40 Burst results for "Jeremy"

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Josh and Jesse Berger Talk All Things PKT
"These two gentlemen that are here today have been fighting to get on there and get some visibility for a year now. I met you both gentlemen last year walking around. And I have with me Josh Berger and Jesse Berger. The Berger Brothers. The Berger Brothers. Is there another one? There is a third Berger. There's a third Berger. I saw him on the emails. Who's that one? He's the younger Berger Brother. You don't take him with you? He's got a kid, so we got to, you know, he needs a babysit, you know. Got to babysit. That's funny. We need someone to keep the train on the tracks while we're out here in the trenches hustling and spreading the gospel of packet. That's it. That's what we're here for today is talk about packet and it's spelled PKT. That's correct. But it was interesting is last year I ran into you. We were talking over at a lounge and it was so exciting because at Consensus of 2022 had like 20 ,000 people. It was just amazing to be able to run into everyone. And there's so many people here today. We have more room here to mingle and walk around, but you've come such a long way in a year with this product, with this amazing, what would you call it? A portal Wi -Fi. How are you packaging packet? Yeah, so it's a mesh Wi -Fi technology and there's really two key parts to this. There's the baseline protocol, the blockchain, which is called packet and it's an ecosystem fully decentralized. There's no foundation. There's no company. There's no investors. It's like the true decentralized type protocol, similar to Bitcoin. It's code on GitHub. Anybody could download it for free and make essentially money off of your internet. And then within that ecosystem, a company that Josh and I and Jeremy founded, as well as our other co -founder, Caleb James Delisle, who's one of the original protocol creators and lead dev, started PacketPal. And PacketPal, the whole premise was building software and hardware to make it really easy for people to participate in the packet ecosystem.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh update on "jeremy" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News
"And go. Shortness of breath. Fatigue. I kept going. Then I got so lightheaded, I couldn't. My said doctor I have AFib, so I'm about five times more likely to have a stroke. Other symptoms. Irregular heartbeat. Heart racing. Chest pain can come and go, but the risk of stroke stays. If you have symptoms, tell a doctor. Visit NoTimeToWait .com. Sponsored by Bristol -Myers Squibb and Pfizer. Everything you need, every time you listen. WTOP News 1145. With us. For the first time in 50 years, NASA astronauts are set to return to the Moon's orbit with the Artemis II mission. Baltimore local Reid Wiseman is the commander of Artemis II. The NASA astronaut spoke with WTOP's Luke Garrett for the latest episode of the DMV Download podcast, with more about what this mission means for our planet. I look at Artemis II as a absolutely tiny step in the broader Artemis architecture NASA has generated. We've set the strategy that we would like to see humans on Mars. And I guess in the way you asked that question, the first time someone looked across the Atlantic Ocean and I'm said, going to sail across that and see what's on the other side. Everybody thought they were crazy. And now we jump on airplane an and in a few hours we're across the Atlantic and it just seems totally normal. No one would ever question that. And so think I by setting the strategy of putting humans on Mars, of really seeing humans working on another planet, start you to make the impossible very, very real and tangible. You know, Mars still seems so far out, But just hearing you talk, it kind of sounds like it's closer. You're hopeful. Do you think we'll get to Mars and if you do, when? I know for certain we will get to Mars. The when part of that I can't answer because we've been trying to do it for many years. Right. But I really think when you when you look at what's going on with private space, I think I mean 10 to 20 years doesn't seem unreasonable to me. Wow. The moon is 250 ,000 miles to get out to the moon. When I was a kid, that was unimaginably far. Now I'm a year and a half away from going out there. doesn't It seem intangible at all. We're going to go do it and so Mars will be the same way. Alright, so you're a year and a half out. What's left to do? I'm sure there's a full list ahead of you. I would say we haven't even begun. We a have solid 18 months of training that we're going to start in the middle of June. And that is when together we will come as a crew, myself, Victor, Christina and Jeremy, and we will really start learning the nuts and bolts of the Orion spacecraft, the Boeing Space Launch System. We have Airbus has built our service module that will power us out to the moon. So we have a lot of work to do. And that little kid who's thinking about becoming an astronaut or anyone who's going into college who's interested in this field, what would you tell them? First, I would tell them to find their passion and attack it. And if aerospace is their passion, there's never been a better time in the history of human civilization to get into that field, whether you become an astronaut or a mission controller or a rocket scientist, a vehicle designer, we need all of those. But we also need school teachers and nurses and doctors and veterinarians. There's a large need to help civilization right now. So find your passion and go change the world. And that is NASA astronaut Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman, who I have to say his enthusiasm is a bit contagious. He is set to go to the moon in November 2024 to orbit the moon. Hear the full station on the DMV Download podcast wherever you get your podcasts.

AP News Radio
TSA is testing facial recognition at more airports, raising privacy concerns
"The transportation security administration is testing the use of facial recognition technology at a handful of airports across the country, a traveler puts their driver's license into a slot that reads the card. Then looks at a camera on a screen about the size of an iPad. It captures an image and compares it to the ID. While we are trying to do with this is a the officers to actually determine that you are who you say you are. Jason Lim with TSA showed off the technology at the Baltimore Washington international thurgood Marshall airport. Once the process is complete. As well your life photo is deleted upon which. Jeremy Scott with the electronic privacy information center would like to see some kind of audit. To ensure accuracy to make sure that disproportionately impacting certain groups of people. Scott is also worried what his optional now may soon be mandatory. Right now, facial recognition technology is at 16 airports. I'm Ed Donahue

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh "Jeremy" from WTOP 24 Hour News
"I would say we haven't even begun. We have a solid 18 months of training that we're going to start in the middle of June. And that is when we will come together as a crew. Myself, Victor, Christina and Jeremy. And we will really start learning the nuts and bolts of the Orion spacecraft, the Boeing Space Launch System. We have Airbus has built our service module that will power us out to the moon. So we have a lot of work to do. As that little kid who's thinking about becoming an astronaut or anyone who's going into college who's interested in this field, what would you tell them? First, I would tell them to find their passion and attack it. And if aerospace is their passion, there's never been a better time in the history of human civilization to get into that field. Whether you become an astronaut or a mission controller or a rocket scientist, a vehicle designer, we need all of those. But we also need school teachers and nurses and doctors and veterinarians. There's a large need to help human civilization right now. So find your passion and go change the world. NASA astronaut and Artemis II commander Wiseman Reid set to go to the moon in November of 2024. Hear the full conversation with Luke Garrett on DMV Download Podcast wherever you get your podcasts. Look at the top you want to WTOP hazy skies across our area. The effects are being felt directly in your sinuses. Stay with us for

AP News Radio
First Republic Bank seized, sold to JPMorgan Chase
"Failed bank first republic was seized by the government Monday and sold to JPMorgan Chase. First republic is the third midsize bank to fail in two months and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says it won't be the last. There may be no smaller one, but it's pretty much resolves them all. But this part of the crisis is over. That does not down the road. There are rates going way up, real estate, recession. That's a whole different issue, but for now it was just take a deep breath. JPMorgan Chase CFO Jeremy barnum says first republic clients can bank as usual at branches. Feel confident that their deposits are backed by the strength and security of JPMorgan Chase. Following the failure of Silicon Valley and signature bank, customers rushed withdraw money from first republic creating a run on the bank. The FDIC estimated its deposit insurance fund paid for by banks would take a $13 billion hit. Julie Walker, New York

Bloomberg Daybreak Asia
Fresh "Jeremy" from Bloomberg Daybreak Asia
"Business tab and Bloomberg radio .com this 29 minutes past six in the morning here in Hong Kong as well as in Singapore 29 minutes past six in the evening on the Atlantic seaboard of the United States. I'm Brian and I'm Brian Curtis we are drifting into some negative numbers here in terms of futures Hang index Seng futures down about three -tenths of a percent and Australian futures are trading down about two -tenths of one 1 we'll % get to the latest on the markets with Doug Krisner coming up in a few moments, but now the top stories all Let's right have a Well, look at what's let's been happening in Europe with Italy saying that it's preparing restrictions on Pirelli's top shareholder which is Okay Bloomberg's Bonnie Al has more the restrictions are set to include limits to Sino Camp say over over company roles and fetal powers for Italian investors. It's seen as an opportunity for Italy to show resolve In distancing its economy from China Sino Cam has been the largest investor in a time maker since 2015 It owns a 37 % stake in Pirelli following a 2017 listing sources say Sino Has Cam been pushing to have more say in the firm's corporate governance Sino cam itself has been asked by To Chinese authorities take a more active role in its foreign holdings in Hong Kong. I'm Bonnie our Bloomberg Daybreak Asia Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan says that higher capital requirements may impact lending it It follows reports that large US banks may have to boost their capital by an average of 20 % Here's Moynihan speaking at the Bloomberg Invest conference in New York You know in the end of the day it's a fairly straightforward if our capital ratios go up by 100 basis points we basically you know simply put You Can't make about 150 billion dollars of loans and it because people say well you have more capping make more But if we took risk on that capital we wouldn't have that capital ratio so it has to be a riskless bill to capital can't be out there taking risk Bank of America and its rivals have been bracing for the updated capital requirements late last month JP Morgan Chase CFO Jeremy Barnum said that the firm was expecting proposals on new standards any day now and he said the bank was preparing for its requirements to rise and last Citigroup week CEO Jane Fraser said that her bank was holding off on anything beyond modest buybacks until more it had clarity on the upcoming changes. all right well we've got another big technology company scaling back its office footprint job cuts remote work and worries about the economy continue to be contributing factors here Bloomberg said Tom Busby has more Microsoft is the latest tech company to cut back on office space looking now to sublease 42 ,000 square feet of offices at 11 times square right in the heart of New York City now this isn't the first office reduction for Microsoft which has been cutting jobs and recently dropped plans to build a new office complex in London firms like alphabet meta platforms and Amazon have all announced plans to reduce office space and Twitter and Spotify have also marketed office space for subleasing this year Tom Busby Bloomberg break Asia 32 minutes past the hour is time for news any hopes of an immediate thawing out of relations between China and the US got thrown a of little bit a wet towel today let's hear more on that let's get to Ed Baxter in San Francisco in the 60 newsroom Ed yeah of course I can tell by the tone of your voice said this mean it's going not going to happen in the long run but White the House says US China reengagement is still very early phase and that the state of affairs makes even that uncertain Kurt Campbell White House Indo -Pacific coordinator says the aim

Mark Levin
Pres. Trump Will Be on 'Life, Liberty & Levin' This Sunday
"If I have a guest on I have a guest on for a reason And that guest is on So we can hear what that guest has to say about various things This Sunday 8 p.m. eastern 5 p.m. Pacific 7 p.m. central You name it There we are I have I think a very important opening One of the most unusual openings in terms of non prototypical type openings on cable Some of the producers got very nervous I don't know if I should do I don't know if a lot of stars do it We're doing it do it Followed by the part two of our interview with Donald Trump He does a great great job And it's very very interesting I've already banned the left from watching I have banned the New York slimes in the Washington compost I have banned mediocre right and all the fools frauds and phonies there I banned maggot haberman I have banned Jeremy and his Peters and I have banned of course Philip and his bump and the other retrograde phony journalists out there You need and watch The wool watch because that shows not for you anyway No it's not

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Fresh update on "jeremy" discussed on CoinDesk Podcast Network
"Let's face it, Coinbase has got a lot of money. They're able to fight this, the same with Ripple. And I'm happy for them. I'm glad that they're going to be able to fight this. I think it's ridiculous. I think it's embarrassing. And if any, and I'm voting for whoever is pro crypto at this point, I don't care about social issues. Jen, I was just going to bring up Ripple as well. I think the deadline is June 13th for those Hinman papers to be revealed in the Ripple case. And I wonder if whatever comes from those papers when it comes to either being a security or not being a security is going to creep into these Coinbase and Binance cases. I think the SEC scrubbed their website of Hinman and his biography and whatever over there. So they're they're working kind of to do these unethical things. And it's all public. And it's just very sad at this point, because, again, the people that are getting hurt as American taxpayers and people that pay their crypto taxes, people that follow the laws and people that just want some sort of regulation or actually not even regulation, some sort of guidance as to what's happening. So, again, the poor people, the underdogs are getting hurt. Guys, I have some breaking news for the show right now. Binance US has posted an article in the last hour, listing 40 trading pairs, most of them trading pairs with Tether USDT. And there's like one inch on here, Zcash and a bunch of other tokens I can't even name because we're just all over the place. But I think this kind of shows you that there's like more pressure on these exchanges right now and there's more pressures on the products that they're selling. And that's something that we discussed the last two days with the Binance case and the Coinbase case, that a lot of the pressures that are on the exchanges is because the products that they're selling themselves are seen as unregistered securities within the eyes of the SEC. I think one thing to keep watching going forward is that some of these exchanges will be proactive in delisting a lot of these exchange pairs, a lot of these trading pairs. And it won't be just the ones that the SEC is going after, right? It's going to be other exchanges that say, hey, this product probably not worth the juice I'm squeezing out of it. So let's just delist it and get rid of it. So something to watch. Your favorite token might not be listed forever. I had one more thought. There was just a headline that moved on Bloomberg about Catherine Coley. Remember, Catherine Coley, the Binance U .S. CEO, who has been not heard of for a while. Her testimony is in part of that suit against Binance. So that is a fascinating resurfacing of someone we've all been wanting to hear from. Anyway, good stuff. Zach, wasn't there like a 400 million dollar plus bounty from the SEC for Whistleblower lately? But it was anonymous. I don't know. I have no idea. OK, we go to our next story after that little fervor of speculation there. Let's talk about some stable coins. Stable coin corner. This is almost the road to boring, but not quite because stable coins have seen their fair share of action recently. USDC, an entity affiliated with the company Circle, is moving into Singapore, getting some licensing. This will enable USDC to be opened up in other markets to have more stable jurisdictions. This, of course, comes after what happened in February with a lot of the banking partners of Circle and the Circle Consortium going under and Circle trying to figure out who to have as their banking provider. But if they can continue to move internationally and start working in safe regimes, then they can have a safer product. Another story at the same time is that there's also a push in crypto circles to continue building crypto native stable coins. Just because Terra Luna occurred doesn't mean that crypto natives are not interested in making stable coins themselves. Aave is building the GHO stable coin. They've been running a test net for the last few months and it's gone quite well. So they're looking now at launching this product to Ethereum mainnet. This would, of course, accompany DAI, which is the largest native stable coin. It's asset backed on the Ethereum blockchain. Zach, this feels like a story for you. I got to throw it to you. Because it's boring. It's a boring old story. He likes the boring stories. Boring old guy. Get that boring old guy to comment. Yeah, we're talking about stable coins. All right. Well, sure, let's do this thing. I'll go back to the USDC one in Singapore. I think that's super interesting. Obviously, there's a lot of sort of jockeying for which like leading Asian crypto hub will emerge as one that wins this industry. And I think obviously, like, it's hard to view this news without understanding the subtext of what's going on in the US. Right. Like Circle is a US based company, probably going to be in the US for a long time. I think there is some future world in which maybe some of their technology powers a digital dollar in the US at the CBDC level. But for now, they're also hedging their bets and they're saying, OK, we're getting some key licensure in Singapore and we're going to make it proper. So it's interesting to see, I think, this sort of global jockeying going on for who's going to serve this industry in a compliant and regulated fashion. Right. Whether that's Hong Kong, whether that's Japan, whether that's Korea, whether it's Singapore and Singapore certainly putting its stamp of approval on Circle in this instance, I think it's quite notable. So that to me is sort of like geopolitical subtext of these things. You know, you have chaos in America and you have Circle saying, OK, well, we've got some licensure in Singapore. Singapore is cool. You know, they're ready to build the future of finance with us. And you have Jeremy O 'Leary and Dante Desparte saying as much in this release. So that to me is what's notable. I'll toss it to Jan in case she has thoughts on that one. Well, you guys can tell me if I'm crazy for drawing this parallel. But when I was reading the story, I was just like noting this seeming growing race and tension between CBDCs and stablecoins. And what's happening in Singapore is like kind of interesting for me. Right. If USDC is getting licensed there, I know Singapore at the end of last year said that they were testing out a few different CBDC pilots, but retail wasn't super interesting to them. And then a few weeks ago, Singapore talked about this partnership they have with the New York Fed and settling interbank transfers using CBDCs. And like maybe there's this world where stablecoins solve the problem for retail and CBDCs can be used on a governmental level for banks to interact with each other. And solved we've the issues by working together and maybe Singapore has figured it out. I don't know. That's what I that's what I took away from the story. And maybe it's totally off, but that's how my brain is working this morning. Sounds anti Bitcoin to me. I don't know. Well, well, everything that is not Bitcoin is an obvious S coin. OK, come on now. As far as the story goes, I honestly think that USDC is going to be the CBDC of the United States of America. I think our public servants are just way too lazy to create something themselves. They can't even define what a security is versus a commodity. And why would they create something on their own? I think that they're just going to use their partner with Circle at some point, and they're going to have to rush to do so because it looks like China played like 4D chess with us and is a lot more pro crypto assets than the US, even though their country operates a

The Bible in a Year
1 Samuel 27: David Flees From Saul
"First Samuel, chapter 27. David goes to king Akshay in gath. And David said in his heart. I shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul. There is nothing better for me than that I should escape to the land of the Philistines, then Saul will despair of seeking me any longer within the borders of Israel, and I shall escape out of his hand. So David arose, and went over. He and the 600 men who were with him to akshi, the son of Malcolm, king of gath. And David dwelt with akshi and gath, he and his men, every man with his household, and David with his two wives, a hint of jezreel, and Abigail of Carmel, naval's widow. And when it was told Saul that David had fled to gath, he sought for him no more. Then David said to Ashish, if I have found favor in your eyes, let a place be given me in one of the country towns, that I may dwell there, for why should your servant dwell in the royal city with you? So that day actually gave him Zika. Therefore, zik lag has belonged to the kings of Judah to this day, and the number of the days that David dwelt in the country of the Philistines was a year and four months. Now David and his men went up and made raids upon the gesture rights, the gurus, and the amala kites. For these were the inhabitants of the land from of old, as far as sure to the land of Egypt, and David struck the land, and left neither man nor woman alive, but took away the sheep, the oxen, the donkeys, the camels, and the garments, and came back to Akshay. When Akshay asked, against whom have you made a raid today, David would say, against the negev of Judah, or against the negev of the Jeremy lights, or against the negative of the canines. saved neither man nor woman alive to bring tidings to gath thinking lest they should tell about us and say, so David has done. Such was his custom all the while he dwelt in the country of the Philistines and trusted David, thinking he has made himself utterly abhorred by his people Israel. Therefore he shall be my servant always.

The Dan Bongino Show
Fresh update on "jeremy" discussed on The Dan Bongino Show
"Through Friday, Charlie Sykes speaks with guests about the latest stories from inside Washington things have come out of this, but it also feels like we have this massive hangover, no shouting or grandstanding principles over partisanship. The bulwark podcast wherever you listen. It's too fast to put down your street. Was it Brent Sherman local boy makes good. He's in the big NASCAR race, 4th of July weekend, and he's on with with me, Steve Cochran. Tomorrow I'm the big 89 WLS. If liberal policies work, Why don't liberal policies work? The Dan Bongino show. Yeah, folks, our official Joan Jett recognizer Jeremy's getting a little out of control. I gotta I gotta I gotta draw the line. He's like pushing Pantera. Now that's that's Eric's job. That's Eric. I appreciate you taking on new responsibilities. But Jim was very upset. Jeremy, don't you gotta stay in your lane. Gotta stay in your lane. Gotta do one good thing. Well, we gotta let you don't be crouching on Eric. I'll have to arbitrate between you guys. And Eric's the arbitrator, too. So then we're in real trouble. You have too many jobs going around here. And Jim was like, yeah, Jim's got pictures for you, by the way, of his various smoked meats, in case you want off. We talked about. I'm glad you like the last segment, folks, because the rebellion is brewing. I got more evidence coming up, and it's not good for the left. They have way up. And the really tragically hilarious thing

The Officer Tatum Show
Jeremy Boreing Responds to Steven Crowder
"So Jeremy came out and just laid the hammer down. And to me, it made me lose. All but a little bit of respect for Steven Crowder because of that. And what happened recently is that world, unfortunately he's going through a divorce. Now, I don't understand in the Christian world why people haven't getting divorces like they like they do. What happens to the dead do you part? You don't have to like the person. That don't mean you have to get a divorce. You made a commitment. You made a commitment that wasn't up for negotiation. With God, you're supposed to be a Christian. And I'm not talking about him 'cause I don't know. He maybe he getting abused or something. I don't know what happened to him. But I'm just throwing that out about people that get married. They get married and they're like, I don't like this person. I want to go move on. The grass, listen, the grass ain't greener. Especially for men, you think you feel to leave your wife and go get she crazy too.

The Dan Bongino Show
Has Dan Bongino Signed His Life Away to Wife Paula?
"What am I signing right here I am you sure I'm not signing my life away Paula this is his trick she pulls Do I have to date it too I did So that's why he's 6 Paula does this thing folks He has his stunt while she's here associated I'm not talking about him behind my back She comes up by him on the air in a live radio show and asks me to sign documents and she's like oh yeah don't worry About like a bulletproof car whatever Meanwhile says at the top agreement to turn all of your assets over to Paula bongino No stipulations included She does this all the time I have no idea what I'm saying This is like the fourth time in the last and there's a note This is unbelievable Hello notary this is made by the unbelievable Notarized I gotta show my license and everything This is so hilarious I have no idea what I just saw He does this all the time And you know what here's the thing Jim She knows the time clock of the show She knows the time clock So she's like hold on We got a minute till he's back on the air Every time Yes I did not miss pantera I did not miss It was just a little bit of a delayed response So official pantera recognize her Is that Eric or Jeremy's Joan Jen right Eric I think it's our pantera recognizer I didn't miss it And Jim's funny right before we went back on the air Jim didn't want me to miss it So he said don't miss it just like the don't sniff them He said it whether he knows it or not and he exact Plato sniff them You have those sniff them He said it the exact same way I don't even think he did Don't sniff them Don't miss it Play it again Don't miss it That's really probably one more time That's what he said He did it the exact same way

The Charlie Kirk Show
Jeremy Carl Details the Evolving Political Landscape of Montana
"Cut 38. This is happening in Montana. Montana's more liberal than people realize. I want to talk, you know, Jeremy, because it involves the Senate race. People don't get it. And I said Missoula, I met Helena, but Missoula is more left wing than Stalingrad. That place is out of control. You got university of Montana there. Boseman is not too far behind it with Montana state university. Play cut 38 please. Let's post it. Literally holding them hostage. And again, this is such a this is such an exhausted way of commentating on radio and television, but I have to do it. Could you imagine if those people were wearing maga hats and a bunch of cowboys? Could you imagine how the media would respond? It's actually an appropriate thing to keep on saying. It just kind of gets a little tired because no one really cares. But Jeremy, tell us about Montana. I'm worried about Montana. You know, you're letting a lot of Californians into your state. It's not as right wing as people think. Now is it maybe I'm wrong because I heard one interesting point from somebody I trust they said, but Charlie it's mostly Republicans moving into the state is that true? I do think that post COVID it's been a much more Republican movement. And that's good to hear. Keep going. Yeah. And I've actually done some very micro analysis of the Senate like county by county district from the census. And what you see is people moving into conservative and rural counties. You have the most conservative in the last year, metro in Montana, which is callous bell the flat head up near glacier national park growing twice as fast as Boseman, which is more liberal to kind of near where I live. But still a mixed district and I have to say, I know tons of conservatives who have moved here just in the last few years. We are quite a ways from boulder. It's not an accident that the Montana GOP got its first super majority in the legislatures in the last century just this last cycle.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Jeremy Carl Exposes Montana's "Transurrectionists"
"Carl from the wonderful Claremont institute, Jeremy, I find it interesting the left, they scream about January 6th insurrection, but we see them time and time again behavior behaving in very similar fashion, taking over state houses, mostly the trans world though. And that I really want to build that out because you're a deep thinker and a really well published writer. But we'll get into that as we go. I want to know what your ideas of where this ideology comes from and how we could properly diagnose it. But tell us about what happened in Missoula, state capitol, what's going on? Helena. How old are not Missoula? Go ahead. Yeah, well, we had these transactions as I call them come in yesterday and attempt to disrupt the meeting of the state House, essentially doing a bunch of chance and trying to shut down the House business. And this is a really big deal because as a small state, we only have a legislature that meets three months every two years. We've got a lot of business to get done in a short amount of time and when we have a disruption like this, it puts a bunch of things on the legislative agenda off that agenda and it creates some real problems. Yeah, so who was the driving force of it and was it legal? Well, it definitely wasn't legal. And the good news is that we arrested 7 of them, some of them were actors, although, you know, and it's funny because the people in Montana are such decent people, you know, as what are these people being let out in handcuffs, the arresting cop, and this is on video somewhere apologized for misgendering them at some point. What do you guys Canada? And basically a lot of them to give an impromptu interview to all these news media who were there. And again, it's not that this cop is a bad guy. He's just not used to dealing with these sorts of malevolent actors.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Is Texas Poised to Challenge the Dollar? Paul Blair Explains
"Very important topic of something happening in Texas, friend of mine joins us to explain Paul Blair who's head of the liberty pastors network and a great man. Paul welcome to the program. Charlie, thank you for the time today. I really appreciate it. Paul, tell us about what's happening in Texas and how people can help. Well, Charlie, you're one of the few, in fact, you've been out there beating this drum for a while. You're well aware of a number of the threats that we currently face here in the United States from the Davos ground. And of course, one of those is the Central Bank digital currency. They're just so happens to be a couple of bills that are down currently in committee and Texas legislature that will one serve as a great inflation hedge to every American. In fact, everybody in the world, it'll be a way for the state of Texas to be able to generate a little bit of additional revenue, but maybe one of the most important things that we'll do is provide an alternative for what seems to be the intentional effort to destroy the dollar and guide us into a programmable digital currency. So Texas, according to article one section 9 of the constitution, states have the authority to coin gold and silver. Since Tinder or actually the dollar was supposed to be backed by gold and silver and was in the early 70s. But states can't just print dollars or create dollars, but they can coin actual gold and silver. So in 2015, the state of Texas brought all of its gold back from New York and built their own gold depository. Kind of like their own Fort Knox. And what these bills will do will create the ability for the Texas comptroller to basically add an ATM machine to the Texas goal depository. And every individual in the world can deposit part of their savings, part of their paycheck, whatever, and have it held in gold at the depository rather than in dollars at the bank. And this is legal tender, according to the constitution, state of Texas absolutely has every state has the right to do this.

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Bored Ape Yacht Club Wins Lawsuit Over Copycat NFT Collection
"We are going to get to the day's news. Starting with Jen, take it away. All right, a federal court in California has found that board ape yacht club ripoff NFTs violated you the labs copyright. So Ryder rips and Jeremy Kahn are the two people behind the RR board ape yacht club NFTs, which feature primates that are posting similar to the board API club primates, and they also use similar marketing materials. The two say their collection is satire and contains Easter eggs that speak to numerous stories surrounding the collection. Wendy, I'm gonna pass this one off to you. What do you make of this win for you go labs? Okay, so I'm very excited that you go labs did win. I'm gonna keep this as calm as possible because I was actually in a space when a lot of this stuff was happening and I kind of went off on these people about their reason why they were doing this and it was just kind of an embarrassment to a lot of different things. But I'm glad that they won. I think that some of the things that we do see happen on crypto Twitter or NFT Twitter and just like a lot of the discourse we have a lot of it is cloud chasing and we saw a lot of crypto Twitter happen over the weekend. I think it's just kind of silly at this point and I'm glad that you collabs did stand up to take them to court. I'm not a really big advocate for tattling and doing those types of things. But at the same time, if you're running a company in a business and somebody's trying to do things that are ridiculous and kind of slander you, there has kind of a fine line with that. So I think that this is important win for the future moving forward, especially into the NFT space because these profile pictures are supposed to, the 10,000 generative collections and others that are similar, they're supposed to give the holders different types of opportunities and rights like the IP rights and the licensing to where they can actually monetize that. And that's kind of why we decide to invest in some of these projects.

The Breakdown
Hasta La Vista, USA! Crypto Companies Look Abroad
"Asta la vista U.S., love crypto. That quote, by the way, comes from a tweet from lawyer Jeremy Hogan. All right, so we kicked off the week covering coin desks tour of the UK. Brian Armstrong keynoted London FinTech week and had a number of conversations that were at once provocative, and at the same time, kind of completely obvious. In one interview, he said that, if the U.S. wasn't able to give regulatory clarity, coinbase would be forced to consider relocating. Armstrong also specifically called out the turf war between the CFTC and the SEC as part of the problem. Later in the week we of course got the hearings which I've now covered AD nauseam. But which basically showed just how partisan crypto regulation is getting, and how the U.S. fear in this domain is to quote congressional witness Austin Campbell, collapsing into chaos. Now this stood in stark contrast to the European Union, where on Thursday, the European parliament voted by a huge majority to pass the markets in crypto asset or Mika legislation, which is a landmark first comprehensive crypto legislation from a major global power. Austin Campbell again articulated the significance in stark terms. He writes, I told my class yesterday that Mika might be the most significant development in crypto for the next two years. The details work out, always TBD as they implement. The EU has created a framework to formalize how crypto works in the largest economic bloc to affect such rules. In the past, when Europe has taken these steps, normally they have been surpassed as a place for innovation by the United States. However, in this case, the hysterical response towards a new technology by U.S. regulators in some politicians means the EU has a massive advantage unless Micah is truly broken in ways I am not aware of yet in the short to medium term. The longer that advantage persists, the longer it will take to overcome if the United States ever manages to act, which I don't think is a foregone conclusion. Excellent bit of playing offense by the EU to get this done. And puts the UK in a position where they need to act fast or get left in the dust by the continent. It seems the future of crypto is no longer in North America.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Darren Beattie's Revolver News Has a Massive New Story
"Joining us now is Darren beattie who just dropped a wild story about a January 6 whistleblower Darren. Welcome back to the program. Tell us about the story. So great to be back here, especially to talk about this breaking story. We just published it a few seconds ago. So it's white hot and brand new and deeply, deeply important. So the summary of it is this, basically, the Biden regime, I mean, the title speaks for itself, Biden regimes 7 year prison sentence for green beret, January 6 whistleblower, reopens, festering wounds of fed's direction line. Jeremy Brown is a green beret, a hero who served as country admirably in many contexts, but not just a military context. In early January, joint terrorism task force agents approached him, trying to recruit him as an informant for something big that was going down in January. Now, how these agents were aware of something big going down in January in early December is another fascinating question. But we'll set that aside for now. They try to recruit him as an informant. He says no, he recorded the exchange and he published it as a whistleblower saying, look, they were recruiting, there were agents in their January 6th is aligned. And after he did that, the feds retaliated against him turning a misdemeanor charge that they weren't even going to charge him into into felony charges that they ultimately sentenced him for 7 years in prison for. The details of this are so scandalous, such an egregious case of forget about prosecutorial discretion. This is prosecutorial gymnastics.

AP News Radio
After Alabama birthday shooting, hope and frustration
"To Alabama teenagers have been arrested and charged for the birthday party shooting over the weekend that left four dead, mainly other teens and several wounded. Sergeant Jeremy burkett of the Alabama law enforcement agency says tyrique McCullough 17 and Travis McCulloch 16 are charged as adults with murder. We can't get into a motive right now. Absolutely because that would be part of an ongoing investigation. DA Mike seagrass says Alexis dowdell, who was celebrating her sweet 16, had to watch her brother die. On her 16th birthday party, she been out by her brother as he took his last breath. Another three were killed 32 wounded seagrass, says four of them are in critical, and he says more charges are coming. We're going to make sure every one of those victims has justice and not just the deceased. Audio courtesy W TVM, I'm Julie Walker.

AP News Radio
Teen to plead guilty in Iowa teacher's death
"One of the two Iowa teenagers charged in the beating death of a high school teacher has pleaded guilty to first degree murder. Willard Miller changed his plea to guilty, admitting he served as a lookout while Jeremy Goodell beat their Fairfield high school Spanish teacher 66 year old Noah McGregor, her body was found in a park in November of 2021. Prosecutors said the evidence shows both of them struck graver with a bat, investigators have said the attack was possibly over grades, as part of the plea deal with Miller, prosecutors agreed to recommend a sentence between 30 years and life in prison with the possibility of parole, Goodell had previously agreed to testify against Miller at his trial, which was expected to begin later this week. I'm Julie Walker

Mark Levin
Mark Levin Challenges the Leftist Media to Pull Back the Curtain
"Most of these entities like media matters like media are funded with big donors With big pockets And they don't make their donors known I would encourage media matters put out your big donor list Meteorite put out your big donor list And by the way mediaite is sort of a knockoff of media matters If I were media matters I'd be pissed off and I'd sue me tonight for plagiarism That's what I would do But they never would pull back the curtain We don't get the text messages and the emails that a mediaite and all the pre bubes that right there We don't get the emails and the text messages from media matters And all their communications with Democrats and leftists and sorrows operatives and all the rest We don't get the text messages and emails of maggot haberman Or Jeremy and his Peters are filling his bumps We don't get any of that information Isn't it amazing And yet we have a judge in Delaware Trial judge the lowest level Who gives out discovery like Well like Hunter Biden takes I better not say that But you get the point Here is a local lowest level trial judge These are all my own opinions I want to discuss them with anybody Never do Don't get permission don't get to hold not to I do what I want to do

AP News Radio
AP Sports SummaryBrief at 11:17 p.m. EDT
"DP sports, I'm Mike Reeves after battling weather issues on Friday and Saturday. They were able to complete the masters on Sunday. Graham agar's has the story. John Robin has closed out a comfortable four shot victory at the masters to claim his second major title, adding the green jacket to his U.S. open crown became the fourth Spaniard to win at agusta, joining 70 by a sterile Jose Maria Osama and Sergio Garcia. Never thought I was going to cry by winning a golf tournament, but I got very close on that 18th hole. And a lot of it because of what it means to me and to Spanish golf. In the NHL, the Boston Bruins won 5 to three in Philadelphia to set a league record with their 63rd victory. Bruins goaltender, Jeremy swayman. It's hard to win in this league. There's a reason why this record's at 62, because not many teams can get there. So it's a special honor. The play in tournament pairings are set in the NBA in the east 7 seed Miami plays number 8 Atlanta. About number 9 Toronto meets number ten Chicago in the west, the Lakers are the 7th seed and they'll host number 8 Minnesota, LA forward LeBron James for us as good as we don't have to travel. We travel a lot the ladies. It's good that we get to stay here, but that doesn't make us be comfortable. The other Western Conference play in match up will feature number 9 New Orleans against number ten, Oklahoma City, New Orleans, head coach, Willie green knows what to expect from the thunder. You may not get as many shots as the scores are not going to be as higher. And we still have to attack, have tech mentality. On the diamond, the rays defeat Oakland 11 to nothing to improve their record to 9 and O pitcher drew Rasmussen. I think this organization has come to expect big things when it comes to the regular season and moving into the postseason. And so the start we're off to is unbelievable. Wide receiver Odell Beckham junior has agreed to a one year contract with the ravens Beckham did not play last season following ACL surgery and Christopher Bell held off Tyler Reddick to win the dirt race at Bristol Motor Speedway. Mike Reeves AP sports.

AP News Radio
1st moon crew in 50 years includes woman, Black astronaut
"NASA has introduced its first moon crew in 50 years. Administrator Bill Nelson says the four astronauts will fly around the moon late next year. This is humanity's crew. And White House spokeswoman Olivia Dalton says a historic one. We'll include the first woman, the first person of color, and the first international crew member on a lunar mission. With Christina Koch, Victor Glover and Canadian Jeremy Hansen, joining commander Reid wiseman. There'll be the first to fly NASA's Orion capsule after an empty one went to the moon and back last year in a dress rehearsal. This flight is a prelude to a lunar landing a year later, Sagar Meghani, Washington.

Fresh Air
"jeremy" Discussed on Fresh Air
"That was my guest, pianist Jeremy denk, playing a piece by stock house and it's on his album of music from 1300 to 2000. So is there more joy in playing this kind of music than in listening to it, do you think? And I know I'm probably alienating some people in stating my opinion about this. But at some point music becomes more to me like a philosophy or an intellectual puzzle than something that gives me a lot of satisfaction as a listener. I'll admit that I don't put that piece on when I'm going to bed or something to relax. You know, there's a long and great history even in medieval times. Renaissance music of creating sort of puzzle pieces, you know, that are kind of intellectual or philosophical explorations. And I think that's a lovely way to approach music too. It's part of the big quilt of life. Part of the reason I put it in that program was to show I put it next to a Phillip class etude, which is it's more or less diametric opposite, right? And to show that this kind of unbelievable fork in the road of style that happened in the middle of the 20th century. After we seem to be marching forward in a certain direction, all this time. And then suddenly there are style begins to kind of explode, right? And that's the complicated moment when there isn't this kind of universally agreed upon stylistic language. So I put those two pieces together as kind of an odd couple. And I really enjoyed going from one to the other to feel that kind of weird stylistic gap or whatever. What language do we speak as musicians these days, you know? Let's hear some of that Philip glass a tube that you recorded. So here's Jeremy denk and again at the piano.

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver
"jeremy" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver
"Of questions, you can make observations about which truths appear to be universal. I love this discipline, and it made me wonder what if these questions were just the jumping off point? What greater depths would be revealed if I asked these questions as conversation starters with thought leaders and trailblazers across all these different disciplines? So I adapted Bruce questionnaire and I wrote my own 7 questions that I personally think are pertinent to a person's story. They are, when and where were you happiest? What is the quality you like least about yourself? What relationship real or fictionalized defines love for you? What question would you most like answered? What person place or experience has shaped you the most? What would be your last meal? And can you tell me something in your life that's grown out of a personal disaster? And I've gathered a group of really remarkable people, ones that I am honored and humbled to have had the chance to engage with. You may not hear that answers to all 7 of these questions. We've whittled it down to which questions felt closest to their experience or the most surprising or created the most fertile ground to connect. My guest today on many questions is journalist broadcaster and farmer, Jeremy Clarkson. Jeremy is a big personality and force in British media and beyond. He is committed to and extremely forthright with his opinions. And this can cause division in terms of public reaction sometimes. But the role of agitator is clearly something he is unafraid of being and as anyone who's watched his show Clarkson's farm will know. Great humor, and a capacity to let the people around him put him in his place has added a layer of complexity and humility to his well-known voice. To qualifiers before we get started, firstly, Jeremy and I had this conversation before the first cases of amaran were detected. And it's strange listening back and knowing we were headed back into a lockdown soon after this chat. And secondly, no spoilers, but in Jeremy's discussion about his last meal, he does talk about a meal and the preparation of that meal that some listeners might find upsetting. So what quality do you like least about yourself? Oh, I'm pretty perfect. No, that's not true. I can be a bit shouty sometimes. Yes. You can be a bit shy. But it seems to be quite enjoy being shouty. It's always appeared to me. No, not at all. I always regret being shouted. I just walked into my office, which was full of people doing things in the show. I said, look, I really don't want this to happen again. So why couldn't you just say would you have said politely 30 times to all the girls over there? Would you mind working with your own offices? Normally. So now I've tried sales and we'll see what happens. But I suppose that would be that's a fairly nasty trade and far too fat. That's a nasty trick because I'm greedy, I suppose that's a very nasty trade. I can't just have one chocolate out of the box. You have to have all of them. I just ate a whole chocolate orange. I was going to have two segments. I ate the whole thing. That's appalling. It's a bit like I thought I'll just have a glass of wine last night. But then you just look at the rest of the bottle and think, well, let's just say now it been in that not in me. Then you finish the bottle off and then I look and think oh, crush is now there's another bottle in there and that's also stupid. Screaming to get out. It doesn't need to be in the bottle. Possibly use as that. That should be a meat. So then I find myself toddling across the garden to go into the bottom of the rice cooker because I think there might be some more in there which are always in. So that's a fairly portrait. I think they're understandable. I mean, maybe all of our human foibles are understandable. I like that you went with being perfect to begin with because we could actually probably use a little bit more of that. Recently because I'm lazy. There's another track wouldn't be bothered to think my fault but now that I've got a role shouty lazy reading alcoholic fact. And patient, in fact, that's not much right, really. There's not much. I'm going to struggle at the party Gates. That's for them sure. Did you do anything worthwhile, Jeremy? They're not really sorry so. Nothing. When I got to say, watching clogs as farm. I like it when you're shouting and aggravated. But then invariably get shown up by or shown the door by the people around you and take it with very good grace. I think that's marvelously evolved. Yeah, that's good editing. Yeah, it's good editing. It's a very well edited show. We've all commented on that in our household. Very well directed. Which is Andy Roman my old school friend and producer of everything I've ever made and editor. He's now disappeared into a basement and Soho to edit the next one. Is it finished? It can't be done. No good no, takes a year to film. So you started editing. And when did you start filming this last one? Just before the harvest, so what was supposed to be finished next August? Berlin can't wait. Loved it. So what relationship real or fictionalized defines love for you? Defines love. Yeah. Oh, I think I would say the relationship someone has a bad dog. I only say that because it's extraordinary. I've just got two puppies there about, although they told me that you need so. And obviously they all over the house and they tune things into their permanently in trouble. You permanently say no bad dog. And then they look very shame faced. But moments later, moments later they're giving you the big dough eyes. And it's that absolutely undiluted love they have for you, which you have for them. When I have a really bad hangout, it's all this nothing can get me out of bed. But now I've got the dogs. Oh no, I'm just gonna look after the dogs will feed them for a walk. They are unconditional, they are unconditional love. It's absolutely unconditional of the dog and the dog has fear. In many relationships, it might experience there's always some trace element of conditions running around somewhere in the dogs capacity forgiveness exceeds any human I've ever met. And I've met Nelson Mandela and he was pretty good at forgiving. But a dog, even exceeds Nelson Mandela. I miss my dog. But I have a dog, but my dog he was 17 when he died. I love unconditionally. And I have another one. I just don't love him as much. That's like having more love for one child than another one. I think you'd find that there are some people who would agree with that and say that they do have a favorite child, and It's really very different children. That could be able to say, well, I love that one more than that one. I couldn't possibly, not a trillion years. I couldn't even conceive of it being a thing. I know. I mean, I only have one child, so I can't really speak to that. Yeah. But you're doing it with dogs. I'm doing it with dogs. It's a different relationship. My dog. He's a rescue. Romania, where he came from. Oh no, he was tied to a tree in altadena in California for three years. No. A girl used to bang on the door, this lovely girl every day saying, please contact your dog. And eventually, a horrible man who had him sort of got the dog and threw him out her and said, I don't want to pay for his food anymore. I don't understand why people have dogs if they're going to be horrible to them. But he has wonderful life now. And he's a difficult. He's difficult animal. Yeah. You're going very much loving mine, even though the capacity for destruction is endless. What kind of dogs are they? Folks read labradors and their sisters. Sweet. Now, they're great. I quite like to see them. You haven't got them knocking around there have here. No, I don't know where they are..

Not Another D&D Podcast
"jeremy" Discussed on Not Another D&D Podcast
"This is a headgum podcast. Welcome to dungeon court. Don't have to do it, but it feels so good. But it feels so good to do it. Today, we are joined by Jeremy Cobb, writer, director, actor, one third of three black halflings and the resident DM welcome Jeremy. Thank you so much. It is such an honor to be able to sit here behind the bench. We're gonna bring you up. Oh yeah. Right now you're actually with you're actually in the bailiffs. What do bailouts say? Nothing pin. You're in the bailiff's dunce's corner. Not a lot of esteem to go around down here. Why is there so much alcohol back then? But we do have an oath for you to swear you in to get you up on the high chairs up here because we are big giant baby high Ferris. Yes. Which is great because there's a little tray for snacks. Yeah. Yeah, and I can strap myself in. Yeah. 'cause they're very teetering is the things. You are gonna want to be strapped in. You are gonna get a little bib that catches all the detritus that you don't fit into your mouth. Really great to just feed bag it up mid and you just hand that to me on your way out. I host those down in the back alley. Yeah. That explains all of the crusty bibs next to the bottles of alcohol. Yeah, Jeremy, if you'd like to read the oath and swear in, we'll get you, we'll get you here on the court as one of the judges here. I will put one hand on my picture book beginner's Bible. Wow. Beginners by? Yes, it's called the beginner's Bible. My God. It has, it has illustrated versions of a bunch of bibles. You can't start a kid off on a pro Bible, you know that. Yeah, yeah, you gotta start them with a gentle New Testament. You wait till they're like angry teens to introduce old man. Yeah, that's interesting. Oh, this goes full old. Most of this book is Old Testament believe it. Wild. They have to omit some stuff, right? Or do they just make it? Definitely. That's probably what beginner means is like none of the sex scenes. There are a lot of dry passages of who fucked who. Two years old. An illustrated version of the song of Solomon babies first erotic literature. All right. All right, I will read this. I, Jeremy Cobb, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the players as well as the DMs against all enemies foreign and domestic that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same that I take this obligation of my own volition and that I will well and faithfully embark upon this noble pursuit of justice, so help me gods. Wow. Welcome. We have the actor there, 'cause I was feeling a little bit swelled with civic pride. I did salute.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"But what's really striking about what we're seeing now. And actually the negotiation process that has been underway between the united states government and the taliban in doha for the better part of ten years. Now is that there was an opportunity to have that kind of negotiation in the first months after the invasion of afghanistan in october two thousand and wine and the response of the united states to that was we don't negotiate with terrorists. And so you know what's happening now is really painful to watch on a lot of levels. One reason that it's painful to watch is that tens of thousands of people have died. Who did not need to die in this war and that's not even speaking about the other kinds of damage the billions of dollars that have been spent. We have this military. We have this giant defense infrastructure that the people who are involved in that world and then that infrastructure and there are many of them need to fill relevant. They need to justify the gigantic budget that we have for these kinds of operations and for our military and it just it feels so wasteful and heartbreaking To think that this was this was kind of really a chance for people to spend money and play with their toys. Essentially you know if you have a lot of guns and you don't use them. What are they good for. When i first went to afghanistan in two thousand and two i was i was a young reporter and it was my really my first time. I had been in pakistan the previous year. But i was living in the region but it was my first time covering a conflict and the thing that has released stayed with me. Is that the way interviews are conducted in. Afghanistan is often especially for someone new to the story as i was then. There's a lot of history so you sit with people for a very long time and you hear what's happened to them and how. Their families have fared over successive wars. So they talk about. What happened when the soviets were there and they talk about what happened during the mujahedeen era. They talk about what happened. When taliban came to power in the nineties and held power for a number of years and they talk about what happened when the taliban fell and where they were and then they talk about what was happening at the time about sort of the us invasion and the us occupation the first wave fifty tomahawk cruise missiles like these fired from us and british ships and submarines twenty five warplanes off the aircraft carriers carl vinson and enterprise launched strikes from.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"This is intercepted. I'm what's sane a reporter with the intercept About one am on the seventeenth of august thirty six hours since the taliban took control of the afghan capital kabul in a surprisingly peaceful transition of power with the afghan government led by shroff ghani. That's andrew quilty a photographer and writer based in kabul. The remaining fifteen also provincial capitals felt the taliban in a matter of is bringing then insurgent gripped to the gates of kabul light on the night of the fourteenth of august. It was a sleepless not that not fa cobbles residents who are anticipating the next state to begin violently. It was only a couple together agreement between the the government and the taliban that would see a peaceful transition of power in just a short time. We saw the taliban takeover afghanistan the taliban seething back power nearly two decades after nine eleven taking over the capital of kabul. In just a matter of days the afghan president has fled the country and us troops taken control of the city's airport where thousands of afghans are also desperate to leave the country. Us uk troops engaged in evacuating their citizens while the international community tries to define its response to the taliban's lightning speed victory anything. The development of the past week reinforced at any new us military involvement afghanistan. Now was the right decision. American troops cannot and should not be fighting nor and dine in a war that afghan forces are not willing to fight for themselves when the agreement was made that would say the government falled must of the afghan security forces shed that uniforms and left their posts across the city. Former members of the afghan national army and the national police could be seen walking from military infrastructure around the city carrying sacks of belongings and within a matter of hours s. security vacuum developed in the city looting began thieves dressed up to look like taliban relative able in straight and within a matter of another few hours the taliban beta hasty decision to send their fighters into the city to feel the vacuum left by retreating disappearing afghan security forces. We'll be hearing more manjoo in a few minutes. The two decade-long. Us worn ghanistan has come to conclusion with the us. Having suffered what appears to be a stunning defeat after spending over trillion dollars in fighting a war that resulted in thousands of us casualties. In the deaths of hundreds of thousands of afghans. The us is leaving the country with taleban firmly in power. Vanessa is ari. National security editor for the intercept has been years reporting. It's stan after the. Us launched the war. Vanessa shooter reflections with us on the. Us government's longest war and what the recent developments mean for afganistan one thing. I've been struck by watching what's happening now. Is that the videos were seeing now. Come out of afghanistan of men with rpg's on the streets of major cities and the streets. Empty and gunfire ricocheting around and refugees in kabul in parks where a lot of us spent time picnicking or with friends. I'm just struck by how much it looks the way it did. Twenty years ago when the us i got involved in the war. It's really striking and surreal. How twenty years of our engagement. There seems to just have been erased in a few days but you also have to remember that. Tens of thousands of people have lost their children husbands brothers. Mothers fathers sisters to this war afghans americans europeans and many others in afghanistan alone according to the cost of war project brown. The total dad's since october two thousand and one hundred seven thousand of whom the vast majority are afghan civilians security forces and opposition fighters and for all those people in many others who have been there in this period. These years won't be erased ever. They'll never forget what happened in this period and while our war maybe ending maybe the war is not ending for afghans. And it's probably going to continue for a long time for a generation of afghans and americans. This war was very strange beast. It was a tapestry of cultural marvel's dark stories. Daf destruction beauty. Suffering friendship. Regret guilt and official lies. The biggest lie has been about america about what this country is in the world and about what we can and cannot do as the world's sole superpower american exceptionalism has now been shown in so many ways to be a bankrupt concept. We are not strong. We are not capable. We are not principled and so i'm thinking right now about the possibilities for moral recovery as a nation given the last twenty years of our history and what. We're seeing now in afghanistan. During most of the nineteen eighty s the cia secretly sent billions of dollars of military aid to afghanistan to support the mujahideen or holy warriors against the soviet union which had invaded in one thousand. Nine hundred seventy nine during the past eighteen months. The jadid fighting inside the country have improved their weapons tactics and coordination. The result is being a string of serious defeats. The soviet elite units as well as many divisions from the kabul army. The us supported jehad succeeded in driving out the soviets but the afghan factions once allied to the us eventually gave rise to the oppressive taliban and osama bin laden's al-qaeda at the scene at this moment at the world trade center stand dealer abc's good morning. America is down in the gentleness. Dan can you tell us what has just happened. It has just completely collapsed. The entire building has just classed as penalization team set off. When you see the old demolition buildings anymore whole side has collapsed at. The united states was attacked by al qaeda on september eleventh. Two thousand and one. We're about to hit the twenty year anniversary of those attacks. They were horrific group and this leader. A person named who some bin laden are linked to many other organizations in different countries. The leadership about canada has great influence in afghanistan and supports the taliban regime in controlling most to that country. They caught america almost totally by surprise in terms of the public. I mean the security state was actually expecting these tags. So that's a whole other story. But i think the public was really caught off guard by you know was. It was so surprising to people. I think that is part of why the notion of going to war as an answer to the nine eleven attacks was compelling for a broad range of republic and tonight the united states of america makes the following demands on the taliban deliver to united states authorities. All the leaders of al-qaeda who hide in your land the taliban must act and act immediately they will hand over the terrorists were they will share in their fate on my orders. The united states military has begun strikes against al-qaeda terrorist training camps and military installations of the taliban regime in afghanistan. These carefully targeted actions are designed to disrupt the use of afghanistan as a terrorist base of operations and to attack the military capability of the taliban regime. What happened was essentially an invasion. That should have been a arguably a police operation extensively. The us government went there to go after bin laden and the taliban who who sheltered him..

John Bartolo Show
"jeremy" Discussed on John Bartolo Show
"There's just a lot of different problems with the entertainment industry geeks and gamers was never intended to be something that it is. Now it's did it evolved into where it's at now because of hollywood and how they're trying to ruin so many of our different properties and so geeks gamers is kind of evolved into this thing. Where i wanted to give a voice to anyone with common sense. I don't care who you voted for. I don't care what your opinions on things are. But if you have a basic level of common sense a working brain. I wanna give you an opportunity to have your voice on this platform and hold people accountable when they're creating bad products and we've been pretty successful up to this point and then you got the ultimate gift the whole gina carano debacle. Yeah i mean they literally did exactly what we accused him of doing. But how dumb. See what i want to get to is. How dumb disney or the brain trust that is disney are. They can't read the tea leaves and figure shit out. Well it's like is the ego supersede the common sense. Where does it all meet to create that perfect storm of stupidity. it will. it's it's an echo chamber. And i don't think that the people at disney are necessarily stupid. I think that their arrogance has taken them to a place that will tell the people what they want. Yeah i mean. They believe that they are smarter than everyone else. They believe that they know better than everyone else. And they've created this culture to where if you disagree with them you're a racist toxic man baby. Who's part of far-right extremism. That's that's what they've created so any criticism they face. They just respond with while. You're just intimidated by women. Are you're intimidated by black people. Even even if it's women black people criticizing them. That's been their narrative so i don't think they're stupid. I think they're arrogant. I think they're bad. People i think are just really bad people in hollywood. How scared though should people be about this. Jeremy because i see it as almost like like critical race theory in schools right where you start in infecting things like the marvel universe star wars other cultural things with your poison with with your bullshit where you're forced narratives. How dangerous is that berry because it's not about the entertainment industry. The entertainment industry is the vehicle..

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"One way or another worked for the pesticide industry. You know. I heard from a number of people that the pesticide companies are. Just very president. Epa there in the lobby. There bopping around. I heard they're of know all the the names of the people who are actually making you know decisions in the scientists who are working on their products. And i've heard that for the most part. They're very helpful and nice. But that is until you do something that pisses him off. And then i've also heard that you know if you get on the wrong side. They will do all they can to get rid of you and to make sure that you know you were taken off their products. But in terms of fostering those sort of positive side of the relationship there are also a lot of what they call crap tourists and farm tourists where companies or individual farms sometimes Companies sometimes trade associations will invite the staff scientists to farm or to visit and look at how they use pesticides over the past twenty five years. The tour has grown from the north dakota grain growers to clued the corn and soybean associations and other groups. They're educating officials about the things that affect growers the most having these people out here and showing these people how we use pesticides is is a great education tool for them in their future work with labeling of new products and relabeling of existing problems and you can see how people would say well. This is important knowledge. This is what these folks are working on and yet what i heard from people who went on these tours. Is that spending the day with with these representatives of the manufacturer's products that they're in the middle of assessing in like hearing chatting them up in being friendly and sharing a plate of barbecue with them. They felt that they were sort. Just more sympathetic to the industry point of view just by virtue of hanging out and spending the day informally and there's a whole range of them. You can go look at potato farms and you can go watch how pesticides are sprayed from planes. And it is a way of certainly increasing the intimacy between both sides the regulator and the regulated starch baker. The president of the united states..

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"We're also seeing similar problems within the office of pesticides programs. These were slightly differently in the pesticides program because they're using a different law so the new chemicals goes through tasca the toxic substances control act and the pesticides go through a law called Under tosca there's actually no baseline data that a company is required to provide which is kind of nuts. When you think about it so would new chemicals you can just not have any safety in health information and you can introduce it you can. You can actually get it onto market. Interestingly the law says that if you have any info on its safety and health you have to submit it but the weird kind of upshot of that is that acts as sort of an incentive not to do research because if you do research you have does minute and if you don't do it then you don't under viva with the pesticides. They actually have to submit certain studies and similarly woods. What is similar between the two is that there is overwhelming pressure. To pass these things would minimal restrictions and get them onto the market and you have a lot of employees who work in boats in both divisions who go back and forth and you have a lot of structural similarities. So a problem with both divisions is the revolving door which is to say that a lot of people leave the agency and get jobs in industry or come from industry and get jobs at the agency with pesticide program. I looked all the way back and found that going back to nineteen seventy four every single director of the office of pesticides that continued working after they left the agency in one way or another worked for the pesticide industry. You.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Have been working at the united states. Environmental protection agency in the office of pollution prevention and toxics since february of twenty nineteen. And i am a chemist and i'm also a dbt. which is a certified toxicologist. I am currently a human. Health is in the office of pollution prevention toxics. And that sarah gallagher. I've been in the office since may twenty nineteen i'm phd chemists. And i've been working at the toxicologists at epa. For the past. Five years surin. I are here participating in this podcast. Speaking as private citizens on matters of public concern. This is a very difficult topic for us to talk about because it touches on our work at the agency but it is so important that we get the word out about. What's been going on in our program since the kinds of concerns that these successors are pointing out our scary. So things like cancer and brain damage and developmental toxicity. One of the chemicals. I was reading about the issue is a potentially a birth defects including missing bones club in extra fingers so the assessors jobs are to protect the public into suss out whether these chemicals are going to pose arrest to human health and the environment congressperson acted the toxic substance control. Act forty years ago to protect americans from bill from the risk posed by chemicals in commerce. It has not been reauthorized since since its original act. But the laws become outdated and efforts to modernize it have been ongoing for several years with great difficulty. Tasca is law that pertains to chemical safety. In how how. The epa assesses chemicals in terms of human health and their impact on the environment as well and and so in two thousand sixteen that law was overhauled right and that presented a real opportunity. What did you see as the opportunity of the lautenberg out in twenty sixteen. I saw it as an opportunity to go back and look at existing chemicals and evaluate any hazards risks stemming from those as well as be more proactive about evaluating new chemicals before they got on the market.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Sammy took the job at the convenience store. Russell started backing away from their friendship. He thought sammy's job at the convenience store. It was weird. He warned sami earlier that the fbi targets muslims. That you gotta be careful this brother. I explained this to him from the beginning as in other brothers. I know as well we talked about this. Let them know listen. We living in new time. They are fighting islam afraid of muslims. Now and they're doing everything they can to scare you and to stop. Put a stop to wislawa work. You have to be very careful how you carry yourself in what you say you know so. Explain this to the brothers into the brother abdul. I explained him from the very beginning on told him. Look at all the muslims arrested in. Us was all fbi involvement in all of them ignored russell's warning and fbi agents then arrested sammy after providing him with ak47 suicide vest. Car-bomb the weapons were of course all fake federal agents pasta tampa tara plot tonight what we're learning about. The suspect and the sinister alleged plot to attack crowded spots around tampa using weapons of mass destruction. Good evening everyone. Linda jameson euler. We'd be russell disappeared soon. After sammy's arrest. Sammy was convicted at trial and sentenced to forty years in prison. I was left with two clues about russell. The i was an fbi report six days after sammy was arrested. Fbi agents stopped russell at the airport. He had a ticket to detroit..

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Us us-backed syrian rebels. The islamic state's execution videos had one struck fear in us citizens but now isis fighters were on the run fleeing small patches of syria that isis still control russell was running to. I didn't realize it back then. But as i look back on it now i think russell knew he was going to die. He didn't wanna die mystery. I wanted to To explain something here. I'm very sad about about things that happened. You know but at the same time Have to be honest about About the way the things things happened you know and We are here communicating because we have righteous goals for the both of us. So we have to be honest. We have to say the truth. You know I can't begin to tell you russell story and the questions that surrounded him without first telling you about samuel's mccosh. Sammy was a slender young man. Who came to the united states. When he was thirteen years old he and his family had fled the war in kosovo and settled in florida. Sammy suffered from schizo affective disorder. Meaning that he struggled to separate fantasy from reality in an effort to treat disease. Sammy turned to islam into russell who became his religious mentor. following a chance encounter at a mosque in december. Two thousand nine. You have a prepaid call..

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Making the right decisions. They want to figure out. Oh you didn't turn your you know your lights on or you didn't blinker. One hundred feet ahead of the of the stop sign you know. They're trying to figure out all these situations they want to catch you off guard in twenty nineteen and bridge purchased a plot of land right next to the may walk. Since then drones have regularly appeared over the protest camp reporters that gizmodo were able to confirm that some of the drones spotted along the line. Three route including of water protectors homes along to customs and border protection but others remain. Unidentified drones also appeared above the solar energy business eath fire solar which was co founded by. The activist duke. Sarah little red feather who used to live on. The property says surveillance has escalated. Since july of last year we counted six twenty and actually got one video where came under four hundred feet and went over the bay fire solar garage and level of my place and flew over. And i have my video doing that. And just you know hovering around our our land you know just hovering to standing still just doing that. And i'm like what are you doing. What do you want around that time as umbrage had done it. A may walk. The company quietly purchased the strip of land next door to the solar business line. Three is making a positive impact in minnesota. It's creating thousands of jobs boosting the economy and increasing safety minnesota and strongly support line three and with construction over halfway.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Displaces about life in balance and that means building community with the land and building community with each other. That's tara house again. The water protector from minnesota. And we do a lot of direct action in this space direct actions and other protests against line. Three have seen more than five hundred people arrested or issued citations. When i arrived the spring members of the camper tents another water protector had just been pulled over right outside of camp for having expired tax. So right before you guys were coming here One of our cat members got pulled over right out here as they were leaving the property and There's like an hour stoppage big wing again usually. That's like a ticket right. But they went to jail. They arrested them. And now they're being held in hubbard county jail since nonviolent direct action can run afoul of the law. The camp became a target for surveillance. The police stops ramped up with the spring temperatures. I honestly don't think there's a car here that has been pulled over. We've all been pulled over. The stops have left people on edge which they figure is part of the point. When you're in that constancia flexible in that constitute a crisis. I think they don't want you to be making the right decisions. They want to figure out. Oh you didn't turn your you know your lights on or you didn't blinker. One hundred feet ahead of the of the stop sign you know. They're trying to figure out all these situations they want to catch you off guard in twenty nineteen and bridge purchased a plot of land right next to.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"The stop line three movement gathered in front of bridges park rapids minnesota headquarters on one tuesday the spring music please over a portable speaker while one of the group's leaders were known all the duke a one time vice presidential candidate tries out salsa moves and bridge hasn't used the building much since construction began but the firm left it signs up to keep water protectors there and water protectors don't mind the event drums up support measured in cars that pass and honk across the street attorney mara hidden hilliard wheats at a mexican restaurant to pick up dinner for actress and activist jane fonda fonda is here to draw media attention to the anti pipeline movement for hidden hilliard has represented fonda in cases related to other activism. She came along together information for a potential lawsuit. I'm looking at etheridge. We're looking at the sheriff's officer. We're looking at the public safety. Esker trust because we believe that. These things have created a really extraordinary mechanism that fully financially incentivizes a level of repression to silence and shutdown the organized here and the water protectors activities examples of police. Cooperation with the energy firm weren't hard to find. The escrow account is the most obvious form of collaboration. In north dakota public.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Saying to them. Make it very clear. You're not to get involved and trying to interfere with the rights of people legally Legally exercising their rights under minnesota constitution. And that all their contracts and asides show not interfere by entering into what i consider counterinsurgency tactics or misinformation campaigns. Similar one occurred in north dakota. He added what's critical for me to know as we go forward that kind of activities this insurgency sites off the pinkerton style type stuff doesn't happen here in minnesota this is a. This is the united states of america. We are citizens of minnesota have a right to protest. The anti counterinsurgency language was inserted into the permit but with no definition to accompany it. This vagueness has meant less accountability. Touma declined a request for comment but the public utilities commissions executive director will sufered confirmed that the commission never defined the term corporate counterinsurgency as for accountability. He says the state's designated public safety lease on for the pipeline monitors for such tactics and raises concerns if they occur the department of public. Safety has not replied to my request for comment to better understand. These methods scholars are examining. Us counter-insurgency strategies abroad and resistance to extractive industries around the globe. I think it's important to start with an understanding. The counterinsurgency whether it's state lead or facilitated by a private company is essentially about social control over a given territory or area. Simon gronkowski larson of the university of regina in canada. Recently co wrote a paper offering a rubric for identifying corporate counter insurgencies around the world. Often we think of counter-insurgency as as Particularly of a form of warfare or form of military campaign and it is but there's more to it than the security side counterinsurgency is about controlling population. So that they don't Oppose the implementation of the objectives. That those carrying out the counterinsurgency half in the hands of private companies. The purpose of it is a little bit more narrow. Because here we're talking about private companies that are trying to get control over a territory for for the sole purpose of implementing an economic project that they have in mind whether this is a natural resource extraction or or something else. Minnesota's multi-agency coalition managing pipeline resistance known as the northern lights task. Force doesn't seem to be making a big effort to avoid counter-insurgency strategies instead minnesota public safety officials have in private embraced. The approach taken at standing rock more than four thousand workers are expected in northern minnesota over the next couple of weeks to help build the contentious line three oil pipeline replacement at the same time. Activists are escalating their efforts to block it while law enforcement officials are trying to keep the peace in december twenty twenty shortly after minnesota approved the line. Three construction permit nicholas radke the intelligence coordinator for the minnesota department of public safety distributed a standing rock after action report.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"And conquer effort by the company aimed at local communities. I interviewed dozens of people review thousands of pages of public records and academic literature all suggesting and bridge and the police's efforts bear hallmarks of corporate counterinsurgency. The fight against the end bridge pipeline is part of a larger struggle with enormous stakes. The mayor of thief river falls brian. Homer says the pipeline has boosted. His business michael's meets. The mayor has repeatedly spoken publicly about the benefits of the project through the group. Minnesotans for line three over vast three months as increased our sales probably about thirty percent overall. And is this last week. When the firefighters shut down the road restrictions and some of the environmental impacts and stuff it dramatically decreased. So we're kind of backed in almost a little bit but Elaine's reins been really really good for the community Some of the brighter points. We've heard i hear it on a daily basis. Just mind never heard myself be called sir so much because of the lateness of Two pipeline is around. They're fun to be your own very friendly And i think actually up here overall really raced him and bridge. A comedian energy firm is expanding rerouting. Its old corroded line. Three branded a quote unquote replacement project. The new pipeline will double the old line threes capacity to carry tar sands oil from the canadian province of alberta to a hub in wisconsin. From there it would be transported onto refineries from the gulf coast to eastern canada. The process to transform sticky alberta's sludge into usable fuel make tar sands oil one of the most intensive fossil fuels in terms of carbon dioxide emissions..

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"jeremy" Discussed on Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
"Stopped. I've observed the suspect. He was standing in front of the of the store. Once he recognized our vehicle was he walked from the final store and as he decided to walk where we call an alley. That was time suspicious to me. And my partner officer to. And that's when i saw the Suspect radovan like he was like peeing in public confession. Roll down window. And then at the time i said hey stop. He looked over back at me. Just sit his waist area. And that's when you try around looking right at me and now i can see a lot better. I can see what he's wearing. I see that he has a bag. is underneath of jacket over that right there kind of indicated in my mind that he might be carrying something because in my training experience. I've made several subtle arrests with guns in arcata cts with these types of man bag satchels said to myself warmer. Go on talk to this guy. At the time. I got out he merely served. Cortez was afraid if the place. He was a trauma survivor of police violence. When one of the men got out of the car he immediately took off the officer almost immediately.