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Michael Steele shares a jaw-dropping exchange between Senator Gary Peters and Postmaster General David Steiner in which Steiner admits that a new proposed Trump administration rule would withhold mail ballots from states that do not comply with Trump's voter database demands. Senate Peters joins to discuss. Mychael Schnell, MS Now congressional reporter, and Scott MacFarlane, chief Washington correspondent for MeidasTouch, discuss Donald Trump making enemies in his own party. Kristen Clarke, former assistant attorney general for civil rights at the Department of Justice, talks with Michael Steele about how the lop-sided Supreme Court is hollowing out civil rights under the Constitution and what reforms need to be made when power changes hands in Washington. Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford joins to discuss his race for governor and the issues voters are telling him need to be addressed. And Adm. John Kirby discusses Donald Trump's Iran mess and how Iran is playing the upper hand in its victory over Trump. To listen to this show and other MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
In this episode of John Solomon Reports, host John Solomon uncovers a bombshell hearing on Capitol Hill, where Postmaster General David Steiner made a pivotal announcement regarding mail-in ballots. Steiner confirmed that the Postal Service would not deliver ballots from states that refuse to comply with President Trump's executive order mandating the vetting of state voter rolls by the Justice Department. This declaration sets a significant precedent in the ongoing debate over election integrity and is expected to lead to legal battles ahead.Joining Solomon is Congressman Keith Self from Texas, a staunch advocate for the Save America Act. Self shares his insights on the importance of this legislation and suggests that Congress should be compelled to vote on it daily, a strategy that could alter the legislative landscape.The episode also delves into a new scandal reminiscent of the Fast and Furious operation, this time involving fentanyl. A decorated DEA agent has come forward with allegations that over one million deadly fentanyl pills were allowed to flood the streets of New Mexico due to negligence from federal agencies. Solomon speaks with Tristan Leavitt, the agent's lawyer from the Empower Over Oversight Whistleblower Center, to discuss the implications of these allegations and the potential consequences of federal inaction on public health.Finally, Solomon addresses critical federal election rulings pending before the Supreme Court, with insights from Hans von Spakovsky, a leading campaign finance expert. They explore the significance of a key case in Mississippi and its potential to shape the future of elections in the United States.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this week’s episode we be talking with Seth Swerczek about pistol bullets from Hornady For listeners of this podcast I want to give you an advance heads up on a new product from MantisX called the Tor-X available the first week of August 2024. The TOR-X is the sublime marriage of the military-grade Steiner laser and the power of the MantisX. The MantisX hardware is now integrated inside a Steiner laser. Pair it via Bluetooth to your smartphone or tablet, and you’re training package just got more complete. Combat-worthy lights and lasers, Mil-grade aluminum, built Steiner strong. Designed to expose, blind and target with maximum impact. Up to any challenge. Just like you. The TOR-X features a Type III hard-anodized machined-aluminum housing and rail mount. It is dustproof, splash-proof to IP54 standards, and available with a green (520 nm) laser. The direct diode type laser operates in extreme cold weather. Other features include left and right fire buttons for ambidextrous use, constant power drive that ensures the laser output remains constant throughout the life of the battery, low battery indication, as well as windage and elevation bore sight adjustment screws. The universal rail mount on the TOR-X will fit all pistols that have a Picatinny or Weaver style rail forward of the trigger guard. This design allows optimum positioning of the laser so that the fire buttons are easily accessible for a wide range of users. I’ve been using the Tor-X for several weeks on my Glock17 and my Glock48 now and when paired with the MantisX app it’s taken my training to a new level. Check out all of our episodes at: https://podcasts.concealedcarry.com/the-firearm-trainers-podcast/ Email comments, topic suggestions, or questions to us at FTP@ConcealedCarry.comFollow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/firearmtrainerspodcast/ Remember we bring you this podcast to support the industry, the second amendment, and most importantly every firearm instructor in America that dedicates time and energy into making gun owners more knowledgeable. #FirearmTrainerPodcast #FirearmTrainerAssociation #FTAProtect #MantisX #Hornady #NRAVoices The post Hornady Bullets first appeared on The Firearm Trainer Podcast.
In the fourth episode of our series on Theosophy, Rey talks about the founder of Anthroposophy, Austrian guru Rudolf Steiner. Steiner started started out as a Theosophist, but was much too ambitious and much too German for that movement. --- Subscribe to https://patreon.org/tenepod https://bsky.app/profile/tenepod.bsky.social https://x.com/tenepod
While new CO GOP Chair Steiner was busy stacking his committees with RINOs the former Chair's attorney moved to garnish all of the Party's money.
Julia Steiner, guitarist and singer for the Chicago-based band Ratboys, reflects on the band's 16-year history; making their latest album, Singin' to an Empty Chair; and more as they prepare to play at Archer Music Hall in Allentown on June 22.
The full crew is back to break down Lewis Hamilton's first Ferrari win, Mercedes' response, and so much more. We cover: - Rockstar & Wanker of the race - Could Lewis have won without the virtual safety car? - What Hamilton's win means for Charles Leclerc and the Ferrari dynamic - Mercedes strategy breakdown: did they cost themselves the race? - Kimi's DNF, George gains 18 points — is the championship back on? - The engine latest: Red Bull crying foul and is Mercedes sandbagging? - Pierre Gasly's penalty mess - Gas or Brake - The Kardashian curse - And more! Chapters: 00:00 – Intro 03:52 – Rockstar of the Barcelona GP 06:26 - Ferrari's feeling the positive vibes 12:20 - Is this the end of Charles' reign? 16:38 - Wanker of the Barcelona GP 20:15 - Will Toto give team orders? 37:46 – Gas or Brake Vankah Hours is part of the Vox Media Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this episode, Michelle Lee Steiner, paraeducator, advocate, and founder of Michelle's Mission, joins us to shed light on the realities of living and thriving with an invisible learning disability. Michelle opens up about her personal journey navigating a world where disabilities are often only recognized if they are physical. She shares the challenges she faced growing up labeled as an outcast due to childhood bullying, and how discovering her voice through writing and photography became a powerful catalyst for healing and self-acceptance. Michelle breaks down the practical strategies she uses to teach her students age-appropriate self-advocacy and provides critical advice for adults transitioning into the workforce, including how to honestly navigate job interviews and secure workplace accommodations. From finding her chosen "tribes" outside her immediate community to sharing her beautiful real-life love story, Michelle offers an inspiring reminder that success doesn't always come in the package we expect, but can turn into something even better. LEARN MORE AND CONNECT WITH MICHELLE LEE STEINER Website: https://www.michellesmission.com/ Email: msteiner441@gmail.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/steiner7250/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michelle.steiner.493966/ Facebook (Michelle's Mission): http://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=Michelle%27s%20Mission
Finding yourself after years of putting everyone else first isn't a straight path and Kayley knows that better than most. In this clip, she gets real about what it actually felt like to be a stay-at-home mom of seven while quietly carrying a dream she didn't think she was allowed to have. She opens up about the depression, the identity loss, the guilt, and the slow, hard work of building a marriage that actually goes both ways. What she discovered along the way? The biggest obstacle was never the logistics. It wasn't the kids, the schedule, or even the MCAT. It was believing she was worth inconveniencing her family for. That's the self-compassion work no one talks about, the daily habit of reminding yourself that your needs, your goals, and your growth matter too. If you've ever talked yourself out of something because it felt selfish, or if personal development has felt more like a luxury than a necessity, this one's for you. Because how you feel about yourself shapes everything…your marriage, your happiness, your ability to keep going on the hard days. https://www.aboutprogress.com/blog/how-do-you-get-into-medical-school-as-a-busy-mom Preorder Sticky Habits book today! Leave a rating and review Get the free DSL Training. Follow About Progress on YOUTUBE! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uma desoladora mistificação do nosso tempo opera-se pelo colapso da responsabilidade, como um processo de recitação em que o ser se expurgasse daquela impiedade no juízo que faz de si mesmo, deixando de reconhecer como a consciência só alcança um limiar sagrado no momento em que cada um de nós admite que o “sermos responsáveis pelos nossos actos até ao fim dos tempos é o verdadeiro juízo final com que temos de nos confrontar” (Steiner). Suponha-se, então, que nos seria possível construir uma excepção que revertesse aquele sentido de responsabilidade absoluta de que falava Dostoievski em Os Irmãos Karamazov (“Todos somos culpados de tudo, culpados por todos diante de todos, eu mais do que os outros.”), construindo-se um efeito de expiação automática de qualquer pecado, em que a culpa não implica já que nos refaçamos dos nossos erros, mas que estes sejam atribuídos ao regime de dissociação geral em curso. Podemos hoje reconhecer como se tem procedido a uma espécie de morbidez da projecção, em que, por um lado, os homens entram num transe, num confessionalismo constante das suas fraquezas, exprimindo aquele desgosto por si mesmos que parte então em busca de causas mais gerais, por outro, tornando-se especialistas em narrar a sua queda, superam assim qualquer transtorno e retiram até um gozo perverso de se verem a actuar como possuídos, como se o próprio céu não passasse de uma ficção infernal, um modo de antecipar a culpa, justificar-se enquanto se encarna os piores defeitos que se poderia reconhecer de fora, sendo este o supremo gozo estético. Seria uma forma de dispor intimamente dessa intuição que guiou Benjamin ao reconhecer como a humanidade, que antigamente, com Homero, foi objecto de contemplação para os deuses olímpicos, veio a tornar-se objecto de contemplação para si própria, e até de forma cada vez mais obsessiva. Ele notava que a alienação de si própria atingiu tal grau que lhe permite viver a sua própria aniquilação como um prazer estético de primeira ordem. De algum modo isto explica como cada um tomou a seu cargo esse movimento de queda para lá de qualquer possibilidade de redenção, em que os seres se deliciam com a possibilidade de enfrentar o juízo final com uma insolência desmedida, com tal desdém pela realidade, que os seus gestos estariam consagrados à produção e reprodução da destruição do mundo, apreciando essa simetria entre a sua devastação íntima e a degradação sucessiva dos planos exteriores, como se o Antropoceno fosse uma projecção de ordem quase libidinal, uma forma de reclamar, pela posse violenta, toda a vida e todo o espaço, revirá-los, cometer contra eles o acto mais infame, realizando assim as nossas fantasias despóticas. E isto porque chegamos a um tal estado de amputação sensível que não conseguimos retirar verdadeiro gozo de uma relação de proximidade e de dependência dos elementos, de tudo aquilo que revelava a nossa fragilidade intrínseca, essa ânsia de ligação. “Compreendo que Nietzsche tenha perdido os sentidos ao ver espancar um cavalo”, diz Steiner. “Trazemos a condenação dentro de nós. Caso contrário, porque teríamos destruído o planeta?” Talvez tenhamos encontrado um meio de vingar-nos da morte, sendo certo que todo o anseio e o terror que esta nos provoca é o resultado de vidas que não sabem cumprir-se. Assim, produz-se esse golpe desesperado que faz do mundo um imenso cadáver de modo a ser-nos mais fácil passar por cima dele, fazer da nossa morte um triunfo. Conseguimos reconhecer esta forma de buscar a própria catarse no lixo, a forma depravada de encontrar esse corpo que corresponde inteiramente aos nossos excessos, à dedicação de todas essas descargas ofensivas, não sendo já possível a ninguém escapar a esta encarnação doentia. Os nossos actos ganhariam assim esse prestígio do horror, como se participassem de uma profecia obscena, traduzindo esse horizonte cor de carne, como as costas de um moribundo… “Demos graças pela nossa violência, disse ele, mesmo que ela seja estéril/ como um fantasma, embora não nos leve a lado nenhum,/ porque estes caminhos não levam a lugar algum” (Bolaño). O lixo torna-se a condição necessário de toda a lógica de acumulação, e acaba por representar a verdadeira herança e o próprio destino que melhor exprime os anseios de um ser que adoptou nas suas rotinas um princípio de indiferença face aos efeitos que produz, sentindo-se desalojado da própria mente, desalojado daquele sonho que antes nos aproximava, sendo que agora todos os sonhos implicam a degradação dos outros, e até quando tenta transmitir aquilo que deseja, só é capaz de produzir um discurso em que todas as palavras se tornam medonhas. “E viajava de um lugar a outro/ dos sonhos/ qual verme da terra/ arrastando o seu desespero/ comendo-o”… Ninguém estranha assim toda esta raiva, e alguns põem-se a fantasiar com um suicídio planetário, sendo hoje mais fácil imaginar o fim do mundo do que a possibilidade deste mundo prosseguir sem eles, com a frieza com que hoje nos despedimos seja de quem for. A destruição do planeta torna-se assim uma espécie de ilustração do estupor de um ser que faz a escolha de transformar o ultraje dos anos, a consciência do fim. É como se os vivos já não pudessem senão acreditar nessa cumplicidade que liga aqueles que estão obcecados com a sua morte, esses que conspiram para dar a morte à morte. Só que, como nos faz ver Michael Marder, “a morte da morte deteriora fatalmente a vida”, e, assim, “os restos descarregados no vazadouro das nossas loucas aspirações à incorruptilidade, à preservação estática, acabando por interferir nos estreitos parâmetros da vitalidade. Perecemos devido aos nossos anseios de imortalidade perversamente realizados e arrastamos connosco grande parte da biosfera.” A vida que se serve como esse deplorável espectáculo entrou numa decomposição angustiante há algumas décadas, e isto dá-nos uma sensação de ver realizar-se o projecto de um mundo submetido a um contágio em que vemos os mortos continuar entre os vivos. “Custa-lhes mudar os costumes, renunciar ao tabaco, ao prestígio de violadores de mulheres”, lê-se em A invenção de Morel. E se até certa altura a humanidade odiava aqueles seres que se dispunham a ter uma relação virada para o livro, o pensamento e a ética, e que lhe lembravam de que esta não era ainda verdadeiramente humana, se Steiner diz que essa era a verdadeira fonte de todo o ódio contra o judeu, esse que nos vinha exigir uma coisa que sabemos ser justa, mas que nos obrigava a dominar os nossos impulso e desejos, a certa altura, parece que a humanidade quis libertar-se dessas aspirações, e ela mesma realizou-se através de uma imortalidade pútrida, esta lixeira que significa a produção de uma realidade alinhada com o niilismo que por fim nos desobriga de qualquer obrigação moral para com este mundo. Neste episódio, Marder, que acaba de ver publicado entre nós Filosofia no Lixo – Uma Fenomenologia da Devastação, com selo da VS, veio orientar-nos neste confronto com esse monturo crescente de resíduos que sufoca, fende e diminui as regiões habitáveis do planeta, ao mesmo tempo que penetra a própria fibra do ser e exprime materialmente essa fantasia metafísica da economia capitalista que no seu crescimento monstruoso e sem trégua produziu um pesadelo de que não parece haver saída.
A unique evening of storytelling is coming to East Clare. Balor Otherworld will be bringing tales from the land, the old ways and beyond to Alfa Steiner Secondary School in East Clare on Saturday, June 13th. The evening promises stories inspired by Irish mythology and folklore, with themes of nature, imagination and the rich traditions of Ireland's Otherworld. Joining Alan Morrissey earlier to tell us more was storyteller Tommy Lanigan, A.K.A. Balor Otherworld. Image (c) Tommy Lanigan
His upcoming ordination to the priesthood on June 12th
Jenseits der Worte beginnt das Fühlen
V oddaji se posvečamo filmskemu festivalu Kino Otok, ki bo s pestrim filmskim programom vse do nedelje obarval obmorsko mesto Izola. Nadaljujemo v Ljubljani, saj so v Muzeju novejše in sodobne zgodovine Slovenije odprli občasno razstavo z naslovom Darila državi, kjer si je mogoče ogledati darila, ki so jih prejeli nekdanji predsedniki in še aktualna predsednica Republike Slovenije. Vsem dobro znan roman Na klancu, ki govori o revščini in družbeni neenakosti skozi življenje protagonistke Francke, bo danes v režiji Tina Grabnarja dobil dramsko obliko. V Ljubljani se je danes začel 19. festival sodobne klovnade in novega cirkusa Klovnbuf. Na današnji dan pa mineva 100 let od smrti katalonskega arhitekta Antonija Gaudija. Oddajo končujemo v Mariboru, kjer bo danes ob 19-ih odprtje skupinske razstave Drugačne ptice Anje Smaka in A. Steiner. Vabljeni k poslušanju!
Matt's on his honeymoon, so it's just Guenther and Brian recapping the chaos in Monaco: - Rockstar & Wanker of the race - The penalty disaster - George's season in freefall - Brake gate: Charles Leclerc's cryptic post-race message & Brembo's response - Charles re-signs with Ferrari — life sentence or the right call? - The engine power rankings, who's the new #1 - Toto on the Monaco podium - Gas or Brake + Barcelona predictions For simple, online access to personalized and affordable care for Hair Loss, ED, Weight Loss, and more, visit http://hims.com/redflags Go to http://factormeals.com/vankah50off and use code vankah50off to get 50 percent off and free daily greens per box! Want even more content? Subscribe to our Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/c/TRFPod Pre-order our book -- Formula 101! https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250397478/formula101/ Chapters: 00:00 – Intro Rockstar of the Monaco GP - 2:57 Wanker of the Monaco GP - 12:36 Pierre's Podium Penalty Drama - 20:48 Charles' Contract Extension with Ferrari - 29:41 Gas or Brake? - 48:48 Barcelona GP Predictions - 01:01:06 The Red Flags Podcast is a Vox Media Production Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
V oddaji se posvečamo filmskemu festivalu Kino Otok, ki bo s pestrim filmskim programom vse do nedelje obarval obmorsko mesto Izola. Nadaljujemo v Ljubljani, saj so v Muzeju novejše in sodobne zgodovine Slovenije odprli občasno razstavo z naslovom Darila državi, kjer si je mogoče ogledati darila, ki so jih prejeli nekdanji predsedniki in še aktualna predsednica Republike Slovenije. Vsem dobro znan roman Na klancu, ki govori o revščini in družbeni neenakosti skozi življenje protagonistke Francke, bo danes v režiji Tina Grabnarja dobil dramsko obliko. V Ljubljani se je danes začel 19. festival sodobne klovnade in novega cirkusa Klovnbuf. Na današnji dan pa mineva 100 let od smrti katalonskega arhitekta Antonija Gaudija. Oddajo končujemo v Mariboru, kjer bo danes ob 19-ih odprtje skupinske razstave Drugačne ptice Anje Smaka in A. Steiner. Vabljeni k poslušanju!
Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Colorado GOP Betrayal, Open-Primary Battles, and the Grassroots Fight for Party Control in Colorado Is Craig a con man? It appears we were duped by newly elected CO GOP Chair Craig Steiner…. Who assured us he was for opting out of the disastrous open primary but then stacked his committees with RINOs who hate the idea of opting out. Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Open with an Apology In this episode of The Chuck and Julie Show, hosts Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden open by apologizing to listeners for having briefly trusted newly elected Colorado Republican Party Chair Craig Steiner. They explain that after hearing Steiner speak and after hearing support from figures such as Ted Harvey, they believed he might genuinely support the Republican opt-out effort and help revitalize the party. Within days, however, they say Steiner's committee appointments convinced them that he had misled the grassroots and was instead aligning with the establishment wing of the Colorado GOP. Craig Steiner and the Opt-Out Fight The central issue of the episode is the Colorado Republican Party's fight over the opt-out, which Chuck and Julie describe as essential if Republicans want Republican voters to choose Republican candidates. They argue that open primaries and jungle-primary-style systems weaken the party, empower outsiders, and reduce the role of grassroots Republicans. Steiner, in their view, had promised support for the opt-out but then appointed anti-opt-out or establishment-aligned figures to important committees, making his early leadership look like a betrayal rather than a unifying move. Committee Appointments and Party Power Chuck and Julie spend significant time discussing the bylaws committee, legal affairs committee, and other internal party appointments. They criticize the removal or sidelining of pro-opt-out voices such as James Peabody and object to appointments of figures they identify as establishment Republicans, including Laura Carno, John Fielding, Tom McCracken, and others. Chuck notes that the legal affairs committee has been deeply involved in the party's legal strategy around the opt-out and related lawsuits, so changing its balance could affect whether the party continues fighting for grassroots control or moves toward an establishment-backed primary structure. Caucus and Assembly Versus Jungle Primaries The hosts argue that Colorado's caucus and assembly system may be messy, cumbersome, and imperfect, but it still gives party activists and Republican voters meaningful influence over candidate selection. By contrast, they warn that jungle primaries and open-primary systems make parties nearly irrelevant and turn ballot access into a pay-to-play process controlled by wealthy donors, consultants, and signature-gathering operations. Julie emphasizes that the question anti-opt-out Republicans rarely answer is how candidates would actually get onto the ballot once the caucus system loses power. California as the Warning Example Chuck and Julie repeatedly point to California as an example of what they believe Colorado must avoid. They discuss California's long ballot-counting process, mail-in ballots, ballot harvesting, and races where Republican candidates appeared strong early but allegedly lost ground as later counts came in. They especially focus on the Los Angeles mayoral race involving Spencer Pratt, saying that late-arriving vote batches and slow counting create distrust. For the hosts, California represents the political future that establishment Republicans and Democrats are enabling in Colorado through open primaries and expanded mail-ballot systems. Unaffiliated Voters and the Future of the Colorado GOP The episode also addresses the growing power of unaffiliated voters in Colorado. Chuck and Julie note that more ballots are being mailed to unaffiliated voters than to Democrats and Republicans combined, which they say undermines the meaning of party primaries. They argue that unaffiliated voters can already change affiliation easily if they want to participate in a party nomination process, so the current system weakens party identity without solving a real problem. Their concern is that conservative Republican candidates will have little chance if nominations are shaped by unaffiliated voters and donor-funded campaigns rather than party members. Substack, Media Censorship, and Political Humor Later in the show, Julie explains how Substack became popular during the COVID era as a platform for writers and commentators who were being limited by YouTube, Facebook, Google, and other large technology companies. She says Substack gave independent writers a place to publish, build email lists, and monetize their work, but she worries that left-leaning voices may now be moving into the platform and shifting its culture. Chuck and Julie also discuss political comedy, arguing that conservative or independent voices such as Greg Gutfeld and Tim Dillon succeed because they are funny, while much of left-wing commentary has become humorless and predictable. Budgets, Blue States, and Political Drift The hosts also briefly compare state budgets and political cultures, especially Florida and New York, arguing that New York spends far more while producing worse results. They connect this to education bureaucracy, Medicaid spending, illegal immigration, and progressive governance. The discussion returns to Colorado as they mention budget problems, Medicaid concerns, and the possible loss of TABOR refunds. This section reinforces the show's broader theme that government growth, progressive policies, and establishment politics produce higher costs and weaker accountability. Closing with No More Optimism Chuck and Julie close by acknowledging that the episode is shorter than usual because of a scheduling conflict, but they say the warning about Steiner and the Colorado GOP could not wait. They again admit that they were briefly optimistic and now believe that optimism was misplaced. Their closing message is that grassroots Republicans should understand they have been betrayed, that the fight over the opt-out is not finished, and that they intend to continue challenging the establishment forces they believe are trying to push Colorado toward jungle primaries and donor-controlled politics.
Democrat Steiner seeking different elective position, pursuing Iowa House seat.
Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Colorado GOP Betrayal, Open-Primary Battles, and the Grassroots Fight for Party Control in Colorado Is Craig a con man? It appears we were duped by newly elected CO GOP Chair Craig Steiner…. Who assured us he was for opting out of the disastrous open primary but then stacked his committees with RINOs who hate the idea of opting out. Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Open with an Apology In this episode of The Chuck and Julie Show, hosts Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden open by apologizing to listeners for having briefly trusted newly elected Colorado Republican Party Chair Craig Steiner. They explain that after hearing Steiner speak and after hearing support from figures such as Ted Harvey, they believed he might genuinely support the Republican opt-out effort and help revitalize the party. Within days, however, they say Steiner's committee appointments convinced them that he had misled the grassroots and was instead aligning with the establishment wing of the Colorado GOP. Craig Steiner and the Opt-Out Fight The central issue of the episode is the Colorado Republican Party's fight over the opt-out, which Chuck and Julie describe as essential if Republicans want Republican voters to choose Republican candidates. They argue that open primaries and jungle-primary-style systems weaken the party, empower outsiders, and reduce the role of grassroots Republicans. Steiner, in their view, had promised support for the opt-out but then appointed anti-opt-out or establishment-aligned figures to important committees, making his early leadership look like a betrayal rather than a unifying move. Committee Appointments and Party Power Chuck and Julie spend significant time discussing the bylaws committee, legal affairs committee, and other internal party appointments. They criticize the removal or sidelining of pro-opt-out voices such as James Peabody and object to appointments of figures they identify as establishment Republicans, including Laura Carno, John Fielding, Tom McCracken, and others. Chuck notes that the legal affairs committee has been deeply involved in the party's legal strategy around the opt-out and related lawsuits, so changing its balance could affect whether the party continues fighting for grassroots control or moves toward an establishment-backed primary structure. Caucus and Assembly Versus Jungle Primaries The hosts argue that Colorado's caucus and assembly system may be messy, cumbersome, and imperfect, but it still gives party activists and Republican voters meaningful influence over candidate selection. By contrast, they warn that jungle primaries and open-primary systems make parties nearly irrelevant and turn ballot access into a pay-to-play process controlled by wealthy donors, consultants, and signature-gathering operations. Julie emphasizes that the question anti-opt-out Republicans rarely answer is how candidates would actually get onto the ballot once the caucus system loses power. California as the Warning Example Chuck and Julie repeatedly point to California as an example of what they believe Colorado must avoid. They discuss California's long ballot-counting process, mail-in ballots, ballot harvesting, and races where Republican candidates appeared strong early but allegedly lost ground as later counts came in. They especially focus on the Los Angeles mayoral race involving Spencer Pratt, saying that late-arriving vote batches and slow counting create distrust. For the hosts, California represents the political future that establishment Republicans and Democrats are enabling in Colorado through open primaries and expanded mail-ballot systems. Unaffiliated Voters and the Future of the Colorado GOP The episode also addresses the growing power of unaffiliated voters in Colorado. Chuck and Julie note that more ballots are being mailed to unaffiliated voters than to Democrats and Republicans combined, which they say undermines the meaning of party primaries. They argue that unaffiliated voters can already change affiliation easily if they want to participate in a party nomination process, so the current system weakens party identity without solving a real problem. Their concern is that conservative Republican candidates will have little chance if nominations are shaped by unaffiliated voters and donor-funded campaigns rather than party members. Substack, Media Censorship, and Political Humor Later in the show, Julie explains how Substack became popular during the COVID era as a platform for writers and commentators who were being limited by YouTube, Facebook, Google, and other large technology companies. She says Substack gave independent writers a place to publish, build email lists, and monetize their work, but she worries that left-leaning voices may now be moving into the platform and shifting its culture. Chuck and Julie also discuss political comedy, arguing that conservative or independent voices such as Greg Gutfeld and Tim Dillon succeed because they are funny, while much of left-wing commentary has become humorless and predictable. Budgets, Blue States, and Political Drift The hosts also briefly compare state budgets and political cultures, especially Florida and New York, arguing that New York spends far more while producing worse results. They connect this to education bureaucracy, Medicaid spending, illegal immigration, and progressive governance. The discussion returns to Colorado as they mention budget problems, Medicaid concerns, and the possible loss of TABOR refunds. This section reinforces the show's broader theme that government growth, progressive policies, and establishment politics produce higher costs and weaker accountability. Closing with No More Optimism Chuck and Julie close by acknowledging that the episode is shorter than usual because of a scheduling conflict, but they say the warning about Steiner and the Colorado GOP could not wait. They again admit that they were briefly optimistic and now believe that optimism was misplaced. Their closing message is that grassroots Republicans should understand they have been betrayed, that the fight over the opt-out is not finished, and that they intend to continue challenging the establishment forces they believe are trying to push Colorado toward jungle primaries and donor-controlled politics.
Do your migraines become unbearable before your period — along with mood swings, anxiety, rage, or deep exhaustion? What if it's not “just PMS”?In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores the often-overlooked connection between migraines and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD). Many women spend years believing their symptoms are normal hormonal changes, while their nervous system is actually struggling with a much deeper hormonal sensitivity.Blending neuroscience, hormones, and holistic insight, this episode helps you better understand why your brain and body may feel completely different before your cycle — and what you can do to support yourself more gently and effectively.You'll discover:
In this inspiring interview, Dan Steiner joins Hearts of Oak to share how he left a successful career as a trucking executive after encountering Jesus Christ and felt called to confront abortion as both a moral and spiritual crisis. He explains the remarkable growth of Preborn, which began as a single pregnancy clinic in Indiana and has become the largest pro-life organization in the world. Through free ultrasounds, practical support (maternity clothes, baby supplies, housing, and medical care), and compassionate counseling, Preborn has helped save over 80,000 babies in a single year. Steiner emphasizes that Preborn's mission pairs life-saving work with sharing the gospel, helping women and their children find not only physical rescue but eternal hope in Christ. He also discusses the shift in the abortion industry toward online chemical abortions and how Preborn has adapted with digital outreach, phone counseling, and telehealth to reach women earlier. A powerful conversation about faith, obedience, compassion, and the vital role of the church in standing for truth. "LORD, WHAT CAN I DO?" This is what PreBorn! Founder, Dan Steiner, asked himself as he thought of the 800,000 babies being slaughtered each week at the hands of abortionists. This issue of abortion is the DEFINING issue of OUR generation. You are NOT powerless in the mission to save the lives of babies at risk for abortion. You are a KEY instrument in the power source God desires to use to SAVE BABIES and SAVE SOULS. Just as God called Dan Steiner, PreBorn!'s Founder, to save babies and save souls… you are being called. Connect with and support PreBorn...
We were initially optimistic about the CO GOP as new Chair Craig Steiner assured everyone he was a long time supporter of opting out of the disastrous open primary. But he duped us and stacked his committees with RINOs who hate the opt out and are pushing jungle primaries instead. Think California.
My recent chat with Jordan E. Petersen on the excellent Gods, Ghosts and UFOs Podcast. Follow them on substack: https://ggupodcast.substack.com/ What's Jo's Favorite Fairy Sighting? "This week, Jordan finally gets to ask the host of the singular Modern Fairy Sightings Podcast the most annoying question he can come up with, and she does not disappoint. Jo Hickey-Hall has been collecting these stories for years. And the one she leads with is hers: a stick being made of literal sticks, running down a beach in Jersey with a gait so strange it made everyone watching laugh. Years later, a man in northeast England describes seeing almost exactly the same thing. We talk about why these things, these beings, whatever they are, resist being accurately described or depicted. They're so vivid in the moment, but as soon as you start to try to put words on them, they seem to slip away. But we're doing our best. You can come judge for yourself. Highlights: Jo Hickey-Hall, folklorist, social historian, host of The Modern Fairy Sightings Podcast (also find her at scarlettofthefae.com and preorder her book here) Nerd Critic Jo's favorite fairy sighting The shadow-cutters A stick being made of sticks The Brazilian Ent (a tree trunk that walked, then tried to become a man, and didn't quite get it right) The disconnect between perception and description “I can see it in my head, but it just doesn't seem to translate into words or drawings” Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy Mysterium tremendum and mysterium fascinans Why one guy runs away and the other is filled with awe Conditioning, inheritance, and the holding place we make for the uncanny Orbs in the context of UFOs, fae, and consciousness Conscious plasma :) Different witnesses, different filters/stations/signals How to learn to see auras (try it at a conference with a white screen behind the speaker) The Genius Loci Two strangers see the same being in the same place, twenty years apart “Your daemon is really driving you” How to actually meet the fae Picking up litter is an offering Thresholds: doorways, dawn and dusk, the line where the beach meets the sea, the transitions in your own life Theosophy and the elemental beings — Blavatsky, Steiner, Paracelsus The London flat haunted by goblins (near a crossroads, near water) Are the fae hitching lifts on trains and trucks? Fairies as emergent phenomena of place (this is what humans are, actually) Part two maybe? (with Mal (and Tom???)) And in the epilogue…on Gods, Ghosts and UFOs A disembodied head in a kitchen window Why you can't tear down a house to make a haunting go away How UFOs are seen so often over a Neolithic burial chamber that locals don't bother to look up anymore ⭐️ JOIN THE MODERN FAIRY SIGHTINGS COMMUNITY ⭐️ https://www.patreon.com/c/themodernfairysightingspodcast/membership If you're looking for exclusive bonus material, monthly zoom chats with like-minded folks, access to the Discord chat channels, quiet meditation gatherings and meeting other members, join us at: https://www.patreon.com/c/themodernfairysightingspodcast/membership S U P P O R T If you'd prefer to support the Modern Fairy Sightings with a one off donation, you can ‘buy me a coffee' and I'd be very grateful
If you enjoy this episode, we're sure you will enjoy more content like this on The Occult Rejects. In fact, we have curated playlists on occult topics like grimoires, esoteric concepts and phenomena, occult history, analyzing true crime and cults with an occult lens, Para politics, and occultism in music. Whether you enjoy consuming your content visually or via audio, we've got you covered - and it will always be provided free of charge. So, if you enjoy what we do and want to support our work of providing accessible, free content on various platforms, please consider making a donation to the links provided below. Thank you and enjoy the episode!Links For The Occult Rejectshttps://linktr.ee/theoccultrejectsOccult Research Institutehttps://www.occultresearchinstitute.org/Substackhttps://substack.com/@theoccultrejects?r=7auau0&utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-pageCash Apphttps://cash.app/$theoccultrejectsVenmo@TheOccultRejectsBuy Me A Coffeebuymeacoffee.com/TheOccultRejectsPatreonhttps://www.patreon.com/TheOccultRejectsBIBLIOGRAPHYHidden Rooms, Holy Water, and the DeadWhite, L. Michael. The Social Origins of Christian Architecture, Volume I: Building God's House in the Roman World: Architectural Adaptation Among Pagans, Jews, and Christians. Trinity Press International, 1996. Key use: Essential source for early Christian architectural adaptation, especially the shift from domestic and semi-domestic gathering spaces toward more specialized Christian buildings. White's work is useful for showing that early Christian architecture develops inside a broader Roman social and architectural world, not in isolation.White, L. Michael. The Social Origins of Christian Architecture, Volume II: Texts and Monuments for the Christian Domus Ecclesiae in Its Environment. Trinity Press International, 1997. Key use: Companion volume for the textual and archaeological evidence behind the domus ecclesiae, early meeting spaces, and the built environment of pre-Constantinian Christianity.Yale University Art Gallery. “Christian Building.” Dura-Europos: Excavating Antiquity. Key use: Strong anchor for the Dura-Europos Christian building and its wall paintings. Yale notes that the Christian paintings were uncovered in 1932 and that Clark Hopkins described the murals as preserved from more than three-quarters of a century before Constantine recognized Christianity in 312.Yale News. “House Call: A New Study Rethinks Early Christian Landmark.” 2024. Key use: Useful cautionary source for not oversimplifying Dura-Europos as merely a domestic “house church.” The report highlights recent scholarship reexamining how domestic the Dura Christian building really was and why its architectural classification needs care.Smarthistory. “Dura-Europos.” Key use: Accessible overview of Dura-Europos as a multicultural Roman frontier site, including the adapted Christian building used as a meeting place and baptistery in the first half of the third century.Peppard, Michael. The World's Oldest Church: Bible, Art, and Ritual at Dura-Europos, Syria. Yale University Press, 2016. Key use: Major source for the Dura-Europos Christian building, its baptistery, biblical imagery, ritual use, and the danger of reading the site too simply through later church categories.Snyder, Graydon F. Ante Pacem: Archaeological Evidence of Church Life Before Constantine. Mercer University Press, revised edition, 2003. Key use: Important archaeological source for Christian life before Constantine, especially material evidence for worship, burial, symbols, and everyday Christian practice before public imperial privilege. Mercer University Press identifies the book as focused on archaeological evidence of church life before Constantine.Jensen, Robin M. Baptismal Imagery in Early Christianity: Ritual, Visual, and Theological Dimensions. Baker Academic, 2012. Key use: Core source for baptismal images, ritual meaning, water, initiation, death and rebirth, and the way visual programs frame baptismal practice.Jensen, Robin M. Understanding Early Christian Art. Routledge, 2000. Key use: Early Christian visual culture, catacomb imagery, baptismal scenes, Good Shepherd imagery, Jonah, Daniel, Lazarus, and the visual language of salvation and resurrection.Ferguson, Everett. Baptism in the Early Church: History, Theology, and Liturgy in the First Five Centuries. Eerdmans, 2009. Key use: Major historical and theological source for baptismal practice, initiation, immersion, anointing, catechesis, and the development of baptismal rites.Johnson, Maxwell E. The Rites of Christian Initiation: Their Evolution and Interpretation. Liturgical Press. Key use: Development of initiation rites, catechumenate, baptism, post-baptismal rites, and how Christian initiation becomes structured over time.Spinks, Bryan D. Early and Medieval Rituals and Theologies of Baptism: From the New Testament to the Council of Trent. Ashgate, 2006. Key use: Long-range ritual and theological development of baptism, useful for tracking how early baptismal space later becomes more formalized.Britannica. “Catacomb.” Key use: Baseline definition of catacombs as subterranean cemeteries composed of galleries or passages with recesses for tombs; useful for correcting the popular misconception that catacombs were primarily secret churches rather than burial landscapes.Stevenson, James. The Catacombs: Rediscovered Monuments of Early Christianity. Thames & Hudson, 1978. Key use: Classic overview of Roman catacombs, burial architecture, inscriptions, symbols, and early Christian memory.Rutgers, Leonard V. Subterranean Rome: In Search of the Roots of Christianity in the Catacombs of the Eternal City. Peeters, 2000. Key use: Catacombs as archaeological and social evidence, including burial practice, community identity, and the relationship between Jews, Christians, and Roman funerary culture.Fiocchi Nicolai, Vincenzo, Fabrizio Bisconti, and Danilo Mazzoleni. The Christian Catacombs of Rome: History, Decoration, Inscriptions. Schnell & Steiner, 2002. Key use: Detailed treatment of catacomb history, inscriptions, burial spaces, and visual programs.Brown, Peter. The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity. University of Chicago Press, enlarged edition. Key use: Essential source for the holy dead, saint veneration, relics, tombs, pilgrimage, and the way corporeal remains became central to Christian religious life. The University of Chicago Press describes Brown's work as exploring how worship of saints and their corporeal remains became central to religious life in Western Europe.Brown, Peter. The Body and Society: Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity. Columbia University Press, 1988. Key use: Christian body theology, asceticism, holiness, discipline, and why the body is so central to late antique Christian imagination.Yasin, Ann Marie. Saints and Church Spaces in the Late Antique Mediterranean: Architecture, Cult, and Community. Cambridge University Press, 2009. Key use: Churches, saints, relics, cult practice, community identity, and how sacred spaces are organized around holy bodies and memory.Grabar, André. Martyrium: Recherches sur le culte des reliques et l'art chrétien antique. Key use: Classic work on martyr shrines, relic cult, and the relationship between architecture, art, and the holy dead.van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Key use: Separation, liminality, and incorporation. Crucial for baptism, catechumenate, thresholds, initiation, and the movement from outsider to insider.Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Key use: Liminality, threshold states, ritual transition, and communitas. Useful for baptism, catacomb descent, martyr devotion, and controlled access.Kilde, Jeanne Halgren. Sacred Power, Sacred Space: An Introduction to Christian Architecture and Worship. Oxford University Press, 2008. Key use: Christian buildings as arrangements of power, worship, divine presence, and embodied access. Useful for thresholds, sanctuary divisions, nave, altar, and congregation.Kieckhefer, Richard. Theology in Stone: Church Architecture from Byzantium to Berkeley. Oxford University Press, 2004. Key use: Church architecture as theology made spatial. Useful for altar, pulpit, nave, threshold, symbolic layout, and worship practice.Krautheimer, Richard. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture. Yale University Press / Pelican History of Art. Key use: Classic architectural history for early Christian and Byzantine buildings, including the shift from pre-Constantinian spaces to basilicas, baptisteries, martyr shrines, and later monumental forms.Mathews, Thomas F. The Clash of Gods: A Reinterpretation of Early Christian Art. Princeton University Press, 1993. Key use: Early Christian imagery, visual conflict, ritual meaning, and the development of Christian art within the Roman world.Elsner, Jaś. Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100–450. Oxford University Press, 1998. Key use: Roman visual culture, Christian adaptation, imperial imagery, and the shift into Christian public art and architecture.MacMullen, Ramsay. Christianizing the Roman Empire: A.D. 100–400. Yale University Press, 1984. Key use: Social and historical context for Christian expansion before and after Constantine, useful for understanding how Christian space changes as Christianity grows.Mango, Cyril. Byzantine Architecture. Key use: LonAlso want to remind people about the website, if you're into reading we have tons of information by multiple contributors, and we got t-shirts up on the site if you're interested. Fun fact, the art is all based on the eyeball. A
Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Colorado GOP Shakeup: Craig Steiner, Opt-Out, Party Strategy, and the Road Ahead Guest, Ted Harvey The CO GOP elected a new party chair - Craig Steiner from Douglas County. Supporter Ted Harvey joins the show and assures grassroots Steiner fully backs opting out of the disastrous open primary. Plus Tina Peters is free today! Chuck and Julie Open with Colorado Republican Party News In this episode of The Chuck and Julie Show, hosts Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden open with major news from the Colorado Republican Party. They discuss the party meeting in Buena Vista, where Craig Steiner of Douglas County was elected the new Colorado GOP chair after defeating Joe Oltmann and Jeremy Goodall. The hosts bring on former Colorado legislator and strategist Ted Harvey, who supported Steiner's campaign and helped explain what the leadership change may mean for the party going forward. Ted Harvey Describes Craig Steiner as a Tactician Ted Harvey describes Craig Steiner as a political tactician rather than a loud partisan figure. He explains that Steiner previously served as secretary and chair of the Douglas County Republican Party and created a voter-targeting program called Voter Spectrum, which has been used for get-out-the-vote efforts, door knocking, phone banking, and campaign organizing. Harvey argues that Steiner is strong on conservative issues such as life, guns, taxes, unions, and education, and points to Douglas County victories, including Republican wins and school-board efforts, as evidence that Steiner understands how to organize and win. Ballot Harvesting and Get-Out-the-Vote Strategy Chuck asks about ballot harvesting and whether it will be part of the Colorado GOP's future strategy. He recalls using absentee voting and ballot collection in Glendale years earlier and argues that Republicans have often been outworked by Democrats on this front. Harvey says Douglas County Republicans have used similar tactics successfully, especially in smaller races where turnout is lower, but acknowledges that large-scale ballot harvesting requires money, volunteers, organization, and paid effort. He also notes that the Colorado Republican Party does not currently have much money, making fundraising and organizational rebuilding essential. The Opt-Out Issue and Republican Primaries A major focus of the interview is Colorado's opt-out issue, tied to the party's ability to opt out of open primaries and return more candidate selection power to Republican caucus and assembly participants. Harvey says he has been on the front line helping push opt-out efforts and would not have supported Steiner if Steiner were not aligned with him on that issue. He says Steiner opposed Proposition 108 when it was on the ballot and believed the party should opt out as quickly as possible. Harvey argues that establishment figures have used open primaries to influence Republican nominations and keep conservatives from winning. Party Debt, Legal Bills, and Donor Confidence Chuck and Julie also ask about party finances, debt, and legal bills left from the previous administration. Harvey says donors were reluctant to give money while the party appeared focused on legal battles and internal fights rather than electing Republicans. He says Steiner's first task will be to understand the lawsuits, invoices, and financial obligations facing the party. Harvey believes that if donors see competent leadership and assurance that money will go toward winning elections instead of paying attorneys, they may begin contributing again. Neutral Leadership and Avoiding the Enemy List The hosts discuss internal party fights, including what they describe as “enemy lists” and attacks on grassroots conservatives under prior party leadership. Harvey says Steiner will not create an enemy list and will not use the chairmanship to put his thumb on the scale in primaries. While Chuck and Julie express interest in seeing some establishment Republicans challenged, Harvey argues that the chair should not personally drive primary attacks. Instead, he says the state party should focus on making the process fair and preventing establishment forces from tilting the playing field against conservatives. The RNC, NRCC, and Future Assemblies Harvey says the Republican National Committee and national Republican groups will need to decide whether to work with the Colorado GOP if the party moves forward with opt-out. He argues that Steiner's temperament may help because Steiner is not a bomb-thrower, but someone focused on doing the work. Harvey says the party will need to prepare for a very different nomination process, including state, county, state House, and state Senate assemblies where Republican activists and caucus participants will have far more influence in selecting nominees. Tina Peters Released from Custody After the Ted Harvey interview, Chuck and Julie turn to the release of Tina Peters, who was freed that morning. They discuss her interview with Steve Bannon, where she said she remained concerned about election machines and vote-flipping claims. Chuck and Julie criticize media descriptions that characterize Peters as being imprisoned for “election fraud,” arguing that the actual charges related to official misconduct, impersonation, and attempts to influence a public servant. They also criticize Republicans and Democrats who opposed her release, while noting that Governor Jared Polis may have had political reasons for granting relief. Colorado Politics, Jared Polis, and Party Divisions The hosts speculate about Governor Jared Polis's motives, including whether his decision regarding Tina Peters may be connected to future national ambitions. They also discuss divisions within Colorado politics, the role of county clerks, and the divide between grassroots Republicans and establishment figures. Chuck argues that the state may eventually become ready for a real alternative to Democratic governance if economic and political conditions continue to decline, though he also acknowledges that opt-out alone will not guarantee statewide Republican victories. Media Humor, Spencer Pratt, and Campaign Messaging The episode later shifts into commentary on media, campaign ads, and political humor. Chuck and Julie discuss Spencer Pratt's Los Angeles mayoral campaign messaging and praise a satirical ad portraying left-leaning media outlets as a kind of ideological treatment. They argue that humor can be powerful political messaging when it is funny because it contains truth. The hosts contrast this style with Republican messaging they see as less creative, saying conservatives could benefit from sharper, more intelligent humor. CBS, CNN, Barry Weiss, and Legacy Media The hosts also comment on legacy media upheaval, including reports involving Barry Weiss, CBS/60 Minutes figures, Scott Pelley, Anderson Cooper, CNN, and possible changes in major network leadership. Chuck and Julie frame these developments as signs that old media institutions are losing influence and that some longtime media personalities may not understand how much the media landscape has changed. Their broader point is that legacy outlets can no longer assume the same level of audience control or cultural authority they once had. Closing Thoughts on the Colorado GOP's Future Chuck and Julie close by saying they believe Craig Steiner's leadership could help stabilize and revitalize the Colorado Republican Party, especially if the opt-out process moves forward. They describe him as a calmer, more practical chair who may not be as combative as past figures but may be better suited to rebuilding party structure. The episode ends with optimism that the party may be moving toward a more grassroots-driven future, even while acknowledging that organization, money, unity, and candidate quality will still determine whether Republicans can win.
This episode of the Dan Caplis Show is a must-listen for anyone concerned about the future of Colorado politics. Joining Heidi Gahnal in the studio is Robyn Carnes, a passionate advocate for fair representation and a voice for the silent majority. Together, they dive into the critical issue of the Democrats' proposed ballot initiative that would eliminate the independent Congressional Redistricting Commission and replace it with a map that would lock in seven seats leaning far left and one seat leaning right. The conversation covers the importance of this issue, the potential consequences of the proposed changes, and the need for Colorado voters to take action. Robin Carns shares her expertise and insights, highlighting the need for a more balanced approach to redistricting and the importance of giving voters a voice in the process. The discussion also touches on the challenges facing the Republican Party in Colorado, including the need to build trust with donors and develop a clear plan for success. Heidi and Robyn also discuss the upcoming Rocky Mountain Voice Freedom Festival, which promises to be an exciting event for conservatives in Colorado. With a lineup of talented speakers and musicians, this festival is a great opportunity for like-minded individuals to come together and make their voices heard. Also, Craig Steiner joins the program to close out the show for two full segments after earning election as chair of the Colorado Republican Party. If you're concerned about the future of Colorado politics and want to stay informed, tune in to this episode of the Dan Caplis Show to hear Heidi's full conversations with Robyn Carnes and Craig Steiner. Don't miss these insightful discussions on the critical issues facing our state and the importance of taking action to protect our rights and freedoms.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In a state where Republicans have struggled to gain traction in recent election cycles, the newly elected chairman of the Colorado Republican Party, Craig Steiner, is taking the reins with a clear vision for the party's future. As he settles into his new role, he's facing a daunting task: unifying a party divided by infighting and lack of trust among donors.Craig Steiner's experience as a long-time Republican Party activist and former chairman of Douglas County has given him a unique perspective on the party's challenges. He's aware of the difficulties his predecessors have faced and is determined to break the cycle of division and negativity. By focusing on the party's core mission – electing Republicans – and avoiding the distractions of internal conflicts, Steiner hopes to bring stability and trust back to the party.In this episode, Steiner shares his plans for addressing the party's fundraising struggles and getting out the vote. He emphasizes the importance of having a physical office presence and working with county leaders to mobilize volunteers. With a diverse range of opinions within the party, Steiner acknowledges the challenge of unifying the party's various factions, but remains optimistic about the potential for success.To hear more about Craig Steiner's vision for the Colorado Republican Party and his strategies for overcoming the challenges ahead, tune in to this episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aaron J. French is a post-doctoral researcher in Religious Studies at the University of Erfurt in Germany. His main research focuses on the History of Esotericism, the History and Philosophy of Science, Sacred Space and Architecture, modern German Philosophy, and Science and Technology Studies. In this episode we discuss J. Allen Hynek, Jacques Vallee, Rudolf Steiner, and UAPs.UAP chat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLQZqzee3oU&ab_channel=HermitixPodcastVideo link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1irPsTBWXxA&feature=youtu.beKnowing Others paper: https://correspondencesjournal.com/ojs/ojs/index.php/home/article/view/152---Become part of the Hermitix community:Hermitix Twitter - / hermitixpodcast Hermitix Discord - / discord Support Hermitix:Hermitix Subscription - https://hermitix.net/subscribe/ Patreon - www.patreon.com/hermitix Donations: - https://www.paypal.me/hermitixpodHermitix Merchandise - http://teespring.com/stores/hermitix-2Bitcoin Donation Address: 3LAGEKBXEuE2pgc4oubExGTWtrKPuXDDLKEthereum Donation Address: 0xfd2bbe86d6070004b9Cbf682aB2F25170046A996
The tribute speeches and induction ceremony for 2025 National Wrestling Hall of Fame Distinguished Member Terry Steiner.
Saxum West's Nina Steiner on finding space for Hollywood studios, the LA office market, proof stacking, and why the riches are in the follow-up. The Crexi Podcast connects commercial real estate (CRE) professionals with industry insights built for smart decision-making. In each episode, we explore the latest trends, innovations and opportunities shaping commercial real estate, because we believe knowledge should move at the speed of ambition and every conversation should empower professionals to act with greater clarity and confidence. Nina Steiner spent years in television production before finding her way into commercial real estate. Ten years later she is one of the only tenant reps in LA who specializes in entertainment: securing writers' rooms, production studio space, and flexible offices for showrunners, studios, and production companies. In this episode, Nina joins host Adam Siegel to talk about what makes entertainment real estate different, how she built her niche, why she chose proof stacking over cold calling, and what staying in the game looks like. Welcome to The Crexi Podcast Introducing Nina Steiner of Saxum West From TV production and internet new media to commercial real estate The Santa Monica meetup that started everything Getting licensed and choosing the tenant rep lane What surprised her most: rules, vetting, and learning on the fly Why having a previous career is an advantage in brokerage Storytelling as a trust-building tool How the stonecutter's creed changed her mindset Why she chose tenant rep over investment sales and landlord work Flexible workspace as a differentiator — volume where others saw small potatoes How the entertainment niche evolved without a business plan The showrunner rule: they want to be close to where they live Eight leases closed in Sherman Oaks in Q1 Why production people avoid managed flex: always in stealth mode What entertainment clients need: perimeter offices, bullpen, large conference room Working a UK writers' room placement across a 12-hour time difference Staying calm, offering options, and not deciding for the client Proof stacking: saying the same thing consistently even when there are crickets Be niche, narrow your market, know your lane Boutique versus big shop and why flexibility matters LA's entertainment real estate ebbs and flows with content cycles Amenities are now table stakes for landlords Lease terms getting shorter: startups taking 3 months, not 3 years Staying on the good side of both sides: communication first Act when a space hits 90% of the boxes — a LOI is non-binding Watching streaming as research for her next client LinkedIn, proof stacking, and posting even when nobody seems to be watching AI tools: Gamma for presentations, Claude for prompts and content Building referrals through warm calls and doing right by people The Vancouver referral: turning a cross-border deal into a handoff Advice for early-career brokers: interview tenured brokers, pick one lane The thrill of the hunt: what still gets her up in the morning The 10-minute walk to the beach and why balance matters Half a commission beats no commission About Nina Steiner: Nina Steiner has over 10 years of experience as a commercial real estate tenant representative in Los Angeles, specializing in office and retail leasing. Her unique background as a former television line producer gives her an edge in understanding the entertainment industry's specific needs, from securing writers' rooms to finding the perfect space for production studios. Nina focuses on providing customized solutions that fit each client's long-term business objectives, whether it's in traditional leasing or managed flexible office spaces around the globe. Nina approaches each client with empathy, putting herself in their shoes to understand their challenges and goals. Her niche expertise in finding creative spaces for Hollywood studios sets her apart, while her deep knowledge of the LA market ensures her clients get the best possible deals. Through regular social media updates and educational content, she keeps tenants informed about market trends and real estate opportunities. Nina is a trusted advisor for businesses looking to expand or relocate in Los Angeles. For show notes, past guests, and more CRE content, please check out Crexi's blog.Looking to stay ahead in commercial real estate? Visit Crexi to explore properties, analyze markets, and connect with opportunities nationwide. Follow Crexi:https://www.crexi.com/ https://www.crexi.com/instagram https://www.crexi.com/facebook https://www.crexi.com/twitter https://www.crexi.com/linkedin https://www.youtube.com/crexi About Crexi:Crexi is reimagining commercial real estate with an AI-powered platform built to deliver smarter, more efficient solutions at every stage of the deal lifecycle. From real-time data and market insights with Crexi Intelligence, to targeted property marketing and seamless deal management through Crexi PRO, and a transparent, time-bound bidding experience with Crexi Auction— Crexi enables users to evaluate opportunities, maximize exposure, and close with speed and confidence. To date, Crexi has subsidized over $2.74 trillion in property value, 26 billion square feet listed, and supports a growing community of more than 23 million yearly users.
The tribute speeches and induction ceremony for 2025 National Wrestling Hall of Fame Distinguished Member Terry Steiner. Tribute speakers: Adeline Gray and Rich Bender. Tribune emcee: Tim Johnson. Induction ceremony emcee: Sandy Stevens. Recorded June 2025.SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOWApple Podcasts | Spreaker | iHeartRadio | Spotify | Android | RSS Support Mat Talk OnlineIf you love exceptional wrestling content and value the deep historical research and extensive reach of these shows, consider becoming a contributor to Mat Talk On-Line today. Every contribution ensures the continued production of unique insights found nowhere else, and in exchange for patronage, supporters gain access to exclusive bonus content, ad-free podcast feeds, and specialized research features. The level of contribution is entirely a perso
C'est à l'occasion de la sortie de son nouvel album, intitulé Exile to Hollywood et consacré aux compositeurs de l'âge d'or du cinéma américain, que nous recevons Isabelle Durin, violoniste passionnée de musique de film, pour une conversation à bâtons rompus autour de Steiner, Waxman, Rózsa, Tiomkin et bien d'autres.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
After losing her husband Mike, fifty-five-year-old Marsha Mills found purpose in caring for her two beloved granddaughters and occasionally watching Evan and Noah Shoup, toddlers from her daughter's best friend's family.On May 10th, 2006, that love would destroy her life. After feeding lunch to the four children, Marsha took them outside to play. With her infant granddaughter in her arms, she turned to close the back door when two-year-old Noah fell from the porch to the concrete patio below.The child was unconscious. Marsha moved him inside, called his father, and waited for emergency workers while caring for three other frightened children. When Noah died the next day, Marsha was charged with murder.The case against her was built on medical opinion, not evidence.Detective Larry Hootman, who first investigated the scene, testified it was a "freak accident." He was removed from the case. Detective Michael Goodwin used ultraviolet imaging throughout Marsha's house but found no substances or evidence of violence.No physical evidence. No weapon. No motive.But Dr. Daryl Steiner of Akron Children's Hospital had an opinion.Based on Noah's injuries, Steiner testified the child had been abused. The prosecution's medical examiner agreed, using a doll to demonstrate how Marsha allegedly slammed the toddler repeatedly against surfaces.The defense fought back with science.Biomechanical engineer Dr. Chris VanEe built a replica of Marsha's back porch and used crash test dummies to prove a fall down the steps could cause fatal injuries. Forensic pathologist Dr. John Plunkett testified that Noah's death was "probably accidental" and consistent with Marsha's account.Two experts saying accident. Two saying murder.The jury chose to believe the prosecutors.After five hours of deliberation, they found Marsha Mills guilty of murder. She was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after fifteen years.She remains behind bars today, a grandmother whose only crime was caring for children who weren't her own.VOTE FOR OMR AUSTRALIAN AUDIO AWARDSEARLY AND AD FREE ACCESS: for as little as $1.69 a week!Apple + HEREPatreon and find us on Facebook here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Die Zürcher Bildungsdirektorin Silvia Steiner (Mitte) hat ihren Verzicht auf eine erneute Kandidatur für den Regierungsrat bekannt gegeben. Die Mitte-Politikerin leitet die kantonale Bildungsdirektion bereits seit dem Jahr 2015. Weitere Themen: · Bundesgericht weist Beschwerde gegen Zürcher Kantonsrätin Garcia ab. · Zürcher Staatsanwaltschaft hat immer mehr zu tun. · Zürich Tourismus hat neuen Werbeslogan.
I denne episoden utforsker vi skjæringspunktet mellom avansert maskinlæring, anvendt etikk og sosiopolitisk transformasjon. Vi har besøk av Preben Monteiro-Ness, en ledende kapasitet innen AI-sikkerhet for å dekonstruere mekanismene bak moderne nevrale nettverk og de systemiske risikoene som følger i kjølvannet av superintelligens. Sentrale tekniske begreper Explainable AI (XAI): Feltet innen kunstig intelligens som søker å gjøre maskinlæringsmodellers beslutningsprosesser transparente og forståelige for mennesker. Essential for å unngå "snø-bias" (hvor modellen identifiserer en hund som en husky kun basert på bakgrunnen). World Models: En tilnærming der AI-en bygger en intern, abstrakt representasjon av det fysiske eller konseptuelle miljøet den opererer i, snarere enn bare å utføre statistiske sannsynlighetsberegninger på sekvensielle data. RLHF (Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback): En treningsmetode hvor menneskelige operatører rangerer modellens svar for å finjustere dens sosiale og faglige kompetanse. Zero Marginal Cost Society: En økonomisk teori (popularisert av Jeremy Rifkin) om en fremtid der kostnaden ved å produsere en ekstra enhet av en vare eller tjeneste nærmer seg null, drevet av automatisering og AI. Filosofiske og litterære referanser Kants Kategoriske Imperativ: Drøftet i lys av AI-ens intensjonalitet; er en handling moralsk hvis den utføres av riktige grunner, eller er resultatet det eneste som teller? Bostroms "Paperclip Maximizer": Et tankeeksperiment som illustrerer risikoen ved feiljusterte mål (alignment problem), hvor en superintelligens kan ødelegge verden i et forsøk på å utføre en triviell oppgave. Alasdair MacIntyre & Telos: Diskusjon rundt menneskelivets formål (telos) i en post-arbeid-æra. Oppenheimer-analogien: En refleksjon over det teknologiske "point of no return" og behovet for globalt samarbeid for å unngå eksistensiell risiko. Kulturelle nedslagspunkter Satanisme og AI-protopia: En anekdotisk analyse av hvordan visjoner om kunstig intelligens har manifestert seg i subkulturer på Grünerløkka lenge før LLM-revolusjonen. Steinerskole-utopien: En metafor for et samfunn fokusert på kreativitet, smal kunst og menneskelig samhandling fremfor industriell produktivitet. Sora og AI-generert video: Status for nåværende generative modeller for levende bilder og de tekniske begrensningene knyttet til minne og beregningskraft (compute). Anbefalt litteratur: Nick Bostrom: Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies Jeremy Rifkin: The Zero Marginal Cost Society Alasdair MacIntyre: After Virtue See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
After losing her husband Mike, fifty-five-year-old Marsha Mills found purpose in caring for her two beloved granddaughters and occasionally watching Evan and Noah Shoup, toddlers from her daughter's best friend's family.On May 10th, 2006, that love would destroy her life. After feeding lunch to the four children, Marsha took them outside to play. With her infant granddaughter in her arms, she turned to close the back door when two-year-old Noah fell from the porch to the concrete patio below.The child was unconscious. Marsha moved him inside, called his father, and waited for emergency workers while caring for three other frightened children. When Noah died the next day, Marsha was charged with murder.The case against her was built on medical opinion, not evidence.Detective Larry Hootman, who first investigated the scene, testified it was a "freak accident." He was removed from the case. Detective Michael Goodwin used ultraviolet imaging throughout Marsha's house but found no substances or evidence of violence.No physical evidence. No weapon. No motive.But Dr. Daryl Steiner of Akron Children's Hospital had an opinion.Based on Noah's injuries, Steiner testified the child had been abused. The prosecution's medical examiner agreed, using a doll to demonstrate how Marsha allegedly slammed the toddler repeatedly against surfaces.The defense fought back with science.Biomechanical engineer Dr. Chris VanEe built a replica of Marsha's back porch and used crash test dummies to prove a fall down the steps could cause fatal injuries. Forensic pathologist Dr. John Plunkett testified that Noah's death was "probably accidental" and consistent with Marsha's account.Two experts saying accident. Two saying murder.The jury chose to believe the prosecutors.After five hours of deliberation, they found Marsha Mills guilty of murder. She was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after fifteen years.She remains behind bars today, a grandmother whose only crime was caring for children who weren't her own.VOTE FOR OMR AUSTRALIAN AUDIO AWARDSEARLY AND AD FREE ACCESS: for as little as $1.69 a week!Apple + HEREPatreon and find us on Facebook here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this week’s episode we be talking with Mike Harris and John Green from Gun Owner Action League (GOAL). For listeners of this podcast I want to give you an advance heads up on a new product from MantisX called the Tor-X available the first week of August 2024. The TOR-X is the sublime marriage of the military-grade Steiner laser and the power of the MantisX. The MantisX hardware is now integrated inside a Steiner laser. Pair it via Bluetooth to your smartphone or tablet, and you’re training package just got more complete. Combat-worthy lights and lasers, Mil-grade aluminum, built Steiner strong. Designed to expose, blind and target with maximum impact. Up to any challenge. Just like you. The TOR-X features a Type III hard-anodized machined-aluminum housing and rail mount. It is dustproof, splash-proof to IP54 standards, and available with a green (520 nm) laser. The direct diode type laser operates in extreme cold weather. Other features include left and right fire buttons for ambidextrous use, constant power drive that ensures the laser output remains constant throughout the life of the battery, low battery indication, as well as windage and elevation bore sight adjustment screws. The universal rail mount on the TOR-X will fit all pistols that have a Picatinny or Weaver style rail forward of the trigger guard. This design allows optimum positioning of the laser so that the fire buttons are easily accessible for a wide range of users. I’ve been using the Tor-X for several weeks on my Glock17 and my Glock48 now and when paired with the MantisX app it’s taken my training to a new level. Check out all of our episodes at: https://podcasts.concealedcarry.com/the-firearm-trainers-podcast/ Email comments, topic suggestions, or questions to us at FTP@ConcealedCarry.comFollow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/firearmtrainerspodcast/ Remember we bring you this podcast to support the industry, the second amendment, and most importantly every firearm instructor in America that dedicates time and energy into making gun owners more knowledgeable. #FirearmTrainerPodcast #FirearmTrainerAssociation #FTAProtect #RangeTech #GOAL #NRAVoices The post Gun Owner Action League first appeared on The Firearm Trainer Podcast.
We cross the hills to Lindblum, meet Regent (and oglop!?) Cid, Zidane and Steiner agree but mostly bicker, and Dagger reveals her intentions. Plus, Freya is introduced to the story and we ponder on how FFIX's commentary on class differs from FFVII.
Josh Steiner is a polymath of the New York and D.C. power corridors across government, media, and finance, and co-author of From Mistakes to Meaning: Owning Your Past So It Doesn't Own You. Josh rose to national prominence as the youngest-ever Chief of Staff at the U.S. Treasury in the Clinton administration, where he made a high-profile mistake he unpacks in the book. He pivoted to finance as a media investment banker and co-founder of private equity firm Quadrangle Group in 2000, worked as an operator at Bloomberg in the 2010s, has served on Yale's Investment Committee for nearly a decade, and five years ago returned to private equity as co-founder of SSW Partners managing capital for a few families. Our conversation focuses on mistakes, quite a contrast from other discussions on the podcast. We kick it off with Josh's big mistake at Treasury and analyze the nature of mistakes and what happened to Josh. We then turn to his mistakes in investing across deals, managing an investment business, managing people, and serving on Investment Committees. We close with frameworks to avoid mistakes and with Josh turning the table on me to discuss an impactful mistake I made that I've never discussed before. Learn More Follow Ted on Twitter at @tseides or LinkedIn Subscribe to the mailing list Access Transcript with Premium Membership Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant (https://thepodcastconsultant.com)
After losing her husband Mike, fifty-five-year-old Marsha Mills found purpose in caring for her two beloved granddaughters and occasionally watching Evan and Noah Shoup, toddlers from her daughter's best friend's family.On May 10th, 2006, that love would destroy her life. After feeding lunch to the four children, Marsha took them outside to play. With her infant granddaughter in her arms, she turned to close the back door when two-year-old Noah fell from the porch to the concrete patio below.The child was unconscious. Marsha moved him inside, called his father, and waited for emergency workers while caring for three other frightened children. When Noah died the next day, Marsha was charged with murder.The case against her was built on medical opinion, not evidence.Detective Larry Hootman, who first investigated the scene, testified it was a "freak accident." He was removed from the case. Detective Michael Goodwin used ultraviolet imaging throughout Marsha's house but found no substances or evidence of violence.No physical evidence. No weapon. No motive.But Dr. Daryl Steiner of Akron Children's Hospital had an opinion.Based on Noah's injuries, Steiner testified the child had been abused. The prosecution's medical examiner agreed, using a doll to demonstrate how Marsha allegedly slammed the toddler repeatedly against surfaces.The defense fought back with science.Biomechanical engineer Dr. Chris VanEe built a replica of Marsha's back porch and used crash test dummies to prove a fall down the steps could cause fatal injuries. Forensic pathologist Dr. John Plunkett testified that Noah's death was "probably accidental" and consistent with Marsha's account.Two experts saying accident. Two saying murder.The jury chose to believe the prosecutors.After five hours of deliberation, they found Marsha Mills guilty of murder. She was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after fifteen years.She remains behind bars today, a grandmother whose only crime was caring for children who weren't her own.VOTE FOR OMR AUSTRALIAN AUDIO AWARDSEARLY AND AD FREE ACCESS: for as little as $1.69 a week!Apple + HEREPatreon and find us on Facebook here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode we're welcoming Amber Steiner with LPT, who became interested in real estate after experiencing her own home buying journey. We hear how she rebuilt her career after hitting rock bottom and why gratitude became the key to success. From thank-you cards to client events, she shows us why the job is less about transactions and more about the people. In this episode: How Amber ended up working as a nanny in Long Island. What her trade show work experience taught her about logistics and people. How buying her own house made real estate feel like a great opportunity. How having a tiny network made early career growth extremely difficult for her. The lesson she learned about how leads can require months of follow-up. How open houses helped her build face-to-face trust with prospects. Why obtaining her Wisconsin license became a foundation for referrals. What fishing, family trips, and cabin time reveal to her about balance. How hitting her career rock bottom forced a return to business basics. The client events that Amber designs around connections instead of transactions. How your communication style needs to shift according to each client's needs. The current state of the market, which Amber describes as the “Wild West.” Why Amber prefers to team up with other solo agents to hold events. The NAR settlement and how it has affected buyers in Minnesota. Contact Amber: Cell: 651-285-5510 Website: https://www.ambersteiner.com Email: ambersteiner.realtor@gmail.com
Rudolf Steiner warned of a dark spiritual intelligence entering the modern world — a force tied to materialism, technology, control, and the hardening of human consciousness. Was Ahriman only a symbol… or did Steiner believe something was coming?Full episode here: https://youtu.be/wMzKO_z8htI?si=ssjKvOpe7LunLgVb
Ever wondered why Cloud feels like an anti‑hero, why Squall radiates lone‑wolf introvert energy, why Zidane is so charismatic, or why Tidus is secretly one of the most emotionally intelligent protagonists in the series? In this episode, we break down the real psychology behind your favorite Final Fantasy characters using: The Meyers-Briggs MBTI Color Code From FFVII, FFVIII, FFIX, and FFX, we analyze how each hero's personality shapes their journey — and why these characters feel so alive decades later. We cover fan‑favorites like: Cloud, Tifa, Aerith, Sephiroth Squall, Rinoa, Quistis, Seifer Zidane, Garnet, Vivi, Steiner, Kuja Tidus, Yuna, Auron, Lulu, Wakka And we explore how their personality types influence: Their relationships Their growth arcs Their leadership styles Their mythic roles in the story Their emotional strengths and flaws If you've ever taken a personality test and thought, “Which Final Fantasy character am I actually closest to?” this episode is for you. Whether you're a psychology nerd, a Final Fantasy fan, or both, this is one of our most fun deep‑dives yet. Enjoy the podcast, and don't forget to become a part of our Patreon community if you have the means. Thanks for watching! **Listen On Spotify**: https://open.spotify.com/show/4gIzzvT3AfRHjGlfF8kFW3 **Listen On Soundcloud**: https://soundcloud.com/resonantarc **Listen On iTunes**: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/state-of-the-arc-podcast/id1121795837 **Listen On Pocket Cast**: http://pca.st/NJsJ Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/resonantarc Subscribe Star: https://www.subscribestar.com/resonant-arc Twitter: https://twitter.com/resonantarc Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/resonantarc Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/resonantarc TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@resonantarc
In this special episode of Tangent Proptech, Edward Cohen is on the red carpet at one of the most exclusive commercial real estate events of the year: the Real Estate Gala in New York City. This episode features rapid-fire conversations with founders, investors, brokers, developers, and operators across the proptech and commercial real estate ecosystem. A big focus of the evening was on AI. Namely, this question: how is AI being used in real estate right now? And possibly more front-and-center: what's hype and what's here to stay? From leasing and marketing to underwriting and financial modeling, this episode explores where artificial intelligence is already driving value in real estate, where it's falling short, and how we can close the gap.(00:00) - Welcome to the Real Estate Gala Red Carpet Interviews (02:30) - Cyrus Claffey (ButterflyMX): AI Across Product, Marketing, & Operations (06:00) - Zach Molzer (Molzer Development) & Madi Bremer (CBRE): Networking & AI in Leasing (08:30) - Gabe Einhorn (VryfID): Content, Consistency, and AI Efficiency (10:00) - Kaylan Knitowski (Franklin Street): AI Workflows and Competing with Experience (13:30) - David Auerbach (Hoya Capital): Driving Tech Adoption in Real Estate (14:45) - Adam Steiner (Rick, Steiner, Fell, and Benowitz): Document Automation & Bridging Tech and Business (16:45) - Humberto Lopes (HL Dynasty, Gotham Housing Alliance): A Human-First Real Estate Perspective (19:15) - Jovian Lopes (Gotham Housing Alliance): AI for Research vs Human Relationships (21:00) - Lauren O'Breza (Foresite CRE): AI in Brokerage & Underwriting (24:30) - Pablo Barreiro (Fortec): Simplifying Tech Adoption & the Future of Financing (26:00) - Shanti Ryle (Crexi): AI Data Enrichment & Storytelling Advantage (30:30) - Rameen Inayat (Ryan): AI for Admin & Property Tax Insights (32:00) - Collaboration Superpower: Priya Parker
Nestlemania and JC discuss...Will Jacob Fatu thrive in this role?Danhausen at the Miz's house... What will happen next.Does Bron Breakker need to change his name to Steiner?Jacey Jane becoming a huge star right in front of us?Can NXT rebound from losing so many stars?All this and more ...this week on the Jobber Knocker Podcast.Check out the merchandise! https://www.teepublic.com/JobberKnockerFollow us on Twitter!@JobberKnocker@Nestlemania@JCoftheJK@TJoftheJK@RayRayoftheJK@DommyFeds33@Danyfab@SSJPegasusFollow us on Facebook & Instagram @JobberKnocker!Visit Jobberknocker.com for some great wrestling articles!
In this Omni Talk Retail interview, recorded live from World Retail Congress 2026 in Berlin, Chris Walton connects with Tim Steiner, CEO of Ocado, to discuss the rapidly evolving future of grocery ecommerce, fulfillment, and retail automation. Drawing from Ocado's work with retailers across global markets, Tim explains why grocery ecommerce continues to operate so differently market by market, from the UK's delivery-led ecosystem to France's pickup dominance and the increasingly hybrid US landscape. The conversation explores how local consumer behavior, labor economics, and store infrastructure continue to shape fulfillment strategies worldwide. Tim also shares why automation and micro-fulfillment are beginning to regain momentum after several uneven years across the industry. He explains why many early automation deployments struggled to produce strong returns, why growing ecommerce volumes are creating new urgency around fulfillment capacity, and how Ocado believes robotics can help retailers improve both operational efficiency and customer experience over time. The interview also dives into: • Why the US grocery ecommerce market has evolved so rapidly • The operational differences between delivery and pickup models • Why many first-generation micro-fulfillment solutions failed • How automation economics improve as online grocery scales • The growing capacity challenges facing US grocers • Why sub-one-hour fulfillment changes the economics of picking • How robotics can improve both efficiency and speed • Why retailers may eventually need automation to stay competitive • The complexity behind building scalable grocery automation systems • How Ocado approaches fulfillment differently from traditional automation providers Thank you to Vusion for supporting Omni Talk Retail's live coverage from Berlin. #WorldRetailCongress #WRC2026 #OmniTalkRetail #Ocado #GroceryRetail #Ecommerce #MicroFulfillment #RetailAutomation #SupplyChain #FutureOfRetail
On America at Night with McGraw Milhaven, Scott MacFarlane, American journalist and chief Washington correspondent, debuted his new weekly segment “MacFarlane Mondays.” MacFarlane discussed the latest developments surrounding the shooting near the White House Correspondents' Dinner at the Washington Hilton, and what the incident means for security around major political and media events in Washington. Next, Tracy Walder, NewsNation National Security Contributor and former intelligence officer, joined the program to discuss current national security concerns and the evolving threat environment in the United States and abroad. Later in the show, Michael Lynton, former President of Sony Pictures, and Joshua Steiner, former Chief of Staff in the Clinton administration, joined for a two-part conversation about their book and concept “Owning Mistakes.” The discussion focused on high-profile professional missteps, the lessons leaders can learn from failure, and how acknowledging mistakes can become a powerful tool for personal and professional growth. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Happy Monday! It's Jen Winters & Timmy today, we recap the NFL draft & tell you where all the Buckeyes went, we play some Steiner math for you, Tomlin thinks Aaron Rodgers will return, we give you a Foodgasm & we chat MLB with Jayson's Beef.
Rocker Steiner and Kade Bruno join the podcast to talk all things rodeo, adrenaline, and country music. From the reality of climbing into the chute knowing things could go wrong, to the brotherhood behind the scenes, they break down what life as a professional bareback and saddle bronc rider is really like.They also dive into how Yellowstone and Taylor Sheridan helped push rodeo and country culture into the spotlight, why Nashville is becoming a hub for rodeo events, and how the lifestyle compares to touring as a country artist. Plus, stories involving Koe Wetzel, Trace Adkins, Kid Rock, and even a jab from Post Malone.This episode is brought to you by Music City Rodeo. Get your tickets now at musiccityrodeo.com.whiskeyriff.comshop.whiskeyriff.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.