35 Burst results for "Florida State University"

"florida state university" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:42 min | 2 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"So here she can't say a word about Joe Biden's illegal things We take it very seriously I mean I've said it over and over The president has said it I don't think we could be clear He takes it very seriously But here's what she says go Some concerns about this action by the desantis administration Magic concern Don't you think he's a bigot Come on Don't you think he's a racist Don't you think he's anti black like most Republicans Can I tell us Tell us Go ahead Administration does not dictate any curriculum for local schools That is not something that we do here But there is something that we do want to comment I guess she's all set and ready to go right Mister Medusa Not without decade but I'm ready to comment Go ahead Comprehensible that to see that this is what this band or this block to be more specific that desantis has put forward If you think about the study of black Americans that is what he wants to block and again these types of like that So desantis wants to block the study of black Americans Does that make any sense to anybody Maybe she's thinking of Joe Biden in the 1970s Segregationist Joe Biden Desantis doesn't want to block advance programs and studies Of African Americans

APAS James G Martin center lab school of Florida state un associated materials Gavin de Burgess Biden Florida state university AP Burgess North Carolina U.S. Desantis desantis Florida Phil South Dakota Tennessee Georgia Texas Chris sununu
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

05:14 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Let me challenge one of your frameworks. I think it's going to be helpful for you. Don't go do what you're interested in. Do what you're good at. So what's your skill? Talking persuasion. Well, you can make a lot of money talking because I'm not kidding. If you were good at communication, from a public speaker to a writer, you could make a ton of money. Now, what are you interested in? Business is a huge interest. I like, I like groups like turning point or groups where you advocate for something. I'm a huge mental health advocate. I'm huge on that. You'll figure it out. The point is this is that I hear kids all the time say that I'm following my heart and my passion. That's a really bad idea. And it's the worst advice. Follow your skill that you don't hate. No serious. And then if you don't hate, I'll give you a great example. If I followed my passion, I would be a college football coach. Seriously. And I mean, I love college football more than anything else. And by the way, I'm not a fan of your coach. I'm just going to be very honest. He's not going to make it. He's not going to bring him to the promised land. I'm telling you right now. It's not going to happen. Mark my words, just wait. This way. Okay. When was the last time you guys went to a bowl game, right? Not a while. What? Two wins away? Wow. What is it, week 7? Yeah. I'm saying Florida state is compare that to bowden, okay? You guys deserve you guys should be undefeated is what you should be. But anyway, I don't know how I even got out of that. I don't mean to insult. But I love college football, a big fan. Now if Florida beats you guys this year, I think he might be getting the axe, but we'll see. So, and but that's not what I'm the best at. Does that make sense? Yeah. It's about your following your skill, okay? And following your skill is very important because then other things start to fall into alignment. And make sure you don't hate that skill. And then the final thing is this, you just have to if you want to be successful in life, you have to dedicate yourself to hustle and grit. It's very rare to find. Show up the earliest, leave the latest and complain the least. You do those three things. I don't care what you do. You're going to move up because that's very, very hard to find. Yes, sir. Thank you. God bless you. Thank you. Hey Charlie. My name is Sharon. I'm a mom of four and my old. Thank you for being here. My oldest is actually your age and my youngest is a junior in high school. Who's right over there? Anyway, my question is, well, first of all, all four have gone through public school, which back in 1999, when we started that, it didn't seem like a bad idea and actually we've had many great teachers and it worked well for us for a long time. But obviously in recent years, our eyes have been opened and there's been a lot of going on in agendas pushed within the school system. I'm also the local chapter chair for our moms for liberty. So that on the forefront. Great job. Ben on the forefront of trying to fight our district who has been one of the ones defying the governor in our state laws. So my question for you is around school choice. I see the Arizona just this year voted to have a statewide school choice system and actually I've been feeling with the frustration locally that maybe it's a better idea to put energy and time into supporting getting behind, advocating for statewide school choice system in Florida. Yes. So the issue with your Florida education is you guys have a very tricky funding model, right? So if I understand correctly, every school district gets appropriated the same amount of tax dollars. And my understanding that correctly? Per student is how I understand it. Yes, that's right. So that's correct. So it gets funded by student. That is very unusual, right? So Illinois is based all on school district, and it's all sort of messed up. But I'm still a huge school choice advocate. The problem, the only issue is that you're going to have trouble getting through the legislature because there's a lot of these deals that have been made and relationships and infrastructure that's built there. And so I would start small. So Arizona just passed the best school choice legislation in the country. It took 20 years to get there. Of small incremental work. It's so good in Arizona. Any parent can send their tax dollars to any school of their choosing at any time, regardless of circumstance, I want that school. I want that private school. That charter school, that it's full choice. It's awesome. And so if a Hispanic family in the west side of Phoenix, who's just really struggling economically, doesn't like the local school, they could pull the trigger and get their kid to a successful school. If they don't like CRT, the woke is in the pornography and their school, boom, they can move it right out, right? And so I would encourage you guys to entertain that. I'm not a policy wonk on this thing, but you guys have a very, you have a much better school choice system than most other states. And I hate to give credit to him for this, but Jeb Bush did a pretty good job actually on schools and for at least getting a charter model. And more broadly and nationally, the Florida charter system inspired so many other states to get involved in it. And Jeb was really kind of the pioneer of that as much as it pains me to say. But I would still argue for school choice and more than that, I just think the fight also has to be in curriculum standards and all this. And governor desantis deserves such credit for not allowing the CRT nonsense. I know it's still happening and it's going back door and all of that. But to set a standard from the state level is so incredibly and critically..

football Florida bowden Arizona Sharon Mark Charlie Ben legislature Illinois Phoenix Jeb Bush Jeb governor desantis
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

03:32 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"So I believe in a small but strong government. That's an important part, right? So if you go read the federalist papers of which I encourage all of you to read, if you ever want to get ready for bed and fall asleep. They're beautiful. They are. It's just they're written in a type of English that isn't really around, but you could learn so much. You read the fabulous papers. There was this tension. And by the way, by the way, read the anti federalist papers too. They're just as interesting. That kind of gang of three, John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison, who formed our structure and system of government, and a lot of different ways they were debating in the open air against the jeffersonians. And both won, right? And so what they wouldn't really admit is that they took a lot of things to heart from Jefferson's critique of too strong of a centralized government, but basically history vindicated Hamilton. History showed you need some form of a federal government because the Articles of Confederation were a mess. Absolutely. The Articles of Confederation, you had no centralized government. You had nothing. And so there was coups. There were rebellions, no one knew how to trade. There was not the strong system of government, all this sort of stuff. And so to answer your question, should we have a federal is it time to use big government? No, it's not what it is time, though, is to pass laws that do protect the most basic things. So for example, if I'm a big supporter of pro life legislation, all 50 states, if you can't protect those people that can't protect themselves, that you're not even doing the most basic thing that government should do. And I mean, so you have this insanely sick and twisted thing events. Let's take the state of Oregon, okay? So in the state of Oregon, you have a it's an amazing cartoon, right? Of a guy that is sniffing cocaine with a straw. Which one do you think is illegal? The straw. I think the straw is because probably because of all those bogus environmentalists. It's environmentalism over, I don't know, human decency and flourishing. So that's big government gone awry and not even doing a space basic things. All right, I gotta take some more questions. Thank you. Sorry about my misuse awards there. No, you're great, man. Thank you so much. I hope you have a great rest of your day. Thank you. Hey, Charlie. Thank you so much for being here. I'm a student here at FSU and I'm a member of turning point. Awesome. So it's awesome to see here. I've been a fan for years. Love to talk to you today. So my question is more about the future. I know no one can tell the future, including me, but in the next ten to 15 years, I want to have, I want to be married and I want to be starting a family. I'm one of 5 kids to two loving parents, who have been married over 20 years, and I'm a strong believer in raising my own family. So however, like you say, inflation, it's on the rise. It's becoming harder and harder to make and save money. You also talk about how depression is at the high for this generation. And I've noticed that people who are in jobs, they don't tend to like or don't aren't in jobs that they love. They're more likely to have depression or some form of mental health issues. So for me, the careers, some of the crews I'm interested in, don't pay the kind of money that I think it would take to support the kind of family I want. Especially because I want to have a lot of kids because I'm a family worth a lot of kids. So how do you think that I should go about finding a career that I both enjoy and pays the bills so that I can be happy and raised in my family because I think being happy is necessary to emotionally physically and mentally support..

John Jay Alexander Hamilton James Madison Oregon Jefferson Hamilton FSU Charlie depression
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

03:39 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Problem. A 100% correct. God bless you. Thank you. Charlie, you spoke about the economic hardship that a lot of young Americans are facing. What can conservatives do to make a difference on that? How can we modify our national economy to relieve that? Suffering. I mean, that's very real. Yeah, I mean, this is what's so frustrating, right? Is that we're kind of under the tyranny of academics right now. So just a couple of very simple things. We got to get energy independent again. It's very simple. We got a drill baby drill, drill far, drill wide, and tell Greta Thunberg to get the heck out of our national discourse. And stark actually understanding how energy policy impacts every single person in this room, okay? We got to bring down the price of oil. We got to tell OPEC to go shove it. We have to go exporting oil again. You got to get oil beneath $40 a barrel quickly. Now, that impacts everything. Let me just say that lowers the cost of food because you got to transport it. The cost of transportation. The second thing. And these are very agreed upon things. The second thing is we have to go after inflation with a sword. We have got to go through intentional monetary policies that cool the quantitative easing of the last 15 years. You got to follow up. No, I was just going to say, do you think that it's sort of the academic and media elite that put us in this situation to begin with? It was their policies and their philosophy, their propaganda that made it so that our national economy became over financialized and it ate out the real economy. Yeah, I mean, it was a couple of things that happened in the 1990s. We allowed China into the World Trade Organization. We had nafta. We repealed glass Siegel, which never should have happened amongst other things. And then 9 11 happened, we lowered interest rates as soon as Greenspan did that. As soon as we set the precedent that there's any sort of economic misery, any sort of economic hardship, we could just kind of turn the lever on cheap money. It set this 20 year cycle that we're still living through right now with all that other nonsense of the de industrialization of the American economy of the hyper financialization, as you say, led to O 8. And then what was our immediate reaction to O 8? Not it wasn't just financial and fiscal stimulus. It was then monetary stimulus. Is that we're going to lower rates unrealistic. And so then what ends up happening, COVID happens. And our reaction to COVID. Got to go down to record low rates. Well, there is a price of doing a 20 year sugar high. It's unsustainable. And so we've been on a 20 year monetary sugar high, not caring about the next generation, not caring about your purchasing power. Couldn't care less about any of it. And so the result is what we're living through right now, which is you have hyperinflation and almost very dangerously low economic growth in a tumbling stock market. Stock market. Yeah, you're living through crash, basically. Even worse than stagflation. And so if I was head of the Federal Reserve, I mean, the only way to say is that we're going to have to go through an intentional 6 month recession to get this solved. There is no other way to do it because you've created this ridiculous unrealistic circumstance. But Wall Street doesn't like that. Americans don't like that. So basically, here's what's going to happen. My prediction is that we are now going to be told by our elites, we have to get used to 8 to 10% inflation for the next decade. It's the only way to do this. Unless you're willing to tighten the belt, the new normal will be 8 to 10% inflation and you're just going to have to get used to it. That's catastrophic. Of course it is. That's the agenda to reset the currency, allow the globalists into our system, to destroy the American dollar by other means. That's my prediction. You're going to see a labor market collapse in March. Mark my words. You're going to see unemployment go to four or 5%. And then you have a crash stock market, hyperinflation, just in time to try to blame the Republicans. Thank you, Charlie. Thanks..

Greta Thunberg OPEC Charlie World Trade Organization nafta Siegel Greenspan China Federal Reserve Mark
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

04:42 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Good evening, Charlie. My name is Jonathan Ramirez. I happen to be a conservative. I win a three Trump rallies. I'm very serious about my stance on politics and supporting people who voice the same principles that I agree with. Despite me being a conservative, I do happen to be pro choice. How do you feel on the matter and where is the nation we can come together to agree on something sensible? Sure. Well, I'll just ask you, when do you think human life begins? Me personally, when I feel like it begins with the heartbeats, sir. Okay, so then so you would have 6 week ban, is okay then? I am pro choice with exceptions, no one, I don't feel like if a woman is due to have a child next week, that she could choose the abort the child. That's not decency. That's not decent. But why a heartbeat? What's the reason for that? Why a heartbeat? Yeah, so do you think we should not allow abortions right around 6 weeks? However, I feel like 6 weeks is slightly too early only because correct me if I'm wrong, I'm not a gynecologist, but that means that week 6, that meant mister period by three weeks, give or take, and that's already then it's too late, potentially right, but there's a heartbeat around 6 weeks. Correct. So just to play it out, that would be a termination of human life. Correct. Right. So why do we have murder laws then? You ask, why do we have murder laws? Yeah, because that would be murdering a kid, right? If it's a human life by your own estimation. Correct. You stomped me there. I'm not gonna lie, you didn't stop me. I contradict myself where I stand with the matter, that's why I'm asking more or less. That's okay. You are take on it. Yeah, so my take is this. Life begins at conception. And when life is formed in the womb and deoxyribonucleic acid is created a new being comes into formation. And that being is still growing, it's still on its process, but we as human beings tend to have size, level of development, environmental, and degree of dependency privilege. We think just because we're bigger and stronger and no longer in a womb, we have a moral right to do whatever we want to those that are still in the womb. And the toughest questions are the ones when we ask what does it have to do with me and is it worthy of protecting those that can't protect themselves? And so to be consistent, we say that's when human life begins. And just because the being is small, just because the being is in a womb, doesn't mean that we have a moral right to obliterate it. Does that make sense? Yes, it does. I think you're actually pro life. I am, I just think, you know, of personal situations and you know, things that I matter, but let's play that out just for a second. Situational ethics, for example, if a family is going bankrupt because the four year old is eating too much food, you can't kill the four year old to be able to reduce the family budget, right? Correct. If I have the time, I will say, for one reason that I am, I do happen to be pro choice. A lot of people that is pro life feels like it is an extremity for women that is already on the system to continue to have more kids. I hear you. To be given more funds, so with the same notion, I feel like it's like having your cake and eating it too, if you don't want women to be able to have the option at awarding an abortion, but feels like they shouldn't continue to get more welfare. That means that child being born into the world is going to not be brought up to the same measures. I think you're coming at it from a good perspective. I reject kind of situational malthusian ethics in that regard in the sense that if it just makes your life easier, it doesn't mean you can commit an injustice against another human being, the same goes for our sin or robbery or whatever it might be. But I will agree that we have to make it easier to adopt kids in America. There's 2 million families right now on the adoption waiting list and there's a million abortions every single year. So the idea of an unwanted pregnancy is statistically untrue. And I believe that churches and communities and yes, even at times city and state and local governments need to step up and say, okay, we want row repealed, but we have to make sure that families and parents and moms have the support that they need. And I'll say one final thing I think you agree to the cowardly men that in pregnant women and pregnant women and disappear, shame on you and you're a big part of this.

Jonathan Ramirez Charlie America
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

04:00 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Yeah. When we're live streaming, so okay, cool. I know that you and other conservative speakers have spoken at length about left leaning universities and colleges and I agree with you to that point about how toxic can be. My question is, is there any blame to be placed on students who are coming into colleges without any moral ideals without any political ideals? And if there is blame whose fault is it what's causing this and what can we do about it? There's a little blame on students, but you can't totally blame an 18 year old for not having a certain grasp of a moral framework. I mean, I put the blame on the parents for the parents for not teaching morals or ethics or proper civics or history. And also it's not just colleges, high schools now, it's elementary schools. It's grade schools. And so I just say to parents all the time. You have to make it your full-time job to make sure your children shares some form of values of your own. And obviously, there might be some differences in nuances there. But I wouldn't put a lot of blame on the students. A lot of kids are 18. They do what they're told. They really haven't thought that deeply yet. That's not an accusation or criticism. It's just the way it is. I put it more on the educational system and parents not properly doing their job. I agree with you on that. God bless you, man. Thank you. Hi, Charlie. Thank you for coming. I'm a sophomore here at FSU, but I'm from Massachusetts and spent my last years of high school during kind of Massachusetts restrictions on the coronavirus. I watched how incredibly detrimental it was to my community's mental health and I really appreciate what you said about America's response to COVID and everything that came with it. Thank you. Why do you think America is not more focused on those issues as opposed to COVID deaths? Why is the CDC so focused on coronavirus deaths as opposed to being increasing amount of suicides, obesity, alcohol, everything you mentioned? Why do you think that COVID is the focus instead of everything that was detrimental to mental health during that period of time? Yeah, I mean, look, no one gets more powerful talking about suicide. No one does. You've got a lot more powerful talking about an invisible contagion that could be spread at any moment. You got to wear a mask, got to take a vaccine, got a lockdown society, destroy small businesses, Pfizer makes a $100 billion. A lot of people get wealthy and powerful off of that. I hate to be that sinister or cruel. But if our leaders cared about us, if our leaders really cared, they'd be talking about the 90 to a 100,000 fentanyl overdose deaths that happen every single year in our country. Sponsored by the Chinese Communist Party trafficked in by the sin olla cartel across the southern border, of which I bet half of this room knows someone in their life that has suffered from a fentanyl overdose in one way, shape, or form. And they're now doing in form of candy where kids are getting fentanyl laced candy and it's killing kids all across the country. But the CDC is more worried about making sure you have your 7th booster of which they say has now been tested on an 8 mice, not humans. All you guys should know that, by the way, if you get your booster, it's tested on mice, not humans. And they admit that it doesn't even stop transmission. What are we doing here? Well, what happens is we have an entire country that's controlled by a pharma industry that does not care about the well-being or the interests of young people, a young person that the leading cause of death for a young person is either drug overdose or suicide. That should just be a fire alarm for our society. Our leaders should just say time out, what are we doing here? There is a risk in everything. There's a risk you might get the flu tonight. You might get a cold, you might get food poisoning, saying there's no risk is insane. And you know what's so amazing is that we told the generation of students that now lived in total fear that our 8 9 and ten years old that, you know, there might be an invisible virus around the corner that might kill you. Even though statistically, that they're in more danger in the car being a passenger to and from school every single day than COVID ever was for them. And so look, a fearful population is easier to control a fearful population allows tyrants to be able to do that what they wish with a population. A population that cares about liberty and his courageous is a tyrant's worst nightmare. God bless you. Thank you so much. Thank you..

Massachusetts CDC Chinese Communist Party FSU America Charlie obesity Pfizer pharma flu
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

04:49 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Hello. Given the concerns you've expressed about censorship and interference with free speech, I wonder how you view the laws in Florida and other states that restrict what professors can teach about racism in the classroom. I mean, obviously you disagree with the doctrines you teach, but why would you extend to them the same right to free speech that you advocate for everybody else? No, I mean, it's a matter of curriculum, right? So I would ask a question. Should we teach the flat earth theory? In physics. Right? Should we, should we teach bloodletting in biology? Should we teach lobotomies in medical school? Or should we teach eugenics and ethics? No, there's some ideas that are so reprehensible, and provably wrong. They shouldn't be in anywhere close to an academic environment. Now, professor obviously has the freedom of speech to say what he or she wants individually, but from a curriculum standpoint from what you're able to measure or test, to say that all of a sudden we're going to teach that race matters that somehow that people are suffering from a pandemic of whiteness as Coca-Cola would say or just critical theory or critical race theory. No, that has no place in an educational environment because in an educational environment, it's less about really the opinion of the teacher or the opinion of the student, it's the pursuit of the soul and the entire being of the student towards truth, goodness and beauty. And so you must have, you must have a teleological destination for that. Yes, a follow-up. Just one thought, which is, so you would say that the idea that there's systemic racism in this country is as off base as the idea that the earth is flat and is provably wrong as the idea that the earth is flat? Yes. I mean, I would ask you, how are we systemically racist? Well, I mean, we could have a long discussion, but I'm a journalist. I don't think it's a place for it, but possibly if you attended a class on it, you might get a debate with the professor and see what their data shows. And whether it's a matter of scholarly dispute, I mean, there's a lot of books on both sides or whether it's I'm not aware of a lot of scholarly well accepted books that advocate that the earth is flat. So I would say this is a matter of scholarly debate. Why are we thank you very much. Thank you. And yeah, just to close it, yes, I think advocating for black only dormitories is a moral equivalent of bloodletting lobotomies and flatter theory. I think it's evil it's wrong and has no place in American education. Hi. Thanks for coming out. We really appreciate it. Both of my grandparents went to the hospital with COVID a year ago last May. And they were doing fine like getting better with everything of whatever they were both getting better. They were both feeling better expressed to my family. They were feeling better. Until they were put on Remdesivir, which was supported by Tony Fauci, and then they both died. I also had a friend last night who passed away from the vaccine due to heart failure. He's 19 years old. Is there anything that anyone is doing your team or anyone that you know to bring Tony Fauci to justice? Yeah, that's a really good question. So I mean, I hope and thank you for the journalist that's there. And by the way, I correct myself Galileo did not pause that the earth was out flat. He posited the heliocentric theory of the earth and so I was mistaken by saying that. But let me just ask you a question for everyone here in the room. How many of you know someone that had a very serious reaction to the vaccine to the point of irreversible health damage? Raise your hand? Okay, so about half the hands are up. If this is true and this happens everywhere I go to every single audience, then the CDC is not just lying. It's the greatest cover up in modern American medical history. Because they say it's one in a million. And every single room I go to, hands go up. So either everyone's lying on their end on its mass conspiracy theory or there's something here that people really are ignoring intentionally. So look, Anthony Fauci should be in prison for what he has done. He's a liar. He's an unbelievably sinister person, and there's not enough being done. And the new Congress, whoever ends up controlling it, priority number one needs to make sure Anthony Fauci gets held to justice. And I'm very sorry to hear about the Remdesivir encounters. The pushing of Remdesivir is nothing more than expensive poison on an entire population that did not need it. Meanwhile, any conversation around Ivermectin hydroxychloroquine, vitamin D levels, intravenous therapy, potential ozone intervention, baby aspirin was suppressed from the top levels of our medical authorities. And so I'm going to make it a top priority to try to hold Anthony Fauci accountable. And I encourage all of you to do the same. Thank you. Hey, mister Kirk, my name is Sam dove permission to record your answer..

Tony Fauci COVID Coca Cola Florida Anthony Fauci heart failure Galileo CDC Congress mister Kirk Sam dove
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

03:50 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"My name is Martin walker. I'm the vice president of the chapter at TCC. Awesome. From my understanding you wrote a book, you had mentioned that college was not for everyone. Yes. And getting a degree for me, it's not the end of the world. I just want to be successful. I just want to me personally, I want to get more politically active or involved in politics. How would someone like myself go about doing that? Great question. So degree in politics means next to nothing. If you want to get into politics, no one's going to care about where we went to school. Politics is the closest thing to a pure meritocracy of any industry you'll ever see. It's are you going to show up early at precinct committee meetings? Are you going to make the phone calls? Are you going to drive halfway across the state for an event with 15 people? Are you going to be a body man to a state rep and kind of help them out really when they need it? And so basically, if you want to make it in politics, you have to do the Gritty hustle work for years and eventually you'll get a shot to move up. And absolutely. I can make the effort. Then you're going to succeed in politics. I mean, so at turning point USA, we have an amazing staff 250 people and our turning point USA staff is a majority of them started as turning point USA chapter leaders doing the nitty Gritty work and then got internships and then started the work their way up through the ranks. And so it's we love people that dedicate themselves and work really hard and kind of in the political space. You know, it's a place where you could be really significantly rewarded by doing that. Absolutely. Thank you. God bless you, man. Thank you. Good evening, mister Kirk. My question is not for myself, but it's from my brother actually. He's a huge fan. So first question. Sure. I've gotten permission to record your response. So if it's okay with you, I'll read his question to you and then I'll start recording and then if you could say like, I don't know, high Brendan or something that would be pretty cool. It's his name Brandon or Brendan. Brendan, Brendan oh, I was gonna say so close. You can say let's go Brendan. He liked that too. Let's go Brendan. Okay, good. All right, so here's this question. Who would you like to see in office for president in 2024? Is it Trump or desantis? Who would it be and why? And if not either of them, who would you like to see in office? I've gotten this, I've received this question at every tour stop. And so I do encourage people to watch it but I'll give you the same answer I've given everywhere and hi Brendan, how are you? Good. Let's go Brendan. So look, I've said this personally speaking personally, not on behalf of turning point USA or 20 point action. I've said this. If Trump runs again, I'm going to back him again. I'm a loyal guy. I can't stand in politics where people say one thing and do another or they're all of a sudden very wishy washy with all that being said. With that, with that kind of pretext, I'm a massive governor desantis fan. I think he's amazing. I think he's done such a great job for the state of Florida. Governor desantis very well might be a once in a generation leader that we're looking for. I have looked far and wide for a reason not to like governor desantis, and he has been incredible. Now I'll close with this on this question. I think governor desantis would make a phenomenal president. I know Trump made a great president. And so I know that getting him another four years would make us energy independent again, would get this entire Ukrainian mess figured out would get our economy roaring again with secure the southern border would restore confidence of the nation in a way that's very profound would get CRT out of our military wokeism out of our schools. That's enough for me to be able to say, hey, you earned the rights to another four years, especially after all the nonsense in the shenanigans that happened in the 2020 election. Thank you, Brendan. Thank you, man. Thank you, mister Kirk. Have a good one. Hi..

Brendan Martin walker mister Kirk TCC USA desantis Trump governor desantis Governor desantis Brandon Florida
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:26 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"I'm not sure how up to date you are with what's been going on with Kanye West and his interview with Tucker Carlson. Very hard to keep up with it. His interview with Tucker Carlson and Cuomo and the podcast, but I was wondering, what are your thoughts on what? He had to say about the media and politics in general and specific on what are your thoughts on him and Candace Owens in the white lives matter t-shirts. Also, do you believe that or do you believe that Donald Trump was a good president why or why not? Okay, that's a lot of questions. Let me start with the easiest I wrote a whole book saying Trump was a good president. So yes, definitely believed that. And he was a great president, economically, American strength, energy independent, all that sort of stuff. So I wrote a whole book on that. So I will answer the most controversial part of the question intentionally because it's important that people are honest. So I don't love the way what Kanye said, but I do not think that Kanye is an anti semite, because I'm a behaviorist. And I have never seen Kanye ever treat someone who is Jewish without respect or honor or decency. That's a very important thing, which is, okay, should he have said what he said? That's debatable and questionable. However, the outrage from people to cancel him and throw him out the window. I asked the question is, how is he treated people that are Jewish and across the board? He's treated them very well. Such says a lot before you start all of a sudden going to the rafters and saying he's the worst person ever because of what he said. And I think it could obviously have been worded differently. I had the opportunity to spend some time with him. Over a summer. And that was a whole whirlwind of time that was back in 2018 or 19. And I found him to be an incredibly decent and loving father. And so I think a lot of these characters slanders and smears against him are wrong and awful and from people that I've never met him. So that was kind of the first answer to that. The second thing is he's undoubtedly one of the most talented artists of a generation. His communication style is not for everyone. He says things that people don't like. Okay, that happens a lot in life, stop taking yourself so seriously instead of understand this is someone who's worth multiple billions of dollars that is now speaking out against a couple things. What he calls a genocide in the black community, which is regular abortion, that's a very serious thing he's speaking out against. And he's also talking about liberating this idea that you must believe a certain thing because your skin color.

Candace Owens Kanye Ben Shapiro Ari daljin Charlie Kirk Trump Rashida Tlaib Florida state university Elon Omar Michael Knowles Tallahassee Gainesville university of Florida Charlie Matt Walsh Florida Elizabeth Warren Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton Ben
Why Charlie Doesn't Think Kanye West Is a True Anti-Semite

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:26 min | 5 months ago

Why Charlie Doesn't Think Kanye West Is a True Anti-Semite

"I'm not sure how up to date you are with what's been going on with Kanye West and his interview with Tucker Carlson. Very hard to keep up with it. His interview with Tucker Carlson and Cuomo and the podcast, but I was wondering, what are your thoughts on what? He had to say about the media and politics in general and specific on what are your thoughts on him and Candace Owens in the white lives matter t-shirts. Also, do you believe that or do you believe that Donald Trump was a good president why or why not? Okay, that's a lot of questions. Let me start with the easiest I wrote a whole book saying Trump was a good president. So yes, definitely believed that. And he was a great president, economically, American strength, energy independent, all that sort of stuff. So I wrote a whole book on that. So I will answer the most controversial part of the question intentionally because it's important that people are honest. So I don't love the way what Kanye said, but I do not think that Kanye is an anti semite, because I'm a behaviorist. And I have never seen Kanye ever treat someone who is Jewish without respect or honor or decency. That's a very important thing, which is, okay, should he have said what he said? That's debatable and questionable. However, the outrage from people to cancel him and throw him out the window. I asked the question is, how is he treated people that are Jewish and across the board? He's treated them very well. Such says a lot before you start all of a sudden going to the rafters and saying he's the worst person ever because of what he said. And I think it could obviously have been worded differently. I had the opportunity to spend some time with him. Over a summer. And that was a whole whirlwind of time that was back in 2018 or 19. And I found him to be an incredibly decent and loving father. And so I think a lot of these characters slanders and smears against him are wrong and awful and from people that I've never met him. So that was kind of the first answer to that. The second thing is he's undoubtedly one of the most talented artists of a generation. His communication style is not for everyone. He says things that people don't like. Okay, that happens a lot in life, stop taking yourself so seriously instead of understand this is someone who's worth multiple billions of dollars that is now speaking out against a couple things. What he calls a genocide in the black community, which is regular abortion, that's a very serious thing he's speaking out against. And he's also talking about liberating this idea that you must believe a certain thing because your skin color.

Tucker Carlson Kanye Candace Owens Cuomo Kanye West Donald Trump
Charlie's Advice for a Long, Happy Marriage

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:42 min | 5 months ago

Charlie's Advice for a Long, Happy Marriage

"Never had a good role model in terms of marriage with my parents. So I was wondering, what would your best advice be for having a long, happy marriage? So married a year and a half, so I don't know about long or happy. I don't know about happy. I don't know about long. So don't know about long. So, but we're working on the length. So look, I mean, it's not about you. That's the most important thing that you'll learn really quick. It's about service. It's about commitment to the other. And this is the thing I always laugh about when people say men and women the same. When you're married for like an afternoon, you realize men and women are very much not the same, right? And so, I mean, a great example is when a man comes home from work, there could have been a nuclear explosion at work. How is work? It was fine. It was good. Where the wife just will talk about every single detail that it's just the nature, right? It's completely different. And then Dennis prager has a really great speech on this that drives the left crazy, which is that men, men's nature is towards variety, okay? And I think it's very important for wives to just say to their husbands, thank you for being loyal to me. It's a very important thing. A lot of men don't hear that enough, and it drives some women like I don't want to have to say that. It's like, just study a little bit about men's nature and understand how men are kind of programmed towards variety. It's a very important thing. The final thing is just carve time for one another. And I mean, I'm a big believer in the ten commandments. I believe the Sabbath is one of the great gifts from God to be able to preserve the family. I think the Sabbath properly understood is the preservation of the family. And so I turned my phone off every Friday night, turned it back on Sunday morning. I'm unreachable, unreachable by the world. And you can just you just have to focus on another person.

Dennis Prager
Why Do Leftists Push Anti-Science Ideas in Our Schools?

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:23 min | 5 months ago

Why Do Leftists Push Anti-Science Ideas in Our Schools?

"Do you think that leftists and liberals and people on the left side or why they push anti science ideas in our school systems like they push the ideas where it's like a man can be a woman, a woman can be a man. There is no difference between genders and why parents accept that, and then one last question, what do you think we should do with public school system? Should we try to change them? Should we take kids out of the public school system homeschooling? Because I'm a home schooler. I'm wondering what you thought. Yeah, great, great. So why do parents put up with it? That's a mystery to me. I think that's changing, though. I think parents are starting to push back. I think there is kind of a default setting of being polite and a lot of these communities and parents don't want to come across as being impolite. So why do they teach things that are contrary to science? That's a really important and good question. They would disagree with how you just categorized it, even though it is science in and of itself. But they also have a different view of what science is. I gave a whole speech on this in Kansas City that I encourage you to check out, which is science properly understood, should be about the preservation of human life and the advancement in the flourishing of human life. Science, I would say improperly applied is about exerting your own will and dominion over nature to show supremacy over the design or let's just say the state of what nature is. I'll give you an example, right? So two forms of medical technology that could be used by the same person for two complete and total differences, okay? An abortion and a C section. One gives life and protects life and one destroys life. They're both instruments of science because if you look at a test tube, you're not going to find morality in a test tube. So you have to bring some form of morality into science, right? This is one of the great lies, I think, a secular. So they say, oh, you can find morality in science. Now at some point you have to have some sort of a construct and a framework, right? These are tools that you use, right? And so with that kind of advancement of technology, praise God, we have C sections in America, right? It's the most commonly performed surgery in America that has saved millions of pregnancies and babies that otherwise we don't know what have happened, but then you have abortion very similar procedure in the way a trained technician has to do that, but a completely different result. And so the question really needs to be what is science, what is the point of science? I believe science should be first and foremost an inquiry into the natural world, understanding it. And if we have to intervene if we have to create something new, it has to be under the moral framework of allowing human beings to flourish and to succeed.

Kansas City America
When Will Trickle-Down Economics Trickle Down for You?

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:07 min | 5 months ago

When Will Trickle-Down Economics Trickle Down for You?

"Mister Kirk. I mean, okay, I voted Trump in the 2020 election, but oh, good. You're not that liberal. Okay, but things changed my mind. But anyways, I'm young, obviously. And I was wondering about trickle down economics. I was wondering, when is it going to trickle down for me because historically I've never personally seen it like, for example, this trust got she resigned over the dumb tax things, Georgia Bush said it was voodoo economics. So my question to you is, would trickle down? I mean, or when is it going to trickle down? Yeah, I'm not a defender necessarily a tricker down economics. I mean, I think in some ways, if you want to talk about supply side versus demand, here's the thing. I happen to be, I used to be a really economic libertarian and then I grew up and you start to see that you actually need some checks and balances and externalities in the market. I am a big defender of the market though, generally. So how should we approach economics, I suppose that's a question, right? And so here's how I answer that, which is that an economy should serve people. People should not serve the economy. Okay, I think you and I could both agree with that. And so I will defend them. The idea of giving tax cuts to businesses. That's a very good idea. Because businesses are run by people and businesses employ people. Now should you only give them to big businesses? No, I think that's silly. But the vast majority of businesses in America are small businesses run by entrepreneurs. And so for example, my entire economic viewpoint is to make you more empowered and easier for you to be able to start a business and grow a business from something to nothing. So you can call it whatever you want. You can call it free market economics, entrepreneurship focused economics, whatever it is. But I think you and I could find some common ground on some things. For example, I think it's wrong and it's stupid and it's silly that the largest corporations in America don't pay anything in income tax, whether it be Amazon or ExxonMobil. It's not fair, it's not right. And I think a lot of these loopholes are designed to be able to favor the corporate lobbyists in Washington, D.C., while everyday people get completely and totally crushed. And I'm

Mister Kirk Georgia Bush America Exxonmobil Amazon Washington, D.C.
Charlie's Advice for TPUSA Chapter Presidents

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:05 min | 5 months ago

Charlie's Advice for TPUSA Chapter Presidents

"President of the new turning point USA chapter at Tallahassee community college. Awesome. And. We've been struggling recently to get some recognition by the faculty and the leadership of the school, obviously. Kind of an uncooperative administrative body you could say. So I was just wondering if you had any tips for helping us gain the trust of those teachers and school leaders who could potentially help us launch our student group. While still keeping to our conservative America first values. That's awesome. Well, first of all, thank you for your commitment and your leadership. You should be applauded for that. That's awesome. And look, it's going to take grit and hustle. You got to find faculty sponsor, not easy, right? I'm sure there's one. And if you can't find one at least try to find one person that you might disagree with, that still believes in freedom of speech that like, hey, you at least believe that something that you might not agree with has a right to exist on campus. But honestly, this is all a very good exercise for you. And I just want to encourage you personally. The difficulty, the opposition, navigating a community that might not agree with everything that you hold is going to make you a tougher more resilient person throughout your entire life. Just having everything easy when you are young, creates a lot of misery. It does. And I have a whole theory about this, which is that young people are the most comfortable generation in history, which is why they're the most depressed generation in history. There's a great book called comfort crisis. You guys should check it out by Michael Easter, which makes this argument that we as a human species were not designed to just be able to sit around all day and have three meals and perfectly air conditioned to climate controlled situations. Over a period of time, it actually creates a lot of anxiety and depression. And so opposition is a good thing. I would consider that to be a blessing. At the same time, we're happy to give you resources and help in any way possible. And I'm positive, you'll be able to find hopefully a sponsor of two throughout it. But look at it as a blessing. Look at it as almost a metaphorical muscle building opportunity. So that later in life, you will have gone through, you know, being called nasty names, not being in the majority, and eventually you'll be stronger because of that.

Tallahassee Community College America Michael Easter Depression
It Wasn't Covid That Hurt Young People, It Was Our Reaction to It

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:40 min | 5 months ago

It Wasn't Covid That Hurt Young People, It Was Our Reaction to It

"That COVID did all these things. And even I'm a little sloppy in my language at times because I'm so used to saying it the way the regime says it, but it really was not COVID that hurt young people. It was our reaction to it. And every single metric from weight gain to suicide, to psychiatric drug medication, to alcohol, all went in the negative direction. During these lockdowns and for what? It will go down as one of the worst mistakes ever made in decent society and in our civilization. All around kind of this prevailing dogma of mass propaganda and a fear. And now you have a generation that now, let's just pretend everything was fine health wise, despite the fact that all of these things went up anxiety, depression, mental health issues, all those things went up. Let's just talk economically, our response to this. And this is where, you know, I'm trying to warn conservatives that if we don't get actually a coherent message around these sorts of topics and these issues, the socialists are going to have quite a field day with the next generation because when people don't own anything, they make for perfect socialists. And everything is twice as expensive minimum. And every major metropolitan area over the last two and a half years. And we did that. Both parties did that. Conservatives and liberals decided to go print a bunch of money. We did not have to inject it into mass stimulus packages. Obviously, the current administration did it more than the prior one, but there is no doubt that it was a bipartisan agreement to go continue to inflate the currency and to basically create what is record inflation where many of you in this room probably have a fair amount of economic cynicism where you say, where exactly is this American Dream that was promised to me?

Depression
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

06:47 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"And you got to wonder, like, okay, so you guys are ones that are spreading misinformation. And here's the best way you respond to misinformation is just we're not going to shut you up and you don't shut us up and then we're able to disagree and we're able to have dialog because you guys are going to spread all this nonsense, but that's not what's happening here. What's happening is they label anyone on the American right that might have a difference of opinion. All of a sudden they say, we are now going to be able to use force and power to be able to stop your ability to speak. And so speech and we take it for granted and it's quickly disappearing in our country because there's two forms of censorship and we'll talk about both of them tonight, one that happens internally and one has internally what happens in externally is the speech is the best way to be able to find out what is true and how you react to certain crises or things happening in your country or civilization. If you are not able to consume information that is accurate for not even say information that's accurate as you see things happening in real time, you're living in some form of a tyranny. Period. And it's really interesting because the big censorship in this country is not just coming from the government. That's obviously happening with, you know, the kind of intimidation of people on the right from raiding Mar-a-Lago to rating pro life leaders across the country. The unprecedented weaponization of our government. But it's also happening where people say Charlie, if I spoke out the way you do, I would lose my job. I get kicked out of class. I would get graded differently. I'm going to have a career. The biggest form of censorship in this country is you shutting up you. And it's people that say, I'm afraid to wear a maga hat to go to a grocery store. I'm sure we have some mega hat here. God bless you, someone that has the courage to do that. Always somebody, that right front row, there you go. And there's always somebody. And but most people, they do it in quiet. And the question should be why. I mean, you could see kind of the apparatus outside. They obviously are unashamed to spew their venom. And that's what they have a right to do that. They have a right to say whatever they want to say. And that's fine. But here's the thing is that I'm confident you should be confident if you love liberty and freedom. We're going to beat those people. I mean, just look at them. Obviously, we're going to beat them. And but all we need is an opportunity to speak. They know that if there's actually a marketplace of ideas and you're allowed to have ideas spread and people be persuaded, then that's a massive threat to the current status quo that they're trying to usher in. And you go through topic after topic after topic after topic. And so I always find it chuckling when people kind of zero in on that misinformation thing. And that's not to say that people get things wrong. I do my best to try to correct things. You might get facts and figures that are off, and you should do your best to kind of also that wasn't right. Or that should be focused on more. But no, you have entire narratives where there is a posture and an intent around things that are completely and totally fabricated. I'll give you another example. So a public opinion poll, they asked just a thousand adults in America. How many blacks do you think are killed by whites every single year? Or how many unarmed blacks do you think are killed by whites every single year? And the responses were like a thousand 1500. That's about the average of what people thought. When in reality, the amount of unarmed blacks killed by police officers or killed by white people, something like 40 people a year, or if you just count police, it's about 18 people here. How is it that you have people that believe it's 1200 or 1500 when in reality it's in the teens or the early 20s? It's because, well, the media is very, very good at making you believe that there's a problem that actually doesn't exist a much larger than it really is. It's this massive propaganda campaign that happens. Another great example is this is that this is the media fear mongering propaganda campaign is that during the height of COVID, asked American adults by political affiliation. What's the chances you think you're going to be hospitalized if you get the Fauci virus or the Chinese coronavirus? What is the likelihood? And registered Democrats or registered people, people on the left would say that there is a 50% chance that I will be hospitalized if I get COVID. In reality, it's one to 5%, depending on age. How is it that people would believe so firmly, a 50% chance that you'd be hospitalized? It's because the misinformation artist, the center of the misinformation, hub themselves, is they're designed to keep you fearful and ignorant and not understanding what's actually happening in the country. And I'm sure there's some people on the left here tonight. I'm glad you guys came. And but we'll have dialog and we'll have discussion hopefully and see where we agree and disagree. But it's very tempting to want to use power that you have to shut up people you don't like because you think they're super evil. Like, oh, there's never been anything like these right wingers right now. We have to shut them up and then, okay, over a period of time, let's say you shut every single conservative up. Do you think that all of a sudden the sensors are just going to stop until they shut up you until there's no disagreement on the left? I'll give you a great example. Tulsi Gabbard. Tulsi Gabbard, you might like her, you might not like her. You might agree or disagree. Where is there space in the American left right now for Tulsi Gabbard's opinion on foreign policy or wokeism? Doesn't exist. She's not allowed to even express those opinions anymore. She says it herself. She said there is no space for a classical liberal on the American left to be able to say that what we're doing in Ukraine is not exactly smart. We need to ask more analytical and let's say deeper questions. And I think that it's really dumb to tell kids that men can become pregnant. Like, really basic stuff, right? That doesn't exist. And we learned this from the Russian Revolution and from kind of Bolshevik, is that as soon as you use the power of censorship, it knows no limitations whatsoever. So it's tempting. Like, yeah, we got to shut those guys up. We have to be able to say that those people can't speak. Like, okay, and eventually it will come for you. And eventually, here's the thing, speech is inherently messy. You get all sorts of people that are characters that you might not like, things that opinions that you might find reprehensible. But through a pattern of allowing people to speak, even with those things, is eventually over a period of time, the American people have to come to some approximation of what is best for them. That is always been the track record. The worst thing you could possibly do is then use the government and then private actors. And that's the other thing that I find so funny is that one of the accusations that what is this, the students for a democratic society, SDS says about turning point USNS. They call us fascist, which is just hilarious. They don't really know what fascism is. But like, okay, what is a fascist? A fascist is someone that tries to use government force to collude with private interests for a very specific purpose. How is that not the American government going to Facebook and asking them the sensor political opponents? How is that not an act of some sort of technocratic fascism of saying we're going to go to Google and say that you must say that if you say certain perspectives or opinions you're not allowed to have them. And so kind of putting all this together, I find it very comical and interesting every time people accuse us of misinformation. Not to say we get everything right. It's not to say that every opinion we have is popular, but the most prevailing narratives of the day are not rooted in truth unfortunately by the big propagandists..

Tulsi Gabbard Charlie America Ukraine SDS American government Facebook Google
"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

06:30 min | 5 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Hey everybody, my campus stop at Florida state university. My comments and then we take questions from students, no commercials in this episode brought to you by turning point USA, TP USA dot com and get involved with turning point USA, sort of high school chapter sort of college chapter today, very important and support our program. A Charlie Kirk dot com slash support. Buckle up everybody here. We go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running The White House folks. I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job, building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, turning point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Thank you guys. I understand we have some friends outside as well. It's too bad. Maybe they're in the room or maybe they'll be here later. Who knows? Nothing that we haven't seen before. The last actually, last time I was at Florida state university, was anyone at that speech a couple of years ago, maybe a freshman or two, yeah? That was the last speech I gave before all the lockdowns, actually. And that was a lot of fun. I remember, we actually got a question at that event. Someone said, hey, Charlie, what do you think about this COVID thing? And it turns out it just changed our entire society. Well, let me rephrase that. The way we reacted to it changed our entire society, which was one of the worst mistakes I think we've ever made as a country and as a civilization. So we'll talk about that. But I do want to address one of these flyers that they have Kirk off campus, which is just hilarious. I've actually never heard that one before. But there's one part of it that I do want to focus on, where it says Florida state university continues to platform far right influencers like Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro, love Ben does a great job. These people invade our communities. That's what we're doing tonight. We're invading. Is that right? Spread their misinformation and oftentimes get funding from the university to do it. This must change. Join us in protesting. Okay, but I want to talk about the misinformation thing. Is that such an interesting thing? Because you're starting to hear that more and more in our society right now, which is that people on the right are somehow purveyors of misinformation. And everything we do is rooted in facts and what's can be proven. And it's not misinformation that they're worried about or facts. It's facts they don't like. It's facts that they want to make sure that students don't hear or opinions that are actually not going to be able to be presented. But while we're on the topic of misinformation, shouldn't we talk about actually who's been spreading the most misinformation over the last couple of years. And I was thinking about some of the biggest stories that have dominated the American news cycle. You remember for quite some time during the 2020 presidential election, there was, again, here's just a good rule for life like exhibit a of why not to do crack cocaine. It makes you do really dumb things. Like, I don't know, drop off your laptop at a laptop repair shop and forget to pick it up. And by the way, who you slap top repair shops anymore, the whole thing is so bizarre. So hunter drops off his laptop repair, his laptop and a laptop repair shop. Forgets to go pick it up. And then somehow it expires over a certain window and the property becomes the computer repair shop, his laptop, and then he then gives it to Rudy Giuliani and all of a sudden there's this laptop out there. And almost instantaneously, the media picked up a story that was complete and total disinformation. And misinformation, which was that 50 Intel experts came out and they said, this story is Russian disinformation. Remember, this right in the midst of an election. And you might love Biden. You might hate Biden. You might say, I hate Trump. I love Trump, whatever. But that's cheating. You're not allowed to do that. You're not allowed to all of a sudden come out using the media, social media, and Intel agencies and say this is Russian disinformation because of the story that you're afraid might actually impact the election results. And so who got held accountable for spreading that misinformation or disinformation? Nobody? They just kind of shrugged their shoulders. In fact, Mark Zuckerberg just recently came out in an interview with Joe Rogan and Joe Rogan is awesome. He's one of the last, I think legitimate free speech liberals. I don't even know if he's a liberal libertarian. What do you want to call him? He's entertaining and smart and fun. And actually, here's other ideas, which is refreshing where Mark Zuckerberg went on Rogan's show and basically said, yeah, the FBI made a special visit to Facebook headquarters and told us that we have to clamp down on this story. And so if you tried to share the Hunter Biden laptop story in the midst of the election season, which by the way, contained, let's just say some rather juicy and salacious details about not just hunters personal conduct, but the soon to be potential president of the United States doing business deals with our adversaries. And if you even talked about it on Twitter, you had your Twitter account suspended. For spreading disinformation and misinformation. So you got to wonder, who's actually the ones that are spreading the misinformation in our country. Remember this story where they said that the virus came from a bat in the Himalayan mountains. Remember that? They said, oh yeah, it's just kind of came from came from a random wet market is what they said. Well, now we know that it was from the Wuhan institute of virology. In fact, early in the pandemic and our reaction to the pandemic, if you dared even say that it came from the Wuhan institute of virology, then you could have lost your social media account and then you could be labeled as a disinformation artist. I see a pattern. We're going to keep on going to this list. That sometimes when they go the hardest after disinformation, it actually tends to be one of the most truthful things that actually ends up needing to be discussed and to be to be spread and heard about. Another one that I think is really interesting and important was during the summer of 2020, during Floyd of palooza when we decided to destroy our entire country around a lie that America systemically racist, which, of course, were not were the least racist country, ever to exist in the history of the world, were very decent country. We don't give ourselves credit for that, is the mostly peaceful protest. And my favorite picture was CNN that was doing their news hit while the Wendy's behind them was burning. Like, yeah, it's mostly peaceful out there. Things are fine. And you strap like that through public opinion polls and what people actually thought, and it was this amazing kind of contradiction where the media was telling us everything was peaceful. It was fine, or they said, oh yeah, protesting needs to be disagreeable. Who says it needs to be peaceful when it actually became very clear that entire cities were burning down. And I can go through story after story from how they mislabeled Kyle rittenhouse, the Nicholas Sandman, to how they told us that the vaccines were going to prevent transmission, and that it was a 100% safe and effective..

Charlie Kirk Florida state university America Charlie Ben Shapiro Joe Rogan Wuhan institute of virology Biden Mark Zuckerberg Intel White House Kirk Hunter Biden Rudy Giuliani Ben Trump hunter Rogan Twitter Himalayan mountains
"florida state university" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

04:28 min | 7 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

"Amanda for that wonderful introduction as usual. And side note, I'm taking miss Amanda, my wife and I had taken her up to Tallahassee, Florida tomorrow. And she will start her, college, college days, college time, college career at Florida state university. Her brother just graduated from there and she's on her way. So exciting times exciting times. So welcome to the podcast. Like I said, you know the name, so I'm not gonna say it. Let's watch it on Twitch, which we're streaming live right now, of a Facebook Twitch, Twitter, and D live. I stumbled upon this streaming service, it's for gamers and podcasts. It's kind of like Twitch. I figured, you know, just put it out there, put the podcast out there, see what sticks, right? So, yeah, that's what we're doing. And this is who we are and let me bring on my first co host of the night. The walking music encyclopedia so when referred to him as, look like you have a music relish. Now I'm nervous. See, I put it right on you. Right on the spot. All right. Bring it on, bring it on. You got big shoes tonight, buddy. Big shoes. Mock pulled off a two and a half hour podcast with me last week. So he said, you don't need one to fill his shoes. You need two. So let me bring on toss Malone. From the goalpost a podcast. Hey, hi, guys. What's up, Tony boy? Doing pretty good. Pretty good. Little tired tonight. So if I'm not my usual jocular self, you'll give me a pass, I'm a little bit tired. Turbo. Turbo extra turbo. Iced coffee. Yeah. Oh, really? Drink coffee? You drink coffee this time at night? No. Normally? But earlier, I was like, ah, fuck. You know what I'm kind of feel that drag coming and I don't like coming into this with that. So I go. It's either that or through a line of Coke. And there was no Coke available, so yeah, right. There was a lot of Coke in the green room. And we're just at it. I'm up there. So much. So my assistant hooked you up, okay. Hey, Scott, can I ask before you get started? Because I've always wondered about this. Your intro music. You know where that's from? That music that you have playing at the end. I made it. Did you really? Yeah. I made

Amanda Florida state university Tallahassee Florida Twitter Facebook Coke Malone buddy Tony Scott
"florida state university" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

01:54 min | 9 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"I mean it from the bottom of my heart it is just a beautiful state if you have any trouble believing the existence of the almighty go to Wyoming for a sunset or a sunrise and it will disabuse you of that silly notion right away But you have a lot of people moving into Wyoming I'm trying to turn a very red state maybe a little less red or maybe even a little purple You know it's great to have people want to come to your state but do you find that that local pressure you know down here in Florida we thankfully have a lot of conservatives moving in which is turning Florida redder but are you finding that Wyoming that's becoming a bit of an issue people taking their liberal values over to this conservative state I think for a period of time we did and first of all thank you for talking about my state that way That's exactly how I feel about it I am born and raised here fourth generation my great grandfather came here on a cattle trail in 1878 from Texas So I've got a deep deep roots in Wyoming and I love my state What I am finding is that we are getting locked down refugees So I believe more conservatives are moving into this state For a period of time I think we were getting liberals but over the last two years we're getting an influx of folks from Oregon Washington and California because they are truly escaping the madness from there And so I as I have been campaigning and I'm now at almost 29,000 miles in Wyoming since I since I started this driving around the state I have met a lot of people who are moving here because of our conservative values And I welcome them all with open arms We want people to come to Wyoming but we want them to understand our culture our history who and what we are We don't want to change that We are all for innovation We're all for those kinds of things but our conservative values are what has made Wyoming what it is So we welcome people with open arms if they want to come here and be a part of this great state

Mickey D Jim McNulty Sanjay Gupta Florida state university bush
"florida state university" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

01:34 min | 9 months ago

"florida state university" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"Speed cameras, news is next, but first the weather channel forecast. I need to check on the neighbors today, especially the elderly neighbors. It is hot, sunshine, low to mid 90s, clear tonight mid 60s to the low 70s. Mid whopper 90s with sunshine tomorrow, heating exercise one O one, and then sunshine for Wednesday, close to the 90, and we'll stay in the low 80s by the Lake. From the weather channel I'm jaffin O WLS in 8 90 with another update in 30 minutes. 85 at O'Hare 87 midway 85, a better life with doctor Sanjay Gupta. Not only is fighting with someone you love, okay, it can actually be healthy for your relationship, but you have to fight fair. Jim McNulty is a psychology professor at Florida state university who has studied relationships for years. One of the most important things we've seen in our research, he said, is that people benefit most from being direct, beating around the bush, implying things insinuating things being sarcastic, that doesn't work. So how do you do it? Start by picking a good time to fight. Don't wait to say what's bothering you until you just can't take it anymore. And don't dive in when you're tired or stressed or hangry. If that's when something comes up, hit the pause button if you can. Analyze your own feelings and do your best to express them without using the words you never or always. Lastly, it's not just about what you say. You do have to be a good listener. I'm doctor Sanjay Gupta, helping you live a better life. Ed Chicago alderman could vote tomorrow to raise the minimum speed you need to be going to get a ticket from one of the city's speed cameras right now. You can get a ticket for going at least 6

the weather channel Jim McNulty Sanjay Gupta Florida state university bush Ed Chicago
"florida state university" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:37 min | 1 year ago

"florida state university" Discussed on WTOP

"Districting Her children map drawn lie dead Deliberately targeting civilians or firing into them with a total disregard for human life The incident enrage Ukrainian president volodymyr zelensky we will not forgive He said we will not forget Zelensky has vowed to stay in the country until the war ends Meantime The White House has exploring options on a possible ban on Russian oil imports President Biden held a video call with the leaders of France Germany and the UK but White House press secretary Jen Psaki says there's no firm decision yet What the president is most focused on is ensuring we are continuing to take steps to deliver punishing economic consequences on Putin While taking all action necessary to limit the impact to prices at the gas pump the nationwide average now four O 6 a gallon New research shows many Americans may have been exposed to harmful lead levels as kids The paper published by duke and Florida state university scientists estimates over 150 million Americans may have been exposed due to the widespread use of leaded gasoline before it was banned early childhood exposure could have long-term cognitive impacts and has also been linked to hypertension and hard disease Authorities have detained several suspects in a deadly drive by shooting outside of a high school in Des Moines Iowa a 15 year old boy was killed there and two teenage girls were critically injured Severe thunderstorms and heavy winds have knocked out power to more than 170,000 customers throughout the northeast Meantime.

volodymyr zelensky Zelensky President Biden Jen Psaki White House duke and Florida state univers Putin Germany France UK hypertension Des Moines Iowa
"florida state university" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

The Paul Finebaum Show

02:33 min | 1 year ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

"The rest of the year that can get them back into the legitimate college football playoff conversation. It's just not going to happen. I don't think it will happen. Unless chaos reigns and they they get in based on that and their name but right now in we all fall victim to the moment on. tv yesterday. Morning putting a heisman. Canada front runner as much as i hate to do that. That's just the world we live in. And and in the acc louisville game will not really matter The notre dame florida state game was really the last shot at some national credibility and that ship sailed when that field go went to the left. And i don't know where they get it back. No you're you're absolutely right now. I did watch all of that game last night. And you're right about florida state university but think you where they'd been. And i always said notre dame they're always overrated but they deserve to be overrated because they've been playing great football maybe for hundred years but florida state played a great game always been a minor villafane and frankly notre dame had had a chance to put the game away early and they couldn't and they had a chance to put it away late. I mean notre dame deserve they'll lose frankly It's but that's just too bad I mean florida state should have won the game on that phil now. They should have now one more point. I'm i am looking out for you. And i know kirby won't let let us get the big head and look past. Uab but that ought to be a pretty good game to watch with the outcome. Being let me say this there are pretty good team. They've been in the spot. A couple of times not always played very well. I think this is going to be a tough game for georgia to get going on. Because their head is still in the cloud. I don't care what kirby says. This is a hangover game. And they're playing a a solid program either teams far inferior to uab. That'd be good. Good programs are good teams. I think i think georgia will will slop around in this game. But i'm not overly concerned about them winning the game. Hey thanks for the call. We will talk to tom lugo. Who was on the field in norman the other day. We'll get his take on the first weekend of the college.

florida villafane football florida state university louisville Uab kirby Canada phil georgia tom lugo norman
"florida state university" Discussed on The Queen

The Queen

05:30 min | 1 year ago

"florida state university" Discussed on The Queen

"It became clear that the war on cancer wouldn't be a flashy success like the apollo program instead it felt like an actual war vietnam. We were stuck in a medical quagmire. When experts talked about the possibility of cure it sounded more and more like propaganda. There wasn't just awesome facing the government but in the medical professions specifically mary. Ziegler is a historian and law professor at florida state university. She says that crisis of confidence emboldened cancer patients. The idea was that medicine at the end of the day was a product like any other that doctors shouldn't be babying them and protecting them from themselves. Doctors should be giving them the opportunity to decide which risks they wanted to take my nineteen seventy seven. That's self help message. Was everywhere manager. Diet pickup jogging tryout acupuncture. The women's liberation movement said that you know your own body and you should walk away from a doctor who doesn't give you the treatment that you want. The feeling.

cancer Ziegler vietnam florida state university
How Much Does a Wedding Actually Cost?

Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin

02:02 min | 1 year ago

How Much Does a Wedding Actually Cost?

"Experts project that twenty twenty one wedding costs will rebound what they were in two thousand nineteen if not higher so let's take a look at the twenty nineteen numbers. According to wedding wire the average cost of a wedding reception per couple was around. Twenty eight thousand dollars. Although i'd venture to say it was probably a little higher. Because according to the not here are the average costs involved with a wedding reception. Buckle up because it's a long one ten thousand five hundred dollars for a reception. Venue two thousand four hundred dollars for a photographer. Eighteen hundred dollars for a video for two thousand dollars for florist sixteen hundred dollars for a wedding dress. Three thousand seven hundred dollars for a wedding band twelve hundred dollars for a reception. Dj seventy dollars per person for catering and the average wedding in two thousand nineteen had one hundred and thirty one guests. I guess it's an odd number because of all the singles who want to go home or at least go to bed with a new plus one and that brings the total cost of food to nine thousand one hundred and seventy dollars. The rehearsal dinner costs on average eighteen. Hundred dollars five hundred ninety dollars for the invitations. One hundred dollars for the hairstylist hundred bucks for the makeup artist. Four hundred bucks for the party favors and last but certainly not least five hundred dollars for the cake that is a total of thirty five thousand nine hundred and seventy dollars to put that into perspective that the lot more than the down payment on one hundred and seventy five thousand dollar house or tuition for a year and a half at florida state university. It's a huge chunk of change. And again i would still argue that. Those estimates are probably low. I mean shout out to the bride. Who's spending one hundred ten bucks on a hairstylist. But if you're living in la you're probably spending five times that amount which brings me to an important point of course. These averages vary widely depending on factors like location. What time of year and even what day of the week it is. You're tying the

Florida State University LA
Assumptions about hurricane season face winds of change

WTOP 24 Hour News

02:59 min | 2 years ago

Assumptions about hurricane season face winds of change

"11. The planet is warming and it's having a notable impact on whether rising water temperatures are fueling a stronger and more active tropical storm season, and that is prompting scientists can to consider starting the Atlantic hurricane season two weeks earlier. Well, let's learn more now with Alison Wing. She's an assistant professor for Florida State University's Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science. She joins us on Skype. Thanks for being with us. We appreciate it. Good afternoon. Thanks for having me first to set this up. Describe the changes that we have been witnessing in terms of these earlier name tropical storms. We're starting to see the stuff earlier and earlier, aren't we? Yes. So in the last six hurricane seasons, all six of those years we have had storms named storms form in May before the official start of the hurricane season on June 1st and so It is something that seems to be happening more and more more frequently recently what our weather researchers considering besides an earlier hurricane season to accommodate these changes. One thing that the National Hurricane Center has already started. For this year. They're going to be issuing their tropical weather outlooks actually starting on May 15 now, which are issued every six hours during the season, just to provide overall overview of what's happening with weather in the tropics. And that would be something to help. You know, people be more aware of what's going on in the tropics, and you know if there's risks of tropical storms or hurricanes forming, But pushing the start to the actual official start to the season earlier is something that you know, could improve public awareness of the risk even more on because when we have these these storms Before hurricane season officially starts. The public isn't always necessarily as aware of the risk they may not have, you know, gotten their supplies and prepared their their homes yet for it, And so it's really a consideration and in order to recognize that we do have storms that happened before June 1st and you know what can we do to make the public As prepared as possible. And is there a way to try to impart to the public? How the storm should be rated like how strong we should expect? Storm's coming our way. It seems like sometimes there's confusion about that. Well, I think one thing to keep in mind is that the wind speed that we used to category categorize storms is category 12 and so on and so forth. That's only one aspect of the type of damage we can can receive from tropical storms and hurricanes. And so I think more and more. Forecasters are emphasizing the full range of impacts from winds be damaged, but also coastal flooding from storm surge inland flooding from rainfall and as well as the potential for tornadoes actually to be embedded inside hurricanes. And so the National Weather Service has some some products that emphasized those and I think that you know we going to see communication of this full range of impacts more and more, and you shouldn't focus solely on the

Atlantic Hurricane Alison Wing Department Of Earth, Ocean And Hurricane Florida State University National Hurricane Center Skype Confusion National Weather Service
Should You Take Your Company Public Now?

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

02:34 min | 2 years ago

Should You Take Your Company Public Now?

"Might reasonably ask as we're seeing virus counts rise and whatever the economic recovery has been so far. We're seeing it falter. A bid one might reasonably ask. Are you sure you want to take your company. Public now. all year and increasingly here in the waning weeks. The answer has been yes. The meal delivery service door dash start. Trading publicly on wednesday airbnb follows on thursday and the short term rental company is feeling pretty confident looking for a total valuation of something like forty two billion dollars which should be some kind of comeback. I'll tell you what from this spring. When the pandemic up ended airbnb is whole business model. Marketplace's amy scott gets going today. Airbnb was planning an ipo back in march. But we all know what happened. That month has global travel. Ground to a halt bookings fell by eighty percent and the company had to refund a billion dollars here. Ceo brian chessy on bloomberg. This summer i felt like a captain of ship in puteaux. Just hit side of the ship. The company laid off a quarter of its staff. Nearly two thousand people cut executive salaries and marketing and focused on the core short term rental business and by september airbnb was profitable again. Tahreek dough grew teaches hospitality management at florida state university. He says as domestic travel picked up airbnb offered something hotels. Didn't it's all yours. You are not going if you don't want to encounter with the host and some people really shifted. I think too Airbnb not everywhere. Jamie lane tracks the short term rental industry at air. Dna he says in big cities like new york and san francisco. Demand is still down forty to sixty percent from a year ago. But we're demand is up and it's up significantly is in small towns and destination markets throughout the country places in the mountains or at the beach. That are easy to drive to. For metro areas and with more people able to work or go to school remotely. They're staying longer to another reason to go public now. Investors are chasing returns in a hot stock market says kathleen smith with renaissance capital. It may be one of the worst years when comes to the pandemic but has been the one of the best years for ideas so far companies have raised more than one hundred forty billion dollars with several more big. Ipo's to go. I'm amy scott for

Airbnb Amy Scott Brian Chessy Puteaux Jamie Lane Bloomberg Florida State University Kathleen Smith San Francisco New York Renaissance Capital
Interview With Dr Matteo Luzzeri

Physical Activity Researcher

05:53 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Dr Matteo Luzzeri

"In this last part of our discussion. We review the lessons learned from the empirical work as avella's mateos thoughts on future directions. In this gnassinde line of research from the show notes. You will find a link to mattel's research which will help in exploring his work for dr martin. Luther terry completed his doctoral dissertation in the field of sports psychology at florida state university. He's also professional water skier. A coach and has a very popular water skiing. Podcast i hope you enjoy the last part of our discussion. A new already. Obviously done a massive amount of work of in- inputting this research together. But i was wondering if you have looked at The actual content of those findings or kind of that would be interesting to take the actual writing and do more qualitative research and analysis on those writings to more. Understand what what's going on there. Yeah so that's that's step two This was definitely something that i want to to follow up on Hopefully when i when my current job winds down in a couple of months. I'll be able to to dive into that. I have obviously read all the old writings And i have done some quantitative analyses on them so Defending the fact that was stopping the tricon of me of meaning. What i ended up doing was analyzing The the words of the type of words that were used. And i use the a what is called dinning quiz. Sticking quired word count so this is A software essentially dead categorizes richton words a bits of text of any length in categorizes the amount of wards in percentage across the totality of words on some categories. It's It's called the liw. See any something that has been used He's being used quite a beating psychological research. And so what i did. Was i analyzed for the intervention group. Six writing Sessions the six writings and suffering since if the expressive the expressive writing exercise about a negative. Like the most traumatic event in sports would elicit more negative emotion than the one about the positive and uplifting event or for instance if the reflective writings would elicit more innovative processing words than dependent. Back your exercises. So i did this type of analyses of tried to see more of like a manipulation of of sorts. So were might writing exercises actually eliciting what they were supposed to release it and fortunately that seemed to be seemed to be the case But in terms of qualitative work. Even i haven't done anything formerly on the data yet. Okay so that would be something that. At least i am very much looking forward to hearing when you when you had the time to look into that and in terms of your intervention. So you mentioned that it was fairly short if you had all the time and resources in the world would you look to do something. That is a longer timespan or what. What would you do differently. If you had all the time resources you needed Seats you might. You might be surprised by my answer. But i would actually make it shorter That's interesting provided a war to do this. Study again because one of the point that in my defense the mike committee made is that you're already working with athletes who are burnt out. And you made the case that they're burned out that you screen for them You we can. We can argue about the criteria. Used to of course. But i went through the effort of screening and taking those who were hiring burnout so the less the least demanding of intervention the better and despite my intervention. I don't think. I don't think was super demanding. Because the average time that is spent on these activities was twenty minutes so twenty times. Three was two hours total across two weeks. Some murky enslaving took more So i i don't think he was very demanding but if i had to do it again with burn out athletes i would probably do. It even shorter if i were to just try to increase. Presence of meaning in sports in athletes not necessarily burnt out athletes Probably i would either do the same or more but the the gold standard would be to to being person as opposed to online There are that are studies he now during interventions a lot of mindfulness intervention studies showing a lot of benefits from an online intervention compared to a nonintervention certainly in not a lot of differences between an online intervention in in-person intervention. Buddy seems to me therefore topics that are these There so the the manding and somewhat strange to talk about how to write about possibly im- person might. We might see something a little different. Yeah i mean as a qualitative researcher. I

Avella Dr Martin Luther Terry Florida State University Mattel Skiing Mike Committee Burnout
'Astonishingly risky': COVID-19 cases at colleges are fueling the nation's hottest outbreaks

Seattle's Morning News with Dave Ross

02:04 min | 2 years ago

'Astonishingly risky': COVID-19 cases at colleges are fueling the nation's hottest outbreaks

"New cases averaging 34,000 Day, which is a decline of roughly 18%. Over two weeks. College campuses continue to be a challenge, though here, CBS's David beg No. It was another weekend of parties around colleges and universities. Young people gathered in Washington Square Park near New York University. For the second consecutive weekends. Thiss crowded House Party took place near the University of Kansas Video of a party near Florida State University shows very few people wearing masks, according to a New York Times survey of more than 1600 schools. Colleges and universities recorded more than 36,000 Corona virus cases in just the last week. An outbreak at Michigan State University as county health officials urging all students to self quarantine for 14 days, But not everyone is convinced that that plan is going to work long term. Eventually, most people are going to get it. And that is exactly what worries infectious disease experts like Dr Michael Foster home with the colleges and universities, openings with the spillover that's occurring with people experience. Even more pandemic fatigue. We're going to see these numbers grow substantially. This morning. There are encouraging signs on the vaccine front. Listen to what the CEO of Pfizer told market Brennan on face the nation in our base case. We have quite the good chance more than 60%. But we will know if the product works or not by the end of October. The vaccine, developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca will resume political trials and at least two countries. This comes just days after they were put on hold. CBS NEWS Medical contributor Dr David Vegas, a neurologic side effect happened in a second patient. The trial was stopped and it was really by an outside group of people called the data stating monitoring board. All of them felt that it was not related to the vaccine, and therefore they could proceed with the clinical trial of the vaccine that the benefit was obviously significantly greater than any potential chance of harm. CBS's David Beg No

CBS Dr David Vegas New York University Michigan State University David Beg Florida State University University Of Kansas University Of Oxford New York Times Dr Michael Foster Washington Square Park House Party Astrazeneca Pfizer CEO Brennan
Miami - Several Florida students defy coronavirus guidelines with large parties

WBZ Midday News

00:38 sec | 2 years ago

Miami - Several Florida students defy coronavirus guidelines with large parties

"Students at Florida universities are in hot water. They held large parties and didn't wear masks and they were crowded. Parties to police have arrested 11 students after a Florida State University frat party. The University of Miami blames dorm room parties for a covert 19 outbreak there. Some students have been kicked out. And in Fort Meyers, the president of Florida, Gulf Coast University, has threatened to campus shut down after two big parties student Caitlin Snook. Everyone's been so bored with quarantine and locked down, and now they think just because they're over it that they can pretend like the virus doesn't exist any more. School officials say Students who went to those parties should get covert 19 tests as soon as possible. Peter

Florida Florida State University University Of Miami Caitlin Snook Gulf Coast University Fort Meyers Peter President Trump
Some Conferences Are Determined: There Will Be College Football This Fall

All Things Considered

03:48 min | 2 years ago

Some Conferences Are Determined: There Will Be College Football This Fall

"There There will will be be college college football football this this fall. fall. Maybe Maybe that that is is the the message message this this week week from from some some top top football football schools schools and and conferences. conferences. It It comes comes after after two two powerhouse powerhouse conferences. conferences. The Big 10 in the Pac 12 announced they were canceling their full seasons because of the Corona virus. NPR's Greg Allen reports how colleges that are planning to play hope to protect the health of their athletes. Even many hard core college football fans are skeptical how Khun well over 100 people on a typical team training play without spreading the Corona virus, possibly shutting down the season this week, three of the top conferences, the SEC, the SEC and the Big 12 said their plans this fall to play and do so safely. John Thrasher is president of Florida State University, which is part of the Atlantic Coast Conference. And what we frankly want to send is a message to some of the other schools that may be teetering on whether or not to play football. We think it's a bit in the best interest of our student athletes. For us to play football. We could do it safely and we can do it productively for them for fans, athletes and the multi $1,000,000,000 sports entertainment complex built around college football things looked bleak Tuesday. Two major conferences, The Big 10 in the Pac 12 canceled their fall schedules because of the uncertainty and health risk surrounding the Corona virus. The announcement by the remaining three of the power five conferences that they would have a fall season came after athletes began a hashtag. We want to play movement on social media. At Florida State Wide receiver Keyshawn Helton says he believes training and playing with regular testing and medical protocols in place. Maybe safer than not playing. You talk about 18 or 22 year old Just quarantine at the house. That's unrealistic. There's really there's so many other things that you know God, I'm going to go do which is not safe. So being here with my team, and all of us together is the safest forth. The college conferences are pushing back the start of their seasons to give them extra time to get ready and perhaps learn from the experiences of other sports. Putting players inside a bubble like the N BA has done in Orlando isn't feasible for student athletes who live on campus and have to attend classes. University of Miami coach Manny Diaz believes college football can learn from the English soccer leagues, which resumed play in June. Without fans with so much at stake. He believes his athletes will be careful. They're aware that they've got to keep their bubble small. They understand the value of what a mask doesn't and who that protection If you're around people who don't have mass on, you've got to find another place to be, but with all that there's risk and going ahead with the college football season. One concern that was reportedly a factor in the decision of some conferences to postpone play is new information about a heart condition. My card is that has been linked to the Corona virus. It's an inflammation of the heart that can lead to long term problems. Announcing its decision to play the Big 12 conference, said any players who test positive for the Corona virus would receive an E K g echocardiogram, cardiac Emery and further heart tests before returning to play. Gabe Feldman, the director of the Sports Law program at Tulane University in New Orleans, says If the schools are transparent and take the right precautions he thinks they can play. Every school in the athletic department has to be very clear with all of their athletes. About what the risks are and what the unknowns are. And then the athletes have to have a choice. It's one thing to play. But can there be fans in the stadium? University of Florida athletic director Scott Strickland says he hopes so We want to be on a have fans, and we hope we're in a position to do that. But you see, this is the NFL season now starts earlier than ours, and A lot of NFL teams and still have a made determinations. Yet that could be the riskiest. Part of all some schools were opposing plans that would limit attendance to 25% of a stadium's capacity, which would still bring together a huge crowd of 20,000 or more cheering, screaming fans. Greg Allen. NPR NEWS Miami

Football Greg Allen Manny Diaz NPR NFL Director Florida State University SEC Florida University Of Miami Atlantic Coast Conference Keyshawn Helton Scott Strickland Orlando Gabe Feldman University Of Florida John Thrasher Khun
Training Topics of Speed and Power Development in American Football and Field Sports

Just Fly Performance Podcast

06:43 min | 2 years ago

Training Topics of Speed and Power Development in American Football and Field Sports

"Hey everybody welcome to another show, so this one is a little different and instead of me, interviewing someone or instead of throwing out a Q. and A. and answering your questions I'm actually being guest interviewed by a guy who has an absolute stud resume in the field, and that is Josh hingst. I will say so. Josh I I meant to interview him for a long time now, but Josh flip the script on me and asked if he could interview me on a speed and power in related training topics for American football. When I say football really no matter what sport you work with it, it's this is really applying concepts of of speed bio mechanics for team sports so so American football team. Sport and really translating sprinting speed, and by a mechanic topics really into that environment the. Josh has a superstar resume. He's the head strength coach of the two thousand eighteen super bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles. He's had past experience with the Jacksonville Jaguars the University of Nebraska the Atlanta Falcons as well as Florida State University. Josh multi talented, not only is he a strength coach and Ex Anna successful. When at that doing? A lot of work particularly with the Eagles in integration of Sports, science, and really being on the cutting edge there, he also is a sports nutritionist and has done a lot of work in the past in the realms of sports nutrition at some of his previous stops in twenty thirteen, he co-authored Athletes Guide to sports supplements out when he was at the University of Nebraska. I I met Josh back in two thousand four in Barcelona Spain, and it's been phenomenal to be able to stay in touch with him. Since then I'm super humbled. He wanted to interview me. This is like a it was a great opportunity to share my thoughts and put some thoughts together on these topics, but again just super humbling to be interviewed by a person with such awesome resume who I've been trying to get as a typical interview. Guests for this show so anyways we'll. We'll get onto it here just a couple of quick topics that we are. are going to run through is sprint a sprint, development and sprint mechanic development and speed drills particularly as it pertains to team sport. We're GONNA get into concepts on training foot. some particular concepts that I've that really stuck with me from a dairy bar that I've learned from him and how that Pertain Sport? We're GONNA. Talk about is metric, hamstring, injury, prevention and more. This was a really fun talking. I, hope you guys enjoy it so so let's get onto it episode to ten guest interviewer. Josh, thinks, and I have any conversation on speed and power topics. All I. I wanted to start off by Sharon. You know just the thank you for You know it's not often that you know people. Like me. Get a chance to thank people like you that you know that you're learning from that. You're progressing from. N. A just appreciated that. You know it's been a really good thing. I that there's others in the field like Mike in my shoes. That want to say that and. Yeah so I. Just I mean a lot of different thoughts. I mean. I think probably for me. You know I think you know a lot of the questions that you of have chewed on and and some of your interests. It's fun because I think we can all see where your brains at sometimes based on some of the people that you're bringing on the podcast with. Health or Of different things like that, but I think it's all really good good stuff, but I guess the first question I had is is probably one that you've answered a lot I think it's just more or less your take on some speed mechanics and running drills, and those application teams or seen I. Think a lot of people in my view. Shoes are like. Like well. We're not going to change that now. You know we're getting twenty three year old athletes in you know. Are we wasting our time in those types of things, or are you feel what you would do? You think that we can make make change. In how much time and energy do we devote to these things? Yeah, so that's a good question. I would say just in my time working with team sports in the running situation and thinking about it, and watching and observing as well I, think the I'll start with the good, actually because I think that it's in my nature to sometimes be a little contrarian as I was mentioning before we start recording I try to stay balanced. Try to really still like both sides of the equation, so with the common sprint drills as the bees, and whatever else there isn't all the marching type stuff 'cause I guess if we think of Sprint Joe. We think of a march. It's not going to fast horizontally. You're slowing the horizontal component down so there's some things in the vertical plane that. You can work on. It's all start with the positives I i. do think that there's always a bandwidth I mentioned this and speed strength, but I think that even if there's a disconnect between the actual mechanics in a marching bass drill for an athlete who might be a very muscular type athlete like they're very muscle driven they they tend to really squat deep in their movements, which isn't a bad for being a football player and Rennick Selah Rating. That's really important. But for someone who may not be in touch with their feet so much I think it gives a good opportunity to give them exposure for some of the vertical contacts ply metric in some ways so I I think that's okay. I don't have a problem with that I. Think it's the poll, the pole or was it dried mock or I think he's Polish when he came up with that stuff. It was really because they couldn't run I. don't know how many indoor tracks they had, and they just had to come up with a creative way to maintain. Muscle specific conditioning for sprinters, so if we think of if I'm a football player, a basketball player, and most of my movement is with a lower center of mass, and it's a little more specific to half the change. Directions quickly which I. wouldn't if I was a football player, I wouldn't WanNa really run like a sprinter because that's sometimes I think about if I'm spending more time in the air by nature, I need to the the the time for me to make a decision is is more or less are basically it's going to if it takes me longer to put my foot down. Now I can't change directions as quickly and I will say and I don't WanNa deviate from the question of sprint because I'm going to get there, but me and a dairy bar have been talking just in attract context about strategies to athletes run the four hundred and a lot of these athletes who are dying at the end of the race die because they don't. They can't switch strategies like they run one way. Way Whereas Wade. Van Niekerk does different things with his arms and legs on the Ben. The key switches strategy so this makes out I do think it is valuable for a football player or team sport athlete to be able to have different strategies, but I wouldn't I would never watch a football player, run and think man. You need to run as long as you're not running away. It's GonNa. Get you hurt. Excessive anterior till and the backside mechanics, poor backside macaques that come with the anterior till I. Get that we want to minimize those, but I don't necessarily need to see. Run same

Josh Hingst Football Philadelphia Eagles Jacksonville Jaguars Eagles Barcelona Spain University Of Nebraska Van Niekerk Sharon Wade Mike Florida State University Atlanta Falcons Basketball
It's (Not) Alive: Chemical Gardens in Space

Innovation Now

01:11 min | 3 years ago

It's (Not) Alive: Chemical Gardens in Space

"Colorful Crystal Gardens are often grown in science classrooms but NASA is growing crystal gardens to learn about self organizing chemical reactions in space. This is innovation now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shave our future crystal gardens made from sugar solutions and string or salt liquid blooming and charcoal are both fascinating and familiar now. The astronauts on the International Space Station are growing their own complex. Crystal Gardens made from dissolved metal salts and a liquid medium once the experiments conclude the intricate samples will be carefully packed and returned to Marshall Space Flight Center homebase for the Crystal Garden team using a scanning electron microscope researchers from NASA and Florida State University will examine every aspect of the crystalline growth wall thickness tube measurements and crystal orientation. We'll be studied and compared to identical solutions that were grown here on earth researchers hope to get a crystal clear understanding of these micro structures and to use what they've learned to engineer new synthetic materials in the lab

Crystal Gardens Nasa Marshall Space Flight Center International Space Station Engineer Florida State University
Discovering 'Stormquakes'

Short Wave

02:43 min | 3 years ago

Discovering 'Stormquakes'

"Seattle Calgary or Juno. You might have felt it October. Twenty Eighth Two thousand twelve seven point eight magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Canada near the archipelago of Haida Guay earthquakes. Earthquakes aren't unusual in that area. Because there's a big fault line nearby but it turned out buried in the data associated with this earthquake. was something unusual joie. We were not particularly looking for something but we were Trying to look for earthquake Evolution processes when you in fan is a professor officer at Florida State University. I am has Malla Gist. Or you can say a geophysicist in a more general term and so a couple years back when he he was looking at the data from the two thousand twelve earthquake off the coast of Canada he noticed spent before that big earthquake struck. There were records of what looked. I like smaller earthquakes nearby just migrating from north to south and by noticing that I saw I found a precursor to the earthquake creek and that was quite exciting to me and that would have been pretty cool on its own a previously unknown precursor to a big seven point eight earthquake but just to make sure it was a real thing when you looked at some data from two years before and the year after so not only to Intel thousand ten thousand thirteen. Tom And what we started to find is that such activities would would happen but only happen during wintertime. uh-huh so those smaller earthquakes in the ocean weren't a precursor to the big earthquake all because they happen before it and after it to now. You don't have to be a seismologist to know that earthquakes don't exactly know when it's wintertime. That's right that's right. Yeah earthquakes aren't seasonal right. They kind of just happen when they happen by. The weather is no sure is so that was Eureka. The Eureka moments saying while the nationality of this sussman activity obviously is quite important. What when you in some of his colleagues would later confirmed? Is that storms out in the ocean. We're causing what they say is a seismic phenomenon that they never knew about before instead of finding earthquakes. We found storm cracks storm. Quakes this episode. How they happen and what they could teach us? I'm Maddie Safai. In this shortwave. The daily science podcast from NPR VR.

Earthquakes Malla Gist Canada Seattle Maddie Safai Florida State University Geophysicist Juno Calgary Intel Sussman NPR TOM Earthquake. Professor Officer
Study: Fossil fuels will be necessary in cold winters

Climate Cast

05:01 min | 4 years ago

Study: Fossil fuels will be necessary in cold winters

"Anew big picture. I tell us what this study in applied energy measured. This is a study that looked at heating transitions from fuels lake fossil fuels, like natural gas and propane to 'electricity with the hope that when they electrically becomes a renewable electricity makes we would decarbonised our heating, and we were able to through the sustainable, healthy cities, network rain together researchers from Columbia University, which, which led the study, my own group from the university of Minnesota, our colleagues from Colorado state university, who provided data about Fort Collins and Florida State University that had. Dade on Tallahassee. So it was a fascinating comparison of full, very different cities to see what, how can we decarbonised heating and cooling? And I looked at some of the numbers in the study, they're quite interesting. What did you find about the optimal energy mix for states like Minnesota to be both climate-friendly and reliable. So this is very interesting. So the study compared moving from heating as I said, which is now by combustion, so we bun, natural gas furnaces, and the hot air is, basically transmitted throughout the house, and that's the predominant way we he doubled ings. And this would switch to a heat bump, which basically takes air from outside and increases temperature and circulates and this. Electrically driven heat pump. We looked at two technologies one as an air source heat, bump rich draws air. The other is. Ground source heat, bump, which taps into your ground temperature with stays about fifty five to sixty degrees Fahrenheit and can be used both for heating in winter and for cooling in summer, and then we said, if we were to move to electrically driven heating and cooling. And if that electricity could be obtained from around us regionally through solar and wind, what is the, the variability of solar, and win that matches the patterns of demand. So it's really how do you match the supply with demand what we found was in our region. The patterns don't match the optimum availability of solar, and wind, just because I mean, even in day to day, you know, we need heat when it's late at night on us and shining. And if you also look at the monthly availability of boat wind and soda, it wasn't as good a match as it was in the other cities. So this is just how the city's demand and the supply of wind and solar. Around, you are weather and climate system works up here. Yeah. So what we found was even the best case you could get about seventy percent penetration of this mix of wind and solar, which for us is more towards wind and less solar. So the numbers were interesting when you combine this twelve hour storage, which will get to in a minute renewable, energy, penetration could reach eighty percent of New York City, seventy percent in Minneapolis, eighty three percent in Tallahassee and sixty nine percent in Fort Collins. So could we say that for your purposes here that means that seventy percent of power through, renewables is a practical, upper limit in Minnesota? So that's what this study is finding if we were to look at just the heating, so heating and cooling. And we also looked at round source heat bumps with thirty six hours of storage for heating and you could go up a little bit to seventy four. Percents. And the study basically says that has a slightly extra higher cost, but ground source heat pump might give you other aspects of reliability. So there's a, you know, we lay out that argument is that technology here today. Yes. Grandmas. Hit bump is here, and there are rebates offered four grandsons. He here's a quote from the study, it says the study found that the use of fossil fuels would still be needed to meet peak demand in cold climates, like Minneapolis and Fort Collins, this is because renewable energy cannot be produced at the rate needed to meet demand during the coldest month. So in that scenario is the rest of that likely natural gas and nuclear power so that these great questions. So it could be natural gas. We could also be thinking cities like Saint Paul and Minneapolis, which already have district energy systems. This could be a wonderful way of thinking about growth in our region. And how to have that growth, be more. Impact so that you can have shed heating and those district energy systems can be flex fuel as you already know. And so they could use biomass, I think waste to energy options would be fantastic, because they

Fort Collins Minneapolis Minnesota Tallahassee University Of Minnesota Colorado State University Florida State University Dade Saint Paul Columbia University New York City Seventy Percent Sixty Degrees Fahrenheit Eighty Three Percent Sixty Nine Percent
Crime Junkie is celebrating 18 million downloads

podnews

02:19 min | 4 years ago

Crime Junkie is celebrating 18 million downloads

"Me tell you about the mysterious death of Kendrick Johnson. Crime junkie is celebrating eighteen million downloads in the past two months. The true crime podcast has signed with Cabana. The digital audio business of at-large media for exclusive add representation the podcast has a live tour in June. Swooped? A new social podcast player has been getting plenty of positive reviews. We noticed one in diverge yesterday. Now, clearly it would be wrong of us to recommend the all sign up and listen to the pod news podcast in swimsuit. So will not be doing that today. We did. Discover specs though, an automatic transcription and voice editing tool, and we linked to a video today of somebody removing the arms in a podcast. It's quite neat. You'll find the link in our show notes and in our newsletter if you'd like to download apps GIO longs to other countries on an iphone. We linked to a helpful guide from gadget hacks today. And if you own an Android phone, it's even easier just use a trusted AP K mirror like one called a PK mirror and download the file to install it on your device after checking your local laws. First Barron's online covers how podcasting becomes a big business today. Dur lingo Spanish podcast is a bilingual podcast and. Sunday media. I looking for story pitches, you need to be a native Spanish speaker and get your proposal to them by the end of April. The twenty eighth the company also highlights Argentina's park podcast network, which has over twenty shows in a blog post today. The Sydney Morning Herald has reviewed the road cast pro and the team behind Nancy WNYC's popular LGBTQ, plus podcast visited Florida State University in podcasts today. Leo LaPorte is the guest in the upgrade from life hacker this week. Also, new this week C S are of one features inspiring people who are making strides outside their chosen careers and nouveau Monde is the first native podcast from French radio station. France unfo- it focuses on new technology. It's thirty minutes long. It to spin off of a four minute feature aired on the station on Saturdays,

Leo Laporte Kendrick Johnson Nancy Wnyc Barron Florida State University France Argentina The Sydney Morning Herald Thirty Minutes Four Minute Two Months