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Wywiad z byłym chuliganem Pogoni Szczecin – Arkadiuszem Kraską. Prawdziwe historie walk kiboli, ustawek i ulicznych zadym z lat 80. i 90. Z tego podcastu dowiesz się czym różni się dzisiejsza „chuliganka” od tamtej sprzed lat.Rozdziały:00:00:00 - Wstęp00:00:16 - Kim jest prawdziwy Hooligan?00:03:51 - Chuligan ze Szczecina00:18:53 - Poznańscy chuligani mają z nami kose00:20:02 - Kibic Pogoni Szczecin00:24:30 - Walki kibiców na stadionach00:26:31 - Śląsk Wrocław zaatakowany przez Pogoń Szczecin00:27:51 - Lechia Gdańsk zaskoczona przez kiboli ze Szczecina00:29:43 - Pogoń Szczecin Hooligans00:34:46 - Wbiłem się w Widzew Łódź 00:36:55 - Kibole na koncertach metalowych 00:38:39 - Szczecińscy chuligani00:40:39 - Chuliganka w Polsce w latach 80. i 90.00:45:45 - Kibole Ruchu Chorzów napadnięci w pociągu00:47:01 - Zadymy na meczach wyjazdowych00:49:05 - Arka Gdynia rozkręciła zadymę, do której dołączyła Lechia Gdańsk 00:48:43 - Walka chuliganów z milicją00:57:10 - Poprawczak01:00:46 - Doping na meczach Pogoni Szczecin01:03:15 - Szczecińska ekipa Hools01:04:25 - Walka na sprzęt01:07:43 - Kibole z Krakowa 01:08:50 - Cracovia będzie zawsze naszym wrogiem01:15:12 - Ustawki01:35:26 - Krojenie barw kibiców01:44:19 - Wyrok i więzienie01:48:13 - Chuligani, kibole, pseudokibice01:50:03 - Jak zmieniła się Hooliganka w Polsce?01:56:41 - ZakończenieLinki:✖️ Instagram • https://www.instagram.com/podcast.narratora✖️ Tik Tok • https://www.tiktok.com/@podcast.narratoraDziękuje bardzo za Twój poświęcony czas i uwagę. Pomysł | Wykonanie | Prawa autorskie: Narrator
La Slovaquie en direct, Magazine en francais sur la Slovaquie
Actualités. Gros plan. International. La Slovaquie sans frontieres. La Vie comme elle va. Nous poursuivons la présentation des activités du point focal WBI en Slovaquie avec son représentant Alan Voldrich. Il sera notamment question de bourses d'études. Adriana Boysova vit dans la capitale du Luxembourg depuis pres de vingt ans ; le pays lui rappelle la Slovaquie a bien des égards. Elle dirige actuellement l'association slovaque locale, l'Association des Slovaques au Luxembourg. Les Slovaques sont amateurs de tradition. Katka Hrnčiariková de Beňuš fabrique des manchettes traditionnelles. Elle préserve l'ancien et brode le nouveau.
La Slovaquie en direct, Magazine en francais sur la Slovaquie
Actualités, gros plan, enquete. Ce lundi est la Journée mondiale des victimes de l'Holocauste. Nous évoquerons un film tchécoslovaque oscarisé évoquant cette terrible page de l'histoire. Nous poursuivrons par le portrait d'une personne incroyable : l'histoire du survivant de l'Holocauste, probablement le plus ancien résistant vivant et athlete exceptionnel Jozef Veselsky, « l'extraordinaire Joe ».La culture fut toujours un instrument de la diplomatie. Nous parlerons saxophone avec Alan Woldrich du pole WBI pour la Slovaquie. Adolphe Sax était originaire de Dinant en Belgique.
Amandine Pekel, jeune diplomate, a grandi dans une ferme en Ardenne avant de bourlinguer de Barcelone à Hong-Kong et de jeter l'ancre à Stockholm où, avec l'AWEX et WBI, elle tisse des liens entre Wallonie et Scandinavie. Et la patrie d'Alfred Nobel dynamite bien des préjugés sur l'image des wallons. Saviez-vous qu'en 1624, un certain Louis de Geer est venu développer l'industrie sidérurgique en Suède ? Dans son sillage, près de 5000 ouvriers wallons ont débarqué pour travailler dans ses forges. Pour attirer et accueillir ces forgerons, considérés comme des héros de la nation, Louis de Geer 1er, a mis en place les fameux bruks, ancêtres des coopératives qui auraient inspiré le modèle social suédois. Il reste aujourd'hui 27 bruks comme autant d'écomusées vivants et de vitrines suédoises de l'inventivité et du savoir-faire belge. A découvrir dans Les Belges du bout du monde, avec Adrien Joveneau, à 9h sur La Première et sur La Une télé Suède - 29/12/24 Merci pour votre écoute Les Belges du bout du Monde, c'est également en direct tous les samedis de 9h à 10h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes des Belges du bout du Monde sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/432 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Guest: Mike Bradbury, Head Coach New Mexico Women's BasketballIn this week's basketball coaching conversation, New Mexico head coach Mike Bradbury joins the Basketball Podcast to share insights on efficient language, keeping it simple, and his “so what” philosophy.Mike Bradbury enters his ninth season as head coach for The University of New Mexico women's basketball team. In his previous eight seasons at the helm, Bradbury has guided the Lobos to a 162-89 (.645) and 89-51 (.636) in conference and became just the second coach in UNM history to win 100 games. Overall as a head coach he has won over 340 games.Five times in his tenure (2017-18, 2018-19, 2021-22, 2022-23, 2023-24) the Lobos eclipsed the 20-win mark, with the Lobos tying the program record for most wins in a single season with 26 in 2021-22. Further, the 25 wins in 2017-18 were tied for the second-most wins in program history. The consecutive 20-plus win seasons under Bradbury in 2017-18 and 2018-19 were the first for the program since the 2007-08 – 2008-09 seasonsFrom 2007 to 2010, Bradbury led Morehead State to a 50–44 record over the course of three seasons, including a 22–11 record and a bid to the WBI in his final season as head coach. The 22-win mark set the school's NCAA-era record for victories in a season, and the 14–4 conference mark in the same year set the school's single season conference wins record and was also the highest conference winning percentage in a season in school historyAt Wright State from 2010 to 2016, Bradbury had five seasons with 20 or more wins and led the school to its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 2014, in addition to WBI appearances in 2011 and 2012 and WNIT appearances in 2015 and 2016.Breakdown:01:10 Longevity in Coaching02:02 Building a Winning Team Culture03:03 Efficient Communication in Coaching04:39 Non-Negotiables in Player Development10:27 Adapting Offensive Strategies15:14 Defensive Principles and Adaptability21:14 Coaching Philosophy and Staff Development26:05 Overcoming Adversity: No Excuses26:42 Staff Organization and Responsibilities27:56 Efficient Practice Communication30:03 Post-Practice and Game Review33:05 Adapting Coaching Strategies39:06 Simplifying Game Plans48:05 Maintaining Passion for CoachingChris Oliver / Basketball ImmersionWebsite: http://basketballimmersion.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/bballimmersion?lang=enYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/basketballimmersionInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/coachbballimmersion/Immersion Videos:Check out all our all-access practice and specialty clinics: https://www.immersionvideos.com
This one isn't exactly about light pollution, but you're going to want to hear it anyway. It's all about 5G. No, not the “5G cell towers are giving you Covid 19” conspiracy, this is about the deleterious effects of radio frequency waves on your health. With the lack of updated standards, and the usual corporate protectionism, this train is full speed ahead unless people like Odette can cut the tracks. Take your phone away from your head! Odette Wilkens has been a technology transactional attorney for over 20 years, having represented multi-national corporations in entertainment, finance and technology. She co-founded Wired Broadband, Inc. (WBI) a non-profit in New York City, and The National Call for Safe Technology, a coalition of over 100 organizations and individuals nationwide. Both organizations advocate protections for the public by promoting safer telecommunications. Expanding her efforts in NYC, she founded the NYC Alliance for Safe Technology, a coalition of NYC residents, civic leaders, and community board leaders and members, advocating for the responsible placement of wireless facilities. In her various roles, she has been promoting the benefits of wired broadband connectivity to bridge the digital divide for the unserved, underserved and disabled communities. Connect with Odette: National level: https://thenationalcall.org/ Local level (NYC): https://www.wiredbroadband.org/ www.facebook.com/wiredbroadband linkedin.com/in/odette-j-wilkens-esq-8153a32
Découvrons la Croatie avec le jeune étudiant Robin Cherry, le journaliste Pierre Galhaut et l'écrivain Nicolas Hanot installé à Zaghreb Originaire de Ciney, Robin Cherry a 16 ans et est le 5ème cinquième lauréat de la série RTBF “Un Ticket pour l'Europe”. Agréablement surpris par sa destination, il nous parlera des rencontres au cours de son périple en Croatie mais aussi en Serbie Après avoir fait ses romanes à l'UCLouvain, Nicolas Hanot part enseigner le français et devient lecteur du WBI. Installé à Zaghreb depuis 5 ans, il a aussi passé 3 mois sur une petite ile de la côte Dalmate. Un séjour forcé par le confinement qui lui a inspiré son premier roman “Les Vaches de Monsieur Burbur”, primé par le prix René Fallet Pierre Galhaut, présentateur de la série télé, nous racontera quelques anecdotes des coulisses du tournage Durant 8 semaines, vivez les aventures des jeunes belges d'« Un Ticket pour l'Europe » avec Adrien Joveneau et ses invités dans les Belges du bout du monde. A 9 heures, le dimanche matin sur La Première et à volonté sur RTBF Auvio.be Croatie - 28/04/24 Merci pour votre écoute Les Belges du bout du Monde, c'est également en direct tous les samedis de 9h à 10h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes des Belges du bout du Monde sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/432 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
THIS IS A REPLAY OF EPISODE #4 Dr. Namie will discuss his journey as a workplace bullying researcher and advocate over the past 25 years and his efforts to change the nature of work through the adoption of the Healthy Workplace Bill. From his experience of vicarious exposure to his wife's experience of bullying, through their formation of an organization to train and develop anti-bullying advocates across the United States, supporting bullying targets and consulting with organizations, unions, and leadership groups as well as serving as an expert witness. Dr. Namie, his wife Dr. Ruth Namie, and the Workplace Bullying Institute have been pursuing healthier workplaces for years. He will discuss a number of important concepts that are essential in establishing a psychologically healthy and safe environment.
"Poszedłem do korwinistów i konfederatów. Na początek? Dużo cukru. A potem rozgrywki polityczne, intrygi, kochanki, noce na barze, nazistowskie piosenki. Wbiłem się w szeregi chłopców, którzy maszerują równo, zauroczeni wizją wolności totalnej. A jeśli na końcu tego marszu czeka nas Polska totalna, w której wolność będzie tylko dla wybranych?" Marcin Kącki, jeden z najlepszych i najbardziej doświadczonych polskich reporterów, nagradzany autor takich książek jak "Białystok. Biała siła, czarna pamięć" czy "Oświęcim. Czarna zima", wraca z nowym reportażem o ludziach, którzy walczą o przejęcie władzy w Polsce. Na rozmowę z autorem zaprasza Michał Nogaś. Nowy odcinek podcastu w cyklu "Książki. Magazyn do słuchania" w sobotę co drugi tydzień. Do usłyszenia! Więcej podcastów na https://wyborcza.pl/podcast
1:25 Director of Creative & Digital Strategy Whitney Haworth joins to recap Men's Golf winning the 43rd Schenkel Invitational @ Forest Heights & talks Women's Golf & Football's new staff hires in advance of Spring practice15:34 Charlie Henry hired as new Men's Basketball head coach16:21 Women's Basketball participates in the 13th annual WBI in Lexington, earning their 1st postseason win in program history over Northern Illinois, finishing in 4th place overall17:21 Naj Watson breaks school record in 200m @ Black & Gold Invite in Orlando to open the Outdoor season17:48 Tennis - Men earn 9th straight win improving to 12-3 by topping Georgia St to start SBC play 1-0, Women blank Troy improving to 10-318:32 Softball down ULM in finale, heads to JMU this weekend19:06 Baseball falls to Kennesaw State but sweeps South Alabama to start SBC play 3-0 w/post-game from head coach Rodney Hennon (21:20) - next 5 on the road @Mercer Wednesday 6 pm, @Southern Miss this weekend26:14 Conversation w/Football offensive coordinator Bryan Ellis previewing Spring practiceSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jay + Keith - Jay = Today 0:00 Intro + Portal Watch 11:21 ETSU WBB HC Brenda Mock Brown on the Bucs' record-setting season and playing in the WBI
1:52 Women's Basketball selected for 13th annual WBI in Lexington, KY starting Friday @ 7:30 v Northern Illinois.3:05 Men's Golf wins Colleton River Collegiate for second straight year3:35 Women's Rifle's Addy Burrow participates in 2023 NCAA Air Rifle Championship4:18 Indoor Track & Field earns six All-Sun Belt selections; Outdoor season begins this weekend in Orlando5:12 Softball falls to Kennesaw St, trip Ann Arbor canceled - visit Georgia Tech, host ULM to start Sun Belt play5:47 Women's Golf finishes 12th @ Valspar Augusta Invitational6:06 Pierre Mouesca named Sun Belt Men's Tennis Player of the Week, Eagles take down Charlotte to win 8th straight match, now 11-3 on season6:31 Women's Tennis drops Sun Belt opener @ Coastal, heads to Troy Saturday6:49 Baseball drops pair to Georgia & all 3 to Rutgers w/post-game comments from head coach Rodney Hennon (8:59)12:33 Men's Golf head coach Carter Collins recaps win @ Colleton River Collegiate & previews 43rd Schenkel Invitational @ Forest Heights30:48 Visit w/South Alabama radio voice JT Crabtree to preview the start of Sun Belt baseball play including Eagles v Jaguars for 3 games this weekend in StatesboroSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Today in The Good Girl Confessional, host Sandy Lowres chats with Dr Vanessa Atienza-Hipolito - Fellow of Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists. She is a Clinical Director, Specialist of Breast Imaging and Intervention and solopreneur/business owner at Women's Breast Imaging (WBI) in Cottesloe, Western Australia.Vanessa is also a qualified and fellowship-trained subspecialist in Musculoskeletal Imaging, Interventional and Vascular Radiology and Paediatric Radiology in Perth Western Australia. Dr Vanessa is a passionate educator and is an Adjunct Clinical Senior Lecturer at Curtin University, The University of Western Australia, and Edith Cowan University.As of 2022, she is a published co-author of three book anthologies: Courage and Confidence: What It Really Takes To Succeed in Business Global Girls - Find Your Thing;And The Power To Rise Above - a book I am so proud to have co-authored with Vanessa, and so thrilled that Vanessa reads from her chapter for us on work place bullying. We are so thrilled this book of hope is in the Hollywood Swag Bags given to 2023 Oscar Nominees including Jamie Lee Curtis, Michelle Yeoh, Cate Blanchett and Steven Spielberg, amongst others.Her notable awards are: Millennial Achiever Award presented by Filipino Australian Club of Perth (2019) People's Choice Gold Award for the ‘Making A Difference (Local Community)' category presented by AusMumpreneur (2021) Breast Radiologist of the Year presented by the Radiology Awards (2022) A highly respected Breast Imaging Specialist, Dr Vanessa is also an accomplished speaker, wife, mother and triathlete.Like many women she faces the stressful challenges of juggling the demands of a career and family whilst taking care of her own physical and spiritual wellbeing. A bright and engaging role model, she always strives to be the best she can both professionally and personally. She is also committed to helping others do the same by sharing the experience and wisdom gained from her own amazing personal journey.Above all, Dr Vanessa saves lives. It is her personal mission to save as many lives as possible by spreading her message of preventative medicine and detecting breast cancer early using advanced mammogram and ultrasound screening technologies such as used at her business at WBI. Along with her message of physical well-being, Dr Vanessa also enthusiastically speaks on self-care, self-compassion, resilience and overcoming difficulties, providing practical strategies that are easily applied to everyday life.You can follow Dr Vanessa here:Instagram: @dr.vanessa.atienza.hipolitoFacebook: Dr Vanessa Atienza-HipolitoTwitter: @DrVanessaAHLinkedIn: Dr Vanessa Atienza-HipolitoWebsite: www.drvanessaa.com linktr.ee/drvanessaatienzahipolito
(Lander, WY) – Mental Health Monday, the weekly segment on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM's Coffee Time, hosted by Vince Tropea, continued today with guest Dr. David Martorano, MD, Associate Medical Director, Director of Adult Psychiatric Services at the Wyoming Behavioral Institute (WBI) in Casper. (Click here to listen to past Mental Health Monday interviews with folks from WBI) Today's topic focused on addiction. Dr. Martorano discussed why funding issues can cause many problems when attempting to treat addiction, ways to help combat addiction among the youth, and how WBI can help folks seeking information on potential treatment. The full Mental Health Monday interview with Dr. Martarano is below. The main goal of Mental Health Monday is to start an open dialogue about a number of mental health topics, and how folks are being affected on local, state and national levels. Guests range from psychiatrists, psychologists, school/drug/grief counselors, and any other professionals in the field, as well as testimonials from those affected by mental health issues, such as students, veterans, first responders, and many more. Be sure to check out Mental Health Monday on Coffee Time every Monday, and tune in to Coffee Time every morning at 8:00 AM on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM, or stream it live right here. If you would like to be a guest on Mental Health Monday, please reach out to vince@county10.com.
(Lander, WY) – Mental Health Monday, the weekly segment on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM's Coffee Time hosted by Vince Tropea, continued today with Traci Blevins, Director of Outpatient and Telehealth Services with the Wyoming Behavioral Institute (WBI). (Click here to listen to past Mental Health Monday interviews with folks from WBI) Blevins gives details about the Telehealth services WBI provides, as well as the benefits of telehealth therapy for folks in rural areas, younger generations who might be more comfortable with therapy that is not in-person, and any folks who may want to give therapy a try from the comfort of their own homes. The full Mental Health Monday interview with Blevins is below. The main goal of Mental Health Monday is to start an open dialogue about a number of mental health topics, and how folks are being affected on local, state and national levels. Guests range from psychiatrists, psychologists, school/drug/grief counselors, and any other professionals in the field, as well as testimonials from those affected by mental health issues, such as students, veterans, first responders, and many more. Be sure to check out Mental Health Monday on Coffee Time every Monday, and tune in to Coffee Time every morning at 8:00 AM on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM, or stream it live right here. If you would like to be a guest on Mental Health Monday, please reach out to vince@county10.com.
In this episode, Dr. Nancy Murphy discusses some high level resus pearls about some of the worst Antidepressant overdoses you will see. We cover management of neuro and cardiotoxicity, timing of intubation, WBI and much more.Any further shownotes, as well as other free open access resuscitation related content, can be found at www.theresuscourse.com
Marie MICHIELS nous explique comment l' organisme WBI permet de promouvoir les designers belges à l'étranger.
Marie MICHIELS nous explique comment l' organisme WBI permet de promouvoir les designers belges à l'étranger.
Welcome to Episode 1097; Future of sustainability reporting to retailers and financial markets - the development of globally standardized metrics Welcome to Wine2Wine Business Forum 2021 Series. The sessions are recorded and uploaded on Italian Wine Podcast. wine2wine is an international wine business forum, held annually in Verona Italy since 2014. The event is a key reference point for wine producers and a diverse variety of wine professionals eager to develop and grow their wine business worldwide. About today's session: “Sustainability” in the wine industry oscillates between being the most important topic for the future of the industry and a useless buzzword. The key to making sustainable wine into something tangible and easy to understand for consumers, buyers, journalists and the industry itself is covering the whole supply chain in the work, finding an industry wide agreement on the most important practices, and including science backed metrics. About the Speakers EricaLandinLöfving is the Chief Sustainability Officer of the publicly traded wine group Vintage Wine Estates (Nasdaq: VWE) in California. She joined VWE in June of 2021 after many years as a sustainability focused wine writer in Sweden (Decanter, Allt om Vin, Wine Enthusiast, Meininger's WBI etc) and consultant in sustainable food systems and certifications (Systembolaget, ICA Group, Orkla, Electrolux…) Mrs. Landin-Lofving has a MSc. in Biology, continued studies in Oenology, WSET III, Sustainable Business Strategy and financial ESG analysis. Though she likes the sustainability impact of working with larger companies, her favorite wines often come from small family producers or “natural” wine projects. The newly launched Sustainable Wine Roundtable, where she is on the steering committee, will be open to members from all parts of the wine industry, of all sizes, from 2022 Connect Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/erica.landin.3 Instagram: @scandinaviangreen Twitter: @ericawinetrips Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erica-lofving/ Moderator Dr. Laura Catena is a Harvard and Stanford trained biologist and physician, and she founded the Catena Institute of Wine in Argentina in 1995. The Institute is dedicated to preserving the Malbec variety and to elevating Argentine wine. Dr. Catena is currently managing director of Bodega Catena Zapata (est. 1902) as well as her own Luca winery. In 2017, Bodega Catena Zapata received Argentina's Extraordinary Winery Award from Parker's The Wine Advocate, while Vivino's Wine Style Awards named it the most awarded winery in the world in 2018, 2019, and 2020. Just this year, Drinks International named Catena Zapata the world's most admired wine brand Connect Instagram: @lauracatenamd Twitter: @LauraCatena Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-laura-catena-054987195/ Let's keep in touch! Follow us on our social media channels: Instagram @italianwinepodcast Facebook @ItalianWinePodcast Twitter @itawinepodast Tiktok @MammaJumboShrimp LinkedIn @ItalianWinePodcast If you feel like helping us, donate here www.italianwinepodcast.com/donate-to-show Until next time, cin cin!
(Lander, WY) – Mental Health Monday, the new weekly segment on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM's Coffee Time, hosted by Vince Tropea, continued today with guest Dr. David Martorano, MD, Assistant Medical Director, Director of Adult Psychiatric Services at the Wyoming Behavioral Institute (WBI) in Casper. The last time we spoke with Dr. Martorano, we looked at mental health from a broad perspective and touched on some local and state issues, but for today's show we chatted about a new undertaking for WBI, which will be somewhat of an exclusive announcement from Mental Health Monday. WBI is about to officially launch Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) treatments, a non-invasive treatment for depression, beginning in October. (In the interview, it is stated that the treatments will begin in August, but it will in fact be in October, with a full press release from WBI forthcoming.) Dr. Martorano discussed the TMS process, how folks can tell if this form of treatment is right for them, and why he felt the need to bring the treatment to Wyoming (he was the first to do so). One of the key points brought up in today's conversation was the concept of hope in the world of mental health, which issues like depression and anxiety rob most people of. While TMS treatment may not be for everyone, it might provide hope to those who have not had successful medicinal or psychiatric treatments. To learn more about TMS and what the folks at WBI are doing for treatment, check out the full Mental Health Monday interview below. The main goal of Mental Health Monday is to start an open dialogue about a number of mental health topics, and how folks are being affected on local, state and national levels. Guests range from psychiatrists, psychologists, school/drug/grief counselors, and any other professionals in the field, as well as testimonials from those affected by mental health issues, such as students, veterans, first responders, and many more. Be sure to check out Mental Health Monday on Coffee Time every Monday, and tune in to Coffee Time every morning at 8:00 AM on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM, or stream it live right here. If you would like to be a guest on Mental Health Monday, please reach out to vince@county10.com.
Dr. Namie will discuss his journey as a workplace bullying researcher and advocate over the past 25 years and his efforts to change the nature of work through the adoption of the Healthy Workplace Bill. From his experience of vicarious exposure to his wife's experience of bullying, through their formation of an organization to train and develop anti-bullying advocates across the United States, supporting bullying targets and consulting with organizations, unions, and leadership groups as well as serving as an expert witness. Dr. Namie, his wife Dr. Ruth Namie, and the Workplace Bullying Institute have been pursuing healthier workplaces for years. He will discuss a number of important concepts that are essential in establishing a psychologically healthy and safe environment.
Have you been bullied at work? According to a 2021 survey from WBI, 30% of the American workforce report being bullied at work. Workplace bullying can rob people of their job satisfaction and effectiveness, leading some to suffer great and sustained physical and/or mental harm. Today on Conflict Managed, we speak with Nicki Eyre, an expert in workplace bullying. Having experienced bullying in a previous organization, Nicki knows first-hand the impact of a toxic relationship. Since that time, she has dedicated her career to raising awareness of the impact of bullying as well as offering practical and pragmatic solutions to organizations who want to improve the way that they handle bullying and toxic behavior. She recognizes the scale of the problem at both an organizational and individual level and is able to bring her wealth of experience to her role as a consultant, coach, trainer, and speaker. Conduct Change was established in 2019 by Nicki Eyre and offers business consultancy, training and coaching about workplace bullying and the need for behavioral change in the workplace. Nicki is an advocate of building a workplace which is psychologically safe, with a particular interest in tackling workplace bullying as part of an overall approach to improving workplace culture and wellbeing. She's also the Chief Campaigning Officer for the Stop Hurt at Work campaign which is currently focusing on raising awareness and seeking formal recognition of workplace bullying as a problem that injures individuals and damages organizations. The law does not provide sufficient protection or redress for people whose employers let bullying go unchecked, making the process of seeking legal remedy in these cases unduly complex and arduous. Stop Hurt at Work is working with lawyers and legislators to identify and close the gaps in legislation. You can find Nicki Eyre on social media: www.conductchange.co.uk https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickieyre/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/conductchange https://www.linkedin.com/company/stophurtatwork Twitter @Conduct_Change Conflict Managed is hosted by Merry Brown and produced by Third Party Workplace Conflict Restoration Services. Contact us at 3PConflictRestoration@gmail.com. Our music is courtesy of Dove Pilot.
(Lander, WY) – Mental Health Monday, the new weekly segment on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM's Coffee Time, hosted by Vince Tropea, continued today with guest Jenny Lok MOTR/L, an Occupational Therapist at the Wyoming Behavioral Institute (WBI). The main goal of Mental Health Monday is to start an open dialogue about a number of mental health topics, and how folks are being affected on local, state and national levels. Guests range from psychiatrists, psychologists, school/drug/grief counselors, and any other professionals in the field, as well as testimonials from those affected by mental health issues, such as students, veterans, first responders, and many more. Lok discussed misconceptions about what Occupational Therapy means, how it's used in the psychiatric setting, the potential benefits of group therapy, the effects of the pandemic on overall mental health in our country and Wyoming specifically, and much more. Check out the full Mental Health Monday interview with Lok below. Be sure to check out Mental Health Monday on Coffee Time every Monday, and tune in to Coffee Time every morning at 8:00 AM on KOVE 1330 AM / 107.7 FM, or stream it live right here. If you would like to be a guest on Mental Health Monday, please reach out to vince@county10.com.
Happy Friday folks! We hope you've had a good week to this point, and we hope you enjoyed all of the post season basketball over the past week. We have a lot to cover on this weeks show! To open up the pod, the boys discuss Miami's parting of ways with men's basketball coach Jack Owens'. Owens went 70-83 in five seasons at the helm, and the RedHawks were never able to get over the hump and become true contenders in the conference. This makes three head coaching vacancies in the MAC, and Miami joins Western Michigan and Ball State in their search for a new head of the program. Moving into post season hoops talk, Zack and Zach discuss the valiant effort that Akron put forth in their first round NCAA tournament game against UCLA. The Zips led by one at half time and by eight in the second half, but the Bruins size proved to be too much for Akron to handle. Nonetheless, the future is bright for the Zips, who have basically their entire roster returning next year. Elsewhere in men's hoops, Toledo submitted an incredibly disappointing performance in their NIT opener, losing to Dayton at home 74-55. Kent State didn't fare much better in The Basketball Classic, losing their opening round game to Southern Utah. Ohio picked up the only post season victory, defeating Rice in the first round of the CBI before falling to Abilene Christian in the second round. In women's hoops, Dyaisha Fair and Buffalo fought hard against Tennessee in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Despite an early Buffalo lead, the Volunteers pulled away in the fourth quarter for an 80-67 victory. Similar to Akron on the men's side, the Bulls performed admirably but were unable to come out on top. In the WNIT, Toledo and Kent State were the only two of the five MAC squads to win their first round games, with Akron, Ball State, and Ohio all falling in the first round. Bowling Green ended their season on a high note, finishing third in the WBI tournament after defeating Nevada in the third place game. To close out the show, the boys re-acquaint themselves with the baseball standings, as conference play has begun in the last two weeks. Central Michigan and Ball State seem to have righted the ship after their early season struggles, and the two preseason favorites currently find themselves at the top of the standings. As always, thanks for stopping by this week folks. Don't forget to subscribe to the Bandwagon on your favorite podcast platform so that you don't miss anything! Everyone have a great weekend, and we'll see you here again next week. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Join abolitionist organizers connecting the dots between surveillance capitalism, border imperialism, and neoliberal prison reforms. A dominant mode of our time, data analysis and prediction are part of a longstanding historical process of racial and national profiling, management and control in the US. In a new report, From Data Criminalization to Prison Abolition, Community Justice Exchange examines the interlocked machineries of migrant surveillance and describes processes of “data criminalization:” the creation, archiving, theft, resale and analysis of datasets that mark some of us as threats and risks, based on data culled about us from state and commercial sources. How might we fight data criminalization on our terms? Rather than being drawn into arguments about privacy, accuracy, or the theatrics of consumer consent and regulatory oversight, we assert that these datasets are inherently illegitimate, and creation and use of them should be abolished. What if we organized our resistance based on that premise? Speakers: J. Khadijah Abdurahman is an abolitionist whose research focus is predictive analytics in the US child welfare system and the Horn of Africa. They are the founder of We Be Imagining, a public interest technology project at Columbia University's INCITE Center and The American Assembly's Democracy and Trust Program. WBI draws on the Black radical tradition to develop public technology through infusing academic discourse with the performance arts in partnership with community based organizations. Jacinta González is a senior campaign organizer with Mijente and leads their #NoTechforICE campaign. Previously, she worked at PODER in México, organizing the Río Sonora River Basin committees against water contamination by the mining industry. Jacinta was the lead organizer for the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice Congress of Day Laborers (2007-2014). In Louisiana Gonzalez helped establish a base of day laborers and undocumented families dedicated to building worker power, advancing racial justice, and organizing against deportations in post-Katrina New Orleans. Sarah T. Hamid (she/her/no preference) is an abolitionist and organizer working in the Pacific Northwest. She leads the policing technology campaign at the Carceral Tech Resistance Network: an archiving and knowledge sharing network for organizers building community defense against the design, roll-out, and experimentation of carceral technologies. Sarah co-founded the inside/outside research collaboration, the Prison Tech Research Group, and helped create the #8toAbolition campaign—a police and prison abolition resource built during last summer's uprisings against state violence. Puck Lo (she/they) is the Research Director of Community Justice Exchange, an abolitionist organization that supports organizers to fight all forms of incarceration and social control. They spent the last year examining Department of Homeland Security's data regimes and other expanding systems of corporeal theft and predictive criminalization. Harsha Walia (moderator) is the author of Border and Rule and Undoing Border Imperialism and an organizer rooted in migrant justice, abolitionist, antiracist, feminist, anti-imperialist, and anticapitalist movements for over two decades. This event is sponsored by Community Justice Exchange and Haymarket Books. Watch the live event recording: https://youtu.be/FTg20fo3nyk Buy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org Follow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks
Long time no see folks! Is your head spinning from the packed weekend of hoops we just had? We certainly had to catch our breath after the championship games on Saturday, and there is a TON to cover on this week's pod! Starting off on the men's side of things, the boys look back at an incredible three days of basketball in Cleveland. Toledo once again failed to capture the title despite winning the regular season championship, falling to Akron in the semi-finals Friday night. In the other semi-final, Kent State knocked off Ohio to set up a rivalry showdown in the final game. After some locker room drama led to four Kent State players being suspended, Akron came out on top, dominating the Flashes on their way to a 75-55 victory. As a reward, the Zips earned a 13 seed in the upcoming NCAA tournament and will take on the UCLA Bruins on Thursday night in Portland. In other post season news, Toledo earned a trip to the NIT as a reward for their regular season MAC title. As a reward, the Rockets will get a home game and host in-state rival Dayton on Wednesday night. Elsewhere, Ohio accepted an invitation to the CBI and Kent State will participate in The Basketball Classic. On the women's side of the fence, Dyaisha Fair and the Buffalo Bulls cut down the nets, holding off Ball State 79-75 in the final. Ball State had a bit of a Cinderella run to the final game, knocking off Toledo in the semi-finals. Unfortunately for Cardinal's fans, Fair proved to be too much to handle, scoring 30 points in the final to lead the Bulls to victory. Buffalo will take on Tennessee in the opening round of the NCAA tournament on Saturday, the Bulls fourth tournament appearance in the last six years. Some folks were disappointed that Toledo didn't get an at-large bid, and justifiably so. Instead, the Rockets will head to the WNIT with five of their conference partners. Toledo, Kent State, Akron, Ohio, and Ball State will all participate in the tournament, an unprecedented number in recent WNIT history. Bowling Green accepted an invitation to the WBI tournament, which will be held next week on the campus of Transylvania University in Lexington, KY. The boys close out the show by discussing the post-season awards. Sincere Carry was player of the year in men's hoops, while Akron's Jordyn Dawson took home the same award on the women's side of things. It was well earned in both cases. As always, thanks for stopping by this week folks. If you're not already, don't forget to subscribe to the pod on your favorite platform - we don't want you to miss anything! Have a great rest of your week, enjoy all of the hoops, and good luck on your brackets! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Join contributors to the special edition of Logic Magazine, Beacons, for a discussion on Black freedom and technology. What would it mean to take the Black internet seriously? How do we call in Black studies scholars to imagining technologies of black freedoms in addition to grappling with the racial regimes wrought by artificial intelligence and machine learning models? The dominant approach to mis/disinformation is policing, reporting and suspending individual users but what if we oriented towards abolition and affirming black joy? What can the black radical tradition offer in addressing new modes of surveillance and social control that begin from black indigineity instead of reinscribing the nation state? Contributors to special edition of Logic Magazine, in partnership with We Be Imagining, Beacons: Andre Brock and SA Smythe will be in conversation with Zoé Samudzi. Moderated by J. Khadijah Abdurahman. Get the new issue of Logic Magazine, Beacons, here: https://logicmag.io --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Speakers: SA Smythe (they / them) is a poet, translator, and assistant professor of Black European Cultural Studies, Contemporary Mediterranean Studies, and Black Trans Poetics at UCLA, where they research relational aspects of Black belonging beyond borders. They are a Senior Fellow at theCenter for Applied Transgender Studies and editor of Troubling the Grounds: Global Configurations of Blackness, Nativism, and Indigeneity, a special issue for Postmodern Culture. Winner of the 2022 Rome Prize for Modern Italian Studies, Smythe is currently based between Rome and Tongva Land (Los Angeles). André Brock (@docdre) is an Associate Professor in the School of Literature, Media & Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Dr. Brock is one of the preeminent scholars of Black Cyberculture. His work bridges Science and Technology Studies and Critical Discourse Analysis, showing how the communicative affordances of online media align with those of Black communication practices. His scholarship includes published articles on racial representations in videogames, black women and weblogs, whiteness, blackness, and digital technoculture, as well as groundbreaking research on Black Twitter. He is the author of Distributed Blackness: African-American Cyberculture. Zoé Samudzi has a PhD in Sociology from the University of California, San Francisco where she is a postdoctoral fellow in the ACTIONS Program. She is co-author of As Black as Resistance, guest editor of the September-October 2021 issue of The Funambulist titled "Against Genocide," and a writer whose work has appeared in The New Republic, The New Inquiry, Hyperallergic, Jewish Currents, and other outlets. J. Khadijah Abdurahman (she/they/any) is an abolitionist whose research focus is predictive analytics in the child welfare system. They are the founder of We Be Imagining, a public interest technology project at Columbia University's INCITE Center and The American Assembly's Democracy and Trust Program. WBI draws on the Black radical tradition to develop public technology through infusing academic discourse with the performance arts in partnership with community based organizations. Khadijah is co-leading the Otherwise School: Tools and Techniques of Counter-Fascism alongside Sucheta Ghoshal's Inquilab at the University of Washington, HCDE. Their report examining the role of tech in mass atrocities in Ethiopia is forthcoming. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- This event is sponsored by Logic Magazine and Haymarket Books. Watch the live event recording: https://youtu.be/kiuv7W4gNqo Buy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org Follow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks
With potential changes to tax laws on the horizon, Don Schreiber, Jr. of WBI and PIMCO's Alan Trice will discuss the tax advantages that municipal bonds and dividend income may provide investors with now and in the future. The panelists will also discuss the tax advantages ETFs can provide.
IG + Twitter: @WeBeImaginingSupport Us: On PatreonHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman and Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisWho is responsible for safeguarding the biometric data of refugees collected in a humanitarian and mass atrocities context? The canonical justification for collecting biometric data in a humanitarian context is to mitigate the risk of fraud by recipients. However, this claim has been thoroughly debunked including because it assumes fraud is most prevalent among recipients rather than the organizations that operate as intermediaries between donors and aid recipients. What is driving this competition between the UNHCR and the World Food Program (WFP) to create and own the largest multinational biometric database? Zara Rahman joins the WBI show to discuss these questions with a focus on how the Rohingya have resisted digital identification schemes that violate their collective autonomy.Zara Rahman is a researcher, writer and linguist based in Berlin, Germany, and working internationally. She's currently the Deputy Director at The Engine Room, an international non-profit organisation strengthening the fight for social justice by supporting civil society to use technology and data in strategic, effective and responsible ways. **This episode was recorded April 1, 2021, prior to this report being released, but please note Human Rights Watch (HRW) has documented that the UN shared Rohingya Data Without Informed ConsentLinks for the Episode:Myanmar coup: What is happening and why?Black Lives Matter protesters aren't being tracked with Covid-19 surveillance tech. Not yetRohingya refugees protest, strike against smart ID cards issued in Bangladesh campsBangladesh cuts access to mobile phone services for the RohingyaWhen technology improves the lives of refugeesBiometrics in the Humanitarian SectorAutomating Inequality | Virginia Eubanks | MacmillanDenied visibility in official data, millions of transgender Indians can't access benefits4 Cultural, Social, and Legal Considerations | Biometric Recognition: Challenges and OpportunitiesLiveCast Episode 13 Infant Identity Management – ID4AfricaHow Our Days Became Numbered: Risk and the Rise of the Statistical Individual, BoukRohingya Refugees Protest, Strike Against Smart ID Cards Issued in Bangladesh CampsBurma: Amend Biased Citizenship LawAP Exclusive 'Leave no Tigrayan': In Ethiopia, an ethnicity is erased By CARA ANNAa fewA fiduciary approach to child data governanceDHS/USCIS/PIA-081 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Information Data ShareTested on millions Non-volunteers (Jordan EyeHood Technology)Use of Biometric Data to Identify Terrorists: Best Practice or Risky Business?Palantir and WFP partner to help transform global humanitarian delivery | World Food ProgrammePalantir's partnership with the UN World Food Programme has humanitarians worried.ID 2020 AgendaIrresponsible Data Risks Registering RohingyaThe Biometric Assemblage: Surveillance, Experimentation, Profit, and the Measuring of Refugee Bodies - Mirca Madianou, 2019Digital payments to refugees A pathway towards financial inclusionBangladesh Will Demand Biometric Data From All SIM Card UsersSharifa SultanaZara Recommends Native American DNA — University of Minnesota PressShe Would Be King
– No mistrz! Wbił w nich klina jak w masło, wystarczyło tylko lekko puknąć – mówią o prezesie PiS i rozegraniu opozycji politycy rządzącej partii. Koszt manewru Lewicy dla całej opozycji będzie ogromny. Podzieliła się mocniej niż Zjednoczona Prawica i jest coraz dalej od jakiejkolwiek koalicji na kolejne wybory. A te mogą się odbyć szybciej, niż myślimy.
The Workplace Bullying Institute describes workplace bullying as: “Repeated mistreatment of an employee by one or more employees; abusive conduct that is: threatening, humiliating, or intimidating, work sabotage, or verbal abuse.” In its 2021 survey, the WBI noted that 43% of remote employees reported being bullied at work with 50% of that bullying taking place in meetings. On this episode of the Radical Candor podcast, Kim, Amy and Jason talk about combatting bullying in remote work environments. See the show notes >> Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Bob, Matt and John (with a new Twitter handle, @horizoneJohn) talk about the post-season success of the Horizon League's women's basketball teams, including Wright State's upset of Arkansas in the NCAA Tournament and Milwaukee's dominant win over Drake in the WNIT. Bob and Matt also have a conversation with Cleveland State's Chris Kielsmeier, whose team took the WBI crown. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/horizonert/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/horizonert/support
How do we think about “Nah” vs the “I would rather not to” of Bartleby the Scrivener by Herman Melville- in other words, how does Blackness re-situate refusal? Samaria Rice and Lisa Simpson, mothers of Tamir Rice and Richard Risher who were murdered by the police, released forceful statements calling out the opportunist infiltration of BLM LA and Shaun King into the movement. This inadvertently catalyzed a conversation on Twitter around “Abolish Black Men” This episode unpacks what that phrase means, What is gender abolition? How does class mediate this discussion around gender and is leaving the hood a precondition for Black studies? Marquis Bey joins the WBI show to vibe on Lil Wayne’s A Milli, Katrina, digital infrastructure for mutual aid, and the utility in being unrecognizable to the state. Marquis Bey is an Assistant Professor of African American Studies and English, and core faculty member of critical theory, at Northwestern University. Their work concerns black feminist theorizing, transgender studies, abolition, and critical theory. The author of several books, including Them Goon Rules: Fugitive Essays on Radical Black Feminism, most recently they are in the midst of revising a monograph entitled Black Trans Feminism to be published in 2022 with Duke University Press. Bey is committed to thinking rigorously and radically about subjectivity, blackness, nonnormative gender, and thoroughgoing abolition.**You can send personal donations to the CashApps of $SamariaRice and $LisaLee693 and/or make contributions to the Tamir Rice FoundationIG + Twitter: @WeBeImaginingSupport Us: On PatreonHost: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:Anarcho-Blackness: Notes Toward a Black AnarchismTina Campt: Black Feminist Futures and the Practice of Fugitivity - ClassroomMelville, Herman. 1853Spike Lee turns cameras on New OrleansSpike Lee Paid $200,000 By NYPD For Consulting On Ad CampaignFred Moten Blackness and Nothingness (Mysticism in the Flesh)Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During this Crisis (and the Next) – Dean SpadeDistributed Blackness: African American CyberculturesSamaria Rice Calls Out Prominent Black Activists In Scathing StatementSamaria Rice Has Demands for Shaun King, BLM Activists2Pac Speaks On Malcolm X Grassroots Movement 1992Otherwise Movements – The New InquiryNikki Giovanni Speaks on her "Thug Life" TattooDenise Ferreira da Silva – Hacking the Subject: Black Feminism, Refusal, and the Limits of CritiqueMama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: An American Grammar Book Author(s): Hortense J. SpillersAlondra NelsonThe Race for Theory by Barbara ChristianRecommendations:Black Aliveness, or A Poetics of BeingMAGIC: THE GATHERING
How do layers of content moderation infrastructure shape sociality and anti-sociality? What are the incentives motivating algorithms used by Facebook, Google and Amazon? How do algorithms shape our sense of time, how we register social information and what content is produced by users? What are the implications for digital consent? Unsettling the myth of “organic content” we discuss Spam and who gets to decide which media is categorized as deviant.Elinor Carmi joins the WBI show to discuss the history of Bell Telephone regulating sound as a form of urban planning in New York City-where Black Americans were deemed noisy (and certain decibels were criminalized), the way digital infrastructure mediates discourse around Israel/Palestine, and the connections between digital literacy and grassroots digital activism. Elinor Carmi is a Postdoc Research Associate in digital culture and society, at the Communication and Media Department, Liverpool University, UK. She’s the author of: Media Distortions: Understanding the Power Behind Spam, Noise and Other Deviant MediaIG + Twitter: @WeBeImaginingSupport Us: On PatreonHost: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:The Organic Myth — Real LifeMe and my big data: developing citizens' data literacyBeing Alone Together: Developing Fake News Immunity Being Alone Together: Developing Fake News Immunity- Faculty of Humanities & SocialTHE playlist – Media DistortionsDear Science and Other Stories - playlist by demonicground | SpotifySocial media's erasure of Palestinians is a grim warning for our futureBlack Siren Radio — The American AssemblyHe got Facebook hooked on AI. Now he can't fix its misinformation addictionArchitectures of Sound : Acoustic Concepts and Parameters for Architectural Design / Michael Fowler.Over*Flow: Digital Humanity: Social Media Content Moderation and the Global Tech Workforce in the COVID-19 EraSarah T. Roberts / University of California, Los Angeles – FlowNetanyahu presides over a social media empire. Here's how he runs it'Go home,' chant anti-Netanyahu protesters ahead of Israel's snap pollsOperation Restart (May 14 Social Media Walk Out)
What’s concealed by the American narrative around Wuhan’s response to COVID-19? Can we attribute the speed at which the virus was contained to the repressive top down measures of an authoritarian government or were there decentralized human infrastructures built up to provide mutual aid and fact check news reports at the height of the pandemic. Digital ethnographer, Tricia Wang (pronounced Wong which we discuss) joins the WBI show to discuss the role of hyperlocal networks on WeChat, how SARS-COV-1 racialized mask wearing and the importance of regulatory frameworks for indoor ventilation to mitigate the occupational dynamics of transmission. Tricia raises that the issue with the privatized infrastructure hyperlocal networks rely on, is not fundamentally about violations of data privacy but violations of personhood. PLEASE GIVE TO STRIKING COLUMBIA GRADUATE STUDENT UNION IF YOU CAN: Solidarity With Columbia Academic Student Workers (GoFundME)IG + Twitter: @WeBeImaginingSupport Us: On PatreonWrite Us: WeBeImagining@gmail.comHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:what disturbs me is how quickly the world can forget centuries of anti-Asian violence, each time the cycle of forgetting is the only certain thingCoronavirus: We Can Lean Something From The People Of WuhanUnmasking the racial politics of the coronavirus pandemicTricia Wang thinks hyperlocal collaboration thrives after Covid — QuartzChinese Americans fear loss of WeChat conduit to friends, familyChina's new vaccine passport could expand the state's already vast surveillance programCOVID Straight Talk /Hablando Claro del COVIDUnderstanding the real impact of the novel H1N1 influenza pandemic: Why your colleagues need to knowI'm A Survivor: The Rhythm of Public Health Systems East Harlem Neighborhood Health Action CenterNew EPA Rules Will Increase Air Pollution As The World Suffers A Respiratory PandemicOur Data BodiesLogic SchoolYou are not your data but your data is still youListen to 'The Daily': Wrongfully Accused by an AlgorithmOn Owed (with Joshua Bennett)Joshua Bennett on the Use of Animals in the Work of Black WritersMachine Bias — ProPublicaApple and Facebook's Fight Isn’t Actually About Privacy or Tracking. This Is the Real Reason Facebook Is So WorriedHe got Facebook hooked on AI. Now he can't fix its misinformation addiction1 - A Thousand Plateaus by Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari ...https://www.youtube.com › watchGilles Deleuze - Philosopher of DifferenceRecommendations:barbara smith | Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around: Forty Years of Movement BuildingSmith Caring Circle is creating The People's Pension
What a wonderful conversation about the mission work that Spencer is doing with WBI! If you want to contact him please let us know and we will get you in touch. Meanwhile, WBI's website is listed below.https://worldbibleinstitute.com/
This episode of Workplace Fairness and Dignity is about bullying behavior: Who are the bully's targets, how to recognize the behavior, and navigating how to address it with future employers after leaving your job due to bullying. Information can be found at the Workplace Bullying Institute (WBI) at https://workplacebullying.org. Additional topics include:WBI's outline of the profile of typical targets of workplace bullies, and why the person that Human Resources considers the ideal worker is often a bully's target;Steps to take and what not to do when dealing with a workplace bully, according to WBI;How to approach the issue of why you left a place where you dealt with an abusive work environment, and the question of references when addressing questions about your former employer; How I found some inspiration in a TV character, Mr. Bevis. Music: Martini Magic, Jazz Trio Jam by Matthew Shaker; Cuban Party Theme by Bobby Cole; Thursday by Jason Donnelly; Fun, Retro, Upbeat by Vladyslav Krotov; Landscape by Adrian Berenguer; Bizet's Habanera by Keith Anthony Holden; Geminiani Concerto (Public Domain); Get Outen Mine Face Der Funk by Patrick Smith.
When discussing machine learning models “Black Box” is typically deployed as a helpful metaphor but from a hardware perspective the term is meant literally. How can we open the inside processors of a phone to verify that what’s inside is actually what we thought was inside? How does the minimalist aesthetic of consumer electronics create the illusion of technology as magic? Andrew "bunnie" Huang is a hacker, maker, and open hardware activist joining us on the WBI show to discuss these questions as well as share updates on Precursor. Alongside Edward Snowden, he worked on the Introspection Engine, a device allowing journalists to identify if and when their phones are transmitting or receiving information when it shouldn't be. Precursor is the development platform working to push out a new iteration of this device.Bunnie holds a Ph.D in Electrical Engineering from MIT and is the author of Hacking the Xbox. IG + Twitter: @WeBeImaginingSupport Us: On PatreonHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:Talking with Andrew "bunnie" Huang (AdaFruit)How ‘Hoverboards’ Epitomize Our Broken Patent SystemHalf A Million 'Hoverboards' Recalled Over Risk Of Fire, ExplosionsMoore's lawThe inverted Pendulum: A fundamental Benchmark in Control Theory and Robotics`GUNG HO` SOFTLY SATIRIZES AMERICAN FEATHERBEDDINGTechnology is Not Magic - bunnie Huang, Bitmark Ambassador #2An Alternative to the American way of Innovation TEDxPickeringStreetSynchronized violin players reveal uniqueness of human networksEdward Snowden designed an iPhone attachment that detects unwanted radio transmissions(@RealSexyCyborg) Thread on IMEs/Signal/Untrustability 'We found a wiretap' Lyubov Sobol's campaign team head released from custody with bugged cell phone nytlabs : Listening Table AKA MEDIA SYSTEMTrackMeNotAdNauseam - Clicking Ads So You Don't Have ToIntroducing Precursor « bunnie's blogPrecursor.dev
How can we bring the air of being a local and hospitality to technical design? What does it look like to design a wearable that’s not about surveilling or calculating your life? How would you manifest code in calm computing for a tactical-unplanned assemblage following a mycological (fungal) metaphor? Noah Feehan, joins the WBI show to discuss the NYT Labs Listening Table, agathonic design, the most salt shaker salt shakers and more.Noah Feehan, is an artist/maker/tinkerer whose creative work is designed to function in other experimental or speculative capacities, augmenting spaces with useful behaviors or holding a weird-mirror to your online personae. Professionaly, his role has taken many shapes and titles over the years, from heading up product strategy at Temboo, leading the critical and hardware research efforts at the New York Times R&D Lab, or building a Fab Lab at a NASA facility.You can now support the WBI Podcast by becoming a Patreon member!Please share your feedback and questions! You can reach us at WeBeImagining@gmail.com or via Twitter and Instagram at @WeBeImaginingHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:The Coming of Age of Calm TechnologySuper NormalPhd: Exaptation – Jb Labrune (Agathonic Design)The Repair AssociationSia's movie sidelines the disabled communityCommunication page I used to handle that invasive woman I met.Ekverstania Twitter Thread of blogs/art/scholarship/advocacy by #NonSpeaking #Autistic peopleWhat's the deal with the "Shake to send feedback" on Google Maps for Android?Kanye Got Kim K a Hologram of Her Late DadHow Holograms Work | HowStuffWorksNudgeablesSublime.cloudA Burglar's Guide to the CityDIY IMac Fish Tank : 10 Steps (with Pictures)Mycodo Environmental Monitoring and Regulation SystemCycling your JarrariumRecommendations:Review: George Saunders' 'Sea Oak' makes a dead-funny TV comedyThe Cooking Gene | A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South
How do we practice the case for reparations? How do we do this land justice movement without being co-opted by the NPIC when people still gotta eat? When you bring Black young adults in to working on the land, how do you resolve conflict when you don’t call the cops? Abiodun Henderson, founder of Gangstas to Growers chops it up on the WBI show on how G2G is grappling with these themes in real time.Gangstas to Growers (G2G) is a social enterprise focused on building worker-owned cooperatives that provide opportunities for employment, empowerment, and entrepreneurship in agriculture for criminal injustice involved youth. You can now support the WBI Podcast by becoming a Patreon member!Please share your feedback and questions! You can reach us at WeBeImagining@gmail.com or via Twitter and Instagram at @WeBeImaginingHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:Tupac at Malcolm X Grassroots MovementOccupy The Hood (@occupythehood.mtl)Protesters set to 'Occupy Congress'Truly Living Well Center for Natural Urban Agriculture | AtlantaWestview Community OrganizationHABESHA – Helping Africa by Establishing Schools at Home and AbroadCenter for Civic InnovationBlack Sustainability NetworkRon Finley - Gangsta Gardener for the Urban CommunitySoutherners on New Ground: HomeFort Negrita for earth-inspired folksNational Black Justice Coalition |Green Is The New BlackMetro Atlanta Mutual Aid FundSAAFON: HomeHigh Hog Farm: HomeRecommendations:No Disrespect by Sista Souljah
Megan Wolff, Chair of Mental Health Policy at DeWitt Wallace Institute for the History of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College joins the WBI show alongside Dan Bouk, Associate Professor of History at Colgate University and author of How Our Days Became Numbered: Risk and the Rise of the Statistical Individual. Dan researches the history of bureaucracies, quantification, and other modern things shrouded in cloaks of boringness. His work investigates the ways that corporations, states, and the experts they employ have used, abused, made, and re-made the categories that structure our daily experiences of being human. You can now support the WBI Podcast by becoming a Patreon member!Please share your feedback and questions! You can reach us at WeBeImagining@gmail.com or via Twitter and Instagram at @WeBeImaginingHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:The Myth Of The Actuary: Life Insurance And Frederick L. Hoffman's Race Traits And Tendencies Of The American NegroA Review of Hoffman's Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro - The American Negro Academy. Occasional Papers No. 1Fact Sheet: The Impact of Pandemic Disease on Mental HealthLife Insurance And COVID-19: All You Need To KnowMedicalizing Blackness | Rana A. Hogarth | University of North Carolina PressThe Health and Physique of the Negro AmericanNumbered Lives: Life and Death in Quantum Media By Jacqueline WernimontThe Emotional Epidemiology of H1N1 Influenza Vaccination The Condemnation of Blackness — Khalil Gibran MuhammadRecommendations:Megan: “The Birchbark House” Series by Louise ErdrichDan The Beautiful Bureaucrat — Helen Phillips, The Need — Helen Phillips,Census Stories, USA | Reading the stories in the data.
How do you get freshman undergraduates to take on complex immunological research? How did colonization enable the spread of HIV in Central Africa and Haiti? Does the militarist language of immunology- ie “fighting the war against viruses” undermine the complexity of the human immune system which is more comparable to tending a garden?Brianne Barker, Associate Professor of Biology at Drew University with expertise in vaccine development, HIV biology and understanding immune responses to viral infection joins the WBI show. She shares that the privilege of working at a non-R1 institution solely with undergraduate students is an opportunity to pursue your research interests relatively autonomously and without the same external pressure to publish. Brianne is also the co-host of the Immune podcast, part of the TWIV (This Week In Virology) podcast suite that inspired our show. We cover a lot of ground in this show, from pattern recognition receptors to science pedagogy and a discussion of the Barker Lab’s recently published paper, Polyglutamine binding protein 1 (PQBP1) inhibits innate immune responses to cytosolic DNAPlease share your feedback and questions! You can reach us at WeBeImagining@gmail.com or via Twitter and Instagram at @WeBeImaginingHost: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:Colonialism in Africa helped launch the HIV epidemic a century agoThe Impact of Globalization on Infectious Disease Emergence and ControlThe 2011 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine - Press releaseInterferon discovery and ferret fluHVTN StudiesBlack in ImmunoImmune 37: Black in Immuno | ImmuneRecommendations:Pandemic by Sonia ShahBraiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall KimmererSpillover by David Quammen
Phd student of oral archival traditions, silences in written records/archives, and anti-colonial struggles, Ayantu Ayanna joins the WBI show to discuss the assassination of Oromo musician Haacaaluu Hundeessaa in June and what it means to contest official state narratives of Ethiopia through the archives. Transcript Available Here**This interview was conducted in August 2020 as part of an deeper investigative look into the history and political climate of Ethiopia as it intersects with data and tech policy. In particular, We Be Imagining is concerned about the role of mis/disinformation on social media platforms like Facebook which fail to provide adequate content and context moderation. However, the slow scholarship this requires was outweighed by the urgency of the current political moment so we are sharing some of the stories recorded then. Please note, inclusion in this series in no way indicates agreement among each interviewee or is fully comprehensive of the political history, we simply aim to provide more nuanced and thoughtful insight given the dearth of coverage. Links and notes are subject to change. Host: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:The media's crisis on Ethiopia by Ayantu Ayanna
Getu Teressa, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine and political analyst joins the WBI show to share his insight into Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s “Medemer”, his insights into the existential and material crisis of the Oromo people and the weight of Oromo musician and activist, Haacaaluu Hundeessaa’s assasination.Transcript Linked Here**This interview was conducted in August 2020 as part of an deeper investigative look into the history and political climate of Ethiopia as it intersects with data and tech policy. In particular, We Be Imagining is concerned about the role of mis/disinformation on social media platforms ie. Facebook which fail to provide adequate content and context moderation. However, the slow scholarship this requires was outweighed by the urgency of the current political moment so we are sharing some of the stories recorded then. Please note, inclusion in this series in no way indicates agreement among each interviewee or is fully comprehensive of the political history, we simply aim to provide more nuanced and thoughtful insight given the dearth of coverage. Links and notes are subject to change.Host: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisLinks for the Episode:The media's crisis on EthiopiaAbiy Ahmed—a Philosopher King or a Sophist? By Getu TeressaHaacaaluu Hundeessaa: A towering musician and an Oromo iconWhat is Medemer?Ethiopia PM Fires Defence Minister, a One-Time Ally, in Major ReshuffleEthiopia's Abiy wins Nobel Peace Prize for resolving conflict with EritreaWhy Abiy Ahmed's Prosperity Party could be bad news for Ethiopia
WBI - 12 November 2020 - Ps. Lukas Suherli - Membangun Keluarga yang Kuat
According to the Workplace Bullying Institute (“WBI”) (https://workplacebullying.org/) nineteen percent (19%) of adult Americans experience workplace bullying. That means that some sixty point three (60.3) million workers are affected by this type of misconduct. Sixty-five percent (65%) of the people bullied at work are women and seventy percent (70%) of the perpetrators are men. Approximately sixty one percent (61%) of bullying is committed by a supervisor or boss. In 2019 a Monster.com survey revealed that nearly ninety-four percent (94%) of responding employees reported being bullied in the workplace. These statistics are shocking when one considers that there is no federal law and few state laws prohibiting or even acknowledging bullying in the American workplace.A study by the WBI found that thirty-seven percent (37%) of bullying targets were terminated, while thirty-three percent (33%) quit their jobs and seventeen percent (17%) were transferred from their positions or departments. The bullies were punished only four percent (4%) of the time, and only transferred in nine percent (9%) of cases.
How does a child welfare system claiming to help families in need systematically target, punish and separate Black, Hispanic and poor families? Why aren’t we better connecting the dots between police abolition and the need to abolish child services and their implementation of surveillance in the name of *support*? How has the federal Family First Prevention Services Act passed in 2018 changed the priorities and funding for state level child welfare agencies?Author of Catching a Case: Inequality and Fear in New York City’s Child Welfare System and Anthropology Professor at University of Wisconsin Stout campus, Tina Lee joins the WBI show for our 3rd episode examining the child welfare or family regulation system. We need systems that provide support for families instead of punishing and surveilling them.Host: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisShow Notes:Wounded Innocents: The Real Victims of the War Against Child Abuse by Richard WexlerChildren as Chattel: Invoking the Thirteenth Amendment to Reform Child Welfare Note 1 Cardozo Public Law, Policy & Ethics Journal 2003Shattered Bonds The Color Of Child Welfare by Dorothy RobertsKilling the Black Body by Dorothy RobertsA Fiji Junket, a Padlocked Office and a Pioneering Nonprofit’s CollapseAn Interview with Richard Wexler, Executive Director of the National Coalition for Child Protection ReformAn ‘Exemplary’ Foster Father, a String of Suspicions and Sexual-Abuse Charges (Published 2016)Elisa W. v. City of New York - Amended Complaint (Class action lawsuit against ACS and OCFS)THE PARENT LEGISLATIVE ACTION NETWORK HAILS PASSAGE OF HISTORIC CHILD WELFARE REFORM IN THE NEW YORK STATE LEGISLATURE AND URGES THE GOVERNOR TO SIGN THE BILL INTO LAWFamily First Policy Forum Slide Deck (Slide 90 features Virginia Child Welfare Commissioner's slide of kids in large suits counting money)State-level Data for Understanding Child Welfare in the United StatesData Brief: Child Welfare Investigations and New York City Neighborhoods (2019)Some Parents Awaiting iPads Got Visit From Child Welfare - THE CITYRecommendations:AUTOMATING INEQUALITY How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor by Virginia EubanksAlgorithms of Oppression How Search Engines Reinforce Racism by Safiya Umoja Noble
How do we put the significant changes of the Earth’s atmosphere we’re experiencing now due to anthropogenic or human caused CO2 into context relative to the natural variability our planet has experienced? Rates of mass loss similar to now occurred in the early Holocene Period (~11,500 years ago) but simulations predict the 21st century will far exceed that rate of loss. If we deviate from the business as usual model, commit to low carbon emissions, can we mitigate or reverse sea level rise due to a melting Greenland Ice Sheet?Assistant Scientist at UCI Department of Earth System Science Joshua Cuzzone joins the WBI show to discuss Rate of mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet will exceed Holocene values this century. He co-authored this recently published paper in Nature alongside an interdisciplinary team of paleoclimatologists, glacial geologists and geochemists. Check out this episode to learn about the 5 years they spent examining these questions. We also take an in depth look at the high-resolution Ice Sheet and Sea-level system Model (ISSM) used for simulating rates of GIS mass change from 12,000 years ago to AD 2100.Host: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisShow Notes: Chernobyl: data wars and disaster politicsRecommendations:The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future by Richard AlleyPlease rate, review and write us at WeBeImagining@gmail.com
WBI - 29 Oktober 2020 - Pdp. Popo Tjahja
WBI (22 Oktober 2020) - Ps. Jan Eleazar - Aturan Main
From poultry plants in the US South pushing low-wage workers to process 175 birds per minute (BPM), to the slow violence of pesticides in Punjab causing premature disability to the European food sovereignty movement challenging strategies of resisting capitalist discipline imported from digital rights activism- scholars, Carrie Freshour, Divya Sharma and Barbara Van Dyck join the WBI show to connect the dots of agroecology across the global south.How can we trace the lineage of poultry production to the plantation? What do the oral histories of 80 year old farmers in the Punjab region tell us about ecological degradation and the green revolution? How does transforming our relationship to food, land and each other require a transformation of the state? This extended cut episode addresses these questions and more.Hosts: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelGuests: University of Washington Assistant Professor of Geography Carrie Freshour, University of Sussex Lecturer in Sustainable Development Divya Sharma and Associate Professor at Coventry University in the Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience Barbara Van DyckMusic: Drew LewisShow Notes:Capitalist agriculture and Covid-19: A deadly combination (Interview w/ Rob Wallace)Racial Capitalism: A Fundamental Cause of Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic Inequities in the United States - Whitney N. Laster Pirtle, 2020Divya Sharma - Mobilization for Socio-Ecological Sustainability in post-Green Revolution PunjabPoultry and Prisons by Carrie Freshour (Monthly Review)“Ain't No Life For A Mother!” Racial Capitalism And The Crisis Of Social Reproduction by Carrie FreshourScholar-activists in an expanding European food sovereignty movement by Barbara Van Dyck(PDF) Articulating Agrarian Racism: Statistics and Plantationist Empirics by Brian WilliamsTheir Family Bought Land One Generation After Slavery. The Reels Brothers Spent Eight Years in Jail for Refusing to Leave It.What is Revolutionary About The Green Revolution?Recommended Organizations/Movements:Saturday Free SchoolAgroecology Now! - Knowledge, Action, TransformationMississippi Minority Farmers AllianceKheti Virasat MissionStudy and StruggleCooperation JacksonPeople’s Archive of Rural India
WBI (15 Oktober '20) - Pdp. Ika Juanti
Brooklyn Law Professor Frank Pasquale joins the WBI show to discuss his latest book, New Laws of Robotics: Defending Human Expertise in the Age of AI. What are the challenges and promises of serving on the federal health committee as an expert on the legal frameworks of emerging technologies during 45’s reign? How do we reconcile the need to prioritize human expertise while acknowledging the harm often committed by professionals against marginalized communities? We discuss these question and more on the latest episode of the We Be Imagining Podcast. Please send us your questions and comments at WeBeImagining@gmail.com.Host: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisRecommendations:Competition is Killing Us; How Big Business is Killing Our Society and Planet- and What To Do About ItCompetition Overdose by How Free Market Mythology Transformed Us from Citizen Kings to Market Servants By Maurice E. Stucke, Ariel EzrachiLPE Project - The Law and Political Economy Project
WBI (8 Oktober '20) - Pdp. Soesiana Tanto - Wanita yang Berdampak di dalam Keluarga
WBI - 1 Okt 2020 - Ibu Clara Sulaeman - Jadikan Pandemi sebagai sebuah Kesempatan
What becomes available when Black people come together? How do we understand Mike Brown, a child unjustly slain by the state as a kind of Christ? Poet and Scholar, Joshua Bennett joins the WBI show to discuss operating out of an archive of air, the shape of Black ideas, Black exuberance and joy. We chop it up about the praxis of police abolition, the choreography of anti-colonial navigation in the academy, the indebtedness of America to Black folks and the the debt owed by America to Black folks. Read Owed, the second book released by Bennett this year and check out this episode. His many references are in the show notes.Host: J. Khadijah Abdurahman, Ilan MandelMusic: Drew LewisLinks to the episode:Still Life With First Best FriendAgainst Consuming Images of the Brutalized, Dead, and DyingBeing Properly Once MyselfSobbing SchoolHow It Feels to Be Colored Me, by Zora Neale HurstonOwed to Eminem by June JordanLegendary Nikki Giovanni Speaks on her "Thug Life" Tattoo + New Book "Chasing Utopia"CHANGE: A World Without Prisons - Ruth Wilson Gilmore in Conversation with Mariame KabaNAACP | NAACP History: Lift Every Voice and SingThe Mis-Education of the NegroIn the Break — by Fred MotenGwendolyn Brooks | Primer for Blacks
Episode TranscriptHow does legislation touted as protecting children from sex trafficking actually harm consenusal sex workersand serve as a trojan horse attacking encryption and privacy rights of our broader society? What does it mean to do racial justice as a dominatrix? We discuss these questions as well as uplift the work of organizations led by and for sex workers around unionization and digital rights.Selena the Stripper and the Goddess Cori, hosts of Heaux in the Kneaux podcast join the WBI show to discussthe 2018 Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) as well as their 2020 descendant, the Earn It Act. This is the kick off to our second season where we look forward to inviting hosts of our favorite podcasts onto We Be Imagining to diversify the conversations around privacy, surveillance and digital rights beyond academics.Host: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisLinks to the Episode:Hacking and HustlingSoldiers of Pole: A Stripper Union Movement - Learn About Your RightsStrippers Are Workers With the Power to UnionizeStrippers And Giggers: Unionize Now | by Antonia Crane | PULPMAGL.A.'s Exotic Dancers Are Launching a Labor MovementSWOP USAAnalysis | Has the sex-trafficking law eliminated 90 percent of sex-trafficking ads?FOSTA-SESTA anti-sex-trafficking law has been a failure: opinionAnalysis | The Four-Pinocchio claim that ‘on average, girls first become victims of sex trafficking at 13 years old’Warren, Sanders back bill that could uncover violence against sex workersFollow on IG:#stripperstrike (@pdxstripperstrike) EastLondonStrippersCollective (@ethicalstripper)Hacking//Hustling (@hackinghustling)For more information, navigate to https://americanassembly.org/wbipodcast
Thank you Full Sail University, Hawthorne and AT&T 5G for sponsoring this episode! Go to http://fullsail.edu/whatsgoodgames to learn more about Full Sail University! Check out http://hawthorne.co and use promo code WHATSGOOD to get 10% off your first purchase! Head over to http://att.com/galaxynote20ultra5g to learn how you can get the Samsung Galaxy Note 20 5G for free or the Galaxy Note 20 5G Ultra for $299.99 for a limited time and go to https://www.mark.app to download the MARK AR app! This week Britt, Andrea and Steimer talk about ALL THAT MARIO NEWS, Tokyo Game Show's upcoming schedule, the potential sale of Warner Brothers Interactive, the new name of Ubisoft's Gods and Monsters and more! Hands-on includes Marvel's Avengers, Tell Me Why and Struggling. The third segment features an interview with actress Anjali Bhimani hosted by Ri! Thank you to our Patreon Producers: · Chewy’s Godson · Califorunicated · Justin Foshee · Punkdefied · Faris Attieh · Mohammed Mohammed · Marcus Brown · Alex Rigopulos Support What’s Good Games on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/whatsgoodgames Discuss the podcast on our social channels! http://www.facebook.com/whatsgoodgames http://www.twitter.com/whatsgood_games http://www.youtube.com/whatsgoodgames Join the community page! https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatsgoodgames/ Timestamps: Segment One: News :55 Welcome to the show! 3:45 Tokyo Game Show 2020 schedule announced 10:44 SO MUCH MARIO STUFF WAS ANNOUNCED 39:40 AT&T isn’t looking to sell WBI anymore? 42:55 Nintendo will finally let you cancel pre-orders 46:33 The Witcher: Monster Slayer 51:25 Gods & Monsters has a new name 55:07 The Marvel’s Avengers beta is the most-downloaded beta in PlayStation history! Segment Two: Hands-On 1:03:10 Struggling 1:07:50 Tell Me Why 1:21:41 Marvel’s Avengers Segment Three: Patreon Produced Segment 1:48:10 Let’s talk to Anjali Bhimani!
‘Barrée’ raconte l’histoire d’une femme qui a changé de vie et a donné rendez-vous dans un théâtre à Avignon le 10 juillet en pleine festival à trois de ses amours. Par chance nous y étions avec nos micros, et la proposition des trois auteurs, Laurence Vielle, Christine Van Acker et Rémi Pons, a pu être enrichie de nos sons captés dans la ville. Des sons qu’elle aimait, cette femme en vadrouille. Mais viendra-t-elle à ce rendez-vous ? Trois comédiens Marie-Aurore D’Awans, Emilienne Tempels et Pierre Gervais donnent chair aux mots de la fiction, avec, sur scène, les musiciens Jean-Paul Dessy et Noé. Avec une création originale de Noé. Prise de sons, montage, mixage : Pierre Devalet Réalisation : Pascale Tison et Fabienne Pasau En collaboration avec La Trois et avec le soutien de la SACD, du Théâtre des Doms et de WBI
Nigerian-American artist and researcher whose work highlights the social relationships and power dynamics behind data collection, Mimi Onuha joins the WBI show. We spend a lot of time in the beginning of this episode exploring Mimi’s undergraduate thesis Death on Facebook, how different cultural practices around death and birth are allowed in western society and mediated in the digital. We think together about how these rituals-fundamental to being human-are happening on commercial platforms we know we don’t own or govern yet connect on this *public* forum anyway because we year to be seen.Out the ashes of this loss, we dream about building alternative sociotechnical systems to further liberation, think about the racial tension between Black Americans and African immigrants in STEM academia, ending with a cypher round on hope and possibilities.For show notes and to learn more, navigate to https://americanassembly.org/wbipodcast
Multimedia artist and scholar whose work enacts Blackness as the imaginative capacity to desire and enact something else and otherwise, Treva Ellison joins the WBI show in conversation with Romi Morrison. Romi is an interdisciplinary designer, artist, and researcher working across new media, Black feminist praxis, and cultural geography.Together we think out loud about the epistemic assumptions embedded in sociotechnical systems that aim to calculate Black life, how Blackness is so much more than being a subject of violence.For further show notes and information please navigate to https://americanassembly.org
Dorothy Roberts, acclaimed scholar of race, gender and the law at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare joins the WBI show with co-founder of Movement for Family Power, Lisa Sangoi to discuss the history of the American child welfare system. Better understood as a family regulation system, the state began systematically targeting Black families for punishment and surveillance as a matter of *child welfare* policy in the 1960s coinciding with mainly Black mothers demanding inclusion into public assistance programs. Why do so few people know about the multibillion dollar surveillance apparatus able to knock on the door and remove your child on the basis of racist stereotypes with not even as much as miranda rights being read? How can we begin to dismantle a system that articulates its violence in the language of care and benevolence? For complete show notes, navigate to: https://americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast
Assistant Professor of Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work at MCLA, Mohamad Junaid and Lafayette College Assistant Professor, Hafsa Kanjwal join the WBI show to discuss the the acceleration of the settler colonial project in Kashmir and the continued fight for Azadi or self-determination. The Indian BJP government’s recent passage of the domicile law in Jammu and Kashmir is a move towards ethnically cleansing the occupied territory. Last November, Indian Consul General in New York, Sandeep Chakravorty advocated for this law in order to introduce “Israeli model” settlements into Kashmir.“I don’t keep calm, I’m continuously in outrage, I don’t have any spiritual solace, I don’t have any calm, everyday is like a new mourning.” Junaid shares- yet finds hope in Kashmiri writers, activists and artists a generation removed from state sanctioned illiteracy now documenting the desire and struggle for national liberation to the rest of the world.“Bollywood is India’s kind of wet dream...Initially kind of creating this desire for the beautiful landscape without any regard for the local ‘ignorant people they needed to modernize’”- Kanjwal provocatively comments, drawing out the sophisticated ways in which Hindu nationalist culture legitimizes the state sanctioned erasure and potentially the extermination of the Kashmiri people.For full show notes and cited works, please navigate to The American Assembly
Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Illinois and author of Digitize and Punish: Racial Criminalization in the Digital Age, Brian Jefferson joins the WBI show to discuss the history of digital computing and criminal justice, revealing how big tech, computer scientists, university researchers, and state actors have digitized carceral governance over the past forty years. How did the War on Terror provide the impetus and funding for the NYPD’s to set up a separate proprietary fiber optic cable network for their surveillance infrastructure in the backdrop of historically low crime rates? How are IT companies-that are the equivalent of industrial manufacturing companies in the late 18th century- actively driving urban policies and the physical infrastructure of 21st century smart cities?
Rashida Richardson, Director of Policy at the AI Now Institute joins the WBI show to discuss the Public Oversight of Surveillance Technology (POST) Act she wrote while at NYCLU, the limitations of the law as a tool in addressing or mitigating the harm of automated decision making systems (ADSs) and the amount of time she has for institutions waking up from their 450 year slumber to the realities of racial capitalism. How can we distinguish the types of action big tech companies including Microsoft, Amazon and IBM are taking to respond to public demands for them to end contracts with law enforcement? How can we distinguish the types of action big tech companies including Microsoft, Amazon and IBM are taking to respond to public demands to end contracts with law enforcement? She puts us on the spot asking, will the title of this podcast will get to most of America? Will we have a little more imagination on what makes an actually racially equitable and just society because the efforts of most of these institutions is still drawing on logic based on assimilation, “here let’s throw a few things at you and let’s go back to business as usual”?
Andrea Miller, soon to be a faculty member of Florida Atlantic University this fall, joins the WBI show to discuss her research interests including critical military and police studies, racialization, drone warfare and preemption, cybersecurity and algorithmic governance, ecosystem ecology, and the politics of extraction and infrastructure. How do some digital technologies that are operationalized in the war on terror really emerge through circuits and histories of racialized policing? How can we understand drones as complex infrastructures and trace them back through the use of air power by military and local police departments? Is the police response to protests representative of a strategy and tactics or is the state being reactionary-responding in full force to threats to its consolidation of power?
Assistant Professor of Digital Media Theory at New School’s School of Media Studies and author of This is Not a Minority Report: Predictive policing and population racism, Joshua Scannell joins the WBI show. How do calls for police transparency miss the ways predictive policing claims to have ownership of the future through surveilling the present? How does speculative fiction embody and intervene in our anxieties of American racial capitalism? Drawing on his essay in Ruha Benjamin’s collection, Captivating Technology: Race, Carceral Technoscience, and Liberatory Imagination in Everyday Life, Josh invokes the words of Black studies scholars including Christina Sharpe in challenging us to see the world otherwise.
Impact of COVID on Corporate Fundamentals (#83) by WBI
4 women with direct personal experience being investigated by the New York City’s Administration of Children’s Services (ACS) join the WBI show to share how the agency works to systematically separate Black and Brown families. They also lift up the ways in which families are thriving now in the absence of the surveillance typically executed via the public school system.In response to the COVID-19 global pandemic, National Bailout is bailing out Black mamas and caregivers now through May, to ensure our people are alive, well and safe for Mother’s Day and beyond. We encourage you to give directly on their site in the spirit of Mother’s Day.For complete show notes, visit americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast.
Host: J. Khadijah AbdurahmanMusic: Drew LewisMichael Nugent of It’s Up To Us To End Mass Incarceration joins the WBI show alongside people currently incarcerated in Rikers Island and their families. Rikers Island currently has almost 9 times the rate of community transmission of COVID-19 relative to the rest of New York City. Listen to the testimonies of those most profoundly impacted by the virus and unable to socially distance. #FreeThemAllYou can follow It’s Up To Us on their Facebook page or contact them at ItsUpToUsToEndMI@gmail.com. To support their work, you can make a donation via Venmo @ItsUpToUsToEndMI.For complete show notes, visit americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast.
Andrew Rowan started in animal welfare in February 1976, as a Scientific Administrator at the Fund for the Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments in London, England. In 1978 he became the associate director for the Study of Animal Problems at the Humane Society of the US and then in 1983, proceeded to Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine as Professor and Chair for the institution’s Department of Environmental Studies. He launched the Tufts Center for Animals and Public Policy, the academic journal “Anthrozoos” and the first Master's degree program Animals and Public Policy. In 1997, he returned to HSUS and took over Humane Society International which he ran for 20 years and grew it from a $1million a year operation to $20 million a year! Andrew left HSUS in 2018 and started WellBeing International to seek solutions for people, animals, and the environment. WBI is committed to a collaborative approach in developing, engaging and supporting effective coalitions, generating accurate data and sound analysis, and the transparent reporting of both successes and failures. WellBeing International seeks to achieve optimal wellbeing for the triad of People, Animals, and Environment, emphasizing the intersections of the three elements, through approaches to build global health and happiness.
Ali Winston joins the WBI team to continue to discuss the privacy implications of surveillance enacted during COVID-19 containment measures and what it means for the world to rely on social media and Zoom video conferencing to mediate most relationships outside of their home. For complete show notes, visit americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast.
Author of Networks of New York: AN ILLUSTRATED FIELD GUIDE TO URBAN INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE joins the WBI podcast to discuss the impact of COVID-19 “shelter-in” on internet infrastructure, examines the role of Amazon Web Service as daytime streaming has increased and the vulnerabilities data centers when the people who do repairs are quarantined. For complete show notes, visit americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast.
Chris Gilliard and Jasmine McNealy join the WBI team to discuss the privacy implications of surveillance enacted during COVID-19 containment measures and what it means for the world to rely on social media and Zoom video conferencing to mediate most relationships outside of their home. For complete show notes, visit americanassembly.org/wbi-podcast.
The Her Hoop Stats Podcast: WNBA & Women’s College Basketball
The Marshall Thundering Herd were one of the top turnaround stories in the country last season. After missing out on the Conference USA Tournament in Tony Kemper's initial season of 2017-18, his 2018-19 team finished 10-6 in CUSA play, eventually earning a bid in the WBI. Coach Kemper talks about his coaching journey, and how he moved from an assistant position to the head coaching role at Marshall. He also gets into his affinity for the three ball, and how much he looks into analytics. Make sure to subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts. Please rate and review the Her Hoop Stats podcast to help others find it while we work diligently to grow the women's game. Feel free to reach out with comments or questions to: podcast@herhoopstats.com
Stephen Miller is a CRL and Senior Business Process Consultant from Cohesive Solutions. Mark Haag is the Maximo Process Lead of WBI. The migration of paper to Maximo, paper to iPad in a year. How did they do it? Award winning program :Best New Implementation.
App State University Women’s Basketball Coach Angel Elderkin on the Torg Stories Podcast. Click the audio player below to listen to the podcast or download it via the podcast app on your iPhone. Coach Elderkin’s Appalachian State women’s team is coming off a 22 win season during which they won the the WBI […]
The Her Hoop Stats Podcast: WNBA & Women’s College Basketball
Angel Elderkin is a survivor. The head coach of the WBI champion Appalachian State women's basketball team is entering her sixth season. In 2016, Elderkin was diagnosed with endometrial cancer. She never missed a game and was awarded the 2017 USBWA Pat Summitt Most Courageous Award along with ESPN analyst, Holly Rowe. You'll be inspired by her story of survival, but also impressed by her journey through the coaching ranks. Along the way she worked for several hall of fame coaches, including Pat Summitt and Debbie Ryan. Make sure to subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts. There's a new feature conversation every Monday, and in between you'll get some tremendous bonus content. Please rate and review the broadcast to help others find it while we work diligently to grow the women's game. Feel free to reach out with comments or questions to: podcast@herhoopstats.com.
We're back on track with our first App State sports recap episode in two weeks! We analyze the Kerns hire, 8 baseball games, the WBI tournament, softball's success, and the football scrimmage!
This episode I am joined by Rice head coach Tina Langley. We discuss how she took her program from just 9 wins in year one, to 23 wins the past two seasons, including a WBI championship and a WNIT birth. We also talk about her journey to Rice, how the high academic standards at the school has been an asset, and how the team continues to improve.
Yale head coach Allison Guth joined me today and we talked about a lot. We covered why she took the Yale job and the apparent attraction to academically challenging schools, her team's 19 win season a year ago and why a WBI championship was so important to them, and what her team is like now. We also discuss "Guth's Goodies" and her incredible streak of running 4-6 miles a day for a year straight, even if that meant running at 3 a.m.
De grootste studie (ruim 4.000 patiënten) naar het effect van partial breast irradiation(PBI) laat zien dat de kwaliteit van leven voor borstkankerpatienten toeneemt door PBI. PBI voldeed echter niet aan de criteria om de gelijkwaardigheid aan te tonen met whole breast irradiation (WBI) in het aantal ipsilaterale-borsttumorrecidieven. Het absolute verschil in het percentage ipsilaterale-borsttumorrecidieven was echter
Stock market volatility is back on investors' minds this week. Do you want the whole enchilada? Don and Matt warn against herd mentality and also discuss how WBI's investment management process combats volatility in the markets. *This episode was recorded Monday, 2/5/18
Does the "Down Dow" have you worried about your investments? Matt Schreiber, President & Chief Investments Strategist at WBI, says we are working to protect your capital.
Don and Matt talk Big Beats this week with Q4 Earnings Season projections. And learn what WBI is doing that could be just what you need right now.
EPISODE RECAPDid you think that bullying was only a schoolyard problem? To give you some perspective on just how much bullying there is in the workplace, it might help to know that there are multiple groups (e.g., WBI and IAWBH) that are dedicated to studying and eliminating workplace bullying! In a 2014 study, WBI found[...]
WDAZ's Phil Neumann joins the panel to talk NCHC Frozen Faceoff plus Basketball's postseason action with the women in the WBI and the men in the CIT. They also preview the NCAA playoffs for Men's Hockey plus Spring Football resuming and Baseball starting conference play.
The guys' are joined by Paul Ralston fresh off his trip to Reno for the Big Sky conference tournaments as they discuss the teams both reaching the semifinals plus men's hockey's sweep of Colorado College in the NCHC Quarterfinals. The guys will also breakdown the NCHC Frozen Faceoff and men's and women's basketball's postseason berths in the CIT and WBI respectively.
ARE YOU WORKING WITH A BULLY? Are you working with a bully? More than 25% of us are. If you aren't being bullied, chances are you have seen someone being abused by a supervisor or coworker. When we talk workplace bullying, we're talking more than some eye rolls or impatient words. Those can be off-putting, but when we talk bullying, we're talking about more than that. The eye rolls and the harsh words are often coupled with more verbal abuse, with non-verbal actions, with exclusionary actions, and they are used repeatedly. We're talking covert abuse along with overt actions perpetrated by someone who is doing it on purpose to targeted workers. Think you are the victim of workplace bullying? Gary Namie, PhD, is research director and one of the founders of the Workplace Bullying Institute. According to its website, "WBI is the first and only U.S. organization dedicated to the eradication of workplace bullying that combines help for individuals, research, books, public education, training for professionals-unions-employers, legislative advocacy, and consulting solutions for organizations. Tune in Saturday at 11 am Pacific time to hear what he has to say and to ask questions about workplace bullying and what you can do if you are targeted -- or what you should do if you are the bully. Call-in with your comments to (646) 378-0430. And if you miss the live program, you can go to the website and listen to all our archived programs whenever you like. http://www.blogtalkradio.com/3women3ways
Question and answer session with Dr. Minesh Mehta, Professor of Radiation Oncology at Northwestern University, on topics related to treatments for brain metastases and related complications, especially in the setting of lung cancer.
Question and answer session with Dr. Minesh Mehta, Professor of Radiation Oncology at Northwestern University, on topics related to treatments for brain metastases and related complications, especially in the setting of lung cancer.
Dr. Minesh Mehta, Professor of Radiation Oncology at Northwestern University, describes benefits and risks of multiple interventions that are currently used or being studied to reduce risk of developing brain metastases or treat established metastases.
Dr. Minesh Mehta, Professor of Radiation Oncology at Northwestern University, describes benefits and risks of multiple interventions that are currently used or being studied to reduce risk of developing brain metastases or treat established metastases.