35 Burst results for "Juarez"

The Eric Metaxas Show
John Zmirak on the Grim Reality of Drug Cartels in Latin America
"Drug cartels of Latin America are they make the mafia in movies like The Godfather look like the little sisters of the poor. Yeah. These cartels will massacre birthday parties and kill all the children in order to get the guy who's the waiter. They will wipe out whole villages. Large parts of Mexico are controlled by these cartels to the point where the government really is not sovereign. It's tragic in 2000. I went down to Mexico for the one time in my life and I went to the city of monterrey. At the time, it was wealthy and coming. It was like Dallas with refried beans and salsa. But I mean, it had beautiful old 17th century churches. And even the slums had a certain dignity to them where people hung out decorations and had religious pictures. And I thought, this is beautiful. If only all of Mexico were like this. I've since talked to people Uber drivers and people immigrants who lived in Monterey scents and it was taken over by the cartels and it is now a hellhole just like Juarez and Mexico City. And it is heartbreaking. There are millions of people good, honest, well meaning family people who would like to live in an orderly society and there's no hope of that in Mexico. A lot of them are coming to America looking for it and the Democrats are using those same people to smash it up.

Northwest Newsradio
"juarez" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio
"Far as south of Ciudad Juarez or piedras negras or Matamoros, cities just the other side of the Texas Mexico border. Thousands of migrants, mostly fleeing violence and poverty in Venezuela, marched to Mexico City last month to apply for asylum in the U.S.. Many of them believe that the lifting of title 42 clears a path into the United States. Smugglers are seeking to take advantage of this change and already are hard at work spreading disinformation that the border will be open after that. Homeland Security secretary Alejandro mayorkas says the opposite is true. Those who arrive at our border and do not have a legal basis to stay will have made the journey often having suffered horrific trauma and having paid their life savings to the smugglers only to be quickly removed. The lack of title 42 does not mean the lack of all immigration law. It means that the U.S. goes back to title 8 with its tougher rules about who's admissible to the country or eligible for a Visa. Criminal penalties for crossing the border between checkpoints or reentering unlawfully after deportation. To drive home the point that the border is not open, Brigadier general pat reiter says 1500 active duty troops are being deployed. At the request of the Department of Homeland Security, secretary Austin approved a temporary Department of Defense increase of an additional 1500 military personnel to supplement U.S. customs and border protection efforts on the U.S. southwest border. On the ground in Brownsville at the southern tip of Texas It sounds a bullhorn warning since simulated explosives. We were very alarmed because it's so close to home. Valeria chapa watched as federal state and local law enforcers trained for

AP News Radio
Mexico's immigration agency chief to be charged in fire that killed 40
"A Mexican immigration agency chief is to be charged in a fatal fire. The decision to file charges against Francesco gaudino, the head of Mexico's national immigration institute, was announced late Tuesday by the federal attorney general's office. He'll face criminal charges in a fire that killed 40 migrants in Ciudad Juarez last month, with federal prosecutors saying he was remiss in not preventing the disaster, despite earlier indications of problems at his agencies detention centers, anger initially focused on two guards who were seen fleeing the march 27th fire without unlocking the cell door to allow the

AP News Radio
38 dead in Mexico detention center fire after guards didn't free migrants
"A surveillance video shows guards walking away during a far in a Mexico detention center that killed 38 men. The video shows that after migrants place mattresses against the bars of their cell and set them on fire, guards quickly walked away and made no apparent attempt to release the men before smoke filled the room hours after the fire broke out on Monday, rose of bodies were laid out under silver sheets outside the immigration detention facility in Suarez Juarez, which is across the U.S. border from El Paso, Texas, and a major crossing point for migrants, the national immigration institute says at the time of the blaze 68

AP News Radio
39 dead in fire at Mexico migrant facility near US: official
"At least three dozen migrants have died in a fire at an immigration detention center in northern Mexico near the U.S. border, according to a regional newspaper report. Images from the scene show ambulances firefighters and vans from the morgue around the facility, the injured had been taken to four hospitals, according to the diarra de Juarez newspaper, sources told the paper the fire happened late Monday at a facility in the city across from El Paso in Texas, media's reporting Mexico's attorney general's office has launched an inquiry and has investigators at the scene, so I read Juarez is a major crossing point for migrants. It's shelters full of migrants waiting for opportunities to cross or who've requested asylum in the U.S. and are waiting out of the process. I'm Charles De Ledesma

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Right now, which is, again, that's a different part of my journey and eventually would love to show one day that, hey, I'm in a relationship and it's like very successful and happy and healthy and yeah, I don't know how I'll navigate that like publicly I don't as of right now I would not like to show my relationship publicly just because I am like scarred from doing that the last time but when I get there I'll get there and that's going to be that part of the journey. So I think I have to keep in mind that the people the right sided the right minded people that are watching my stuff want to see me heal eventually. They want to see the journey get better. They don't want to see me be depressed for like ten years, you know. So yeah. For sure. I think that's something a lot of content creators struggle with. This just like, oh, do I post what feels authentic to me and what's actually happening or what I know will get views or will make the most amount of people happy because you're never going to make everybody happy. I know Meghan and I, we posted a video on a certain topic that got way more views than anything else and it's gotten all this engagement. And we're like, we don't even want to talk about that again, but that's like what? It's just such a hard balance. It's really hard. I totally get that. Yeah, that's why again, not to get too much into content stuff, like that's why I set up content pillars myself so that I know that not every video I talk about is divorce, so I do like cottagecore stuff, self love, self love, related things, maybe like outdoors and nature kind of more related stuff, which is kind of more cottagecore and then divorce, heartbreak, that realm so that I know I'm diversifying my content enough. So that people that love the college core stuff, you know, that's there. People like are going to divorce, that's their truth that are just wanting self care, body image, self love. That's there as well. And it's not just all I talk about is divorce. So anyway, that's just, again, from a content creator side, it's weird. It's weird going through this process of divorce and then also being hard to navigate it so publicly at times as well. So that's a whole different we could do a whole different podcast on that, but yeah. I'm excited to see whatever you post. I'm excited to follow along. Thank you guys so much. I appreciate this and your questions were honestly really helpful for me to even reflect on all this. I'm like, what am I looking for? Eventually in a relationship. So it was fun. This is really been so, so great. And I think it's going to be so helpful for people in all different stages of their lives listening, whether they've gone through a divorce or not or just a breakup. I think a lot of what you said was really insightful and really helpful. So I'm really excited to share this with our audience. I'm so glad. Well, thank you guys so much again.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Exactly. I love that. That's such a good standards to have because they aren't unrealistic, it's not like these crazy yeah, truly just someone who is equipped to care for you well. And join you in life, I think that's such a beautiful thing to desire and to look for. So I love that. Yeah, well, thank you for sharing. I'm just being so open and vulnerable with us and I think it's going to help so many people. I know you've already seen that on your own channel so your own platforms. I think I saw that you started some kind of support groups for women to join. So if you want to share a little bit about that, if someone that's listening, that might be able to use that resource. For sure, yeah, so I've started a slack channel in a Facebook group. I will say the slack channel is way more poppin than the Facebook group only because the slack channel or I said the slack group is broken up into channels. And so we have living alone, your win, so people can go in there and type, oh hey, like I had like my, I don't know, I went to the dentist all by myself today. It was a big accomplishment, whatever is so big, small wins, whatever you can type them in there and use this as accountability. Also divorce support and heartbreak support. So maybe you're not going through divorce, maybe you just went through a messy breakup or whatever. You can go in there and grab support from people as well as what else do we have? I have my thoughts so anytime I find like resources or I have an announcement to make or I posted a new piece of content that might be helpful out announce it there so really it's just a group to oh and there's also a faith based one so people have prayers that they need things that they need prayer for or scriptures that might be helpful.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"They'll change, that's never, you never want to be with somebody that you feel like, oh, I want to fall in love with who you could be, who I want you to be. No, who they are is really who they are and everybody has room to improve and to shift in their life and that's totally great. I've changed over the years, and that's I think everybody does, but promising over and over again, I'll change. I promise I'll change they will not. Most likely, unless they get some sort of intensive therapy and you're willing to do that with them and that's great. So also I noticed that my ex-husband was really weird in kind of uncomfortable around my family and my Friends. When we would like, I would bring him around my Friends. He would like kind of like slowly go into the background. I would want him to like, hey, we're all hanging out, but it was more like he was letting us have a little play date. You know, it felt like he was just like this parent that was kind of chaperoning us and not like a part of our day. It was just really weird. So, and then around my family, I felt like he was a little uncomfortable and I don't know, so that just kind of was a weird red flag for me. Also like jumping into what I wanted to do like really quickly. Like I said, I wanted to go vegan. Last year, and he was like, okay, ugly, and he had no research or anything like that and he ended up sneaking around and eating meat. And I was like, why? I don't care if you're not vegan or I don't care, but then he started sneaking and lying again and hiding stuff and so dad, I guess just be careful like they're jumping into what you want to do too quickly.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"I'm good, but since that wasn't said, I was like, cool. Great. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, sometimes sometimes just your presence. Is all you can manage and then that's all that we need, you know? And so, yeah. Good point. I also love that you were bringing up kind of when you were going through the midst of it really at the beginning, your family just helping out with very practical things. Like meal deliveries and the toolkit because you know, especially since you were married at such a young age, like you really hadn't experienced adult life on your own before. Which is for someone who hasn't gone through that. Extremely jarring and there's so many things that you haven't had to deal with by yourself and so I think that's another thing to bring up as well. As married people as well, how can we support a single people? A lot of times it's like, well, do you need help fixing something? Do you need a meal? Do you need a home to come to and spend time with people so that you're not by yourselves? You know, just like some of those practical just very simple things. Like it doesn't always have to be this complicated well I need to organize this huge support group. It's like sometimes it's just being there for someone and giving them those little things. And so I loved that your family recognized that and did that. Like the story with the toolkit, I think that's just so wonderful. Yeah, yeah, I'm a mom was just like, I'm not buying you one of those girly ones. First of all, they mark up the price like way too much. Plus, you know, she's like, I think that there's something to you holding, you know, a black and an orange or a whatever like just normal tool for you to have that confidence in it not to be this like girly frilly thing, which although very cute, it makes me feel like I am just as capable as any man doing this for myself and it's not this pink frilly thing and this little dinky toolbox. It's a real toolbox for me just like I would have might be reaching for my husband's toolbox. So I mean psychologically it really did make me feel more empowered. So it sounds so small and simple but like every time I open it to this day I'm like, I can do this. Like I literally can do this. I got my toolbox and I'm good. That's awesome. Yes. I feel like after going through something like that, you need to find what makes you feel empowered and capable on your own. And I feel like that's such a cool practical thing that you could do. And I love that you talked about, yeah, just sometimes getting up and going to church, like that's all you can do.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Like, some people, maybe that's just not right for them. Or maybe they're just not actively looking for that in their life and they're trying to heal and work on themselves and not be looking for that in their singleness. They just want to be single and that's okay. So that's one thing. And then also really wish that there was small groups for people that are going through divorce or grieving some sort of loss in their life. Because I, again, I was in this really weird, still am in this really weird category of like, I'm young. But I'm not in college, so I'm 21, I'm not in college, I'm also divorced and trying to heal, so it feels weird to be in a college group. It feels weird to be in a singles group because I'm not looking for a partner right now, so I just wish that there was something where like people who are dealing with grief loss, any of that could go and kind of like, I guess I feel like, I don't even know where in the Bible to look for support with this stuff. So it would be helpful to have like a Bible study group that can take you through that and we can talk about it and so that's just something I wish the church would kind of open up a little bit more on. Yeah, I love that. Just wondering where you belong. And I think it's so important that we don't create such strict categories for people who don't fit into those categories. There isn't a space for them. I think that's really important what you're saying. Yeah. Yeah, and I like that you hit on that not everyone's looking to get married. And marriage is not the end all be all. I think, I mean, we've all experienced as young Christian women, and you know, I'm not married yet.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"I think also to just feel like I need to validate somebody. Who feels like there's not gonna be a tomorrow. I remember when I was at my sister's house, their apartment, I was sitting on their couch and was kind of like curled in this little tucked position. I think I just got off the phone with him and he yelled at me for the first time. Saying that he said if this marriage is ending, then we need to look at all the reasons why it's ending. It's not just me. Like you've done so much damage or whatever, that kind of thing and I remember speaking up for myself for the first time and I said, don't yell at me. I do not deserve to be yelled at. If I didn't know anything else, that's all I knew. I am so glad I just wanted to think that was the whole spirit speaking up for me and being like, I know without a shadow of a doubt, first of all, I know that I wasn't perfect in this marriage. I messed up. Countless times. But the damage that I did was maybe like little tiny little dense and scratches not like a sledgehammer just came in and like, you know. So I was sitting on the couch and I was just like feeling really defeated. And I told my sister, I just was like, I can't move. I can't. There's no like, I said, I don't know how there's a moment after this moment right now. Like, I can't move from this position on the couch. I can't get up. And for anybody who's feeling like that, I get it. I totally get it. And I, when I tell people, I was at the lowest of the lows, I mean it.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Of wrap this question up, I know I've been on this for a long time but once I did move here back here all on my own, my parents were great in sending me helpful things that I needed, which I think this is for any parents listening or any but any Friends of somebody who's going through a divorce listening the most the most helpful thing you could do is gift that person things that they practical things that they need so meal delivery kits. I really wish I took my parents off on that. I don't know why I was like, no, no, I can do it, I can grocery shop. I was trying to be missed like strong or whatever, but I really should have just taken them up on that because I was not feeding myself really well at all. It was a really terrible time in terms of self care. So I should have taken them up on a meal delivery kit. But they offered that. And then they also sent me so helpful. They sent me a man toolkit like just not like a girly toolkit that's pink with like little cute dainty tools like a real, my own home kit that has hammers and drills and nails and everything I'll need and I have used that countless times and it's been so helpful to make me feel like I'm capable of doing this by myself. I'm capable of fixing little things around my house, tightening this screw, you know, hanging a picture like whatever I need to do. So they sent me that they sent me a stool so I could actually reach things in my house because my ex-husband was taller than me. So yeah, helpful, practical things are the most the most amazing thing that you can do to support somebody going through this as well. Yeah, so I think that's it.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"And I then had to call my sister and it was really kind of this moment where I had to be honest with my sister for the first time. We've been close my whole life, but I hadn't told her any of the things that were going on. I never told her that with all the trauma of. The line and then he was stealing and all these different things that had been going on and she didn't know any of it. And I think the only person I really told was my parents, I just like, it was so something I didn't want to tell anybody. And so in one phone call, I think it was like ten minutes. I told her everything that had happened and she was like, that's a lot to take in. I had no idea. And so now her view of this person is completely like just in one moment just like, yeah, it's like finding out your family members are murderer, like in one sentence. You know, you're just like, what? I don't even know how to process that. So she's like, okay, well we are coming to get you because he was at work when I found out and all this stuff. So I was home alone and her and her husband, floored it to get here, they're about 50 minutes away. And they just told me to pack a bag for a few days and they took me to their apartment and they're running this business by themselves. They run a fashion company and so they put their entire life on hold to care for me and it was a really rough time because they had to I was so in this abusive I was being abused.

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Should try to convince somebody to remember why they love them. It should just be an organic thing that happens and it wasn't like at the very end for I think I'd fought for a month to like I would show him old photos and be like, look, don't you remember like this? We were so happy. You love me. I know you do. You're in there somewhere, but he was a completely different person by that point. I mean, he just basically, well, he wasn't a completely different person. He was just showing who he really was. The whole time. And my mom said something like so just right on the nose. She was like, I wish that he could have been the person that he pretended to be, because he was a really, he wasn't actually a very great liar. He was a really, really great actor. And so he acted this certain way. He had this really amazing facade. Everybody loved him. He was the kind of a teddy bear guy. Just everyone he met was, they were like, oh, he's so, you know, he's kind of meek and he's gentle and he's nice and he's soft spoken and he's funny and he didn't have a very big characteristic or like a loud character at all. He was very quiet but like everybody liked him and my family was like in love with him and all this stuff and oh he's so sweet and he's so kind and oh he does anything for Lauren like everything like that but like behind closed doors he is not that person at all. I think that that's my therapist was saying, I think that's the person God made him to be. I think that's the person that he truly is like he should yeah that guy gets that God designed him to be at his core, but he gave in to this other side of him and ultimately like, yeah, it's just really sad that he couldn't have been that person. And he had mentioned several times and I think this was a huge red flag. He'd mentioned several times that he felt like he was two different people living in the same body. And I'm like, okay, you need to actually see somebody about that because that's like a real, you need a diagnosis for that. And that's not me being like, oh, you need to get help, but like for real because when people do struggle with like a split personality disorder, there's resources, there's tools, there's things to like, you know, and maybe if we had caught that or maybe if we had like, he had saw somebody, even if we still, on a better path. Obviously I don't know where he's, you know, is right now mentally, but I don't know. So it's just, yeah, it's really unfortunate that he couldn't have been that person and he acted like he was. Yeah, thank you for sharing all of that. I think yeah, a relationship it takes two different people. Like you were saying you felt like you were the one that was trying to make it work or like making remember to love you. And you get to a point where if the other person is not willing, I think that's what's most important in a relationship because neither of you are going to be perfect and someone might really struggle with something that is serious, but if they're both willing to work through it because of out of love for the other person, you can make it work. But you can't carry it all yourself. And that's when it's like, okay, well, you know, I can't, I can't make this work and people might

Let's Talk About It
"juarez" Discussed on Let's Talk About It
"Hey, welcome back to let's talk about it with Jackie and Megan. Are we like to talk about things that are messy awkward hard or controversial and create a space for healing? Hey guys, today we're talking to Lauren Juarez, who is a digital creator and freelancer who discusses sustainability, slow living, and personal topics such as faith and her divorce story across her platforms. You can kind of just tell her audience who you are and about yourself as we get started if they don't know who you are already. Yeah, so I'll just start here. I grew up in central California and I had a pretty happy childhood. My parents have and still are always been together always been in love and I feel like I had a really great picture of what a healthy marriage should look like from them. And I started dancing when I was two years old. And I stuck with that and stuck just not competitive dance, but just performing kind of like with a traveling performance group as I grew up and did that all the way through to senior year of high school and my high school experience was a little bit different than most. I was actually at a new tech high school, which basically, I think they're all over the U.S., but project based learning. So instead of tests and like just sitting in rows and you're just sitting straight forward and taking notes and doing tests, you actually sit in groups and then you present to a panel of adults at the end of a few months of you working on a project and that's where I learned how to advocate for myself and how to public speak and as well as what I wanted to do with my career. So those are really amazing high school experience.

WGN Radio
"juarez" Discussed on WGN Radio
"What you think of what is happening at Benito Juarez community academy This Chicago area high school is going to starting April 25th tell the students that when they get to school each day they have to put their phones in a locker that's at the beginning of the school day and they get them back at the end of the school day That's according to an email from the principal And of course I think that's a really good idea I'm shocked that kids are allowed to have their phones on their person during the school day And I know that must sound really like unawares because I don't have a kid in school And for those of you who do you may feel differently Obviously it's not a teaching aid It doesn't help them learn but we're all tethered to our phones and we like being connected to our kids So in that sense I understand the impulse But no I think the kid shouldn't have the phone They should not have the phone during the school day Asking them to power it down doesn't get the job done But you may feel differently Heck if you agree with me imagine that Three one two 9 8 one 7 200 Give me a call and tell me what you think about this Parents took to social media to discuss the decision Some wrote the decision was this is from block club Chicago today Some of the parents wrote the decision was smart and will help reduce student distractions others said they worried about not being able to contact their child and urgent situations that so unsafe one person on Facebook wrote earlier this year The school did go into lockdown due to shots fired outside the building it's not clear if there was a particular incident in one of the classrooms that's led to the decision by the principle to ban cell phones but I don't know how that does not happen everywhere One last thing before we go to a couple calls my son works in a Chicago public high school And he reminds me every now and then of just how different the world is Now as opposed to when I went to high school he says his dad things are different now Things are different now So maybe I like I said maybe I'm unaware of the environment or the need or just how much a part of the human being the smartphone is You can't take their phone away anymore you can take their hand away That sort of thing But I think they could and should And if I were a parent I would not want my kid to have a phone in the school at least not on during the day I would not want them to have access to it Let's talk to D you're on WGN radio Heidi Joaquin what can you say to us Hi John A long time listener first time caller Hooray I just wanted to mention that the high schools they rely on their kids to have cell phones the teachers actually will say please pull out your cell phone go on to Google look at this app And I was really taken back by that to hear my children that were in high school at the time Hearing the teacher stating that this is something that they encourage I wonder about the app was something they were studying about or thinking about huh Wait it was a variety of things It was an app or it was Google It was kind of the smartphone for the children were taking the place of the computer of the school supply and computers or the children bringing computers Yeah you know that's interesting that you mentioned that because according to this block clubs story the principle said that Juarez the school is a one to one school meaning each student has their own computer to access digital materials during the school day So maybe what I'm suggesting works as long as every kid has a computer in front of them right Absolutely Yeah no And it might be different for grade schools as opposed to high schools I have 18 year olds So they back then they weren't allowed to have their phones in grade school where in high school it transitioned over differently So maybe was giving the computers that will take away from the need of the smartphones and they can use the Google app Thanks for the phone call do you think that you joined us I'm glad you're on the line Thank you so much You have a great rest of your weekend Yeah you too Parents at pilsen's high school that the pilsen high school Benito Juarez community academy The kids have to check their phones into a locker at the beginning of the school day They get him at the end of the school day Principal sent the note out starts April 25th I wonder why April 25th is the years about over but fair enough Hey Terry jump in here You're on WGN What did you want to say My concern when I first heard this was that when you get an emergency in the school or there's these shooters going in there A lot of these kids were able to call 9-1-1 but they were also able to be in contact with their parents So what do you do I mean that hardly ever happened I mean I know but it's still I don't know just a little extra safety thing to the kids I guess Yeah that's what we're getting a lot of texts like this Terry Everybody is saying well what about in the case of a Columbine What about in the case of something like that Yeah you hate to think of it like that and everything but it's the only way that those parents had any way in that the kids hit any way of being in touch with their parents Yeah Terry thanks for the phone call I'm glad you're listening Yeah I got it I got it Well thanks for the phone call So fair enough but so then what do you do There could be a shooter Think about it If there were a shooter in the school you would be able to talk to your kid your kid would be able to talk to you but that doesn't make the kid necessarily any safer It just alleviates your anxiety You're terrified You want to reach out to your kid At the end of the day if you did need to reach your student at the school you call the school and then they get your kid like the olden days.

The Tennis Podcast
"juarez" Discussed on The Tennis Podcast
"Would it have been around the time of Carlos Juarez Navarre's retirement, perhaps that equals Carlos Juarez Navarro is record of most Grand Slam quarterfinals reached in the women's game anyway without reaching a semifinal. But I'm not sure there are regrets for Canopy and I'm not sure, you know, I think overall she's 36. She could very well continue to play for a long time or certainly at a time. But Grand Slam quarterfinal is I don't know what I'm trying to say, David. I'm trying to compliment Canopy and I'm worried it's going to come out as a sort of backhanded compliment. It's extraordinary her record at slams quite frankly. I really don't think she should focus on as much as I've just talked about it, focus on the failure to reach a semifinal. She has been an extraordinary Grand Slam competitor for 15 years. Yeah, and she's look she's another another corner, I feel like and yet she's done the quarterfinal several times, but she's done it over a really long period of time. I didn't realize she was 36. I mean, she's an incredible athlete. She's really so well conditioned and puts the work in and just had horrible injuries in that time and just keeps on coming back for more and I tend to dismiss her as the player who nobody wants to meet in the first couple of rounds, but doesn't do much when she when she's gone beyond that. But actually, that's a really consistent record of success. Several times. And she's had a career to be proud of no matter what happens from here. Yeah, same, I'm guilty of thinking her as her as a kind of clock device rather than an actor or a character in her own right and 7 7 quarterfinals is absolutely nothing to be sniffed at. Incidentally in just tennis being so completely tennis news, after Medvedev and Felix, or share early scene finished their match, gone midnight. It was announced to the crowd that the mixed double semifinal between her duchess and Escobar and furless and kubler would soon be coming on to court. Don't go anywhere, folks. I mean, everyone was literally going anywhere at that moment. And there was love. There was laughter when that was. Don't be silly, was the field of the noise that was coming through my TV because I heard that announcement. And it's disrespectful really. To that conception into those players. That's one of the biggest matches of those players lives and it started at ten to one in the morning and we don't know why it wasn't why it wasn't me. Don't know anyway, should have been something you just can't have that happening. I know we're conditioned to sort of accept that tennis does do this to itself, but it really doesn't need to. Better news stories from today. Alfie Hewitt and Gordon Reed defeated Schengen and Gustavo Fernandez 6 two four 6 ten 7 to win their third straight men's wheelchair doubles title. And their 9th successive Grand Slam doubles title. Absurd. Absolutely. You've said. And alpha Hewitt is going through the double tomorrow. He's in the wheelchair singles final where he'll also be taking on shingo Canada. And he's just an incredible story. If he wins tomorrow and tend to try and speak to him because he's had such a tough few years with the threat of having the sport taken away from him hanging over him the threat of reclassification of his disability rendering him unable to do his job to do what he loves to do what he earns a living from, but he has had the verdict that he will definitively be able to continue playing and he told us the fuller of the BBC in a piece on their website that he feels like a completely new person. Since his future in the sport was assured. And yeah, it's wonderful to see them winning. So he'll go in the singles final tomorrow. Did the hood and unique they won the women's wheelchair doubles title day defeated. You would meet and Lucy shuka tend to in the match tiebreak. That is their 13th Grand Slam doubles title together and their third Australian open. And they will also face each other in the singles final tomorrow, which is just one of those little twists that I love. I love that. And I always want to just be there, you know, to hear the conversation on the day. You know, when they get the switch over from the double stuff and then they're facing each other in the next match or vice versa. Don't you think it's all probably annoyingly lovely? Yeah, I mean, I remember we asked alpha Hewitt that question that queens a few years ago and he really didn't like the question. Well, he really dismissed it because he said for us, it's not a big deal because we're always in that situation of playing doubles partners and sharing a small locker room. It's not like the singles where they might team up with a double splay and it would be a really big deal if they make each other in the final. There's a smaller pool of wheelchair players, but yeah. Not much awkward. And.

KOMO
"juarez" Discussed on KOMO
"For a difficult start to the day we have about 42 schools that have about 20% of their staff out But superintendent Brenda casely says not all were COVID cases The CDC now says if you want to test if you test positive and you want to get tested 5 days later and you have the access to do So go ahead but it insists that a negative test isn't necessarily an all clear Stretch of I 95 in Virginia where drivers were stranded by a blizzard has reopened San Antonio police say an FBI dive team has joined in the search for a missing three year old Stocks closed mixed today the Dow up more than 200 points in the NASDAQ down more than 200 area all being ABC News Como news 1000 FM 97 7 a common news type 7 31 it's 38° art Sanders and your top local stories from the como 24/7 news center Bruce harrell has now Seattle's mayor He was sworn in on Saturday but today was the ceremonial event giving her all an opportunity to outline his plans for the city Today begins our journey to bring new energy and new resources to address homelessness and public safety and gun violence and climate change Harold defeated the more progressive arena Gonzales in the November election Deborah Juarez has been elected as the Seattle city council president Juarez was first elected to the council in 2015 representing district 5 in north Seattle In her time at city hall she has become a more moderate voice among a group of progressives Juarez is also the first person of Native American ancestry to lead the council something council member Lisa herbal made note of and that made Juarez herself a bit emotional I never thought of my life I'd be singing here Carrying someone is gracious and kind as you is repeating the whole understanding of the blackfeet way of knowing in the black foot confederacy and how we come together for the greater good Juarez was elected by her colleagues in a 9 to zero vote Jeff pagella come on news Seattle's newest city attorney is officially on the job and Davis and took the oath of office this morning in an online only ceremony and followed up with some tough remarks I am here because politicians were more interested in hearing themselves talk Then solving problems Davison becomes Seattle's first female city attorney replacing Pete Holmes who was defeated in last summer's primary election City of Everett has sworn in four new city council members and for the first time in its history the body is now represented by women in the majority I'm Carly Johnson This was also the first time the members were elected by district instead of having all positions be citywide races of the 5 district council members and two at large members 5 are women to our men The reelected female mayor also took the oath of office once again I passed it for England Do solemnly swear 2021 was the first election year by district candidates ran for four year terms in those positions one through 5 And in 2023 elections will be held for the at large positions Carlene Johnson come on news in the late senator Doug Ericsson's 42nd district seat will remain vacant for the start of this year's legislative session the watkin county council met today to name a replacement but instead decided to have each of the three candidates answer a standardized list of questions for review prior to making the.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"juarez" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Pivot during the Trump administration They'd already said trade wars coming We got a pivot and then during the pandemic that just amplified So near shoring is that what we're calling it Sort of For now it's just called an economic boom in Mexico along the U.S. Mexico border That's what I wonder How much of it is because you know we have relationships right With Mexico It's easy for us They've got cheap labor And so it kind of makes sense if we're looking for a lower cost provider Why not take one that's maybe closer Yeah and that there's less risk for So for example in the story that we're looking at today supply chain hell ignites economic boom along the U.S. Mexico border by our very own Thomas black He actually points out that one of the major cities dealing with this is El Paso Texas because it's so close or the city Juarez actually which is kind of the sister city of El Paso Texas because it's so close to the consumer the travel there really works in its favor Well and I think about with ESG and like as companies get graded on their impact you are going to be thinking about what does it cost to bring something from thousands of miles away And maybe this isn't today's story tomorrow story but I do think that's going to be a factor of just for some color on the ground I flew into El Paso a few months ago when I went and saw Jeff Bezos rocket take off for the first time Carrying people And you have to understand El Paso is so close to Juarez There's essentially a fence that runs through it And people can commute back and forth My cell phone actually thought I was in Mexico for a short period of time It is literally right there And it goes through the system And so this is a global issue There's so many cities around the world who have that There's city in on the board of Germany and France where folks live in Germany and they go to work in France and they come right back and that's why a lot easier to do with the European Union.

ESPN FC
"juarez" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Lead outlet. You ain't got the equaliser visits is completely messed up. Throwing via rally may make it to one as a mixed bag sold them take the lead but then later on the old of mix up of the around the defending goes ahead of the goalkeeper's out of position and somehow hit trickles across the line. If finishes to to craig list talk about a dramatic ending that goal for you who's phones. Yeah thank you this. I don't know just before we came on lia debate hers fort. was you defender goalkeeper. And i was something law. I thought it was. The defender actually go coming into possession where he's not the common tomb and so i think it's the goalie of Admiral is both of them. The two guys it took off for the throwing away in the corner which handed lewis juarez the equalizer via rio after all the hard work and pressure. Sometimes the hot with stunned on some of the good play to go away from home and look like going to be the champions from last year and possibly champions from this year because a lotta bookies definitely many see athletico madrid as and then throw all the way he's going to be. I mean you mentioned. I was listening to the boys. You're talking about half time is jack-in-the-box their new way to a dot dressing room though. Because he's going to be going by non name the go. Geronimo is the name of the goalkeeper. Frank is the goalkeeper the defendant while after seeing twice. You know i would say that really boss of them because the first rule of for defender when you give a goldbach. He's normally you try to put the ball. Outside of the the goal the net serena make sure that the incase happens. The ball doesn't go in but it's true that ask craig mansion. Keep going nowhere near it. I mean i don't know why goes so much on the left because should see that the defenders going to head the ball. So you shouldn't go. That left. So i will say both but i will say that must form for me the more the most guilty for that he's gonna keep her new side still four in madrid. We just saw that say damn.

TalkRadio 630 KHOW
"juarez" Discussed on TalkRadio 630 KHOW
"I mean, there could be an abduction in broad daylight. No one saw it. No one talked about it. These were like ghosts. The numbers started to rise. And then a lot of theories were floated up the gangs, the serial murderer, the cartels, organ traffickers, the possibility of some sort of strange devil worship. It's been 15 years since I first heard about these murders, and I've been haunted ever since. How is it possible? These crimes remain unsolved on our journey to find out. We talked to victims, families, FBI agents and a psychologist who claims to know one of the culprits. We traveled to a dangerous part of downtown Juarez, where many of the women disappeared. Yeah, we're going around looking at the missing posters of women, and we're asking a lot of questions they might Send someone to scare us off. I'm as Voloshin Monica Ortiz. This is forgotten The women of Juarez. Listen and follow this podcast for free on the I heart radio app number one for music, radio and podcasts all in one guitar and a spare time. That's absolutely right. And I guess you play 12. Very cool. Yep. It is a man of many talents and apparently doesn't sleep very much. Lots of energy. He's it. Ed slot, joins us today to talk about his newest webinar That's based on his news book. The new retirement Sieving Stain bomb This 45 minute Webinar.

AP News Radio
Donated US Vaccines Arrive for Mexican Border Cities
"Mexico is just received coronavirus vaccine donated by the U. S. the US donated more than a million doses of the one shot Johnson and Johnson vaccine officials in Mexico say once those shots are enormous there won't be any reason to continue restricting travel over the U. S. border the US and Mexico of restricted border crossings to essential travel only since early in the pandemic the US shipment will be used to vaccinate anybody over eighteen in four cities along the border Tijuana Mexicali Ciudad Juarez and Reynosa about thirty percent of Mexico's adult population is already gotten Kovic shots I'm Rita Foley

Fresh Air
Biden says migrant families apprehended at border 'should all be going back'
"First press conference as president Joe Biden said migrant families will continue to be turned away at the southern border. Mallory Falk from member station KTRH reports. The Biden administration is going to great lengths to send them back to Mexico. At a migrant shelter in Juarez, Mexico. Family sit on glue sleeping pads trying to get their bearings. They're hundreds of miles from where they first crossed the border in South Texas. The government flew them to El Paso, brought them to an international bridge and then expelled them back into Mexico. Yes, that was a little girl, but no familia. Honduran father named You there, who asked us not to use his full name, says he and others initially thought they were taking Busses to join family in the U. S. But then they arrived at a runway. Biden Stress to the US will accept Children who arrived at the border alone. But he wants all families returned to Mexico for

BBC World Service
Journalist killed in Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez
"Notorious for its violence and crime. Arturo Album, Medina was shot in a pseudo Juarez street just moments after he had finished presenting his television news show. Here's atleast the six journalists to be murdered in Mexico this year. World News from the BBC.

The Gee and Ursula Show
Seattle mayor names task force to guide spending $100M on communities of color
"Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan has unveiled who is now going to be on that task force that will determine how $100 million will be spent on communities of color. The Seattle Times is reporting this morning that 29 members include pastors, union leaders, the end of Thie Urban League, along with Seattle Indian Health Board and El Centro de la Raza. City Council member Debra Juarez is going to serve as a non voting member, Thie Durkin administration is going to pay consultant up to $200,000 to help this taskforce navigate its work between November and June of next year.

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
Seattle City Council overrides mayor's veto of partial reallocation of police funding
"City Council has overridden the mayor's veto of police budget cuts in the 2020 budget. Rebalance We get the update from comas, Jeff Poached by a vote of 72. The council has implemented seriously cuts to the Seattle Police Department. Councilmembers, Debra Juarez and Alex Peterson were the only no votes with Peterson saying it is the union contract and not the police budget. That is the problem. Every progressive and well intentioned move seems to be met by a brick wall that contract the budget rebalancing as council members have called it. Reduces the police budget by roughly 14% and could lead to the lay offs of up to 100. Officers. Jeff Pooja look come on news After the vote, Mayor Jenny Durkin's office issued a statement which says in part after previous promises of a 50% cut to SPD. The reductions to the SPD budget are almost exactly those proposed by the mayor and former chief best, But none of the other issues counsel admitted. Our problems have been addressed. A

In Defense of Plants Podcast
The Cultural and Ecological Implications of the Salep Orchid Trade
"Take those steps in and do something professionally with your career to actually. Contribute to the world of conservation, which brings us to the topic of Salad, and if anyone listening has heard of salad at all is probably as an ingredient, which is interesting. Because often times I hear people saying, Vanilla is the only culinary viable orchid on the planet, which is not true. So let's talk about sal up what is it? What is it used for, and where does it come from? When Salad Salad? Actually, it's not only an arcade ashamed Larkin it's like a big group of four kids. If you go through literature, you can find more than thirty five species. SLEAFORD Silane it's also depending on when a whether you are what exactly two different species or group species in Greece different one in Turkey or other countries. So when we talk about the If we see all the countries together faced in weekend, say that the most common once belonged to Janet like or he's like that filariasis also mccown. And infected, maybe it's off races when. So what's smoke one between solid core kids as their root system they most often have obeyed Bob's or? Huber's along one that look like little fingers. If. You see those on the rises. So this is actually a a salad porchet and being driven is coming through the dried and ground Cuba's that's what you get the. Fowler and the Susan Shelley Different. If you see, for example, in Greece, they like days they're just washed with water and dry. But if you go to Durkin also boy in either walking on me, it depends on very Jim. So that's what's giving you the final product of salad father. In what is sell generally used in? I mean, if someone's looking to see if it's an ingredient, what kind of food are they looking at generally or is it a lot just like the orchids that gives us it If you look at it as any greeted Bailey actually there are a lot of things you can find it most often is the traditional beverage. Back. The. Actually it's not always clear product that sometimes makes the cornstarch. Bob Is the one that you make the beverage hot beverage also techie you can find the acid thickening ingredient for they additional ice cream called on the. One that stick you on. an increase is also used or traditional ice cream, but this call, Kai Mikey by this mixed with mustard powder. The one that comes from the must be healthy. So this is more I don't mind. And less. But issue see that he starts Suzanne Masters you can not a fine sapping the most stains places even as an ingredient or bombs. So. Mrs I leave. I much. Boy. While an okay. So these are all terrestrial orchids for anyone that's not familiar with the Genera, and when you talk about harvesting routes, that immediately brings to mind issues that we have with harvesting plants here in North America for instance, panics and high dressed us. Those are two plants that are highly sought after further routes, but the very act of pulling up a plant. By. Its roots kills it right. So this is where you can kind of see the connection with conservation. If you're harvesting the roots of a plant, you're you're taking its life away from it right and so that's where you start to come into issues with biodiversity endangerment with a lot of these orchids correct yet because the production of Saleh Pro Juarez, the use of the entire. Plans. So basically in the overwhelming majority of aces harvesting salad means the destruction of the orchestras selves. Now to make one kilo solid requires a by two and a half thousand plans. To the half thousand individuals, Wallin kilo. Of. Salam powder ouch. Yeah. That's a lot of orchids. Now, if you think about one cup of sal but of the equivalent to Cappuccino or something but drinking salad beverage. you need five grams for that. So if you do the math works as Iran thirteen plans for a single cup of salad drink. Does a pretty expensive kind of process in terms of of orchids. and. There are certain people told you know taking one of the to chew birds and putting the other back but all this is all this is just talk really because the amount of work required harvesting these things it's very hard were, and that's one of the reasons why are studied we found a lot of people that actually stopped elected. Elected Saleh. But It's a bypass were talking about something between. Ten. In Turkey and the launch ed very variable. The amount of used something between twenty and AC tones in a single year. Yeah. And that I remember talk from Professor Cramps Zeke, he mentioned that every year and thirteen one, hundred, twenty, million arcades are being kids in order to produce missile of the year. So it's like a tremendous amount of individuals and as able say that it is like you're actually bringing up a whole mountain that say a huge number. Yeah and again, we wouldn't be talking about conservation here. If this was something that was produced agriculturally, right these are all being taken from the wild they're harvested and those numbers are mind blowing I had no idea what we were getting into when. We started talking about this just in terms of quantity and like you said, it's not just the fact that they're pulling these plants out of the ground and them for this it's your digging the whole time you're also disrupting habitats and that's something I never see talked about when it comes to harvesting foraging anything like that is the fact that if you're digging things up your

WIOD Programming
Miami Mayor Outlines ‘Emergency Steps' Taken to Address Fish Kill in Biscayne Bay
"Pumps force air into Biscayne Bay to try to oxygenate the water. Miami Mayor Francis Juarez calls that one step the city has taken after a large fish kill in the bay. He says it will put trash containers where volunteers can put the dead fish they collect. So they don't infect the marine creatures still alive with Florida's news. I'm John my question.

Alyssa Milano: Sorry Not Sorry
Femicide and the Forgotten Women of Juarez with Oz Woloshyn and Monica Ortiz Uribe
"For nearly thirty years, women in the Mexican border city of Juarez. have been disappearing many of them turning up dead in mass graves. We. Don't know who the killers are very few have been charged and fewer convicted. My guest this week. Our odds volition and Monica Ortiz Rebbe. Of the amazing podcast forgotten the women of what is the final episode two, which is now available, they are incredible journalists with an infuriating story to tell. If! You've ever been to war with disposing of bodies, Israelis. You don't have to dig to her dirt. You're digging through saying. Just across the bridge from El Paso Texas, hundreds of young women have been tanning up dead in Juarez Mexico. Many artists covered in mass graves. Some have strange symbols coughed. Some. have their hands bound with shoelaces? And? Everyone from the families of the victims to the United States. FBI has tried to uncover who is behind these crimes. But one thing is clear. The crimes are connected. They're not just random victims. The women were picked. They were selected I mean there could be an abduction in broad daylight. No one saw it. No one talked about it. These are like ghosts. The numbers started to rise, and then a lot of theories were floated up the gangs serial murder. The cartels organ traffickers the possibility of some sort of strange devil worship. It's been fifteen years since I first heard about these murders, and I've been haunted ever since. How is it possible? These crimes remain unsolved on journey to find out we talk to victims, families FBI agents and a psychologist who claims the new one of the culprits. We visit, the site of one of the mass graves and traveled to a dangerous part downtown. Where many of the women disappeared? I Voloshin, I'm one of the hosts of Forgotten Women of Juarez. The podcast explores what happens when this become targets, and when the judiciary is compromised, I'm fighting for bust institutions and freedom of speech. Sorry, not sorry I'm Monique, our three, they co host of the podcast forgotten. The women of what is I believe workers everywhere should earn a fair wage and women ought to live free from violence Nazari Period I. WanNa give the listeners some back story on what's happening in Juarez. How many women have gone missing in the crimes not being? Even really investigated by authorities and then go into why you felt it was important to do. The podcast I first started working on this podcast of several trips to the Texas Mexico border specifically El Paso Texas and In Mexico. And it took me several trips before I learned something that everybody in the region knows, which is that? Since the early nineteen nineties, hundreds of women have turned up dead in Horace, and many of them met incredibly brutal fates, which was evident from that bodies when they were discovered. That been five mass graves of Women Discovering Juarez since nineteen ninety five. And yet, all of this was happening right across the border from one of America's safest cities, a prosperous suburban Texans city, and so I was just very curious. How could this be happening? How could the crimes not be solved? And it ended up being this journey with Monica that open up. All kinds of other questions particularly learn things like the FBI had tried to solve the crimes, not once not twice, but three times. When the mass grave was discovered, and suspects confessed harder Crawford was the FBI special agent in charge of El Paso. Is Office was just a few miles away from the site. The mass grave and he taken a special interest in the murders of women in Juarez and was following this case closely as a potential breakthrough. You could sense that the pressure was mounting. Political pressure public pressure international pressure. The families and relatives and friends of the disappeared. Women were allowed. Those women would hold use. Mourning the deaths and George attention to that. That was huge. There was all kinds of attention from the international press. People like Jennifer Lopez. Eve ensler involved and yet these crimes remain stubbornly unsolved wasn't clear. Who was killing these hundreds of women, and why and it was a story of vulnerability, but also a story of the deep paradox irony of the border that many of these women were working in factories, which were American owned could see across the border into a Passo a city of. A Fred safety enormous safety by comparison and that Alpes Owens could see back into war as many of them had relatives there many of them. Have Friends there and yet. Those this seeming inability to do anything and that struck me as something which was I had to know more

The Gee and Ursula Show
Seattle City Council president addresses protests targeting council members’ houses
"Outside the homes of Seattle City Council members are getting the council president's attention. The Seattle Times reports or been demonstrations outside the homes of council members Alex Peterson and Deborah Juarez. Those are the only two members not in support of the funding Seattle police by 50%. Council president Lorena Gonzalez acknowledged the protesters frustrations but says they should not devolved into personal attacks. The

WIOD Programming
More than 47,000 coronavirus cases recorded in Miami-Dade County
"Has has to to pass pass 200,000 200,000 Corona Corona virus virus cases, cases, The The percentage percentage of of test test coming coming back back positive positive has has reached reached 15%. 15%. Miami Dade County has more than 47,000 cases by itself. Miami Mayor Francis Juarez says the case numbers now grow exponentially almost immediately. We got Ahead of the curve, and we're seeing a declining slope of 14 cases. Just before this weekend. The inclined slope was 91 new cases per day, so it's almost three times greater slope. Then it wass prior to stay at home were so you know, it's it's extremely worrisome Sora spoke to ABC is this week He says he's issued a mandatory mask or increased penalties on businesses that violate reopening rules and closed beaches over the July 4th holiday weekend.

WIOD Programming
Miami - Florida sees single-day record of 11K new coronavirus cases
"Said a record of more than 11,000 new Corona virus cases Saturday and edit another 10,000 Sunday to raise his totals to more than 200,000 on Lee New York in in California. California. Had Had Mohr Mohr on on ABC ABC is is this this week. week. Miami Miami Mayor Mayor Francis Francis Juarez Juarez would would not not say say the the state's state's reopening reopening came came too too soon, soon, but but says says it it has has contributed contributed to to covert covert 19th 19th resurgence. resurgence. The city of Miami was the last city in the entire state of Florida Open. I was criticized for waiting so long, but there's no doubt that the fact that when we re opened, people started socializing as if the virus didn't didn't exist. Miami Dade County has had 47,000 cases. It's beaches and those of several South Florida counties down through the keys have stayed closed. But elsewhere in the state, people were free to flock to the sand. People going to beaches this July 4th weekend gave some feeling of independence to businesses that need visitors to survive. Five.

News, Traffic and Weather
Seattle City Council bans chokeholds, police use of crowd control weapons
"City council is taking up bands on chokeholds tear gassed other so called crowd control weapons and police officers are covering their badge numbers with morning bands the first two are sponsored by councilmember Shamus or what he says it's urgent to pass those ordinances because the federal judge's ban on those weapons is only two weeks councilmember Debora Juarez as the offices of the inspector general of police accountability have asked for more time to compile their report they have deserted matter expertise and we're also going to have a briefing by legal and we want to get this right nobody is saying that it's okay to do this right now nothing's going to happen hopefully that we have at your own place in the end however the council voted unanimously to pass all three ordinances which now have been there for signature

Mentally Yours
Ellen and Yvette In Lockdown
"Hey if it's been like a long time since you've just had like just one on one chat. Offset. Bits of the country and. Fire laptops and things. It's really strange, isn't it? We thought would dip in different episodes this week because we didn't have an expert on talking about you know the bigger picture. How people being affected across the country? If they have mental health issues during the pandemic we thought well. Why don't we talk about how we've been affected? Just so that people consider I. Guess get like a first person kind of. Account, because as I feel like a ban on this by about constantly, but you know I've got bipolar disorder and you've got the. Seating his. Fun But. It's nice to like maybe this hour. Bet as well and say you know when not experts here's how we're doing. How you guys doing is all. Like come chat. Please do as well because obviously. This is just a punk cost between two people right now, but like talk to us on twitter facebook again definitely. Correct! Yeah, so affects great, which is mentally ill, also mentally Juarez's the twitter. Absolutely I feel that. Give out advice about. We'll stick to routine and do some exercise, but like. Is Hard radio sniff. I mean white sticking tour routine. Because I. Know I would have done though is off to speaking to all these experts said constantly. How good routine is fuel mental health I have Rishon out my routine and on Sundays. Yeah, it isn't. It isn't 'cause, but the thing is like most days I managed to stick to it, and then I feel like a loser because I haven't done it, so the thing is the moment like my sleep is very bad, so even had a sleep expert on gave his tips it still like. It hasn't managed to stop me from I. Wake Radio early now, so my routine. It's like get up at seven o'clock but. My. But I'm actually waking up like three am. Four am five am. And really full of adrenaline Sir I. Don't feel I can go back to sleep at that point. So you get open. Do stuff or do you just stay in bed? He has an. Varies an I it something I really am trying to keep an eye on and keep track of because. Some days I wake up without of energy I'll be really creative rows of style for like writer. The song like. I'll just at one point Nephew's birthday and I made minimum. A. Birthday, cake and a list and very helpful, but at the same time Hossam is just dislike I. Really need to be careful because the fight. What I'm describing is like. the the initial phases of potentially a hyper manic episode. So so all this creativity is great, but possibly is always thinking I. Really need to translate down. So what I do is already do one thing at a time, so even if I woken up at the a goal is ideas I'll be like well or so I'm Gonna I'm going to. Write, this thing I'm I'm going to do this of cleaning. I'M GONNA. Do but what can happen, is I want to do lots of stuff in between like I'll start doing the washing up. Then I'll start doing something, but what? I'll try to slow down as like. I'll do the washing up and finish it, and then all right some hurt tree, and finish them or like is is a bit. Crazy. You? You were going into hyper mania. What would? What would you do like? Are you able to kind of okay? This is what I need to do or is it I need kind of emergency urgent. Help at this point well, I mean the things like hyper menu mania. That's the thing like I'm not I'm not actually even that. Maybe. I'm maybe not even that worried about high mania because menu was manulife manual. When I've had it before is actually losing touch with the vanisi psychosis oldest gagged and stuff where you could potentially sections. Mania is things like to me is like spending lots of money impulsively being creative. Big Very talkative like so Yeah, it's not ideal, and in terms of I mean to want to question in terms of like how how do I deal with that I mean? The things I've escaped like trying to slow down. Do One thing at a time I mean I have friends in my my mom said of checking checking off mate, not like in a way that they really ever talk about disorder, but they are regularly checking. Who May which is useful? Because if I stopped telling them that I think I can fly or something. They'll. Hopefully they'll nice young hopefully. Things I mean like my mom's sort of been through this with me before like so she. She knows like in my voice. On Hammond Speaking Mike where I am pretty much emotionally and I've identified you. I've been supreme much through all through the pandemic anyway like I've had at the moment I'm going to high, but in the post of being a bit of depression.

Michael Medved
Mexico opens first government shelter for asylum seekers
"Mexico opening its first shelter for immigrants seeking asylum the shelter is in the border city of Juarez across from el Paso Texas officials say it will provide meals medical care and more to immigrants have been sent back to Mexico from the US where their applications for asylum are pending the Mexican government says the shelter can house thirty five hundred people twenty thousand asylum seekers have been sent back to Mexico since January when these new program began Mexico is expected to open more shelters in the next few