35 Burst results for "Kimberly"

AP News Radio
At least 8 fake electors have immunity in Ga. election probe
"Some of the fake Republican electors who said Donald Trump won Georgia in 2020 have immunity deals. I'm Norman hall. The prosecutor investigating interference in the 2020 election in Georgia has agreed to immunity deals with at least 8 Republican fake electors who signed a certificate falsely stating that then president Donald Trump had won the state. Defense attorney Kimberly Deborah revealed the existence of the immunity deals in a court filing Friday, saying her 8 clients had accepted the agreements last month, the filing does not identify the 8 people who were offered immunity deals last July, a lawyer for Fulton county district attorney fani Willis office revealed that each of the 16 who signed the false elector certificate was a target of her investigation, which is examining whether Trump and his allies committed any crimes while trying to overturn his narrow election laws. I Norman hall

AP News Radio
Musical 'Some Like It Hot' leads Tony Award nominations with 13 nods
"The musical version of some like it hot leads the Tony nominations with 13. I'm Archie's are a letter with the latest. The Broadway adaptation of the 1959 movie some like it hot is up for best musical competing against Anne Juliet, Kimberly akimbo, New York, New York, and shucked the best play nominees are ain't no mo between riverside and crazy, cost of living, fat ham and leopoldstadt, Jessica Chastain, Sean Hayes, Jodie comer, Josh Groban and Sara Bareilles all earned nominations. Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical bad Cinderella and a beautiful noise the Neil Diamond musical were shut out. The tonys will be June 11th in New York with

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
When Did We Arrive at the Tipping Point? John Solomon Explains
"We arrive at that tipping point? When did the critical mass become enough that you'd have for a cabinet members? Leading politicians, speakers of the House. For example, Nancy Pelosi in the article I wrote yesterday, the arrival of the police state to America. I just reminded everybody and I embedded the hyperlink in the article. I said, you know, we had a Speaker of the House who, for four years, refused to address the president as the president called him illegitimate, talked about the current resident of The White House. You've been in this field of political reporting for decades, was this just the frog in the hot water with the dial slowly being inching forward or was there a moment? Was there an event where you realized, wow. This is not the America I grew up in. Yeah, listen, I think the period of 2016 to the summer of 2016 to the summer of 2018 is going to be a moment that when historians look back at America, they're going to say the fundamental nature of our Law & Order society change. And it may have been changed indelibly, meaning we're never going back. It started in the summer of 2016 with the creation of the Russia collusion case where FBI agents and analysts feel comfortable initiating a case that they know, according to their own bosses. Now we've interviewed people like Kevin Brock, who said, didn't meet the predicate test meeting. They didn't have a legitimate reason to open up on Donald Trump. They knew they were using opposition research from Hillary Clinton. They knew that Hillary Clinton, according to intercepts, was playing a dirty trick on Donald Trump, and yet they allowed themselves to be used to create the perception that there was a real reason to investigate Donald Trump for Russia conclusion when none existed. In fact, there was more evidence of Hillary Clinton's campaign collecting colluding with Russians than there was Donald Trump. That moment and then as that's going on and that fall 2016 election, the first major Soros backed prosecutor Kimberly Garner gets elected in St. Louis. And within a year or two, she starts the local version of Russia collusion. She goes after a sitting governor of Missouri, Eric greitens, and actually gets farther than the FBI ever got. She actually brings criminal charges. She brings an indictment against a sitting governor. And within months, it's obvious that she had neither the proof, the evidence nor the crime. She

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"About that. Okay, this is called the cliffhanger in show business. More on that when we come back, the book is the invincible family, Kimberly ells is my guest. Folks, welcome back, talking to Kimberly L's ELL S, the book is the invincible family. So Kimberly you were saying that you're at the UN and this young woman teenager yesterday at the UN and one of these meetings raised their hand. And brings up the issue. And again, this orwellian term sex workers, and she asked, I guess the authorities there at the panel, what did you think of that? Right. So there was a representative from the United Nations. They had a representative from meta talking about how we can push women into tech and onto tech. And that which used to be Facebook. Right. And so their partnering there with the United Nations and how to move this agenda forward. So anyway, this high school student was concerned about what she'd seen her classmates are being promoted into prostitution basically. And she wanted to know what the powers that be thought about that. And interestingly, they didn't answer the question. And they can't answer the question publicly because the World Health Organization, which is a United Nations entity, they are in favor of legalizing sex work. If you go to decriminalize sex dot work, their logo is huge as life under supporters of the cause of decriminalizing sex work. And the World Health Organization that was trying to give us advice about the vaccines ten minutes ago. I mean, listen, their worldview is as antithetical to what most human beings on this planet believe. It's fascinating that these elites gather to promote this agenda. And so the answer that the meta person eventually did later in the things she said that she said, well, we want to remain sex positive on the social media platforms without veering into basically the realm of abuse. So that's very true. Yeah. We don't want to be pimps on the web. We will be, I'm sure, to some extent, but we want to veer away from that. I mean, there's no way around this. So the feeling is they want to be quote sex positive. Okay, well, I'm sex positive. What does that mean? Positive that marriage that sex should occur in marriage. That's what I'm positive about. And only in marriage. And that it's a good thing when it happens in marriage. But anyway, the powers that don't go along with that line of thinking at all, they want to present sex as a right a human right apart from any other thing. And it's just the most destructive thing. But you also have to ask why? In other words, where do you get that from promoting sex or sexual pleasure as a right? You want to say, okay, nice idea. Where does that come from? Ideologically, what are the roots of that? And what is the reason for that? Well, there's a couple of reasons. And one purpose is, of course, to destroy the family, to lay a bomb at the genesis of the family, which is sex. The other thing is, Planned Parenthood federation is trying to make your child a client. Because they need young people to be having sex. So that they'll get into the predicament of having an unsupported pregnancy and unmarried pregnancy. Then so they can, of course, charge for abortions. They can charge for sexual disease testing. And now, of course, they've gotten on the bandwagon of providing testosterone and estrogen treatments for transgender people. And so it's insidious. Are there transgender people? That's even another question for people who think that they're in trapped in the wrong body. But you're telling me that Planned Parenthood figures like, hey, we can make a good buck there as well. So they're getting into the nuke. Oh yes, this is the new cash cow for planned parents. So this whole thing advances their business model. And because Planned Parenthood federation is the largest purveyor of what's called comprehensive sexuality education. In the world..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Back. I'm talking to Kimberly L's author of the invisible sorry, the invincible family why the global campaign to crush motherhood and fatherhood can't win. I was just saying Kimberly that so the transgender movement kind of leaps sort of from nowhere. I mean, I really found it so bizarre and it is the more bizarre to my mind that it has become the enemy of women, it's just an extraordinary thing. I just feel like you see the radical anti God left eating its own. I mean, one minute, it's all about women the next minute, it's destroying the concept of womanhood. It's so interesting. And I spend a chapter on that in the book. And it's really been ingenious the way that this has been put forward because LGBT, they were all put in one package, right? And when you look closely, they're not at all the same. They are divergent ideologies that lead in different directions. They're both family destructive, but in different ways. The argument behind for same sex marriage is being born that way. So even if you believe that belief, the other argument, the argument for transgenderism is very different. It's that I was born in the wrong body that my body is wrong. So warring ideologies, but they don't want to acknowledge it because they happen to be working together for the season. Yes, but the thing is some groups and individuals are coming out from these divergent communities saying, you know what? No. This isn't our fight. These arguments aren't the same. And it's very destructive, because on the one hand, the arguments for same sex marriage and so forth seek to obliterate the fact that the sexes are compatible with each other. And are made to cooperate with one another. But transgender transgenderism takes it a step farther and it wants to say that male and female don't exist at all, not just that they're not complimentary, but they actually don't exist at all. Which is destructive of reality. It's not true. But once you dig into it, once you lean in that direction, start to believe that. Then you're led down a path that is not based in physical truth. Well, this is the thing to me. In other words, I don't know if I have put it this way before. But I sort of touched on it earlier. All of these ideologies are at war with reality. They're at war with nature and nature's God. They are at war with God's idea of what a human being is, what a woman is, what a man is, what a family is. And we need to at least acknowledge that. In other words, that these ideologies are trying to deconstruct these things, put in place by God. And they are at war with God. There's no argument to be made. In other words, unless you say, look, I'm an atheist. There is no reality. We are just products of accident. We can do whatever we want. There is no overarching reality or model to which we need to conform. We can do anything we like, and it's like, if you want to believe that, you can believe that, but nobody should be fooled to think that that is somehow compatible with faith in the God of the Bible. Because he has given us clear orders of life, family, male, female, and that's what's so fascinating to me is how you have various fronts at war with this, but at the end of the day, they're all at war with God with what God says..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Do. So Kimberly Ellis, thank you so much. The book is the invincible family why the global campaign to crush motherhood and fatherhood can't win. Kimberly, thank you. Thank you. This is nothing close to place to go to break. My pillow is excited to bring you their biggest betting sale ever at the Giza dream bed sheets for as low as 29 98, a set of pillowcases for only 9 98 and rejuvenate your bed with a my pillow mattress topper for as low as 99.99. They also have blankets in a variety of sizes, colors and styles. They even have blankets for your pets, get duvets, quilts, down comforters, body pillars, bolster pillows, and so much more. All the biggest discounts of the year are happening right now so don't miss out. They're also extending their money back guarantee for Christmas until March 1st, 2023 making them the perfect gifts for your Friends, your family and everyone you know. So go to my pillow dot com and use promo code Eric or call one 809 7 8 three O 5 7 and you'll get huge discounts on all my pillow betting products, including the Giza dream bedsheets for as low as 29 98 and get all your shopping done now while quantities last again use code Eric and save my pillow dot com..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Well, Lennon himself said, give me four years to teach the children. And the seed I've planted will never be uprooted. So, and it's true. To a very large degree. And so they want your children for those first four critical years. Don't give those four years to anybody. Very least of all the state. And we as parents the thing is, we have been put in a position of extreme power, and we get to decide what happens. It's been said, I think it was Barbara Bush, who said what happens in your house is more important than what happens in The White House. And that is, in fact, the truth. And we can make our homes fortifications of truth and goodness. Now, that doesn't mean all of our children are always going to make the choices that we might want. But we can teach them the truth. And we can set them on the right path, and we can offer an alternative to our children, to the narrative that they are hearing everywhere. And we can offer them something so much better and so much brighter with so much more happiness before them. Because when you're fighting against your own anatomy, when you're fighting against God's plan, there's going to be disillusionment. And there's going to be sadness. But when you find God or even people who, as you said, aren't religious. This just makes sense. It's rooted in our anatomy, the family exists for a reason. And it exists for our good. Well, there's no doubt about it. And most people know that there is an actual order that men are created different from women, women look different. They get together in marriage. They have children. This is something that we've taken for granted for millennia, but of course now it has been challenged so dramatically. And it's chilling Kimberly to hear that these elites are at war with these things, but it's also encouraging to me because as we hear these things, people get activated. And they understand, I need to take a stand. If I'm going to some church that acts like this is a marginal issue, maybe I want to get the heck out of that church and find a church that takes this seriously because everything is at stake. Everything is at stake. This is at the heart of reality. And it's really vital that we do everything we can.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Back. I'm talking to Kimberly L's, the author of the invisible family, why the global campaign to crush motherhood and fatherhood can't win. You were just saying, Kimberly, that it's pretty obvious that when a child is born from a womb, the mother whose womb that is, belongs to the child, the child belongs to the mother. There's just a bond there that's so obvious, but now because of surrogacy, even that most basic thing is being challenged, that you can pay some woman and say, well, we want to have a baby, but we don't have a womb because we're a gay couple because this because that is so we want to rent your womb. Which brings up all kinds of ethical problems. Do you talk about that at all? I do spend a chapter on that in the book. And anything, anything that severs or tries to suffer. The relationship of the mother to her own child, we have to be very cautious of that. That has to be suspect. And so if you look at what has been said about the relationship of mothers, like shalom with firestone, early feminists from the 1970s, she said she said the reason why socialism has not worked so far. Either on the micro or the macro level, she pinpointed it. She said that's because we haven't been able to eliminate the belonging of certain babies to certain mothers. And she said, as long as we have natural childbirth methods, where a mother is pregnant, bursts of the baby, and then it belongs to her. She says as long as we have that. Socialism can never be fully enacted. I've never heard that. That's really interesting, because that makes sense. It's so foundational that if somebody wants to redefine all of reality and say, okay, we're going to be collective now. All children belong to the state. The problem is that because of God's design, almost all mothers will have this deep, deep, deep connection to the child that they gave birth to, and there's really no way around that. Right. And that's intentional. And God's design. There's just no way around it. So it creates private belonging, first of all. And then it puts children who are helpless in the care of other people, their parents. And then what usually happens is in caring for someone else, you love them. Like there's an inherent love that usually comes when a baby is born, but then as you serve your child, which is demanded upon you day after day as parents, that's where the love begins to happen. So it puts the world on a track to love. And really, through the anatomy that God has designed, the world is established on the love of mothers and fathers, and it's interesting because firestone also said, she said, if you, if a mother gives birth to a baby and labors for 9 months and bursts the baby, she's going to feel like that baby belongs to her. And you know what firestone said? She said, we want to destroy this possessiveness. So determinists who is talking about this was the ultimately the enemy of this you're saying. Yes. So she pointed out that fact and said, therefore, since from her opinion, since we all want global socialism, then we have to hack away at the connection between mothers. This is interesting because I've always known we know these things in part where you know that any big state philosophy, whether it's Soviet communism or Chinese communism or the Nazis or whoever it is, they are at ultimately at war with God's order, which includes the family. And so that's the fundamental problem. And so they want to destroy all of God's orders so you want to destroy the family. You want to destroy the concept of marriage. All of these beautiful things are created by God. Woven into the warp and woof of reality, but when you're at war with reality and the God of reality, these are the things you go after. And so this is what they've been doing and you're giving us a piece of how that happened in the 70s. I've never heard that before. Right. And so it really is significant. So when I read that that was her philosophy, said, wait, that's my philosophy. But my answer is totally different than hers is therefore we have to cut the bond between mothers and babies and mine is, therefore, that's the thing we have to preserve at all costs. And the thing is, it's pretty hard to break. That's why the title of the book is the invincible family. Because if you're going to truly break the family and do it permanently, you have to break motherhood, which is nearly impossible because it's nearly invincible. So we've got reproductive technologies now attempting to do this. And in fact, firestone said that her first objective for humanity was to eliminate the bearing of children by mothers. So that's a tall order, but you see that we're marching in that direction. And people are beginning to accept that way of thinking. And technologies that would facilitate it. Right, which I think I have to think that we are very, very far from synthetic wombs. Like when people talk about that, it's like talking about artificial intelligence, developing consciousness. It's like, I don't think it could ever happen. Like I just don't. I think that it's just chatter. People say, even if it happened on a limited basis, it would never be the solution for human. It would never be a widespread solution because the way God designed it happens a lot more effectively and easily through sex and childbearing. And so it's really not false childbearing is not going to take over the world. But the ideology behind it is that is what's marching forward. Oh, there's no doubt about that. No, there's no doubt about that. But it is interesting, too, how I never saw it coming, but I remember when same sex marriage became the quote unquote law of the land, which to me, again, talking about marriage beyond a man and a woman for life. Redefining marriage, you can't actually redefine marriage. You can do it in this sort of, it becomes sophistry. It's like redefining sex, redefining whatever you're just basically carving out these words and giving them the meaning. But when that happened, we kind of leaped quickly to the trans thing. And when we come back, I want to talk about that because that's become the enemy of womanhood..

The Eric Metaxas Show
Kimberly Ells on the US Strategy for Global Women's Economic Security
"Talked about the Biden administration. I assume they're on board with all of this really horrible stuff because Democratic Party for the last little while has been completely on board. It's just staggering. We're not in the world of tip O'Neill anymore. Right. Well, something happened in January that really caught my eye. So you may have seen the Biden administration rolled up and out a new initiative and it's called the U.S. strategy for global women's economic security. So I thought, what is that? So I listened to the people introducing it. And then I got digging into the details. And so basically, what it is is facilitating universal. And you'll notice it says the U.S. strategy for global women's economic security. So it's meant to be a global thing. So what they say in the details is that the Biden administration has now partnered with the World Bank, which is a UN entity. To provide so the UN bank has a new program called the invest in child care initiative. And so what the plan is, they detail is that they're going to incentivize countries the World Bank is going to pay countries for an acting certain child care policies. And then they're going to collect data showing that having someone else take care of your children, having them in public care is better than having them in home care, which they'll have to really stretch that data because that's never true. Yeah, they're going to have to lie. They're going to have to lie in misrepresent the data. And obviously, they're doing it with our tax dollars. Yeah, I mean, there are some parents who are terrible who their children would benefit from these things, but by and large. Parents are the best caretakers of children. So they're going to pay countries to do this. They're going to have a huge watch, watch and see what happens over the coming year. I believe there's going to be a huge rollout against motherhood incentivizing and glamorizing how someone else care for your children. And then they say because they want it to be high quality, that they're then going to enact regulations on early childhood care. So what we're doing is the Biden administration has partnered with the World Bank, basically the United Nations to take over the child care industry.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Eric Chats With 'The Invincible Family' Author, Kimberly Ells
"Back. I continue my conversation with Kimberly L's ELL S, the book is the invincible family why the global campaign to crush motherhood and fatherhood can't win. You're this week here with us in New York at the UN. And I've never been a big fan of the UN and whenever I talk to somebody like you about things like this, it gives me more and more evidence of why I shouldn't be a fan of the UN. They are promoting things that are abominable to me to almost all people of faith in the world and to most people in the world in general. But they are the cultural elites. They are all convinced that this is the right thing to partner with Planned Parenthood. But there's something deeply creepy when Planned Parenthood is partnering with the World Health Organization on and on. It goes and using the UN. It's kind of like this wink wink wink like we all know what's right and whom we're fighting. And whom they're fighting generally speaking is people with faith in the God of the Bible, the God of the Bible, the ideas that have been part of civilization from the beginning. And it's an extraordinary thing that they feel they can do this. But you're thesis in the book the invincible family is that they can't succeed. That's right. And that's the hopeful message and all of this. It seems quite daunting. We've got these global forces that are coalescing and they have billions of dollars in budget because the nations of the world are supporting this in various ways and Planned Parenthood is getting rich off of our children. But in the end, the answer to all this attack on the family, ironically, is the family itself. And it can't it can't be totally broken. It can be abandoned. We can leave our own marriages. We can not get married. We can not care for our own children and all these things. But the thing is, in most cases, when a man and woman come together and they create a life, they create a baby together. In most cases, they're going to love that baby. And that's going to Trump all else, and the love of a mother and a father for their baby is the motivating force behind almost everything they do.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"One of those things is what I like to call the family, the family has been under attack. And we haven't talked about that very much. We talk about it obliquely, but I'm holding in my hands here, a book called the invincible family, why the global campaign to crush motherhood and fatherhood can't win. The author is Kimberly L's and she is my guest right now. Kimberly welcome. Thank you for having me. Listen, you were in a book about this, but I just, when I saw the book, I thought we have to have somebody who's an expert on this talk about it. You're in New York, you're at the UN this week for some, what is going on at the UN that brings you here. Is the commission on the status of women, which happens every spring in New York where the women of the world converge and talk about women's issues. So it's not yet about birthing persons. It's still about women. So there's hope, ladies and gentlemen. So far, yeah, there's still an amazing that we even have to joke about that. You've been writing on family issues and for a while working for a Friends at the federalist town hall life site news, epic times, this is something that is important to you. It seems to me not least because you're married and the mother of 5 children. That's right. Right. So but how did you find your way into the subject that you would be writing about it? I mean, there's a lot to write about and it really is under attack. But what was your path into that? Well, it happened somewhat accidentally. So what happened, what precipitated becoming interested in this fear at all, other than being mom, of course, was one day it was actually ten years ago. I found some information online. I was doing some other study. And I ran across a document that was just utterly shocking to me. And what it was was it was a document created by international Planned Parenthood federation. And it was talking about the sexual rights of children. It was sexual rights for youth. Okay, pause. Ladies and gentlemen, you're not having trouble with your radio set. You just heard that. There are times I just have to say, excuse me, what? You know, you hear this. And you're saying this was ten years ago. Right. And who was this again who posted this? International Planned Parenthood federation. Talking about the sexual rights of children. That's just diabolical, so please continue. So that's the reaction that I had. I thought, wait, what? I didn't know this would be out there. It was easily findable. It was one of their public documents. It's called the exclaim document. And as I read it, it's very beautifully done and it talks about these ten principles of sexual rights for youth. And I thought this can't be real, but I discovered that it was. And so then I thought, well, if it is real, I'm going to fight it. I'm going to spend the rest of my life if need be of fighting, fighting this agenda. And so what happened from there is I somewhat quickly a miraculously by the grace of God got involved with an organization that had been fighting this very issue. The children's sexual rights issue at the United Nations for several years. And so I felt like I'd found my calling and was able to join forces with them. And I've spent the last ten years studying this learning about it attending the UN and seeing for myself how this agenda is being pushed forward. I mean, we have to go to the heart of it. This is Planned Parenthood pushing this. So anybody misinformed enough at this point to think that Planned Parenthood is just trying to help women or whatever. They're pushing an agenda. That does not just include at its center killing children in the womb. It is about an entire sexual revolution to upend what I and most people would see as God's natural order and his plan for families and children, but it becomes clearly diabolical when they're talking about children in a sexual way. And but of course, that's where it goes. It takes time, it's taken decades. They wouldn't have dares said this ten years before, but suddenly ten years ago, there it is, on their website, and what interests me is that they're banking on the idea that they have enough capital with the people who believe in Planned Parenthood that they can float this and not get any blowback. Right. And what I've discovered is it's been going on even much longer than ten years ago. Like one of the documents that the World Health Organization created in 1975 claims to have put in their definition of sexual health even then that sexual pleasure is a right. Now in that document that didn't say for youth, but so let me give you an example from the document that I discovered. So one other quotes is that they say sexuality and sexual pleasure are important parts of being human for everyone, no matter what age, no matter if you want to be married or not and no matter if you want to have children not. And then they go on and they say governments and leaders have a responsibility to protect and fulfill all sexual rights for everyone. Right. And you hear and there, there's no limitations on age. In fact, they say at all stages of life. And for everyone. That doesn't leave anybody out. And what I found is it's specifically aimed at youth. They're targeting youth and they say that they do that on purpose because if you influence someone in their youth you influence them for their lifetime..

The Eric Metaxas Show
Eric Explains What His Last Name Means in Greek
"Number two. Hello, I've heard you talk about your father being from Greece, and I just wanted to ask you about what the name means in Greek. My dad has been very interested in learning Greek and has heard me talking about you how to curiosity he typed metaxas into Google Translate and it translated your name as silk. Is this accurate, if not, he would be curious to know what does it mean? By the way, I watched a lot of veggie tales growing up and it's interesting to know that you were the narrator on the ester episode, which I've watched many times. Thank you, sir and God bless all of you. Wow. Well, the name metaxas does not exactly mean silk. It would be more like silk or, you know, it's kind of like if your name is Cooper, last name is Cooper, a Cooper is the man who makes barrels. If your last name is Smith, you're the one that operates the smithy, you operate, you're the blacksmith in the village. If your last name is fuller, you would be the person who whitens the clothes in the old days they would have somebody. You have the last Mercedes, you're making more sadar. That's correct. Correct. So a lot of names actually have that kind of thing. So metaxas means the silk or really meaning the merchant of silk, the person who sells silk. So that is correct that metaxas means in English, it would be something like silk or silk merchant or something like that.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Of the Books Eric Has Written, Which Is His Favorite?
"What has been your favorite book that you've written in your career? Which one has brought you the most joy, well, okay, that's hard to say in some ways it would be fish out of water because I had to call my parents up almost every single day to ask them questions like when we did this who was this and what was this about and there was something really kind of just, I don't know, fun is a good word for it. It was sort of writing, I always say this, writing is hard. You write, I write, writing is hard. I find writing to be really hard work, writing a book is hard work. But there was something about writing fish out of water that there were elements of it that it really was fun because a lot of the stories are very funny. And so it's a joy to write a true story from your life that you know was funny and if you communicate it effectively, it will make the reader laugh, but I would also say that my Martin Luther book was similar. There was a certain joy in writing parts of that book because Luther was such a madman in the best sense. And there are kind of funny stories about him. And then there's funny stories about the people around him. I mean, but the intense corruption of the late medieval Roman church. You just want to fold down from horror and laughter. Could it really have been this bad? Some of it is just so anyway, there's some comical portions, so there's a lot of that in the Luther book. So in some ways, I would say that about my Luther book that I think it would be a fun read because when I wrote it, it was some of it, I was dying myself writing it.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"kimberly" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Folks, welcome to the Eric metaxas show, sponsored by legacy precious metals. There's never been a better time to invest in precious metals, visit legacy p.m. investments dot com that's legacy p.m. investments dot com. Welcome to the Eric metaxas show. Do you like your gravy sick and rich and loaded with creamy mushrooms? If no one was looking, would you chug the whole gravy boat? Stay tuned. Here comes mister jugga lug himself. Eric mar Texas. Hello folks. Do you suffer from eczema, seborrhea? Psoriasis. All of them. You know what? I keep forgetting Medicaid a shampoo is not a sponsor on this program. So just forget all about just forget I said a word about that. Who is a sponsor on this program? My pillow dot com. Yes. My store dot com. New traumatic dot com. Yes. And when I say new traumatic dot com, that reminds me to remind all y'all as we say New York actually in New York, we say all of yous 25% off this month only new traumatic dot com new traumatic. Dot com new traumatic stuff. I'm 25% off if you use the code Eric. Before we get into all this crazy stuff, January 6 footage, blah, blah, blah. Let me say, my guest today is a hero. Her name is Kimberly L's. She she's written a book about really, it's this globalist agenda to destroy the family and motherhood. And you know, it sounds like something in the future. Wait till you hear my conversation with her. And you know, I often say, or people ask me inevitably endlessly. What can I do? There are many things you can do and I will repeat them over and over.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Charlie Takes Us Back to February 2020...
"Back in February of 2020, just about three years ago. Three years ago, boy, I remember where I was and Andrew and I were reminiscing. On a moment in time, I could write a essay, if not a short book on what could be called the last supper of Mar-a-Lago. You could actually dig up the exact date. I do remember it was late February and early March. We are on tour for my book, the maga doctrine, New York Times Best Seller, almost New York Times number one. We got so close. Amazon number one bestseller. We were traveling the country, having a great time. We were doing events all across Florida. We were doing events at Liberty University. And the news of COVID started to bubble up more and more and more. We didn't really know what to make of it. The hypochondriacs in our life were really freaking out and people were saying, oh, it's nothing is just a coal is just a flu we've been through this before. And we were concluding our book tour at Mar-a-Lago. What better place to conclude a book tour on the maga doctrine than at Mar-a-Lago? And when we get there, it was as if it was a Great Gatsby party. The energy was off the charts and there was 5 or 6 different high stakes things happening simultaneously. When we came into Mar-a-Lago, president Trump was literally meeting with jair Bolsonaro talking about big trade deals and negotiating partnerships, Mike Pence was there meeting with some people. Jared Kushner and Ivanka are meeting with some people. Tucker Carlson was there just to go meet with Donald Trump to warn him about COVID. Kimberly Guilfoyle's birthday party was happening. And then we were there. It was, it was a circus, but in a good way. And the energy was off the charts the attitude. That night in late February, 2020 was that Trump could not lose. There was nothing that could happen. The economy was roaring, morale was up. We were going to run up against this Biden guy. It was a joke. There was an aura of invincibility. The election was 8 or 9 months out. There was almost an attitude of what are they going to throw at the bulletproof Teflon Trump now? And yet there was that little whisper of what's this virus? What's this, what's this thing? And it was very interesting when Pence left the evening early and he didn't seem too happy. Pence left and remember Pence was tasked with looking into the virus and was actually in charge of the virus response and he kind of left and you could read something into it, but did he know something about it? Maybe maybe not. All while this was happening. Donald Trump and his administration did not know. That Anthony Fauci was working in the shadows to cover up the origins of this virus.

The Dan Bongino Show
Donald Trump Jr. Crashes Kimberly Guilfoyle's Interview
"Trying to bum rest my interview If you look at this guy Hey Dodd you don't listen We love you too You two are like you really like the power couple and conservative politics I mean you got Don on by the way folks We're doing the interview with Kim obviously but Donna is a show on rumble two that's gone like he just want to crazy Free promotion right now He's like I'm here to make sure you plug my show princess It did one that's like obviously you've all know I'm an equity holder of rumble So I watch everything that happens at rumble And of course you have big expectations for Don Junior like we do for Kim but the show went crazy to the point where I'm calling up Chris the CEO and I'm like hey man I'm not so sure I'm like the king of rumble anymore I'm an equity holder Look at Don Don show went crazy too So you guys are going to just go crazy when you're just going to make you richer okay I know He is and we love him So we're we need that freedom of speech out there because as you see this weekend with the Wuhan lab leak theory the most plausible and common sense argument ever the media went full bet They have no credibility anymore Like you're going to actually be able to get real news from people like myself Kim yourself People who've been in the theater people who've been in the room people can see through the nonsense and the lives and actually talk about it And guess what You won't have to wait three years to find out what probably happened

The Dan Bongino Show
Kimberly Guilfoyle: Launching 'The Kimberly Guilfoyle Show' on Rumble
"Really about being that pretty uncensored voice exercising our First Amendment rights to be able to get out there in the marketplace of ideas Tell people what we think and feel and more than ever and you know this I've been working in the industry as well It's just outrageous The mainstream media is literally just a fake news media If they don't even pretend to try to do the job and bring you the facts the evidence the truth about what's going on there So I want to have a really collaborative relationship with the viewers and the listeners and do the stories that they want to hear about But I am going to do news of the day and two of the shows that I cofounded at Fox the 5 and outnumbered cover a variety of subject matters whether it's politics obviously start out with that what's going on in DCA What's going on with Biden administration et cetera Also I'll talk about law I'm going to talk about entertainment pop culture wherever the story is take me You know I have obviously a tremendous amount of experience over years of covering all the different legal cases out there working from court TV before ABC News Fox News CNN before it went full commie But I used to do it And it's been great quite frankly for these past few years in our traveling the country with Donald Trump Jr. and meeting people literally in every single state So I feel really connected great television journalism experience and then real people experience about the hardworking men and women out there in this country and what matters to them most And I want to be a part of that amplification of their voice And I want to encourage other people to be on this I love rumba we were just there at the grand opening The ribbon cutting for the headquarters was fantastic with our fearless leader the CEO Chris pavlovski We missed you there but you were there in spirit and I like your conference room to Dan bongino border and by the way You like that

The Charlie Kirk Show
Kimberly Guilfoyle Has a New Show on Rumble
"Joining us now is Kimberly Guilfoyle, KG, how you doing? Oh, great. I can hear you. I can see you. It's fantastic. Good. Tell us about your new show on rumble. Oh yeah, so I'm a new BT rumble, which I absolutely love. I can really Guilfoyle and you know, as you know, Charlie every single day, they are trying to cancel America first Republicans, people that love this country that believe in the freedom of expression. We want to have our voices out there. We don't want to be canceled. That's why shows like yours are so important, which was a big trendsetter leading the way paving the way for other patriots to be able to follow the example that you've set. And it's very disturbing and distressing to me as a first generation American living in this country and being able to enjoy the American Dream that I would wake up one day and they were canceling people because of what they believe in. Not radical ideas, just ideas that are really amazing. Like your group, turning point USA has been promoting across the country, which is we don't need big government. We've seen big government fail, as you know, really exponentially with the Biden administration. It is just completely an absentee landlord, you know, occupying The White House with no ideas, no innovation, no foreign policy, no national security, no idea about infrastructure and manufacturing and completely destroying lives across this country of the hardworking Americans, the middle class who truly love this country that stand for the flag that stand for choice and education that stand for not forcing vaccinations upon people and ruining their lives and that's why the work that you're doing is so important and I want to be one of those active voices as I have in the past and at all your events to stand for the people that believe in what we believe in.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Rich Baris Talks Effective Presidential Primary Messaging
"Rich, I don't think messaging is nearly as important as it used to be. But it certainly is still an element of elections. Let's talk macro. Let's not get too into the approval rating and all that. All that stuff comes and goes. But what do you see as leading indicators or trends, things that are candidates should become fluent in things that you see that can build consensus with swing voters? What are one or two issues that even might be a little heterodox that you think, hey, we got a zero in on this and this could help us win on the margins in 2024. Yeah, I think the economic message is kind of one Charlie, and it just doesn't matter. It's a matter of whether you get those voters. It's a matter of whether you get those voters to the polls or not. I think we're in an area where there are new culture war issues that unfortunately Republicans did not grab onto and run with. Look at how popular governor Glen youngkin is. When we pull around the country nationally and we ask about some of these issues that youngkin really championed, then ran with, you know, there are no brainers to people. And we sat there kind of silent on the abortion issue and we let them or we either Republican Party candidates and let them play offense on that issue when they left the transgender and the kids issues off the table. But it's more than that. It's just general feeling that their culture and way of life is being attacked and there's nobody there to defend them. And there's no line being drawn saying this is where public parties stand on these issues. Everywhere that we do see those lines drawn Democrats lose.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Rich Baris and Charlie Assess the 2024 Primary Landscape
"Might run for president. If Joe Biden does it, let's play cut 35. Couldn't be a more exciting time for transportation. It's had a challenges. Right. I mean, if you look at what the American transportation systems have faced in the last two or three years, partly because of the pandemic, we've faced issues from container shipping to airline cancellations. Now we got balloons. That's right. But also the best time ever to be working transportation because of these resources. So how should we think about the 2024 race? There's a lot of interest in the horse race desantis, Pompeo, what is the strength of Donald Trump right now in the Republican primary? You know, I mean, this is a long way in politics. It's a long way away, Charlie, but, you know, some of the private stuff we've done and some of the other polling that we've seen people we know and trust do. He the former president did lose some support over a couple of 6 weeks, 8 weeks ago, and it does seem to have rebounded somewhat, but as we put more names onto this, we'll have to see how it takes shape. But the bottom line is, Charlie, a Republican primary, will be dominated by non working class voters and until other candidates break through. That demographic, he's going to be tough to beat. He said that it will be dominated by non working class voters. Oh, excuse me, non college working class. Okay, thank you. Thank you. Yeah, the muscular class. So you're saying that muscular class white upper middle class Christians. And I don't say any of this negatively. It's just a fact. They disproportionately vote in Republican primaries. Is that correct? That's correct. And

The Charlie Kirk Show
The 2024 Horse Race
"Landscape is developing. And it's going to be a very long, tiring primary. A year from now, we're going to be right in the middle of it. And so we have Nikki Haley, who is officially announced him Scott, who looks like he's going to run Mike Pence, who's probably going to write, run Mike Pompeo, who's probably going to run. Whispers are that friend of the show, Vivek Rama Swami. Might run for president. And then, of course, Donald Trump is running. I think all of this helps Trump. All of this strengthens Trump's case. For 2024, Donald Trump running for the presidency, standing against neoliberalism, open borders, silly trade deals, and interventionist foreign wars is how he will differentiate himself amongst many other things, obviously. The fact that he was actually president, he got a lot done. These people say they're running for president. Nikki Haley says she's running for president Tim Scott says he is running for president, but in reality they are running against Donald Trump. That is the reality, but they're not going to say it. They're not going to try to insult Trump voters, but they are going to be running against Donald Trump. And I actually think that helps Trump. I think Trump will be able to navigate that successfully. The more kind of targets the better and they're going to start attacking each other because they're going to try to fill up the different lanes. Now whether or not Ted Cruz is going to run for president, that will be interesting if Marco Rubio run for president that will be interesting. We'll Glenn youngkin run for president. Will Greg Abbott run for president? These are all very interesting questions. Will Larry Hogan run for president? I think all of it helps Donald Trump

The Charlie Kirk Show
Kimberly Fletcher Describes the Challenges Faced by School Board Moms
"A very interesting story because it involves potentially three different agencies. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Justice, and the Department of Education, which we don't talk about a lot, which is this guy Miguel cardona, and it seems to be the evidence suggests and we'll get a definitive answer as Congress starts to do their job. That the national school board association, a non government organization, lobbied the Biden administration, was able to get an audience with three different government agencies that resulted in terrorist type activity. I mean, terrorist threat level activity as if we were dealing with Al-Qaeda having a sleeper cell in Charleston, South Carolina. That sort of law enforcement activity was then a result of the national school board association lobbying our government. Do I have that about right? You do have that right. And here's the really scary part about that is when the federal government comes out with those kind of standards, then all of the law enforcement agencies on the local level act on it. So we have had moms who have been going into the school board meetings who have read from the books that their children are being exposed to, who have addressed real concerns that the school district should be paying attention to. And they're being told that they can't talk about some of these things. Like when they're reading the books, these excerpts. They said, you can't read that because it's public TV, and that's against the FCC standards. You know, to have that on TV. And when the moms keep reading it, then we have had moms who have literally been handcuffed by police officers and taken out of these school board meetings. Who are the terrorists? So when you have the federal government, basically arming or empowering local governments to harass parents. That is a big problem. And

The Charlie Kirk Show
Charlie Welcomes Kimberly Fletcher of Moms for America
"Stories of the last couple of years is how the Biden regime targeted moms and school boards calling them domestic terrorists, the new Republican Congress is going to get to the bottom of this and hopefully people will be held accountable. Joining us now is Kimberly Fletcher from moms for America Kimberly. Welcome back to the program. Hey, great to be here, Charlie. Kimberly, you know all about this and a lot of the moms you work with were actually targeted. You've dealt with this personally. Walk us through it and also tell us what do you think this new Republican Congress should do to get to the bottom of it? Well, I would really like to see the questions that have been asked in the past and ignored being answered. I think the fact that we now have control of the Congress, we have a better power play on getting those answers. I really like what Jim Jordan is doing in Matt Gaetz coming out and putting the pressure on the various organizations to answer those questions. We're dealing with it on the national level as well as the local level. And what's really exciting about what we're at now is for years I had to try and convince people that everything was local. And I don't have to convince people anymore. And while a lot of people are really depressed about the last election, it was the best, most successful election in my lifetime because moms came out in droves and the biggest question they asked was, do we have to vote for every office on the ballot for my ballot to count? And they came in and they voted the down ballot. They voted the things closest to them. School board city council sheriff. And when they had people that they believed in who they felt would stand for them for us, our principles and our values and protecting our kids and our schools, then they voted for them on those levels too, which is why Florida did so well in governor desantis did so well because

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Steve Gill: Trump 2.0 Was Undercut by His Latest 'Announcement'
"That he would be wanting to do whatever was necessary to repair his image with the independence and some of those conservative Democrats of any are left, and I'm not sure this kind of stuff actually does it. It's another one step forward two steps back is announcement that he was running was spot on in terms of tone and temperament and content. And it was like, okay, Trump two. Has shown he's learned. He's going to become a new Trump that's not going to be his blustery is not going to be focused only on the path. He's going to be looking forward. He's going to show a different tone and do what it takes to win those independent young voters. Suburban women that are not in his camp. And you can not win general elections with just the Trump base. Now, like you thought, I'm a huge Trump fan. I love his policy. I'm not as offended by his bluff and bluster and behavior, but others are. And the others that are really offended by it are the ones critical to winning general elections. And I think the problem is that Trump two we saw in the announcement has now been completely undercut by this new major announcement that just again takes all the wind out of whatever push he had after the announcement. And I think just again, one step forward two steps back. I have friends who are getting 5 or 6 emails every other day from Don Junior begging for money. It's like, what are they wanting money for? And why is Don Junior putting money into his pocket or his pack or Kimberly Guilfoyle again, it looks like the worst excesses, at least they're doing it publicly, but it looks like the worst excesses of the Biden prime family when they're just kind of just money grubbing. We're looking for cash that isn't really doing anything to elect Republican candidates, promote the policies and values that he stands for. And I think, again, it's not just this episode, but it's all the people around you and they look like their money grub and using his name. And

The Officer Tatum Show
Candace Owens' Court Battle Is Officially Over
"I got some people calling in let me see what they talking about. But I want to give Candace Owens to shout out. For winning that court case against fraudulent fake black Republican candidate Kimberly klacik. Kimberly klacik sued Candace Owens for $20 million because Candace Owens exposed to her regarding her FEC reports. And I said, exposed her meaning she just asked the questions, why are you spending this distance and as a politician because according to your FEC reports, this seems suspicious. Instead of coming back and saying, hey, let me explain these things. Let's have a conversation. Let me explain them or whatever. You don't have to have a conversation. She made up all these lies said Candace Owens made up stuff about her and she sued her for $20 million. But ladies and gentlemen, as of recently, I think it was yesterday came out that Kimberly klacik lost the lawsuit. It was a frivolous lawsuit. And she knew she was wrong. And she ended up sitting with Candace and having to pay her a $115,000. But, you know, her cowardice, corny, wack, drug using self isn't going to come out and apologize, she's not going to be an honest woman because she was on social media talking big trash. I remember swatching it. Talking about, oh, I beat Ken, it's ha ha. Let's see you in court. All this other stuff and now she lost and she quiet.

Encyclopedia Womannica
"kimberly" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica
"To you by Mercedes Benz. This July we're celebrating dynamos. Women who led dynamic lives that shifted evolved in bloomed, often later in life, eventually achieving the success they were destined for from the start. Today's will mannequin actually found her passions early, but she didn't rest until she found her niche and brought all her expertise to a role that fit her like a glove. Please meet Kimberly Stevens. My name is Kimberly Stevens. I'm a senior truck side aerodynamicist for the Mercedes AMG, petronas, Formula One team. I work with maximizing the performance of all of the surfaces that you see on the car. Kimberly grew up in a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, called rexville. It's very safe and very pretty and the schools are good, but I think I would also call it pretty boring. Everything looks the same, all the houses look the same. Let's be honest, the people all look the same. I was much more interested in other stuff, even as a young person living here and I was really fortunate to find a group of kids as friends who were also interested in less suburban things, shall we say. Kimberly got a job baking bagels. On the weekends, she and her friends would take the money they earned downtown to Cleveland's art scene. This exposed her to new experiences outside her suburban life. It helped her gain the confidence she needed to invest in an unexpected passion. Cars. I still don't have a good answer for where my love of cars came from. Apart from that, I always have loved them. There are stories of me not walking very well. That's how young I was and just like running away from my family to go look at a car or a motorcycle. I think it may have been the sound, even now, what really gets me excited about anything motorized is actually the sound. No good reason why I like cars other than I think maybe the best reason, which is I was just born to like them. Kimberly followed that love to Ohio State where she studied aerospace engineering. She quickly realized she could apply the concept she was studying to her interest in cars. She put those skills to work her freshman year when she joined an Ohio State student project developing a land speed car. It was called the Buckeye bullet. So it's really long sort of pencil shaped thing comes up to your waist and hide it most. We were a little bit like the black sheep of the Ohio State student projects, there was several car teams there. And they all have like between 20 and 50 students involved and we were the bucket bullet. We had this massive electric car and we were like 12 kids that work on it. So we were a little bit weirdo nerdy kids. Test runs for the Buckeye bullet had a lot riding on them. The car could only be tested out in the Bonneville salt flats in Utah. Out there, away from the garage, it was nearly impossible to repair any major malfunctions. And the team had several high profile sponsors banking on it. And so if it just finishes in a ball of fire like that's really bad. In August, they hit the salt flats for a trial run. It did not go as planned. The car started leaking bright teal gearbox fluid. Out in the salt flats, the crew had no way of fixing it. That was it. Week over. Kimberly wasn't going to give up. The team regrouped repaired the car and set off again in October. This time was different. The Buckeye bullets had a land speed record, 321 mph. While she was still in college, Kimberly worked with Honda research and development Americas. She used her knowledge of aerodynamics to optimize the car's systems. Whether the goal was to get a car up to speed on the highway or make sure washer fluid hit the windshield just right. Kimberly was on the job. Just a few weeks after graduating, Kimberly's love of racing took her across the Atlantic. She signed a contract to work in Formula One racing in Switzerland. 7 years later, in 2013, she joined the F one team at Mercedes Benz. Formula One wasn't a straight trajectory. We won a few races, but it was still a bit of a low key existence. You know, even though we were Mercedes Benz, they had had quite a few challenging years. They weren't at the front. Even if you look back at pictures of the team gear we wear. You know this is our team gear now. It's this lovely white pressed shirt. That's what we wear at the track and back then it was polo. So you know, we looked a bit ragtag. Kimberly and the other members of the team got to work. She remembered her lesson switching years when the Buckeye bullet hit a dead end. And then 2014, goodness me, did we have a weapon of a car? Before long, the Mercedes Benz team was on top. And we basically won everything. And that's success more or less continued for 8 years. The team became a lot more polished in appearance and in operation. And we had a lot more scrutiny on us. Once you win a single time, the expectation is there that you will keep winning. Kimberly knew that working at Mercedes Benz was an important step towards changing the industry she loved so much. The only thing that really matters to Formula One is the performance, right? It is about nothing else than making two cars go fast. In the end, if you're good and you work hard, that's all that matters. All that matters is you and how much you can contribute. So, you know, when I joined the sport, there were not a lot of girls around, and in particular, in the engineering disciplines. Some Mercedes has taken a really big effort to recruit people from lots of different backgrounds. Her dedication goes beyond making sure Mercedes Benz shines on the racetrack. Kimberly and Mercedes Benz are working to ensure the company is a place for folks to live dynamic careers. Where anyone can achieve their peak performance. You know, some of my proudest moments have been in the more higher profile situations that I've had being with Mercedes Formula One at the track. There's a part of me that knows that girls are looking at this and thinking, yeah, totally possible now. Whereas it wasn't necessarily like that, even in the early 2000s, when I was a kid, you didn't watch racing and see a lot of women around. Kimberly's learned from her time at Mercedes Benz that success requires determination. When the going gets tough, she remembers her team's motto. Imagine your counterpart in our competition. Do better. If that's how we win. You know it's something that I kind of have lived by in particular when things get a bit hard or you're a bit tired. And you think, oh, I want to give up, you think, no, because maybe the trackside arrow, at Ferrari, they're still finding performance or they're still doing something. And if I give up, no way, not happening. All month, we're talking about dynamos. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at will manica podcast. Special thanks to Liz Kaplan, my favorite sister and co creator. Talk to you on Monday.

Breaking the Glass Slipper: Women in science fiction, fantasy, and horror
"kimberly" Discussed on Breaking the Glass Slipper: Women in science fiction, fantasy, and horror
"At breaking the glass slipper, we believe it is important to have conversations about women and issues of intersectional feminism within science fiction fantasy and horror. To continue to do so, we need your help. Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Join the conversation by following us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Welcome to breaking the glass slipper. I'm Megan Lee, and I'm Charlotte Bond. These days, punk is added to a whole host of different genres sub genres and words never before used to indicate a book genre before. But there was once only one punk, and that was cyberpunk. Pioneered in the 1980s by authors like pat cadigan, William Gibson, and Bruce Sterling. Cyberpunk imagined a dystopian world of advanced technology and crime. In the face of unprecedented levels of corruption on an incredible scale. Cyberpunk stories were populated with down on their luck rebels and tent on overthrowing the ruling classes. Usually by way of their expert tech skills. Borrowing heavily from tropes in film noir. Cyberpunk tends to be Gritty dark and pessimistic. But has it changed at all since it first came on the scene? Are we finding more optimism in feminist cyberpunk narratives? And why is thriller cyberpunk's natural genre companion? Well, we are excited to have Kimberly unger with us today to explore all the cyberpunk and thriller. So Kimberly, if you would like to introduce yourself to our listeners. Sure. Hey folks, I am Kimberly unger. By day I work for reality labs on their virtual reality platform. Formerly known as Oculus, and the rest of the time I write science fiction about where all of these app driven superpowers are going to take us. And cyberpunk seems to be the genre in which I end up the most often, and so I'm delighted to delighted to have the chance to dive in on it. And we are very excited to have you here. Talk to us about it. And I think Charlotte will acknowledge that she's not the biggest cyberpunk person in the world. But I have long loved the genre and also a few years ago we got to interview pat cardigan and was amazing and I was like bowing down pat catechin is amazing. Do you know you're right. I don't read a lot of cyberpunk when I researched it. But apparently I've watched an incredible amount and I really enjoyed that. So I'm looking forward to speaking to Kimberly this evening and talking about all the different authors out there, because I'm already like going, oh, Margaret Atwood's got some cyberpunk.

Oh No Ross and Carrie
"kimberly" Discussed on Oh No Ross and Carrie
"Significant effect of your NDE on your personal life? There will be an open mic for audience members to share their histories with our esteemed panel, hosted by Daniel Brinkley. So this would be hosted by Dany and Brinkley a person I hadn't heard of before, but apparently a New York Times bestselling author. Oh, okay. Sarah breskin cosme, a master hypnotist, Tracy Dunn blazer, who is an empath, a shaman, and a 20 time national award winning author. Wow, you had me at shaman. And Douglas Taylor, who's a multi talented author speaker teacher, artist and woodworker. I like that multi talented. Yeah, so when you know he wrote it. And an alien contactee. Says he. And finally, Kimberly Meredith, who survived two near death experiences. Yeah. And was healed through the Holy Spirit? Just do experiences. I hate to blame the victim. I'm sure she's not completely at fault here or anything, but it's one of those like, you let this happen twice. A little bit of that. Okay. Hold me one, shame on you. Right, for me twice, get out of the sidewalk. And she also mentions in her bio here that she has her new book awakening to the 5th dimension. So this was in the downstairs Plaza area where most of the panels would be. Oh yeah, like you have to descend escalators and then walk along these hallways and follow signs kind of into the bowels of this Hilton. Yeah. And then you finally get to this one really large room that's very dark where they have all of their panels. Panels, right. Yeah, all the other stairs here are us sending that these are descending. Then that's an important detail callback to the gene Scott investigation. Yeah, I went down there only once for a talk about psychedelics. Interestingly, the last time we were there, that whole haul was full, but this time it was empty. So this definitely at a lower turnout is scaled back everything. Okay, so I was in the second row on the right house right for this talk. And I felt mostly confident that she spotted me. She kept looking at me. Possible that this was just sort of where her eyesight was naturally landing and she was just far away enough that even with my glasses, I couldn't tell like, are your pupils touching my pupils? Right. Well, and knowing her vision, which isn't perfect. She's spotty. How else could she see you? But I just picturing Carrie in the audience with your eyes wide and you blinking it hurt. So I was actually like hoping she wouldn't spot me right away. Because there was another time that I jumped in on one of her Facebook Live presentations and one of her co hosts pulled me on screen just from the audience and she immediately was like, I'm not, I don't want to talk to this person. Wow. So I thought it not impossible that she'd be like, that woman, second row, get her out of here. Though, that would be a really awkward thing to do. Yeah. Maybe less awkward than the whole how she handled the woman coming up for the heel. Okay, yeah, fair. But I feel like if I were in that situation and my mortal enemy walked into the room and sat there, I'd be like, boom, hit nothing I can do about this. But if you came up to the mic, then she'd be like, get her out of here. Right. We're not answering her questions. I did try to get to the mic, but we'll get there. Okay. I also saw a woman at this talk who was she was a row behind me and a little to my left. And I recognized her right away because she was at a previous talk. I'll tell you about later. And at that talk, she had mentioned just in point of conversation that she was a therapist and mental health counselor and she doesn't believe in any of this whoo whoo stuff. That's how she put it. Her friends were there, and she had come to help them. And so she was just sort of testing out, but she was just very honest. She was rude, but she was very honest about like, yeah, I really don't believe this stuff. I just like hard stop. You don't need to call on me. It's embarrassing. My first thought is why are you here, but then I realized I am the other person who is here that people would say, why are you here? It's like that cheers joke where norm is like they're so sad just yesterday, this guy sat next to me for 11 hours. That's great. You're an arm. I'm norm. So I kept kind of glancing to see how long she'd stay. And indeed she stayed about half an hour of the two hour event. I was picturing the sad state of her sitting next to you for three hours. So if dad just be pathetic. Okay, so there are only two people on this panel, as far as I could tell, piecing together their stories. I think there were only two who had actually had near death experience. Yeah, so there's Kimberly, and there was the host, the moderator of the panel. That was like, well, at least get him on the panel and move someone else out. What are you doing? I came here for near death stories. Yeah. So it was just so strange. It would be great if it was just the host in Kimberly talking the whole time. And they just leave everything. Like, oh, you haven't had one. So the host, his name was Daniel. And Daniel is one of the best slash worst. Yogurt. Ever seen. Really? It was actively cracking up by the end of it. Oh, that's right. You were writing me about this. Yeah, okay, so there were a couple things that made Daniel just a joy to watch. A terrible moderator. Number one, can not phrase anything as a question. Okay. And not only that, at least someone who doesn't have that talent usually will still get to a point you see, where they're going and you kind of help them. Couldn't even quite do that. Okay. He would say things like, oh my God. I won't even be able to make it up. I think I have an example here. Okay, so here's him asking Kimberly a question. Okay. So next is Kimberly, when you started to heal, how did that affect the healing of yourself? Because I know about the eyes and sensitivity to light, not everything that is going to be in service is always as victorious, but it's worth the journey because you made it today. Wow. That started so well. Almost, although when you started to heal how did that affect the healing of yourself? Yeah, well, and then the whole victorious thing. You asked me there. It really gets crazy. So she responded. Okay, thanks, Daniel. I don't quite understand the question. Oh, all right, good for you, Kimberly. Yeah. So there was just a lot of that. I would expect her just to run with whatever the hell she wanted to say. Yeah, and she started calling him on that show. I probably would have too. She just gets her desperate to say anything into the microphone at that point. I guess moderation in everything. Including moderating. Don't moderate too much. Okay, so Dany and the host. I do want to tell you a little bit about the other people on this panel and the host just because here we are in front of them. And because Daniel was such a delight. So Daniel was a marine for 37 years. He worked in hospice care. He said semper 5 too many times during his presentation. And he mentioned that he co wrote a manual on death and dying for veterans. So I did go and find it he really did. He was one of like 40 ish people who collaborated with, you know, cool. It's called no veteran dies alone. And after listening to him for two hours, I'm like, you should have made it no veteran dies because..

Oh No Ross and Carrie
"kimberly" Discussed on Oh No Ross and Carrie
"We do live in the fourth dimension. We're just kind of constrained on one axis there. But yeah, then she'll go straight to the 5th dimension. And she doesn't talk about like a tesseract or bending spacetime. Or anything like that. It's just this higher vibration. She'll use that phrasing. But shouldn't we all be trying to get to the zero dimension where you're not aware of self and you're not aware of time, isn't that what they're usually going for? That'll be Kerry's talk at the next conscious life expert. Guys, back up. Ask for me. Yeah, she constantly refers to the 5th dimension. And it's become, I think, a buzz term amongst this crowd, which we saw Deborah king would talk about the 5th dimension and scaling to the 5th dimension and scalar energy. There's so many of these terms that get thrown out. But yeah, definitely, it's one that Kimberly Meredith invokes constantly. There was a woman who had given a talk that I was in just before this who was a riot. I can't wait to tell you about her. She was in the audience here. Oh, great. And that's always interesting for me. You walk out of a room where someone is like, I am the show leader here. I'm the authority. I'm the big figure. You all came to see me. I'm the spiritual leader. And now they go to see someone else. Now going sit down in my little seat? Yeah, and she was very loud and vocal in participating in this. So I would kind of hear a little things coming out of this other presenter. But I always think that's interesting. Like, oh, okay, it's almost like kind of a humbling move. I could feel like some of these speakers saying, well, I don't need to go to anybody else's talk. I'm 6th dimensional. Yeah. Something like that. Anyways, she was there that was interesting. When I got there at 8 O 7, there were 36 people. I think more started to come in, but this was a large big crowd. Yeah, but it was a big ballroom. This was one of their biggest spaces in the la Jolla. Oh, okay. You and I would see something else later there. Okay. And I saw Linda monton how there. Okay. Yeah, you and I were there once and it was as packed as I saw anything at that conference. So yeah, this was a much humbler gathering. Still decent crowd, though. Yeah, and I think that's why they were doing a little bit of that. Okay, well, thank you all for coming here and not going to the cacao ceremony. That sounds really interesting. So yeah, she talked it a little bit about her backstory, which is that she had a near death experience, which sounded truly horrifying like she was just standing on a sidewalk and a truck came by some sort of SUV and it had something wrong with its door and the door like flipped open and hit her. Oh, okay. Which I think is how she described it in the book. But it's interesting, my thought had always been that she started doing the rapid eye blinking thing after that. But in the book she talks about having rapid blinked as a child. Child. She does explain this in places maybe she didn't during that talk. But that was a gift she had as a child, so it was a natural gift. That went away and then when she had this accident, it came back. She hadn't really remembered she'd done it before, but when it happened, her mom was like, oh, you used to do that when you were a kid. I don't know if it was actually the same thing. And she wasn't able to work as she was recovering, but she found that people started asking for her services because she had just kind of nonchalantly mentioned something about someone else and someone had come to her and asked for a prayer and she prayed over them and then they had this great healing and they came back to her and said, oh, you need to see people and she started practicing reiki and she was using cold laser therapy for a while. All right, cold lasers. That's right. She's into that. Forgot about that. There's so much stuff with this woman. Yeah. Which is wild. She wrote a book about COVID when COVID was a pretty new idea. I mean, to the average person. Not ten years. But she wrote a book about COVID, where I think she talked about that a little bit also. Cool. Anyways, so she started realizing this ability that she had as a healer and that these eye blinks of hers that were coming back were in the 5th dimension at this higher frequency. It was this manifestation of her connection to Holy Spirit, which as far as I can tell seems to be interchangeable with the 5th dimension. Yeah, she also has guides in the 5th dimension to speak directly to her. Why not? As she's saying all this, she's already kind of blinking regularly like someone would if they're, I don't know, their eyes feel dry. Yeah. You just need to moisturize. Because it's like, she doesn't blink hard the way you would expect. And bewitched or I dream of Genie, right? Who blinks Genie, Genie and I dream of Jeannie. It's not like that. But fluttering of the eyes. But yeah, yeah. It's not quite like a normal blink either. And if we don't have enough spiritual modes in one woman, the book that she wrote, she channeled, and at the beginning she lists whoever it is that she's channeling. Oh my God, I missed this. Okay. I know that she channels, but I didn't know that she was channeling in the writing of the book. I did notice she talks about herself in third person a fair amount. Right. But she's also telling her life story in the book. What? What do you mean your channel? Maybe it's like the Bible and God is there guiding her hand. Okay. Yeah. Sure. It's like the Bible. Of course, she's promoting her book, but she's also saying that since she started the book hundreds of additional people have been healed through her. Blinking and diagnosis. How wonderful. And because we're all kind of culturally, I guess we're all approaching the 5th dimension. Like you said, kind of like age of Aquarius. There's more healings going on in general, but she is a great conduit of this. She can also heal people en masse. Like just people and I asked her why she doesn't just walk into the COVID ward then and do that. And she said she's not interested in that. Why is she not interested in that? Great question. She just callous. I think so. Okay. This was an interesting statement. She said that we're all going to need to be moving forward in the next four years into the 5th dimension. Or in ten years, it's all over. Oh my God. So it's like girl. What are you saying? So if we don't achieve the spiritual collective goal in the next four years, we're all doomed in ten years. Yeah, okay, hang on. I gotta put that in our calendar. Okay, so in ten, okay, ten years, that's February 20 32. She said, or in ten years, it's all over. What date was this that she gave it? February 4th? Okay, February 4th 2032. Okay, Kimberly Meredith said that what is it if we don't move forward? Yeah, so we're going to move into the 5th dimension within the next four years or in ten years, it's all over. Okay, you're really Meredith said that it's all over by this date.

Oh No Ross and Carrie
"kimberly" Discussed on Oh No Ross and Carrie
"But yeah, finally, I told her, I kept climbing up like, okay, I'm gonna do this yeah. Oh, it's gonna be that much more money. Oh, it's that much sooner. Okay, okay. And then suddenly your brain goes like, wait, take a step back. Wait a minute, you went from like, I hope I can get onto this bill to like I need to write a talk and it's $3000 to happen right now. Yeah, and so that part of my brain kicked in and I was like, don't do this. So it's good. So I told her no, and then she started calling again and was like, okay, I can bring the cost down. So I just need you to get 5 Apple gift cards. And read me the codes. My cousin is the deposed king of Nigeria. His son is very sick. She thought she had the hook on you. Yeah. So then she kept trying to bring it down and these different things and oh, she could actually make a very special deal for me because she talked to her manager and she explained that I usually do my talks with my friends. Yeah, yeah. That's kind of different. You know when it's two people who are kind of getting too advice on so they're going to bring it out for us. I was like, no, no. If I was to give a talk, I should probably be billed just as raw. For this conference. Yeah, yeah. Totally. Leave off the double S. Would it just be RO? I kind of like that actually, yeah. Yeah, 'cause everyone would call you around. Yeah. It's wrong. It's actually wrong. It's okay. Everybody does it. People do it all the time. And then when people talks about going raw, raw juicing, you can make a lot of jokes there. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, all right, I've got my stage persona all set. See, I came more prepared. Okay. I didn't know about this whole drama that's fun. I like texted you little pieces of it as it was increasing, and then by the time you looked at it, I had gone through the entire experience. You know what? Never mind. This is a bad idea. Sorry about are you? And then you're like, this is fun to read after. Yeah. Okay, so then I said, well, Ross. Now tickets to the college's life expo sound. So cheap. We gotta go because all our favorites are gonna be there and some people we wanna hear from you. Classics. Yeah. Yeah. So you bought your tickets first and sent me an email and so I thought, okay, well, carries going here. And I realized I just had too many things on my Saturday, so I said, I'm gonna cover Friday and I'm gonna cover Sunday. Okay. Now Friday was just like opening ceremony. There were some talks, but it was just kind of like the latter half of the day. I couldn't go because I was getting my marriage license. Fancy. Yeah, I'm getting married. That's a good excuse. So I bought just the day pass for Friday. So there's kind of multiple levels of sign ups that you can do. Sign up ability. Because like I said, they have multiple tracks and there's a grid of all of these different free talks going on in a various rooms and like at any given hour of the day, you could be in one of 8 different talks going on. Yeah. Or just out on the floor milling, buying crystals, buying stuff, higher water. Going over to the samosa house to get some Indian food. Which both of us would at some point is good. So you can get either a day pass and those are relatively cheap that lets you just go to any of the free talks. So for Friday, that was just $25. I could go to any of the free talks, but it's just half of the day. Right. Yeah. And then for Saturday, I think it was $30 and Sunday 35 or something like that. That sounds right. That's just kind of like general access. And I got tickets just for Saturday and Sunday since I couldn't be their Friday. So we're like, cool, we'll overlap one day. And then there are premium talks. So I go really fancy schmancy speakers. And if you want to go to one of those, those are $45 to add on. Yeah. You can't just go walk in on Linda Moulton Howe. Okay. Right. She's a pretty penny. Yeah. And so if you start racking up enough of those, like, well, I'm going to listen to this fancy speaker and I want to listen to this paid talk for $45. You might want to get the all access day pass. So I figured, you know what? Sunday, I'm just going to devote my whole day to being at the conscious life expo. From stem to stern and I'm going to buy the all access pass. That was a $165. Damn, okay. Yeah, but that means I'm just going to be traveling from premium talk to premium talking because I paid for it. Those high ticket items. Okay. Yeah, but that means I'm also going to miss a lot of stuff that looks really interesting. So because I can not split me at least I have a co host and we were able to attend quite a bit. And I was like, Ross, please, if you can. If you can, get there on Friday because I can't and my old dear friend. Kim Kimberly Meredith is giving a talk. I said, okay, my turn to go see Kimberly Meredith. Yeah, because you've never interacted with her. Nope. No? So for anybody who doesn't remember or hadn't joined us, I interviewed her. Probably like two years ago now. Yeah, it might be worth going back and listening to that if you haven't heard it. It's very special. It's one of my favorite interviews I've done in any context ever. Okay, so Kimberly Meredith is well many things, but she claims to be like a psychic healer. Medical medium. Yeah. The term she uses. Yeah. So it's all about healing and one thing that came up and carries interview is that she had often referred to herself as a nurse or having nursing credentials. Yes. Either currently being a nurse or having been a nurse in the past. I looked into that, not true. Yeah, she was kind of false. She's kind of nursing adjacent without actually being a nurse. She had worked in a hospital. And now she just nurses a grudge against Carrie for pointing that out. Yeah, the whole thing is quite eventful. It's quite an interview, but her big thing is that she had a near death experience that seemed to unlock some sort of ocular condition where she will suddenly blink very rapidly. And she interprets that as the Holy Spirit and her spirit guides talking to her through her blinks, such that she can use those blinks to see what is wrong with you in your body. That's right. All right, so let's get into it. When you show up at the conscious life expo, you paid for all your parking and everything, you walk into the lobby and yet not too many people wearing masks. Now yeah. I will say at least they did have a COVID policy. They highlighted on their website, proof of vaccination is not required, but when you do actually go in the doors and go to the registration desk, they're going to either want to see your vaccination card or a recent negative COVID test within the last two days. I think that's LA laws, isn't it?.

GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"kimberly" Discussed on GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"Kimberly and i will be discussing. Who's holding you accountable where we're going to get into self accountability so without further ado. Welcome kimberly yeah. Thank you so much for having me. I'm so excited. Thank you kimberly for being here on jams where you know. The mission is to educate inspire and motivate each. And when you think about holding you accountable what led you to starting your own business. I low key feel like this was something that i was called to do for many years now and it took me for ever to do it. So let me backtrack a little bit about twelve years ago. Yes well. I found that i worked in corporate america and i still do but i worked in corporate america and i was having conversations with Everyone you know regular people. I'm very social and what happened. Is that people kept telling me about their dreams and their stuff that they want to do with their lives and businesses and just so many things in my question in my response would always be will. Why not what's holding you back. What's stopping you. Why not and people would say well because they don't have the time or i don't have this. I don't have the capital. And almost every excuse under the book. And so i started to do the research create a program or create a path for them and then bring it back to work the next day and they'd be like oh you did all this i not i mean i'm showing you simple to do. Sometimes we think that it's a it's a lot harder to get things done and it's really not just you know step by step and so i basically just start working with Men and women particularly women and guiding them telling them. Hey this is your passion. This is what your dream is. Why don't we go for it wider before you rule it out and say it's not simple. It's not possible. Let's go for it. And that's how. I basically started becoming their accountability partner. Innocence and kind of trying to a business in the process. Nice so when you started out doing it where you just doing it because you really passionate about helping others and did you monetize it in the beginning. No i didn't monetize it. And quite frankly i probably should have but i didn't monetize it. It's almost like well. How do you charge. These co workers when they weren't making a lot right. I kind of knew the tea is. I was making light. So it's like you know. I didn't and then i kind of felt like it's your.

GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"kimberly" Discussed on GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"Still had to realize that there is a learning disability where retaining information and do college and do My years of study. I had to form my own but i had to raise and like you said i had to go through my journey to understand where this foundation come from and then how can i help myself. What skills do i need. That are the positive. Feel not the depression of the sleep all day. Not the one that Deal with the skill of Begging or forcing love or Trying to i love. This is not what it's supposed to be. Life is supposed to be like so this is where the epitome came due and It's pretty much the essence. The resilient whole package. More of timmy has made that title. I love that. Because as you were talking i see you light up. I see you glow and the reason. You're glowing is 'cause you're on your glow up and you're on your way up because you've found your voice you back the power you took the traumas that were meant to break you and you turn them into a breakthrough because yes it broke you. But you've made it through you. Took the resiliency the determination the perseverance. You've found your fi and you said even though i went to. Ptsd were they mislabeled it me as mental retardation. I overcame that label. Because at labeled did not define kimberly bell was. That label was just a placeholder. While once i knew who i was in who is i wasn't i really became into kimberly bell. Kimberly bell is up powerhouse but that powerhouse stemmed from what happened to kimmy when she was a little girl and her hashing took what happened to her and she took those stones etc that were thrown out her. Is she allowed. Those stones to pave her yellow brick road. She allowed those stones to build a bridge. As she got over the bull-crap she got over the hurt. She got over the lack. She got over running from relationships relationship. She got over from seeking validation in all the wrong places and she really determined. Kimberly is a woman. That is on a mission. Kimberly is a woman that has went through some messed up stuff but that messed up stuff is not going to define me or contain me kimberly. As a woman that went on to get her degrees and she's making it Imprint in the world to drive the impacts. and kimberly. I just wanna to tell you while you are here. I wanna give you your flowers while baked metaphorically speaking because you are a woman on initiatives and you are multifaceted multidimensional in had you not gone through what you went through. You wouldn't have the power to talk about it instead. Another young girl free said another woman free etc right so walk us through a bit of your journey on where you are now and how this book has helped.

GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"kimberly" Discussed on GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"I want you to talk about. How did you decide to name your book. The pit emmy of kimmy. And what did your rydin journey. The process look look like because obviously you went through a healing journey and you went through the processes and you talked about marriages that laurel so. Let's unpack that. Because i feel like in order to really understand who kimberly bell is. We need to understand some of the things that you went through because the things that you went through not just happen to you but it happens for you and now we see how some the messes messes were your message. Yes yeah and so when you said that the epitome how did i come up with the Pity me i came up with this As i had to revisit the journey from like you said the beginning. I had to and it really with the help over there because the whole time dealing with this book I had there. Sometimes i call. I i I had two sessions in the week out but would be breaking down crying and And so It took a lot of courage because My biological mother. And i do not have a relationship still to this day but i had takes that that this was not my outcome. Or because of the fact that i close the The door for relationship with something. I had except from her so But the journey Going with chapter Made me conclude the epitome. Because i kept finding the essence of what i was created from the berry. Getty As you were saying as a child Feeling like you were on wanted But yet was i. If wasn't not not again. But an understanding okay and accept all altruism are gifts you included and you were uniquely and beautifully made so i had to go and reveal that and accept that about me as you were saying when something's traumatically like that happens is always insecurity that i had to unfold and say this was nothing about me. That was wrong with me for this to happen. But i am different. And so i had to reveal and unfold the foundation and the hurt that the mild retardation. That misdiagnose was ptsd. But at that time in the seventy they didn't have the test they didn't have the pool to have that knowledge to really define what i was going to but still is The ptsd that happened and from Birth to five and being silent and and They abuse and the mental trauma I.

GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"kimberly" Discussed on GEMS with Genesis Amaris Kemp
"Welcome back to jams with genesis. Amar's temps with me. Today is kimberly bell. And here's a bit about kimberly. Kimberly and bill is a native of sows buried narrowly. It almost wanna have salisbury state. She holds two degrees one in human growth and development which is in the field of psychology and the other in theology. She has served on the ministerial staff of saint. James a. m. e. zaylon church incomplete completed four years of conference steadies cheese a passionate speaker and author of the epitome of kimmy except in embrace it all through her work. She uses her personal life struggles to inspire others to never give up hope and she provides insight into the realities stanley hidden beneath the surface of our society. She is also an advocate for mental health awareness. Which is something. we all need to take into consideration. She covers topics like physical mental emotional and sexual abuse as well as childhood abandonment. Ptsd which is post traumatic stress disorder in healing from trauma and without further. Do please welcome kimberly bell to jams. Hi how are you am doing. Well kimberly how are you. You have some amazing base doing great. Thank you so much. It's an honor to be on podcast with you today. Kimberly let's talk about your personal background. Which is your childhood and how that has helped you become the woman you are. Today it will make more sense. Why like to start off with this. Okay well I was five years old when I adopted.

How'd It Happen Podcast
"kimberly" Discussed on How'd It Happen Podcast
"Here's kimberly kane. Everybody welcome back to the show today. As you heard i've got kimberly came with me and we're doing a live podcast today. Which is always a treat to having done so many zooms over the last. I don't know it's getting to be a lot of months now. so kimberly. welcome to the show. Thanks mike and it is great to be here in person versus via zoom. What jumped at the chance..