35 Burst results for "Jeanette"

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Lord Conrad Black Shares a Fascinating Canadian Story
"Your impending article, you talk of a Canadian instance. You talk about a certain minister of national defense, general Andrew mcnaughton, and then the long serving premier of Quebec. Will he tell us about this fascinating Canadian story? Well, in April, April 7th, I recall of 1945, a general monotony who had been the Canadian commander in Europe and was a very admired and serious general. He wasn't he wasn't some quarter master doling it that spirit issue a new pairs of socks to people at home. He was a proper combat officer in both world wars. And he was the minister of defense. And he wrote the premier of Quebec warning him that balloons made of and I quote strong paper had been sent off by the Japanese and were designed to descend upon northern Quebec and drop incendiary bombs in the forests of northern Quebec and they might also be used for purposes of bacteriological warfare, but he did reassure the premier of Quebec. This, by the way, was the same premier portrayed in a cameo role in the famous movie, Rosemarie with Nelson and Jeanette McDonald. Premiered your blessing. He assured him that these balloons made of strong paper and carrying incendiary bombs and possibly bacteriological warfare units. We're not carrying soldiers. I mean, why it would possess men of the intelligence of general mcnaughton to tell a serious person like the premier of Quebec that that paper balloons launched from Japan and propelled by the airways did not, whatever else they might be intended to do. Did not carry soldiers. It just sort of astounds me.

Empowered Women Rise Podcast
"jeanette" Discussed on Empowered Women Rise Podcast
"Feel like that because of someone else and it is about making choices and deciding the people that you have around you the people that you have in your life. Making sure that they're fueling you in a positive way. And that they accept you for you and that you are you. No more button turning down that way. I think it's not his, 'cause he's the one that has to part with me for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 42 weeks a year. It's 7 years continuously working together together. I don't know how we've done it. Well, actually, it's 8 years in July of July 28th since we left the UK. And in that time, we've spent I spent 7 days away from him in the UK in November before we went traveling to Asia in that year. And then I spent four days in the UK in 2014 and then in 2019, I spent four days in the UK and that is the only time that we have been a part in 8 years. Clearly something's working for you, both, so keep doing what you're doing at the end of the day. I can hear him shopping away cooking the lunch. So things are going well. Yeah, I don't share the part that I'm the one that does the dinner, so yeah. Keep breakfast. It's a team. It's a team. Oh my God. So much so. I'm really lucky. I found that I found a Spaniard obviously. I found him in London, but a fan of Spaniard who isn't the type and doesn't believe that women need to be doing everything because otherwise we would have a few lines. Definitely. It would be like, yeah, he wouldn't want to be getting up in the morning. For sure. It's been so nice to get to know you. So because we met the female entrepreneur association membership club and we've chatted a few times now. I've presented in your group, you're going to present in my group and now you've come on and done this wonderful interview for us today for the empowered women series. And I just want to say that, you know, getting to know you and getting to know other women that I meet through these type of communities, it's so valuable. And if people aren't part of the communities or they don't see the benefit of it, then this is it. They're getting to know lovely people that you connect so much with. And last week we were chatting and laughing and you said to me, I feel like we've known each other for years. And I felt like that. The first time we had our call, I didn't say it because I didn't want to seem like a stalker. But I felt like that's so much. And I think, well, we were like, let's just have a casual chat and see how we can kind of work together. And I think we ended up chatting for like an hour. At least an hour. Oh my God. But it's so nice. It's just so nice. I'm so lucky. I feel so lucky. I feel, yeah, I feel so lucky. I feel lucky to have bet you lucky to have met the other wonderful women, whether they be my clients certainly. It's such a great experience. And like you, I never, I never imagined this is going to sound really soppy now. I never imagined that life could be like this, like I always thought it was just that I just thought it was the conveyor belt..

Empowered Women Rise Podcast
"jeanette" Discussed on Empowered Women Rise Podcast
"An interview with Jeanette Spencer for the empowered women series. Jennette, how are you today? Thank you so much for joining me. Hi, everyone. I am so grateful to be here. I'm absolutely fine. Just busy busy, but yeah, everything is all good over here. How are you? I'm good. It's amazing how busy we can be. So. Yesterday I was talking to a client and she was saying how you're in the events industry. She's a wedding planner and she said that a client had said to her, well, you must be loving this. You've got so much time to just chill out and relax. What are you doing? You must be having a great time and she was like, I.

News Radio 1190 KEX
"jeanette" Discussed on News Radio 1190 KEX
"Jeanette Manfra is the director of risk and compliance for Google Cloud. We talked this week about some of the risks that these tech companies and the government are trying to combat together. Tell me a little bit about what you learned during the summit that took place at the White House. I mean, top leaders from all over the country. What Google is doing is saying it will invest $10 billion over the next five years. To expand zero trust programs, help secure the software supply chain and enhance open source security. For most Americans, that means blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So tell us what that means. $10 billion is a lot of money. Sure. So the summit um it was it was an important event to bring together leaders across various different industries, including tech and the government to share perspectives. It is a lot of money, so zero trust is getting beyond the notion that you can have this trusted inside network. We don't trust anything. And so we have a lot of technologies that we've built in pioneered over the last decade plus to create a world where I as a Google employee, I can go into sit at any network. I can connect. I can securely access whatever tool or application I need to do. But there's all that security and safety built in So a lot of people may have heard of solar winds and some of these other attacks where you have now a very complicated software supply chain. If you will and what we're doing, and what we have done is identified ways to reduce significantly the ability for an actor to disrupt that so you can trust your software, and the last part is open source. For those who don't sort of understand the difference. You have either proprietary technology and technology that is owned by Cos there's also open source, which is a community of people globally that are really contributing to this open source code. And what we're doing is investing in this public good if you will to improve the security of those open source tools. What is the most vulnerable part that you see of, you know, like the nation's I T systems. It's oftentimes less about the data being stolen and more about the ability to disrupt functions. Think about electric systems, financial systems, all of these systems in our country and globally that are very dependent on technology, and an actor's ability to disrupt or to somehow undermined the integrity of those systems is concerning as an individual. Whether you're a reporter or a scientist, there is still always the the threat of stealing that information. Making that public or using it for from.

Because You Need to Know
"jeanette" Discussed on Because You Need to Know
"Phrase of I don't know red flag if red flag as something. That sixty percent of your company is used in the last month. That sounds like a relative term right. Whatever red flag means. That's fine but you're looking at relevancy. In fars uc jeanette bet as as usage goes down then. The system recognizes that that. Hey i may not be as relevant now so now. We can shift our focus to whatever the next new phrases. Is that what you're saying. Yeah exactly exactly because we'd really think again. No let's cannot be study. you cannot be stored. Knowledge is something that it's it's absolutely every day so it makes no sense to work with those static sudworth stats just in index. Everything because they create a lot of noise and you end up not finding anything nine finding this stuff you need right in a lot of times in those kind of search functions you may have to weed through a bunch of stuff defined the one piece that's helpful or the actual thing you need exactly and then we're thinking about this old way of management or looking for information is that you have a look a lot of junk files that they are not useful and you have to open them and you have to read them and then realized that damn this this and this is happening because the unit of knowledge is not documents the paragraph it makes no sense to show as a result thousand documents nobody will release never nothing is paragraph inside the document or the site video or inside and we are letting humans get the information they need at light speed much faster. Sign me up. Let's go let's do it. I'm all for it. You're right okay. You you're right you can count on it. Of course. of course all right. My friend will thank you very much for joining me today. It's been a blast. And i i want to hear more informed and thank you very much for letting explain what we do. Our vision actually. I've got a challenge for you. I think i have a use case that maybe we could try and see what the results are really up lesser. And then we'll have you back on a show to talk about what we got. Great do you like skeptics. Thank you very much a good day. Thank you.

Dyking Out - a Lesbian and LGBTQ Podcast for Everyone!
"jeanette" Discussed on Dyking Out - a Lesbian and LGBTQ Podcast for Everyone!
"I've been documenting this on the podcast. Maybe more on the patriot. I'm going through my little body. Positivie journey so i was topless on cherry grove. That feels but did it. I did so with the group of people you went with. Yeah like auld normally go topless with alli we've just go to the beach and we don't know anyone but socially topless wants to some fun pool parties at the pines went to low t. If you know you know and you know kept making my voice sound worse and worse throughout his activities on the last night we were there. We all went skinny dipping in the pool. We shared and nice. That was nice. Everyone has amazing tits. But like no one's compares to genetics. I need to tell everybody about chanet. I met the queen of cherry grove. This lesbian is like one of the most beautiful souls. I've ever met to but at the same time like one of hottest girls like i was already warned that i would be meeting someone with the quote. Most perfect hits on the island. That's all i knew going into the meeting. So then you know me and you hold i contact. But then you're like what's going on. And we met her a for a widened cheese. Our we stayed out of women owned in called wisteria women. They had a wine and cheese our every day at five and she came by for that and that just speaks to how well loved. She is on the island because the women who run it are like no one's allowed for the wine and cheese. Jeanette is the only person allowed that these older dykes would let into the house. What makes her boobs so perfect. So we all the gays thing is actually after. We went skinny dipping..

Dyking Out - a Lesbian and LGBTQ Podcast for Everyone!
"jeanette" Discussed on Dyking Out - a Lesbian and LGBTQ Podcast for Everyone!
"I've been documenting this on the podcast. Maybe more on the patriot. I'm going through my little body. Positivie journey so i was topless on cherry grove. That feels but did it. I did so with the group of people you went with. Yeah like auld normally go topless with alli we've just go to the beach and we don't know anyone but socially topless wants to some fun pool parties at the pines went to low t. If you know you know and you know kept making my voice sound worse and worse throughout his activities on the last night we were there. We all went skinny dipping in the pool. We shared and nice. That was nice. Everyone has amazing tits. But like no one's compares to genetics. I need to tell everybody about chanet. I met the queen of cherry grove. This lesbian is like one of the most beautiful souls. I've ever met to but at the same time like one of hottest girls like i was already warned that i would be meeting someone with the quote. Most perfect hits on the island. That's all i knew going into the meeting. So then you know me and you hold i contact. But then you're like what's going on. And we met her a for a widened cheese. Our we stayed out of women owned in called wisteria women. They had a wine and cheese our every day at five and she came by for that and that just speaks to how well loved. She is on the island because the women who run it are like no one's allowed for the wine and cheese. Jeanette is the only person allowed that these older dykes would let into the house. What makes her boobs so perfect. So we all the gays thing is actually after. We went skinny dipping..

Woman's Hour
"jeanette" Discussed on Woman's Hour
"They can't be racist who was people rationalized in the same way they can subject them to color them are k. And have a history doesn't it. This isn't this isn't a new phenomenon not at all no color. Ism has global is a global issue and it has different histories in different parts of the world so among the descendants of transatlantic slaves it dates back to the preferential treatment given to slaves with light skin with a mixed race. Children of slave masters unin slaved women and those mixed race children within allowed to work in the home. They'll give him privilege treatment. Sometimes they received basic education and training so then and then the high rockies were established then going with the darkest at the bottom and those by skin talk persisted after the abolition of savory but beyond that in in countries histories of european colonialism colors is partly the results of privileging of light skinned that resulted from associating light. Skin whiteness power and privilege and dump scheme with primitiveness and said that contributed as well and often illegible people having privileged position in society and that that contributed to hierarchies as well and all seven countries. There there's the idea that those were outside in the fields they status may have darker skin so lights again was privileged in those contexts. Could as well very deep rooted. And i should just point out to people i think are made up a university. That you are social justice lecturer. Aisher at king's college london naturally. Like to come to you now. Good morning to you and tell us about how you describe yourself compared to how others describe you. Well yeah i mean. That's that's one of the key things about about. Being mixed having mixed heritage is that there is a difference between how you see yourself and how the people perceiving you and very often in my experience and the experience of the people. I interviewed my book. Is that this this kind of disempowering thing that happens where your job constantly told what you are and what you are not by other people Basically deciding where you fit and how you fit into the pre existing cats agrees that exist in their head based on your your outward aesthetic. Parents are outraged. Your skin tone is big part of that and so so for myself. I have like heritage white heritage. My dad's is black. Caribbean moments british. And i identify as a black mixed woman So yeah i think that's a really interesting kind of juxtaposition. Between what you feel you'll sell to be and what you'll told by others and that kind of color ism and the prejudices around skin tone are very coke so when you do have white heritage and all of the privileges As aisha kind of alluded to that come with having proximity to whiteness..

Woman's Hour
"jeanette" Discussed on Woman's Hour
"I'm ten years old and this is mom. We've been reading books about curly hair and books with like black princesses and all sorts since you were little. Which one would you say is one of your favorites. It's about this young mixed race girl and she wants to become a ballet dancer. What's happening is that we rich around children but they're still going to walk into the world. Get these comments is not just for us to be buying diversity in toys and books in media. It's for everyone. i'm the beginning stage. I'm already exhausted by it. Your ten years down the line three daughters. I think the fact that i'm writing about it. I feel like that has had an impact on me feeling like i'm not just taking it. I'm doing something about it. You are constantly educating. it is exhausting. But it's also it's kind of what you have to do. I find of support apart from last week. When i got the she. Superior comment not was from a white threatened all the comments. So far i think coming from people of color which i think is why i'm here today speaking to you because i don't know why i just find that more shocking they're still widely held perceptions. About what black should be look like and who can clue lay claim to that identity. I think i hope that people like kamala harris have helped to question that a little bit if people do identify as being mixed or being multiracial. There's gonna be multiple narratives about what black is and what that means. Your mom was telling me sometimes described your family in terms of ice cream flavors. I'm caramel my mom. Is vanilla. ella is fudge. My youngest sister is but a scotch and then my dad is chocolate. I'm what made you think of using ice cream. Flavors i think it makes it a bit better because when you say oh your light them meal your super dock and it just seems like you're separating each other making it into delicious things shows that people love this things all of them. Wow what a powerful and important discussion. That was thank you to anonyna- for that report. There's also ought article on the bbc sir. Bbc websites about the experiences there of anna fariba and wendy which she might like to search for now of course you just had their about the experience of receiving negative comments about the color of your child's skin tone similarly collar ism can have justice negative impact on people of color the number of british people who identify as having a mixed background almost doubled between the census of two thousand and one and twenty seven to about one point two million which is just over two percent of the overall population experts. Say though that this figure is likely to be an underestimate to discuss this further joining us now Nasty marissa journalist and the author of mixed of explorations of moti reality. In modern britain and dr aisha phoenix. Who is a social justice lecturer at queen's college london and co conducted the first major sociological study on. Colorado's him in the uk. Good morning to you both. Hi i'm i shall. I think what's important. I is that we just establish just what color ism is. How would you describe it. So communism is skin shake prejudiced. Which light skin is privileged over. Dhaka skin shades. So it's relate to to racism but distinct from it in the sense that it can occur both within and between racialist groups. So do i mean by that. So for example white people can be both racist and congress people of color but a person of color..

Woman's Hour
"jeanette" Discussed on Woman's Hour
"Swimming getting on the tokyo olympics. Were just a couple of hours ago. Actually mallory franklin added yet another medal. To britain's tally in the canoe slalom. We'll also be speaking to steph. Read about her goals going into the paralympics which get underway next month and her campaign to keep young girls involved in sports also this morning. A powerful discussion between three women who've received negative comments from strangers about the skin color of their babies plus detrimental impact collar. Ism can have on. People of color will be talking about the consequences of skin tone bias and light skin privilege as it's known with a woman who has conducted the first major study on color ism in the uk and journalists who has written a book that touches on the subject. Do get in touch with us though if you've had experience of colorado or skin tone bias. Tell us what happened. Or perhaps you are four. Having a lighter skin tone and used skin lightening products for example text. Us on eight. Four eight stubble. Four texts will be charged at your standard message rate. You can tweet us to at bbc woman's hour or e mail us through our website also this morning we have a live guest in the studio which these days is a bit of a treats at writer and broadcaster jeanette. Winterson will be with me to discuss the latest book. Now it's a feminist look at artificial intelligence and what it means for us as humans in the future. It's called twelve bites how we got to where we might go next. And it's published today really looking forward at to that chat but i this morning as i said we are celebrating the success of our female olympians in tokyo before the games kicked off. We set on women's our that women would be bringing home the medals. And we've been proven right way yesterday. Charlotte do your. Dan confirmed her place in the history books with her. Bronze in the dress arch making her the most decorated british female olympian ever on the metals. Keep on coming mallory. Franklin just one silver in the canoe solemn earlier this morning when she was beaten to the gold in the final run by australia's jessica fox bought. It still makes mallory only the second british woman ever to win an olympic medal in canoe. Slalom and women have already won. Medals in gymnastics taekwondo and cycling amongst other sports for team. Gb and there are hopefully many more to come before these games are over. Let's get more on this joining me from tokyo. Olympic sports reporter sonja mclaughlan covering her seventh seventh summer olympic games. Good morning to you sonia. Let's start with charlotte deja dan creating history with her bronze-medal in the dress arch. Yep hello no. british woman. Now has won more medals at an olympics then charlotte dujardin and on tuesday. She do level on five with rower. Cast granger and katie go. Free was playing tennis in the nineteen twenties during live long five that was with a bronze in the teen dressers but yesterday she got a second bronze in the individual competition to chalk up six olympic medals and rewrite those history books and actually she did it on a brand new young horse called. Go that's after. The retirement of her super steed allegro so is an indication of just. What a talented writer. She really is at. Its setzer now in terms of olympic medals. Out there on her own as britain's most successful olympian female ever more goodness water performance from her one of my standout performance on your has to be a georgia taylor.

All Things Considered
Ransomware Attack Hits Ferry to Cape Cod, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard
"Attack has hit the primary ferry service that runs from Cape Cod to the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. Website and reservation system are down as Jeanette Barnes of member Station C. AI reports. It's unclear how long the service will take to recover. The steamship Authority says the attacks started early Wednesday. Fairies are running, but passengers who are often traveling from afar have to buy tickets in person. Annamarie Gavin of Burlington, Vermont, says she noticed something was wrong when she tried to confirm her departure time. So is on. I will the log in as of seven a.m. this morning. And I wish I could have checked my very time because I ended up being a little late. A Steamship Authority official declined to say whether the attacker has demanded money. The authorities said on Twitter that vehicle reservations will be honored. That's likely to be a source of worry for customers who have to book months in advance.

Short Wave
Dermatology for Skin of Color
"Want to talk about the field of dermatology. That's the one treating hair skin nails Yeah it's an amazing field. So skin is the largest organ of the body. We shed more than pound of dry skin throughout the year. And it's a really visual field. Okay so dermatologists. Like dr jeannette. Acquai- rely on pictures to get a sense of what a disease looks like so they can recognize it in the moment where freely scanning the patient from the minute we walk in the room and many of our diagnoses. We actually know them from the door. Because rote memorization of what things look like as such a big part of our training. Jeanette is chair of the department of dermatology at howard university college of medicine and like a lot of dermatologists paying close attention last spring when covid nineteen was giving some patients. A skin rashes. Do you remember that. yeah i do. There were reports of covid toes. Like people's toes swelling up usually showed up with more mild cases. Yeah it was considered kind of covid red flag but ginette was noticing. The pictures clinical papers about cova. Toes and other skin manifestations were overwhelmingly of light. Skin historically black skin. Brown skin is not represented in literature appropriately. So it wasn't a surprise. It's just that on the heels of all the things that were going on in the country last summer we thought that it was worth calling it out in a way that we hadn't called out our colleagues in the past

PodcastDetroit.com
"jeanette" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com
"I don't care what your credentials are aren't when your child is filled in anxiety filled toxic house weather. You're mary or divorced. you're everyone who's us. I think people that even our legally married but have been a relationship for children benefit from this to. It doesn't mean it just for marriages right. That's that's a great point to sure even if it's not like at the end we're necessarily looking for this tangible you know parenting agreement because we're you know we're we're staying cohabited under the same roof absolutely to some education to realize how your words are hurting child right. Nfl another thing. Is you know We're putting that child in the middle and we're asking them to choose. And i think another really important that needs to be made is that research shows that when we are Our child has made a fifty percent off and fifty percents spouse and when you put down their other parent child actually internalizes that as you're putting down down because you really putting the trial down to since fifty percent of that. Yes yes that's really important. I think people forget. Forget that they do you get so caught up in being right being the one that was hurt and you forget. That's your mass not your kids. Yeah and people also forget how much burden they put on a child By talking to about the other parent to the child And i know that because as a kid. My parents divorced. When i was three so my entire childhood. Was my mother talking bad about my father. My father talking bad about my mother and my grandmother talking bad about my father and it was it makes you have to choose sides or have tension and not show allegiances. It's worked for a child than they should have to have. That is so true in another point at like to add to that. Is your child too young to quite understand the depth of that concept you know the depths of the concept to understand. Maybe even how you're scrutinizing them but what you are. Teaching them is to gas. Stop in scrutinized in judge and those skills are are are now being on imprinted in them and they a promise you that will turn around and bite you in the butt because.

PodcastDetroit.com
"jeanette" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com
"Why i'm so passionate and fill. It needs to be brought out. Is you know we. We know of the typical. We know therapy. We know of divorce lawyers we. We've heard the word mediation lawyers do it. But what does somebody with a psychotherapy child development background doing with with mediation. And that's where i come in is. I'm teaching you in empowering you how to collaborate with each other in in actually it's a software prophecy in you won't hopefully you need to hire anybody again in the future because you know how to handle each other you know how to get to the conflict and get her solve the conflict and get out so so how would be the first couple of sessions. What would they look like. What do you do well. you know. that's great. I can't i like to start off with you know if you can. How do you want your child to describe you in twenty years. Oh my god way. I love that yet on. I look at both appearance and i see. How do you want your children to describe you or your relationship with them in twenty years. You know i love this you know. I don't know if you do. You know terrance real. He's a longtime a therapist Published many books. He's relationship therapist now. Terence real and he in his trainings. He says when he works with couples he asks them to bring pictures of the children that he puts off to the side between the couple on a table. And says i want you to behave towards each other the way you want your kids to see you behave with with each other. It's just sad. That is that so powerful though. I like that. Addition i might. I'm really have to borrow that do it. He he sure all you know exactly we lose focus. I truly believe that People are good. We lose focus. That's the differences rather than can you not sometimes like when we go straight to the lawyer streets straight to divorce. We actually kind of Increase the conflict in that entitlement in you know in that fight. We're this is. The tone established a mediator. You know i'm not here to fight for you. I represent you both in the actually sit. It's kind of the metaphor. i'd like to say as we behave differently on church and sunday than we did saturday night in the mediator just tend to sets that tone and you actually see parents kind of you know. Drop the boxing gloves in kind of relax and when they realized that's not what my job is. And that's not what we're gonna do here. Now let me ask you. Do you see the kids to.

PodcastDetroit.com
"jeanette" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com
"I love what you just said. It's not just child centered. It's family centered. Yes yes it's it's in the end we're gonna to have a collaborative parenting agreement. Decided by you not me. Not a judge. Not a lawyer. Not the court cited by you in the difference between me. In a way because you're right lots of lawyers can mediate the difference is is is the underpinning of where i come from i come from a collaborative base. Not i'm gonna fight for you me versus you. Because unlike splitting the vote in the house and the monetary position this is a child. They are a human. They're not an object to be split in an ongoing end forever. You're their parents forever. See you gotta get it together. You're going to be making decisions for them for the rest of your life. So i know you do this by devising a parenting agreement. Can you talk about what that is. And why would couples need one. Oh shirt so The parenting with the child support medical insurance things like that. But it's also very important that we understand our devising holidays assurance of time with grandparents Problem resolution around the children. Something should come up with with if one of us should remarry. How do we introduce significant others to the children any type of concerns health education it activities. They beat you know. We had this plan when they were younger. But guess what other playing sports in in it looks. Different one parent moves so things like that that that of balls that are ongoing and that we have to decide together in aren't black and white. How do you get an unwilling spouse to see a mediator. Oh i get that a lot and you know you can't make somebody come but the but the beauty is it doesn't you both don't need to be there. It only takes one person to evolve into change and you change the system. They have to change. Because you changing. I like that. And i think it's an important message to the parent. Let's say there's an unwilling spouse and more difficult spouse and there's the other parent so easily could give up and say this is too hard. I can't do this. I just they collapse. And you're saying stay strong can still be. You can still affect change by with doing it. With one parent. Absolutely connecting ended the day. Were responsible for ourselves and our own actions. In if you're doing the work and if your putting your child in the forefront in your choosing to not engage in my ex's toxic manipulation because hey i've learned and i want my child i you win. That's the ultimate winning. I refuse to go into this tax battle. I choose to put my child. I i just love that and the other piece that people don't understand i started to see early on. I worked with kids in the beginning of my career. I actually stopped. Not because i hate working with kids or or adolescence. Even it's the parents that wouldn't be on board and would interfere with the work so it became too difficult and Upsetting to me. But i do know that kids will step in to empty porenta fide to make things better if the parents don't so what you're doing is preventing that.

PodcastDetroit.com
"jeanette" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com
"Let's collaborate so that you can go through this divorce. With keeping your child at the forefront with enabling or empowering them in their in their choices and their feelings along with your own to make the best new dynamic for your family just the new normal right normal. We have really good research. Now that show that yes Divorced disrupts the lives of children but in two years it generally takes two years and they have a new normal and they adjust and people but they don't adjust very well. If there's a high conflict between the two people would you agree with that. That's exactly true. Joe and you know Change in transition that the natural part of life and really if we can just reframe this mindset of divorced like. You're saying it's not the divorce it's how mom and dad or mom tell. The parents react to each other. That's really the impact on the child. Yes makes total sense. How what exactly is child centered mediator. And how do you to.

Doctor Health Radio Show
Weather Experts Say Lack of Planning Caused Cold Catastrophe
"Experts say a lack of planning caused the cold catastrophe We lived through last week because the killer freeze was no surprise. At least 20 people dead four million homes without power heat of water At some point meteorologist sounded the warnings weeks ahead of time to officials and on social media tweets like off the charts. Cold blog's about Arctic air alerts, warning of sub freezing temperatures. The head of the National Weather Service is behavioral insights units as people may have heard the message, but we're thinking cold is no big deal. Something disaster science professor Jeanette Sutton says, is human nature. That's Julie Walker reporting. Meanwhile, the temperatures in Texas starting to warm up now the cleanup

WTOP 24 Hour News
Weather experts: Lack of planning caused cold catastrophe
"Weather experts say a lack of planning caused the cold catastrophe we all lived through last week because that killer freeze was no surprise. At least 20 people dead four million homes without power heat of water At some point meteorologist sounded the warnings weeks ahead of time to officials and on social media tweets like off the chart Cold Blog's about Arctic air alerts, warning of sub freezing temperatures. The head of the National Weather Service is Behavioral Insights unit says People may have heard the message. But we're thinking cold is no big deal. Something disaster science professor Jeanette Sutton says is human nature. It is our communication with trusted people around us that influence the decisions. We make even more so than the message. Another weather expert says of the utility and power companies left unprepared. Saying the storm was so big it wasn't planned for is not a great way to

Short Wave
Anti-Racist Science Education
"All right today in the show. We're unsmiling what's not working in science education around representation and racism and how to teach science in a more inclusive way and idea from listener and scientists esther kunle yes so thanks to esther. We went looking for k. Through twelve teachers teaching at the intersection of science and racial justice at all grade levels. And i want to start with. Let me see a fears. She's a post doctoral fellow in the collaborative for stem education. And outreach vanderbilt okay. She's a black scientist. Helping out in science classrooms in tennessee. Among fifth graders at this one particular school she is a total rockstar to walk into a classroom. And they'll be like dr. Yeah it's me. It's me everyone you know know autographs thing. We lit up each others world. Our saying that let me see a drops into fifth seventh and eighth. Grade science classrooms like a real life. Miss frizzle okay. I'm not kidding. You she wheels the cart between classes clattering with beakers and different very interesting looking chemicals and students. They're so intrigued. They run up to her on our like number my wife just all that stuff and then when she's in the classroom let me see a doesn't just help them run experiments. She'll also delve into the ethics of designing an experiment. Okay she'll talk about how wrong. The tuskegee study was which is win. Scientists studied syphilis in black men and withheld treatment. Sushi's like introducing bioethics to kids as important part of the curriculum. Yup scientists are presented as very human herself included and her students can totally handle these conversations. We see what's happening with this generation with them protests. And they're speaking out and they're not having it they're not gonna they're not going to allow us to continue to destroy her and her point is that if science teachers can tap into that compassion and that curiosity and show the way that scientists have messed up. Kids might take up an interest in science. I love it and if we can't do that then we are gonna lose on. And i think it's hard were minority kids. They already don't see themselves as the teacher or the prisoners doing the science so that already kind of puts up a block of well. That's just what the old white main with crazy hairdo and so another thing. Let me see a does is named drop scientists of color as often as possible. She'll talk about astrophysicist. Did eisler medical physicist hadean ecole green astronauts. Joseph akaba and jeanette epps. She designed paper rocket lesson around them and this helps kids develop a mental picture of a career in stem beyond a doctor or a dentist. This is so cool because it's not just about teaching science history right. It's also helping. Students see themselves as scientists and for gretchen craig. Turner the next teacher. I want to introduce you to this. Level of engagement becomes even more important as students get older and start to get into their teenage years and develop their own opinions their own opinions about science. Yeah to be critical of it. Oh yeah that was not in my k. through twelve science education hers either. I don't remember a lot of writing or Opinions being part of science in fact it was very much i believe taught. The opinions didn't belong in science right that it was supposed to be a

Ask Women Podcast: What Women Want
"jeanette" Discussed on Ask Women Podcast: What Women Want
"All right. We are back with Jeanette Burke and I wanted to dive into what Jeanette touched on which one that is a way of expressing who you are and you gave a couple of cues that guys can use so I know that you said like sharing about how you feel or like a passion you spoke as if there's a very normal for people to do some people don't know to do that. I'm actually working with this client right now and he's really fixated on understanding the approach and just he's like, wait how would this question work on you? How would this question work with you and I'll say things back to him. It could work. It's great for getting my attention, but it's all in the follow up afterwards and he's just like okay when I give direction about how to share more and to dive into that topic from his point of view and he's mind was blown. He's like, oh, so I'm supposed to share information with women and that was something he hadn't thought of before he just thought the magic was in the questions that he asked in the very beginning..

Forever35
Supported Boobs, Getting a Bra Fitting in a Pandemic
"I'm here to talk about bras during i'll tell you what it's hanging it's actually not hanging. It's very supported right now. i feel a moonies. He'll so freaking. Good honestly. Because i got a new bra and i it dawned on me. We've been in quarantine life or almost a year. And i have been. My breasts have been so uncomfortable for this whole pandemic i i. I gained some weight over the last couple of years so a lot of my older bras. Stop fitting. I tossed them. I had one bra from third love. That really liked their minimize bra and that has underwear and then i had bought myself some like true and company bras. Which are those like. We don't have under wire. But you'll feel great in these and the truth. Is there like good for lounging. But they don't. I really like to be held and tucked in and supported and i didn't feel that way in those bras So i so. I basically been wearing either like sports bras is i exercise. And then i don't shower or my one third love minimize abroad. That i've had for like two years so i finally reached a point as like. I think i need like this. This one bra is stretched out. It's a mess. I need to get bras. And i think i need to get it had for bras And so i did a zoom raw fitting which i tell you what worked out pretty well. Wow okay so there's a really lovely small business here in los angeles called jeanette bras inc. They also they think they have four stores in the kind of los angeles area and then they've won in atlanta. And i have. And they serve people with breasts size d and above and they are doing they. Normally you go in and they do a whole fitting with you and and You know you take your dislike. Shirtless topless getting measured. There is no modesty. No one is shame body. Shaming it's very body. Positivity and people are very comfortable with the body. But you can't. They're not doing in. There are not doing them in person. Obviously because of the pandemic right now here in los angeles so they're doing them over like google meat and much to my daughter's horror. I got you know. Took my shirt off on this hookah meat and showed the my boobs ansel and they found me a bra. That feels amazing watch. What is the bra. So the way the process worked is that i told them what i liked a told them what i didn't like a told them what worked What wasn't working. I showed them the one bra that i had been wearing. This minimized problem. Third love showed them what i liked about it. And then like the you know the spots that were starting to stretch out or I'd say that minimize abroa- that has that has lasted me a long time. It's done its job. Inc you or love minimize ross. So they then sent me photographs of the bras that they thought would work and described them. And i i had like specifically asked for certain things and so. They came back with photos that i picked the ones i wanted to try. And you know. I paid for them. They sent them to me. I tried them on. And i'm sending back the ones that didn't work and keeping one so far that really worked and they're trying to track me at the same broad down in a another color. So i would have to working bras. Which feels like a good start for me And you know like their bras are pricey. These are an i kind of had like mentally. Tell myself like this is like investing in very comfortable shoes. I wear the same every day every fucking day so i had to be with you. Hey like i have to invest in my boobs. Yeah i wanna be comfortable. And i don't want to be self conscious and i wanna feel at ease in my body and my clothing and i needed abroad to do it. And i want to tell you what this brise. It's the exact amal. Spacer bra by antonia. Mo is very comfortable. that's all that's where i'm at

KHVH 830AM
"jeanette" Discussed on KHVH 830AM
"Dr. Bob is here for you calling right now Tell me where it hurts with whatever is ailing you I'm interested in helping you the number into the show 18885537 to 6 to 88 55 Dr Bob one Triple eight. 553 7 to 6 to next up. Is Jeanette from Utah. Welcome to the program, Jeanette. Hello. Hello, Dr. Bob. Thank thank you for everything. Yes, ma'am. I had a question about my brother's 65. He has a brain injury. From a motorcycle accident number 17 and I have to make decisions for him. Like you got to call the chart on February 12, and four days later, he had blood in this German I took him to the doctor the next day and he has Yuki I, doctor. Don't worry. It's not related to the shot, but Mike Jen, Jeanette Jeanette! Would you please turn off your radio in the background there? It's coming through, honey. You've got to turn that off when you go on the air, and I can't even hear it. Hold on one second. All right, So Jeanette is on the line. Asking about her brother. Who's got a brain injury. Never have your tell your radio on when you call it because this is what happens, Unfortunately or your speaker phone. Don't use that. All right? We're back with you, Janet. Yes. Oh, that sounds so much better. Thank you for that. Sorry to interrupt you. No, no worries. And so I did. There's a little pressure, Tonto that I got him the shot. He lives with two other disabled boys. And, you know, everybody wants you just Had been protected, and so I'm curious in the blood. Is clearing up and he's only antibiotic. But would it make any sense to it Scared the heck out of me and Should I get him? Ah, blood with a blood tests show anything that's going on with his blood right now. It just made me think of that doctor in Florida, and I'm just Beard. I even got him to begin with. Well, has he ever had any history Janet with anything like this prior to taking the covert 19 vaccine. Um, he could see you tr every Maybe every two years. And has he ever had the bleeding come through from that? No, no. So this was the first time reaction you saw after the vaccine. Yes. Okay, So maybe maybe it just maybe it. It puts some kind of a strain on his immune system and over reaction to the vaccine may have created the problem. I don't know It's gonna be hard to trace that back. No, The answer to that definitively will Probably never be found. But in the meantime, what? What you're here for is good. Because I can't tell you how to stop those UT eyes from happening going forward, Which is the most important thing for him now and what you can do about this. You can't do anything you can't undo. On boiled the vaccine that's already gone into his vessels. There's nothing to counter act it that we know other than the tincture of time in the hope that you know he survives it, but he can start using demand knows right away. 3000 mg of deep manos de m a. N N O s e. It's a powder. You put it in water. He drinks that every day, and he reduces his risk of urinary tract infections. D Manos. That's what the accident greedy in white cranberry, by the way, it works, But this is better than that. Thank you.

World News Tonight with David Muir
Far-Right Personality ‘Baked Alaska’ Arrested In Texas During US Capitol Riot Probe
"New chilling details about the insurrection. The washington post reporting three days before an internal capital police intelligence report warned that congress could be the target of angry trump supporters. The fbi is investigating whether lawmakers eight pro-trump rioters by giving building towards the day before so far at least three hundred opened investigations into riot suspects far-right right media personality. Jeanette who calls himself baked alaska also arrested in texas today allegedly spotted video inside the capitol chanting. Patriots are in control and suspect jenna ryan the texas realtor accused of taking part in the riot now publicly asking for a pardon telling station. Ktar she was just following president. Trump me personally not feel a sense of shame or guilt for my heart from what i was doing. I thought it was following my president. I thought i was following what we were called to do that. Defense echoed by suspect jacob. Chance lee the arizona man allegedly left a note on his desk in the senate chamber that read. It's only a matter of time. Justice is coming. He's also now asking for a pardon through his attorney. He walked down constitution avenue and entered the capital. He was there at the invitation of and request of our president.

Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"jeanette" Discussed on Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"Great weekend of meteorologist Jeanette Kaaya News four. San Antonio Here for you. Thanks to that 44 breezy charity was happening. Bipartisan group of lawmakers have introduced a bill to award Capitol Police officer Eugene Goodman the congressional gold medal for his role in protecting lawmakers during last week's U. S. Capitol riot They say Goodman deserves Congress's highest civilian honor after he was killed. Ruptured in photos and videos leading writers away from the entrance to the Senate chamber. During the attack, Goodman was being chased by writers and a scene looking through an empty doorway that leads to the Senate floor, or lawmakers and staff were sheltering. Goodman learned the mob away from the immediate entrance and around the corner to a back corridor, where they were met by additional police officers. Well, Mrs Rogers, the wife of Mr Rogers has died. The wife of Mr Rogers. Joanne Rogers has died at the age of 92, according to Fred Rogers Productions, which said in a statement. Joanne was a brilliant and accomplished musician. Ah, wonderful advocate for the arts and a dear friend to everyone in our organization. We extend our heartfelt condolences to Joan's family and the thousands of people who had the privilege of knowing and loving her. The couple was married for 50 years. Until his death in 2003 from stomach cancer When he was 74 After his death, she carried on his legacy of promoting kindness and understanding and making this a better world for Children. Well, America's oldest brewery, D. G. Yingling and Sun announced his beer will be available in Texas retailers as soon as this fall, The beers will be brewed at the Molson Coors Fort Worth Brewery. Yuengling is currently in 22 states on the East Coast in Texas is the first state and its westward expansion. While millions of Americans are hoping to hit it big and two huge national lottery's this weekend we'll have details.

Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"jeanette" Discussed on Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"1200 w O a eye on my heart radio. Just ahead of headlines, Traffic and weather together. Mention a cold front coming in way. Welcome in news for San Antonio meteorologists in that case, Good morning, Jeanette. Thank you And good morning. Happy Thursday. Well, pretty nice day ahead. We'll see plenty of sunshine throughout the day. It will be noticeably cool there, despite the sunshine for a cast tie this afternoon of 65 degrees. Breezy as well. Winds from the north and northwest 10 to 15 miles an hour. Occasional wind gusts getting up to 25 miles an hour for Friday in the morning, low temperatures will be starting off in the mid thirties. Tomorrow afternoon, mostly sunny and a high of 59 degrees. On Saturday, partly sunny with a 10% rain chance and a high closer to 57. Another storm system approaches on Sunday Sunday rain likely right now, the chance for rain it's at 70%, and it's gonna be a cold rain because temperatures on Sunday will be in the forties. By Sunday night, so there could be a wintry mix in the hill country on Monday, Low temperatures will be dropping to the freezing mark, if not even lower. Monday morning. 31 degrees Monday afternoon Sunny with a high of 55, a meteorologist Jeanette Kalyan news for San Antonio here for you, Thanks to that 46 degrees charity. What's going on? Police are assessing the damage of the U. S Capitol after protesters stormed the building. Many were caught on video breaking windows, pulling out furniture and smashing equipped That one person was even seen carrying a podium out of the rotunda. Others posted photos of them inside, including and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is office, which was vandalized. The building is said to have debris all over while outside a group.

Aviation Careers Podcas?t?
Seaplane Pilot Genesah Duffy on Living Your Dream
"Let's get on with the show first of all. This is the person i have on today. Is somebody that i truly admire. Because of the fact that Her persistence perseverance. And hard work has gotten to the position where she is today and again. That's as chief pilot and manager of operations flight operations and training for icon. Aircraft has a sea plane pilot and her name is jeanette duffy genesis. Welcome to the show. Thanks for having me. Yeah this is awesome as you know we were just talking off line. We met a few years back when you actually were introduced to pulse. Stay college and your on boarding there. That was pretty exciting time. We're getting started in your career and it sure has blossom From that point so you are a graduate correct of pokes. Yeah awesome awesome Well before we talk too much about bulk state and we'll talk about that later and you you really have had a varied path to the flight deck and one thing i want to mention is That you are Ex or retired navy. yes. I was in the navy. Four I just did one term for years but I'm a veteran cool. We appreciate your service and all those that are listening right now. So we'll talk a little bit about that too transitioning as a veteran because You know we do a lot of career. Coaching with veterans coming out. There are some unique things. It's it's definitely different world. that's for sure. Yeah for sure but genesee you. You took a different path and we're talk a little bit about that You became a sea pilot instructor and didn't go the route of the airlines which It was seems like that was kind of the direction. You may have been Heading towards so a lot of people are. I'm sure they're gonna be saying why in the world a seaplane pilot. I asked that sometimes to back. When i started flying and when i go to the military i really had no idea what i was going to do in aviation klein was not remotely in the realm of things that i was considering the time So it just kind of be. It was happenstance that i fell into Going on discovery flight and realizing i wanted to be a pilot. But i didn't know anything about aviation like nothing. I knew no pilots. Nothing so when i started flying i kind of assumed while all right i'll be an airline pilot. That's that's what you do you become pilot For delta or american. Or whatever. And then once i got my commercial rating was actually right around the fifteen hundred hours switch so before just assume as get my commercial rating star working for murph operator planning on being i And then fifteen hundred our role kitten play. Sounds like okay so now after struct this is going to be different. Also didn't really know anything besides meeting my instructor for the first time didn't know anything With that was like or or what that could be like But then i actually kinda enjoyed instructing a little bit. And i started down that path and then i realized i don't know about actually want to go be an airline pilot. I liked. I mean. I like flying smaller aircraft. I started looking into more of the adventure. Type flying i even i debated before going fixed-wing being a helicopter pilot. I'm so i was kinda just all over the place. Since i was so new into aviation in general i just wanted to explore the different avenues. Before i committed to going to the airline route. I felt like the airline route was a safety net. Were all pilots can end up going to the airline route And then i started working actually an aircraft maintenance job because i also thought about getting my amp license. And i wanted to know more about maintenance and and really just general aviation as as a whole and i felt like working at a maintenance shop would have Did give me a lot of information about the industry. And and i met some incredible incredible people on the way And that made. It shop was at winter haven airport which everyone knows is is jack. Browns is so just one day. I decided i was like you now. I have no idea what. I'm going to use this four but i feel like one day i might use it so i just over a weekend. I went over to jack. Rowell's got my seaplane. And then i think maybe it was a year later that i actually started doing some seaplane instructions so i didn't do anything with were while and then it just kinda started to fall into place after that

John Williams
Anjanette Young, victim of botched Chicago police raid, cancels meeting with mayor
"Worker and Jeanette Young. The woman whose home was raided by Chicago police, as it turns out, incorrectly, has scrubbed plans to meet with Mayor Lori Lightfoot. As well as be part of a public forum with members of City Council and Police Superintendent David Brown. It's over disagreements on how those gatherings would proceed. Under current covert 19 restrictions on indoor gatherings. The raid on her home in the city's handling of it is lead. You angry reactions from members of the clergy, lawmakers and civil rights activist who decried it is done only racist but an affront to the dignity of black women.

Sunday Standards
Anjanette Young, Who Was Handcuffed Naked During Wrong Police Raid, Agrees To Meet With Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot
"Outside of Chicago Police headquarters Sunday Rainbow Push Coalition led a march to protest the police raid on the home of anti net young body camera video showed Young was handcuffed naked while police searched her home person they were actually looking for was in another apartment. Jeanette Lewis of Rainbow Push criticized the officer's actions They broke in that woman's apartment. She told him. I was the wrong place that wouldn't even let her put on clothes. They didn't fix the restored apartment, left her naked and vulnerable. Her apartment of vulnerable for anyone to enter. Young has since agreed to a meeting with Mayor Lightfoot. Until the

Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen
The Real Housewives of Atlanta Recap
"Atlanta atlanta. Okay so we have two new faces. Who grace us in this episode. We have looked toya who is a friend of and we have drew sonora. Who has the fast housewife of the season. Well and we have a third person. If you count drew's husband ralph. who is. He is hot but he is also a little too much unpacked there. So i can't wait till we get to that final scene but yes. He is at first glance a very attractive man and we know how we all feel about getting a new hothouse husband. But there's much to do. There are a Twa comes into our lives very an interesting fashion because kenya usually does not warm up to new people. But she's all about the toyota innocent even her friends. Candy's friend right. Her lower third is candy's friend. That kenya stole link is not very common for kenya. Take to a newbie like this. I'm getting crushed vibes and there was a hint of that in the super team for the season where kenya says something about. I've got a crush on her or something along those lines. So we're definitely seeing the beginning of this girl crush that may ultimately become something else. I don't know but it is not characteristic of kenya to be taking to somebody like this right. I kind of hope that marriage has put kenya off so much that she's just like you know what women women now i mean. It wouldn't surprise me also does drew starting the show in a boot make you think of brandy from beverly hills. That is such a great point. I didn't make the connection before. But yes so really. She has the makings of becoming a great housewife late. There's something about the lucky boot and let us not forget. Porsche was in a boot at bravo con. So there's a lot of good luck there. Yes yes yes yes. We found out a lot about drew's marriage. Can we just get to that part. Yeah definitely there's yeah for sure okay. Because drew and her husband. Ralph are living with drew's mom. Yeah we'll technically. She's living with them. Well the mcdan- right. Yes that sounds like a recipe for divorce. That's i don't know how else to say especially in quarantine like it's it's just not setting yourself up for success. Definitely not i mean pastor. Jeanette seems like quite a character. And i also love when we get a new housewife. We get potentially a hot house husband and we got a mom who's going to be a big character and we got that in her. But i feel like quarantine or not. I'd be like after a certain amount of time. Mom you gotta go back home because we got got a situation going on here with my family that needs to be worked on and clearly. There's a lot of work to be done Andrew and ralph's relationship.

Anna Davlantes
Bodycam video shows Chicago police handcuff innocent, naked woman while they raid wrong house
"The The Law Law department department attempted attempted in in court court this this week week to to block block a a local local news news station station from from airing airing body body camera camera footage footage of of Chicago Chicago police police officers officers raiding raiding and and innocents innocents Woman's Woman's home. home. And handcuffing her while she was naked. During today. City Council meeting Alderman Byron Sexual Lopez ripped the police department. We have a systemic issue, the police brutality, Ms Young Call out the police. 43 times, 43 times. So the now's of these plus on illegal on wrong, Miss taken rate Mayor Lightfoot, accusing him of not having the fact we deal with counsel as an ethical responsibility. We never deal directly with the plainness. So the city filed a request to have the woman and Jeanette Young sanctioned for allegedly violating a confidentiality order.

All of It
Millions of Americans travel for Thanksgiving despite spike in Covid cases
"Americans are traveling ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday despite a record number of new Corona virus infections in the U. S. Triple A spokeswoman, Jeanette McGee is urging people to check Cove in 19 restrictions and guidelines when they reach their destinations. Plan ahead, check with state and local authorities where you are a longer out to understand what what's happening in those areas and are there certain rules and regulations that you're going to need to follow before you get there? And when you return home, the seven day average of daily new infections now stands at about 172,000 in the U. S, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Tai Asks Why
What are the origins of English
"Think if it is a bunch of. It is probably a bunch of women, MOMS and aunts on the island of England. That's probably the people who invented the English language and they were called angles. So they didn't even call English. They called it anguish. My Name's Tom Howell and I used to write the Oxford Dictionary encounter and I wrote a book called the Rude Story of English and it is a history of some dudes and some woman thousand five hundred years ago trying to invent the language. So in a sense when you learned English. From the older people in your family. They are inventing English in a way because that is going to be a bit different. From the English that their grandparents spoke and then their great grandparents spoke and so on and so on and so on. Until when you go back far enough, it would be very difficult for us now to understand like great. Great. Great. Great. Great. Great great grandparents, saints which other think of how friend and neighbor are spell differently neighbors eat before I, friend is I before e friend came from one place where they said free owned once upon a time and neighbor came from another place where they were saying. It was actually called a near Ghabbour. You know has GM neighbor Mrs Weird thing we don't pronounce it now. It's just people stop pronouncing it properly but. Once upon a time, they would've been like, no, it's wrong to say neighbor without Jeanette they would have been like the correct way to say that is Nia Gabor because it was a boor who lived near you. So generations go by people make mistakes people say things a bit differently. People put on funny voices. Things Change. Now we say neighbor instead of new? Kabar I guess it is. The English is so complicated because it comes from all around the world. Yeah. What recalled English today like if you look up a word on the Internet to find out where it came from could come from anywhere. Like bungalow comes from India but you know even if you went back all the way to what the angles were saying, their language also came from all around the world like their language came from. Iraq and India and Russia and all kinds of weird places like people have been talking to each other for at least one, hundred, thousand years. So all of us, any point in history might say who invented our language and the odds would almost be some not dudes some arts and mother's thousand, five, hundred years ago. kind of doesn't matter where you are. That's always kind of be the answer.

In The Thick
A Culture of Silence
"Hey welcome to the. podcast politics, race, and culture from a multi layered POC perspective I'm money. and. Joining us from Overland Ohio professor. Jeanette. Is Cultural anthropologist author and professor of Comparative American Studies at Oberlin College Hey Gino welcome to the show. Thank you so much for having me and thank you for being in Ohio. We need you and joining us from New Jersey. Also, very important state is Pam Gumbo spot mashes a veteran of foreign policy organizer and a senior political strategist. At the Working Families Party welcome. Pam. Thank you so much for inviting me. All right. So we are looking at a sad story, the story of Vanessa Gin. But we're going to put it into a larger context. Right? We hope everybody knows the story of. She's twenty year old specialist in the US Army who went missing from Fort Hood army base in Killeen Texas, which is about. Fifty minutes away from Austin. Right at the end of April. When many of us at least here in the east coast were in the throes of like pandemic insanity more than two months. Later, there was an extensive manhunt. Finally, there was a grassroots campaign led by let the women service members and veterans, and there was national each and the family was finally told that their daughters remains had been found with the backdrop of a global pandemic and you know this real. For Racial Justice long-held accusations have reemerged into the national spotlight around the military sexual violence in the military. Violence and how you protect yourself from other people who have guns and you're living on a base in the military and so many other intertwined injustices in systems that ultimately were responsible for says, disappearance and death. So Pam you've been actively involved in the campaign for justice for Vanessa is well is speaking out on these issues in fact, for years Gina You as an academic have written extensively about the military's relationships specifically with Latino and Latina communities. So gene, we're going to start with you talk about the significance of this case and what it's putting into the national spotlight from your perspective. Well, as you say, this is such a tragic set of circumstances that brings us here together but I think it's also really kind of an important opportunity to honor Vanessa's life and. Hannity, incredible activism, an extraordinary advocacy of her sisters, her younger sister Lupe and her other sister and her mother to bring this to national attention and I. Think. For me one of the things that. So extraordinary about this is that for some people, this is new that this is something that is surprising to people because I think for many people like Pam and others who are have been in the military know that issues of sexual violence and sexual harassment in the military have a long history. And Violence Against Latinos and the way that in social media and used media have framed this as femicide. We also know that this has a long history in our communities alongside history and our communities. So for me, this is a real opportunity to draw attention to things that we don't want to pay attention to enter really hold our elected officials accountable to addressing these longstanding problems that have is incredible impact. On Latina's and women's lives and on their families and communities that they have sworn to protect and that they have enlisted in the military to try to protect, and so I see this as a tragedy that is also a real opportunity. Pam Do you see it the same way tragedy? That's an opportunity from your perspective as somebody who served in the military what stands out about the importance of this case I. Will tell you. I. Organized Around Pretty Heavy topic sprayed ending wars, militarism violence holding the department, of Defense, accountable and when I heard about the disappearance, right because we can't forget that she was disappeared choose disappeared for months and I learned about it through Spanish language media and social media networks not through the English. Media networks and the sowed and devastating part is that Vanessa is one of thousands on thousands. And I think the social media explosion that happened with Vanessa that Hashtag shows you how prevalent this is what is different however, I do think that we are in a reckoning moment in this country where everyday people are no longer satisfied with hypocrisies. Yeah and what greater of hypocrisy than the daughter of an immigrant joining the military to give her life for what rate what caught my ear when I heard. Gloria. Vanessa. Ganz immigrant mother on the Spanish language news. She was very clear about what was happening. She said me e my daughter told me that she was being sexually harassed by a superior right and nothing was done. There was little to no urgency. has also done what often doesn't happen, which is she has not treated the military the Department of Defense generals she has not treated them with blind allegiance or ability. She has said I don't care that I'm a working class, Latina you're going to respect me and you're going to give me answers which is different right and I think that blind allegiance we'll get into it but blind allegiance to the. Institutions have really lead US astray and not had any accountability for

Rush Limbaugh
Florida’s Pam Bondi, Jeanette Nuñez to address Republican National Convention
"Speakers for day number two of the Republican National Convention. Jeanette Nunez says she's honored to speak up and out on behalf of President Trump, She says her goal is to verbalize exactly what's at stake November 3rd. Sometimes people don't really pay attention to politics get turned off by the negativity, but I think that there's really issues about the future of this country. The future freedom, she said. She'll begin her speech by telling her story of how our parents fled Cuba in search of a better life in America. And now this became the driving force of her political career. Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is also speaking today, along with first lady Melania Trump and Trump's Children, Eric and Tiffany. Wendy Grossman.

Purity Products
Asia Today: No masks on red carpet as Taiwan logs few cases
"At Taiwan's annual film festival after keeping its Corona virus outbreak, So a few 100 cases actors lined up for photos with no social distancing Saturday night and despite a recent spike and Corona virus cases in the U. S. Florida Lieutenant governor Jeanette Nunes remains confident. What you've seen is an increase in cases your Florida across the sun belt, but it doesn't come with a proportionate increase in fatalities. You see our fatality rate We have been able to manage that. Nunes, speaking on Fox is America's news headquarters. Meanwhile, Louisiana Governor