35 Burst results for "Chan"

A highlight from TOP Crypto Pick For 2024! (3 Low Cap GEMS with 20X Potential)

The Bitboy Crypto Podcast

09:53 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from TOP Crypto Pick For 2024! (3 Low Cap GEMS with 20X Potential)

"Injective protocol, can it reach $100 per token? This project's been on an absolute tear over the year, up over 500%. So here's everything that you need to know about this protocol and why it could change DeFi forever. It's time to discover crypto. So what is Injective and why has it been pumping so much? Injective is an interoperable layer one blockchain optimized for building Web3 finance applications like decentralized exchanges, lending and borrowing protocols and derivatives markets. It is built on the Cosmos SDK, aka software development kit, and its Tendermint consensus architecture, which gives it fast and cheap transactions, as well as make the blockchain interoperable through the use of the Cosmos IBC protocol. It also uses Ethereum virtual machine compatibility. Injective is attempting to bring the low fees, speed and cross -chain trading of centralized exchanges into a decentralized permissionless environment. It was the first Cosmos blockchain to offer fully decentralized order book infrastructure. Now, Injective was founded back in 2018 by Eric Chen and Albert Chan, who now serve as the CEO and CTO of the umbrella company Injective Labs. They were first backed by Binance Labs. They then went on to raise over $50 million in three funding rounds. First in July of 2020, where they raised $2 .6 million in an initial seed round. Then they raised $10 million in an April 2021 funding round. And finally, they added an additionally $40 million to the pot with another funding round in August of 2022. They also did the Binance Launchpad in October of 2020, where they ICOed, selling 9 % of their total supply for 40 % of the tokens. Then in 2021, they released their mainnet and launched their smart contract platform. Injective has investors like Binance, Pantera, Jump Crypto, Mark Cuban and many more. Ignore Mark Cuban's NFT plays. The Injective blockchain holds decentralized order books, which provide liquidity to the DEXs, a trade execution coordinator and a bi -directional token bridge and EVM execution environment. Any DAP that is built on the Injective blockchain has access to all of this. And the blockchain is public, so anyone can build a DAP as long as it's approved by the governance. While some DEXs use an automated market maker formula to manage liquidity, Injective uses an order book model that is similar to centralized exchanges. This means that the DEX on Injective doesn't need gas fees, so users only have to pay market maker and taker fees using INJ. That is where the utility of the token comes in. There are tons of applications in the Injective ecosystem, but we're going to be just going into a few. Injective's most popular DAP is a cross -chain DEX called Helix, which stands out from the crowded DEX landscape by offering unique features like zero gas fees, stop -loss orders, trading history and reward tracking. These elements give Helix the positives of a centralized exchange with privacy and safety of a decentralized environment. Helix can natively support a ton of assets like Cosmos, Ethereum, Solana and Polygon, and has an easy -to -use interface where you can connect a self -custody wallet or send your assets to your Helix portfolio. And people seem to like using Helix because it becomes one of the fastest growing decentralized exchanges since it launched in September of 2022, when it reached over a billion in cumulative trading volume after just one month. So make sure you smash that like button if you're an INJ holder. Not only have you seen a 500 % growth year over year, you guys continuously change DeFi in a positive direction. Currently, Helix has over 13 times that cumulative trading volume across all its spot and perpetual markets. And Helix just launched its pre -launch features feature, which allows users to trade futures on tokens that haven't even launched yet. Now, this is probably part of the reason Helix is pumping, because this additional service allows users to speculate on upcoming coins without having to gain access to pre -sales or launch pads. Helix has marketed this as an attempt to level the playing field for the general public since venture capitalists and wealthy insiders are typically the only ones who have early access to projects. Now, what else is in the Injective ecosystem? Mito Finance is another one of Injective's popular applications. Mito Finance is a DeFi trading platform that aims to democratize finance and increase profits through automation. Mito utilizes smart contracts to bring algorithms typically used by institutional investors and hedge funds to the common man. You just sign up for a vault and earn rewards, and Mito also has a launchpad that makes token creation incredibly easy. Now, while that might not be my favorite application, it is true. Institutions utilize medbots and have ways they can profit that retailers will never be able to access in their lifetime. Thanks to yours truly, Gary Gensler, regulations get harder and harder for retail traders over time. And then there's FrontRunner, which is a decentralized sport prediction market. What's cool about FrontRunner is that it allows traders to buy and sell shares of sports propositions the same way you would buy stocks. Now, you could buy and sell these positions in real time as the odds change. Like I said, there's a ton to explore in Injective's ecosystem, so go to their website and see what you want to learn about more. Since its launch, Injective has been chugging along with one improvement after another. In January, Injective launched a fund of $150 million to accelerate the interoperability between blockchains to enhance DeFi adoption and expand its ecosystem. The following March, Injective launched a testnet for Solana -based apps. And then just a few months later in September, it released a testnet for its EVM layer. This is a two -part solution that will allow Ethereum applications to now natively run on top of Injective. The other piece of exciting Injective news is that Injective will integrate into Google Cloud's analytics hub, joining the ranks of major layer one blockchains like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin. This means that anyone using a Google Cloud server will be able to interact with the data across the Injective network. CEO and co -founder Eric Shen said that the Google Cloud team has played an integral role in the growth of Injective since its inception, and that this latest collaboration will help take Web3 as a whole to new heights. Now, all of these developments have led to the price of Injective just going through the roof in the past few days, going between $7 and $8 at the beginning of October to now nearly $17 in just last week. So if you're an INJ holder, congrats, because your bag basically just tripled. Now, what's interesting to me is that while other crypto projects are struggling to regain just a quarter of their previous market cap all -time highs, Injective has already shot past that halfway point and isn't approaching a brand new all -time high. So this makes me wonder, is Injective not only going to break its all -time highs while we're still coming out of a bear market, but is it going to just surpass them and show significant gains coming over the next month? Other than being a great investment vehicle, what are other use cases for Injective? The blockchain uses a proof of stake model, so staking your INJ can help secure the network, and currently staking rewards are pretty sweet. Coming in at just over 16 % APR, you get to choose one of their 126 validators and start earning free INJ. Currently, there are almost 45 million tokens staked, about half of the circulating supply, and now remember that staking never comes with zero risk. So make sure you do your own research and don't go to staking your savings. Now perhaps one of the best reasons behind the INJ pump is going to be the tokenomics. Over the bear market, their vesting schedule released the majority of the supply into circulation. Now seeing roughly almost 89 % tokens in circulation, this goes to show that there's not a lot of dilution moving into this next bull run. So if we have all of this development, all of these DeFi applications, and all these integration, that means we can see INJ continue to push to new highs without seeing VCs and insiders dump on retail. Now other use cases include governance, and if you have a stake to INJ, you get to vote on new applications and the direction of the blockchain. INJ is also used for protocol fees, as well as developer incentives. Now there is one thing we need to be cautious about. The total supply could still potentially increase over time, because Injective uses inflationary emissions for block rewards. Currently, the block time is 0 .82 seconds. The inflation rate started at 7 % with a plan to decrease that rate in 2 % over time, but Injective also has a unique burning process that basically ties the percentage of INJ burn to the popularity of the protocols on its blockchain. So if Injective gains more and more adoptions, there's a chance that the token will become deflationary in the future. So what we need to be cautiously optimistic about is, is this inflationary pressure going to dilute the tokens moving into this next bull run? Because like I mentioned, there is not a lot of dilution coming from the early vesting schedules. So if we get burning mechanics on top of that for more development, I don't know what the right word is, but pomponomics is the kind of what comes to mind. So what makes their burning process so unique? Injective collects 60 % of the fees its platform receives from the users and puts them into a weekly auction and burn fund, where it invites people to make bids on those fees. Bidders have to buy the native token, INJ, and use that to make a bid on the assets that are on the auction block. Then Injective burns the final bids. This decreases the token supply and also drives demand for the INJ token. I know this is a little confusing, so imagine Injective auctioned $1 ,000 worth of an asset, and the highest bid ended up being $800 worth of INJ. Whoever won that bid would then have an arbitrage opportunity with the assets they've won, and Injective would then burn that $800 worth of INJ. This is why the level of Injective deflation is directly linked to the popularity of the protocols that use its on -chain order book. So what do you guys think? Do you have Injective in your portfolio? Do you think this is a pump and dump, or will INJ keep flying to the moon? So make sure you turn on those post notifications, leave a comment down below, and let us know your thoughts. Is Injective Protocol going to change DeFi forever? See you at the top. Thank you.

Gary Gensler Eric Shen 2018 August Of 2022 October Of 2020 April 2021 $1 ,000 $800 September Of 2022 Binance Labs 2021 Injective Labs 0 .82 Seconds January 7 % Two -Part Albert Chan $2 .6 Million Last Week 2 %
Monitor Show 13:00 09-29-2023 13:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:54 min | 2 months ago

Monitor Show 13:00 09-29-2023 13:00

"When professional soccer player Marcus Rashford injured his shoulder he turned to Resil's virtual reality training program to help him maintain his skills and return to the field with confidence. Learn more at meta .com slash metaverse impact. On tenth of one percent, Nasdaq up three tenths of one percent. Sound on with Joe Matthew from Washington DC. That starts right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. Now from our nation's capital, this is Bloomberg Sound On. We're talking about red and blue division within states. How busy is Donald Trump's legal team gonna be? Is the economy stupid? Is that actually what will decide this race? Bloomberg Sound On. Politics, policy and perspective from DC's top names. Federal spending combined with too lax monetary policy has produced this 40 year high on inflation. China policy is driven basically by domestic politics. American families are finding themselves further behind the eight ball. To get anything done in this Congress, it's gonna have to be done in a bipartisan way. Bloomberg Sound On with Joe Matthew on Bloomberg Radio. The government shuts down tomorrow. The auto workers strike is expanding and Senator Dianne Feinstein has died. Welcome to the fastest show in politics. With three major political stories developing today, we're gonna spend the next two hours learning more. Beginning with our conversation with Congresswoman Haley Stevens. The Democrat from Michigan has been on the picket line and is in the midst of the budget debate right now. Joins us live from the Capitol in just a moment. We seek analysis from our political panel. Bloomberg politics contributor, Democratic analyst, Jeannie Chan.

Jeannie Chan Marcus Rashford Joe Matthew Washington Dc Haley Stevens Donald Trump Michigan Tomorrow 40 Year Nasdaq Dianne Feinstein Bloomberg Business Act Senator 24 Hours A Day Congress Meta .Com Today Three Major Political Stories DC Bloomberg Radio
Monitor Show 12:00 08-22-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:39 min | 3 months ago

Monitor Show 12:00 08-22-2023 12:00

"Silly thing where they pretend they don't Buy it so the Indians buy it and then the Indians refine it and then they sell the refined product to the Europeans That's right. So that's how it works. So we'll keep an eye on that again Regular gasoline three dollars and eighty five percent at three dollars and eighty five cents a gallon across The u .s. A little bit cheaper down at the Jersey Shore, but not much People still got some driving to do this summer. So paying attention to the price at the pump. We're gonna have more coming up this Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg radio This is Bloomberg markets with Paul Sweeney at We got a lot of green on the screen here, but the volume is light We constantly underestimate the strength of the US consumer This is a market that's much more optimistic or bullish than maybe its central bankers are breaking market news and inside from Bloomberg There's still some concern out there in the market that there is room for things to deteriorate a little bit more than what they're indicating As small and medium -sized businesses struggle, they don't present as much competition The supply chain has still got dislocations globally and here in the u .s. This is Bloomberg markets On Bloomberg radio All right coming up in this hour we're gonna talk about the regional banks here Herman Chan and Arnakul Kuda, they're both from Bloomberg intelligence, so they're smart folks S &P just downgraded the banks I guess it's better late than never but we'll check in with the the smart folks who do this stuff for a living January Jennifer Reese she's a senior antitrust Litigation analyst Microsoft Activision.

Paul Sweeney S &P Three Dollars Bloomberg Business Act Jersey Shore Jennifer Reese Arnakul Kuda January 24 Hours A Day Eighty Five Percent Both Eighty Five Cents A Gallon U .S. This Summer United States Herman Chan Microsoft Activision Europeans Indians Bloomberg
The Latest Hunter Biden Developments Are Absolutely Stunning

The Officer Tatum Show

02:57 min | 9 months ago

The Latest Hunter Biden Developments Are Absolutely Stunning

"Story is absolutely stunning to me. If you needed any evidence that the Biden family aren't just corrupt, but traitorous, this story does it. That laptop from hell is causing some real damage to the Biden family. So the media would love you to be focusing on Trump and desantis and everything else they don't want you to focus on the border crisis. They don't want you to focus on, you know, lord forbid, you know, a bank collapse, all right? They don't want you to focus on any of that stuff that the Biden administration is causing and the damage that they're doing. So they stay fixated on former president Trump. Partly because they are scared of them, and they hate them, but also because it's an easy distraction because they know that most people have some type of emotional connection to Donald Trump, either they absolutely love them, or they absolutely hate them. I don't think there's a lot of people that are that are in between, but you know, but maybe, yeah, okay, I take that back. I'm sure there's some people that are in between, but nonetheless, this story is one of the most damaging stories that I've read. I want you to hear this audio clip. A Miranda Devine was on Fox News last night, and I want you to hear what she has to say about this. This is absolutely insane. This takes this family from corrupt to straight up traitorous. Audio clip number three popov Chan. Actually bizarre. I mean, it's another bizarre twist on an already bizarre story about the Biden family and the cast of characters involved in their influence peddling scheme around the world. And doctor gal loft is the latest one. He is an Israeli energy expert, a professor, he was arrested in Cyprus as you said, and is still in a Cyprus jail. He's charged apparently with gun running and Farah violations and various things. And he claims that he is innocent and that he's only been arrested to shut him up about what he knows about the Biden family business. And you know, a lot of his story does check out. He is regarded in his orbit in Washington, D.C. as, you know, he's well regarded. He's a legitimate energy expert. He's a former high ranking officer in the Israeli defense force. He has multiple degrees and he also talks about this FBI mole that he claims Hunter Biden used to tip off his Chinese partners that there was an FBI investigation into them. And there is some corroboration of that from the reporting that we've already done from the laptop. We know that Hunter Biden did have contacts within the FBI. We know that he used them to benefit at least one of his Chinese business

Donald Trump Cyprus Washington, D.C. FBI Last Night Israeli ONE Biden Hunter Biden Miranda Devine Chinese Popov Fox News Chan President Trump Farah
On this week's AP Religion Roundup, a Hong Kong ritual whacks away troubles.

AP News Radio

00:55 sec | 9 months ago

On this week's AP Religion Roundup, a Hong Kong ritual whacks away troubles.

"I'm Walter ratliff with the religion roundup. For people holding a grudge in Hong Kong, one way to release their anger is to take part in a villain hitting ritual. Edison Chan says he hopes the ritual will help cut out gossip and keep bad people away from him. Ritual practitioners, mostly older women, use a shoe to bash an image of the person who was the target of their customer's anger. One practitioner says many of her customers are people who have trouble at work or feel like they're being unfairly treated. She says she helps them by symbolically whacking the bad people away for a fee of 50 Hong Kong dollars. The ritual includes blessings from Hong Kong's goddess of the sea, as well as divine beings related to Buddhism. I'm Walter ratliff.

Edison Chan Hong Kong One Practitioner One Way 50 Walter Ratliff Buddhism
It will soon be time to render unto Caesar to visit Rome's pantheon, a Hong Kong ritual whacks away troubles, and a Zoroastrian holiday cause some to hit the streets as others hit their pocket books.

AP News Radio

02:17 min | 9 months ago

It will soon be time to render unto Caesar to visit Rome's pantheon, a Hong Kong ritual whacks away troubles, and a Zoroastrian holiday cause some to hit the streets as others hit their pocket books.

"On this week's AP religion roundup. It will soon be time to pay Caesar to visit Rome's Pantheon, a Hong Kong ritual wax away troubles and a Zoroastrian holiday causes some to hit the streets as others hit their pocketbooks. Tourists in Rome checking out the Pantheon will soon pay €5 for admission. Proceeds will be split between the culture ministry and the Roman Catholic Church, tourists at the site were divided over the new fee. I wasn't really expensive to stay here so I think it's a very nice building and for us to visit for free is wonderful. We are fully understand that it's necessary maybe to pay, you know, for the securing of the value, what is possible to say inside. The Pantheon was built as a Roman temple more than 2000 years ago. It was transformed into a church 14th century ago, and mass is regularly celebrated there. For people holding a grudge in Hong Kong, one way to release their anger is to take part in a villain hitting ritual. Edison Chan says he hopes the ritual will help cut out gossip and keep bad people away from him. Ritual practitioners, mostly older women, use a shoe to bash an image of the person who was the target of their customer's anger. One practitioner says many of her customers are people who have trouble at work or feel like they're being unfairly treated. She says she helps them by symbolically whacking the bad people away for a fee of 50 Hong Kong dollars. The ritual includes blessings from Hong Kong's goddess of the sea, as well as divine beings related to Buddhism. The markets in Iraq's Kurdish region are busy, as people prepare for the spring festival of Nauru. The Persian new year, the holiday dates back to at least 1700 BCE, and incorporates ancient Zoroastrian traditions. This year, however, now ruz coincides with the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. Shopper delga is having the two holidays at the same time creates a bit of a financial burden. In Iran, a fyre festival related to the holiday spark protests. Demonstrators chanted against the country's ruling clerics and hurled firecrackers at security forces. Hardliners have long condemned the fyre festival as an Islamic. I'm Walter ratliff.

Caesar Edison Chan €5 Roman Catholic Church Iran Iraq Walter Ratliff Hong Kong Two Holidays Rome This Year 14Th Century Ago One Practitioner AP This Week One Way 50 Persian More Than New Year
1984 on Steroids With Tracy Beanz

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:09 min | 9 months ago

1984 on Steroids With Tracy Beanz

"Tracy you have an article here, bombshell court order outlines proven government big tech censorship to tell us about it. Yes, this is Missouri versus Biden, one of the biggest cases that's going on right now in the country. It is so huge. Well, basically, the states of Missouri and Louisiana decided they were going to sue the federal government because they said the federal government was stepping in to censor American speech on a myriad of topics from COVID to vaccines to the Hunter Biden laptop to election integrity, all kinds of different stuff. They stepped in, they asked the judge if he could file a temporary injunction to stop the government agencies from discussing this stuff. Any longer with the social media companies like Twitter, Facebook, Google, all of them. So in order to get there, to grant that temporary injunction, the judge gave them expedited discovery and deposition power, which is almost unheard of generally. But to do it at such a high level of all these government agencies was absolutely bonkers. They did it. They granted it. The government kicked and screamed and fought. But ultimately, the heads of sissa, the CDC, you know, Anthony Fauci was deposed. Elvis Chan from the FBI was deposed. All these people were deposed in this case. And today we're getting the filing finally from the states of Missouri, Louisiana and various plaintiffs to make the case for that temporary injunction. The judge has already said they've basically made their case because the discovery they've received has been absolutely off the charts insane. So remember that disinformation governance board that they tried to spring up, Nina jankowitz, who's now begging for money. Yeah, that's right. Yeah. Yeah, she is to sue what Fox News. Is that what she's doing? 100,000 bucks, yeah. Yeah. So she, that disinformation governance board was actually just a cover for what they're already doing at sissa. Sisa declared they learned through this lawsuit discovery. Your thoughts, cognitive infrastructure. So cisa has declared that your thoughts, the things you type on social media and what you think are part of their infrastructure. Therefore, they can regulate those things as they would any other piece of critical infrastructure that they are in charge of.

Missouri Hunter Biden Federal Government Louisiana Elvis Chan Biden Tracy Anthony Fauci Nina Jankowitz CDC Twitter Facebook FBI Google Sisa Fox News Cisa
NFL Coach Chan Gailey Discusses Losing Football Coordinators

The Doug Collins Podcast

01:45 min | 10 months ago

NFL Coach Chan Gailey Discusses Losing Football Coordinators

"Losing O season office according to defense coronary is more or is it the same more changing on a college level or a pro level? Because now you're looking at Philadelphia, Philadelphia came very close in a Super Bowl, look good, mahomes is just my home. But he now loses here on loses his office, Gordon and his defensive coordinate. Going into a new year with, you know, again, is much pros do move. Which is the bigger impact. An offensive coordinator defense Courtney loss on a college level or a pro level. I think it's more in a college level. Because in pro level, you got enough money, you've got enough. We're with all to make sure you have got somebody in the wings or you've done enough research that you've got a general idea of what you're going to do. I mean, it can't be a shock to everybody that Philadelphia was going to lose a coordinator. What, oh my gosh, he's leaving. He had made he had been thinking about this. He and the GM and the owner had been talking about this for a month and a half now. So it didn't like it's a shock to them. Whereas in college, you don't have to wear with all to maybe, you know, the one that's done at the best to me is Nick. Nick's always had one of those guys that they call whatever they call them. And analyst. Yeah. That's how analysts, he had an analyst sitting there that he was developing to be the next coordinator.

Philadelphia Super Bowl Gordon Courtney GM Nick
Are We Seeing the Golden Era of the Player Flop? Chan Gailey Explains

The Doug Collins Podcast

00:58 sec | 10 months ago

Are We Seeing the Golden Era of the Player Flop? Chan Gailey Explains

"We seeing the golden era of the player flaw? The injured floppy, what are they going to do at some point? I mean, it's become so obvious in some of these and I'm surprised I don't see any, I don't see any rule change for that. But I mean, really, I mean, you think that'll be something addressed in the future. I don't know. I don't know how you completely officiate intent. You know, they have, they have a rule in football called intentional grounding. Yeah. We all know what the guys doing, but there was a receiver over there within 17 yards. So it's okay. No, it's intentional grounding. So we've got a rule in there about intent, but it's very vague and right now, I think they've got a very vague situation, and they don't want to make a rule till they get more specific.

Football
Doug Welcomes Back Former NFL Coach Chan Gailey

The Doug Collins Podcast

01:59 min | 10 months ago

Doug Welcomes Back Former NFL Coach Chan Gailey

"Gailey, coach extraordinary glad to have him with a stock in the year and also what's going ahead in this time of year. So what are college coaches doing right now? Right now they are organizing for their off season program, spring practice, they are evaluating last year's film. What they did good, what they did bad. And this is going to be good for pros and college in many respects. But there are evaluating what they did good, what they give and what they need to improve upon. The difference and I might even talk about the differences between college and profile of sitting here because pros have got a decent idea who's going to be back next year. Right. Some of the colleges, they're still recruiting their kids, you know, they don't know who's going to be back next year. That's the challenge that they have. And transfer portal made that even worse. Oh, it's ten times worse. At least, you know, 5 years ago, you knew you had going into spring practice to practice. You knew who you had. Because a guy, to be eligible, he would have had to have already transferred and gone somewhere else and it just wasn't an open door policy at any point in time. And so. It's much more difficult on the college guy right now as far as evaluate what they did last year is about the same. Right. Okay. How good were we in red zone? Had a good war worry two minute offense. How good were we? Kick off return. All that. And but the personnel, who you have, the pro guy has a great idea about what he has and the college guy does it.

Gailey
What's the Point of Watching Biden's SOTU?

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

02:10 min | 10 months ago

What's the Point of Watching Biden's SOTU?

"President Biden delivers tomorrow a State of the Union. His annual State of the Union usually happens late Chan, I guess, early fab. So here we are. And there have been some speculations about what this will be about, but I think we all kind of know what it's going to be about, why? Because we've been hearing Biden talking about some of this beforehand. And it's going to be a big boast about the magnificent state of the economy and the even more magnificent job that Biden is doing in it. Now, the problem with all this is that Biden is a brazen liar. This guy will state things that are the flat opposite of the truth. And I'm going to show that dramatically by focusing in on some specific statements that he's made lately. We have created, I'm quoting Biden more jobs in two years than any presidential team within two years. This is the strongest two years of job growth in history by a long shot. And then Biden was asked, hey, you take some responsibility for inflation. The highest inflation 40 years. Quote, do I take any blame for inflation? No, because it was already here when I got here, man. Biden. Now, he goes on, quote, remember what the economy was like when I got here, jobs were hemorrhaging inflation was rising. We won manufacturing a damn thing here. That's why I don't. Now, let's look at the truth of the matter. First of all, the economy was in great shape in 2019. This is pre COVID. It then got hit by the COVID firestorm in early 2020. Trump listened to health experts, the country was shut down. In April 2020, a hemorrhaging of jobs, 20 million jobs lost, economy plunges into a recession. But then what happens is things begin to start picking up as the COVID crisis schools, in fact, as soon as the third quarter in 2020, the GDP grows at an astonishing 38%.

Biden President Biden Chan Donald Trump Covid
Julie Kelly: FBI Increases Reward for Info on 'Mystery Jan. 6 Bomber'

The Dan Bongino Show

01:51 min | 11 months ago

Julie Kelly: FBI Increases Reward for Info on 'Mystery Jan. 6 Bomber'

"You know it's really shocking I mean in light of everything happened we had to happen with the multiple Twitter files drops What we now know it's not open for debate anymore That the FBI DHS DNI and other members of the IC intelligence community were actively working through Elvis Chan of the FBI and others to openly coordinate with various social media companies not just Twitter to violate the First Amendment and censor content You'd think the FBI would be doing kind of a retrenching doing a hot wash and saying wow how do we screw this up And how do we get out of the political stuff and move back to shoe leather investigations and rebuilding the American people's confidence This is the way you do it Let's do a clearly clearly partisan investigation into grandma for an alleged trespass on the capitol at a political rally that we're now talking about years every years ago I mean it's obscene but I only got limited Tommy I want to ask you another question I'm sorry I mean the filibuster There's been an update on the bomber case What is the FBI up to They just came out with a statement They're increasing the reward to $500,000 for the alleged bomber who supposedly left bombs at the RNC and DNC on the evening of January 5th into January 6th What do you think's going on there Well I think that the FBI recognizes that this is such a gaping hole in the alleged investigation and a source of mockery on our side that here we are two years later and they can use geo fence warrants to track down an India to grandma who took a selfie inside the building in 6 but you can't find the bomber So in a little bit of I think a spin they increase the reward from a 100,000 to 500,000 for anyone who could give information about this mystery pipe bomber

FBI Elvis Chan Twitter DHS Tommy RNC DNC India
Julie Kelly: Deposition Released With FBI Agent Elvis Chan

The Dan Bongino Show

01:52 min | 1 year ago

Julie Kelly: Deposition Released With FBI Agent Elvis Chan

"Now last time I checked Julie the DNI the DHS and the FBI were operations within the federal government that sounds like a First Amendment issue to me and kind of a big deal It's a huge deal in Dan this morning I was posting screenshots of Elvis Chan's court order deposition that he gave last week in the civil lawsuit filed by the attorney generals of Missouri and Louisiana to expose this collude between the government and big tech This was not just run out of that San Francisco field office by Elvis Chan the so called cyber expert which he admitted is that FBI headquarters had basically a 24/7 every single day foreign interference alert system happening where they were in constant communication with social media companies demanding that they had staff available at any moment where they could flag them or contact them and have them remove content that the FBI had deemed part of foreign interference or misinformation have to materials et cetera So this is not just how this chant it was not just a handful of these agents which he said in this court deposition is that it was also happening at FBI headquarters So to your point the government was fully involved They were operating on an encrypted chat to these social media companies a lot of that information apparently has been scrubbed And Dan they were low key threatening social media companies either you say whatever material comes forward violates your terms of service for half to materials or we will file we will get a warrant We will get a seizure warrant on your platforms and force of the remove it That was the threat that seems to have been made to these companies

Elvis Chan FBI DNI DHS Julie Federal Government Louisiana Missouri San Francisco
Julie Kelly: The FBI's Success Rate in Suppressing Online Speech

The Dan Bongino Show

01:22 min | 1 year ago

Julie Kelly: The FBI's Success Rate in Suppressing Online Speech

"I've been using your screenshots and your analysis of the Elvis Chan deposition on my podcast and radio show So I'm actually going to bring that up a little bit later And there's also another portion I got from your Twitter account He admits at one point I got about a minute and a half left Jew but he says they ask him what was your success rate And he's probably underestimating yours on 50% So you're telling me the government goes to social media companies and 50 out of a hundred times They can take down people's accounts Sounds like a First Amendment problem to me It sure does And then he admitted Dan that they had a meeting with these social media platform companies after the election They called it a hot wash that's what he said I'm sure you're familiar with the term law enforcement So they could see what worked and what didn't work in the 2020 election Meaning did the FBI did their threats and their constant communication back and forth Did it work successfully in getting rid of material damaging to the Joe Biden's presidential campaign or did it not I mean that's really what it was right Yeah I mean to do a hot wash afterwards which is like one of those Buffy jargon terms we use in law enforcement and after action kind of report And it's to not be happy that you had a 50% success rate of destroying the First Amendment Just goes to show you that not only did they weren't afraid of what they would do They wanted to do more of it

Elvis Chan Twitter DAN FBI Joe Biden
Julie Kelly: James Baker and FBI Election Interference

The Dan Bongino Show

01:53 min | 1 year ago

Julie Kelly: James Baker and FBI Election Interference

"Stating things openly and releasing documents indicating that way you and I knew for a long time that this symbiotic big tech FBI Democrat party organism was working to crush free speech and suppress stories about Hunter Biden But I think the shocking revelation we learned yesterday which I think is a more interesting story is that James baker and you have a piece up it was at American greatness Let me just get the title here quick just so I make sure everybody goes and reads it Greed this out It's by Julie Kelly American greatness dot com Obama Biden government in exile ran the Hunter Biden laptop suppression operation and you'd be right because Jim baker who was general counsel at Twitter apparently allegedly according to Elon and taibi was kind of vetting the information that leaked out there first and isn't it a coincidence he was one of the same key players in the spy gay case again So weird So weird that these same people just keep popping up in places of influence and power So yes now I think there were some decent questions our friend Miranda Devine sort of called out Ivan Musk yesterday inside come on You had to know that Jim Bakker was a top FBI official He was Jim Comey's general counsel He was responsible for the first few illicit Pfizer's He helped paddle the alpha bank Narrative you know he testified in Michael sussman's trial the Perkins cooey lawyer who tried to get the FBI There's weird ties to that as well Elvis Chan the FBI guy out of San Francisco who was also involved in the alpha bank and DNC hack He's now showing up as part of the suppression campaign by the FBI but anyway so yeah so how did Elon Musk not know the Jim Bakker was going to be vetting these files before turning them over to manti but he was exited out of Twitter headquarters yesterday So

Hunter Biden FBI Julie Kelly Obama Biden Taibi James Baker Jim Baker Miranda Devine Ivan Musk Jim Comey Elon Jim Bakker Michael Sussman Perkins Cooey Elvis Chan Twitter Alpha Bank Pfizer DNC San Francisco
FBI Met Weekly With Big Tech Ahead of the 2020 Election, Agent Says

The Dan Bongino Show

01:40 min | 1 year ago

FBI Met Weekly With Big Tech Ahead of the 2020 Election, Agent Says

"There's a name that came up in a bunch of depositions that are being given in a lawsuit filed by the Missouri attorney general It's a free speech lawsuit Eric Schmidt a good guy a couple other AGs are involved too including Louisiana They subpoenaed a guy by the name of Elvis Chan Elvis Chan is a supervisory special agent I believe at one point worked out of the San Francisco office at tip archaeus audience Now you may have heard that name Elvis Chan before because Elvis Chan's name was mentioned by FBI whistleblower Kyle seraphin on this show as a possible conduit between the FBI and the tech community Well Elvis Chan testifying under oath the Fox News article my newsletter today you'll notice that the FBI met weekly with big tech ahead of the 2020 election an agent testifies FBI agent Elvis Chan testified Tuesday in the Missouri and Louisiana attorneys general's case there Attorneys attorneys general What did Elvis Chan say Well I was Chan said a lot He admitted to the meetings But proving to you that the most dangerous component to this story and left wing media The communists left wing media will do anything to squash the First Amendment portion of this story That the government the FEC the DNI the FBI and others knew about this At least the law enforcement at these new before the election They were watching Rudy Giuliani purposefully as an effort to steal his messages to make sure they could get ahead of anything Giuliani was going to do to release the Hunter Biden story The fact that the FBI knew

Elvis Chan FBI Elvis Chan Elvis Chan Kyle Seraphin Missouri Eric Schmidt Louisiana San Francisco Fox News Chan DNI FEC Rudy Giuliani Government Giuliani Hunter Biden
FBI Met Weekly With Big Tech Ahead of the 2020 Election

Mark Levin

01:53 min | 1 year ago

FBI Met Weekly With Big Tech Ahead of the 2020 Election

"Supervisory special agent Chan who serves in the FBI's San Francisco bureau was questioned under oath By court order about his alleged critical role in coordinating them quoting with social media platforms relating to censorship and suppression of speech on their platforms Why supervisory special agent in San Francisco Well that's where Silicon Valley mostly is During the deposition Chan said that he along with the FBI's foreign influence task force and senior cybersecurity and infrastructure security agencies officials had weekly meetings with major social media companies to warn against Russian disinformation attempts ahead of the 2020 election According to a source in the Missouri attorney general's office Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the FBI came to his company to warn about Russian disinformation What do you mean like Russian collusion with Trump I just don't trust these bastards I just don't Those meetings were initially quarterly than monthly than weekly heading into the presidential election between former president Donald Trump and not President Biden How about the Chinese influence on Biden With a monitoring that No According to a source chain testified that in those multiple separate meetings the FBI warned the social media companies there could be potentially Russian hack and dump or a hack and leak operations in their complaint the GOP AGs noted on August 26th Podcast episode of the Joe Rogan experience in which meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg stated the FBI basically came to us told Facebook to be on high alert relating to a lot of Russian propaganda Zuckerberg added the FBI said there's about the same kind of dump That's similar to so just be vigilant Sorry that's choppy That's him not me

FBI Chan San Francisco President Biden Silicon Valley Mark Zuckerberg Missouri Donald Trump Facebook Biden Ceo Mark Zuckerberg Joe Rogan GOP Zuckerberg
Julie Kelly: We Need More FBI Agents to Blow the Whistle

The Dan Bongino Show

01:45 min | 1 year ago

Julie Kelly: We Need More FBI Agents to Blow the Whistle

"This agency who I revered so much growing up Julie It is we just had a whistleblower on the phone before you a friend of ours Kyle sheriff and it is just totally imploded It's horrifying to watch this happen It is it's horrifying it's sad But look this is an agency that is acting as the enforcement arm the personal Gestapo of the Democratic Party We need more Kyle seraphims We need more Steven Friends We need more people inside that agency to blow the whistle and expose what's happening And you know what Dan it's not just happening the 7th floor of the Hoover building This kind of corruption partisanship has infected every single field up I wrote this week about I'll just Chan who is the cyber expert FBI special agent out of the San Francisco field office Dan he's not a cyber expert He's got 300 Silicon Valley companies big tech in his jurisdiction Is he investigating their suppression of free speech as he investigating how they interfered in the 2020 election No He is the conduit between the FBI and big tech telling them what to suppress what to censor what to ban under this ruse of foreign disinformation So it infected field offices related to the Whitmer fed napping hoax In Michigan in other states So unfortunately this is not just a top tier C suite level sort of problem at the FBI This is this right it goes all the way down and it has to be fixed because they're destroying life and they're putting Americans in jeopardy because they're focused on political work instead of keeping our country safe

Kyle Sheriff Kyle Seraphims Hoover Building FBI DAN Julie Democratic Party Steven Chan Silicon Valley San Francisco Whitmer Michigan
"chan" Discussed on Accelerate!

Accelerate!

06:13 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Accelerate!

"Better and thing is unlike consuming in track and field and so on his. You can't quantify how much better you are. It'd right it in order to win the deal. The customink incision. It's like know they may have a spreadsheet mayor cheaper by certain percents. But it's not always about price right right so it gets back to the side you're talking about is at least in. My mind has always been my stress to people. I coaches at every little thing matters because yesterday to presume that the margin victories only one percent between you and everybody else asset doing the attention to detail. You're you're putting in the creativity you're exerting analysis or you're exerting that is that extra one percent right that's right you know it's walls things where you know. I think gary said he's had for years now. Gary bainer shock me saying the best sales or marketing strategy is carrying and so true wine than tension nalty of care to every part of your process. You are much more intentional from everything you do from how you speak on the phone to how you write your emails to proposals to how you run the sales calls to how you follow up and all those details really matter. You may not seem that way up front but they truly do because it all caters towards that experience tapped as a customer is feeling with you and your company exactly and it is predominantly about the customer experience. the drives the decision buying experience with you as individual seller. absolutely right. yeah. I'd love the Made ten plus years ago alpha as a bicycle family. I am but tour. France fan and and the dominant team for a long time team sky and now called any us in the domino Franson and their manager. Dave braille suffered. You had this theory or philosophy. Follow called the aggregation of marginal gains. And so i looked at every little. There was no aspect of a person writing a bike that they didn't examine and say. What can we do to make this part better right around the position on the bike. The bike della bicycle since the writers would spend hours in a wind tunnel right and looking at the form on the bike they would the shape of their materials on the or the shape but the well the shape somewhat as you know even though the seeming they used in stitching the garments together to try reduce pill wind flow over the the garment Helmets everything nutrition sleep. There wasn't anything that didn't look at and you have to take that same approach and sales because we don't know what's going to make a difference is it's absolutely right and it's one of the things were i can't remember which Was with vince lombardi. I camera which may jal would camera who it was. I was in the books. I it's about how initial seasons stars one of the first things that's coach would do was teach him how to tie their shoes. John wooden john wooden. Yeah it was y'all witness because that's exactly it and the failure is preparing to fill. Yes right exactly right words. It's those little details like the players. Were laugh so let's so stupid. We all know. How tire shoe. Whatever but reality is improperly tie. You're gonna lose focus. You're gonna lose footing get distracted. It gets an impact everything else that you do. The initial baseline and i think about a sales process the same thing and it's really cross sports life. Everything when you understand those micro-moments will make the money you know. It's what makes magic happen. You pay attention to the micro moments this like russell. Wilson says the separation is in. The preparation is a little details. He has how do we. How do we inculcate that that mindset into sellers. I think you know comes from managers. I think has to start there. But but this is really important is going to frustrating to me is when i'm working with sales teams has just this call slackness right. I mean it's it's not paying attention to the details not understand. The details are important Just following the process instead of the point earlier being very intentional about every moment. Yeah yeah what what why believes it starts with. I their belief and they have to have a belief that they are not a product of their circumstances. And a lot of times. When you talk to call you the average rep right. The average rep oftentimes if they are not perform to level expected themselves or the expects of them they usually. We'll try to find external reasons on why they're not able to hit their goals and get they wanna go and you'll hear all types of things from hey we don't have the right text up. We have bad product market fit. I have a bandleader. I all these xyz reasons and yeah for sure sometimes those might be very valid reasons like an impact it but the end of the day. It's having a belief that you can control what you can control. Can't control those things but you can control how you show up how you prepare and how you interpret events together desires you because if you don't you competition will or someone else on the team. Well and they'll get better results than you so thing is starts with the ownership and belief that you are one hundred percent accountability for your capital to yield results but also to your own failures and mistakes and started out there. Because if you can't overcome that. I if you do not have that pure belief about my conviction. It's very hard to do anything else. Everybody else becomes about compliance verses commitment or conformity.

Gary bainer domino Franson Dave braille John wooden john wooden gary vince lombardi jal France russell Wilson
"chan" Discussed on The Poetry Magazine Podcast

The Poetry Magazine Podcast

03:16 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Poetry Magazine Podcast

"I've <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Female> <Music> <Advertisement> written a <Speech_Female> lot of poems about <Speech_Female> racism that <Speech_Female> i've experienced in childhood. <Speech_Female> But i think <Speech_Female> now <Speech_Female> that. I think i worry <Speech_Female> that sometimes if i <Speech_Female> only write about those <Speech_Female> poems <Speech_Female> and those expenses <Speech_Female> that happened in childhood <Speech_Female> that white audiences <Speech_Female> might think that <Speech_Female> it was in the past <Speech_Female> and they don't feel implicated <Speech_Female> as much <Speech_Female> so <Speech_Female> just thinking about <Speech_Female> situating <Speech_Female> in contextualising <Speech_Female> racism <Speech_Female> in everyday <Speech_Female> situations. That <Speech_Female> happen with <Speech_Female> even friends. <Speech_Female> I love <Speech_Female> my husband is white <Speech_Female> so <SpeakerChange> thinking about <Silence> our relationship to <Speech_Female> yeah. I <Speech_Female> think that <Speech_Female> One strategy that maybe <Speech_Female> both of us use <Speech_Female> lisa. <Speech_Female> I think there's <Speech_Female> a talking in both <Speech_Female> of our aesthetics <Speech_Female> and also. <Speech_Female> I try not to <Speech_Female> shy away from narrative <Speech_Female> and i think <Speech_Female> that sometimes <Speech_Female> it's sort of taboo <Speech_Female> to have <Speech_Female> too much narrative <Speech_Female> in in your poems <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> I really <Speech_Female> like narrative poems. <Speech_Female> And i think that <Speech_Female> that can add to the <Speech_Female> emotional impact <Speech_Female> in the clarity of <Speech_Female> the poem <Speech_Female> than so having a narrative <Speech_Male> arc to <SpeakerChange> home. <Speech_Female> I think can be helpful. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Yup i i want <Speech_Female> to make space for <Speech_Female> if you marianna. <Speech_Female> Lisa had <Speech_Female> anymore <SpeakerChange> questions <Speech_Female> for each other. <Speech_Female> So lisa <Speech_Female> your armpit poem <Speech_Female> you mention <Speech_Female> the future daughter <Speech_Female> who you hope <Speech_Female> will not <Speech_Female> think about white women are armpit <Speech_Female> hair as much as you. <Speech_Female> You're thinking about <Speech_Female> it and so i'm wondering. <Speech_Female> How <SpeakerChange> much are you <Speech_Female> thinking about. <Speech_Female> Parenthood as well. <Speech_Female> Yeah <Speech_Female> in your poems <Speech_Female> or in general <Speech_Female> or general. <SpeakerChange> Yeah <Speech_Female> yeah i think. Parenthood <Speech_Female> is such an <Speech_Female> interesting <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> topic to <Speech_Female> think about the future <Speech_Female> in terms of a way. <Speech_Female> That is <Speech_Female> not just <Speech_Female> yourself kind of like <Speech_Female> you were saying marianne and <Speech_Female> i'm really excited to read <Speech_Female> your new work to <Speech_Female> In which. <Speech_Female> You're engaging that. <Speech_Female> I don't <Speech_Female> know i think parenthood <Speech_Female> is sometimes can <Speech_Female> be a shorthand <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> especially for <Speech_Female> somebody who doesn't have kids <Speech_Female> can be a shorthand <Speech_Female> for <Speech_Female> thinking about <Speech_Female> dreaming. About <Silence> what could be <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> i think. Marian i <Speech_Female> have <Speech_Female> similar wanderings <Speech_Female> that you have <Speech_Female> in your palm <Speech_Female> of your therapist <Speech_Female> being <Speech_Female> with a white person <Speech_Female> and thinking about <Speech_Female> parenting <Speech_Female> an interracial <Speech_Female> child. I think is something <Speech_Female> that. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> I think that <Speech_Female> i'll have to kind of <Speech_Music_Female> work through myself. <Speech_Female> A lot <Speech_Female> and yeah. <SpeakerChange> We'll see. <Speech_Female> i'm not sure. Therapist <Speech_Music_Female> asked if i grew up <Music> in biddle city. <Speech_Music_Female> There are lots <Speech_Music_Female> of little cities <Speech_Music_Female> everywhere. She tells <Speech_Female> me <Speech_Female> i didn't know she <Speech_Music_Female> knew about biddle city. <Speech_Music_Female> I thought <Speech_Music_Female> it was a <SpeakerChange> place. I <Speech_Music_Female> made up. <Speech_Music_Female> I realized <Speech_Music_Female> what <SpeakerChange> was wrong <Speech_Music_Female> along. <Speech_Female> I say <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> i'm not an <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> interracial person. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> But i'm afraid <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> that i'm white. <Speech_Music_Female> I'm afraid <Speech_Music_Female> that i made myself <Speech_Music_Female> white that <Speech_Music_Female> chosen whiteness. <Speech_Music_Female> Along time ago. <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> I see myself <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> crying on <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> a square on my <Speech_Music_Female> computer screen <Speech_Music_Female> like <Speech_Music_Female> this. My face <Speech_Music_Female> looks undeniably <Speech_Music_Female> asian. <Speech_Female> I try to relax <Speech_Music_Female> so that. it's no longer <Speech_Music_Female> crumpled in this <Speech_Music_Female> way but it <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> doesn't move. <Speech_Music_Female> It's frozen like <Speech_Music_Female> this in its <Music> rectangular box. <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> I have more <Speech_Female> questions than answers. <Speech_Music_Female> Which i think is <Speech_Female> a good place to be <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> after talking <SpeakerChange> about poems <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> and poetry. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> Thank <Speech_Female> you so much <Speech_Female> do in maryalice <Speech_Female> was really <SpeakerChange> fun to <Speech_Female> deal with. The you llosa <Speech_Female> great to do this with <Speech_Female> you too. And i love listening <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> to answers lease and <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> thanks for all the good questions <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> sues <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Advertisement> grade <Silence> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female>

biddle city lisa marianne Lisa Marian
"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

The Psychology Podcast

02:42 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

"This <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> is such good <Speech_Music_Male> therapy. A <Silence> therapy session <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> anchor any for for <Speech_Music_Male> anything. That once <Speech_Music_Male> dealing with in <Speech_Male> one's life <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> let's meet <Speech_Male> end with this question. <Speech_Male> Then how do you propose <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> that we redefine <Silence> <Advertisement> well <SpeakerChange> itself. <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> I love this <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> question. <Speech_Music_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Female> I think <Speech_Music_Female> we need <Speech_Music_Female> to look at our <Speech_Female> current <Speech_Female> definition of what <Speech_Female> love is and <Speech_Female> what a successful <Speech_Female> relationship <Speech_Music_Female> is <Speech_Music_Female> and <Speech_Music_Female> ask if <Speech_Female> that model <Speech_Female> is helping <Speech_Female> you in <Speech_Female> creating the type of <Speech_Female> life and love that <Speech_Female> you want now <Speech_Female> because so <Speech_Female> often <Speech_Female> we have a definition. <Speech_Female> That's based <Speech_Female> on society <Speech_Music_Female> on <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> movies. We watch <Speech_Female> the songs <Speech_Female> we listen to our <Speech_Female> our parents <Silence> ideas <Speech_Music_Female> and <Speech_Female> we've also <Speech_Female> absorbed these ideas <Speech_Female> as if they are <Speech_Female> own. We don't question <Speech_Female> them. <Speech_Music_Female> And <Speech_Female> so <Speech_Female> you know what is <Speech_Female> success in a relationship <Speech_Female> so many people <Speech_Female> think that. <Speech_Female> Oh as long as you've <Speech_Female> been together for very <Speech_Female> long time than that <Speech_Female> successful. <Speech_Female> I definitely <Speech_Female> do not think that's true <Speech_Female> if you were in <Speech_Female> an abusive relationship <Speech_Female> for twenty <Speech_Female> thirty years. <Speech_Female> I don't think <Speech_Female> that you deserve a trophy <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> brain. <Speech_Music_Female> If you recognize <Speech_Female> that you're <Speech_Female> in a dead <Speech_Female> end relationship <Speech_Female> where it's <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> killing your soul <Silence> <Advertisement> and you get out of <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> it and <Speech_Female> that lasted only a year <Speech_Female> but you learn so <Speech_Female> much in that help <Speech_Female> you in the next <Speech_Female> relationship <Speech_Female> for you to get <Speech_Female> really aligned with your values <Speech_Female> and if who <Speech_Female> are who are choosing <Speech_Female> my god. <Speech_Music_Female> That was a successful <Speech_Male> relationship <Speech_Female> so so <Speech_Female> question. <Speech_Female> These <Speech_Female> ideas that <Speech_Female> you've got you <Speech_Female> might have to absorb. <Speech_Female> That might not even <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> be yours. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Question the plan <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> that <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> you think you need to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> have <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> and <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> you know. Ask <Speech_Female> yourself if you were <Speech_Female> to have a blank canvas <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> and <Speech_Female> you're to start right now. <Silence> How would you paint <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> that <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> see what actions <Speech_Female> you can take to start <Speech_Female> creating <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> that and making <Silence> <Advertisement> that a reality. <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> What's <Speech_Male> under there <Speech_Male> so we can. We can all <Speech_Male> get go and already with that <Speech_Male> blank canvas filling out <Speech_Male> the blank canvas. <Speech_Male> Hey <Speech_Male> amy is <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> just such delay talking <Speech_Male> to. I love what you're up <Speech_Male> to in this world and let <Speech_Music_Male> there <Speech_Male> so we can. We can all <Speech_Male> get go and already with that <Speech_Male> blank canvas filling out <Speech_Male> the blank canvas. <Speech_Male> Hey <Speech_Male> amy is <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> just such delay talking <Speech_Male> to. I love what you're up <Speech_Male> to in this world and let <Speech_Music_Male> me know how <SpeakerChange> it can support <Speech_Music_Male> it in any way <Speech_Music_Female> all to. <Speech_Male> This is so fun <Speech_Music_Male> so <Speech_Music_Male> much fun. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Thanks <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for listening to this. Episode <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of the psychology <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> podcast. <Speech_Music_Male> If you'd like to react <Speech_Music_Male> to something you heard. <Speech_Male> I encourage <Speech_Male> you to join in the discussion <Speech_Music_Male> at the psychology. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Podcast dot <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> com. <Speech_Music_Male> That's the

thirty years twenty a year Speech_Music_Male
"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

The Psychology Podcast

02:20 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

"Or nothing thinking is one catastrophes ing when you take one thing and then you turn into this huge Huge problem that's ever gonna go away. getting caught up in shoots so i should have done that. He should have done that she should have done that right. You're not based in reality. You can't change the past and and that causes a lot more stress in often a lot of self blame or or blame onto another or even shaming yourself And i think another huge when that happens is making assumptions right. Maybe you didn't hear back on a text right away and perhaps you had a few experiences in your past That made you associate. Not hearing back equals you know a threat. someone's going to drop you or reject you and so you personalized that you make an assumption and you're like oh this person must not be into me. This person must be taking advantage of me in a really great thing to do when you find yourself. Doing that is actually just great writing down a list of possible scenarios with a compassionate lands. And this also. If you're kind of in panic state your has kind of taken over. And you're like invite her flight. This can actually help prefrontal. Cortex comeback online right. You're rational logical part of your brain just by listening you know interviewing that that can help calm you down So those are some of the common thinking traps that. I see all all often so this is so helpful. So let's say that the the person really isn't into you and so that's one of the possible scenarios that you just rationally. Think through what if the worst case scenario is true. You know what if it's not this is. This ain't happening scotty then What how can you still show that yourself compassion in that situation. I think i sing is don't fall into the trap just personalization become when you're right like you someone doesn't jive with you. They don't wanna continue dating. It doesn't mean that you're flawed as a human being quickly and so often people go straight there like something's wrong with me and nothing is wrong with you and you haven't met your your fit yet. I mean that's what dating is the filtering process and not everyone you need.

one one catastrophes one thing Cortex scenarios
"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

The Psychology Podcast

02:51 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

"Becoming aware of all this and you're helping people become aware of this stuff because we don't if we don't have the language for we may never be able to comprehend what we're doing or what you know what's happening on. What's the difference between feeling and feeding emotions. Great question asking good questions moscow so feeling your emotions is allowing yourself to feel the motion pinpointing where by feel you. You're feeling in the body knowing that it's going to pass away and feeding your emotion is when you it's almost like emotional cutting you keep doing things to make that motion baker and stick around longer so for example. Maybe you're feeling sad and instead of doing the opposite action which would would be okay. I'm going to connect with a friend. I'm going to go jogging. I'm gonna exercising you know get the endorphins you instead put on co play on repeats. You might watch love actually in the sad romantic movies that have unattainable ideals and feel really bad about yourself you might you with your body posture hunched over being fetal position. Stay there you do these things and you know it's gonna make you feel worse and worse. Almost you can't help it. It's emotional cutting just need more. That's feeding the motion. And i call it feeding them otieno monster. So i think it's important to recognize as whether you're going through a break up or you're going through the ups and downs of life when you're feeling the sadness or anger or whatever it is are you judging yourself for feeling it or you allowing yourself to okay. I feel it's going to pass or are you feeding it just putting gasoline into the fire and choose what's going to serve you. Yeah and also another technique. You talk about your book is imported. Redirecting your thoughts in order to avoid excessive rumination I feel like that's that's related. I mean we can be feeding our emotions but can also be feeding our thoughts right off quicker that way before but if it fell right it felt right so we can you help people with his techniques if they have this excessive rumination. And there's wanna stop already. Yeah so training. Your brain is a skill right. And like i mentioned earlier when you showed me your meditation pillow that is a hard work upfront right. It's doing those daily practices that are going to help you. That when it comes to game time and you're gonna rumination roller coaster because you've trained your brain and you've done mindfulness and self compassion. You're able to kind of pause and not react.

"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

The Psychology Podcast

01:50 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast

"Show each episode of jordan show which apple named one of its best of two thousand eighteen jordan dives into the minds of fascinating people from scientists and authors to athletes to mobsters spies and hostage negotiators. I recommend our listeners. Checkout jordan's conversations with cowed newport on reimagining work in a world without email and lisa feldman barrett who talks about seven and a half lessons about the brain jordan's always focused and pulling useful practical sites out of his fascinating guests. And we're not just talking about pop. Psychology are wish. Washy self-help stuff here. The episodes are often loaded with bits of wisdom. That you can use to legitimately change your mind improve your life right away. It's definitely worth checking out. There are very few other podcasts. Listen to casually. You're seriously to expand your worldview. He's also got a relatable weekly segment called feedback. Friday or jordan covers advice and everything from escaping a coal or psycho family situations to relationships networking to asking for a raise jordan. Harbinger is smart. Funny and easy to listen to. You'll be hard pressed to find an episode without excellent conversation a few laughs and actionable advice that can directly improve your life. You just can't go wrong. With adding the jordan harbinger show tire rotation. I really enjoyed the show and thank you will as well. There's just so much of their checkout jordan harbinger dot com slash start for some episode recommendations or search for the jordan harbinger. Show that's h. A. r. b. as in boy i n. As in nancy g. e. r. On apple podcasts. Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. I've been on the search for the perfect mattress for past few years. And let me tell you. I've gone through so many mattresses. My friends have made fun of me because for so long. I didn't actually mattress. I just went through many free trials. I had no idea what it feels like to be. Well rested until i try to helix. Mattress you're not able to sleep because of stress.

"chan" Discussed on Marketing Today with Alan Hart

Marketing Today with Alan Hart

03:51 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Marketing Today with Alan Hart

"Almost like your mother in law's tongue it makes makes sense. I hope my mother-in-law listening to this so anyway moving on as a marketer curious if there is brands or companies or causes that you follow or you think other people should be taking notice. Yeah so a new company that came across in the last couple of months i was. I took the subway for the first time in a long time. A few weeks ago actually saw an ad on the subway platform and it was a company called back market. I don't know if you're familiar with it but they are a marketplace for refurbish devices. And i was just looking more into them. And they're very mission driven and their mission is to really. How do we reduce environmental waste caused by devices. And i think that's fascinating. Because especially with covert and the increase for digitization as we mentioned right devices are indispensable and yet they actually take a lot of energy to create and then it also. They sort of lasts for a long time sort of end up in. Landfills are not back market trying to create not just a marketplace but really an economy for refurbish devices. So that people can sort of make more use out of out of these devices so that a they become more affordable and then be also become warrant sorta environmentally responsible. I think it's a fascinating concept definitely and especially as you think about all the virtual students in the us in many of the students I would imagine have a hard time accessing devices or or cheaply accessing devices. Yeah makes perfect sense in and for the environment for all those reasons he just laid out. I'll have to check them out. I haven't heard of them for will last question for you. Curious what you think is the either largest opportunity our biggest threat that marketers are facing today. So i think Similar to what i was talking about earlier i think a big threat is if people with an organization operate in silos and so i think the opportunity is really how do we better integrate marketing coms customer experience sort of altogether so all of these different pieces work together to deliver customer value and to build that relationship and trust with our customers. 'cause i do think right especially in the world right now. It's it's harder and harder to draw the lines between sort of where pr ends were. Marketing begins or where prada experienced starts. And where service begins right and so i think organizations that internally are siloed and see these different functions being very separated at the end might not be well positioned to deliver the greatest customer benefit. Erica thank you so much for coming on the show. Join the conversation. Thank you for having me. Hi it's allen again. Marketing today was created and produced by me with support from my team and podcast editor sound engineers and writers. Cher your genius. Find them at share your genius dot com. If you're new to marketing today please feel free to write us a review on itunes or your favorite listening platform. Don't forget to subscribe on marketing. Today podcast dot com and tell your friends and colleagues about the show. I love to hear from listeners. You can contact me on marketing today. Podcasts dot com there. You'll also find complete show notes linked to what was discussed in the episode today and you can search our archives. I'm alan heart and this is marketing today..

Erica itunes subway Today first time last couple of months prada few weeks ago today com allen dot com A alan
"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

Audible Orgy

02:09 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

"Dollars this week taking the last week in houses ten dollars krantz. Because i want to talk about joel. Stern andrew the candidates this young lady in here. She's based of dc She has kinda pullara real quick line. That says you know No one should be in jail for. She's trying to raise money for people who are in jail for bail money for people who are in jail for cannabis so let me sees rimini rebel. Hold on let me make. Sure i get it right because oh yeah like fifty thousand dollars. So this recall remedy rich. The brand it was created due to the need for representation of positive space for the cannabis community. Our mission is to eradicate the negative stigma buying cannabis consumption one statement at a time through apparel so one of the search. She has no one should be in prison for wheat. Normalized needing a blood on Assume i was. I always knew. Say the the thing about cannabis in fact that because i do suffer from a battle mental illness. I have depression bipolar disorder. And other you know in zion. He and You don't wanna be stuck taking pills problem pills all the time. Their cannabinoid derivatives. There are cannabis's so many things that are natural of the earth's like you ain't gotta go in there and mix that you ain't got to cook it up. Put the ice in created okay. Slough of some the earth from the earth like. It's probably up. Yes you accept the dugas. Stephen a. T. you eat.

fifty thousand dollars last week ten dollars Stern joel this week Stephen a. T. earth bipolar disorder one statement zion
"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

Audible Orgy

02:05 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

"Back. The hours was one day. Lord i just want to limits by me a durant and i'm not least high. You get that much money and you worked twelve hours for the year. Like okay guy. I'm not doing right. Why will let me ask this question. To what extent can we still blame society or the inequality in the society to our problems. We can blake society and still perpetuating this whole process in this course and that's why the question because yeah we could blatant but at what point do we take responsibility. Wreckage interational curse. But you sitting up. You're waiting you know what i'm saying like come on now. You know one hundred dollars jen. It don't make sense. It's like is the idea that the money is free money in this attached to end slave labor. Like is that what it is that so that is so appealing to us because it's not attached to labor. Is that if not our free money if money you notice. They didn't give us no interest on monday. Talked to from us know right you rate for money with interest put metal spring ritual interest. Dammit i want it back with interest they will they interest like a work both ways and i need like quit khwaja job and they expect it's two week notice to lead us love. You just walk out of.

monday two week one hundred dollars both ways twelve hours one day
"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

Audible Orgy

02:05 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

"Back. The hours was one day. Lord i just want to limits by me a durant and i'm not least high. You get that much money and you worked twelve hours for the year. Like okay guy. I'm not doing right. Why will let me ask this question. To what extent can we still blame society or the inequality in the society to our problems. We can blake society and still perpetuating this whole process in this course and that's why the question because yeah we could blatant but at what point do we take responsibility. Wreckage interational curse. But you sitting up. You're waiting you know what i'm saying like come on now. You know one hundred dollars jen. It don't make sense. It's like is the idea that the money is free money in this attached to end slave labor. Like is that what it is that so that is so appealing to us because it's not attached to labor. Is that if not our free money if money you notice. They didn't give us no interest on monday. Talked to from us know right you rate for money with interest put metal spring ritual interest. Dammit i want it back with interest they will they interest like a work both ways and i need like quit khwaja job and they expect it's two week notice to lead us love. You just walk out of.

monday two week one hundred dollars both ways twelve hours one day
"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

Audible Orgy

02:50 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

"For me from the great produce flight on business what your life. But if that's what you wanna do now listed. Don't tell me i got you would you can you. Can you think good to you. You got this whole shack akon five. Oh no. I don't think that they might not my boy say here. In the boys he decided added real the weekends off. Yes what has been mad. I've missed you. Hi this you the last episode. We talked about anything in general because we got so off tangent and we took so many left or right turns and down the rabbit holes. And i'm looking forward to that adventure again. I was like people. Folks will take you there like i even last people will take you there so you know. That's exactly what what the wrong people in your life will. Do you take you on different ads. Have you gone down. Dead ends down there. You know in the alley with no no way to get out and just sitting there looking crazy going. Yes that's what happens and the alley allieu which up to working working working Gosh i don't even know where to begin like some amazing placements by half like bob just by working behind off I've seen a couple of your shelves. Now you've been interviewing some pretty big names. I had to some nights dropping. I mean i. You know what goodness i did. Interview jazz anderson s coming out Tammy roman's daughter. She has a new project coming out this summer. Let's say she's lyricist. That girl is a lyricist. Like i i will say The y'all generation are ones that are making the change needed in. I gotta give you all respecting. Its do Denise beauty come out we want to say born the same year.

Denise this summer bob Tammy roman anderson akon five
"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

Audible Orgy

02:17 min | 2 years ago

"chan" Discussed on Audible Orgy

"Ambassadorship. First of all. I know nike brand is all. I'm saying. I talked about the lack of assault yoga looking like a bottle of pet though. That's the that's that iky bottle though. Bizmap being you know what i'm saying. I think hater nike. Anna's highlights girl. I wanna in autumn saying you want a real brand supporter. I'm your girl with beautiful people. Girls sat with my boy. Sit episodes mobile brand new season right. Can you believe the people ask people weird these days so. I'm not surprised that weird that people got right right. You can't explain. All you know is gotta have. I like that man. Listen i don't wanna waste eighty five getting looking at the main ones like we did this moving because y y'all when i tell you this woman. She probably needs to consider a career in comedy. I so fucking hilarious and she just telling the truth and that's the funny part about it. She just intrude man. Okay so we go ahead and get into the mommy. My girl shandra gorgeous. She is like a reagan consultant guru. She came up and she's the founder of the shandra gore consultant agency. She's a publicist. I mean she is like more world renowned the president she plays out a dc. She produces books. Podcast productions tapes. Anything that you need a she got you jolla that that asset. Not the one thing that you focused on new us out.

nike shandra Anna First one Bizmap reagan eighty five
"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

05:49 min | 3 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

"She's like maybe you know you. Just don't find those butterflies when you get older. And that ended up being the guy that she married and i think that you know for both of us it was like no 'cause that's actually not love like that's what we're taught to believe as love but is not A you may have read it on my friend. Rachel resnick wrote. This book called love junkie. And i remember telling her that was i just want that like bosnian. She has oh god she's like you're a total of junkie and i didn't and i remember. I refuse to read her book at the time. Because i was like taking a hit close to home but now i think you know six years later. I'm like yeah you're spot on about that. It's it's taken me a long time to come to terms with that. Because you know in hollywood you know you have these beautiful endings. You've movies like serendipity where you know some guy meets a girl. He met seven years ago in like this really poetic story unfolds right. I mean yeah. I may would make a really boring movie if they showed the every day. The doing the dishes like changed like what happens in the law. When you don't wanna have sex with someone like which happens like the reality of relationships is not shown at. Yeah will actually. Let's let's talk about sex in particular. I think the the thing that struck me most. And i remember and this is really not easy for a guy to here. I write therapist. Look he said if you actually wanna have a healthy relationship. I recommend that you don't have sex with this person as soon as possible and john. That's the stupidest thing i ever heard at the time. And then i finally started to realize those like the moment you start sleeping with somebody. You stop seeing them objective. Yeah so this is controversial right. Because in this day and age we wanna be like independent women like heroes. Roy do anything like you know. Sports talk and for wile. When i grew up watching sex in the city. I want to be samantha. Gonna have sex for fun and like us these guys and and it was very falsely empowering because it actually didn't come from a root of like self worth or abundance or confidence came from a place of actually major insecurity and so it actually helped me especially having an anxious attachment style i would have sex with people and feel so attached to them and completely devastated when they didn't like me back and so i think it's you know learning about the different chemicals that do happen is important rate like when when a woman and a man have saxon. There's an orgasm. The man will have a lot of testosterone. Which can blunt out. The effects of oxytocin ray suppressant which is abundant chemical Whereas a woman when she has an orgasm she gets an increase of oxytocin And less testosterone so she is more prone to bond and so of course..

Rachel resnick seven years ago Roy both six years later samantha john oxytocin bosnian hollywood
"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

05:46 min | 3 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

"It can be a collaboration. And so i think like learning how to communicate and express yourself is really important. I've had friends who've been you know name never were able to set boundaries entire life and then they learn. Read some book. And they're like okay. I'm gonna do these boundaries and then they would come across with these boundaries as like super hard and an aggressive and the person on the other side is already on the defense. And there's no way that is going to go. Well but i think you can state your boundaries without it being such a confrontation confrontational conversation. It could be like. Hey like this is what i'm feeling. This is what i prefer like. What are what do you feel about that. Are you open to that and making it a dialogue and and a collaborative conversation I think that could be a great approach and also starting with small stakes. Don't if you're someone who's never been able to state your boundaries. I would not go and have a high stakes conversation. As your first one. I would start small. I would start by. Maybe call your credit card company and seeing if you can get your credit raise. These tiny conversations. Maybe it's you went to restaurant food and normally you just kinda suck it up but then you talk to the manager you see something about it you start with small stakes in you. Grow your muscle for being able to communicate your boundaries and your needs. It's funny you say that. Because i remember talking to a friend about this on a podcast and she a year mother. She was like no. That's not how you start this conversation about boundaries. She was like the one place. You don't want to start. I was like good points. She's start with something easy. I sure all right well. Let's talk about what i think was my absolute favorite part of the book. And that is this whole idea of fantasy because this was me. I mean this was me in every way possible. Like i literally. I remember when i was dating this long distance. i'd even crafted the screenplay out in my head. It was going to be called love and twenty cities like we would meet in one city every month and we made it to three cities and she broke up with me. And i was like that was like the ultimate wakeup call awhile. I am living in a fairytale world and a friend of mine. Said you have this. Disney movie idealized version of love. And you said what does fairy tales romantic movies and love songs..

Disney three cities one city twenty cities first one a year one place every month
"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

06:20 min | 3 years ago

"chan" Discussed on The Unmistakable Creative Podcast

"It was just like i think the thing in in my own imagination that i'm guessing. This is a pretty common thing. Is i would literally replay single moment of the relationship and be like okay. I wonder what would have happened if i hadn't done this. And it took me months to realize what does it matter. The outcome is still exactly the same. No matter how many times i replay the story and you say you know that the emotional spiral worsens when we repeat the story over and over walking if not sprinting on a vicious going nowhere. This is the mental trap of rumination the story becoming a blurred with no starter and so the question is then how the hell d'you stop ruminating. And so you have to think about when you were in a relationship with someone I i have this exercise called pie. Exercise where you draw a circle and then you slice up that circle In slices of pie. How much of that pie Meaning your head space your energy your talk. Mount of time was devoted to the relationship and usually this is anywhere from fifty percents to sometimes ninety percent for people who are more codependent and so after the relationship ends. You have to think about this. Have like fifty percent of this or eighty percent of this pie. That's now vacant. And if you don't strategically and proactively find ways to fill up that pie with things that light you up you're going to use up that empty space with ruminating thoughts of your acts. And so what i really encourage people to do is when you're stuck in this in this vicious cycle a thinking trap of ruminating and stuck in the i should have done this or maybe that or blaming these are all thinking trump's that human beings are privy to on. If you don't find something else to get obsessed over you're going to continue going that route when you're in that thinking chapter in a disempowering fantasy because it doesn't matter what you do. You cannot actually change that outcome..

eighty percent fifty percent ninety percent fifty percents single moment trump months
"chan" Discussed on KUGN 590 AM

KUGN 590 AM

01:41 min | 3 years ago

"chan" Discussed on KUGN 590 AM

"Review with Jennifer and Victoria and J and Doug number one this week, at least according to the folks that talkers The insurrection investigation. I did notice that the this guy what's his name? Was it Chan's Lee, who was the guy with the wolf and or whatever those horns on? His mother was demanding. He get organic food in jail. Oh yeah, that genius, he said. The lawyer said his client used to love the president but now feels let down and he's going to testify against him. Because he didn't get a presidential Where's is more kids. But doesn't that pretty much tip of? Doesn't that tell you what those people are about? In the first place? I mean, most of them, including the couple of Congress. People that have supported this stuff. They're nuts. And how did they get? Are we that nuts is our society that nuts that we elect people like that to office out there better. We have so many bad people in office on both sides of the aisle. Incompetent nincompoops. Many of them is Jennifer was pointing out about Carrie have never had a real job in their lives. They don't really know. What the real world is about Some of the young kids that are in their in their twenty's. They don't know anything about anything. That's why I love the term limits thing that was brought up this week. Bring it on. I'm very well I'd like to meet him too. So sure. Whatever. Good I will be good to kiss him. Goodbye. But there are lots of others in there that deserve to have much more scrutiny. Where the heck did these people come from? Unga Bunga. All right, sir. It is the overview of the charts.

Jennifer Unga Bunga Chan president Congress Doug Lee Carrie Victoria
"chan" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

New Jersey 101.5

02:11 min | 3 years ago

"chan" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

"Chan Robinson topping our report this hour 10 months ago today. New Jersey reported its first positive Kobe 19 case. Since then, the state is seen nearly 500,000 cases and over 17,000 related deaths, Murphy saying We must begin the new year strong taking the same precautions as we did last year. This remains a fight. We must engage in together to save every life. We can to push these numbers down and to gain the upper hand against this virus, while the number of positive cases has fluctuated over recent weeks States Hospital metrics remain steady. In case you missed it. New Jersey Democratic Congresswoman Mikey Cheryl is one of three Democrats to vote present during the vote to elect Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House for 1/4 time. It was the second time Cheryl voted against Pelosi. Rest of the Democrats in the New Jersey delegation supported Pelosi, who won by a slim 216 to 12 9 votes. Right now. Employers in Jersey can refuse to hire or promote anyone over the age of 70. Stephanie Huntzinger with AARP, New Jersey says, for some reason. Ageism is the last socially acceptable prejudice. 65 plus population is the largest growing demographic of workers in our state legislation described these decisions does exist but hasn't seen any action since last winter. Overall crime experience a double digit drop in 2020 state wine, while violent crime surged in some areas during the pandemic, Angie dot com reporting that as of November, 30th. Jersey Police departments reported nearly 150,000 cases of murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny in auto theft last year, That's fans as a 13% drop. President elect Joe Biden is trying to help push to Democrats over the goal line in tomorrow's big Senate runoff election in Georgia. Biden campaigned in Atlanta, saying the runoff could spell the New day for America, noting control of the Senate is at stake..

New Jersey Nancy Pelosi Congresswoman Mikey Cheryl Joe Biden Jersey Police Senate Chan Robinson Kobe Stephanie Huntzinger Murphy AARP President Atlanta theft America Georgia murder burglary robbery