35 Burst results for "Kamal"

Northwest Newsradio
"kamal" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio
"Dozens of times every day trains cut through the streets of Kent while cars and pedestrians wait for them to pass. Except not everyone is always so patient. Because it's a street level, you know, they think they can just run out. Even when crossing arms come down, some decide to go around. To get over trying to race before the thing goes down. The results can be tragic, like when a woman tripped on the tracks as a train approached. Between 2019 and 2022, trains hit and killed 18 pedestrians in Kent, according to the state utilities and transportation commission, it's the most deaths of any city in the state during that time period. That's como forest Joel Moreno, and we check your traffic. Every ten minutes on the fours, from the high performance home traffic center, here's RZ cats. Both directions of the west valley highway closed just south of one 80th due to fatality crash they were doing some accident investigation works or they're going to be there for several hours. Definitely take I 5 or one 6 7 as an alternate route. And we do have a new crash northbound 5 just north of Colombian way, looks like the left lane is blocked there, fire on the scene, and it looks like we're starting to build a pretty good back up there. Your next northwest traffic report at three 44. And now let's check in with Kamal forest's third zone with your forecast, sponsored by northwest crawlspace services. Throughout the afternoon we'll keep the showers going under most of the clotty skies, temperatures, mid to upper 40s today. Overnight lows are going to be dropping down to the upper 30s to lower 40s, and we're back to that upper 40s range

AP News Radio
Russia takes losses in failed river crossing, officials say
"You you you you Klingon Klingon Klingon Klingon and and and and British British British British officials officials officials officials say say say say Russia Russia Russia Russia who who who who suffered suffered suffered suffered heavy heavy heavy heavy losses losses losses losses when when when when you you you you crane crane crane crane forces forces forces forces destroyed destroyed destroyed destroyed the the the the pontoon pontoon pontoon pontoon bridge bridge bridge bridge enemy enemy enemy enemy troops troops troops troops were were were were using using using using to to to to try try try try to to to to cross cross cross cross a a a a river river river river in in in in Ukraine's Ukraine's Ukraine's Ukraine's east east east east in in in in another another another another sign sign sign sign of of of of Moscow's Moscow's Moscow's Moscow's struggle struggle struggle struggle to to to to salvage salvage salvage salvage a a a a war war war war not not not not going going going going quite quite quite quite to to to to plan plan plan plan you you you you cranes cranes cranes cranes enabling enabling enabling enabling Kamal Kamal Kamal Kamal and and and and who's who's who's who's released released released released photos photos photos photos and and and and video video video video of of of of what what what what it it it it says says says says is is is is a a a a damaged damaged damaged damaged Russian Russian Russian Russian pontoon pontoon pontoon pontoon bridge bridge bridge bridge over over over over there there there there Seabiscuit Seabiscuit Seabiscuit Seabiscuit donuts donuts donuts donuts river river river river and and and and several several several several destroyed destroyed destroyed destroyed or or or or damaged damaged damaged damaged Russian Russian Russian Russian military military military military vehicles vehicles vehicles vehicles nearby nearby nearby nearby you you you you crane crane crane crane says says says says troops troops troops troops had had had had thwarted thwarted thwarted thwarted an an an an attempt attempt attempt attempt by by by by Russian Russian Russian Russian forces forces forces forces to to to to cross cross cross cross the the the the river river river river earlier earlier earlier earlier this this this this week week week week leaving leaving leaving leaving dozens dozens dozens dozens of of of of tanks tanks tanks tanks and and and and other other other other military military military military vehicles vehicles vehicles vehicles damaged damaged damaged damaged all all all all abandoned abandoned abandoned abandoned the the the the command command command command says says says says its its its its troops troops troops troops drowned drowned drowned drowned the the the the Russian Russian Russian Russian occupiers occupiers occupiers occupiers I'm I'm I'm I'm Charles Charles Charles Charles the the the the last last last last month month month month

Feminist Current
"kamal" Discussed on Feminist Current
"I i hesitate to call myself one because while we about it becoming too ideological and i don't want time myself down in that. So why because until like especially within two identity argument off stepped away from being on like the hardcore left or come from of really hardcore left and realize. How much electoral was the come from. Pretty hard vase and Kind of stepped away from that. Now i'm headed in to go anywhere near anything remotely wants to tell me what to do what to think saw yes. That's not impulsive of it. Really i mean. I suppose i would interpret that as you know because i i've felt similarly in express this in the past i don't know here too. Which is that. I prefer not to attach myself to a particular ideology because then it feels like you have to analyze everything in one particular way and i prefer to challenge myself more than that and to yeah think more critically and be open to various analyses and and you know facts and data and statistics and so on and so forth that may not fit within this particular framework. Yeah yeah especially exactly how i was. Well i think that. I i would prefer to off kamal questions and have more discussions than to be given what i should think. Oh be given all of the answers if that makes and actually being given some says does help to some extent like i said before about when i first saw star aid meeting law feminism online. It didn't give me a log on to things and it did resolve some things in my mind about how things in my life has gone as a woman. But i don't want to have to adhere to a particular school of thought that makes sense to me so let's talk a little bit more about what happened when you perhaps accidentally got involved in the gender identity debate because you happen to mention that only women have ovaries let happen. Didn't even didn't even do stay down. You said that you have to have to have them over disease. Oh okay okay. I mean i did say so. Say you have to be able to have these functioning based it could be disease extremist clearly. According according to your website you've been the target of a harassment campaign. I think for like a few years now. Is that right. Yes yeah it's been at least on agai- okay and the newer targeted by not just like ran does on the internet but people who used to be friends with is that is that accurate yet..

AP News Radio
Parents guilty in first college admissions scandal trial
"To wealthy parents were convicted by a jury in the operation varsity blues college admissions cheating scandal in the first of the cases to go to trial a jury found Kamal Abdul Aziz a former Las Vegas casino executive and John Wilson who heads a Massachusetts private equity firm guilty in a case that exposed to scheme to get undeserving applicants into college by falsely portraying them as star athletes prosecutors argued that secretly recorded phone calls between admissions consultant Rick singer and the parents proved that they were in on the scheme both men were convicted of fraud and bribery conspiracy charges the Daniel Mandel as the acting U. S. attorney for the district of Massachusetts even these defendants powerful and privileged people are

The Current
"kamal" Discussed on The Current
"Were to have a choice the right now you know if you live with a gun to my head with probably say i want to be out in aden. I don't think that has changed. And that's where you believe you belong. I think belonging is very complex. But if i have to choose I would. I would choose to go back to my roots. Yes i think. That's that's an answer. That would probably not go down very well with many many listeners. Doesn't even sit well with my friends when i mentioned it. Why do you think this wouldn't go down well with listeners or your friends i think i'd go back to that point. Where the ark of an immigrant success story has some predictable elements and one of them is sort of loyalty and love for adopted homeland. Which i do have. I just wanna make sure that that that comes out loud and clear and and yet and that any any duality in that belonging is seen as less than gratefulness for for the host country. I always. I'm always amazed at how many of my friends referred referred to neo refer to other people united circle as success phones. This kind you know. I'm so proud of canada. For giving you a home. And i and i sub grateful began of all of that but i also want to propose that i could. I could have that and also have abuse of me and at least my you know. Don't don't begrudge me not you. Personally i mean just for for the for everyone listening the begrudge me the right to also want to to go back and go back to the roots go back to the motherland it is. It is a taylor over time. And i'm just simply sort of feel like it's an evolutionary narrative and i'm just following his controls it's a really powerful book and i'm grateful to have the chance to talk to you as always come out. Thank you very much. Thank you so much. What a pleasure to talk to you again. Take care come out. Also eilly is an author and the director of the university of british columbia school of journalism writing and media. His new book is return. Why we go back to where we come from for more. Cbc podcasts goto. Cbc dot ca slash podcasts..

The Current
"kamal" Discussed on The Current
"Of the yard. A piece of land. A big old home. It it to me. It was on one level inexplicable around the other. The most natural thing. I could think of you. You interview a woman named angela. Tell me her story and hurl experience because it may in many ways captures exactly what you're saying. Yes i think in a in a in what was already multiple visits. Angela stood out because she she someone was married five times and two of her husband the first one christopher the second one richard were actually murdered the the first one during a home invasion of the second one In a hold up a restaurant and you know tas one has been To to motor wanting to secondly is completely another and my i kind of expected her to say. Oh my i never want to live in this country again. Or i took my step and left yet. Aside from sort of brief stints in the us and with her family in other parts of the caribbean she always wanted to live in the o. Two returned to jamaica to instant jittery. There she kept talking about something in dna. She cannot imagine living anywhere else. You know like honestly. I don't know if i might. My gut feeling would be to flee the islands and it had two of my partners work where he'll but hers have response however was to return to return several times and to make it a home. Because there's something about the air but the people of the culture about the level of comfort an. I have to agree with that. And even when i went back to visit cairo. Dead was a certain kind of comfort in looking like everyone else and understanding language perfectly in knowing the customs in not worrying about someone telling me to go back to where you come from. They were there. It is home and it's something that immigrants really really sort of religion. Identity runs through this book as well and i as a member of the lgbtq community. You say you had to flee home to be able to find your identity you right fat leaving and returning is in your words. A part of our story a chapter we tell a lot. What do you mean by that. I think there's a such an coming out narratives for members of the gbd's museum. Is that you if you particularly of you lived in a if you grew up in a culture. There was a homophobic or did not allow an expression of sexuality is that you go to the big city. You move to move to the west. And if you're if you're in in the west ready you move from a small town to the city and thinking the city will be your salvation. Many of us have come to the city myself included. I mean i remember when i first arrived in toronto and how much The gay village meant to me right now. A brady ever go and and to me. The the city is not executive. A safe haven for for edgy. Btcu people that it was an and on a personal level. I think the the serial killer Bush macarthur and the and the motor from the operationalize in indigenous. Gay men or men who have sex with men. has really left me reeling and made me every time. I was the gay bench now. If i do. I just keep thinking of them and thinking about how could this haven as tender into playgrounds promoter. You also talk about language in your own story. And i mean this is connected with that idea of identity and your relationship with the language that you grew up speaking and where that relationship is. Now tell me about about how language has shaped and complicated in some ways Your thoughts on return. I think i think if i if i were to pick i kind of the spark for the book. It has been my inability to communicate in arabic with my family at times of great stress for them. The chicken to refer to the war in yemen and arabic is native tongue is is. it's you know. I call it my birthright but the and in in an attempt to reinvent myself as a gay man as a westernized game as someone who will love english wanted to learn. English studied english as it should to deliver each day. The only way i could achieve all of that was to suppress arabic and month. Lettered contaminates my my understanding and my my my work in english and that lesson three decades or more to the point where it's actually the language a- trophies. I barely know how to write in it. I struggled to read it. I understand most of it but not all of it and that has added a level of complication when it comes to return. Because how do i go back to a country that i that what i look like everyone else whereas actually my birthplace but i do not understand what people are saying and i discovered that this is not a unique experience and a particular felt that in in places like taiwan where a generation of gaining an american second generation of taiwanese Young men and women have troubled and made a life for them shows even though they don't speak mandarin. How do you reconcile now. Thirty years later your desire to return. I mean you call it an obsession at the end of the book with your sexuality and how that would be viewed back home that that remains an answer question in the book i mean. I don't. the book offers offers a lot of questions. Some answers and some remain unanswered. An i an honestly met. I don't know what the answer to that would be. I know that it is not going to be. I'm not going to be welcomed as a gay man. And i also wish to go back into the closet and express my phoenix my six pm. How i feel i but i can't. I can't let that stand in the way of me connecting with particularly with my family and connecting with the land. I come from i have to figure way around the but i have not even by this under the book went to press. I did not find an answer to that. That's not easy. It's not an easy answer is a question. There's no easy answer at the end of this book. As i mentioned you. You say that You're longing to return the desire to return as an obsession. Have you figured this grim question to ask but have you figured it where you want to be buried. I would like to be by eight and to be perfectly honest. I like to be very very close To my grandparents. I'd like to end my days in aden. I don't know how an if that will happen. But if i.

The Current
"kamal" Discussed on The Current
"We talk about return. Think think there's there. There is perhaps a misconception. That return implies defeats or or or at least the host country has failed in its duty of care towards newcomers. I think there's a. There's an impression that Particular countries liberal democracies and am thinking of the. Us canada australia museum. In the countries that have sob- large numbers of immigrants have always guest themselves as the country safe haven for migrants and refugees 'exiles and when some of these people decide that you know what this is not working. I'm going back to where i come from even though but i didn't know what awaits me there or would be probably a much higher than life. In my opinion. Some you know the some of the people are of oga talking about immigration or planning immigration policies tend to see that as gonna slap in the face or an insult to the host country. When it shouldn't be it is the most organic. The most natural human desire and some people will immigrate will will will have great. Success will always have a piece of say canada as part of their lives. Instill also choose to go back to their country of origin. You travel the world to gather these stories. You go to ghana to northern ireland to jamaica. Israel to the basque region. In spain northern ireland is really interesting i mean with an irish diaspora that that extends around the world. Why did you go to northern ireland. And not the republic. I want something. I wanted to focus on countries where the the whole land is contested where there are several people at least two groups of people who are fighting to call bat their homelands mentioned. I went to israel. So for example. The israelis the israelis and the palestinians but in northern ireland's. It was a. I was fascinated with the idea of of homecoming for the irish diaspora. Which is you know as as you mentioned is is the millions around the world but i to go to the republic with and being slightly with just giving me that context was looking for which is the conflict that still ongoing between Being catholics importer spence and and that's still under rights so much of the story of northern ireland. What did you learn about why it is that people drawn to go back to northern ireland. I i mean this is. This is a chapter that has a lot of mennonites. And it's the for taiwan. In both cases i think the there's there's a certain element that the two things in in northern ireland particular there. Is this almost folkloric attachment to to to to homeland to irish culture to the to the offi of ireland but there is also some kind of transactional elements in the sense that it was an economy. At the time i visited and Prepaid dynamic economy. that is very open to innovation and in the work of technic- of into preneurs and is will the possibilities that that that that combined that that can be combined with a better standard of living cheaper housing than say in new york london toronto and a kind of very traditional way of life where many of the characters i spoke to talk about buying a home outright and being able to raise their. You have to put their children in schools. That it's like a five minute drive away so there there is almost kind of chain a to a simp- simpler life. I thought that was fascinating. Because that is unfolding against an ongoing conflict than as john docherty wannabe people. I talked to new book. mentions that it is. It may be a violence society. But it's not a conflict one just yet right now. Our lives are on our phones and with our phones full of livestream exercise classes midday work calls and nightly family video calls. There's no room for fraud calls thankfully. At and t. Makes customer security a priority helping block those pesky calls. It's not complicated. At and t. Active armor twenty four seven proactive network security and fraud call blocking to help stop threats at no extra charge compatible device slash service required visit. At and t. dot com slash act of armor for details. Hi i'm josh. Block host of uncover escaping nexium from. Cbc podcasts. I pull back the curtain on the secret of self help group that experts call a called and follow one woman's heroin journey to get out. The podcast was featured in rolling stone magazine and named one of the best podcasts of two thousand eighteen in the atlantic. Listen to uncover escaping nexium on. Cbc listen or wherever you get your podcast. How is that different than the return to a country like jamaica me. Initially you were speaking about the idea of failure and the idea that return can be seen as a kind of failure that that runs through a part of jamaican society but there is also an element where people want to go back and they want to go home to something that they have in their own minds. I would say that jamaica was the place that i find most surprising and in many ways touch me affected me the most because that connection to to The gym the jamaican migrants. Who are all can american or british or canadian. Citizens has persisted over fifty years. More has assisted over several declines. In senate of living in jamaica ovalles's vising levels of violence and yet everyone. I spoke to dreams or has made. His daydream come true of having a piece.

The Current
"kamal" Discussed on The Current
"There is a political firestorm burning in america. Walk down to the capitol. The flame throwers tells the story of the radio. Broadcasters who started that fire and kept it burning here is rush limbaugh broadcasters who clubbed their way from the fringes of american politics. I had enough hall enough to the very center of power. The fleeing throwers available now on. Cbc listen app or wherever you get your podcasts. This is a cbc podcast yemen. Israel was born in the port city of aden and where most of my siblings and extended families that lived on the capital sino cholera and water and electricity shortages floods and more than a year of qubit nineteen have left yemen is reeling as the world watched helplessly in differently in his new book canal. Also reflects on what it is that pulls people to return to their homeland. That book is called return. Why we go back to where we come from. The biggest collection however remains are shaped homeland soil sees streets structures. Mountains trees. smells and sounds. Even if i've been away from the country for decades he surprised by how much you miss yemen. Even after decades of being away. I was really taken aback by this inexplicable connection. I have particularly ammunition said. Probably not all the pm. And but it. In the city. Where i was born in the city i left the age of three and willie which into briefly in my twenties but it city that lives in the family in the family history and and and yet i think so much of my life into less furious have been motivated by a desire to revisit spend time in. Wanna talk about that desire Because that runs through the book in in various ways the book starts with this question that not a lot of us. I think to be honest are grappling with before we have to. The question is where do you want to be buried. Why do you. Why did you want to start this book there. I wanted to start it. Because because it is i think the ultimate expression of where you belong it is. Where do you want to to for your body to have that final resting place. And i couldn't think of anything that says this is home. This is the soil. This is the land that i belong to. Then where you choose if you have a choice. Some people don't have that choice. If you choose to be buried in your homeland it seems to me to connect this inexplicable desire with literally with the land that you the the two are connected to it was it was also as mentioned to book was it was a question that took me by surprise Because it was it was my partner at the time who asked me that question as were walking down. Toronto setting up less insanitary toronto. And that's sort of interesting. Question is almost ninety years old now and has lingered ever. Since why do you think that is. I think the question lingers. Because i do believe over writers right the same book but in different ways. This is something that i been having been written about books and having written a bug books and i think for me. The one question does underwrites all of mine. books in my writing is via a web web mobile whereas home and the question has lingered because it forced me to confront that yes. I've moved to toronto in canada. And i had an. I'm still having a wonderful life. I'm very grateful for this country in many ways. Also my homeland. But this part of me doesn't feel could be connected to it and is above that still things that land of my ancestors is where i should. Which is what should spend. Probably the end of my life and were should be buried again. This idea that you say something is broken in your sense of belonging which what's broken a number. I would say a number of things. I feel that. I am much more confronted by racism in ways that i had not realized earlier on in my in my immigration in history when i first moved during nineteen ninety six. It was a completely different sitting. I'm sure they. There was racism other workplaces on street level. But i never read felted and it felt to me many ways. Toronto federal paradise having been come here from small town in england and i would say Probably an i said that in the book probably since the start of the trump's presidency and even in the lead up to it. I started to feel less secure in the on the street of toronto. Something i've always done is especially when added dog to go for long night walks unexploded buzz of the city. I feel less comfortable doing that than than i was. Even maybe six years ago. And i think that's as security of nuts of of standing out a little bit even in a multicultural city electronica of feeling that people were looking at you differently. And then experiencing lighting experiencing racism at work or or microaggressions or racial tensions. Resentments have all added up to a sense that you know. Why am i here. Why continuing this charade of of trying to convince myself that this is this is. This is where i belong. This is your story in many ways. But it's the story of many other people around the world who are also grappling with the same emotions and those same tugs. If i can put it that way From from a homeland when you spoke with people. Broadly i mean what did you learn about why it is that people want to go back to where they came from. You know if i worked votes. Put it down to a one to one observation. I would say that as long as there's been immigration or exile. There's been return. It is sort of baked into the very movement of people across continents and countries it is. It is in many many of the people. I spoke to have had the formative experiences in the homelands. They returned to but many others didn't they pretend to their ancestor or the end of the parents or long long Like great grand parents etc. But i think for every every immigrant story has returned a spot ability. Only the only they'll leave sort of reason we don't talk. The only reason that may not be talked about in now is that sometimes return is very hard to quantify or to analyze because countries don't necessarily keep data bedrooms which enter their homelands and return itself can be multidirectional. People go to their home. Leatherman can come back to their adopted country then go back so it's return as phenomenon is much harder to study to analyze then say immigration which was countries than to keep records. Tell me more about that. Why is it that. Is you say in the book. Liberals in particular think of immigration is uni directional wire. Why don't we talk when we speak about migration..

ESPN FC
"kamal" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Has to say. There's the us men's national team really that team to beat as we start world cup qualifiers snow. It's still it's still mexico. But i like what. He's where he's going there. He's taking a jab at mexico. Why at the same time acknowledging. Hey look at all these tiny species all these shiny stars. These young players playing at big clubs. We want to bring them to our cities to our towns to our country and we want to beat them. We want to show them. We're just as good. You've got definitely a target on your back at the year. The us national team because of the stars are exporting but as far as being the team as far as actually playing in this world cup qualifying campaign dominating the way make. Mexico has cain years past historically is still mexico. but he's taking a dig in mexico. Que they beat you twice in the summer. These guys because of what they've done are the team to beat. But more importantly. I think he's mentioning of where these players are at bulletin board material for mexico. Like would you said this in the lead up to a game like this. No absolutely not. It's definitely board material. And he's laughing the whole time he's saying in now love kamara he doesn't care he's taking a jab at them. He knows exactly what he's doing. You don't think this was at all week. On before we can't and sportscenter with jamaican player kamal lawrence as saying that mexico's no longer the team to be mexico lost twice to the us. Look at all these shining stars here for the us. You don't think this was on the news cycle in land america. You're wrong we've done this all week with kamara loins right work. Her a few people have a better perspective on the us mexico rivalry than hordic campus. And you got to speak to bro the at the mls league all-star game. Let's listen to what he had to say. Let's talk about mexico. Let's talk about the us men's national team this summer. They played each other twice to finals. The cop nations league final and the gold cup final. Tell me what you saw in those two finals in this rivalry.

Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts
"kamal" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts
"To go to hospital bed improve their schools. The plot got harry. That's exactly what my husband's name to him. And i was like i'm not saying that and i'm glad that you guys are as evil as i don't think she should be voted for. I don't know i guess. Make tribal council the next day trouble council in the hospital. We the circle the like the ambulance roundabout thing and like in the middle is a fire and they have to like every time an ambulance collins. And they've just literally georgia in a bed. Instead of i know. I love this because gale becomes to campus. Like guys as you can see. Georgia's john here right now. We cut we straight cut hospital room jail standing there all the tortures behind with all the wires. Everyone's like crowded into the room. I love that. I mean you're probably right it's still is instead of having toured. She's got like a wheelchair and one of those. You know those bags. It's like a saline bag. Something like that. And then the bag is actually like designed to sort of turned into the shape of the torch. We'd light fire at the talk so like she like a thing that goes along with that that can be like put out sold it. This is why we need to be unproductive hundred percent like that is what it is you bring them or if she can't come to tribal council we're gonna bring traveled cassidy you out of this but no lease. Make me a producer australia. I will promise you more sick pass advantages like that exactly so okay. We sold that. That's how you handle that way. That is genuinely though a better way to handle it. It's not worth you drive on the hospital. Look again australia and survivor is. There's more constraints in the us. We have to say that kamal commercial constraints but still have to be a better way. All right that's some criticism. Let's get to some love again. You loving this like back and forth compliment. Family uber ponca huge family. Where there's a lot of sandwich. Yes so haley. Every every positive layer is a handsome. I actually like like branch out from that like. Let's go quickly through haley. Allay you let you go on with like she.

The Entrepreneurial You
"kamal" Discussed on The Entrepreneurial You
"Community with halle extended family so on many of us sales. That's not a good thing that neglect of has a week catching on us. And we need to be careful because sometimes it gives absolutely no warning untold. Though when you don't get any warning that is the most dangerous thing and sometimes we get the warning and we do not even pay attention to the warning. So i think i got some warning but i am not sure that i did i if i did. I didn't pay attention to the words so here on sunday night i had a long team. The meeting ended after level motel. Thirty and i was us to do the minutes of the meeting. Now it's not a core competency but based on what was happening. I took on responsibility to do it now. Because it's not micracle the dixie. I decided i was gonna sit up after the knee team. Do we do eat well and said which is what i did so i went to bed minister to. I had the third day of a three-day audie treating the following day. Which was monday. And so i got in the morning fuming a bit sluggish and i said why a copy more you know. There was a time when i would do a party son. Kamal plan go to school and all of those things but now sixty nine years old. I don't know. I say device kathy jennifer. I laughed advice of so at nine o'clock. I started the webinar. And i said to the participants. Hey guys i'm not operating my views. I am operated few. But i'm gonna give you my foot hundred. I'm not feeling so hot. But i'm gonna give you my full hundred and i did the third day of the sweetie audit for today but launched said olympic. Call the doctor cousin out feeling so yeah an i called the doctor and he gave me a three forty five appointment -pointment. The webinar finished at three o'clock and i went to the doctor. He gave me some work to do who said Fast works who at other morning so the following morning i will vote could not find the energy to not even with my son so i asked harold to send the lab. The what's it called for an expert but that yeah and he came on when the doctor the results. He said he needed to see me. Slicer cut about on the phone. He's at knowing of the. Because i have to admit you so i said should i come with the back. Yes so i went to the doctor with a bag in. Don't be admitted. The hostile dehydration exhaustion. Shogo way. we will we also control. I was. I didn't know i went into the hospital. I walked into the hospital. Dan iceland what to my room with my son and in today's eye elsie. In an old of consciousness it was frightening for my children was frightening up as it was frightening for the nurses. What made so frightening is an act dokic. The last time i was in the hospital was thirty seven years ago when i had my last child folks take care of yourself and was drinking enough water. I sat down every single day. Doing these webinars and was not excising. I was not taking. My medication was not eating well and not doing any of those things that i knew i need to be doing in order to preserve. We think we can do everything because the mind tells us that what sometimes the body does not cooperate with the mind ladies and gentlemen friends my colleagues. My sisters. My brothers soon take time out for you. Your health is your wealth and this is not academic stuff. This is not something you tell yourself. This is something you do and it must be done consistently john. Maxwell says consistency cup. You can't stop it. Society the body continues to fall. You can't stop drinking water enough water and the body continues to function where you cannot not take your medication on time. Those of us who are on medication and the phone shows where you cannot not eat properly and the body functions. Well there are reasons why we have these regimes that we need to follow in order to preserve l. And we know it. S a sad thing of we know it. All of us know what it is that we are supposed to.

Unexplained Mysteries
How Is The Piri Reis Map so Accurate?
"Born around fourteen sixty five in gallipoli. A turkish peninsula across the gene see from greece. Pirie reece's real name was haji. Ahmed mouhidin puree. The word res actually referred to a rank. He acquired later in life. As a captain in the ottoman navy. From a young age. Pirie felt at home on the sea. It only twelve years old. He joined a crew of pirates led by his uncle. Kamal for fourteen years kamala attack christian trading ships in the mediterranean sea with periods side. The islamic ottoman empire was expanding but it wanted to avoid open warfare with italy. Spain and portugal. So it empowered private captains like kamal to do its dirty work period. Uncle taught him how to pilot a ship and navigate. Using the stars together they fought battles and stole plunder. The even rescued jews and muslims fleeing catholic persecution in the spanish peninsula and in fourteen ninety five. The empire officially inducted inducted puree and kamal into the imperial ottoman navy. Kamal died in fifteen ten leaving forty-five-year-old pirie without his captain and mentor freed from obligation. He hung up his pirate boots and turned to his. True passion cartography. He returned to gallipoli and to work on a map that he hoped would capture the whole world on a single page. This daunting task took three to complete period gathered more than twenty different charts created over the preceding two thousand years. One of his sources was an ancient map supposedly drawn from the reign of alexander. The great sometime between three thirty six and three twenty. Three b c e. Many others were drawn by portuguese and arabic explorers to combine all these charts period had to match the contours of each continent's coastlines to each other like fitting together pieces of a puzzle. Even with modern technology. This would be difficult but at the time. The task was nearly

Podcast RadioViajera
"kamal" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera
"Going blanca at the komo. Cossio sean. Ya keta polycarp mongan. Opinion taylor gusts loop Bryant spaniard commercial moon the canal. Avia hub oni spectacle. How recommended law medical tailender. Viel chat i the lobster in bonn they come up with a lutheran dallas stick joining us. Bill thin dude on there for that but if he could get here in motto e jimbo yamashita fiat that us very little sengoku. United ido not lure. Enter miyamoto musashi east sasaki casino. Kamal messy that. I was telling me. And we're don't want this do in. I robot they'll go in in leszek vian but gas daily kabul dot com and in group. Olodum atta pony thousands. I cannot boy speed access. Units clinical podcast de mail boondoggle. You're a alikes evokes motor.

Nightline
Fallout of Texas winter blast
"Good evening. Thank you for joining us. The governor of sexist apologizing and promising answers after a deadly winter storm the deep freeze. Just the start of an ongoing nightmare for residents now. Struggling with shattered pipes in skyrocketing energy. Bill here's abc's tripled. I can't imagine what it's like for you to see it like this is terrible. I've never thinking house. This brianna bolden tells me she could smell the soap rotting wood from outside the front door of her grandmother's house before walking into this is pictures and the memories. They captured all underwater. And this is actually my big lama right here. This is all and that's the past those wife for half a century. Her grandparents filled this home with children and grandchildren home cooked meals. Tiny reminders of a family growing together is a lot of memories at this house. But now this house like so many in texas has been gutted. Helplessly flooded by first hypes last week's historic winter storm on your couch look. The damage is just a fraction of the devastation. in texas. that killed thirty. Two people will take months or years and billions of dollars to clean up. So how did it go so wrong so quickly. Texas has more than enough generating capacity to handle itself. It was just the state of affairs of that equipment and the state of affairs of the management of that equipment. The causes from texas is the only state in the continental us with an independent grid meaning. It does not connect to any other states power source. When that merciless winter weather hid in one of the warmest regions of the country. People crank up their heaters and the energy demand surged when that system shut down. There was nowhere to turn for power. There is no place for the texas grid to go there. Couple small lines extension cords to the east in the west. But that's not enough really to to pick up. A forty percent drop in texas generation and the result was more than three million texas residents in the dark and cold at one point leading many to take drastic measures for running dangerously low on one. So now what we've been doing. All day is actually coming outside getting snow putting it are pods and heaving on our propane grill. Then hypes began to freeze and burst shutting down water treatment plants across the state inning. Almost fifteen million texans would have to toil their water of four. It was safe to drink daily block water. We don't even have the electric reliability council of texas or bur. Kat had long been warned. Its infrastructure was vulnerable to freezing temperatures the state legislature held hearings on this exact issue in twenty eleven. The last time the state experienced major freeze there were numerous hearings hundreds of pages of recommendations but they were all made voluntarily. Nobody actually change the incentives so that the generators would have a financial reason food to weather. Is this week. Several urquhot born members resigned in the wake of this disaster today in virtual urquhot board of directors meeting. The chairwoman acknowledged the pain and suffering of texans her resignation effective after the meeting ended. All of our hearts go out to all of you with head to go without electricity. Heat water not attending and food during frigid temperatures and continue to face the tragic consequences in some cases. The loss of a loved one state leaders have promised an investigation into urquhot handling of the crisis and members of both parties and the governor of rowing to make sure texans are on the hook for those astronomical electric bills at a time when essential services were needed. The most the system broke. You deserve answers. You will get those answers but people brianna bolden are in need of far more immediate solutions. She's facing mounting hardships. Having recently lost her father and grandfather. It sounds like your grandmother doesn't have home insurance right now. She don't she couldn't afford it anymore. Every generation been through this. Is papa really worked hard for this. I'm sorry statewide. There is so much damage from burst. Pipes plumbers can't keep up see the water. We have another one right here. Everardo omega of a plumbing. In houston says he's crews have been working around the clock just as bad. I mean there's necas mad and they're receiving more calls than they can answer this heartbreaking the tell somebody. uk make we broke down here. Twenty five hours plummer andrew mitchell in his family driving all the way from new jersey with a car full of equipment in arts in short supply here for just going to see what we can do to help out texas residents and also converging in texas to help out the cajun navy civilian volunteers known for using their big trucks. Kamal boats for rescues during major storms like hurricane harvey in twenty seventeen. We talked with a lot of people around here who've been they were impacted by hurricane harvey. I dealing with this. A lot of people think that this is worse than a hurricane's coming in we have more. We know what's going to happen with this disaster. We did not know what was coming. Community was not prepared. No one knew what was coming riley at this is marin mckim. She spent the last decade doing aid work in africa. When disaster struck home she was one of the first on the front lines. The cajun navy has gotten quite good quickly setting up distribution sites like this one but with so many people impacted. What's perhaps most useful is their platform and their connections. Cajun navy crowd sources disasters and cajun navias known so once we find the need we start using the social media platform and we put the word out there and people want to help on this day. They're delivering to katy texas home to just over twenty thousand with some areas still under a boil. Water notice

WBZ Afternoon News
Milton hot sauce maker nabs spot in Boston Red Sox lineup
"Park's Gonna have a new official hot sauce this season comes from a curious Caribbean native chef who grew up just south of Boston. Kamal Jared was born in Jamaica grew up in Milton, saying his family's background got him started in cooking. And then it took off from there. Lot of my cooking and experimentation had to deal with kind of blending those two cultures. He's now the creator of Hillside Harvest Hot Sauce, which is made in Dorchester and now the official hot sauce of the Red Sox. Partnership. He couldn't be happier about having the opportunity to try us within within the confines of something that they love doing like going to a Red Sox game, And even as fans slowly get back to Fenway Hillside harvest will be ready for that new normal that the ballpark going forward. There's gonna be a lot more single serving, and so if you think of like ketchup packets or hot sauce packets or things like that, and that's how you'll find hillside harvest soon enough at Fenway.

Native America Calling
Alaska tribes await word from FCC about broadband licenses
"This is national native news. Tony gonzales alaska. Tribes are awaiting word on scores of wireless broadband licenses by the federal communications commission. It's part of a push to improve internet access and underserved communities a startup called alaska. Tribal spectrum received a one hundred thousand dollar grant to register as many alaska tribes during the final months of last year's application period gym berlin. Heads the keybase nonprofit which has signed up nearly seventy tribes mcnally commission were set up to create a recreated website in an application process to make it very very simple to join the consortium application and get as many as many tribes to grab a hold of for free asset before before the window closed any unclaimed licenses will go to auction to private carriers berlin says it was a big push to get rural tribes with poor internet to enroll on their website and the struggles. They had were told the craziest stories. You'd ever wanna hear trying to get their application in some of them. We ended up faxing in in in in to get an in Somehow to handwrite it. You know and do paper applications. I mean it was. It's so challenging. One of those tribes as douglas indian association near juneau kamal lint off says the trip was happy to get assistance. We had no clue. You know what this really was. And then no clue on how to how we manage it or even get started We had probably a couple of different places contact us and we kinda jumped on board with that one stinking. I was all we needed to do. Some of the applications overlap the douglas tribes applications for coverage in an area also claimed by central council of clinton haida indian tribes. Overlapping claims are being negotiated. Tribes will still have to pay for infrastructure. The cares act created a one billion dollar broadband fund tribes can apply for alaska. Tribal spectrum has applied separately for a federal community connect grant to bring broadband service to villages and the bristol bay region montana state lawmakers heard two bills wednesday seeking to establish indigenous peoples day in october yellowstone. Public radio's caitlyn. Nicholas has more senate bill. One forty six brought by senator. Shane mauricio a democrat from missoula would replace columbus day with indigenous peoples day. Senate bill ninety four sponsored by democrat. Susan weber from browning in northern montana would also establish indigenous peoples day but does not remove columbus day. More support was shown for the proposal to remove columbus day. Even the other bill sponsor said she preferred it. But many proponents including jordan thompson confederated salem in kootenai tribal member spoke on behalf of both bills are believed that the first bill we heard today was kind of like inviting everyone to the same backyard for a barbecue. This one's more like waving at each other with fence in between so we support it. But i'd much rather be at the barbecue. Proponents of the bills spoke to the importance of celebrating. What they called true. Us history acknowledging olive montana's citizens and the harm of celebrating christopher columbus whose acts of genocide and crimes against native. Americans are well documented. No one opposed either bill. During the hearing similar montana legislation failed in twenty seventeen and twenty nineteen. No executive action was taken on either bill for national news and report for america. I'm caitlyn nicholas the. Us senate committee on indian affairs holding. Its first meeting of the new congress thursday. The committee will elect new leaders. Senator bryan shots democrat from hawaii. As chairman and republican senator. Lisa murkowski from alaska as vice chair cove in nineteen relief healthcare education sacred site protection and a long list of other issues are among tribal priorities. I man tonia

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"I had no idea but it was just trying to survive and get out of it and go build a life. you know. that's what it was about so knew nothing about this. And this is what i would have given to myself. Yeah which is a great advice. But the good thing is that the silver linings Having gone through what you have not than are helping a lot of people around the world so thank you so very much. I for letting us do your book at kiki case will link to that for anyone. Who's listening obviously an thank you for being such an inspiration for so many of us who have been struggling and i decided to do these for valentine's because i think sometimes with valentine's is all about romantic labrador. But i think the first step is loving yourself and then everything else falls into place when that happened so i wanted to put it in because i think valentine's sometimes can be depressing for people and i think this will give anyone who needs it a very very nice valentine's gift and also if whoever's listening if you you email me emails in the book i mean no you got. It was a key. Should that would be awesome to hear. Yes and company were. You can read it to me. Thank you so very much and I i can't wait to watch out for your next book and obviously also listen to a podcast. So thank you so much for coming on today. But you while i just love camels passion for self love and storytelling. He is such an inspiration. Personally i love how he writes about his own challenges on his path to self love in order to help others. I have read this book. Cover to cover a few times and find. It truly helped me work through my own challenges. I am so grateful to him. And i cannot wait for you to read it as well. I encourage you all to grab a copy and hopefully you will love it as much as i do..

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"Especially when i'm working on something important like when i'm working hard whether it's usually it's it's a book or or if it's like a work these days i don't i'm not doing start up. Some actually fund investing in startups in fact built by second fund recently Within like you get up and you you just time for yourself. It's not. The world is the world. I mean that thing inside your phone best the world you know inside that little device is the world you put the you take a little time for yourself before before you give yourself to the world and same thing at night. You know. it's time for yourself. Not for the world usually just reading a book in a something and unwinding a reading. Something or meditating. Are doing the love yourself ten brats but this kind of like you start the day that end. They were day that way. You book ended a great practice. Thank you for reminding me. I forgot that doing it honestly like you know but i do think you say in the book. I'm just trying to refresh my memory now. I think actually say that you will. I mean retains like that. We all sleep like you'll have periods in our life where we are really wide into the wild and then we have have times where we need space So that's very natural. I think most of us like a like that. But i think you said that every time you go back to that you feel really good. So maybe it's time for you to go back to that guest. I'm glad you answered my mouth. I am incredibly inspired but before we finish up. I love to ask a couple of quick questions if you could give one piece of advice to the next generation to help them live. Daydream life. What would you say. Follow your song. You know it will lead you to your stuff. Whatever your thing. Is you know that comes from our conversation. I've never used for Before but i love it. It really is followers and you arrived and create your own sewn. Not anyone else exactly. Yeah yeah i love that. I am such an avid reader ahead. Coming across your original book and the second book and saw thank you always interested to know. Do you have a favorite book and why you call yourself not a self help. Also i am the axles. Swear to you. Got a favorite self-help book. I wouldn't call it a self help book but it really is a book that was transformed for me when i read it in many ways because it's such a beautiful book the outcome football. Yeah lhasa beautiful book. I've bought so many copies over the years and every few years already to gain and he pulled up something special something rare a writing that book in like you come across his books in not many of seven your life for the author pulled off something so human and beautiful and this few like that. There's the little prince by sonic super easy. You know there's But the outcome was was one that i'd recommend everyone to read..

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"Whatever that is dream. Face whatever's right for them a lot of people say fear and self doubt but you had in the book if it scares me. There is magic on the other side. so how do we get through. That is something. I've learned just have just have encapsulated that too much to apply it and often you know it's it's a whole book is about working on your inside so it's as action. Why the inside I'm thinking something often. funny enough. Loving ourselves scares us. Loving ourselves truly scares us. We're used to remind myself because their offices magic on the other side is what i've learned like it's almost like fear is a signal w kinda screwed up unless you're burning building or the edge of a cliff and our yes listened to fear but that like so much of our fears that actually what it sang is going in that direction Up and be good way. We run the opposite direction. When you go face it you go through. The side is something special there even if something special is the fact that you did it and now you knowing that you can do it. Yeah and it also gives you confidence to them. Think i could more i can. I can go through fear. And i i just feel like feel the fear and do it anyway months once you've done it you just then you grow and then you go to the next stage and that's how you can evolve where you have to your entrepreneur. You're facing fear every day. It's all about the unknown. You're creating into the unknown. If you didn't face it couldn't be announced for now. And also. I can think that if i if i don't feel a bit scared or feel a bit uncomfortable. I think i'm dreaming big enough. Because i know now and i'm looking at the future like it almost makes me feel a little bit six with oldest stuff that i'm planning and thinking about but then i'm like i'm really excited but i certainly scabby it and that's the exciting part of. I think i absolutely agree with that if it absolutely true. Because it's all a lot of fear is just fear of the unknown or fear of like it's in our brains trying to minds trying to protect us protect us from what there's no tigers in backyard but it's just been wired for the tigers around us but we don't have tigers around us but that's where the wiring comes from a red that you almost didn't publish your book about that while the original version..

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"I find it difficult to know the answer and i'm sure for dig deeper. I will have the answer but sometimes you think you should do certain things but then if you really love yourself should you let yourself do things that perhaps you isn't a traditional. Yo isn't the ri- right way. But is right for me. And i think sometimes it's it's it's difficult for for people going through challenging times to know what's right and wrong when you're in that canal. Dock space. Yeah that's a great point. You know look for human beings you know bureau Trying to be our best. We're trying to be better and better you know they're better than we were a couple of years ago. A wise of them were a couple of years ago but a question like that. Honestly i think if you ask yourself and attempt to to answer attempt to repeal. It's more about not getting it right every time there is no right through dissolving announcer. That's the point. It's a habit that you putting through you know. Select imagine if you're at your actions eighty percent of them guarded by this. Imagine what life would be like. You know it doesn't have to. There is no right but that's a great question. I've never thought of it this way but there there is no right. There's there's just an answer. Tell us a little bit about the mental leap. The mental loop was literally one came up. With when i was in a really hard place and i was trying to figure out because of a vow made of myself to love myself and then i had to figure how to live this vow and you know. I talked about in the book and it was like well. How do i do it. you know. i didn't go. What binding books on it you know. First of all that did funny enough. I wouldn't trust a book that told me how to.

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"You can apply to anything in life. That's the whole point is it's spreading human. You know because it's fundamental human. Any human can do it so that was part. Two part three was actually a very honest Story with us historian it's nonfiction about a really rough period. I went through. And i kept records off it and i realized under keeping the records of what i was doing. I had fallen off the practice. And i wasn't loving myself. And i had to step up and reapply and reese redo this all from scratching my head and so what step three does partidos shows you how i'm doing this in my head. My whole fundamental pointed to all of this part one. Two three part one was to show you like look as possible is really possible this could be done and this is easy part to as here's how to do it by three is hairs all the nuances. If you ever have questions all the kush basically was done. All the cushions add received had been answered so my point was like boy but i put this version now. This number questions. This is the definitive work that i can put out to the world and allowed love their lesson part. Because i think that's when you really thought about it and the way you did it in the way you've failed sometimes. I thought it was really really good really helpful so tell us a little bit about the manual. So the The step-by-step so our listeners can stop practicing before they getting the book boy Turn to think you know. It's like usually when i ask sean Wrote the book for a reason this very hard to just like you know. Honestly if i could just put it in a few words i would never. The book is way easier bookstore. Right in fundamentally you know what it is. It's mindset as Its heart set is working. It's not on the outside is working on the inside. The whole loving yourself actually comes from inside out. Someone once told me like this this concept and that really helped me said look darkness is the absence of light okay. Darkness is any negative emotion or feeling or thought you have fear pain anger whatever darkness he said you cannot fight darkness you will be in darkness you cannot fight fear you will be in fear you cannot fight pain you will be in pain it. That's that's the irony of it when you're in those situations certified it you. Just go deeper than he said. When you're darkness would you have to do is go for the light in. Here's how you do it. You find the nearest window and you pull out your rag. You start wiping the window like naturally comes in and does its thing but like naturally comes in and takes away the darkness. He said your job is not to bring the light end. Your job is just to clean the window and light will do what it does. So i took the concept. And when i came up with this i came up with this practice originally In a in a in a really bad place. And i was trying to get out of it and just i like just worked at myself and through the grace of god figured out you know luck whatever you wanna call it. All i was trying to do was bring light inside..

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"So i'm very grateful personally but also i know that so many of our listeners would absolutely love it but let's jump into the books. Let's talk about their three different pots. I think so for this the vows. Maybe tell us a little bit about that. So here's the thing you know. I think I wrote this book. Not as a self help book What i sold it harper one and they add the editor worked on. It came back to me. And they're turning to self help book and a set of our look. I'm not gonna do this. I have to write this book my way. I want to write the truth the way i know how to write it. And that's why it works. Because i'm not a self author you know i'm a guy who's just tries right. Tries his best to learn things in sharing them. And so what i did was the structure was the first part of the book because original version of the book had been touched so many lives in such a special way. I kept it there so the first part of the book part one is the original book someone edited you know now that i have to seven years. I know what to add to what to move away after what i've learned. The second part was something of his especially looking forward to which is what was missing. Was the manual. I was like okay. Now that i've shown you what i've done. Let me actually write down a step by step definitive manual on how to love yourself something. No one's ever done something. That i apply is all our work because anyone can replicated and it's really stupidly simple. You know there's all standing on your head does none of that essence literally simple practical steps you do day by day just like you would. If you wanna be fed you eat healthy. You go to the gym day by day. Same exact thing. So i wrote this manual and i worked very hard that partner you know. I went to so many drafts trying to sell a down even down to okay. There's a fundamental practice that you do basically wires you that eventually you just say. Eventually i mean very very fast..

Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"kamal" Discussed on Your Dream Life with Kristina Karlsson, kikki.K
"And i love exploring these sorts of christians to inspire people to dream the aside kiki k. I had a dream that i could bring swedish assign to the world to create beautiful products that brings spots of joy into the everyday lives of millions. Now that i have achieved that dream. I want to help you dream. I want to create a global movement to inspire one hundred one million dreamers to transform their lives and transform the world in return each episode. I'll be talking to some of the world's most inspiring people exploring the powerful impact. The dreaming has had on their lives. We'll be telling deep into the power of dreaming with real insights and ideas that you can use immediately to build a dream life of your own whatever that means for you Welcome back to another episode these weeks after one. That is very special to me as it is with the incredible kamalle ravikant the bestselling author of love. Yourself like you. Life depends on it a book that i personally find so helpful during some of my most challenging times. Over the past yeah. I was so amazed to learn that. Kamal almost didn't publish his book. He was terrified as ceo. Who had fallen apart. After his company failed writing a book. About how loving himself saved him he thought he laughing stock and his career would be finished. How wrong heroes. After sifting through his fees. He shed his truth with the world and what happened. Next changed his life. He spoke vent myrow for some his book. Save their lives for others. It was the first time they have ever latham selves throughout the pages of his book..

News and Perspective with Tom Hutyler
‘Tsunamis of Misinformation’ Overwhelm Local Election Officials
"To go to before the election. Elected officials in our state, our warning of male delays and misinformation. Here's Kamal score one from the Office of Washington secretary of State, which oversees elections comes a warning of an unofficial website offering unverifiable information. The secretary of state's office, says the site vote Washington dot info has been reported to the U. S Cyber Security and Infrastructure Security Agency. Meanwhile, Democratic U. S representative Susan Del Benny is worried about local ballot delivery. She's calling for an investigation into five pieces of decommissioned mail processing equipment in Redmond. Judge ordered the machines back into service in September day, Benny says it hasn't happened yet. Corwin

Cyber Security Weekly Podcast
Cyber Power Index highlighting Australian Governments gaps in cyber capability
"Like any INFO Technology Sector security has plenty of indexes flooding around or get. Indexes collided by vendors and people trying to sell things to us I thought this for Senate index was. Useful because it doesn't come from I accompany product. It say independent academic attempt to benchmark Com, sub security capability and intent from nation sites It appealed to make per couple of reasons may not have had A to do with Bill Center in the past spend a little bit of Thanh. Talking to their academics in previous roles and particularly locked the way that This report sets metrics that up designed to objectively major subsidy maturity in nations So it says what are the kind of things that we could judge the intent of a nation in the obscurity spice and one of the kind of things that we could use to objectively major capability. And it tells an interesting story in Australia Australia's categorized in the higher intent, low capability quadrant and the reason for that is because when the the objective metrics this reporter applied to the statements made by by government ministers by government departments, entities about what our intent is. Assab security spice. Where about the most ambitious nation in the world for ask security attend? But. Then when you look at what our actual capabilities against that intent on again measured in a series of objective metrics. We fold anti sixteenth in that space. So, FA May that told a pretty familiar story because this over promising on delivering stories. One that I think is familiar to a lot of. People in the Strand security sector. In the context of these trying government's actions since the twenty six, Day sub, security strategy. A lot of announcement to be my bet when you follow up way those announcements. In the years after that have been made you say less deleted then was announced to the media. Will what's on the industry? Kodak in the two thousand, sixteen strategy that was undefended at least out of the Prime Minister's office. This one is looking out at a ten years. The two thousand twenty strategy is looking at at the ten year timeframe. And proposing one point six, billion, dollar funding. Backdrop, but a lot of that is going into law enforcement and as you say might be into that capability. What's your take on the strategy itself? Overall as you say, it's it's another announcement is on the strategy whether it's not as another thing but certainly yet your thoughts on the strategy itself and where maybe else we could have been in twenty twenty from the twenty six danes strategies. Have you have you seen that the two thousand twenty strategy's building on the twenty, sixteen or? Taking a completely new direction. While the that, you can certainly say the why the two thousand twenty strategy is reaction to experience the twenty six strategy That the twenty sixteen subsequently strategy had a very large number of of objectives and Nisha announced under it. I think the government found the experience of trying to implement those very large number projected initiatives again, adopted under outcome Tambo's prime ministership around the breathing bruising exercise because the twenty twenty strategy dramatically rationalize is temptation I'm say that the broad spread of of initiatives and objectives under the strategy a kind of a toddler. Your decide that the Gospel confessed about ninety percent of the funding. Associated with these twenty twenty strategy he's allocated to security agencies So it goes into building. Capabilities with particularly the is day but also other security agencies on. Enforcement agencies like the the I pay, and that's well and good We have I think outstanding internationally recognized capabilities within is. and this is the conduct that you have to keep investing in order to. Maintain those capabilities in my time that that international ranking. Suppose big Criticism that that libraries had is one that we've been exploring for at the loss twelve months and that's really When you look at security policy to strike the problem is the ability to project those capabilities out of the silos of how defense and security agencies. To the problems in Australia Com in terms of lifting a bench, mock the baseline up security security. Brazil and Sada resilience across the Australian government trying economy You know there's a lot of examples of that. Wall is day is absolutely world standard. Saab resiliency combined entities is as at the government's own description reminding at relatively low levels. you know the is days top full became mandatory in the. Seventies ago now. had a slew of a straight national ordered office inquiry since then. when you type them all up on like twenty nine percent of Kamal entities compliant with all the top four. Seven years after theoretically became mandatory say interesting. Is Connect between very high capability. Inside Is Day lower levels of saga resilience and more broadly throughout government not to sign story that we see in the corporate sector unites now at banks and Al. Telcos, absolately will class intends to their sub security posture. But you only have to sort of take one stiff through the down. In the I six navy top fifty. And you start seeing. Very, different levels of resilience.

Monocle 24: The Briefing
beirut explosion latest news
"Good afternoon from Zurich we start in Lebanon where people are calling for justice following a huge blast in the country's capital Beirut at least one, hundred and thirty five people are known to have died in the explosion thousands more have been injured and many more have lost their homes. Komo mosaic is an entrepreneur who lives and works in Beirut, and he's very good friend of the MONOCLE team. He joins us on the line from Beirut Hello Komo. Good morning by the Hello Calico I I wanted to to start, of course with maybe you painting a little bit of a of a picture for us We are of course. Yeah. Now well, over day into this aftermath of this blast of course, we've spent a lot of time in Beirut together over the years in good times and in bad. But what is the spirit of the city today? What's the spiritual sippy can be after you know I'm not going think immature I think everybody's so this mushroom blast you know. And someone course barrel Shema. So it's the second. Sousa search biggest love ever the over so. I don't know what can be. She would emergency mode on Tuesday nights of trying I. I was I drove from the mountains to within like half an hour which takes maybe two or three times more time. I was trending on the streets just to meet by partner who was wanted at the other end of the street. So I think first, they were completely under the show yesterday we were trying to. To suck leaning. Roberson. Understand who's alive was that was one bit and today is our survey after Sabang and trying to understand what happens and it's devestation. There's nobody people's there's not once the. Organism is doing anything. People are in this three hour cleaning the streets. They are helping people took years, their houses they are moving. To you know and. It's just keeping. Others today the. which talking to understand what happened it took us two days to understand I'm I'm curious to to understand also the psyche because you of course have been through so much as all Lebanese have the decades and of course, there have been there have been car bombs There have been of course, mass protests, and of course we know that Lebanon has been. Through a particularly difficult patch of of late and of course, this this happens I want to about the resilience of of the Lebanese spirit. Are you seeing that because I think we all often always agree that the Lebanese have to be the most resilient people in the world given all that they've they've been through but what what is the spirit like right now? I don't want to hear sort at all anymore I even pronounce foods are. You know I can't hear it anymore I don't think it is what it is just sort of you know we have no choice but to survive But to be able to survive, I'm not able to to say the word was arch to be able to survive your orders need a minimum of strength or. or in your hearts, which is fine. Doesn't exist at all anymore I. think it's like treaties trump and we cannot take all anymore. It's. It's you know. It's lot of. Destruction seeing all your life what would you know over and over again? In the weight it's like bombs tighter cannot be but this. Is. Where it had suspended for dinner is. Completely. Destroyed the trees in front of our issues on how can you get down? Of A tree it is beyond that you can you imagine just like. An on bump and since too much to go over. Where we don't have the choice where we're where you know we're looking at our wounds now. and. I jumped out of meeting where we're trying to set up a kitchen was censored. was the. Central Kitchen full dress project to start cooking for emergency. So we're just trying to get out now of success of the emergency and seeing what can be done and what we can do, what must be done, but it's really very, very, very difficult to scale beyond anything you can imagine. Kamal over the last forty, eight hours. Of course, we've heard a number of countries probably France what am I talking about AIDS and and of course, emergency intervention in the country are you already seeing signs of that? Are you seeing troops or support from from elsewhere already involved with recovery? You Emmanuel Macron. And votes French president arrived city. To visit. That city and president haven't even said a word of on. Anything have been on the grounds so as or nationally and metro is now on the ground just planted and bill, and then the number I cannot. I cannot reply to France and seventy support trump over. So we're you cannot believe what it is. It is overwhelming it's warming our hearts it's giving maybe this is the only thing thousand giving us hope sore going to go on. So, yes. That's about specific receptacle trump something as to moral. That's for specific projects about play you we need everybody. To be able to grow up Camilla's in Beirut we will look forward to, of course, speaking to and Komo hopefully also. Looking forward to coming up to Beirut to join you very soon

Lars Larson
Kamala Harris advances as top contender for Biden's Vice President
"Kamala Harris ran for president of the United States she barely made an impression on American voters and because of that she ended up leaving the race relatively early but she may get back in if she becomes the vice presidential candidate Joe Biden now you've heard me tell you that I don't care what the polls are saying right now I mean the polls said that Hillary Clinton was going to be a major winner in twenty sixteen and they turned out to be terribly wrong well but the polls are saying the Joe Biden has a chance to win the presidency of course nothing is certain until the day after election day but Kamal Harris senator from California who is now they say the front runner to be Joe Biden's run image that's the one I cannot figure out she has some major problems her history as Attorney General in California is incredibly problematic especially for Joe Biden Joe Biden is getting confused about just about everything these days I mean if I started running every sound bite that show Joe Biden is confused about where he is and what he's talking about today he got into a Juneteenth controversy because he he thought he would go after Donald Trump saying will Donald trump's going to hold a rally on Juneteenth accepted turned out that the Donald Trump is doing no such thing it was just Joe Biden being more than a little bit confused and half the time half the time what is it appears in front of cameras you would think like I try to do I try to be at my best when I appear in front of you on a microphone I can't afford to be fumbling and bumbling and mumbling but that's exactly what Joe Biden is doing Kamali Harris has a different problem she has to try to figure out how to triangulate a position for herself that is somewhere slightly to the left but not too far to the left and she wants to straddle that divide the way it's being put the death of George Floyd in subsequent calls from progressives to de fund the police have put Harris who's a former prosecutor in a really tough position how she handles the issue of George Floyd over the next several weeks could determine whether or not Joe Biden decides to make her part of that twenty twenty presidential ticket Paris has been asked repeatedly in recent days whether she supports de funding the police well she's a former prosecutor she has responded by trying to clarify what police de funding means I'm not sure there is a universal answer

First Light
Seattle council begins ‘inquest’ of SPD budget amid call to defund police
"Several Seattle city council members have pledged to to de de fund fund the the police police department department Kamal's Kamal's met met mark mark which which spoke spoke with with chief chief Carmen Carmen best best from from council council members members for for to to take take money money from from the the police police department department and and beef beef up up social social housing housing and and social social services services treating the causes that could lead to police calls rather than investing in the police response the chief defended her department saying domestic violence rape shootings all need a professional response and you don't have to phone the police department to fund social programs we do need to have organized chain response for those issues that doesn't mean we don't care about people who are homeless mentally ill addicted they need the funding there too ultimately we expect elected to take care of public safety and public health and that's a request this welcome to head in July because the mayor is going to submit a revised budget and the council has to agree on this new budget so that's when the really hot debate about the funding of police were actually take place

News and Perspective with Taylor Van Cise
Trump warns governors: let places of worship open this weekend
"Center we're getting a response from governor Jay Inslee's office after the president called on states across the country to allow churches to reopen this weekend Kamal's Charlie Harker has the story president trump says he's declaring churches synagogues mosques and other houses of worship the central the governors need to do the right thing and allow these very important essential places of faith to open right now for this weekend if they don't do it I will override the governor's in a written response the governor's spokesperson says they're working with religious leaders to find a way to reopen safely going on to say there is no order and we think he understands at this point he can't dictate what states can or cannot

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
Sixth confirmed Amazon employee dies from COVID-19
"Center and Amazon warehouse workers become the company's six confirmed deaths from cold at nineteen this comes as Amazon safety measures face increased scrutiny as we hear from Kamal score one Hey camas on confirms fifty nine year old warehouse employee George lead died from the corona virus more than a month ago he worked at the company's distribution center in Long Island in New York as we told you yesterday fifteen state attorneys general including Washington's Bob Ferguson

Latino Rebels Radio
Detainees in US immigration jails living in fear as coronavirus spreads
"I wanted to get this show out today because I just got off the phone with Lorena Qudos out of Mississippi who is an immigrant rights activists. We recently published some news coming out of Louisiana Private Immigration Detention Center that Laurynas Organization called attention to and I wanted to connect with her the Afon to check in on what is happening in Mississippi and Louisiana during the nineteen crisis. If you're in the thick fan Lorena was on the show with us live from Mississippi in February and so I just gave her a ring. And here's what we talked about. Hey thank you so much for being unlucky. No rebels radio with me. Thank you for having me so I wanted to reach out to you. Know we just connected like even like less than a month ago. Right in the thick in Jackson so Spin on you've quickly Yeah but in the middle of all this before we talk a little bit about the work that you're doing Right now how is Mississippi? In general How the mood out there during the during the global pandemic well right now with. What's your feeling is a lot of concern We're in Jackson Mississippi And It we are excited that the mayor's taking action to but the rest of Mississippi is pretty much running Normal especially the Gulf coast with many restaurants open and Being so close to the water we hearing exploding daily so concerned Yeah and our the our immigrant communities that you you serve in In Mississippi how are they? Are they getting the information or they? How's that going? Yeah so he feels some sort of infrastructure we have communications and have the comedian's going strong and has been able to really provide information. I've seen as as we were able to to to define what was going on. So we're trying to interpret translate whatever we get from the CDC. Try to clear each easier to understand. And when I don't share that social media we've created looks Different message services over the phone that we're trying we do here sometimes. People don't realize if I it's as the gravity of the situation But we're trying and right now we're working on developing sound videos in shoe and Imam That have more than interfaces so that people can pay attention to what's going on but there is a lot of concern because they've already depleted and resources so our families could not stuck up right. They have anything to with. No they're just GONNA. I'm very very small amount of resources. And we're trying to create a different fun to be able to Helping your also focusing on the other side of this crisis. That is to be honest with you. It's not getting as much attention. And then it has to do with immigrants attention centers particularly in Louisiana. Where it's now great safe to say that we've unit GONNA be another you know not if it's not already so can you tell me a little bit of the context of what happened this this week. in why we're talking right now Yeah so we so we Have a call to action to them. All the united other Southern organizations and Louisiana particularly working with immigrant community Lisa out oppression me the mandate that I Free are people that were in detention and also United with the movement here in just fifty two free Folks in the jails so we sent out a press release. We both reached out to congressman. Benny Thompson who was the chant. Home Security Committee or asking him to publicly. Ask for these folks so he has agreed to a conversation with us. So that's tending for Lundy Terrible. There's particular one that we share the recording of s Beliefs on one of the male detainees in Louisiana upper corner. You Cleveland Apple Towel again. Even through the veto if you take it again going on though while the woman kindly wannabe panel this. You need big game on to winter. They won't believe me. That's about all the topic on way down the alley in downtown Seattle media buying them. I don't you come home. And then not only Audi that a major Yom Lucchino. Thanks for the help. My Album Light Reno Navy to gay big data can only get thirty dollars. A good idea to pay quitting loosely. Kamal can lead equiment even only monkey and won't get get older woman. I go see them on Sola. It'll be Audi dark. You think the last thing they will get into the Marine. Go get him waking. You only think that believe. Showman Noah Anthony Quainton. What you're saying what keying into. Saint Blind Mehta. Can you hear a little bit more about what you're hearing from these From these individuals who are are incarcerated right now and immigrant detention centers and just want the private facility. Correct from what I can share more about what you're hearing the stories Because I know it was so powerful to hear There's a humanity going on here and then and back to me is just be missed in this crisis And so I have visited essential myself when you first come in. And you know it's a brand new looking space but when you And of course we accept patients We certainly Here from Folks that are in detention center is how horrible. The conditions are The fact that they are already mistreated by the officers. But very unsanitary conditions They don't have soap They have to beg for Wendy. Do out of Asia You know the soap shampoo They actually have organized a time for them to clean themselves and they are not because tendency there. Several people that actually have Chronic lung problems and Heart problems and they are terrified. You know because you have people that are coming in from outside constantly and then they'll also transferred people from other detention centres. Dan You know the movement in and out and it's about to happen and time bomb right now and that's that's what people are worried. They're terrified now. We have a hunger strike. Because they're they feel desperate feeling. This is the only way that able get some

Broken Brain with Dhru Purohit
Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It with Kamal Ravikant
"If anyone wants to get healthy they can. And it's pretty easy consistency. We do that. But how often do we take our mind consistently every day? I'M GONNA take care my mind and I mind is what runs the whole damn show. I've worn droop. Wrote here hosted the Berkman podcast and today's episode. We're talking with author. Kamal Robbie conduct all on the topic of how to love yourself like your life depends on it because it does fascinating interview. Stay to welcome to the broken brain. Podcast where we dive deep and then the topics of neural plasticity epigenetics mindfulness functional medicine and mindset all with the goal of helping. You understand how your brain is not broken. I'm drew PRUITT and each week. My team and I bring on a new guest who we think can help you improve your brain health feel better and most importantly live more. This week's guest is Kamal. Ravi Gump Kamal is the author of love. Yourself like your life depends on it. He's meditated with monks in Himalayas. We got to hear about that served as a army. Infantry soldier and Co founded several companies and venture capital firm in Silicon Valley. Come all. I've been looking forward to this interview. Thanks for coming on the PODCAST. Thanks for having me man. I kick off with a quote that I came across years ago and I just thought perfect when I was giving your book by Gideon Gideon while Harper Winer. Yeah When he had mentioned you and then another mutual friend mentioned it and I started flipping through the book. I thought of this quote by CS Lewis. Success hardships prepare ordinary people for an extraordinary life interesting. That's going and while he was a wise man he was a wise man so I want to kick it off by starting from the beginning. You Open Up Your Book and you talk about in two thousand eleven. The company that you spent three years of your life building and all of your money went under set the stage for us at the beginning. Okay so the the genus. This book is actually. This is not a book. Set out to write. You know that people like I'm going to write this book. This was never a book to write. It came out of an experience. That was very transformative for me where I've been in Silicon Valley building startups building companies at Dunwell and the last company. I was building At self-funded if over three and a half years and then took on funding. Because I'd run out of money you know. Billing tech companies not cheap right for for years and And the whole thing blew up and I lost everything you know which in hindsight you you remember. I remember now. Look Ninety something percent star tech startups fail but when is yours and all your money you ego your personality is self worth all of us wrapped up in it. I I it. Blew up on with it and and I was in a really dark place and you know the other things happening in life to at the time it was almost like we had like Salami. I'll just happened at the same time and I was in a very dark place in one night. I just was like okay. I can't do this anymore. I gotta get out of this place or die trying. I cannot be here and and it was like this this intense moment of like saying. I can't do this anymore. Can't be here anymore in this place. This does this darkness depression. Whatever you WANNA call it and I walked over to my journal and my on my desk and I wrote down something to myself I and I you know you should write notes to myself but this this time. Something from somewhere deep I wrote a vow to myself and it was a vow Listen the book You know I'm GonNa Paraphrase but it was avowed alum myself and I don't know where that came from. I wasn't sitting on thinking you know what I need. Another makeup news failed. I need to love myself that I wasn't thinking that at all. I don't know whether we came from like somewhere. Deep Right. It was like one of those pure moments of life. We just come through something deep. I did recognize that. And it was a vow as a full on commitment to myself. And so I'm a big believer keeping your commitments that you made from the heart and this was a pure from the heart to myself and so I had to keep it except I didn't know how and said okay. I'm GonNa work on this. I started because I nothing else to do. My Company of failed. I lost everything of living credit cards and I was trying to figure out what to do next and so I just started like trying things in my head because that's the only thing I control the only control I really had was if I was if I was not happy verbs in my mind the only control ahead was will work on my mind as I started. Just do things to my mind and started trying things and I found. Things are starting to make me shift to make me feel better. And if they worked I went deeper if it stopped working through. I didn't care all I wanted was one result was to get out of this place and so avoid by following that almost like a decision tree of things that are working out working and going deeper deeper. I came up with like a simple practice doing every day and I was just getting better and better. Better my take a better in my life started getting better and this didn't take long. It took weeks if most right and it was it was. I'd never ever knew that was possible to go from that kind of darkness to like almost like light. And so you know it's like when you discover something in life that's really transformative. The next thing. Is you become like newly converted your friends. Who are going through stuff. I would tell them like Lara Dude. Like don't worry. I figured out here I would write little things because while I'll be building companies in Silicon Valley. I'd also been training myself to write literary fiction. I wanted to be write novels right. So I've done the ten thousand hours. I knew how to write someone. Just right up little things and sent to them like little almost a couple of word a couple of pages worth like. Here's what I did. Here's what I went through here. Do this right. I would do this for friends and because it gets tiring having to explain again again because people ask questions adding them again. It gets here. Let me just write it that I could share the same people. I mean different people and it started it worked for them because it's like a simple simple stuff. There's nothing complicated. Have to stand on your head and scratch your. You know like do anything to say. Just little stuff you're doing inside your head beer. And they had all the time any day she'll things that when and we'll get to all that and we'll break it all down but foundational things. That seem so simple that we often overlook. Well look ultimately. If you look at anything in life you look at Art. You look at writing. You look at Physics math anything. Simplicity's where it's all the if the closer to break it down to the basics the very very fundamental basics and simplicity is transformation happens you know especially for us as human beings. We don't need to know complicated stuff. We will not practice it. We need simple stuff that we can do consistently and I was talking with every time. I ritual you know talking yesterday and like was the Diet Best Diet I think the best I can keep consistently was the best fitness program. The one that you can keep consistently you know not the one that you do once a month you know and same thing with the mind. What is the best way for mindset the simplest most effective that you can do consistently and I was in a place where all I wanted was results? I didn't care about theory. I didn't care about Does it make me feel half better. I just wanted to get out over was right so I wanNA come back to your story because a company failing isn't event right and even the word failure is our story on it like you wanted anyway. I was totally in that story right. You're in that story. So you talked about this valley that you made to love yourself but let's go back and set the stage a little better. Because I think that a lot of listeners our podcast might be able to identify it. Identify with it. So what were you doing? You had a situation. You had an intended outcome. It didn't work out. It wasn't what you wanted. But what was the story that you created around it? And where were you at that time that you were doing the opposite of loving yourself while? I was a typical Entrepreneur story in the sense. Like look I didn't take even a Sunday off over three and a half years I think no near the end. My team convinced mutate. Start taking Sunday's off right. I was so obsessed. I was going to pull this off. My entire sense of self was wrapped up. All my money was wrapped up in it and it was coming close to be successful. So my ego was wrapped up in it I WANNA blew up. You know I I took it personally. You know which which is normal. But it's also kind of silly because I gave it my all. You know it's not like a didn't work my butt off you know But it was like the whole story of failure and also I was just. I was worn out. I was sick There are other things happening my life that would result just like a cascade effect of just being bottom and one of the things. I tell people as like look. Don't cut got caught up in my story in a it's a human thing hitting bottom is hitting bottom. People know what that is. You can be living in a in a in a Bedouin. Tent in the middle of the desert understand. What like feeling bad is like we're paying bottom doesn't mean that you have to have built a company to hit bottom should universal humane human. The human you know fear love pain joy these things these are all fundamental human constructs right so and that are all relative to your circumstances just like you said you don't have to be a founder now could be trying to do something for your kid's school well. You could have anything life. A BREAK-UP HAPPEN YAM breakup. Great for gave making your head bottom tastic. I'm poster child for those you know like I it's it's a very human thing but also rising is also very human

Science Friday
Italy calls in military to enforce coronavirus lockdown as 627 people die in 24 hours
"Trump says he still doesn't think a national lockdown will be necessary not so in Italy though where officials in the northern region of Lombardi say they plan to deploy the army to enforce a lock down to slow the spread of the virus NPR Sylvia virtually reports Italy's death toll has now topped four thousand a decline in new cases is not expected until the end of next week Lombardy officials say too many people are still on the streets without justification and they want even tighter restrictions in worst hit bad go north east of the land there are so many deaths the government sent the army into pick up coffins piling up and take them to crematoriums in other towns along with Italian volunteers a group of Chinese doctors has arrived in bed Kamal Cuban doctors who work in Africa during the Ebola outbreak are going to the town of Kramer and American doctors from an evangelical association will go to Cremona yet another town in Lombardy so people Juli N. P. R. news

BBC World Service
Israeli airstrike kills Islamic Jihad commander in Gaza home
"An Israeli airstrike has killed a senior commander of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad in Gaza the group said the habu I'll I'll Ted died at his home along with his wife Tom Bateman is in Jerusalem that is the fast talking to Kerry all the militants of the seniority since the war between Hamas and Israel back in twenty fourteen I think this marks a significant development in Israel's preparedness to do such a thing in in Gaza once again to like they said this doesn't market shift in strategy that this is not a return to the policy more broadly of targeted assassinations Abu I lots how walls Kamal and of the cruise brigade the military wing of Palestinian Islamic

CBS Sports Radio
NBA Scoreboard
"Celtics top the raptors one twelve to one oh six Karl Anthony towns had thirty seven points and fifteen rebounds the Timberwolves crush the Hornets one twenty one to ninety nine the bold over the Grizzlies one ten to one two wizards ninety seven thunder eighty five Kamal merry scored seven of his twenty seven points in oh TN the nuggets beat the sons one away to one oh seven Trobe wages the feed the king of the one twenty two to one twelve in lebron James little scores with thirty two points to lift the Lakers past the jazz ninety five to