Podcasts about two generations

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Best podcasts about two generations

Latest podcast episodes about two generations

In Total Alignment
Thriving After Cancer: Tammy's Story of Strength, Healing, and Hormone Health

In Total Alignment

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 56:13


In this episode of Two Generations, One Mission, we sit down with our courageous friend Tammy—cancer survivor, wellness advocate, and shining example of resilience.Tammy opens up about her journey through both breast and cervical cancer, the mindset shifts that helped her heal, and how she found support in clean living and products that truly support hormone health.We also talk about her choice to become a Hugh & Grace Advocate and what she's learned about hormone disruptors and the power of detoxing your everyday routine.This conversation is packed with strength, hope, and real-life inspiration.Follow Tammy here -> https://www.instagram.com/tammy.rader73/Follow Susan here -> https://www.facebook.com/susan.moore.820351Follow Michelle here -> https://www.instagram.com/itsmichellepfile/

In Total Alignment
Two Generations, One Mission: A Mother's Day Conversation

In Total Alignment

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2025 56:22


In this heartfelt Mother's Day episode, we sit down for a raw and honest conversation between mother and daughter—one with decades of wisdom from raising two grown children, and one deep in the messy, beautiful middle of parenting a teen. We talk about the fears that kept us up at night, the mistakes we learned from, the moments we had to let go of control, and the unexpected joys along the way.Whether you're a new mom, in the trenches with teens, or figuring out how to parent adult children, this episode is a comforting reminder: you're not alone, and you're doing better than you think.This is a reflective listen for any woman who's ever felt overwhelmed by motherhood and the weight of balancing it all—filled with grace, laughter, and a few tears too.Grab a cup of tea or our favourite Adaptogen Complex and join us for a truly special conversation.Follow Susan here: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=866705373Follow Michelle here: https://www.facebook.com/michelle.pfile

The Hog Pod with Bo Mattingly
292. Clay & Gage Goodwin: A Razorback Legacy, Two Generations Strong

The Hog Pod with Bo Mattingly

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 56:58


In this episode of The Hog Pod, Razorback Baseball's Director of Operations, Clay Goodwin, reflects on 25 years with the program — from College World Series runs to unforgettable near-misses. Joining him is his 10-year-old son, Gage, the team's bat boy, who's already learning the game from the inside out. Together, they share a heartfelt look at family, legacy, and what it means to be part of Razorback baseball — generation to generation.-------- The full video version of this episode, including behind-the-scenes stories and insights from Hannah's life and career, is available exclusively on HogsPlus.com Follow us on social media! Twitter Facebook Instagram The Hog Pod is brought to you by South by Northwest Hospitality

In Total Alignment
Surprise Sneak Peek: The Episode That Started It All!

In Total Alignment

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2025 33:07


It's been a minute… and truthfully, I had to sit with myself and figure out what was next for this podcast. While In Total Alignment served me for a season, it no longer felt aligned—but I knew I wasn't done. I've always dreamed of a podcast that felt like two people chatting over coffee, diving into real, meaningful topics that matter—health, hormones, grief, business, detoxing, relationships… all of it.But I never found the right co-host—until now.Enter: My MOM.At 74, she's wise, bold, curious, and full of life—and our FB Live a few weeks ago made it crystal clear we were meant to do this together. That live turned into this sneak peek episode… and the beginning of something special.So here's your unofficial first taste of what's to come on Two Generations, One Mission: Healthy Topics to Help You Thrive at Any Age. We'll be sharing honest, unfiltered conversations about what it really takes to thrive—physically, emotionally, and spiritually—at any age. From hormone health, clean living, and mindset to grief, family dynamics, and personal growth, no topic is off limits. Tune in for real-life stories, laughs, wisdom, and the occasional difference of opinionOur official launch episode is just a few days away—so hit play, subscribe, and get ready. We are just getting started!

Bob Enyart Live

Listen in as Real Science Radio host Fred Williams and co-host Doug McBurney review and update some of Bob Enyart's legendary list of not so old things! From Darwin's Finches to opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, to carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations simply defy the claim that the earth is billions of years old. Real science demands the dismissal of the alleged million and billion year ages asserted by the ungodly and the foolish.     * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner.  * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including: - in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts. - The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies evolving too quickly, 

america university california world australia google earth science bible washington france space real nature africa european writing australian philadelphia evolution japanese dna minnesota tennessee modern hawaii wisconsin bbc 3d island journal nbc birds melbourne mt chile flash mass scientists abortion cambridge increasing pacific conservatives bone wyoming consistent generations iceland ohio state instant wired decades rapid nobel national geographic talks remembrance maui yellowstone national park wing copenhagen grand canyon chemical big bang nova scotia nbc news smithsonian secular daily mail telegraph temple university arial groundbreaking 2m screenshots helvetica papua new guinea charles darwin 10m variants death valley geology jellyfish american journal geo nps national park service hubble north carolina state university steve austin public libraries cambridge university press galapagos missoula geographic organisms mojave diabolical forest service aig darwinian veins mount st tyrannosaurus rex new scientist lincoln memorial helens plos one galapagos islands shri inky cambrian cmi human genetics pnas live science science daily canadian arctic opals asiatic spines canadian broadcasting corporation finches rsr park service two generations 3den unintelligible spirit lake junk dna space telescope science institute carlsbad caverns archaeopteryx fred williams ctrl f 260m nature geoscience from creation vertebrate paleontology from darwin 2fjournal physical anthropology eugenie scott british geological survey 3dtrue larval 252c adam riess bob enyart ctowud raleway oligocene 3dfalse jenolan caves ctowud a6t real science radio allan w eckert kgov
Real Science Radio

Listen in as Real Science Radio host Fred Williams and co-host Doug McBurney review and update some of Bob Enyart's legendary list of not so old things! From Darwin's Finches to opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, to carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations simply defy the claim that the earth is billions of years old. Real science demands the dismissal of the alleged million and billion year ages asserted by the ungodly and the foolish.   * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner.  * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including: - in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts. - The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies e

america god university california world australia google earth science bible washington france space real young nature africa european creator writing australian philadelphia evolution japanese dna minnesota tennessee modern hawaii wisconsin bbc 3d island journal nbc birds melbourne mt chile flash mass scientists cambridge increasing pacific bang bone wyoming consistent generations iceland ohio state instant wired decades rapid nobel scientific national geographic talks remembrance genetics maui yellowstone national park copenhagen grand canyon chemical big bang nova scotia nbc news smithsonian astronomy secular daily mail telegraph temple university arial canyon groundbreaking 2m screenshots helvetica papua new guinea charles darwin 10m variants death valley geology jellyfish american journal geo nps cosmology national park service hubble north carolina state university steve austin public libraries cambridge university press galapagos missoula geographic organisms mojave diabolical forest service aig darwinian veins mount st tyrannosaurus rex new scientist lincoln memorial helens plos one galapagos islands shri inky cambrian cmi human genetics pnas live science science daily canadian arctic opals asiatic spines canadian broadcasting corporation finches rsr park service two generations 3den unintelligible spirit lake junk dna space telescope science institute carlsbad caverns archaeopteryx fred williams ctrl f 260m nature geoscience from creation vertebrate paleontology from darwin 2fjournal physical anthropology eugenie scott british geological survey 3dtrue larval 252c adam riess ctowud bob enyart raleway oligocene 3dfalse jenolan caves ctowud a6t real science radio allan w eckert kgov
Fronteras
‘Be who you are, play who you are' — Two generations of Los Texmaniacs musicians talk career and influences

Fronteras

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 35:23


Texmaniacs founder Max Baca and his nephew and accordionist, Josh Baca, share stories from the road and about their mentor and friend, Flaco Jimenez.

The Language of Play - Kids that Listen, Speech Therapy, Language Development, Early Intervention
206 Jeremiah Program: Disrupting Poverty Two Generations At A Time A PODCASTHON SPECIAL EPISODE with Ally Hanten Ebert

The Language of Play - Kids that Listen, Speech Therapy, Language Development, Early Intervention

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 35:59


Hey Friends~  Podcasthon is a global movement of podcasters simultaneously promoting a charities of their choice. The Language of Play joins Podcasthon by highlighting the amazing impact of the Jeremiah Program, in this episode with Ally Hanten Ebert.  PODCASTHON: "Your platform. Their story. Simultaneously, we amplify causes that matter." JEREMIAH PROGRAM: "Disrupt the cycle of poverty for single mothers and their children,  TWO Generations at a time."  Jeremiah Program is a national organization with a mission to Disrupt Generational Poverty.  JP has worked with families across the country for the past 26 years, supporting them on their paths to economic mobility. "Single moms are the architects of their families' futures. Your support helps make that possible." You can GIVE to Jeremiah Program here:  https://jeremiahprogram.org/give/ Always cheering you on!  Dinalynn CONTACT the Host, Dinalynn:  hello@thelanguageofplay.com   ABOUT THE GUEST:    Ally Hanten Ebert is the Executive Director of Jeremiah Program-Rochester-SE, MN and has spent her career working to elevate the voices and experiences of young people and their families. She gained her experience working with young parents and homeless youth and moved into administrative leadership as her career evolved. Ally is dedicated to helping families get connected to support services; safe, permanent housing; educational opportunities and disrupting the systems that perpetuate poverty. She holds both a Bachelor of Science in Psychology and a Master's Degree in Human Development & Family Science: Couple and Family Therapy from North Dakota State University.   CONTACT THE GUEST:   ahantenebert@jeremiahprogram.org FB/IG: @jeremiahprogramrochester www.jeremiahprogram.org You can GIVE to Jeremiah Program here:  https://jeremiahprogram.org/give/   PODCASTHON WEBSITE:  https://podcasthon.org/   YOUR NEXT STEPS with THE LANGUAGE OF PLAY: I welcome your thoughts or questions!  hello@thelanguageofplay.com FREEBIES:    5 Ways To Get Your Kids To Listen Better: https://dinalynnr.systeme.io/7ca5ce43-d436ea91 21 Days of Encouragement:  https://dinalynnr.systeme.io/1-21signup Sign up for the Newsletter:  https://dinalynnr.systeme.io/newsletter-optin   ** For Speaking Engagements, Workshops, or Parent Coaching (virtual or live), contact me at hello@thelanguageofplay.com    If You Liked This Episode, You Will Want To Listen To These Episodes: 102 Top 4 Mistakes Parents Make And How to Correct Them! 108 EXPERT: Dewey Kraus Discusses Self-Compassion When Parenting 110 COACH: Angie Ellsworth Helps Parents Know Better, Do Better, and Feel Better - And Discusses Bullying 111 EXPERT: Dr. Ngoma Moghalu: Communicating Race & Cultural Differences to Kids In A Fun and Comfortable Way 123 Trauma EXPERT: Santou Carter: Effectively Using Play In Trauma Recovery 185 Anastasia Arauz Unraveling the Magic of Play Therapy in Child Development     Support for Traveling with Little Ones:  BabyQuip is the #1 baby gear rental service, and a total game changer for families who don't want to haul bulky gear while traveling! Follow this link for a BabyQuip Provider where you travel:  https://www.babyquip.com?a=7486bd3

WomanWorthy
Real Estate Entrepreneurs: Two Generations of Peruvian Women

WomanWorthy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 16:28


A 39-year old single woman, owner of a short-term apartment rental in Arequipa, Peru, is following in her mother's footsteps -- asserting her financial independence through real estate development. 

Sustainable Clinical Medicine with The Charting Coach
Episode 113: Two Generations In Medicine + Insights into Concierge Medicine and Podcasting

Sustainable Clinical Medicine with The Charting Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 48:04


Welcome to the Sustainable Clinical Medicine Podcast! Today, we're diving deep into the world of concierge medicine with our special guests, Dr. Sarah Davis and her daughter Stephanie Davis. Dr. Sarah Davis shares her journey of creating a successful concierge practice in Dallas, Texas, that allowed her to balance a demanding medical career while being present for her family. Joining her is Stephanie, a first-year medical student, who offers a fresh perspective on the evolving medical landscape and the importance of sustainable practices. This mother-daughter duo also co-hosts their own podcast, GenerationsMD, exploring medical topics across generations. Tune in as we explore their insights on sustainable practice management, the challenges and rewards of concierge medicine, and the importance of integrating creativity and innovation in the field of medicine. Whether you're a practicing physician or an aspiring medical professional, this episode is packed with valuable wisdom and inspiration. Don't forget to check out chartingcoach.ca/giveaway for a chance to win a prize that could enhance your medical practice! Here are 3 key takeaways from this episode: Building Patient Relationships: Dr. Sarah Davis emphasizes the importance of understanding and connecting with patients on a personal level. From scheduling appointments to knowing their life stories, this personal touch is a cornerstone of her concierge practice. Sustainable Practice Management: Running a practice with only 100 patients allows Dr. Davis to manage her time effectively, ensuring she provides quality care without burnout. This strategy highlights the balance between patient numbers and personal well-being. Embracing Creativity in Medicine: Both Dr. Davis and Stephanie encourage creativity in structuring one's medical career. Whether it's through embracing new practice models or utilizing social media for knowledge sharing, there's always room for innovation in medicine. Dr. Sarah Davis & Stephanie Davis Bio: Dr. Sarah Davis is a board-certified family physician in Dallas Texas where she has had a concierge medicine practice for the past 23 years. She was the first one in the area to open such a practice. Stephanie Davis is her daughter and is a first-year medical student. The two of them have a podcast and social media where they discuss generational differences in medicine and try to roast each other whenever possible. -------------- Don't miss out on your opportunity to join our giveaway, get your entry in at https://www.chartingcoach.ca/giveaway Would you like to view a transcript of this episode? Click here **** Charting Champions is a premiere, lifetime access Physician only program that is helping Physicians get home with today's work done. All the proven tools, support and community you need to create time for your life outside of medicine. Learn more at https://www.chartingcoach.ca **** Enjoying this podcast? Please share it with someone who would benefit. Also, don't forget to hit “follow” so you get all the new episodes as soon as they are released. **** Come hang out with me on Facebook or Instagram. Follow me @chartingcoach to get more practical tools to help you create sustainable clinical medicine in your life. **** Questions? Comments? Want to share how this podcast has helped you? Shoot me an email at admin@reachcareercoaching.ca. I would love to hear from you.

Art Hounds
Art Hounds recommend one-act plays, two generations of artists and art of the fjords

Art Hounds

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 3:45


From MPR News, Art Hounds are members of the Minnesota arts community who look beyond their own work to highlight what's exciting in local art. Their recommendations are lightly edited from the audio heard in the player above. Want to be an Art Hound? Submit here.One-act plays in WinonaDaryl Lanz, owner of Chapter Two Books in Winona, is glad to see Theatre Du Mississippi's One Act Play Festival returning for a second year. Playwrights from Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa submitted original work earlier this winter, and the winning four short plays will be performed together to make a performance running about two hours.The result is a grab-bag of comedy and drama by regional writers ranging from 10 to 50 minutes. Shows will be performed at the Valencia Arts Center's Academy Theatre in Winona this weekend and next, Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m.  A family of artistsVisual artist Fawzia Khan of Hopkins recommends the exhibit “Reflections and Conversations: Monica Rudquist and Jerry Rudquist” at the Catherine G. Murphy Gallery at St. Catherine University in St. Paul. Assistant professor Monica Rudquist explores the relationship between her ceramic art and paintings by her late father, Jerry Rudquist (1924-2001), who taught painting at Macalester College for 42 years. On the gallery's second floor, Sophia Gibson — an honors student of Monica's — extends the legacy one step further by curating an exhibit of Jerry's portraits. The exhibit runs through March 16, with an artist talk by Monica Rudquist on March 5 at 6:30 p.m. There will also be a screening and panel discussion of the short film “The Painted Eye,” which documents Jerry Rudquist's painting process on March 12. In the East Gallery, Monica Rudquist's deconstructed and reassembled bowls, plates and cylinders reflect the shape and textures of her father's work.  “Both artists deconstruct objects and put them together in new ways to create imaginary forms and leave the marks of their hands on the works,” Khan said. Pining for the fjordsDiane Hellekson, retired writer and former art critic for the St. Paul Pioneer Press, was inspired by the mixed media exhibit “Sund: Notes from the Sea” showing at Form + Content Gallery in Minneapolis. Minneapolis artist Moira Bateman created works reflecting on her summer 2024 residency in Ålvik, Norway, and on the human impact of its fjords. The exhibit includes found objects pulled from the fjords, textiles and an audio element that immerses listeners in the sounds of the sea and underwater noise pollution. The exhibit is open Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays through March 8, with an artist coffee reception on Saturday, March 1 from noon to 3 p.m. Hellekson called it an intimate show that gave her a feeling of  “wonder and curiosity.” She says you have to look closely at each piece and see “What is this? Oh my gosh. This is a plastic bag, and you find out that Moira dug it out from among some rocks in a fjord in Norway, and yet, here it is in this strange, deteriorated condition on the wall of a gallery.”“And it makes you think [how] this thing probably was there for years, and yet, if Moira hadn't plucked it out, it would have kept breaking down, and all these little shards of plastic would have gone on to pollute and end up in some animal's belly. It's very emotionally affecting, and yet it's also beautiful.” 

Slovakia Today, English Language Current Affairs Programme from Slovak Radio
Two generations of Slovak female artists in NY. First Slovak Joins Grammy Jury. Culture tips. (7.2.2025 16:00)

Slovakia Today, English Language Current Affairs Programme from Slovak Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 31:49


Two exhibitions presenting two generations of Slovak female visual artists will open at 2 venues in New York on 13 and 14 February. Curator Zuzana Novotova Godalova and artist Eva Cisarova Minarikova invite to come and see. In 2025, jazz singer Ester Wiesnerova became the first ever Slovak member of the jury deciding on Grammy recipients. Culture tips at the end of the show feature also Foreigners in Slovakia: Interactive comedy.

Free Outside
1980 vs. 2010: Two Generations of John Muir Trail Adventures with Jeff Hester

Free Outside

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2024 61:11


Welcome to another epic installment of The Month of Jeff! In this episode, I'm joined by the one and only Jeff Hester, a trailblazing adventurer who's done it all—from hiking the John Muir Trail 30 years apart to founding the Six Pack of Peaks Challenge and SoCalHiker.net . Find Jeff Hester on the internet: https://www.instagram.com/jeffhester/ Jeff shares incredible stories about thru-hiking in the 1980s (hello, mimeographed itineraries and DIY dehydrated meals!) and how his love for the outdoors evolved into building a vibrant hiking community. We dive deep into the magic of the John Muir Trail, the challenges of the Lost Coast Trail, and how Jeff turned his passion for adventure into a movement inspiring thousands of hikers every year. Support us on Patreon: Patreon.com/freeoutside takeaways -Hiking can be a transformative experience that builds confidence. -Planning and preparation are crucial for successful long hikes. -Resupply strategies can make or break a hiking trip. -Community and social connections enhance the hiking experience. -The evolution of hiking culture reflects broader societal changes. -Documenting hiking experiences can inspire others to explore the outdoors. -Physical maps and traditional navigation offer a different adventure than GPS. -The Lost Coast Trail presents unique challenges and rewards. -Building a community requires consistency and genuine interaction. -The joy of hiking lies in the experience, not just the documentation. Sound Bites "It's a whole different experience than nowadays." "I would go back and do that one again." "You just never know how that's going to end up." Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Jeff Hester and the John Muir Trail 09:30 Resupply Strategies and Trail Cuisine in 1980 15:39 Life Changes and the Decision to Hike Again 25:12 Growth of the Six Pack of Peaks Challenge 32:55 The 2010 JMT Hike Experience 38:12 Comparing Hiking Experiences: 1980 vs 2010 44:32 The Lost Coast Trail Adventure 53:01 Backpacking Then and Now: A Reflection keywords: John Muir Trail, SoCal Hiker, hiking community, outdoor adventure, backpacking, trail cuisine, resupply strategies, Lost Coast Trail, Six Pack of Peaks, endurance sports

Impact Nations Podcast
Rescuing Two Generations: The Power of Prayer and Practical Support

Impact Nations Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 12:28


IADC Speaks
Two Generations, One Profession, One IADC: Carolyn and Randy Riggs

IADC Speaks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 35:33


In this episode of IADC Speaks, Host Matt Cairns (Textron Inc.) talks with Carolyn Riggs (Ice Miller LLP) and Randy Riggs (Frost Brown Todd LLC): father and daughter IADC members. Join us as they discuss their journeys into the legal profession, their professional and personal relationship, and their unique experiences and perspective with the IADC. Tune in for a thoughtful conversation about mentorship, the evolution of law, and the benefits of exposure only the IADC can provide.

Who's This Podcast For?
When Two Generations Collide

Who's This Podcast For?

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 94:17


The Past of YouTube film criticism, and the Future of YouTube film criticism, all in the same pod. What a day! Every Frame A Painting and MovieWise videos respectively, as well as my reaction to Head Coach Robert Saleh being fired by the Jets' organization. A massive episode. Engage!

The History of WWII Podcast - by Ray Harris Jr
Episode 489-2 Ep Special! Interview w/ Jan Davis: Air Born: Two Generations in Flight & Retreat or Die

The History of WWII Podcast - by Ray Harris Jr

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 70:31


Astronaut Jan Davis' book tells of her father's time as a B-17 pilot and POW. His can do attitude that gets challenged in a German prisoner Camp. Then, Army Group Center is under constant attack. There are breaches and encirclements along 4th Army's lines. So whether official or not, Kluge starts ordering pull backs as his suspects the OKH of not telling Hitler the full story. But when 4th Army's entire line starts to pull back, Stalin orders an increase in attacks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

RNZ: Country Life
Off the beaten track tourism sustains two generations of sheep farmers

RNZ: Country Life

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 19:46


Dome glamping, farm tours and jetting up the Hurunui River supplements income and highlights cultural heritage at a traditional sheep and beef farm in North Canterbury.

The Warrior Next Door Podcast

Subscriber-only episodeSend us a Text Message.Welcome to Episode 2 of the Jan Davis series. In episode 1 we met Jan Davis, retired astronaut who flew on 3 space shuttle missions and the daughter of Ben Smotherman who flew B-17's in 1943 out of England. We learned about his experiences as a pilot early in the air war and also as a POW till wars end. Join us now as Jan talks about her story as an astronaut and how her fathers story impacted her life. 

The Warrior Next Door Podcast
Author/Astronaut Jan Davis: “Air Born – Two Generations in Flight”, Episode 1 of 2, Series 45

The Warrior Next Door Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 51:10


Send us a Text Message.Author/Retired Astronaut Jan Davis discusses her book: “Air Born – Two generations in flight” about her WWII B-17 pilot father and the parallels with her career at NASA and her 3 space shuttle missions. In this episode, we met Jan Davis, retired astronaut who flew on 3 space shuttle missions and daughter of Ben Smotherman who flew B-17's in 1943 out of England. We learned about her fathers experiences as a pilot early in the air war and also as a POW till wars end. Support the Show.

The Warrior Next Door Podcast

Subscriber-only episodeSend us a Text Message.Welcome to the premium-subscriber, uncut Jan Davis series. In this series we meet Jan Davis, retired astronaut who flew on 3 space shuttle missions and daughter of Ben Smotherman who flew B-17's in 1943 out of England. We will learn about his experiences as a pilot early in the air war and also as a POW till wars end. In the second half of the series, Jan talks about her story as an astronaut and how her fathers story impacted her life.

Hashtag Trending
The Truth About Agile: An In-Depth Conversation over two generations. Hashtag Trending, the Weekend Edition for August 10, 2024

Hashtag Trending

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2024 45:08 Transcription Available


In this weekend edition of Hashtag Trending, host Jim Love chats with developer Gregory Witek about the challenges and misconceptions of Agile development. They explore why Agile often fails in large corporations, touching on issues such as bureaucracy, quality control, and the imbalance of power between developers and process managers. They dive deep into their personal experiences, discuss the evolution of development methodologies, and ponder potential solutions for the industry. Tune in for a thought-provoking discussion on the realities of Agile and its impact on software development. 00:00 Introduction and Algorithm Insights 01:02 Meet Gregory Witek 01:26 Gregory's Career Journey 02:14 Transition to Management 04:00 Challenges in Agile Development 05:54 Corporate Structure and Productivity 07:22 Agile in Large Organizations 10:29 The Reality of Agile Implementation 19:31 Short-Termism in Development 23:32 Agile's Success and Failure 24:23 The Disempowerment of Developers 26:08 Challenges in Estimation and Productivity 32:20 Bureaucracy and Layers of Management 41:46 Finding Joy and Career Strategies 44:09 Conclusion and Call for Solutions

Purposeful Empathy with Anita Nowak
Healing Trauma with Radical Empathy Ft. Kawtar El Alaoui Purposeful Empathy Hosted by Anita Nowak

Purposeful Empathy with Anita Nowak

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 63:12


Watch this episode to learn how radical empathy can lead to healing, and how healing can lead to leadership effectiveness and organizational wellness. Kawtar El Alaoui is a leadership consultant and coach whose specializations include: Organizational wellness, conscious communication, cross-cultural understanding, diversity and inclusion, gender-balanced leadership and should purpose. She is also the author of Unfolding Peace: 9 Leadership Principles to Create Cultures of Well-being, Belonging, and Peace. In this episode, she discusses her personal journey to heal from trauma, as well as the “radical empathy” work she does with David Sauvage to end war in two generations. 00:00 Preview 00:35 Introduction 00:52 About Kawtar El Alaoui 04:11 Kawtar's backstory that led to her book, Unfolding Peace 10:17 Embracing life's messiness to be authentic 14:39 Going to work as a Muslim after October 7 20:12 Kawtar's definition of “Radical Empathy" 21:30 "How We Make Peace: a Muslim and a Jew Demonstrate Radical Empathy (with David Sauvage) 31:55 The healing benefits of practising radical empathy 39:12 Why empathy is essential for today's leaders 44:59 The healing benefits of "Somatic experiencing" 47:35 Interrupting patterns of intergenerational trauma 50:35 Awakening to the reality of our interdependence 53:52 Inner work for outer change 01:01:02 Kawtar El Alaoui's Purposeful Empathy Story CONNECT WITH ANITA ✩ Email purposefulempathy@gmail.com ✩ Website https://www.anitanowak.com/ ✩ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/anitanowak/ ✩ Instagram https://tinyurl.com/anitanowakinstagram ✩ Facebook Page https://tinyurl.com/PurposefulEmpathyFacebook ✩ Facebook Group https://tinyurl.com/PurposefulEmpathyCommunity ✩ Podcast Audio https://tinyurl.com/PurposefulEmpathyPodcast CONNECT WITH KAWTAR ✩ Website https://www.conscioustogetherness.com/ ✩ LinkedIn www.linkedin.com/in/conscioustogetherness ✩ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/conscioustogetherness ✩ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/conscious_togetherness/ ✩ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKVtvP6Lwu6FNoF7CxUqHbQ SHOW NOTES ✩ How to End War in Two Generations https://www.intwogenerations.com/ ✩ The Inner Development Goals https://innerdevelopmentgoals.org/ ✩ Unfolding Peace: 9 Leadership Principles to Create Cultures of Well-being, Belonging, and Peace https://www.amazon.ca/dp/0988780984?ref_=cm_sw_r_cp_ud_dp_XG0QH45K5GN4Y10J9XKY ✩ Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma https://a.co/d/2unwMLe ✩ Origin by Ava DuVernay https://www.originfilm.com/synopsis/ Video Edited by David Tsvariani

The Head Start: Embracing the Journey
Two Generations, One Shared Disease: A Conversation with Mother and Son

The Head Start: Embracing the Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024 35:07 Transcription Available


It's one thing, as a parent, to deal with your own struggles, but to watch your kid go through it - to see them face obstacles and struggles can be excruciating. It often feels like the parent's job is to shield their child from hardships. In this episode, Nora shares the story of Angel and Xavier, a mother and son who are no strangers to Chronic Migraine, supporting each other through their respective journeys. They shine a light on their shared burden and how it may impact different generations. They push back on the pressure for parents to hide their struggles from their children, instead choosing to create a dynamic where it is ok to ask for help and need rest. Click here for Product Information, including Boxed Warning and Medication Guide, or visit https://bit.ly/3BlbaHG.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The EVA podcast
EPS 1: Two generations of within the Aviation sector - Father and Daughter

The EVA podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 27:20


Great fun with both Kristin and Uwe on how the relationship works and why did Kristin join the family business. What was the catalyst of appreciation from Uwe when he realised his daughter had what it takes and more... Working together - The advantages and the complimentary ideas and points of view. Introducing IT experience into the traditional business.

The Family Business with The Alessis
Mom to Mom: Timeless Wisdom from Two Generations of Mothers | TFB Flashback

The Family Business with The Alessis

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 33:31 Transcription Available


What can today's moms learn from the moms who raised them?In this flashback episode from Season 5,  Mary Alessi's mother Dr. Faith Fredrick joins the podcast to explore the ‘then and now' of motherhood. With incredible wisdom, these two women revisit the  journey of both being raised by strong moms, and raising their children with intention, faith and a strong moral compass.As they share fun and poignant memories, these stories will help parents grappling with the societal pressures and anxieties of raising kids in today's world. You'll discover how to celebrate every stage of your children's lives, and that there's no such thing as failure - as long as you stay committed to loving and speaking purpose into your children!Dr. Faith, founder of Faith Christian University, is a world-renowned speaker, author, evangelist and teacher  with a lifelong mission to educate, empower and equip men and women to fulfill their call and do the work of the ministry. Her book, Grace Like Rain, a message of grace and restoration, has been enthusiastically received all over the world.If you enjoyed this, you'll love:From Mother to Daughter: Honest Questions about Marriage, Motherhood and Changing Seasons | S3 E17Mom Friends: How Strong Friendships Build Strong Families | S3 E16Baby Business! Introducing The Newest (and Cutest) Member of The Family Business | S4 E11***THE ALESSIS ARE ASKING*** What phrase do you like BEST for our next TFB mug? 1. Professional Yapper2. Yappaccino We'll pick one of our responders to win free TFB merch! Email: info@alessifamilybusiness.com Social: DM on Instagram or Facebook YouTube: Reply on our Community post Voicemail: Leave a voicenote Text: Text your answer to our Podience Textline 302-542-0800 ***SHOP OUR FAMILY BUSINESS STORE!*** ***Listen to MY MORNING DEVOTIONAL**** ***JOIN THE FAMILY BUSINESS!** Subscribe on this app Follow Us on Instagram and Facebook Subscribe on YouTube Leave a review ...

Back to the Balcony
Two Generations on the Road to Morocco (1942)

Back to the Balcony

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 51:01


What happens two distant generations meet a movie hit from the 40's? Will it stand up or was this a huge mistake? Mario Bernardi guests with Chris Jarvie (who is literally, half his age) to talk about the best of the Bob Hope and Bing Crosby road pictures, The Road to Morocco. Is here a renaissance coming, will a new generation embrace it? Will the old generation ev en remember it? Turns out to be a pretty fascinating discussion with an unexpected obstacle to universal acceptance.

Fit To Be Real: & A Little Extra
Two Generations with Vicki Abbott & Carmela Mayo

Fit To Be Real: & A Little Extra

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2024 47:12


We sat down with our Aunt, Vicki Abbott, and our Mom, Carmela Mayo. Happy to have Carmela back and introduce Vicki (Victoria's Namesake!) She is a Mom, actress, specialist in article reading, exercise queen, book writing, children's theater producing, dance studio office managing, incredible woman! These are two sisters in their 70s who have been working together building a business, community, and laughing all the way through. They talk through how they got started, how they work together so well after all of these years, and then we switch gears and we get insider advice on how to stay motivated in their fitness journey in their 70s. Don't be fooled by all of this incredible content….its basically a 47 minute blooper! Laughed until we cried, which is one of the ways they have succeeded in their ventures all of these years. It was like looking in a mirror through time between the dynamic of Carly and Victoria. We hope you enjoy this chat as much as we enjoyed chatting…and of course, we hope you laugh along with us!—————If you want to workout with us, at home or in person, check us out www.CFITfitness.com We would love to have you join the CFIT Community :)Follow us for updates, inspiration, and ridiculousness!Instagram: @fittoberealpodcast Instagram/Facebook/Tik Tok @cfitfitness

Michelle Barone - RED
Two Generations One Podcast

Michelle Barone - RED

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2024 25:05


In this special episode of RED, Michelle Barone and Ashleigh McPherson sit down and let us get to know them a little better! Michelle and Ashleigh discuss their dynamic as Aunt and Niece who do everything together, from working at MBM (their marketing company), podcasting, going to red carpets events, and so much more! With their relationship as Aunt and Niece, they know what its like to have a generational gap! In the episode the two talk millenial and gen z differences from styles, high school life, clothes, and so much more! Michelle and Ashleigh even read their DMs and give you the behibnd the scenes of Ashleigh's life! Watch the episode to get to know the hosts of RED just a little more! Follow Michelle BaroneInstagram: @michellebaroneonlineTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@michellebarone?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pcFollow AshleighInstagram: @ashhmcphersonTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ashhmcpherson?lang=en

Casual Space
208: Two Generations in Flight with NASA Astronaut Dr. Jan Davis

Casual Space

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2023 50:31


NASA Astronaut Dr. Jan Davis flew on the Space Shuttle for the first time in 1992- ​ on the first joint Shuttle mission with the Japanese during an eight-day mission on Space Shuttle Endeavour.  She would fly again in 1994 on the first joint Shuttle mission with the Russians on Space Shuttle Discovery. Today on the show, we discuss her space career as well as her new book, Air Born, Two Generations in Flight.   Dr. Davis would fly once again in 1997 on a 12-day mission on Space Shuttle Discovery.  Read more about Dr. Davis and her expansive career at  https://astronautjandavis.com/ To order her book, Air Born here: https://ballastbooks.com/purchase/air-born/ About Dr. Jan Davis: Jan Davis was born at Patrick Air Force Base and raised in Huntsville, Alabama, Jan Davis has been surrounded by aviation and space her entire life. She followed up her biomedical engineering degree from Georgia Institute of Technology with a mechanical engineering degree from Auburn University and a Ph.D. from the University of Alabama in Huntsville. During her career, she worked for Texaco and NASA before being selected as an astronaut in 1987. Davis flew on three Space Shuttle missions and continued her NASA career in the Senior Executive Service. After she retired from NASA, she went on to become an industry executive. Now a consultant and speaker, she also enjoys traveling, quilting, exploring the outdoors, and working with her non-profit organization, AstraFemina, to encourage girls to pursue science, technology, engineering, and math careers.

Cafeteria Catholics
Patrick Madrid | A Tale of Two Generations: Big Apologetics in 1988 vs 2023

Cafeteria Catholics

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2023 50:06


Patrick Madrid delivered this talk, "A Tale of Two Generations: Big Apologetics in 1988 vs 2023", at the 2023 Defending the Faith Steubenville Conference.

Bob Enyart Live
RSR's List of Not So Old Things

Bob Enyart Live

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023


-- Finches Diversify in Decades, Opals Form in Months,  Man's Genetic Diversity in 200 Generations, C-14 Everywhere: Real Science Radio hosts Bob Enyart and Fred Williams present their classic program that led to the audience-favorites rsr.org/list-shows! See below and hear on today's radio program our list of Not So Old and Not So Slow Things! From opals forming in months to man's genetic diversity in 200 generations, and with carbon 14 everywhere it's not supposed to be (including in diamonds and dinosaur bones!), scientific observations fill the guys' most traditional list challenging those who claim that the earth is billions of years old. Many of these scientific finds demand a re-evaluation of supposed million and billion-year ages. * Finches Adapt in 17 Years, Not 2.3 Million: Charles Darwin's finches are claimed to have taken 2,300,000 years to diversify from an initial species blown onto the Galapagos Islands. Yet individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. Bird Reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away and in at most 17 years, like Darwin's finches, they had diversified their beaks, related muscles, and behavior to fill various ecological niches. Hear about this also at rsr.org/spetner. * Opals Can Form in "A Few Months" And Don't Need 100,000 Years: A leading authority on opals, Allan W. Eckert, observed that, "scientific papers and textbooks have told that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands... Not true." A 2011 peer-reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia, where almost all the world's opal is found, reported on the: "new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisaged by the conventional weathering model." (And apparently, per a 2019 report from Entomology Today, opals can even form around insects!) More knowledgeable scientists resist the uncritical, group-think insistence on false super-slow formation rates (as also for manganese nodules, gold veins, stone, petroleum, canyons and gullies, and even guts, all below). Regarding opals, Darwinian bias led geologists to long ignore possible quick action, as from microbes, as a possible explanation for these mineraloids. For both in nature and in the lab, opals form rapidly, not even in 10,000 years, but in weeks. See this also from creationists by a geologist, a paleobiochemist, and a nuclear chemist. * Finches Speciate in Two Generations vs Two Million Years for Darwin's Birds?  Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands are said to have diversified into 14 species over a period of two million years. But in 2017 the journal Science reported a newcomer to the Island which within two generations spawned a reproductively isolated new species. In another instance as documented by Lee Spetner, a hundred birds of the same finch species introduced to an island cluster a 1,000 kilometers from Galapagos diversified into species with the typical variations in beak sizes, etc. "If this diversification occurred in less than seventeen years," Dr. Spetner asks, "why did Darwin's Galapagos finches [as claimed by evolutionists] have to take two million years?" * Blue Eyes Originated Not So Long Ago: Not a million years ago, nor a hundred thousand years ago, but based on a peer-reviewed paper in Human Genetics, a press release at Science Daily reports that, "research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. A team at the University of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye colour of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." * Adding the Entire Universe to our List of Not So Old Things? Based on March 2019 findings from Hubble, Nobel laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute and his co-authors in the Astrophysical Journal estimate that the universe is about a billion years younger than previously thought! Then in September 2019 in the journal Science, the age dropped precipitiously to as low as 11.4 billion years! Of course, these measurements also further squeeze the canonical story of the big bang chronology with its many already existing problems including the insufficient time to "evolve" distant mature galaxies, galaxy clusters, superclusters, enormous black holes, filaments, bubbles, walls, and other superstructures. So, even though the latest estimates are still absurdly too old (Google: big bang predictions, and click on the #1 ranked article, or just go on over there to rsr.org/bb), regardless, we thought we'd plop the whole universe down on our List of Not So Old Things!   * After the Soft Tissue Discoveries, NOW Dino DNA: When a North Carolina State University paleontologist took the Tyrannosaurus Rex photos to the right of original biological material, that led to the 2016 discovery of dinosaur DNA, So far researchers have also recovered dinosaur blood vessels, collagen, osteocytes, hemoglobin, red blood cells, and various proteins. As of May 2018, twenty-six scientific journals, including Nature, Science, PNAS, PLoS One, Bone, and Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, have confirmed the discovery of biomaterial fossils from many dinosaurs! Organisms including T. Rex, hadrosaur, titanosaur, triceratops, Lufengosaur, mosasaur, and Archaeopteryx, and many others dated, allegedly, even hundreds of millions of years old, have yielded their endogenous, still-soft biological material. See the web's most complete listing of 100+ journal papers (screenshot, left) announcing these discoveries at bflist.rsr.org and see it in layman's terms at rsr.org/soft. * Rapid Stalactites, Stalagmites, Etc.: A construction worker in 1954 left a lemonade bottle in one of Australia's famous Jenolan Caves. By 2011 it had been naturally transformed into a stalagmite (below, right). Increasing scientific knowledge is arguing for rapid cave formation (see below, Nat'l Park Service shrinks Carlsbad Caverns formation estimates from 260M years, to 10M, to 2M, to it "depends"). Likewise, examples are growing of rapid formations with typical chemical make-up (see bottle, left) of classic stalactites and stalagmites including:- in Nat'l Geo the Carlsbad Caverns stalagmite that rapidly covered a bat - the tunnel stalagmites at Tennessee's Raccoon Mountain - hundreds of stalactites beneath the Lincoln Memorial - those near Gladfelter Hall at Philadelphia's Temple University (send photos to Bob@rsr.org) - hundreds of stalactites at Australia's zinc mine at Mt. Isa.   - and those beneath Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance. * Most Human Mutations Arose in 200 Generations: From Adam until Real Science Radio, in only 200 generations! The journal Nature reports The Recent Origin of Most Human Protein-coding Variants. As summarized by geneticist co-author Joshua Akey, "Most of the mutations that we found arose in the last 200 generations or so" (the same number previously published by biblical creationists). Another 2012 paper, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology (Eugenie Scott's own field) on High mitochondrial mutation rates, shows that one mitochondrial DNA mutation occurs every other generation, which, as creationists point out, indicates that mtEve would have lived about 200 generations ago. That's not so old! * National Geographic's Not-So-Old Hard-Rock Canyon at Mount St. Helens: As our List of Not So Old Things (this web page) reveals, by a kneejerk reaction evolutionary scientists assign ages of tens or hundreds of thousands of years (or at least just long enough to contradict Moses' chronology in Genesis.) However, with closer study, routinely, more and more old ages get revised downward to fit the world's growing scientific knowledge. So the trend is not that more information lengthens ages, but rather, as data replaces guesswork, ages tend to shrink until they are consistent with the young-earth biblical timeframe. Consistent with this observation, the May 2000 issue of National Geographic quotes the U.S. Forest Service's scientist at Mount St. Helens, Peter Frenzen, describing the canyon on the north side of the volcano. "You'd expect a hard-rock canyon to be thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years old. But this was cut in less than a decade." And as for the volcano itself, while again, the kneejerk reaction of old-earthers would be to claim that most geologic features are hundreds of thousands or millions of years old, the atheistic National Geographic magazine acknowledges from the evidence that Mount St. Helens, the volcanic mount, is only about 4,000 years old! See below and more at rsr.org/mount-st-helens. * Mount St. Helens Dome Ten Years Old not 1.7 Million: Geochron Laboratories of Cambridge, Mass., using potassium-argon and other radiometric techniques claims the rock sample they dated, from the volcano's dome, solidified somewhere between 340,000 and 2.8 million years ago. However photographic evidence and historical reports document the dome's formation during the 1980s, just ten years prior to the samples being collected. With the age of this rock known, radiometric dating therefore gets the age 99.99999% wrong. * Devils Hole Pupfish Isolated Not for 13,000 Years But for 100: Secular scientists default to knee-jerk, older-than-Bible-age dates. However, a tiny Mojave desert fish is having none of it. Rather than having been genetically isolated from other fish for 13,000 years (which would make this small school of fish older than the Earth itself), according to a paper in the journal Nature, actual measurements of mutation rates indicate that the genetic diversity of these Pupfish could have been generated in about 100 years, give or take a few. * Polystrates like Spines and Rare Schools of Fossilized Jellyfish: Previously, seven sedimentary layers in Wisconsin had been described as taking a million years to form. And because jellyfish have no skeleton, as Charles Darwin pointed out, it is rare to find them among fossils. But now, reported in the journal Geology, a school of jellyfish fossils have been found throughout those same seven layers. So, polystrate fossils that condense the time of strata deposition from eons to hours or months, include: - Jellyfish in central Wisconsin were not deposited and fossilized over a million years but during a single event quick enough to trap a whole school. (This fossil school, therefore, taken as a unit forms a polystrate fossil.) Examples are everywhere that falsify the claims of strata deposition over millions of years. - Countless trilobites buried in astounding three dimensionality around the world are meticulously recovered from limestone, much of which is claimed to have been deposited very slowly. Contrariwise, because these specimens were buried rapidly in quickly laid down sediments, they show no evidence of greater erosion on their upper parts as compared to their lower parts.- The delicacy of radiating spine polystrates, like tadpole and jellyfish fossils, especially clearly demonstrate the rapidity of such strata deposition. - A second school of jellyfish, even though they rarely fossilized, exists in another locale with jellyfish fossils in multiple layers, in Australia's Brockman Iron Formation, constraining there too the rate of strata deposition. By the way, jellyfish are an example of evolution's big squeeze. Like galaxies evolving too quickly, galaxy clusters, and even human feet (which, like Mummy DNA, challenge the Out of Africa paradigm), jellyfish have gotten into the act squeezing evolution's timeline, here by 200 million years when they were found in strata allegedly a half-a-billion years old. Other examples, ironically referred to as Medusoid Problematica, are even found in pre-Cambrian strata. - 171 tadpoles of the same species buried in diatoms. - Leaves buried vertically through single-celled diatoms powerfully refute the claimed super-slow deposition of diatomaceous rock. - Many fossils, including a Mesosaur, have been buried in multiple "varve" layers, which are claimed to be annual depositions, yet they show no erosional patterns that would indicate gradual burial (as they claim, absurdly, over even thousands of years). - A single whale skeleton preserved in California in dozens of layers of diatom deposits thus forming a polystrate fossil. - 40 whales buried in the desert in Chile. "What's really interesting is that this didn't just happen once," said Smithsonian evolutionist Dr. Nick Pyenson. It happened four times." Why's that? Because "the fossil site has at least four layers", to which Real Science Radio's Bob Enyart replies: "Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha", with RSR co-host Fred Williams thoughtfully adding, "Ha ha!" * Polystrate Trees: Examples abound around the world of polystrate trees:  - Yellowstone's petrified polystrate forest (with the NPS exhibit sign removed; see below) with successive layers of rootless trees demonstrating the rapid deposition of fifty layers of strata. - A similarly formed polystrate fossil forest in France demonstrating the rapid deposition of a dozen strata. - In a thousand locations including famously the Fossil Cliffs of Joggins, Nova Scotia, polystrate fossils such as trees span many strata. - These trees lack erosion: Not only should such fossils, generally speaking, not even exist, but polystrates including trees typically show no evidence of erosion increasing with height. All of this powerfully disproves the claim that the layers were deposited slowly over thousands or millions of years. In the experience of your RSR radio hosts, evolutionists commonly respond to this hard evidence with mocking. See CRSQ June 2006, ICR Impact #316, and RSR 8-11-06 at KGOV.com. * Yellowstone Petrified Trees Sign Removed: The National Park Service removed their incorrect sign (see left and more). The NPS had claimed that in dozens of different strata over a 40-square mile area, many petrified trees were still standing where they had grown. The NPS eventually removed the sign partly because those petrified trees had no root systems, which they would have had if they had grown there. Instead, the trees of this "fossil forest" have roots that are abruptly broken off two or three feet from their trunks. If these mature trees actually had been remnants of sequential forests that had grown up in strata layer on top of strata layer, 27 times on Specimen Ridge (and 50 times at Specimen Creek), such a natural history implies passage of more time than permitted by biblical chronology. So, don't trust the National Park Service on historical science because they're wrong on the age of the Earth. * Wood Petrifies Quickly: Not surprisingly, by the common evolutionary knee-jerk claim of deep time, "several researchers believe that several millions of years are necessary for the complete formation of silicified wood". Our List of Not So Old and Not So Slow Things includes the work of five Japanese scientists who proved creationist research and published their results in the peer-reviewed journal Sedimentary Geology showing that wood can and does petrify rapidly. Modern wood significantly petrified in 36 years these researchers concluded that wood buried in strata could have been petrified in "a fairly short period of time, in the order of several tens to hundreds of years." * The Scablands: The primary surface features of the Scablands, which cover thousands of square miles of eastern Washington, were long believed to have formed gradually. Yet, against the determined claims of uniformitarian geologists, there is now overwhelming evidence as presented even in a NOVA TV program that the primary features of the Scablands formed rapidly from a catastrophic breach of Lake Missoula causing a massive regional flood. Of course evolutionary geologists still argue that the landscape was formed over tens of thousands of years, now by claiming there must have been a hundred Missoula floods. However, the evidence that there was Only One Lake Missoula Flood has been powerfully reinforced by a University of Colorado Ph.D. thesis. So the Scablands itself is no longer available to old-earthers as de facto evidence for the passage of millions of years. * The Heart Mountain Detachment: in Wyoming just east of Yellowstone, this mountain did not break apart slowly by uniformitarian processes but in only about half-an-hour as widely reported including in the evolutionist LiveScience.com, "Land Speed Record: Mountain Moves 62 Miles in 30 Minutes." The evidence indicates that this mountain of rock covering 425 square miles rapidly broke into 50 pieces and slid apart over an area of more than 1,300 square miles in a biblical, not a "geological," timeframe.  * "150 Million" year-old Squid Ink Not Decomposed: This still-writable ink had dehydrated but had not decomposed! The British Geological Survey's Dr. Phil Wilby, who excavated the fossil, said, "It is difficult to imagine how you can have something as soft and sloppy as an ink sac fossilised in three dimensions, still black, and inside a rock that is 150 million years old." And the Daily Mail states that, "the black ink was of exactly the same structure as that of today's version", just desiccated. And Wilby added, "Normally you would find only the hard parts like the shell and bones fossilised but... these creatures... can be dissected as if they are living animals, you can see the muscle fibres and cells. It is difficult to imagine... The structure is similar to ink from a modern squid so we can write with it..." Why is this difficult for evolutionists to imagine? Because as Dr. Carl Wieland writes, "Chemical structures 'fall apart' all by themselves over time due to the randomizing effects of molecular motion."Decades ago Bob Enyart broadcast a geology program about Mount St. Helens' catastrophic destruction of forests and the hydraulic transportation and upright deposition of trees. Later, Bob met the chief ranger from Haleakala National Park on Hawaii's island of Maui, Mark Tanaka-Sanders. The ranger agreed to correspond with his colleague at Yellowstone to urge him to have the sign removed. Thankfully, it was then removed. (See also AIG, CMI, and all the original Yellowstone exhibit photos.) Groundbreaking research conducted by creation geologist Dr. Steve Austin in Spirit Lake after Mount St. Helens eruption provided a modern-day analog to the formation of Yellowstone fossil forest. A steam blast from that volcano blew over tens of thousands of trees leaving them without attached roots. Many thousands of those trees were floating upright in Spirit Lake, and began sinking at varying rates into rapidly and sporadically deposited sediments. Once Yellowstone's successive forest interpretation was falsified (though like with junk DNA, it's too big to fail, so many atheists and others still cling to it), the erroneous sign was removed. * Asiatic vs. European Honeybees: These two populations of bees have been separated supposedly for seven million years. A researcher decided to put the two together to see what would happen. What we should have here is a failure to communicate that would have resulted after their "language" evolved over millions of years. However, European and Asiatic honeybees are still able to communicate, putting into doubt the evolutionary claim that they were separated over "geologic periods." For more, see the Public Library of Science, Asiatic Honeybees Can Understand Dance Language of European Honeybees. (Oh yeah, and why don't fossils of poorly-formed honeycombs exist, from the millions of years before the bees and natural selection finally got the design right? Ha! Because they don't exist! :) Nautiloid proves rapid limestone formation. * Remember the Nautiloids: In the Grand Canyon there is a limestone layer averaging seven feet thick that runs the 277 miles of the canyon (and beyond) that covers hundreds of square miles and contains an average of one nautiloid fossil per square meter. Along with many other dead creatures in this one particular layer, 15% of these nautiloids were killed and then fossilized standing on their heads. Yes, vertically. They were caught in such an intense and rapid catastrophic flow that gravity was not able to cause all of their dead carcasses to fall over on their sides. Famed Mount St. Helens geologist Steve Austin is also the world's leading expert on nautiloid fossils and has worked in the canyon and presented his findings to the park's rangers at the invitation of National Park Service officials. Austin points out, as is true of many of the world's mass fossil graveyards, that this enormous nautiloid deposition provides indisputable proof of the extremely rapid formation of a significant layer of limestone near the bottom of the canyon, a layer like the others we've been told about, that allegedly formed at the bottom of a calm and placid sea with slow and gradual sedimentation. But a million nautiloids, standing on their heads, literally, would beg to differ. At our sister stie, RSR provides the relevant Geologic Society of America abstract, links, and video. *  Now It's Allegedly Two Million Year-Old Leaves: "When we started pulling leaves out of the soil, that was surreal, to know that it's millions of years old..." sur-re-al: adjective: a bizarre mix of fact and fantasy. In this case, the leaves are the facts. Earth scientists from Ohio State and the University of Minnesota say that wood and leaves they found in the Canadian Arctic are at least two million years old, and perhaps more than ten million years old, even though the leaves are just dry and crumbly and the wood still burns! * Gold Precipitates in Veins in Less than a Second: After geologists submitted for decades to the assumption that each layer of gold would deposit at the alleged super slow rates of geologic process, the journal Nature Geoscience reports that each layer of deposition can occur within a few tenths of a second. Meanwhile, at the Lihir gold deposit in Papua New Guinea, evolutionists assumed the more than 20 million ounces of gold in the Lihir reserve took millions of years to deposit, but as reported in the journal Science, geologists can now demonstrate that the deposit could have formed in thousands of years, or far more quickly! Iceland's not-so-old Surtsey Island looks ancient. * Surtsey Island, Iceland: Of the volcanic island that formed in 1963, New Scientist reported in 2007 about Surtsey that "geographers... marvel that canyons, gullies and other land features that typically take tens of thousands or millions of years to form were created in less than a decade." Yes. And Sigurdur Thorarinsson, Iceland's chief  geologist, wrote in the months after Surtsey formed, "that the time scale," he had been trained "to attach to geological developments is misleading." [For what is said to] take thousands of years... the same development may take a few weeks or even days here [including to form] a landscape... so varied and mature that it was almost beyond belief... wide sandy beaches and precipitous crags... gravel banks and lagoons, impressive cliffs… hollows, glens and soft undulating land... fractures and faultscarps, channels and screes… confounded by what met your eye... boulders worn by the surf, some of which were almost round... -Iceland's chief geologist * The Palouse River Gorge: In the southeast of Washington State, the Palouse River Gorge is one of many features formed rapidly by 500 cubic miles of water catastrophically released with the breaching of a natural dam in the Lake Missoula Flood (which gouged out the Scablands as described above). So, hard rock can be breached and eroded rapidly. * Leaf Shapes Identical for 190 Million Years?  From Berkley.edu, "Ginkgo biloba... dates back to... about 190 million years ago... fossilized leaf material from the Tertiary species Ginkgo adiantoides is considered similar or even identical to that produced by modern Ginkgo biloba trees... virtually indistinguishable..." The literature describes leaf shapes as "spectacularly diverse" sometimes within a species but especially across the plant kingdom. Because all kinds of plants survive with all kinds of different leaf shapes, the conservation of a species retaining a single shape over alleged deep time is a telling issue. Darwin's theory is undermined by the unchanging shape over millions of years of a species' leaf shape. This lack of change, stasis in what should be an easily morphable plant trait, supports the broader conclusion that chimp-like creatures did not become human beings and all the other ambitious evolutionary creation of new kinds are simply imagined. (Ginkgo adiantoides and biloba are actually the same species. Wikipedia states, "It is doubtful whether the Northern Hemisphere fossil species of Ginkgo can be reliably distinguished." For oftentimes, as documented by Dr. Carl Werner in his Evolution: The Grand Experiment series, paleontogists falsely speciate identical specimens, giving different species names, even different genus names, to the fossil and living animals that appear identical.) * Box Canyon, Idaho: Geologists now think Box Canyon in Idaho, USA, was carved by a catastrophic flood and not slowly over millions of years with 1) huge plunge pools formed by waterfalls; 2) the almost complete removal of large basalt boulders from the canyon; 3) an eroded notch on the plateau at the top of the canyon; and 4) water scour marks on the basalt plateau leading to the canyon. Scientists calculate that the flood was so large that it could have eroded the whole canyon in as little as 35 days. See the journal Science, Formation of Box Canyon, Idaho, by Megaflood, and the Journal of Creation, and Creation Magazine. * Manganese Nodules Rapid Formation: Allegedly, as claimed at the Wikipedia entry from 2005 through 2021: "Nodule growth is one of the slowest of all geological phenomena – in the order of a centimeter over several million years." Wow, that would be slow! And a Texas A&M Marine Sciences technical slide presentation says, “They grow very slowly (mm/million years) and can be tens of millions of years old", with RWU's oceanography textbook also putting it at "0.001 mm per thousand years." But according to a World Almanac documentary they have formed "around beer cans," said marine geologist Dr. John Yates in the 1997 video Universe Beneath the Sea: The Next Frontier. There are also reports of manganese nodules forming around ships sunk in the First World War. See more at at youngearth.com, at TOL, in the print edition of the Journal of Creation, and in this typical forum discussion with atheists (at the Chicago Cubs forum no less :). * "6,000 year-old" Mitochondrial Eve: As the Bible calls "Eve... the mother of all living" (Gen. 3:20), genetic researchers have named the one woman from whom all humans have descended "Mitochondrial Eve." But in a scientific attempt to date her existence, they openly admit that they included chimpanzee DNA in their analysis in order to get what they viewed as a reasonably old date of 200,000 years ago (which is still surprisingly recent from their perspective, but old enough not to strain Darwinian theory too much). But then as widely reported including by Science magazine, when they dropped the chimp data and used only actual human mutation rates, that process determined that Eve lived only six thousand years ago! In Ann Gibbon's Science article, "Calibrating the Mitochondrial Clock," rather than again using circular reasoning by assuming their conclusion (that humans evolved from ape-like creatures), they performed their calculations using actual measured mutation rates. This peer-reviewed journal then reported that if these rates have been constant, "mitochondrial Eve… would be a mere 6000 years old." See also the journal Nature and creation.com's "A shrinking date for Eve," and Walt Brown's assessment. Expectedly though, evolutionists have found a way to reject their own unbiased finding (the conclusion contrary to their self-interest) by returning to their original method of using circular reasoning, as reported in the American Journal of Human Genetics, "calibrating against recent evidence for the divergence time of humans and chimpanzees,"  to reset their mitochondrial clock back to 200,000 years. * Even Younger Y-Chromosomal Adam: (Although he should be called, "Y-Chromosomal Noah.") While we inherit our mtDNA only from our mothers, only men have a Y chromosome (which incidentally genetically disproves the claim that the fetus is "part of the woman's body," since the little boy's y chromosome could never be part of mom's body). Based on documented mutation rates on and the extraordinary lack of mutational differences in this specifically male DNA, the Y-chromosomal Adam would have lived only a few thousand years ago! (He's significantly younger than mtEve because of the genetic bottleneck of the global flood.) Yet while the Darwinian camp wrongly claimed for decades that humans were 98% genetically similar to chimps, secular scientists today, using the same type of calculation only more accurately, have unintentionally documented that chimps are about as far genetically from what makes a human being a male, as mankind itself is from sponges! Geneticists have found now that sponges are 70% the same as humans genetically, and separately, that human and chimp Y chromosomes are  "horrendously" 30%

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Upland Nation
Bird dog training family offers two generations-worth of wisdom ... would you ”pay to play?”

Upland Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 61:13


We're back on the floor of Pheasant Fest and we need a lot of room for the four members of the Carter family of Merrymeeting Kennels of Brunswick, Maine. Blaine, Patti, Jason and Missy are versatile dog trainers and breeders - you've seen most of them with us on quail hunts on Wingshooting USA TV - and have a wealth of wisdom and experience to share. From when to start training a dog, to why to use "baby talk," best treats, to a dog's mindset and how to use it to your mutual benefit, these folks will share two generations' worth of experience in the Maine woods and across the country. They'll offer hunting tips, too. "Road Trip" offers a practical, strategic tip that could save you time, money, and aggravation; listeners chime in on whether they'd "pay to play," purchasing access to good hunting ground and you'll be surprised at the response. Please visit our sponsors: Sage & Braker Mercantile, Pointer shotguns,, @midwayusa, #midwayusa, Midway USA, Mid Valley Clays and Shooting School, Joy Dog Food, TrulockChokes, FurFeathersFriends and FindBirdHuntingSpots.com.

Horsepower Heritage
The Two Generations Collection With Evan Ide

Horsepower Heritage

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 47:38


With so much incredible performance available in everyday cars today, the first great era of the motorcar is often overlooked. But in fact, most of the technology we take for granted was developed by about 1915.  Many "Brass Era" cars- those produced from about 1903 to 1915- were not only solid performers, but also exceptionally well-engineered and built. The Two Generations Collection holds many great examples of such machines, and it's being auctioned by Bonhams on April 29.  A father and son team assembled this collection over a period of six decades and now it's being sent on to a new group of enthiusiasts. The auction kicks off another terrific event, the Second Annual Audrain Veteran Car Tour in Newport Rhode Island. In this episode, Bonhams Senior Specialist Evan Ide talks about some highlights of the auction as well as the distinct flavor and excitement  of touring in these veteran cars.BONHAMS TWO GENERATIONS AUCTION:https://www.bonhams.com/auction/28770/two-generations-collection/SUPPORT THE POD:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/hpheritageSUPPORT OUR SPONSORS:http://modelcitizendiecast.comhttps://www.drivetowardacure.orgFIND US ON THE WEB:https://www.horsepowerheritage.comInstagram: @horsepowerheritageSupport the show

Here & Now
'Bad seed': Two generations, two terrible crimes

Here & Now

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 41:11


Was Jacob Wideman a "bad seed"? The question emerged not long after Jake murdered his summer camp roommate, Eric Kane, in 1986 seemingly with no motive. In this latest episode of "Violation," a podcast series from The Marshall Project and WBUR, author John Edgar Wideman tells the story of his brother Robby, who received a life sentence for his role in a robbery where a man died, and how his son related to Robby. Subscribe to Here & Now Anytime for new episodes each Friday. Find a transcript and photos here.

Chingona Revolution
EP. 63:From Worrying About Her Next Meal To Financial Freedom For The Next Two Generations w/ Maria Delgado

Chingona Revolution

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 60:11


Rebels! This week Erika is joined by Maria Delgado. Maria, is a self-made Lawtina millionaire and a highly successful Latina Business and Sales Coach. In 2020, she took a brave step and left her toxic associate position to start her own immigration practice. Despite being warned that it would take at least five years to make a profit, Maria was able to generate over 7 figures in less than three years. Her vast knowledge and skills are now being utilized to assist other Latinas in achieving the same level of success and financial freedom in their law firms. Maria's decision to become a Coach for Lawtinas is motivated by her strong belief that we deserve to enjoy the fruits of our labor and sacrifice and that we communities also deserve to thrive. Join them as they discuss Maria opening her law firm during the pandemic, why being uncomfortable means you're growing, and Maria breaks down what her acronym of SALE means  Connect with GUEST: Instagram @lawtiamariaTikTok @lawtia_maria Website: www.theerikacruz.com Follow Erika on: Instagram @theerikacruzTikTok @theerikacruzLinkedIn How to work with Erika: Apply for private coaching with Erika here. Join the waitlist for Courage Driven Latina here.

Richard P Oldham - Glendale Baptist Church
A Link Between Two Generations - 2nd Tim 2 - 02-07-2010 - Richard P Oldham

Richard P Oldham - Glendale Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 17:02


STAGR Cast
(Season 2, Episode #1) Travis Williams & Bob Williams: Two Generations of Big Woods Hunting, Buck Stories, and Memories

STAGR Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2023 114:22


Travis Williams and Bob Williams are a father and son hunting duo out of the New Hampshire lakes region. Both Travis and Bob are successful hunters in both Maine and New Hampshire and have a lot of knowledge when it comes to chasing after Northeast Mountain bucks. Enjoy some stories from deer camp, successful tag team buck stories, wisdom from years in the woods, and a whole lot more. You can follow travis on social media @coolwatercharters

Doctor John Patrick
What Was Unthinkable Two Generations Ago

Doctor John Patrick

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 56:27


Doctor John Patrick talks about what was unthinkable two generations ago. This is talk John wanted todo as a follow up to his 2022 CMDA talks.    // LINKS // Website: https://www.johnpatrick.ca/ Podcast: https://doctorjohnpatrick.podbean.com/ Biblical Literate Quiz: https://www.johnpatrick.ca/meaning-metaphor-and-allusion/ Recommended Reading list: https://www.johnpatrick.ca/book-list/ Ask Doctor John: https://www.johnpatrick.ca/ask/ LINKS: https://beacons.ai/doctorjohnpatrick

joeverdegan.com
"MEET THE MUELLERS" - TWO GENERATIONS OF TRACK ANNOUNCERS

joeverdegan.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2023 8:26


Roger "The Mouth" Mueller and his son Eric "Lil Mouth" Mueller have been track announcers going on six decades now throughout Wisconsin. This is the first episode of eight and in this "maiden voyage" Roger talks about how he cracked into the business announcing at 141 Speedway in Francis Creek, Wisconsin at the age of 17. Give it a listen!

Lamplighters
Rabbi Mayshe Schwartz: Connecting Two Generations Of Rabbis In A Boston NICU

Lamplighters

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 20:39


Rabbi Mayshe Schwartz: Connecting Two Generations Of Rabbis In A Boston NICU"Somebody please get me a Chabad rabbi. The surgery is going to take place in 2 hours. I just need someone to come and pray.” - Jacer Collins"I ran over, dropped everything, and went to Children's Hospital, the 7th floor... She pulled me towards the crib, tiny little crib. You know, what do you say?... The only thing that came out of my mouth was the following; "G-d can do anything. Let's pray for a miracle." - Rabbi Mayshe SchwartzProduced by: Gary Waleik & Shneur Brook for Lubavitch International/Lubavitch.comAvailable on all major podcast platforms - and online at Lubavitch.com/podcastDid you enjoy listening to this episode? Leave us a review and/or email us at Podcast@Lubavitch.com - we truly value your feedback!To inquire about dedicating an episode - please email podcast@lubavitch.com

Inspiring Women with Laurie McGraw
EP. 107 Thank you for your service.

Inspiring Women with Laurie McGraw

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 46:37


Laurie McGraw is speaking with Inspiring Women Lita Tomas and Jean Marie McNamara, a mother/daughter duo who have just published their memoir:  Lita & Jean: Memoirs of Two Generations of Military Women. Hear ...

Aerospace Unplugged
Two Generations

Aerospace Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 28:55


On this episode of Aerospace Unplugged, we will be taking a dive into BendixKing Honeywell product line and two pilots who frequently use these products. You will hear what two different generations have to say about these avionics, and how BendixKing is thinking of the future. Join us as this conversation is sure to deliver a riveting adventure over the Brazilian forest. 

Arrive Alive!
Teach Your Children Well: A Father Shares Two Generations of Motorcycling With His Son

Arrive Alive!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 53:02


St. Louis Father, Michael Sorth's Dad taught him to ride, and over the last couple of years, Michael has introduced his son to riding. Today Michael shares how MSF training, a watchful eye, and sensible strategies have helped shape his son's riding abilities.

Unlocking Greatness with Charlie Harary
Daily Boost Ep 482 "Look two generations up"

Unlocking Greatness with Charlie Harary

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 9:53


Charlie Harary discusses the importance of honoring the people we lost and celebrating those who survived, including his grandparents. “They did the unthinkable because they're unbreakable. And they have superhuman strengths…If you ever feel like you can't do something, look two generations up.” - Charlie Harary. #YomHaShoah Go to momentumunlimited.org/subscribe/ and sign up for our newsletter for more motivation and inspiration. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.

Women of the Military
Two generations of military service (Lita and Jean)

Women of the Military

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 33:45


Mentioned in this episode:Lita & Jean: Memoir of Two Generations of Military WomenWomen of the Military Mentorship ProgramA Girl's Guide to Military ServiceCheck out the full show notes at https://www.airmantomom.com/2022/05/military-moms/Thank you to my Patreon Sponsor Col Level and above:Kevin Barba, Lorraine DiazGet your Women of the Military Podcast gear here.Thank you Patreon members for your support. Become a Patreon member today! Click here.