35 Burst results for "Dina"

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Monitor Show 19:00 09-30-2023 19:00
"Today, ophthalmologists can get countless hours to practice their surgical skills before operating on real patients, thanks to Fundamental VR and Orbis' Metaverse training platform. Learn more at meta .com slash metaverse impact. This is Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. I'm Barry Ritholtz. Stay with us for today's top stories and global business headlines. They're coming up right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. A 45 -day stopgap funding bill to avoid the government shutdown tonight is now in the hands of the Senate. The measure was passed by the House 335 -291 earlier today. The question is on agreeing to the Speaker's approval of the journal. Those in favor say aye. Those opposed, naypenny of the chair, the ayes have it. The journal stands approved. The bill passed with overwhelming Democratic support while dozens of Republicans voted against it. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy pitched the measure as an opportunity to give the House and Senate more time to get around the obstacles and get good bills passed. A White House official indicated President Biden would support the bill, which includes disaster relief and FAA authorization. Former President Trump could be in New York City on Monday for his civil fraud trial. Trump's lawyers revealed his plans on Friday while discussing another case, a lawsuit against his former lawyer, Michael Cohen. Trump was set to undergo a deposition in that case in Florida on Tuesday, but his lawyers asked the court to postpone it so he can go to the New York trial, which opens Monday. Earlier this week, the judge overseeing the New York case ruled that Trump had been overvaluing his properties and was liable for fraud. The NFL is going international for the first time this season. Here's Dina Kodiak.

Op Persoonlijke Titel
A highlight from Caroline van der Plas
"Up, person de ketitel, a respect van vlees en bloot, for the keike die we luestern, and the luesterer die go keiken. Keike and luestern are... Caroline, van der Plas, welcome! Thank you! Eindeke eef rist? Euhm, neewen ik sie tom ik jou. Haha, there you are. Dit is heedleker eef een sprekjeso. Ja. Euhm. Euhm, dit is heedleker eef een sprekjeso. Euhm, neewen ik sie tom ik jou. Haha. Euhm, neewen ik sie tom ik jou. Haha. That doesn't happen all the time, but we do our best for it. That's a lot of work to do. So, since the general over -winning, with the rules... ...a club in the Netherlands... ...is it enough? No. No, the over -winning of 15 months... ...that took all the provinces together... ...and the United States... ...the formation of the colleges of the United States... ...the first came, and we said no. It was a long day for now. All uni, all cities and states... ...and all cities together... ...took a lot of time... ...and we came together in the same way. That's right. And Caroline for the Plus is the overall winner. Yes. You come to the overall table. So sick. Yes, yes, sicker. So we're going to take five or six years of Israel... ...in a module. Yes, clubs. What do you need? What do you need? Now, I have a lot of work to do. I work here, naturally... ...and a lot of work by income citizens... ...because, yes, I don't belong here. I come with my parents... ...and I also like to see that I'm still living here. I have a lot of work to do. Of course, Israel has a lot of work... ...by the opening of MBO here... ...and they say to me... ...you don't have time for that... ...but I'm still living here. I'm still living here. That's why I have a lot of work to do. It's a lot of work for people... ...a lot of work for people. I have a lot of input, so... ...yes, I still have a lot of work to do... ...with my kids. Well, that's it. We're really looking forward to it. You're a journalist. Yes. Are you more? No. I'm not more. No, you're not. You're more of a journalist... ...than a journalist. Yes. Who is more of a journalist than you? Yes, my father. My father was a journalist... ...a sports journalist... ...by David Dagblad... ...and, yes, at the same time... ...I also worked with a lot of sports... ...and so on... ...and I found out... ...that I really liked what he did... ...and that I really liked the Redaxi. What kind of sport was that? I've played a lot of amateur football... ...a lot of times in David... ...and I also played with the Eagles... ...because I think it's the most important thing... ...to be able to drive a motorcycle... ...and to be able to drive the Redaxi... ...and, yes, it's a little... ...but I also really liked the Redaxi... ...and I found out that I really liked... ...a lot of people... ...with a lot of spinners... ...and what -not... ...and coffee halls... ...for the journalists... ...and so on. I also liked the chocolate milk... ...because I thought... ...that I would also be able to help... ...with the KISS Rave. And so on... ...I really liked it. So it's a lot of fun. So it's not so much the journalistic... ...in the interest of where I'm going. No, my father gave me that offer. And he said... ...that you can't do anything... ...and you're not going to do anything... ...and you're not going to do anything... ...and you can't do anything else... ...and you have to pay for it. So it's a lot of the Redaxi work... ...and then the work comes up. So we all have to do something else. And... ...no, that's what I just said. Yeah. The question of whether or not... ...you're going to stick to it... ...can I ask? Yeah, yeah. No, yeah. I'm going to ask you to do something else. And say... ...you're not going to do anything else. No, no, no. I don't know if you know... ...the journalists... ...or the younger generation... ...with which I contacted China. I don't want to get into a Gladiator List... ...but I think it's also a big part of the younger generation. You know, younger generation always SCREAMS... ...about whether you're going to talk about their kind and... ... Their own states and things like that. So we can really talk about younger generations... ...who are going to talk about their own state. I always think that the criticism... ...and everyday else is applied to younger generations... ...so sometimes we think of younger generations as Russian... ...as being assume that it's not just you. We have had insane fish. They don't mind that that's not the best. We can do it without drugs. But we still have to find a way to double this on paper instantly In the mayoralpanels. Can you repeat the question in my context? Yeah well, our publictime support goes back to the start of the setup of the FC times, and to prevent so many types of emergencies. it works .pparang The pattern will break, in the states too fast. This will be ideal cherry grass, but that has to be done spiritually. They are very special for the society. This thing isDexter from the point of view of thephone. What about the speaker? There are several questions that you can answer. At least for a Rocky Buss. It's not that it's a big name, it's just a realistic name. But that's what we're talking about. Maybe if we're talking about problems? Yes. What do you think about that? I think that I'm 33 years old now. Yes, I'm not, but I'm an adult now. Yes, you are. Yes, I know, but... You don't have anything else to say? No, no, my ears are not really working. No, I don't have anything else to say. I'm not sure, but I'm not sure. But it was more that we were actually not really talking about the fact that we were talking about the fact that we were talking about the fact that this restaurant, the cafe, which is called Dina Weis, was a place that was closed for the first time. It was closed for the first time. And now that it's closed, the cafe is still closed, so it's hard to say. And you're from Bine, too? Yes, that was for him a question that is not working. There is no real time for it. No. There comes, well, a normal work up your ass. Yeah. And what you can do is take a stand from a bisturier to an angst for a new party. Yeah. The ground is open. Each year, at least, there's a tour back of the Bible, and stuff like that, so there's no real time for it. There is no real time for this party. It's open. So, it's a bisturier with the hand behind it. And that's what, what's the name of Caroline's bisturier? Her lance bisturier, that's what you're talking about. Yeah. No, it's a bisturier, but I think that we're seeing that we're already open to it. We're always open to it, that we're always looking at it, and that's what's next. And, of course, it's been a long time. And that's what we're seeing is the need for employees. And we're seeing employees that are always looking for a new job, a new job, a new job, a new job, So we're not too far away. So, we're not too far away. So, we're finally in the middle of the day. And, of course, we're having a good time with the candidates. We're having a lot of fun. We'll be doing some work with the candidates, we'll be doing some good things, and we'll be doing some good things. And we'll have a tour where we'll be able to get to know the candidates. So, yeah. Yeah, I think that I think that yeah, what is it? I think that it's a very important thing for the candidates. Because I see it on the wall. I'm not a fan of the wall. Yeah. I think that I think that we're not going to be able to do anything or do anything. Or, I guess so. But, what's your job for your audience? What's your job for your kids? Well, for my first job, I was really lucky. I thought I had a job, of course, and I thought I was very lucky. But I thought that it would be nice for my audience to be able to do something. And it would be nice to be able to do something if it were honest, if it were a technique, or something for my audience. What was it? Yeah, I think I was in the middle of the class. I was 13, 12, 13 years old. I was in the middle of the class. I was 13, 12, 13 years old. When I was really lucky. I didn't have any other things to do. I didn't go to school or other things to do. So, that was my thing. But, I did it. I got to have my own thing. And I was interested in it. I wasn't interested in it. I wasn't interested in it. I was very interested in music, pop stars, French, that kind of thing. So, what kind of music were you interested in? Aspen, ballet, and The Renderer, Ultra Fox, U2. That was the biggest thing. Were you interested in music? Yeah, I wasn't interested in music. I was interested in Spotify, so I wasn't interested in music. I thought, oh yeah, you can't do anything amazing. You have to do things in your head. You have to do everything amazing. Yeah, that's the thing. That's the thing that you have to do in your head. Yeah. on the other hand, you have to do things intuitively. Yeah. And that's another thing in politics. Yeah. No, I have a lot of things that in my head are the biggest things that the United States was in. The United States was free and I wasn't interested in music. I wasn't interested in music at all. I was interested in music. But I didn't have the best set of shows. I had a lot of things that I had done that the United States was free. I was not interested in music. It was good. Good. It was It was good. I was music. It was good. I didn't set of shows. The United States was free. The father was free. Man was free. The author was free. Most of the were free. In fact after that I was excited about my would you be more clear with the history of the place, the land and the state? Yes, I was at my base, but in the period before I came, I was in overland. My father was there in 2013, overland. So he didn't have much money. But my brother, my mom and my friend Henk, they visited as well. And they told me to come back. I was there in 2013, and I was there in 2013, and I was there in 2013. So I was there in 2013, and I was there in 2013. But I was there in 2013, and I was there in 2013. And they had a great experience. They came up with this idea of the Great Lakes. So, yeah. But who is that in the region that believes everything about it? And is there no state for it? Yes, then you have to think about what I'm talking about. Yes. Yes, it's a little different. If a person lives, has a loss of the right to be part of it, they have to go back home with a little bit of a miss. There's also the period that you're sick. It's going to be very difficult. Is it going to be very difficult? No, it's not. I think it's going to be very difficult. But, yeah, overland. In a health care process, I can take care of it. Yes, I think it will have a lot of impact on my health. I think that, with a lot of people, it's difficult to get enough of it. You have to take care of it. You have to take care of it. It's a little bit difficult to get enough of it. But if you see that you have a lot of pain and loss of health, that is a lot harder. That is not a good idea. That I think is a little bit hard. have That you a lot of pain and loss of health. That you don't have a lot of pain, that you're sick. And that's what I really want to hear, from the fact that it's over -layed, that it's all over the place. Is it a sort of good off -site? That you have a lot of pain? Yes, for sure. That's what I wanted to hear. A hundred percent. Overall, it's what I want to hear. That's what I want to hear. If someone has a heart attack and is sick, then they don't have the person who is sick. But you have to take care of it. That's what I want. That's what I want to hear. That's what I want to hear. And if they do that, then they will have a lot of pain. And that's what I want to hear. A lot of things can be explained. And it's sort of off -site, in the sense of, no, we don't have a lot of pain. We don't have a lot of pain. So that's a big deal. Yes, that's a big deal. A big deal. A lot of people do that. And that's a big deal. For someone who has a lot of pain, that they don't have a lot of pain. But I really want to hear it. And that's what I really want to hear. It's a very important moment that you have met Okaa. And you have to think about what it can mean in one day. And you have to work with it. You have to work with it. So you can take care of it. All of that will happen. You have to work with Okaa. And if it works, then it's not going to work. And that really is a real fact. It's not going to work. It's not going to work. So it's an important moment. Our lives and our practices will work together. So if you have a partner, or maybe even a partner, you have to think about it. If it doesn't work, it's not going to work. And realize that people don't have a lot of pain. No, they can't. No. And you don't have a lot of pain. Yes. You have to have a lot of pain. No, no. A lot. A lot of pain. A lot of pain. A lot of pain. Yes. Yes. No, but I've been very much involved in my family. My direct family. My sons. My mother. My brother. My life. That I really feel very good. That it's going to work. In the end, it's a very difficult thing to do. And how I want to do it. Is the state of your life, well, on your own right. Or on your own right. But if my own right is there, well, on your own right. That's it. I find it very difficult. That you have to be good at your own right. And after all, especially from my mother, my friend, my kids, have you ever felt yourself? Yes, it's a good thing. It's a good thing for me. It's a good thing that I'm on the court. I'm in a burnout. That I overcome my own right. That's what I'm talking about. Yes, I know. I'm a good man. I don't want to sit in the bibber as a rich guy at the bank. But if I'm going to be able to do it, it's a good thing. I'm a little bit of a man, but I'm a good man. If I can do it myself, I can do it myself. It's a good thing that my son can do it himself. I'm a big man. I'm a little bit of a man. I'm good at my own right. And I find it very difficult. I find it very difficult for people to do it myself. Yes, because you go to the middle, you have a hope in Bangladesh for a lot of people who are living in the States. That's a political point. But, it's a very big challenge for people to be in the States and be able to do it. And for people to be in the States, I think it belongs to you. Yes, it does. Yes, I think... ...you feel bad in your life, or have bad in your life, then... ...it's as if you make a thing out of it, that you think... ...is it really a bad thing, or is it a drug? And I think, no, it's totally not a bad thing. The people in my life are like a group. I have other things to do. That's why I think it belongs to you. But that's what's wrong, I think. I have a lot of talk about what the ungriving of my fund is... ...but now it's more about my base. My father was a journalist. He was a doctor. My mother was a reporter. She was a reporter. A CDR. A CDR, yes. You can't blame it. You can't blame it, then. No, yes, yes. I feel that it's really a bad thing. And we can work together. We can work together. But that's not the case. No, it's not that. I think it's a drug. I think it's a drug... ...to realize that people... ...who have a letter on their hands... ...have to pay for it. I think it's a bad thing. So I don't think it's a drug. There's no social media. But I think it's a bad thing. I'm a bit scared. But we don't have that. I think it's a bad thing. Yes, it's a bad thing. It's what you're saying. Yes, it's true. It's true. But it's true here. It's true. It's true. Like Savannah was talking about. Or like a little girl. I think it's a bad thing. I think it's a bad thing. I think it's a bad thing. And then there's politics. And then there's politics. I don't think it's a bad thing. But I'm aware of politics. That's what I'm talking about. People are asking for money and money. And that's what's coming out. Irish blood. Yes, I think it's a bad thing. Yes, yes. Is that a thing you're talking about? That you're not talking about Irish blood? In my personal life? Yes, of course. We have a lot of Irish blood. We have a lot of Dutch families. But I also have a lot of Irish families. And they say that I'm poor. But when they say that I'm poor, they say that I have a lot of other problems. In family, my my mother used to say that she had children. She used to work in a mail factory. She had a lot of children. And she had children. She was very poor. So she was very poor. But it was all right. It was all right. It was all right. Everyone was welcome. It was in the eyes of nature. She was very poor. She was very poor. She was the oldest. She was very poor. But she was very poor. That's what she thought. She was poor. And she was very poor. She was only eight years old. And she wasn't very old. She had two brothers of the Philippines. But she was very poor. And she was very poor. She was young. And she was very poor. She was straight and had a coma. And that was what she knew. She had three children. She was very poor. And she was very ill, she had a lot of children. Yes, she was very ill. No, she was very poor. She was a child. And in Limerick, she used to think that I that think the state of life, there is a state of life all over the world. The state of life in the middle of the channel. It's a big part of the roadblocks. It's a big part of the society with meteors. And that's why it's so much more controlled. And not only that, but also the IRAs. They were based on the boomers. And as we know, a boomers was created. There were a lot of strangers and strackers. That was a period when a lot of people... Yeah, a lot of people were in the Republic of Ireland.

WTOP
"dina" Discussed on WTOP
"Together, we can help give hope and support to children battling cancer. It's Friday, May 19th, welcome to WTO. Coming right up after traffic and whether in a check of your money news, this early morning will turn to the latest of the war between Ukraine and Russia this morning. His four 38. I think in whether all of the aids first was always over to Ian Crawford this morning with us in the WTO traffic center. Okay, Dina, most of the beltway festivities that we have been suffering through in the overnight hours, they are gone or almost completely gone. And waiting for the final all clear on the outer loop after university boulevard. Everything else though should be done and dusted, you should have pretty quiet travel lanes. Now, around the belt, we enter an outer loop. We go to Virginia, check the crash in Fredericksburg, not south of Fredericksburg, actually, 95 northbound before route one sponsor, squeezing by the left shoulder, many people as they make their way up to earth from Richmond, are opting to jump off at route 6 O 6. Exit one 18 for thornburg, jump over to route one there, ride route one up toward responsivity, rejoin 95 at that point at which point you would be beyond the crash point. Southbound is not affected by any of that. Now, north that is coming out of Fredericksburg, you are fine heading for the Springfield interchange no delays, no issues pending as you make your way across the rappahannock and Aki Kwan rivers. 66, I think all the overnight work is done and dusted, so you should have quiet lanes from haymarket to the beltway and then inside the beltway to the roslin tunnel. Capital by way as I mentioned nice and quiet. Now, Marilyn 95 BW Parkway quiet 50, all of our lanes are back across the bay bridge. Three going west to go in each of you want to get into early start on the weekend. The ride between the bay bridge of the beltway also, without issue or delay, district travel, good start so far this morning on the southeast Southwest freeway, no reported issues. D.C. two 95 and I two 95 after a contentious night, now quiet. May it's for spring flowers and for biking to work, trying for yourself during bike to work month checkout connecting VA dot org to learn how Ian Crawford WTO traffic. Temperatures have been dropping and right now we're seeing them in the 50s. We'll have some areas dropping down to the upper 40s by the time the sun comes up. Some scattered

WTOP
"dina" Discussed on WTOP
"Desk. His wired by IBW local 26, where electrical contractors come to grow. Good morning is 7 32. I'm Dan running, Jessica Kron who is our producer this morning, the top stories we're following for you here today on WTO. A mistrial is declared in the double murder case of a former Pentagon police officer David Dickson, moments after the decision from the judge, the prosecutor, the top prosecutor in Montgomery county, says he'll seek a retrial. Dixon is accused of shooting to death two men in a car in the parking lot of his apartment complex two years ago. NBC four's Paul Wagner reports in a secret ballot the jury voted 11 to one against further deliberations because it could not reach an agreement. This is the second time the jury told the judge Friday it was deadlocked Dixon's lawyers argued during the trial that his client was trying to stop the men from committing crimes in the driver of the car, and the men were in that they were shot, told the court they were trying to break into the cars, prosecutors pushed back, saying that when Dixon fired the gun, the car was already driving away, and he was not in any danger. 6 people are dead after a shooting rampage through a rural Mississippi community on Friday. CBS News reporter Dina dimitris has more. Authorities then take county say 52 year old Richard Dale crumb killed a man outside this store around 11 a.m.. I heard the gunshot from inside my house. Ethan cash saw the attacker carrying along gun and went to check on the victim. I go up to the truck where a guy got shot at, I check his pulse and everything make sure he's okay. He's already gone at this point. Police say crumb left the store and gunned down a woman in her home. At some point, a sheriff's deputy spotted him in a car and took him into custody after a brief chase, but by then four others were dead. Police say two were found inside a home and two more outside near the suspect's house in Archibald. Dina Demetrius CBS News. New this morning to WTO, South Korea says North Korea has fired a single suspected long-range missile from its capital towards the sea. It comes a day after it threatened to take strong measures against South Korea and the U.S. over the joint military exercises planned for next month. North Korea's record number of missile attacks last year have been punctuated by threats of preemptive nuclear attacks against South Korea or the U.S. over what it says is a broad range of scenarios that has put its leadership North Korea says under threat. The U.S. is calling off its search for the flying objects that were shot down over Alaska and Lake Euron earlier this month. The New York Times has authorities searched an area off the coast of northern Alaska yesterday, but found nothing. Authorities determined that searching the remote areas of Alaska and Lake Huron would be too difficult because of harsh conditions. Meanwhile, Canadian authorities continued to search for a third object shot down over the Yukon. The National Security Council spokesman John Kirby says those items may never be found and that remote territory. Meanwhile, President Biden says three objects that were shot down were most likely he says research balloons and not spy crafts. In Norfolk, Virginia, we are also learning now this morning about another 6 year old student bringing a gun into a classroom police say that happened Thursday at the little creek elementary school, when officers got there, the staff had found that the gun had gotten away, checked, found the staff had gotten a gun away from the student and handed it over, no injuries reported. The child's mother has been charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor and allowing access to a loaded firearm for children. This is near the area where another 6 year old allegedly shot a teacher last month, police are saying that case was intentional. Cutting up on WTO P after traffic and weather will learn how one Arlington mother is trying to encourage young people to develop more confidence by riding a bike. 7 36. Now the small business buzz, packaged by the UPS store. The number of black owned businesses was relatively unchanged last year, but Washington D.C. ranked second among metros for share of black owned businesses 7% are Yelp says the national average is just 2.4%. Atlanta tops the list, Baltimore's number 8, more than four in ten black owned businesses are in healthcare, social assistance, or professional and technical services, I'm Jeff glebe. At the UPS store, we have everything to help small business owners be unstoppable. So if you need mailbox services, we'll be the mailbox store. What if my business isn't brick and mortar? Easy. With our mailbox

AP News Radio
In Peru, protesters were tear-gassed after president called for truce
". Amid ongoing demands for the resignation of president Dina bolo atte. Lima police officers in riot gear razor shields and far tear gas in a confrontation with protesters, videos showing a man running through the street, throwing a rock towards the police lines. Has called for a national truce blaming the protesters for the political violence that engulfed the country the Tuesday anti government protests was the largest and most violent since last Thursday when large groups of people, many from remote Andean regions, descended on the capital to

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"But I mean, there are some much larger players like upside and eat just being the first to launch in Singapore. But there are a lot of smaller companies in this space, and the thing is they're just not all gonna make it through this economy. They're not all gonna continue getting funding. Maybe in the slush fund years of 2020 and 2021, they were able to get some money and ride the high of investor excitement around this really idealistic vision of eliminating the slaughtering process from me, but especially with plant based meat slowing down already and some concern around whether or not cell based meat will actually what it does one day get past all the hurdles of getting them raw materials, getting the technology to scale, making product, et cetera, will people even accept it. I think a lot of investors will be scared off and there will be a culling of the companies over the next couple of years. I mean, I guess that question about whether people will accept it is an interesting one because, you know, a lot of people eat meat and they made peace with the idea that you're slaughtering an animal to provide meat. And yet there's that reaction of kind of like new, so based meat where that somehow seems like a step too far whereas traditional meat isn't. Do you think there's going to be a big barrier to get people to want to eat it? I mean, I think it's just going to depend on different populations of people. I was actually surprised I asked my niece, who's a 15. I asked her if she would eat it. And she was like, yeah, I think she caveated with as long as it's kosher, 'cause she's like a good Jewish girl, but so I think young people are much more open to it than older generations, but what we found with the plant based meat. And I think what we've always known about meat in general in this country is that it's really emotional. Food is emotional generally and meat is really emotional. There's a lot tied up in meat choices. And so how this is perceived and what the consumer acceptance is. We'll have to wait and see, but I wouldn't think it's just going to be an easy bait and switch. And the other thing is some of these products are going to be sort of blends when they're released to consumers ultimately in stores. When they get to that point, they're not even going to mostly be here as up cell based chicken thigh equivalent. They're going to be mixtures that have plant based products and some of the cell based meat product to create nuggets and things like that. And when we're already seeing a slowdown and that space, I think it's a valid question to wonder how people will feel about that. And then again, you're getting into the question of, well, are people moving further away or are people trying to move further away from processed food and what just processed me into different people? Priya Anand, Dina Shanker, thanks so much for talking with me today. Thank you. Thanks for having us. You can read more of Dina's and Priya's reporting on Bloomberg dot com

AP News Radio
Dozens killed in protests against Peru's government as unrest continues
"Anti government protests are spreading in Peru. I'm Ben Thomas with the latest. Riot police firing tear gas as demonstrators for rocks in the tourist city of Cusco. Protests against Peruvian president Dina bell Arte's government began a month ago after she replaced Pedro Castillo ousted as president and arrested following his attempt to dissolve Congress and head off impeachment. So far 47 people have been killed in the protests, health officials in Cusco say 16 civilians and 6 police officers were injured after protesters tried to take over this city's airport. Many foreign tourists come to Cusco to see sites that include the inconsiderate of Machu Picchu. I'm

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Could really replace vision energy, it's much more inherently safe, doesn't have the chance of uncontrolled reactions. The fuel is ubiquitous, you can find it in sea water and in the ground with the deuterium or readily available. And it's really could be a game changer, we think, for energy production, but it's very technically challenging. And that's why we've been working so long on that technology. Dina, we got about 90 seconds, then we're going to do some news and then we're going to come back. But connect coastal resiliency to this because we think about the idea of ways we think about climate change and think about the way that burning coal actually contributes to climate change and the coastal projects that you've had to do across Manhattan to make sure that well Manhattan doesn't go underwater. So I think the conversation about waste is incredibly relevant one and it has to do beyond coastal measures, but certainly how we live our life and it's certainly where we're spending our money, whether or not it's going into our community or whether it's going to run, whether it's it takes 5 shipping and excess energy and excess waste, or if we can begin to look at more closed loop systems and how we can reduce waste and a perfect example of that is nature and nature does that. It has its systems that, if we can imitate nature a bit more in coastal resiliency, certainly. But in our daily life and in our practice, if we can figure out ways to eliminate waste and find purposes for every element of our interactions, that's a direction that's a foot in the right direction. Our thanks to indigo river founder Dina prastos

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"February 12th at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona, the news comes after rumors that Taylor Swift was going to take the gig only to turn it down to focus on rerecording her back catalog. I'm Dina kodiak. A Michigan radio host is dead and his family in critical condition after a houseguest allegedly went in a brutal rampage. There appears to be some relationship, the suspect was frequently at the home. We're still investigating what the relationship is between all the parties. That's Chesterfield township public safety director Brian Bassett. Jim Matthews, his girlfriend, and two children reportedly invited a neighbor across the street over to their home on Friday. Police aren't sure what happened next, but Matthew's girlfriend and 5 year old daughter ran out of the house to flag down help sometime later. His girlfriend had been stabbed multiple times in the daughter was injured. Matthews was found dead inside and his ten year old son was badly hurt. The suspect was found alive in the basement, suffering from self inflicted wounds. Pope Francis is speaking up in defense of the planet Brad Siegel has more. The Pope was in a CC at the leafs Saturday, the birthplace of his namesake Saint Francis spoke to a gathering of around a thousand young people, urging them to have the courage to abandon fossil fuels. He noted that older generations had failed in their efforts to protect the planet, saying quote, we need to go forward on this road and do more. I'm Brad Siegel. The approach of tropical storm Ian is prompting NASA to skip next week's plan launch of a new moon rocket from the Florida coast. Tuesday's cancellation marks the third delay for the Artemis one mission, which will test a new spacecraft designed for lunar orbit, fuel leaks and other technical issues are blamed for the two previous aborted launches. A court filing showing that NFL great Brett Favre press Mississippi state officials in 2019 to funnel state welfare funds into new sports facilities at his Alma mater despite legality questions than governor Phil Bryant reportedly told Favre that the misuse of them could be illegal. Evidence shows far from Bryant diverted at least $5 million of the state's welfare funds to build a new volleyball arena for the University of Southern Mississippi. Favre's daughter played for the team, the former NFL quarterback has not been charged in the state's welfare scandal. I'm Dina kodiak. And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom. Mayor Eric Adams is visiting Puerto Rico to demonstrate the city's support for the hurricane ravaged island. Adams arrived in San Juan this morning one week after hurricane Fiona wrecked havoc. The mayor joined a relief team from several New York City agencies and 50 NYPD officers already on the ground to help with relief efforts. Adams called Puerto Rico, the city's 6th the burrow as nearly 900,000 Puerto Ricans called New York City home. State investigators have substantiated more than 1600 instances of Corporal punishment in New York schools over the last 5 years. That, according to a report in the times union Albany, the report says a substantial number of the complaints were in New York City public schools, Corporal punishment is generally banned and can be classified as child abuse. Raphael bostic, president of the Federal Reserve bank of Atlanta was asked why, after 5 interest rate increases, inflation hasn't gone down yet. He says we have very high demand, but we don't have enough supply. We have very high demands. We have not enough supply and as long as you have that gap, prices are going to be feeling upward pressure. So we've got a narrow that gap and what we were hoping would happen is that we'd see some movement on the supply side to move the supply up so that there wasn't so much of an auction on goods that are in the marketplace. Bostick was interviewed on CBS's face the nation. He thinks that the economy can absorb higher rates and slow in a relatively orderly way. Rihanna is set to headline next year's Super Bowl halftime show. The singer took to Instagram to share the news today. The NFL also confirmed it on their Twitter account. Rihanna will take the stage February 12th at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. I'm Susanna Palmer. This is

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
What the Democrats' 2022 Election Spending Tells Us
"The political cognitive shanty the insiders have already begun to read the tea leaves on the 2022 election. And one of the journals that is very good in doing this is the national journal. When I was in D.C. many years ago, national journal was mandatory reading, I'm not so much into the inside baseball of day to today politics, so I don't read it anymore, but I spotted an interesting article online Josh crush hour writing about how the Democrats had the Democrats are thinking about the 2022 election. And what crush hour does is he looks at one of the biggest democratic super PACS, which is putting a $100 million into the Democratic Party for the 2022 election. And but the interesting question is, how are they spending and where are they spending? Because when they put a lot of money on a race, it tells you something. It tells you that they know something about that race and this is why they're spending a lot to fight it out. So crush are actually begins by talking about Las Vegas. And he's talking about the city of Las Vegas. Now, the Democrats just did some redistricting in Nevada. And you would think that as a result of the redistricting, they would have protected the three urban seats in Las Vegas. And those seats would be safe. So you wouldn't need to spend a whole lot of money on them, but no, out of the $100 million 11.6 million is going to try to protect three democratic incumbents in inner city Las Vegas and what this means is that the Democrats are worried that Dina Titus Lee and Steven horsford are all going to be swept out of office. This is in a place that Joe Biden won well he won Nevada, but he also won Las Vegas and but he won it closely. And so the point is that this is a sign that the Democrats are not looking good. Even in places where they should be, I should be

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Lot of cuts And I think starting off early on they opened the rest of the floor up and we played off that and made it easy Tip off for the championship is Monday at 6 30 Eastern Time at the Superdome in New Orleans I'm Dina kodiak And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom Governor Kathy hochul says a number of New York residents are now eligible to receive a second COVID-19 booster shot That was include New Yorker's 50 years and older who received their first a booster shot at least four months ago Adults ages 18 to 49 who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and immunocompromised in New Yorkers 12 and up The case for a half point interest rate hike at the Federal Reserve's may meeting has increased That according to San Francisco fed president Mary Daly who cited rising inflation and the tight labor market in an interview with the Financial Times daily said the case for 50 of borrowing any negative surprise between now and the next meeting has grown Rick rieder chief investment officer at BlackRock financial management says a larger increase or increases in interest rates by way of fed polysome isn't a sure thing but he says the fed will do what it has to do to rein in inflation I think you're assuming an awful lot to say you're going to go past two And listen they're so far from neutral They're so I mean they're still super easy accommodative position that I think you got to assume that I probably the June meeting you'll have gotten a hundred basis points done We get to see what policymakers were thinking at the last meeting last month with the release of the FOMC minutes on Wednesday Kellogg has fought back another lawsuit alleging its strawberry pop tart package art miss Leeds over strawberry content More from Bloomberg's Charlie pellet A federal judge in New York said the representations are simply not deceptive when viewed in context Now Calvin Brown had challenged the word strawberry and images of a half fresh strawberry with dark red fruit filling in the front label of frosted strawberry pop tarts He said the label is misleading because the toaster pastries also contain apple and pear Bloomberg's Charlie pellet reporting Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I'm Suzanne Palmer This is Bloomberg This is balance and power with David Weston The state of American energy is strong Our nation has the resources and the expertise to meet our energy needs Eventually we'll end up with a vaccine that will be able to do better against multiple variants Where the world of politics meets the world of business The bad has to raise rates And by the way that's a good thing The cause of inflation has been this historic pandemic which is upended life in so many different ways In particular has upended America's supply chains Balance of power with David Weston on Bloomberg radio Coming up this hour we'll hear from former New York fed president Bill Dudley about the prospects for chair Jay Powell's.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Dina kodiak And I'm susannah Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom China evergrande groups onshore units said it received bondholders approval to delay coupon payments on its yuan denominated bond Not according to a statement on the Shenzhen stock exchange late today The delay won't trigger a default on the bond according to the approved proposal The arrangement may help evergrande avoid another round of negative headlines but it's unlikely to calm concerns about the company's long-term financial health As we have been reporting the next stop for Jersey City Saint Peter's peacocks on their March Madness march will be the winner of today's matchup between number three Purdue and number 6 Texas The peacock's upset 7th seeded Marie state last night 70 to 60 coach shaheen Holloway says his team wasn't intimidated by Marie state I got guys from New Jersey and New York City You think we scared anything Did you think we brought about God trying to muscle us and tough us out We do that St. Peters will have a chance to become the only number 15 seed to reach the elite 8 Some New Jersey lawmakers want to harness the power of the ocean's waves to create a new source of clean electricity and several companies say they are eager to build projects there Assemblyman Robert Caribbean check plans to introduce legislation soon that would add wave energy to New Jersey's energy master plan The practical effect of doing this would be to open up funding sources for wave energy projects Wave energy involves capturing the kinetic energy of waves as they affect a solid object such as a buoy or a floating plate There are several types of technology used in the industry and equipment can be used near shore or in deep water But important questions remain including the technologies long-term affordability its impact on the environment and how New Jersey and would react to floating buoys near the shore to these Pellegrini Bloomberg radio We get more about that from Bloomberg's Denny's Pellegrini Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I'm Susanna Palmer This is Bloomberg This.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"dina" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Just keep playing football and we got a bunch of guys on their team I like to go through football players They really enjoy it They're watching an angel in practice and then they love playing I'm Dina kodiak And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg news room Wall Street is looking ahead to this week's fed meeting David Kelly chief global strategist at JPMorgan asset management says he doesn't think this meeting will bring word of higher interest rates I think they will point out that there is significant disruption to the U.S. economy in January because of the overcome variant and we still have a lot of uncertainty with regard to physical policy So I think they have a pass for not making a decision But he says interest rates are headed higher later this year the fed just has to be careful not to slow the economy too much Economists say U.S. economic growth improved in the closing months of 2021 we get more about that from Bloomberg's vinyl giudice Forecasters see fourth quarter GDP doubling to a 5% pace give or take led by holiday shopping Inventories provided a boost too as businesses work to overcome pandemic related supply shortages inflation figures tied to the GDP report will probably echo price search as seen in other recent data If any doubt Judas Bloomberg radio Activist hedge fund trian partners has built a stake in Unilever that according to the Financial Times Unilever shares recorded their worst weekly loss since the peak of the pandemic sell off on March of 2020 after it confirmed back on January 16th that it offered $68 billion for the healthcare unit GlaxoSmithKline rejected the bid as being too low Bitcoin is lower again today but it seems to be holding around the $35,000 Mark newly elected mayor Eric Adams plans to convert his first paycheck this week into two cryptocurrencies which he has been hyping as a potential economic engine for New York City Adam's first salary payment will be deposited in coinbase in online platform used for buying cryptocurrency and then converted into Ethereum and Bitcoin Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I am Susanna Palmer This is Bloomberg This is masters in business with Barry Reynolds on Bloomberg radio My extra special guest this week is Tina Vander Steele She's the head of the emerging country debt team at GMO who she is also a partner She joined the firm in 2004 coming from JPMorgan's fixed income research where she developed quantitative arbitrage strategies for emerging market debt and high yield bonds teeter Vander steel welcome to Bloomberg Thank you So let's talk a little bit about your background which kind of surprises me You graduate Washington and Lee university not only with a BA in economics but a BA in journalism How do you go from journalism to emerging market debt Well that one is an easy one My dad set my expectations early in life that he would pay for my existence through undergraduate or 21 years old whichever came first So I graduated at 20 and I figured that a path in economics had higher lifetime earnings potential And I wanted to live in New York City So I chose that path Of course at the time if you think about emerging debt this is 1990 so the fall of communism we had just finished an economic studying mangrove Olson's famous comparative economic systems so now is here a chance to really get to know some of the countries that we had been studying And my economics professors had said listen you get kind of a free MBA if you join any of the Wall Street banks that go through their training program and free sounded like a good thing So I applied to a couple of them to Goldman and JPMorgan and landed a job with both but my dad conventionally I should definitely take the JPMorgan job The lesser earnings notwithstanding he said the culture will be more of a fit for somebody like me And so that's how I got there Quite interesting You spent two years working at JPMorgan San palo office in the mid 90s that had to be a fascinating experience Tell us a little bit about that What did you learn from your time in São Paulo So Paulo was amazing if I had been the kind of journalist that Michael Lewis was I would have written a whole book just about that experience I mean if you think about it it's 1995 so plan a Fernando and hikara so as elected president he introduces plan a hell which he had devised when he was finance minister and it hyperinflation introduced the new currency that is still the currency to this day which is quite an achievement for Brazil And as an employee of JPMorgan they gave you just a crazy amount of power So I'm in my mid 20s my job at the time my name job was to be a strategist which I really know what a strategy was but apparently what it meant was I would take my little vice president card and I would travel up to Brasília and I would get to know the congressmen because this was during the whole constitutional reform effort which is actually still ongoing today And all of the votes that went on in Congress were super important to the future of the country So I would get to know the congressman figure out which way the vote was going to go fly back to São Paulo get on the guten holler tell JPMorgan's worldwide clients how that was going to go And at the time I guess that was really the origins of sales color which is something I don't read these days but at the time I guess I was in charge of producing sales color which I think is pretty funny That's really quite interesting The today son Paolo was something like 12 million people it's one of the world's most populous cities and it's now a Brazil's vibrant financial center was it clear in 95 that this was going to be a financial powerhouse This location Well it's been several locations actually since then At the time that I moved there the center was actually enchanted or like the actual center of the city But had already moved to avenue to Paula Eliza And since I moved has now moved to a new section of São Paulo called Sari alema And.

The Naked Parent podcast
"dina" Discussed on The Naked Parent podcast
"I can find it. And it's taken a lot of research. But I've over the past year and a half, I've been finding there's so many things out there, but the problem is, again, that the travel and tourism operators aren't announcing that they have these programs. So, yes, it's on a really teeny, tiny spot on their website that's like, oh, we have this autism program, but we don't talk about it. Or, you know, all we have this pass for a certain theme park, but we don't really give you any examples of this isn't things that you'll encounter on the right. These are the sensory things. There's not really a whole lot of people screaming from the rooftops. We are autism accepting rather than autism aware. And there are places like beaches that's got their over 80% of their staff trained. There's aquariums all over the country that has some kind of autism program. There's hotels that have programs, like they'll give you lanyards for your child to identify that they have autism. I know. They do a really terrible job. Oops. Sharing it. They really do. How do we find out about is there a place to search for things like that or do you call you and you just start running off ideas or what does that look like? So there's this website called autism travel dot com. And they have a whole list of okay. They have a whole list of suppliers that will that are certified through the IBC CES. I'm so sorry. No, don't worry at all. Okay, I'm going to stand up. I don't know where it's at. It was right there. And now it's done. But the place that inserted through is called the international board of continuing education and credentials. And they have a whole list of parks, hospitals, aquariums, and children's museums that are all certified through them to go beyond autism aware and to go to acceptance. So like beaches, all the beaches that resorts are certified through them. So they have all the staff at the kids club have at least some sort of training with autism so that you can feel comfortable putting your kid in the kid's club and not have to worry about somebody calling you saying that your child's having a meltdown because they can help support you. While you're on vacation. And then there's like, it's just so it's a lot. But so I was doing one of those websites first and then if you find that you need more support, that's absolutely why I open my business. So I could remove all of that stress of looking up that kind of stuff 'cause I can do it for you, just tell me, hey, I want to go to, I'm just pulling something out of thin air like the Maldives. And then I can book all inclusive for you there. And then coupled that with, I work with a respite care provider that has sitters all over the world. And send those sitters to go to the family and help support the family while they're on vacation. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah. So it's been a crazy journey. These past 18 months, but I've learned a lot and I'm only one voice, but I wish that the tourism travel and tourism industry would just be a little bit more open, I guess with how they support people with disabilities because they're not doing a very good job. In my humble opinion. But we're getting there. We're getting there. Well, and you're helping that along by promoting the places that do. And when people start seeing money come in from, that'll mean something to them and that's awesome. So I'm glad you took the plunge before we end our discussion. The show notes the best way that somebody can get ahold of you just so that somebody can follow up for more details. But that's what you did. So can I ask you a little bit about your significant other, how was their journey through pre diagnosis diagnosis and post? It's been hard for him. I think because you know, I feel like we as parents we have a certain idea, you know, of what our children are going to be like and then and then it's not, you know, we envision it's going to be like, and I think it was harder for him to take the diagnosis than it was for me because I don't want to say I'll unconditionally love my child, but I love him no matter what. You know, you know, if you come to me in the face, every single day, that's gonna be a problem. But you know what I mean? I'll still love him regardless of the diagnosis. And I think just with my husband, it just, it was a hurdle for him to get over, but now that he's accepted that this is the child that I was handed, he's been a lot more open about it and accepting with it. It just, you know, it just took him a little while to handle the whole situation, but you know, he's working full time. He's in the military, so I do most of the driving and taking out care of all the appointments and all that. Fun stuff on top of my business. Yeah. I feel like it's I mean, in my conversations in my own experience, it's just harder for us. Yeah. The reason I think the picture we have is a little more firm on what it was supposed to look like. I was a sports guy, so when I realized it wasn't going to be sports and taking the next generation through hopefully live the things that I did exceed my where I went to it was hard for me to see something else. Yeah. So I don't know if maybe he fills that way. Hang in there with me in there for us. Come around slowly. He's getting there. He's getting there. Yeah, I mean, it's tough for everybody, but it's something you're excited about in your son's future. What's something you're looking forward to? Hold on one second. What do you think? So, hey, listeners. How cool is that to have someone who's focused on where we can travel anywhere in the world that's going to meet the needs of our family? Because if you're anything like me, that I was just talking to our listeners about how cool your profession is. Thank you. Send me information on how people can get ahold of you. Okay. And then we'll set up a time down the road because I want to stay in touch anyway because we're building a family, a bigger international community, okay? That would be a really awesome story. We're supposed to relieve stress for one another, not increase it. Relieve the stress of this show. I mean, email on how people can get ahold of you and I'm going to follow up with you to see how things are going in Florida, okay? Okay, that would be archaea because these next couple months are going to be insane. Right. I look forward to hearing how you settle in in 6 months or so. We'll try and touch base. Okay. Thank you. And thank you so much for jumping on today, okay? Okay. Thank you. Bye..

The Naked Parent podcast
"dina" Discussed on The Naked Parent podcast
"Here somewhere. I just don't know where we got it. Gosh. You know, I'm not gonna lie, my oldest will both of them or really easy easygoing kids. Most days it was like, it's just generally questions and feeding his special interests. So lots of questions after question after question after question of your question, especially with hero love space and the weather and we talk about both topics all day long, special video games. Yeah, so there is big things. I feel like, you know, I don't want to minimize my situation, but I know we're talking about how I do travel and stuff like that. And I felt like at home where he was safe and in our neighborhood is generally less I don't experience meltdowns as much as I would on the road. You know? Because this is his routine. He's used to I get up at this time every day. We have breakfast is this time. I get to do my schoolwork and then we do video game time because he loves video games and then he'll go off to therapy and then come home and then it's easy peasy. It's just when we transition into something that isn't in his every day is when things are really hard. So and that was another big sign of that I knew that he possibly had autism was we took a big trip to Walt Disney World. And this is a big change. You're changing from Colorado to Florida in spring, so it's cold in Colorado and it's warm in Florida and he didn't like the way his shorts felt, and he didn't like wearing his ball cap, and there was so many people at Walt Disney World and it was just like this big ball of uncomfortableness and he couldn't articulate to me what was going on. And I felt like really horrible because he just started crying and I know some kids throw themselves on the floor or they just start screaming. He was just like bawling like somebody punched him in the stomach and it was just like, I'm never seen him cry like that before. So it was really interesting, but since that trip and the work we've done with his OT and his speech therapists, it's been amazing to see how he's been able to advocate for himself. So he's uncomfortable in situations like that. He can tell me like, hey, I don't want to be here anymore. And I'm like, perfect, I don't care how much money we spent. We're out here. Because it's not worth it. It's not worth it. They come uncomfortable. I want him to be happy on a trip and why I know where is the flashlight. Why make him dislike something just for my benefit? You know? Yeah. I don't want to do that to him. Right. Yeah. A really great example is like we went to Santa Fe and there was this art. Installation called meow if there. And it's a very sensory cool place that you can go and there's three in the country now and my youngest son was right next to me right now, totally loved it. He could have stayed there all day long. Going inside of a dryer and walking through your refrigerator, he just loved it. But my oldest son had a two hour window, and at the end of the two hours, he finally said to me, mom, I'm ready to go. And I was like, okay, we don't have to stay here. There's no reason to stay here. We can go to the pool if you want the hotel or go get I don't know some pizza, whatever you want to do. And we just found my husband and my youngest son and we left. And there was no reason to be like, I spend all this money. I have to do this. It's like, no. He had his fun. I had my fun, and that's great enough. I think we could I don't know if it'd be better to make it like a comedy or something deep in psychological evaluation. Like if we could get people with their Disney stories together, I mean, Disneyland might be responsible for my divorce. I mean, it was the most expensive disaster. Of my life as a parent. Right. I mean, it looked like that was abusing my kids. We were on the golf cart like trying to haul ass to the parking lot to get out and jump off the golf cart on laying on one of them. Hold that down with the other. They're screaming bloody murder. And then we finally get to the car and I'm like, let's just get out of here. We like peel out of the drive the parking lot garage right into wall to wall traffic with like 5 hours to go to get home. And throwing up from all the junk food they ate in one trigger, the other one and my ex was like, see what you did? It was a disaster. It can be. It was so horrible. It was real mess. You know, and that's the, 'cause, you know, we're talking about this. It can totally be a very big mess, but I wish that I had known about Disney's disability past their disability access service before I had gone because that would have made our trip so much better than it was. And I didn't know that until I became a travel adviser. And then I was like, oh my gosh, there's these services out here that nobody's talking about. You know, that it's just like, gosh, if I had known that, then I could have taken advantage of it. You know, and it would have made my life so much easier and if I had known about the quiet areas in the parks or all these other things that I feel like in the travel and tourism industry, they just do not share it. I mean, can you tell us a little bit about some tips to know about Disneyland if you want to go? You're saying that there's a special pass you can get? Yeah, and then there's also a similar one at Universal Studios. So if you're a Universal Studios person, they have a similar program, but it's so I can't look at it four years of travel adviser, but it is complementary. And it's for any disability that needs extra support. And what you would do is after you've purchased your tickets, you go into the parks and you go to guest services. And I know they're changing it, so there's a new system coming. It just hasn't started yet. And I don't know if it's going to start by the time this podcast. Episode airs, but anyway, you'll just explain the needs that you have. You don't have to divulge what the disability is just saying like, but you'll just tell them what you need to my son can't wait in lines very long, so they will help us by giving us return times for rides, so we're not physically waiting in line. We'll be virtually raining it away. Hey, do you want to play with delights here? Sorry. This is perfect. Typically, like I try to do it when my oldest son is in therapy and then this one's napping, but he didn't take a nap today. I know. Yeah. What else is there? There's that program. And you ask him, I mean, that's huge right there. If you don't have to wait in line, I mean, that's right. That's a huge thing right in and of itself. So let's talk a little bit about how you got into your line of work, obviously there's a huge need for it. How did it start for you? With the diagnosis I entered the travel and tourism as I opened my travel agency before my son was diagnosed, and then you're looking at him, then when he was diagnosed, that's when I decided that I was going to pivot my business 'cause I started looking for trips for myself, and I couldn't find anything that would actually support us. I also have asked other travel advisers and a lot of them didn't really have information for me. And I said, okay, well, if they don't have it, maybe.

The Naked Parent podcast
"dina" Discussed on The Naked Parent podcast
"You to be able to travel the world and spend precious time with your family and she wants to spend precious time with her family. Welcome to the show, Dina. Thank you for having me. I'm excited to be here. Thanks for being here, so you're calling in from Colorado. Yet. Before you move to Florida is that correct? That is correct. Yes. Children? I have two little boys, a ten year old. He just turned ten and 5. I went my God, four. Ten and four. Yeah, ten and four. So and your ten year olds on the spectrum? Is that correct? When was he diagnosed? He was diagnosed at 8 years old. I don't know if I could speak on it, but I just feel like sometimes in the military healthcare system, it can be a little bit hard to get that diagnosis. So it was a very long journey to get him finally to get someone to find a listen to me. That's challenging. Yeah, it was really challenging. We're initially in Arizona, and that's where I kind of had some. And that's my four year old if he can hear him. We had some challenges in Arizona, but like the pediatrician, just kept kind of brushing me off and then we got orders to Hawaii and was the same thing. Like, oh no, he's fine. He's gonna grow out of it and then finally we moved here to Colorado and I just said, I'm really need someone to listen to me and finally a developmental pediatrician heard me and said, yes. He is on the spectrum. And it was just like, oh, I'm not crazy. You know? Carrying me. Yeah. That's so heavy. It was a lot. It was a lot. And I know that we were talking just a little bit before this. And how I was just a little bit worried with my youngest son, too, but I think I'm going to wait till we move to Florida because we don't have that much time left in Colorado to maybe get him evaluated. But I'm gonna watch him. We'll see. When did you notice that something might be different with your ten year old? Signs that maybe something was different. I think as early as two, there was definitely some signs like he the biggest signs were the cars. He would line up all of his cars and a perfect row with perfectly like everything was in the right order of tallest shortest cars. I had a friend that she has a child that's non speaking and she just kept saying like he's just really unique. You should maybe talk to her doctor about it. And other big sign was my son is still pacing, but he was much bigger pacer when he was younger, and he could go for hours, just pacing back and forth. And I was like, I wish that someone would listen to me. I don't know if this I don't. I don't want to say typical but a typical behavior. He's just pacing and pacing and pacing and everybody said, no, he's fine. He's fine, but there was just some really jarring. Those were the two biggest signs and there was other little things like walking, took a really long time and language was slower to develop than his brother was kind of why I'm kind of like, I don't know. I don't think he is on the spectrum, but yeah, just okay. For all the medical professionals that are listening to the show, whatever emoji is shows screaming people, please accept that from me like scream scream scream scream scream can somebody please tell the medical profession that it's okay to work with us on keeping it real with what's going on with our kids. Right. Because making us feel like we're absolutely losing our mind is not going to help us be better parents. It's not going to help our children. It doesn't help us in any way to make us believe that they're going to grow out of it. And we just sit around waiting year after year day after day hour after hour waiting for this thing to happen that doesn't happen to anybody that comes on the show. I'm sure you had to carry the flag for 6 years before somebody said you can put down your crazy yeah. Yeah. You're laughing because that's all we can do. I think that's it. Yeah. Yeah. It is heavy. You're absolutely right. It wasn't. It wasn't something that I'd want anybody to experience. You know, especially coming in the future for other autistic kids. I want a medical professional to listen the first time. Not 6 years down the road, for sure. I know. Can we get a waiver or something that we can fill out that says you're allowed to talk to us and keep it real? We're not going to do whatever it is that you're worried about, which has you telling us that it's just delayed, even though what to expect when you're expecting is like 14 years ahead of where we're at just waiting for our delay to be over. Right. Can we graduate to the next the next volume of what to expect? I'm making fun of a heavy topic because it just comes up so much. I want to support our community of parents. And I feel like that's one area that where we need support is in the beginning so that we can get off and running so that we can get tools and resources and do our job. Right, absolutely. You know, be questioning our sanity while we're sleep deprived while all the other things that are tough about parenting and oh by the way, you're you might be crazy too. So after all those years, so you had a friend that kind of said maybe you need to look into this you're seeing some signs. You finally reached out. You got the diagnosis. How did you take that? I mean, what did it feel like once you got the diagnosis? A relief. 'cause I thought I was nuts for a really long time. I mean, I really did. And then, you know, there's people around me, they're saying, they've seen signs with him, and I was just like, I'm so glad that someone has finally listened to me. 'cause it feels like, you know, when people, I know that there's that trigger word of gaslighting where people are telling you, otherwise. And it was just like, I just felt when I finally heard those words, I said, okay, it doesn't change my son. He's still the same exact person, the only thing it does is make me feel a lot less crazy. And now that I have this diagnosis, I can get him the support because he really needed support with speech and he really needed to support with OT and it was like, okay, let's just do this. And you know, I'll be the opposite of a soccer mom. I'm taking him to therapy and we're sitting there together and it was just like, I'm so glad that I heard this finally. It was really crazy making. I'm not gonna lie. It really was. Yeah. What aha moments did you have throughout this process. What did a bad day look like for you take us in a day in the life of Dina, farmer and family? I'm sorry, my son was asking for a flashlight and I don't think I have one down here. In there, I'm not sure where daddy put it. I know, I'm sorry. I'm sorry, chat. Oh, yeah, you don't have to be sorry. That's the show is named. That isn't it. Very reason. If this doesn't, if this isn't real, I don't know what is. I know, right? It's a flashlight. I know. I don't know. I have a flashlight in every room. I do. And I can't believe what kind of parent I was special needs child doesn't have a flashlight..

Timesuck with Dan Cummins
Lady Diana: Fairy Tale or Horror Story?
"Diana princess of wales oftentimes called the people's princess born into a wealthy aristocratic family with strong royal ties. Dina grew up assuming her future would be pretty damn bright of course. She assumed that she was raised. Essentially to be married someone with royal blood to be married to a high born man of means. But you couldn't have known or assumed dreamt. Maybe that you would actually marry the prince of england heir to the british throne and become the british commonwealth princess. That's exactly what happened. She i caught. Prince charles is is a teenager when he was of all things. Dating her older sister would appear to be a sweet and dreamlike. Royal romance would begin later when that would capture the world's attention then it seemed to have it all to be living a fairy tale. A little prince the off romanticized prince charming had picked her her foot at fit the fabled glass slipper and she looked like a fairytale princess. She was young elegant fashionable beautiful. And now she wasn't actual princess but fairy tales. Don't often actually really come true do they. Yes dan i was becoming a princess but she was not becoming the happy bride of a devoted in love struck prince charming their fairytale romance was fake from the beginning a show put on for the cameras to uphold the all important picture perfect and profitable image of the british royal family beneath the facade of their romance behind the beautiful clothes and jewels. Extravagant wealth was a woman who is sick and suffering. Diana wet a man whose heart and bed already belonged someone else someone. The king and queen had deemed unsuitable wife for the prince. Diana's happy heavily publicized honeymoon was spent largely in tears. She married a man who she didn't really love because you didn't really know him a man who wished he was married to someone else and now diana worked hard to hide her true feelings from the media frenzy that surrounded her. She'd sacrificed any hope for a private life. Once she'd said yes to prince charles's marriage proposal. The british media and paparazzi would now watch her every move the rest of her life often waiting for her to make a mistake looking for suspected chinks in the royal family's armor diana herself said towards the end of her life after her marriage had ended. I seem to be on the front of a newspaper every single day which is an isolating experience and the higher. The media puts you places you. The bigger the drop

The Daily Beans
Evacuation Flights Resume in Kabul After Deadly Bombings by ISIS-K
"Lead story today. Is that thirteen. American service members are dead and fifteen wounded after two explosions that were caused by isis k. Suicide bombers happened at the airport in kabul isis k. Or isis corazon is the afghan branch of isis general. Mackenzie head of centcom says we should expect these attacks or attempts for these kinds of attacks to continue. There have been warnings of these attacks perpetrated by isis k. They've no doubt been planning the attacks. Since trump signed our surrender to the taliban last year biden has been warning both his administration officials and the public about this danger on the ground. And how it's real and it is the reason we needed to leave despite the attacks today. General mackenzie says the mission to evacuate remaining. Americans and afghan allies will continue per usual. The media is vastly overestimating. The number of americans remaining. They've been saying there are thousands and thousands struggling to get out abandoned by the government but the state department has announced. Today there were fifteen hundred. We successfully extracted five hundred. Those leaving about a thousand around afghantistan and there are currently operations to get those americans out probably via helicopter to deliver them safely to the couple airport as us troops begin to try to find those terrorists responsible for the suicide bombings this morning. The pentagon has confirmed that the number of americans still in afghanistan is at that thousand number not the not the multiple of thousands that the media has been reporting in fact since july. We have evacuated over one hundred thousand americans and afghan allies.

AP News
D-Backs' Gilbert Throws No-Hitter in First Career Start
"He just his first major league start Tyler Gilbert tossed a record tying eighth no hitter this season leading the dina backs to a seven nothing win over the Padres just incredible I mean it was just one of those days I just I don't know who it is like a I know balls we're gonna head around but they're gonna hit you guys and I was making good pitches I mean it was it was just kind of a a rush the whole time he's the third major league pitcher to throw a no hitter in his first start and the first is bobo Holloman of the Browns in nineteen fifty three it's the first time since eighteen eighty four the eight no hitters have been thrown in the season drew Ellis belted a three run Homer to cap Arizona's five run first Josh VanMeter provided three of the Diamondbacks fifteen hits I'm Dave very

Maggi Tax
Florida Urged to Ramp up Vaccination Effort Amid ‘Alarming’ Covid Rise
"Cases in the state continued to go up. The Florida Department of Health is reporting over 73,000 new covid 19 cases in the past week, which is over three times the number of new cases from two weeks ago. As covid cases rise. People who didn't want to get the covid vaccine are starting to change their minds. Dina Dorsten talk to Fox 35 in Orlando outside Immobile vaccine site at the Orlando Police Department. I lost two friends this week in their thirties from the virus. What? Yeah, here one in Miami one in Naples, Florida, So that was my wake up call. Dorsten says things that she read on social media made her distrust the vaccine. She also is eight months pregnant and doesn't want to risk passing the virus to her baby. A

Now Try This
"dina" Discussed on Now Try This
"Where sam when renew boyfriend pantley she last shady side to be Now here's here's the thing. I need to ask you like. How are you feeling about sam. And dina because dina's very much like oh thank you for the follow up can be krona. Thank you so much. How do you feel about the fact. That sam who's right. Who do you side with. Who what are you thinking. This is deana is like you left us. Your sell out in san was like i got out. You broke up with me. I'm a half an hour away in his like no you fucking leftovers shady shady side forever it sounds like buck shady side. Like what are you. What do you think who do you side. I mean who'd i side with. I like shady side versus sunnyvale. Not i meant more like their relationship. Argument rangelands should. I get where she's coming from. But just because you you get to make it out of the projects Out of area doesn't mean that you get to be an asshole. Look down on everybody. Who's there you know. yeah. I think dina was a little online a little bit but honestly i thought it would teaming i mean you're like me grew up in a great area and there were people that got out and look down back at the back of the neighborhood Right yeah it's true all the time. Buck does yeah. No i agree hundred percent so right off the bat. I don't like sam. Which is honestly..

AP News Radio
Diana Legacy Lingers as Fans Mark Late Royal’s 60th Birthday
"Princess Diana's legacy lingers as fans mock the late wells a sixtieth birthday most people wouldn't volunteer to walk through a mine field in nineteen ninety seven princess Diana did it twice she realized some of the photographers accompanying her didn't get the first shot so she turned around and did it again right to edit that Ingrid Seward says dina understood the power of imagery and she knew the photograph was worth a hundred words she would reach over the heads of people in a crowd to shake someone's hand behind she would kneel down to children those touched by the life of the preschool teacher turned princess remembering her ahead of what would it be her sixtieth birthday on Thursday Charles there this month London

Switched On
The Cost of Clean, Green Aluminum
"Sharon julia thank you for being on the show today to talk about aluminum. Thank you thanks for having his. We're going to refer to it as aluminum on the podcast today. Although i will say so you guys are recording from newark. I'm recording from london. And they call it. Aluminium here and i did a little bit of research on it and as it turns out many chemists also call it aluminium and it's otherwise just a real cultural divide and there's no excellent reason for why he give extra syllables here. There's a funny story. That where i was always told that they were looking at the periodic table and thinking about the different. Nca shin spellings. And they were like okay. One of you get aluminum and one of you can get like sulfur with a ph. And i'm not sure who negotiated. What but it kinda sounds like aluminum lost okay. Somewhere somewhere mayor in the folklore of the periodic table. Everybody this is for your next cocktail party. Chat okay so here we are. We're gonna talk about decarbonisation of aluminum which has a lot of different pathways. So as those who are listening to the show realize what we talked to analysts. You're talking them about a ended up piece of research that they've written in this is a doozy. It's fifty pages so we are going to do our very best to pull out some of the most interesting parts but of course there will always be more so i would like to start by really understanding the scale of the industry and the scale of the emissions issue so first of all. Where are we finding aluminum. And and how big industry is this. Dina we really think of aluminum as one of the major metals. When you think about them you've got steel and steel is a huge industry. And then you have aluminum which is second but quite a bit behind steel in terms of volume so it seen as i material that you use when you need a slightly more advanced medal. So it's used a lot in. Airplanes is houston kind of middle of the road bicycles. It's used in cars where it's important for them to be a little bit lighter potentially in electric

MyTalk 107.1
"dina" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1
"I don't want to buy national branded stuff. I keep getting. Yeah, I keep getting all sorts of PR things from these national brands that are putting out I'm like, You know what you are. You're fine like I'll just keep with the local. That's right. So this is a great alternative. If you like fighters and I do. I could also like the best cider ever had, Um, it's a It's a five on my sip scale, skinny tire. The best center ever had. Well, not the best, but one of the best, But I can't stop thinking about because I only had it once, and I've never had it since it's sociable, had a lemon thyme cider. Oh, and it was saving those special thing And it was so good and I could never find it was at the happy Norman. I could never find it again. We have to go right to sociable and see if it's I've asked and they doing no love there Cucumber one, and I also love the I would like that. Yeah, that's a totally like that's not sweet, like a cucumber has like a kind of a nice little fresh, you know, little doing. He was cute government. Maybe even But and then they're having euro cider has always been my I love And when you bang was there with and you Newman Kitchen that was like the perfect pairing to go get some, like, cite some you know, like on me, and then I Perfectly. I would like that, right? Have you ever heard of this brewery? Now? These air beers, Okay, were so well named and cute that I just like them. One is the hard sell. Someone is a beer Wouldn't hill. This is a brewery. That is Dina Dina? Yep. You know, industrial complex. Tell him in there? Yeah, And I liked the peanut colada hard center was the forceps and they're in vacation mode. Tropical milkshake. EPA was a four super to limit so those are some summer sips for you..

Planet Money
What You Need to Know About the FireEye Hack
"You're on the breaking news. Investigative team here at npr. And you've spent months working on this story. So why don't you just pick up where we left off a with kevin mandy the ceo of fireeye. Right he's realized there's somebody who's not an employee who's inside their network and that's a problem so we had several weeks where i'm sitting there going boy. I wonder how they broke in. And it is a terrible nag dina. What's responding to a breach anywhere whether your own house or someone else's house and you don't know how broken so fire is in the business of trying to figure out exactly that kind of thing and that's what other companies typically pay them to do and what they do is they try to think back to. What the earliest evidence of compromise could be. You know like where they might have seen some sort of stranger in their network or where that stranger could come in and they trace this back literally for weeks and they think it all started with some software from a company called solar wizz so at that point the only logical conclusion that i drew was sump. Draw the solar wind server solar winds. We know now. That's what this big that this whole story is about came to be called the solar winds hack and i'm going to be honest with you. I've been sort of following that story. But i don't think i've ever really understood. Like what is solar winds. What is solar winds is a software company and they make a bunch of different kinds of software. But the one. That's at the center of this story is a software they make to manage computer networks cry so nothing to do with either the sun or the wind from thinking alternative energy. I'm entirely in the wrong universe entirely in the wrong. I have no idea what kind of how they came up with the name. But can i can tell you is that. It's what's called network management software. This is what. It people use basically so they can keep an eye on the entire network

Atlanta's Morning News
Bob Baffert Suspended From Entering Horses in Belmont Stakes
"Will not even be allowed to run in the third leg of the Triple Crown, The Belmont. Dina Spirits trainer bomb Baffert has been suspended in New York pending results of drug tests following the Kentucky Derby reporter Steve Futterman says the Medina spirit tested positive for a banned steroid. Its third place finish in the Preakness means no Triple Crown winner this year. Hundreds of homes flood around like Charles, Louisiana, being hit by two hurricanes and ice storm and a

The Mason Minute
Obsessed With Dinosaurs (MM #3679)
"The with kevin mason even though they've been gone for thousands of years. I'm still fascinated with how people are obsessed with dinosaurs. It makes sense for children. I think i encountered my first dinosaur skeleton bones and a museum somewhere. When i was maybe four or five and wyoming or colorado or somewhere out west and dinosaurs are interesting and i've seen lots of dinosaur skeletons but i'm truly amazed with how many scientists in how many archaeologists are continuing to study and create data around dina source. Recently some studies out of believe university of california berkeley was looking into the numbers of t. rex's that might have roamed our earth at one time and right. Now they're estimating two point five billion t rexes but they actually think it could be somewhere between one hundred and forty million to forty. Two billion t rexes once crossing the earth. The amount of time we spend researching dinosaurs is interesting but at the same time. You wonder what we're going to learn from it. Have you learned enough at this point or is it just truly an obsession.

The Mason Minute
Obsessed With Dinosaurs (MM #3679)
"The with kevin mason even though they've been gone for thousands of years. I'm still fascinated with how people are obsessed with dinosaurs. It makes sense for children. I think i encountered my first dinosaur skeleton bones and a museum somewhere. When i was maybe four or five and wyoming or colorado or somewhere out west and dinosaurs are interesting and i've seen lots of dinosaur skeletons but i'm truly amazed with how many scientists in how many archaeologists are continuing to study and create data around dina source. Recently some studies out of believe university of california berkeley was looking into the numbers of t. rex's that might have roamed our earth at one time and right. Now they're estimating two point five billion t rexes but they actually think it could be somewhere between one hundred and forty million to forty. Two billion t rexes once crossing the earth. The amount of time we spend researching dinosaurs is interesting but at the same time. You wonder what we're going to learn from it. Have you learned enough at this point or is it just truly an obsession.

The Mason Minute
Obsessed With Dinosaurs (MM #3679)
"The with kevin mason even though they've been gone for thousands of years. I'm still fascinated with how people are obsessed with dinosaurs. It makes sense for children. I think i encountered my first dinosaur skeleton bones and a museum somewhere. When i was maybe four or five and wyoming or colorado or somewhere out west and dinosaurs are interesting and i've seen lots of dinosaur skeletons but i'm truly amazed with how many scientists in how many archaeologists are continuing to study and create data around dina source. Recently some studies out of believe university of california berkeley was looking into the numbers of t. rex's that might have roamed our earth at one time and right. Now they're estimating two point five billion t rexes but they actually think it could be somewhere between one hundred and forty million to forty. Two billion t rexes once crossing the earth. The amount of time we spend researching dinosaurs is interesting but at the same time. You wonder what we're going to learn from it. Have you learned enough at this point or is it just truly an obsession.

Morning Edition
FBI Still Hasn't Found DNC, RNC Pipe Bomb-Maker
"Authorities have charged hundreds of people for allegedly participating in the January 6th right of the U. S Capitol. But one person still eludes them. The person who placed two explosive devices in Washington D. C the night before Here are Tim Mack and Dina Temple Raston from NPR's investigations unit. The crime the FBI is trying to solve happened between 7:38:30 P.m.. That's when authorities believe the suspect planted two pipe bombs just blocks from the Capitol. The suspect was wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt. Ah Cove in mask and expensive sneakers. They were Nike Air Max speed turf with the yellow logo. Surveillance cameras captured the figure walking through a Capitol Hill neighborhood the night before the January six riots. One of the bombs was placed on a park bench near the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee, the other behind Republican Party headquarters and surveillance footage caught the suspect walking look at how close their feet are to each other. So that is a narrow base of gate. That's Dr Mike Nierenberg, who wrote the textbook on Forensic Gait analysis. He helps identify people based on how they walk. He's watching along with us as we review surveillance video from that night immediately. What you notice is the arm swing of the person on that left arm. There's not a lot of rotation in their upper half of their body, their torso. The FBI has asked for help finding someone who walks like this. The explosive devices they found were made from one by eight inch galvanized steel pipes. Plumbers typically used And they had plastic kitchen timers mounted on top. The con Jews been around set. The FBI said the explosive inside was homemade black powder, which could be a mix of just about anything that will ignite. Typically, it includes salt Peter and sulfur and gunpowder. The FBI is yet to say exactly what explosive was

PhotoBiz Xposed
Dina Goldstein Creating a living and having a voice as an art based photographer
"Guest has been described as canada's visual wizard photo. Journalism was i love and the reason that she became a photographer. She followed her passion and became a photo journalist and editorial photographer from nineteen ninety. Two to two thousand six before moving to large scale narrative at tableau tackles common imagination and beliefs and create images to promote critical thinking. And she's most nine for her series fallen princesses which was created in two thousand and seven and two picks humanize disney princesses placed in realistic modern scenarios yet to see these to truly understand how amazing they are. The idea behind the series was to challenge the happily ever after themes perpetrated by disney. and recently. She's released her thirty year photography archive by the name of triple x. I'm about the incredibly talented dana goldstein rat to have with us now. They not welcome. Thank you so much for having me. It's my pleasure. It's my pleasure thirty years. Has it gone fast or is it just you just into the grind feels like thirty years. Yes i mean. Time does go fast. Absolutely but i feel like i've done so much within these years and of course i've spent the last year the covid year collecting all of my work to my archive. So i've had a chance to recollect and think about things that i haven't thought about for years. So it was covered the reason for putting together the archival. Was this something that you planning to do. Not from ten or twenty years out. Actually i started doing this before cove. Ed i bought myself a very good explainer. Because of my photos are negatives. So i got binders and binders binders of negatives. And the first thing i had to do was go through everything and i started this process before cove it. I went to montreal to show my work and it was abruptly cancelled at. I came back here thinking out. What's next

WGN Radio
"dina" Discussed on WGN Radio
"If you need the support from others asked for it, Dina Bair News Nation Chicago the Biden administration announced it will resume efforts to put 19th century abolitionist period. Tubman on the $20 Bill Tubman, who helped dozens of slaves escape through the underground railroad, would replace the nation's seventh president Andrew Jackson. Joining news nation Now is Elizabeth Calms, professor of US in world history at Texas A and M University. She received her PhD from Stanford is a New York Times bestselling author and award winning documentary film producer. Elizabeth. Thanks for being here. Nice to see you tonight. They're all right. Doctor Cops. There are other women who have graced American currency like Sacha Julia and Susan B. Anthony. What's the significance of Tubman's place on the $20 bill? This would be the first time we've had a woman on the paper currency. So you know Susan B. Anthony was on a coin, for example. But that doesn't really circulate that much. And so were the only major democracy in the world that has not had a female American woman patriot on its currency, so we want to join the rest of the world. I'm really excited about it. So you are 125. Other American historians wrote to then Treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin, urging him to put Tubman on the 20, saying she is simply the most remarkable and well known heroin in U. S history. What makes her so remarkable? She is remarkable for several reasons. First of all, she is, was a prominent abolitionist, the only woman to go repeatedly behind in a sense enemy lines and bring people out so crazy, brave and interesting in that respect, But she was also a foremost female military hero. She led a raid in South Carolina helped to develop military intelligence for a raid. That was amazing victory in the for the Union troops and the Civil War. So And then, after the Civil war, she became a social reformer and actually was a woman suffragist and helped to start homes for the agent in New York, so just tremendous and all friends. Let's talk about your latest book for a moment. It's about Tubman's time is a spy in the Civil War. What got you interested in this story? I got so interested because I thought if she's gonna be on the 20, then we all need to know more about what makes her really unique, really remarkable. And this particular stories is sort of off the charts. She goes behind, you know, in in the darkness and developing the military intelligence, Take three union ships. Up a river in South Carolina. It's an amphibious assault during world during the Civil War. And so it's this very, very remarkable military victory. They liberate 750 people. They recruit new soldiers for the union troops and it zits. Just a fascinating thing. Another was who doesn't love a good spy story. And I also think that Harriet Tubman is a zoo romantic heroine, and that's how I paid for in the book as well. Dr Cobb is very quickly. Let's talk about whether or not you think this is actually going to happen. I know that it has been introduced what you're feeling right now on the on Tubman being put in place of Andrew Jackson on the 20. I'm very optimistic about it. It it just makes sense. First of all, Andrew Jackson will not just a period That plan has always been that he would go in the back of the of the $20 bill, so there's no reason at all not to proceed with that. And it's got to be somebody you know. Pick a woman. She was actually voted out of her group of 24 so remarkable American women, historical figures and by popular acclamation Harriet Tubman one, So she's the right one, and it's time. So I don't see why it won't happen. It wasn't planned. It was all you know, signed, sealed and delivered until the Trump administration decided to put a kibosh on it. You mentioned it is time if you can very quickly as we begin to wrap up Why is it time for a woman to be on a piece of paper money for the United States Currency? Currency represents our values. I mean, it's our picture to the world when people travel all around the world to go to a team. So get foreign currency in the $20 bill is the most widely circulated of all the bills. Think of that when you go to the A T M here, and that's what it comes out at you. So it's very symbolic. And it helps to shift to Saul and helps us to see Well, actually, you know, women are part of our history on dear, certainly part of our future, so it takes something that seems Like strange and odd, You know that there could be a woman President or woman Military Hiller Bureau and actually says No, this is this is right. This is real. This has always been true. We just never looked now. Now we do. Dr Elizabeth Cobbs. Thank you so much for taking the time here on news nation. Thank you. Technology has come a long way When it comes to TVs. There's now four k eight K h.

860AM The Answer
"dina" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"By using the promo code Gallagher, call 800 Lifelock or head over to Lifelock dot com. Use the promo code Gallagher for 25% off Maxwell, the runaways arrest you Bake this position about nine years ago. He was scratching a lot, and he started losing some hair. By that, she says all he must be allergic to the chicken. None of us that eat the brain. So that gene, you said, it's the weather something in the air, and then somebody said he I n o v i t dot com. Hit to the listening to speak side of ice hod carrying. There are different stories of different people, and it's just questions. I got my first night they survive, and it took a grand total of two weeks and the dog stop getting the hair stopped. Falling out. Kind of fight is nutrition, and Mexico loves it. Now he's forced to 10. And this side of eyes big part of Maxwell's diet. Dina fight for life. You won't be lieve how happy your dog will be paying. He just spectacular dog, you know, b i t dot com. Let me tell you about a product I use every day that has made a huge difference in my life. A great impact on my health. It's called Nevada. Je ne vous. What's Nevada's and a V A G. The world's on, Lee knows cleaner with powered suction. We're all concerned about what we're breathing in, and its potential impact on our health, dust, bacteria, pollen pollution and worse. Protecting yourself from these airborne invaders requires keeping the inside of your nose clean. It's like washing your hands to protect yourself. From what you touch. Nevada's cleanses your nose to clear out the.

The Good People Effect
"dina" Discussed on The Good People Effect
"If we die. Okay fine along. Do you talk michael as long as you have. I usually allow things to run the natural course. But if you've got time restrictions. I realized that seven o'clock pants You'd probably want to have some dina certain. Sorry it's it's up to you. Yeah well let's we go up to an hour up to fifty minutes or something like that. So let's let's just begin and dive in and i'll follow your lead. Yeah yeah let's let's start on this point of meaning and i guess the first question would be you know what what happens if we don't if we don't find a sense of meaning in our lives and why's that Kind of a focus of union work. We're well you know. We're miserable if we don't find meaning in life and throughout the history of humankind as you well know so much of humanities life has been constructed by extreme impoverishment at the struggle for survival totalitarian regimes and so forth the but there's something inside of each of us will call it the human psyche loses after all the greek word for soul. There's something inside of each of us that suffers when we're disconnected from what is meaningful to us and You can't impose meeting on someone else. It's sort of like saying to someone well. My favorite food has to be more favorite food. We would think that's kind of ridiculous assumption but there's something inside of each of us that knows what is right for us and when it gets violated as so often happens it is and that word pathology mean comes from the greek word for suffering. Toss it's a solidarity psychopathology. When i spent a lot of time working with folks in states of psychopathology means simply the suffering of the soul. And when you think about where so much therapists today you know. We are behaviors. That's true and that's important when we are cognitive processes that's true that's important we are biological processes as well. That's true and that's important but there's something else beyond all that if you add all that together you don't.

RJ Politics
"dina" Discussed on RJ Politics
"Itself were pretty universal condemning. That i had a story on that this week as as you would expect and many republicans though not all like you said there are still some loyalists. Who would not. And i can't even remember his name. I don't remember if it was chip. Roy in texas or who was but one i saw one member of congress basically said i'm gonna not oppose this election with the knowledge that my political career might be over and it's it's that nod to trump's firm hold. We saw reported today. That trump called into the rnc was cheered. It's not even twenty four hours. And so i think i think it's definitely some some posturing by different members of congress on what they're gonna do. I think everybody knew there was no way for any meaningful challenge of the election to actually unfold. I wouldn't say everybody. I should say Because clearly protesters who went in and right in the capital may be thought they could actually stop something but it did happen and one thing i wanted to mention as well and you you were tweeting about this as well and i. I had the exact same thought the exact same time. Which was we saw late late into the evening When they were actually going through and hearing objections to individual states are wasn't objection in the house to Nevada's vote total in their electoral Voters and everything. And and dina. Titus our congressman from the first district was selected to defend was quite ready. I imagine to do so But there was no backing in the senate and and i can only imagine You know what those those objectors in the house were saved from by that in terms of what dina titus would have told them we saw you know congresswoman lee congresswoman or congressman. Horford especially really really. Come out strongly against what happened. I mean obviously horford has has now said. He's going to sign onto the articles as co-sponsor titus said she'd be quite happy to impeach him again if it came to it I lease maybe open to the idea of. It hasn't said anything you know. The senators haven't really firmly weighed in..