah, that's gonna start using it, but then, you know, I think I'll probably have to ask my parents capacity, but a moment, Mobeen Ansari  08:08 you know, go ahead, I think they worked around me. They really improvised on the situation. They learned at the went along, and I think I learned speech gradually. Did a lot of, you know, technical know, how about this? But I would also have to credit John Troy clinic in Los Angeles, because, you know, back then, there was no mobile phone, there were no emails, but my mother would put in touch with John Troy center in LA and they would send a lot of material back and forth for many years, and they would provide a guidance. They would provide her a lot of articles, a lot of details on how to help me learn speech. A lot of visuals were involved. And because of the emphasis on visuals, I think that kind of pushed me further to become an artist, because I would speak more, but with just so to Michael Hingson  09:25 say so, it was sort of a natural progression for you, at least it seemed that way to you, to start using art as a way to communicate, as opposed as opposed to talking. Mobeen Ansari  09:39 Yeah, absolutely, you know, so I would like pass forward a little bit to my high school. You know, I was always a very shy child up until, you know, my early teens, and the first camera had just come out, this was like 2001 2002 at. It. That's when my dad got one, and I would take that to school today. You know, everyone has a smartphone back then, if you had a camera, you're pretty cool. And that is what. I started taking pictures of my friends. I started taking pictures of my teachers, of landscapes around me. And I would even capture, you know, funniest of things, like my friend getting late for school, and one day, a friend of mine got into a fight because somebody stole his girlfriend, or something like that happened, you know, that was a long time ago, and he lost the fight, and he turned off into the world court to cry, and he was just sort of, you're trying to hide all his vulnerability. I happened to be in the same place as him, and I had my camera, and I was like, should I capture this moment, or should I let this permit go? And well, I decided to capture it, and that is when human emotion truly started to fascinate me. So I was born in a very old city. I live in the capital of Islamabad right now, but I was born in the city of travel to be and that is home to lots of old, you know, heritage sites, lots of old places, lots of old, interesting scenes. And you know, that always inspired you, that always makes you feel alive. And I guess all of these things came together. And, you know, I really got into the art of picture storytelling. And by the end of my high school graduation, everybody was given an award. The certificate that I was given was, it was called pictorial historian, and that is what inspired me to really document everything. Document my country. Document is people, document landscape. In fact, that award it actually has in my studio right now been there for, you know, over 21 years, but it inspired me luck to this day. Michael Hingson  12:20 So going back to the story you just told, did you tell your friend that you took pictures of him when he was crying? Mobeen Ansari  12:32 Eventually, yes, I would not talk. You're familiar with the content back then, but the Catholic friend, I know so I mean, you know everyone, you're all kids, so yeah, very, yeah, that was a very normal circumstance. But yeah, you know, Michael Hingson  12:52 how did he react when you told him, Mobeen Ansari  12:56 Oh, he was fine. It's pretty cool about it, okay, but I should probably touch base with him. I haven't spoken to him for many years that Yeah, Michael Hingson  13:08 well, but as long as Yeah, but obviously you were, you were good friends, and you were able to continue that. So that's, that's pretty cool. So you, your hearing aids were also probably pretty large and pretty clunky as well, weren't they? Mobeen Ansari  13:26 Yeah, they were. But you know, with time my hearing aid became smaller. Oh sure. So hearing aid model that I'm wearing right now that kind of started coming in place from 1995 1995 96 onwards. But you know, like, even today, it's called like BDE behind the ear, hearing it even today, I still wear the large format because my hearing loss is more it's on the profound side, right? Just like if I take my hearing, it off. I cannot hear but that's a great thing, because if I don't want to listen to anybody, right, and I can sleep peacefully at night. Michael Hingson  14:21 Have you ever used bone conduction headphones or earphones? Mobeen Ansari  14:30 But I have actually used something I forgot what is called, but these are very specific kind of ear bone that get plugged into your hearing it. So once you plug into that, you cannot hear anything else. But it discontinued that. So now they use Bluetooth. Michael Hingson  14:49 Well, bone conduction headphones are, are, are devices that, rather than projecting the audio into your ear, they actually. Be projected straight into the bone and bypassing most of the ear. And I know a number of people have found them to be useful, like, if you want to listen to music and so on, or listen to audio, you can connect them. There are Bluetooth versions, and then there are cable versions, but the sound doesn't go into your ear. It goes into the bone, which is why they call it bone conduction. Mobeen Ansari  15:26 Okay, that's interesting, I think. Michael Hingson  15:29 And some of them do work with hearing aids as well. Mobeen Ansari  15:34 Okay, yeah, I think I've experienced that when they do the audio can test they put, like at the back of your head or something? Michael Hingson  15:43 Yeah, the the most common one, at least in the United States, and I suspect most places, is made by a company called aftershocks. I think it's spelled A, F, T, E, R, S, H, O, k, s, but something to think about. Anyway. So you went through high school mostly were, were your student colleagues and friends, and maybe not always friends? Were they pretty tolerant of the fact that you were a little bit different than they were. Did you ever have major problems with people? Mobeen Ansari  16:22 You know, I've actually had a great support system, and for most part, I actually had a lot of amazing friends from college who are still my, you know, friend to the dead, sorry, from school. I'm actually closer to my friend from school than I am two friends of college difficulties. You know, if you're different, you'll always be prone to people who sort of are not sure how to navigate that, or just want, you know, sort of test things out. So to say, so it wasn't without his problems, but for most part of it's surprisingly, surprisingly, I've had a great support system, but, you know, the biggest challenge was actually not being able to understand conversation. So I'm going to go a bit back and forth on the timeline here. You know, if so, in 2021, I had something known as menus disease. Menier disease is something, it's an irregular infection that arises from stress, and what happens is that you're hearing it drops and it is replaced by drinking and bathing and all sorts of real according to my experience, it affects those with hearing loss much more than it affects those with regular, normal hearing. It's almost like tinnitus on steroids. That is how I would type it. And I've had about three occurrences of that, either going to stress or being around loud situations and noises, and that is where it became so challenging that it became difficult to hear, even with hearing it or lip reading. So that is why I use a transcriber app wherever I go, and that been a lifesaver, you know. So I believe that every time I have evolved to life, every time I have grown up, I've been able to better understand people to like at the last, you know, four years I've been using this application to now, I think I'm catching up on all the nuances of conversation that I've missed. Right if I would talk to you five years ago, I would probably understand 40% of what you're saying. I would understand it by reading your lips or your body language or ask you to write or take something for me, but now with this app, I'm able to actually get to 99% of the conversation. So I think with time, people have actually become more tired and more accepting, and now there is more awareness. I think, awareness, right? Michael Hingson  19:24 Well, yeah, I was gonna say it's been an only like the last four years or so, that a lot of this has become very doable in real time, and I think also AI has helped the process. But do you find that the apps and the other technologies, like what we use here, do you find that occasionally it does make mistakes, or do you not even see that very much at all? Mobeen Ansari  19:55 You know it does make mistakes, and the biggest problem is when there is no data, when there is no. Wide network, or if it runs out of battery, you know, because now I kind of almost 24/7 so my battery just integrate that very fast. And also because, you know, if I travel in remote regions of Pakistan, because I'm a photographer, my job to travel to all of these places, all of these hidden corners. So I need to have conversation, especially in those places. And if that ad didn't work there, then we have a problem. Yeah, that is when it's problem. Sometimes, depending on accidents, it doesn't pick up everything. So, you know, sometimes that happens, but I think technology is improving. Michael Hingson  20:50 Let me ask the question. Let me ask the question this way. Certainly we're speaking essentially from two different parts of the world. When you hear, when you hear or see me speak, because you're you're able to read the transcriptions. I'm assuming it's pretty accurate. What is it like when you're speaking? Does the system that we're using here understand you well as in addition to understanding me? Mobeen Ansari  21:18 Well, yes, I think it does so like, you know, I just occasionally look down to see if it's catching up on everything. Yeah, on that note, I ought to try and improve my speech over time. I used to speak very fast. I used to mumble a lot, and so now I become more mindful of it, hopefully during covid. You know, during covid, a lot of podcasts started coming out, and I had my own actually, so I would, like brought myself back. I would look at this recording, and I would see what kind of mistakes I'm making. So I'm not sure if transcription pick up everything I'm saying, but I do try and improve myself, just like the next chapter of my life where I'm trying to improve my speech, my enunciation Michael Hingson  22:16 Well, and that's why I was was asking, it must be a great help to you to be able to look at your speaking through the eyes of the Translate. Well, not translation, but through the eyes of the speech program, so you're able to see what it's doing. And as you said, you can use it to practice. You can use it to improve your speech. Probably it is true that slowing down speech helps the system understand it better as well. Yeah, yeah. So that makes sense. Well, when you were growing up, your parents clearly were very supportive. Did they really encourage you to do whatever you wanted to do? Do they have any preconceived notions of what kind of work you should do when you grew up? Or do they really leave it to you and and say we're going to support you with whatever you do? Mobeen Ansari  23:21 Oh, they were supportive. And whatever I wanted to do, they were very supportive in what my brother had gone to do I had to enter brothers. So they were engineers. And you know what my my parents were always, always, you know, very encouraging of whatever period we wanted to follow. So I get the a lot of credit goes to my my parents, also, because they even put their very distinct fields. They actually had a great understanding of arts and photography, especially my dad, and that really helped me have conversations. You know, when I was younger to have a better understanding of art. You know, because my grandmother used to paint a lot, and because she did photography. When she migrated from India to Pakistan in 1947 she took, like, really, really powerful pictures. And I think that instilled a lot of this in me as well. I've had a great support that way. Michael Hingson  24:26 Yeah, so your grandmother helps as well. Mobeen Ansari  24:32 Oh yeah, oh yeah. She did very, very ahead of her time. She's very cool, and she made really large scale painting. So she was an example of always making the best of life, no matter where you are, no matter how old you are. She actually practiced a Kibana in the 80s. So that was pretty cool. So, you know. Yeah, she played a major part in my life. Michael Hingson  25:05 When did you start learning English? Because that I won't say it was a harder challenge for you. Was a different challenge, but clearly, I assume you learned originally Pakistani and so on. But how did you go about learning English? Mobeen Ansari  25:23 Oh, so I learned about the languages when I started speech. So I mean to be split the languages of Urdu. You are, be you. So I started learning about my mother tongue and English at the same time. You know, basically both languages at work to both ran in parallel, but other today, I have to speak a bit of Italian and a few other regional languages of Pakistan so and in my school. I don't know why, but we had French as a subject, but now I've completely forgotten French at Yeah, this kind of, it kind of helped a lot. It's pretty cool, very interesting. But yeah, I mean, I love to speak English. Just when I learned speech, what Michael Hingson  26:19 did you major in when you went to college? Mobeen Ansari  26:24 So I majored in painting. I went to National College of Arts, and I did my bachelor's in fine arts, and I did my majors in painting, and I did my minor in printmaking and sculpture. So my background was always rooted in fine arts. Photography was something that ran in parallel until I decided that photography was the ultimate medium that I absolutely love doing that became kind of the voice of my heart or a medium of oppression and tougher and bone today for Michael Hingson  27:11 did they even have a major in photography when you went to college? Mobeen Ansari  27:17 No, photography was something that I learned, you know, as a hobby, because I learned that during school, and I was self taught. One of my uncles is a globally renowned photographer. So he also taught me, you know, the art of lighting. He also taught me on how to interact with people, on how to set up appointments. He taught me so many things. So you could say that being a painter helped me become a better photographer. Being a photographer helped me become a better painter. So both went hand in hand report co existed. Yeah, so photography is something that I don't exactly have a degree in, but something that I learned because I'm more of an art photographer. I'm more of an artist than I am a photographer, Michael Hingson  28:17 okay, but you're using photography as kind of the main vehicle to display or project your art, absolutely. Mobeen Ansari  28:30 So what I try to do is I still try to incorporate painting into my photography, meaning I try to use the kind of lighting that you see in painting all of these subtle colors that Rembrandt of Caravaggio use, so I tried to sort of incorporate that. And anytime I press my photograph, I don't print it on paper, I print it on canvas. There's a paint really element to it, so so that my photo don't come up as a challenge, or just photos bottles or commercial in nature, but that they look like painting. And I think I have probably achieved that to a degree, because a lot of people asked me, Do you know, like, Okay, how much I did painting for and create painting. So I think you know, whatever my objective was, I think I'm probably just, you know, I'm getting there. Probably that's what my aim is. So you have a photography my main objective with the main voice that I use, and it has helped me tell stories of my homeland. It has helped me to tell stories of my life. It has helped me tell stories of people around Michael Hingson  29:49 me, but you're but what you do is as I understand you, you're, you may take pictures. You may capture the images. With a camera, but then you put them on canvas. Mobeen Ansari  30:05 Yeah, I just every time I have an exhibition or a display pictures which are present in my room right now, I always print them on Canvas, because when you print them on Canvas, the colors become more richer, right, Michael Hingson  30:22 more mentally. But what? But what you're doing, but what you're putting on Canvas are the pictures that you've taken with your camera. Mobeen Ansari  30:31 Oh, yeah, yeah, okay. But occasionally, occasionally, I tried to do something like I would print my photos on Canvas, and then I would try to paint on them. It's something that I've been experimenting with, but I'm not directly quite there yet. Conceptually, let's see in the future when these two things make properly. But now photographs? Michael Hingson  31:02 Yeah, it's a big challenge. I i can imagine that it would be a challenge to try to be able to print them on cameras and then canvas, and then do some painting, because it is two different media, but in a sense, but it will be interesting to see if you're able to be successful with that in the future. What would you say? It's easier today, though, to to print your pictures on Canvas, because you're able to do it from digital photographs, as opposed to what you must have needed to do, oh, 20 years ago and so on, where you had film and you had negatives and so on, and printing them like you do today was a whole different thing to do. Mobeen Ansari  31:50 Oh yeah, it's same to think good yesterday, somebody asked me if I do photography on an analog camera, and I have a lot of them, like lots and lots of them, I still have a lot of black and white film, but the problem is, nobody could develop them. I don't have that room. So otherwise I would do that very often. Otherwise I have a few functional cameras that tend to it. I'm consciously just thinking of reviving that. Let's see what happens to it. So I think it's become very difficult. You know also, because Pakistan has a small community of photographers, so the last person who everybody would go to for developing the film or making sure that the analog cameras became functional. He unfortunately passed away a few years ago, so I'm sort of trying to find somebody who can help me do this. It's a very fascinating process, but I haven't done any analog film camera photography for the last 15 years now, definitely a different ball game with, you know, typical cameras, yeah, the pattern, you could just take 36 pictures, and today you can just, you know, take 300 and do all sorts of trial and error. But I tried, you know, I think I'm a bit of a purist when it comes to photography, so I kind of try and make sure that I get the shots at the very first photograph, you know, because that's how my dad trained me on analog cameras, because back then, you couldn't see how the pictures are going to turn out until you printed them. So every time my dad took a picture, he would spend maybe two or three minutes on the setting, and he would really make the person in front of him wait a long time. And then you need to work on shutter speed or the aperture or the ISO, and once you would take that picture is perfect, no need to anything to it, Michael Hingson  34:09 but, but transposing it, but, but transferring it to from an analog picture back then to Canvas must have been a lot more of a challenge than it is today. Mobeen Ansari  34:24 No back then, working canvas printing. Canvas printing was something that I guess I just started discovering from 2014 onwards. So it would like during that this is laid up, Michael Hingson  34:38 but you were still able to do it because you just substituted Canvas for the the typical photographic paper that you normally would use is what I hear you say, Mobeen Ansari  34:50 Oh yeah, Canvas printing was something that I figured out much later on, right? Michael Hingson  34:59 Um. But you were still able to do it with some analog pictures until digital cameras really came into existence. Or did you always use it with a digital camera? Mobeen Ansari  35:11 So I basically, when I started off, I started with the handle camera. And obviously, you know, back in the 90s, if somebody asked you to take a picture, or we have to take a picture of something, you just had the analog camera at hand. Yeah. And my grandparents, my dad, they all had, you know, analog cameras. Some of it, I still have it Michael Hingson  35:36 with me, but were you able to do canvas painting from the analog cameras? No, yeah, that's what I was wondering. Mobeen Ansari  35:43 No, I haven't tried, yeah, but I think must have been possible, but I've only tried Canvas printing in the digital real. Michael Hingson  35:53 Do you are you finding other people do the same thing? Are there? Are there a number of people that do canvas painting? Mobeen Ansari  36:02 I lot of them do. I think it's not very common because it's very expensive to print it on canvas. Yeah, because you know, once you once you test again, but you don't know how it's going to turn out. A lot of images, they turn out very rough. The pictures trade, and if can, with print, expose to the camera, sometimes, sorry, the canvas print exposed to the sun, then there's the risk of a lot of fading that can happen. So there's a lot of risk involved. Obviously, printing is a lot better now. It can withstand exposure to heat and sun, but Canvas printing is not as common as you know, matte paper printing, non reflective, matte paper. Some photographers do. It depends on what kind of images you want to get out? Yeah, what's your budget is, and what kind of field you're hoping to get out of it. My aim is very specific, because I aim to make it very Painterly. That's my objective with the canvas. Michael Hingson  37:17 Yeah, you want them to look like paintings? Mobeen Ansari  37:21 Yeah? Yeah, absolutely, Michael Hingson  37:23 which, which? I understand it's, it is a fascinating thing. I hadn't really heard of the whole idea of canvas painting with photograph or photography before, but it sounds really fascinating to to have that Yeah, and it makes you a unique kind of person when you do that, but if it works, and you're able to make it work, that's really a pretty cool thing to do. So you have you you've done both painting and photography and well, and sculpting as well. What made you really decide, what was the turning point that made you decide to to go to photography is kind of your main way of capturing images. Mobeen Ansari  38:12 So it was with high school, because I was still studying, you know, art as a subject back then, but I was still consistently doing that. And then, like earlier, I mentioned to you that my school gave me an award called pictorial historian. That is what inspired me to follow this girl. That is what set me on this path. That is what made me find this whole purpose of capturing history. You know, Pakistan is home to a lot of rich cultures, rich landscapes, incredible heritage sites. And I think that's when I became fascinated. Because, you know, so many Pakistanis have these incredible stories of resilience entrepreneurship, and they have incredible faces, and, you know, so I guess that what made me want to capture it really. So I think, yeah, it was in high school, and then eventually in college, because, you know, port and school and college, I would be asked to take pictures of events. I'll be asked to take pictures of things around me. Where I went to college, it was surrounded by all kinds of, you know, old temples and churches and old houses and very old streets. So that, really, you know, always kept me inspired. So I get over time. I think it's just always been there in my heart. I decided to really, really go for it during college. Well. Michael Hingson  40:00 But you've, you've done pretty well with it. Needless to say, which is, which is really exciting and which is certainly very rewarding. Have you? Have you done any pictures that have really been famous, that that people regard as exceptionally well done? Mobeen Ansari  40:22 I Yes, obviously, that's it for the audience to decide. But right, I understand, yeah, I mean, but judging from my path exhibitions, and judging from system media, there have been quite a few, including the monitor out of just last week, I went to this abandoned railway station, which was on a British colonial time, abandoned now, but that became a very, very successful photograph. I was pretty surprised to see the feedback. But yes, in my career, they have been about, maybe about 10 to 15 picture that really, really stood out or transcended barriers. Because coming out is about transcending barriers. Art is about transcending barriers, whether it is cultural or political, anything right if a person entered a part of the world views a portrait that I've taken in Pakistan, and define the connection with the subject. My mission is accomplished, because that's what I would love to do through art, to connect the world through art, through art and in the absence of verbal communication. I would like for this to be a visual communication to show where I'm coming from, or the very interesting people that I beat. And that is that sort of what I do. So I guess you know, there have been some portraits. I've taken some landscapes or some heritage sites, and including the subjects that I have photography of my book that acting have probably stood out in mind of people. Michael Hingson  42:14 So you have published three books so far, right? Yes, but tell me about your books, if you would. Mobeen Ansari  42:24 So my first book is called Harkin. I will just hold it up for the camera. It is my first book, and what is it called? It is called turken, and the book is about iconic people of Pakistan who have impacted this history, be it philanthropist, be it sports people, be it people in music or in performing arts, or be it Even people who are sanitation workers or electricians to it's about people who who have impacted the country, whether they are famous or not, but who I consider to be icons. Some of them are really, really, really famous, very well known people around the world, you know, obviously based in Pakistan. So my book is about chronicling them. It's about documenting them. It's about celebrating them. My second book without, okay, most Michael Hingson  43:29 people are going to listen to the podcast anyway, but go ahead. Yeah. Mobeen Ansari  43:35 So basically it's writing the flag is about the religious minorities of Pakistan, because, you know, Pakistan is largely a Muslim country. But when people around the world, they look at Pakistan, they don't realize that it's a multicultural society. There's so many religions. Pakistan is home to a lot of ancient civilizations, a lot of religions that are there. And so this book document life and festivities of religious minorities of Pakistan. You know, like I in my childhood, have actually attended Easter mass, Christmas and all of these festivities, because my father's best friend was a Christian. So we had that exposure to, you know, different faiths, how people practice them. So I wanted to document that. That's my second book. Michael Hingson  44:39 It's wonderful that you had, it's wonderful that you had parents that were willing to not only experience but share experiences with you about different cultures, different people, so that it gave you a broader view of society, which is really cool. Mobeen Ansari  44:58 Yeah. Absolutely, absolutely. So your third book? So my third book is a sequel to my first one, same topic, people who have impacted the country. And you know, with the Pakistan has a huge, huge population, it had no shortage of heroes and heroines and people who have created history in the country. So my first book has 98 people, obviously, which is not enough to feature everybody. So my second book, it features 115 people. So it features people who are not in the first book. Michael Hingson  45:41 Your third book? Yeah, okay, yeah. Well, there's, you know, I appreciate that there's a very rich culture, and I'm really glad that you're, you're making Chronicles or or records of all of that. Is there a fourth book coming? Have you started working on a fourth book yet? Mobeen Ansari  46:05 You know in fact, yes, there is. Whenever people hear about my book, they assume that there's going to be landscape or portraits or street photography or something that is more anthropological in nature. That's the photography I truly enjoy doing. These are the photographs that are displayed in my studio right now. So, but I would never really study for it, because Pakistan had, you know, we have poor provinces. And when I started these books, I hadn't really documented everything. You know, I come from the urban city, and, you know, I just, just only take taking pictures in main cities at that time. But now I have taken pictures everywhere. I've been literally to every nook and cranny in the country. So now I have a better understanding, a better visual representation. So a fourth book, it may be down the line, maybe five years, 10 years, I don't know yet. Michael Hingson  47:13 Well, one thing that I know you're interested in, that you've, you've at least thought about, is the whole idea behind climate change and the environment. And I know you've done some work to travel and document climate change and the environment and so on. Tell us, tell us more about that and where that might be going. Mobeen Ansari  47:36 So on tape, note, Michael, you know there's a lot of flooding going on in Pakistan. You know, in just one day, almost 314 people died, but many others you had missing. You had some of the worst flooding test time round. And to be reeling from that, and we had some major flooding some teachers back in. Well, climate change is no longer a wake up call. We had to take action years ago, if not, you know, yesterday and till right now, we are seeing effects of it. And you know, Pakistan has a lot of high mountain peaks. It has, it is home to the second highest mountain in the world, Ketu, and it has a lot of glaciers. You know, people talk about melting polar ice caps. People talk about effects of climate change around the world, but I think it had to be seen everywhere. So in Pakistan, especially, climate change is really, really rearing space. So I have traveled to the north to capture melting glacier, to capture stories of how it affects different communities, the water supply and the agriculture. So that is what I'm trying to do. And if I take pictures of a desert down south where a sand dune is spreading over agricultural land that it wasn't doing up until seven months ago. So you know climate change is it's everywhere. Right now, we are experiencing rains every day. It's been the longest monsoon. So it has also affected the way of life. It has also affected ancient heritage sites. Some of these heritage sites, which are over 3000 years old, and they have bestowed, you know, so much, but they are not able to withstand what we are facing right now. Um, and unfortunately, you know, with unregulated construction, with carbon emissions here and around the world, where deforestation, I felt that there was a strong need to document these places, to bring awareness of what is happening to bring awareness to what we would lose if we don't look after mother nature, that the work I have been doing on climate change, as well as topics of global health and migration, so those two topics are also very close To My Heart. Michael Hingson  50:40 Have you done any traveling outside Pakistan? Mobeen Ansari  50:45 Oh, yeah. I mean, I've been traveling abroad since I was very little. I have exhibited in Italy, in the United States. I was just in the US debris. My brother lives in Dallas, so, yeah, I keep traveling because, because my workshop, because of my book events, or my exhibition, usually here and around the world. Michael Hingson  51:14 Have you done any photography work here in the United States? Mobeen Ansari  51:19 Yeah, I have, I mean, in the US, I just don't directly do photography, but I do workshop, because whatever tool that I captured from Pakistan, I do it there. Okay, funny thing is, a funny thing is that, you know, when you take so many pictures in Pakistan, you become so used to rustic beauty and a very specific kind of beauty that you have a hard time capturing what's outside. But I've always, always just enjoyed taking pictures in in Mexico and Netherlands, in Italy, in India, because they that rustic beauty. But for the first time, you know, I actually spent some time on photography. This year, I went to Chicago, and I was able to take pictures of Chicago landscape, Chicago cityscape, completely. You know, Snowden, that was a pretty cool kind of palette to work with. Got to take some night pictures with everything Snowden, traveling Chicago, downtown. So yeah, sometimes I do photography in the US, but I'm mostly there to do workshops or exhibitions or meet my brothers. Michael Hingson  52:34 What is your your work process? In other words, how do you decide what ideas for you are worthwhile pursuing and and recording and chronicling. Mobeen Ansari  52:46 So I think it depends on where their story, where there is a lot of uniqueness, that is what stands out to me, and obviously beauty there. But they have to be there. They have to be some uniqueness, you know, like, if you look at one of the pictures behind me, this is a person who used to run a library that had been there since 1933 his father, he had this really, really cool library. And you know, to that guy would always maintain it, that library would have, you know, three old books, you know, a philosophy of religion, of theology, and there was even a handwritten, 600 years old copy of the Quran with his religious book for Muslims. So, you know, I found these stories very interesting. So I found it interesting because he was so passionate about literature, and his library was pretty cool. So that's something that you don't get to see. So I love seeing where there is a soul, where there is a connection. I love taking pictures of indigenous communities, and obviously, you know, landscapes as well. Okay? Also, you know, when it comes to climate change, when it comes to migration, when it comes to global health, that's what I take picture to raise awareness. Michael Hingson  54:33 Yeah, and your job is to raise awareness. Mobeen Ansari  54:41 So that's what I try to do, if I'm well informed about it, or if I feel that is something that needed a light to be shown on it, that's what I do. Took my photograph, and also, you know. Whatever had this appeal, whatever has a beauty, whatever has a story that's in spur of the moment. Sometimes it determined beforehand, like this year, particularly, it particularly helped me understand how to pick my subject. Even though I've been doing this for 22 years, this year, I did not do as much photography as I normally do, and I'm very, very picky about it. Like last week I went to this abandoned railway station. I decided to capture it because it's very fascinating. It's no longer used, but the local residents of that area, they still use it. And if you look at it, it kind of almost looks like it's almost science fiction film. So, you know, I'm a big star. Was that Big Star Trek fan? So, yes, I'm in port the camps. So I also like something that had these elements of fantasy to it. So my work, it can be all over the place, sometimes, Michael Hingson  56:09 well, as a as a speaker, it's, it's clearly very important to you to share your own personal journey and your own experiences. Why is that? Why do you want to share what you do with others? Mobeen Ansari  56:28 So earlier, I mentioned to you that John Tracy center played a major, major role in my life. He helped my mother. They provided all the materials. You know, in late 80s, early 90s, and so I will tell you what happened. So my aunt, my mom's sister, she used to live in the US, and when my hearing loss were diagnosed, my mother jumped right into action. I mean, both my parents did. So my mother, she landed in New York, and to my aunt would live in New Jersey. So every day she would go to New York, and she landed in New York League of hard of hearing. And a lady over there asked my mom, do you want your child to speak, or do you want him to learn? Frank Lacher and my mother, without any hesitation, she said, I want my child to speak and to see what put in touch with John Troy center and rest with history, and they provided with everything that needed. So I am affiliated with the center as an alumni. And whenever I'm with the US, whenever I'm in LA, I visit the center to see how I can support parents of those with hearing loss, and I remember when I went in 2016 2018 I gave a little talk to the parents of those with hair in glass. And I got to two other place as well, where I spent my childhood joint. Every time I went there, I saw the same fears. I saw the same determination in parents of those with hearing loss, as I saw in my parents eyes. And by the end of my talk, they came up to me, and they would tell me, you know, that sharing my experiences helped them. It motivated them. It helped them not be discouraged, because having a child hearing loss is not easy. And you know, like there was this lady from Ecuador, and you know, she spoke in Spanish, and she see other translators, you know, tell me this, so to be able to reach out with those stories, to be able to provide encouragement and any little guidance, or whatever little knowledge I have from my experience, it gave me this purpose. And a lot of people, I think, you know, you feel less lonely in this you feel hurt, you feel seen. And when you share experiences, then you have sort of a blueprint how you want to navigate in one small thing can help the other person. That's fantastic. That's why I share my personal experiences, not just to help those with hearing loss, but with any challenge. Because you know when you. Have a challenge when you have, you know, when a person is differently able, so it's a whole community in itself. You know, we lift each other up, and if one story can help do that, because, you know, like for me, my parents told me, never let your hearing loss be seen as a disability. Never let it be seen as a weakness, but let it be seen as a challenge that makes you stronger and that will aspire to do be it when I get it lost all of my life, be it when I had the latest or many years, or anything. So I want to be able to become stronger from to share my experiences with it. And that is why I feel it's important to share the story. Michael Hingson  1:00:56 And I think that's absolutely appropriate, and that's absolutely right. Do you have a family of your own? Are you married? Do you have any children or anything? Not yet. Not yet. You're still working on that, huh? Mobeen Ansari  1:01:10 Well, so to say, Yeah, I've just been married to my work for way too long. Michael Hingson  1:01:16 Oh, there you are. There's nothing wrong with that. You've got something that you Mobeen Ansari  1:01:22 kind of get batting after a while, yeah. Michael Hingson  1:01:26 Well, if the time, if the right person comes along, then it, then that will happen. But meanwhile, you're, you're doing a lot of good work, and I really appreciate it. And I hope everyone who listens and watches this podcast appreciates it as well. If people want to reach out to you, how do they do that? Mobeen Ansari  1:01:45 They can send me an email, which is out there for everybody on my website. I'm on all my social media as well. My email is being.ansarima.com Michael Hingson  1:01:57 so can you spell that? Can you Yeah, M, o b e n, dot a do it once more, M O B, E N, Mobeen Ansari  1:02:07 M O B, double, e n, dot, a n, S, A R, i@gmail.com Michael Hingson  1:02:17 at gmail.com, okay, and your website is.com Mobeen Ansari  1:02:26 same as my name. Michael Hingson  1:02:27 So, okay, so it's mo bean.ansari@our.www.mo Michael Hingson  1:02:35 bean dot Ansari, or just mo Bean on, sorry, Mobeen Ansari  1:02:41 just moving on, sorry. We com, no.no. Michael Hingson  1:02:44 Dot between mobien and Ansari, okay, so it's www, dot mobile being on sorry, yeah, so it's www, dot, M, O, B, E, N, A, N, S, A, R, i.com Yes. Well, great. I have absolutely enjoyed you being with us today. I really appreciate your time and your insights, and I value a lot what you do. I think you represent so many things so well. So thank you for being here with us, and I want to thank all of you who are out there listening and watching the podcast today, I'd love to hear your thoughts. Please email me at Michael H, i@accessibe.com that's m, I, C, H, A, E, L, H, I at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, i, b, e.com, and we appreciate it if you would give us a five star rating wherever you are observing the podcast. Please do that. We value that a great deal. And if you know anyone else who ought to be a guest, please let me know. We're always looking for people and mobeen you as well. If you know anyone else who you think ought to be a guest on the podcast, I would appreciate it if you would introduce us. But for now, I just want to thank you one more time for being here. This has been absolutely wonderful. Thank you for being on the podcast with us today. Mobeen Ansari  1:04:08 Thank you so much. It's been wonderful, and thank you for giving me the platform to share my stories. And I hope that it helps whoever watching this. Up to date. Michael Hingson  1:04:26 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

The Carl Nelson Show
Dr. Melina Abdullah on BLM, Carl Snowden on Civil Rights Silence, & Seasonal Music with Bill Carpenter

The Carl Nelson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2025 188:39 Transcription Available


Former Vice-Presidential candidate and Black Lives Matter founder Dr. Melina Abdullah returns to our classroom this Monday morning. Dr. Abdullah will examine the Trump Administration’s actions regarding Venezuela and address allegations of fraud facing another BLM chapter. Before Dr. Abdullah joins us, Baltimore Civil Rights activist Carl Snowden will discuss the noticeable silence from major Civil Rights groups in response to the ongoing attacks by the administration. Music historian Bill Carpenter will also review music for the season, and Chicago activist and pastor Anthony Williams will also check in to share updates from his work in the community.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Matt Balaker Podcast
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Writer - Dylan Snowden

The Matt Balaker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2025 46:29


Dylan Snowden shares his journey from grocery bagger to financial coach. He discusses how improv and writing for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire shaped his approach to communication and accountability. Dylan also explores entrepreneurship, the importance of early financial literacy, and using data to make smarter money decisions, ending with an optimistic message about building confidence and control over one's financial future.https://www.dylanteachesfinance.com/

Las Vegas Raiders Insider: A Raiders podcast network
Inside the Raiders Locker Room: DE Charles Snowden After the 24-17 Loss to Denver

Las Vegas Raiders Insider: A Raiders podcast network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 6:37


DE Charles Snowden spoke following the Raiders' 24-17 loss to the Broncos. Hear what he had to say on the Las Vegas Raiders Insider w/ @HondoCarpenter on PFI, Pro Football Insiders. #LasVegasRaiders #RaiderNation #RaidersNation #NFL #Raiders Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Security Unfiltered
Power Without Stealth: Should America Flex In Cyberspace Or Starve Cartels Online

Security Unfiltered

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 73:48 Transcription Available


Send us a textWe trace Jake's unlikely route from journalism to the White House, how DEF CON's Voting Village began, and why imposter syndrome can be a secret advantage when paired with relentless learning. Then we pull apart cyber strategy, Stuxnet's signal value, and a plan to choke fentanyl through targeted offensive operations against cartels' digital lifelines.• launching a policy career by building expert networks• founding the DEF CON Voting Village and publishing policy insights• managing imposter syndrome with trusted advisors and study• shifting from shields up to active defense in cyber• why Stuxnet's visibility served a political goal• using law enforcement cyber tactics beyond ransomware• how fentanyl economics and pill presses scaled harm• China's precursor role and Sinaloa's market pivot• Coast Guard and HSI authorities for upstream disruption• making fentanyl unprofitable through targeted cyber pressureFind Jake on LinkedIn: Jake BronnBook: Fentanyl, The Mass Poisoning Of America And The Cartel Behind ItSupport the showFollow the Podcast on Social Media! Tesla Referral Code: https://ts.la/joseph675128 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@securityunfilteredpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secunfpodcast/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SecUnfPodcast Affiliates➡️ OffGrid Faraday Bags: https://offgrid.co/?ref=gabzvajh➡️ OffGrid Coupon Code: JOE➡️ Unplugged Phone: https://unplugged.com/Unplugged's UP Phone - The performance you expect, with the privacy you deserve. Meet the alternative. Use Code UNFILTERED at checkout*See terms and conditions at affiliated webpages. Offers are subject to change. These are affiliated/paid promotions.

During the Break
Chas Snowden - Owner of The FLA Movement - BACK on the Podcast! Food and the Holidays - Mind Shifts - Podcasting - Dogs - LIFE!

During the Break

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 30:00


Chas Snowden - Owner of The FLA Movement - BACK on the Podcast! Food and the holidays - new perspectives - donuts - and LIFE! ===== THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Nutrition World: https://nutritionw.com/ Vascular Institute of Chattanooga: https://www.vascularinstituteofchattanooga.com/ The Barn Nursery: https://www.barnnursery.com/ Optimize U Chattanooga: https://optimizeunow.com/chattanooga/ Guardian Investment Advisors: https://giaplantoday.com/ Alchemy Medspa and Wellness Center: http://www.alchemychattanooga.com/ Our House Studio: https://ourhousestudiosinc.com/ Big Woody's Tree Service: https://bigwoodystreeservice.com/ ALL THINGS JEFF STYLES: www.thejeffstyles.com PART OF THE NOOGA PODCAST NETWORK: www.noogapodcasts.com Please consider leaving us a review on Apple and giving us a share to your friends! This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm

Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle (BYU)
12-3-25 - Will Snowden - Alpha Recruits - What's the latest on Ryder Lyons signing with BYU & why does Will say ‘everything is fine'?

Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle (BYU)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 22:23 Transcription Available


Ben Criddle talks BYU sports every weekday from 2 to 6 pm.Today's Co-Hosts: Ben Criddle (@criddlebenjamin)Subscribe to the Cougar Sports with Ben Criddle podcast:Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/cougar-sports-with-ben-criddle/id99676

Hans & Scotty G.
FULL SHOW: Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge | Alpha Recruits Will Snowden talks National Signing Day | Cougar Preview Show (Big 12 Championship BYU Vs. Texas Tech edition): BYU Play-by-Play Greg Wrubell | BYU sideline reporter Mitch Juergens | Texas Tech sidelin

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 113:18


Hour 1 Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden talks recruiting and national signing day Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge Cougar Preview Show Hour 1 BYU pxp Greg Wrubell BYU sideline reporter Mitch Juergens Hour 2 Texas Tech sideline reporter Chris Level BYU Vs Texas Tech breakdown Final thoughts

Hans & Scotty G.
HOUR 1: Will Snowden talks college football National Signing Day and what Kalani extension means for BYU | Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge + MORE

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 39:45


Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden talks recruiting and national signing day Utah Jazz CEO Danny Ainge

Hans & Scotty G.
Alpha Recruits owner Will Snowden: CFB National Signing Day | Utah, BYU & USU recruiting class | Kalani Sitake extension and impact on BYU

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 19:43


The Astrology Podcast
Recurrence Transits in Astrology

The Astrology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2025 284:50


An introduction to an obscure but powerful timing technique called recurrence transits, which occur when specific planetary alignments in the birth chart are repeated by transits in the sky, with astrologers Chris Brennan and Nick Dagan Best. Unlike standard transits that form aspects to specific points in the natal chart, a recurrence transit occurs when a planetary alignment found in a birth chart repeats in the sky between those same two planets. For example, if a person was born with a Venus-Jupiter conjunction in their birth chart, then an important event will happen in their life in the future when Venus and Jupiter again form a conjunction in the sky. The episode uses the analogy that specific planetary alignments in the birth chart act like a personal theme song; when the planets repeat the same alignment in the sky, it is as if that music starts playing again, signaling a pivotal turning point where the natal potential of the birth signature becomes awakened through a resonance between past and future. The episode opens by exploring the history and transmission of the technique, which is relatively unknown in the English-speaking world at the present time. Nick shares how he learned the method from the late Michael Lutin in the 1990s, while Chris traces potential roots back to early 20th-century German astrology and ancient Hellenistic texts like Vettius Valens. A key point emphasized early on is how these mundane planetary recurrences operate independently of aspects to natal placements, forcing a conceptual expansion of what defines a transit, and demonstrating how planetary cycles can be tied into important turning points in a life narrative even without direct contact with birth chart placements. To demonstrate the technique in practice, most of the episode is spent presenting a wide range of biographical examples as case studies, and focusing primarily on conjunctions in order to keep things simple and compelling. Case studies include the technological breakthroughs of Steve Jobs and Max Planck, the artistic peaks of Vincent van Gogh and Madonna, and the political rises and falls of figures like Richard Nixon and Joe Biden. The workshop also examines how retrogrades can both extend and intensify the importance of certain recurrence transits, as seen in the lives of Edward Snowden and Charles Manson, and we also touch on shared recurrences in relationships, such as Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love. The conversation concludes with a broader philosophical discussion on what this technique implies about the nature of astrology, touching on concepts like simulation theory and the definition of astrology as a map of time. This episode serves as a comprehensive foundation for understanding recurrence transits, providing astrologers and students with a powerful, empirically driven tool for predictive work and biographical analysis that complements traditional methods. This is episode 513 of The Astrology Podcast. Nick's Website https://www.nickdaganbestastrologer.com Bonus Episode for Patrons If you enjoy this episode and are looking for more, we recorded a followup episode on recurrence transits which is available to subscribers on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/secret-astrology-143901212 In the followup episode we share 16 more chart examples that didn't make it into the main episode, which allows us to go into some planetary combinations that we didn't cover previously, and also cover some new facets of the technique such as multiple planet recurrences and intergenerational recurrences. Timestamps 00:00:00 Introduction00:10:49 History and origins of the technique00:20:42 The technique in Vettius Valens00:24:55 Michael Lutin00:29:11 Chris coming around to the technique00:40:39 Focusing on conjunctions00:42:52 USA Mars-Uranus conjunction00:54:28 Natal examples segment begins00:54:48 Chaz Bono00:58:02 Retrograde stations heighten importance00:59:21 Vincent van Gogh01:09:42 Max Planck (Jupiter-Uranus)01:13:22 Steve Jobs (Jupiter-Uranus)01:25:56 Chris' chart01:46:40 Rock Hudson (Mars-Saturn)01:52:03 Malcolm X (Mars-Pluto)01:56:49 Kurt Cobain & Courtney Love (Venus-Saturn & Venus-Mars)02:05:01 Charlie Kirk & Zohran Mamdani (Mercury-Mars)02:11:33 Edward Snowden (Mercury-Mars)02:18:54 Venus Williams (Mars-Saturn)02:25:23 Jada Pinkett Smith (Jupiter-Neptune)02:32:10 Amelia Earhart (Mars-Jupiter)02:34:25 Richard Nixon (Mars-Jupiter)02:45:13 Joe Biden (Saturn-Uranus)02:56:41 The Beatles (Saturn-Uranus)03:10:59 Michael Jackson (Jupiter-Neptune)03:20:32 Madonna (Jupiter-Neptune)03:29:05 Charles Manson (Mars-Neptune)03:42:19 Prince Harry and Meghan Markle (Saturn-Pluto)03:52:38 Beyonce (Jupiter-Saturn)03:59:44 Reflecting on the technique04:04:34 Secret Astrology Podcast follow-up04:09:28 Lessons learned and concluding remarks04:28:35 Simulation Theory04:36:35 Astrology as a map of time04:41:54 Credits Watch the Video Version of This Episode https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GG0Il1QZkmU – Listen to the Audio Version of This Episode Listen to the audio version of this episode or download it as an MP3:

Raiders Podcast Network
Diving into offensive changes, plus Charles Snowden on his pick off Shedeur Sanders | UFR

Raiders Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2025 30:23


Paul Gutierrez is joined by James Jones and Cynthia Frelund to preview the Raiders' Week 13 matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers. Then defensive end Charles Snowden discusses his interception against the Browns.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Plat Chat
The 2025 OWCS World Finals Preview – Plat Chat Overwatch Ep. 283

Plat Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 147:41


Esports podcast specializing in feeding and Overwatch. Support Plat Chat and become a member today!https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC38VAZEq3chAIPf4i2AIq7Q/joinFeaturing Jonathan "Reinforce" Snowden, Kevin "AVRL" Walker, Jacob "Spilo" Clifton, and Raelyni.

Hans & Scotty G.
FULL SHOW: ESPN CFB reporter Ian Fitzsimmons expects CFP chaos after BYU's trip to Cincinnati | Will Snowden weighs in on Utah & BYU being in the CFP mix in November | Ute Preview Show: Former Ute Trevor Reilly impressed with how Jason Beck has tu

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2025 123:04


Hour 1 Former BYU RB Will Snowden joined the show to talk Utah & BYU and the college football season ESPN host/reporter Ian Fitzsimmons Ute Preview Show Hour 1 When was the last time Utah's offense was ranked higher than their defense? Kansas State PxP Wyatt Thompson Former NFL & Ute LB Trevor Reilly Hour 2 Hans Olsen & Trevor Reilly NIL | Utes need to find a way to compete in NIL Jason Beck offense is legit | Kyle Whittingham future final thoughts

Hans & Scotty G.
Will Snowden: Utah & BYU having amazing season into November | CFP committee takeaway + MORE

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2025 25:14


Hans & Scotty G.
HOUR 1: Will Snowden talks Utah & BYU and the college football playoff | ESPN's Ian Fitzsimmons weighs in on the latest in college football and believes BYU @ Cincinnati game will create some chaos + MORE

Hans & Scotty G.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2025 46:07


Former BYU RB Will Snowden joined the show to talk Utah & BYU and the college football season ESPN host/reporter Ian Fitzsimmons

The CyberWire
The Malware Mash!

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 3:06


Happy Halloween from the team at N2K Networks! We hope you share in our Halloween tradition of listening to the Malware Mash. You can check out our video ⁠here⁠. Lyrics I was coding in the lab late one night when my eyes beheld an eerie sight  for my malware threat score began to rise  and suddenly to my surprise... It did the Mash  It did the Malware Mash  The Malware Mash  It was a botnet smash  It did the Mash  It caught on 'cause of Flash  The Malware Mash  It did the Malware Mash From the Stuxnet worm squirming toward the near east  to the dark web souqs where the script kiddies feast  the APTs left their humble abodes  to get installed from rootkit payloads.  They did the Mash  They did the Malware Mash  The Malware Mash  It was an adware smash  They did the Mash  It caught on 'cause of Flash  The Malware Mash  They did the Malware Mash The botnets were having fun  The DDoS had just begun  The viruses hit the darknet,  with ransomware yet to come.  The keys were logging, phishing emails abound,  Snowden on chains, backed by his Russian hounds.  The Shadow Brokers were about to arrive  with their vocal group, "The NotPetya Five." They did the Mash  They played the Malware Mash The Malware Mash  It was a botnet smash  They did the Mash  It caught on 'cause of Flash  The Malware Mash  They played the Malware Mash Somewhere in Moscow Vlad's voice did ring  Seems he was troubled by just one thing.  He opened a shell then shook his fist  and said, "Whatever happened to my Turla Trojan twist."  It's now the Mash  It's now the Malware Mash  The Malware Mash  And it's a botnet smash  It's now the Mash  It caught on 'cause of Flash  The Malware Mash  It's now the Malware Mash Now everything's cool, Vlad's a part of the band  And the Malware Mash is the hit of the land.  For you, defenders, this mash was meant to  when you get to my door, tell them Creeper sent you. Then you can Mash  Then you can Malware Mash  The Malware Mash  And be a botnet smash  It is the Mash  Don't you dare download Flash  The Malware Mash  Just do the Malware Mash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Valuetainment
"Destroying The United States" - Glenn Greenwald WARNS Trump's Global Policies Are HURTING America

Valuetainment

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2025 19:05


Patrick Bet-David and Glenn Greenwald break down how Trump nearly pardoned Edward Snowden, why Republican senators stopped him, and how the intelligence community manipulates presidents. They also discuss deep state influence, America First loyalty, and which figures could flip on Trump.

The Megyn Kelly Show
Glenn Greenwald and Emily Jashinsky - "Megyn Kelly Live" from San Antonio, on No Team Jerseys, Israel, and the Left's Obsession with Race | Ep. 1180

The Megyn Kelly Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 118:46


Megyn Kelly begins her "Megyn Kelly Live" tour stop in San Antonio with an audience Q&A where she answers questions about Pam Bondi, Lindsey Halligan, retribution in the Trump Era, Israel and Ukraine, men in women's sports, and more. Then Emily Jashinsky, host of "After Party with Emily Jashinsky," joins to talk about the fight on the right, the rise of Zohran Mamdani and Marjorie Taylor Greene, how she knew she was a conservative, the nuances of the Israel issue, the difference between critiquing the government of Israel and the state of Israel or Jews overall, the need to be skeptical of all political propaganda, and more. Then Glenn Greenwald, host of "System Update," to talk about the way journalism should work, the need to speak truth to power no matter the party, his reporting on Edward Snowden's documents kept him from coming to America over threats from the Obama White House, being forced to leave the publication he started "The Intercept" over his Biden reporting, how 2016 and Trump changed everything in newsrooms, and more. Then the two guests talk Karine Jean-Pierre's historically terrible book, the Democrats' obsession with race and credentials, the elitism of Rachel Maddow and more.Subscribe now to Emily's "After Party":Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/after-party-with-emily-jashinsky/id1821493726Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0szVa30NjGYsyIzzBoBCtJYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AfterPartyEmily?sub_confirmation=1Birch Gold: Text MK to 989898 and get your free info kit on goldByrna: Go to https://Byrna.com  or your local Sportsman's Warehouse today.All Family Pharmacy: In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, save 40% on Mebendazole. Visit https://allfamilypharmacy.com/MEGYN — offer ends October 31st.Chapter: For Free and unbiased Medicare help dial 27-MEDICARE (276-334-2273) or go to https://askchapter.org/kellyDisclaimer: Chapter and its affiliates are not connected with or endorsed by any government entity or the federal Medicare program. Chapter Advisory, LLC represents Medicare Advantage HMO, PPO, and PFFS organizations and standalone prescription drug plans that have a Medicare contract. Enrollment depends on the plan's contract renewal. While we have a database of every Medicare plan nationwide and can help you to search among all plans, we have contracts with many but not all plans. As a result, we do not offer every plan available in your area. Currently we represent 50 organizations which offer 18,160 products nationwide. We search and recommend all plans, even those we don't directly offer. You can contact a licensed Chapter agent to find out the number of products available in your specific area. Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-Medicare, or your local State Health Insurance Program (SHIP) to get information on all your options. Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.