35 Burst results for "Milton"

A highlight from Andrew Klavan (Encore Continued)

The Eric Metaxas Show

08:09 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Andrew Klavan (Encore Continued)

"Welcome to The Eric Metaxas Show with your host, Eric Metaxas. Hey there, folks. Welcome to the show. Today, we are actually doing something a little different. We've done it before. We are airing my conversation from Socrates in the City with the extraordinary Eric Metaxas Show. Andrew Klavan. One of the best ever. If you want more information, go to socratesinthecity .com. And now, here is that event. But in Paradise Lost, Milton is trying to show that there's a difference between rebelling against a king, which he had done. He had endorsed the beheading of Charles I and had to run for his life after Charles II came in. And he was trying to show that Paradise Lost is his attempt to show the difference between that and rebelling against God, which is rebelling against goodness and creation. And so that idea, well, how do we now rebel against kings and rebel against the church and yet not rebel against God, was where Wordsworth and Coleridge kind of started without even knowing it. They didn't know they were doing this. I mean, Coleridge might have. He was so brilliant. But they wrote this book called Lyrical Ballads, which transformed English poetry. And it's a book in which they sort of say, we're going to show how the imagination in collaboration with reality transforms and enchants reality and how it brings even the smallest of people nobility. And they basically reinvented this Christian ethos through nature, through looking at nature, which they didn't, like I said, Coleridge knew he was doing it, but Wordsworth, I'm not sure, actually understood. Wordsworth ended his life as a Christian, but it took him a long time to come there. And they sort of passed this journey on to John Keats, who was the greatest English poet since Shakespeare. He lived 25 years. He had about one month, about six weeks of writing some of the greatest poetry that has ever been written and then got tuberculosis and died. And this period of great creativity, I just want to say this one thing because it's so fascinating to me. His brother had died of tuberculosis. His was poetry getting terrible reviews. He was poor. He had a cough. He's probably starting to think, oh my God, I'm getting tuberculosis. He's absolutely depressed. He can't write. He's taking a walk in Hampstead Heath, and he looks up, and who's coming toward him? Coleridge. And Coleridge takes him on a 40 -minute walk during which Coleridge never shuts up. He just talks ceaselessly, and suddenly this poetry comes pouring out of Keats, Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode on a Nightingale, Ode to Autumn, the greatest poetry since Shakespeare. And then he dies. And the poetry is about, almost all of it is about, okay, there is this beautiful eternal thing out there, and here am I in this world of death and pain. How do I cross the barrier? And he tries to do it through art, through the Grecian Urn. He tries to do it through the imagination, and he can't quite do it. And one day it just happens to him in his Ode to Autumn. He just writes this perfect poem where the observer and the scene meld into one. And he doesn't know it's Christianity, but that's what it is. I wonder, I constantly wonder, what if he had lived another 25 years? What would he have seen? He understood that the soul was immortal. He understood he's the one who said beauty is truth and truth is beauty, which can only make sense if that beauty is connecting us to something beyond ourselves. That's the only way that makes sense. And I just don't know what would have happened to him, but he didn't live, and basically the romantics fail. They kind of fade away, and this materialism that rules our lives now, where we think like, oh, you feel like a man? Well, we'll cut your body into a man costume and you'll be a man. And at the same time, you say, well, I feel this is immoral. You'll say, no, you're wrong. Follow the signs. Well, actually, that's the link, right? In other words, maybe I'm oversimplifying the romantics and the whole period, but what happened is feelings became paramount so that reality becomes subjective and whatever I feel is it. Well, it's a weird binary because the idea is the basic, if you boil theism down to its most basic idea, it's that matter has meaning. If I torture a child, that's bad. It's not bad because we all agree it's bad. If everybody in the world said it was great, it would still be bad. That's the idea that there is a supernatural, something above the nature. If that's gone, then not only do your feelings mean everything, your feelings also mean nothing, and that's where you get this kind of confusion from the left. Yes, if you feel like a woman, I can cut up your body and you'll be a woman, but if you say cutting up someone's body to make them a woman is wrong, so it's just your subjective feeling. That doesn't mean anything. So it's this kind of double paradox where your feelings become everything, but they are nothing. Well, that's the problem with that thing we call reality, right? I mean, it's kind of like it's a stacked deck. God created reality, and if you can convert people to reality, they will be led to him if they're gonna be intellectually consistent. Okay, so one of the things that I just loved about this book, and there's so many things, but you bring these figures to life. When you describe Coleridge and Keats and all of them, and I realize that's something that also had fallen out of fashion by the time that I was in college in the 80s, where we didn't seem to care about these figures as figures, and you sort of, you bring them to life, so in some ways, it's not a novel, but there are a lot of fun stories in this book about amazing, crazy, brilliant people trying to work these things out in their lives and in their art. Well, if you think about it, Britain is an island the size of Oregon, and on it in this one generation, or it's two generations, but it's the same time, is Coleridge, Wordsworth, Blake, Shelley, Keats, and Byron, the six greatest poets in the English language besides Shakespeare and Milton, are all living together on this island, and so they're all nuts, because they're poets, right? They're wild men, they're falling apart half the time. Coleridge is an absolute ruin of a human being. Byron is screwing everybody, male or female, he can get his hands on. Shelley wants to be doing that, but isn't quite, and then, and one of the people that I deal with is Mary Shelley. One of my favorite chapters in the book is on Frankenstein, because here's Mary Shelley who adores Shelley. She adores this man she's run off with. He's left his wife, and she's run off with him, and she adored and worshiped her father, and now she adores and worships Shelley, and he's basically treating her, as Byron and Shelley treated all the women they came in contact with, he's basically treating her like crap, and he believes in free love, and he doesn't know why she's so depressed when her children die. He's depressed that she's not paying attention to him, and she writes this book, Frankenstein, where she says it's about a man who tries to steal God's thunder by creating life, but I point out that we all create, people create life. We create life of the things that we have. What Frankenstein, what Dr. Frankenstein does is he creates life without a woman, and her nightmare is essentially the nightmare of femininity, the female aspect of life, and femininity and womanhood becoming obsolete, and if you follow, she invents, in that moment, she invents science fiction. She really invents the modern genre of science fiction, and if you follow science fiction, so much of it is about that.

Mary Shelley John Keats Coleridge Wordsworth Byron Andrew Klavan 25 Years Milton Shelley 40 -Minute Oregon Today Charles I Socratesinthecity .Com. Two Generations One Generation Blake Hampstead Heath Charles Ii Six Greatest Poets
A highlight from Evangelism Pt. 2

Evangelism on SermonAudio

04:58 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Evangelism Pt. 2

"Yeah, it's forgot It has the four points of that gospel presentation that I talked about last week being God man Christ and response And today I'm going to be kind of building on that. Well, I am going to be building on it So that's why I gave that handout and on that handout are also some verse references Just in case you guys want to use this as like a reference sheet or something. It could be something that's very useful in the future And also then I just want to mention that there's two books really one book that were really helpful for me Originally as I was kind of trying to grow in my faith and then now again as I was trying to prepare this lesson One of them is called. What is the gospel by Greg Gilbert? It's like 120 pages and it's actually I didn't bring it but it's about this big so it's 120 pages, but they're small So it's a pretty easy read and then the other one is more of a devotional book It's called a gospel primer from Milton Vincent and that's been something that's been really helpful with me, too So I know I already mentioned this but last week I had summarized the gospel message and I had broken it up into four parts That was God man Christ and man's response. I Didn't really go into too much detail about why each point is important or give the verses to support each point But this week I really want to take the time to focus on each part With with some of the verses that support it and explain why each piece of it is important like I mentioned last week the gospel is the message that God has entrusted us with and it is not a Responsibility that we should be taking lightly. This is shown. We'll read it again in Galatians chapter 8 chapter 1 verses 8 & 9 But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary Contrary to the one we preach to you Let him be accursed as we have said before so now I say again if anyone is preaching to you a gospel Contrary to the one you received let him be accursed So the first part the first part of that four -point gospel message is God So today especially here in the Northeast there are a lot of people who either have no understanding of God They have a wrong understanding of God or they just denied the existence of God entirely So most people today when you talk to them about God, you're gonna get probably one of four different responses The first is that God is love and because of that he's not going to judge anyone for their actions The second might be along the lines of that God is angry and he doesn't care about his creation anymore and they'll talk about things like natural disasters and cancer And the third is going to be a denial of God entirely Which would be an atheist or the last response might be that they do believe in a God with a lowercase G And that's either another religion or maybe aliens or something So since God is the beginning point and the foundation of the gospel of the gospel There are some key things that we need to be able to explain the study of who God is and knowing about his attributes and really having a Relationship with him is something that takes an entire lifetime to do and it is something that we're never going to be able to fully understand However, there are certain points and certain basic things that we should be able to comprehend and be able to explain So the first the first part of that is that God is the Creator The creation narrative is something that unfortunately even today is challenged within churches and by Christians For example there are some people who believe that God kind of set things in order and then he kind of just took his hands off things and evolution took over from that point forward an Atheist or a non -believer would be a person who says that God had absolutely no involvement in creation whatsoever So to say that God had no or very limited involvement in creation would be to say that the creation does not belong to God to Yeah, the verses or passages that support this point about God being the Creator are verses that I think we're all familiar with and that Will be in Genesis chapter 1 verses 1 and then 26 and 27 so Genesis 1 1 reads in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth and Genesis 1 26 and 27 is when God created man and it says then God said let us make man in our image According to our likeness and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea over the birds of the air and Over the cattle over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth So God created man in his own image in the image of God he created he created him male and female he created them So because God is a creator this means two things First is that there is a purpose for everything that has been created and nothing just exists by random chance or for absolutely no purpose The second is that because God is the Creator he has ownership over his creation This ownership means two things.

Greg Gilbert Two Books Last Week 120 Pages Each Piece Each Point Each Part First One Book Third This Week Galatians ONE First Part Milton Vincent Four Parts Four -Point Today Two Things
A highlight from Thomas Howard (Encore Continued)

The Eric Metaxas Show

08:36 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from Thomas Howard (Encore Continued)

"Did you ever hear the expression, if life gives you lemons, make lemonade? Well, when Eric Metaxas was little, he had his own lemonade stand. And he sold so much lemonade, he became rich beyond his wildest dreams. Now he's able to do whatever he wants, and he's now the host of a big -time radio show. Welcome the guy who's oh so lemony sweet, Eric Metaxas! I am right now going to air an interview I did with my friend Tom Howard about one of the best books I have ever read in my life. It's called Chance of the Dance. He wrote it, and this is my Socrates in the City conversation with the great Tom Howard at his home. Do not miss it. Welcome to another Socrates in the City event here at the home of Thomas Howard, the great author and, I'm happy to say, my dear friend. He has written many books. In part one of this Socrates in the City interview with him, we talked principally about his book, Chance of the Dance, which I could rave and rave about and typically do. hour, In this I want to talk to him about lots of other things. My conversations with him over the years have been so fascinating that I really just wanted to share some of that with my Socrates in the City audience so that you could also get a taste of Tom and of his mind and be intrigued to want to read his books. So we're here without a studio audience. You're the audience, and so hold your applause. But I do have to say that it means so much to me that Tom and his dear wife Loveless have led us into their home with all these cameras and microphones and things, but it's a privilege for me, and I hope you'll enjoy it nearly as much as I do, so stay tuned. Tom, let me start with this in the second part of our conversation. You know that I love you, and I can say that to you because you have an understanding of that word. My understanding of that word comes from things I've read by you and C .S. Lewis. But you know that I love you, and it's such a joy to be with you that, as I think I said before, I could almost talk to you about anything because I enjoy talking to you. That's mutual, I have to say. I hope that doesn't embarrass you too much. But I revel in you and your emails and your letters and things. And actually, maybe a good place to start would be, we were talking before about your relationship with Lewis, and I asked you whether you'd kept any of the correspondence with him, and you said you thought it was in the Wade Center at Wheaton College, and you were at least slightly incorrect because in the other room, I just happened to find a framed letter from C .S. Lewis to Tom Howard. I think you're the Tom Howard in the letter. Dear Mr. Howard, Maudlin College, Cambridge. Oh, Cambridge, this was in 1958. He said both. And when I read this to you earlier, you almost memorized it. I just can't believe, first of all, his handwriting. What the heck? Amazing. It's beautiful. Right? Legible. It's legible. Dear Mr. Howard, oh, but believe me, you are still only paddling in the glorious sea of Tolkien. Go in for the hobbit at once. Go on from the hobbit. Go on from the hobbit at once to the Lord of the Rings. Semicolon. Three volumes and nearly as long as the Bible, but not a word too long. Three volumes and nearly as long as the Bible and not a word too long, parentheses, except for the first chapter. Which is a botch. Which is a botch. Don't be put off by it. This is hilarious. Is this in Walter Hooper's volumes of his letter in there? I don't know. I mean, the idea that, it's just delicious, that Lewis is calling the first chapter of Lord of the Rings a botch. A botch. But he loves the rest of it as much as anything. Then he says, the hobbit is merely a fragment of his myth, detached and adapted for children. And losing much by the adaptation. And losing much by the adaptation. The Lord of the Rings is the real stuff. Thanks for all the nice things you say about my own little efforts. Little efforts. Yours sincerely, C .S. Lewis. This is, how much can I pay you for this? Would you take, would you take a, no? What do you say? That's, I mean, you, look, I neglected to say this in the first hour. You taught at Gordon College for a long time. So you were a professor at the college level for a long time. And maybe I assume people know that, but many wouldn't. You taught English literature. Did you teach Tolkien? The English syllabus, I had to follow it. And I'm not sure that I ever actually did formally get the section, which I would have loved. But isn't it because when you were teaching college, maybe they wouldn't have thought of Tolkien as being worthy yet of being part of the canon. Yeah, I'm not sure. Right? I mean, that's my guess. Maybe they even think of Lewis as being worthy of being part of the canon. Even in a Christian college like Gordon. But I think I could have made it worthy of the canon. I mean, I think they would have, you know, eaten up if you really unpack what the Lord of the Rings is all about. Well, okay, then what is the Lord of the Rings all about? Is this where I get to admit that I've not read it? Yes, but you can still get into heaven, possibly. I've read Chance of the Dance many times. Just by being Eric, yeah. So what is the fascinating, I mean, there are many people that rave and rave about Tolkien. And there are many people that are unaware of Tolkien. I've heard people rave about him. I feel like I know lots about him. I know that he was instrumental in leading C .S. Lewis to faith in Jesus, which is an outrageous and amazing thing. But what is it about Tolkien for you? Well, I think he does an almost incredible job, piece of work, by opening out for us deprived, benighted moderns. Opening out the world of myth, of saga, of the ancient glory of narrative. I think that's what, you know, his work is, I would suspect, is unique in the modern epoch. Yeah. I am struck, very struck, by reading this letter, the way Lewis writes about the Lord of the Rings. I confess that I wasn't aware of his admiration for it at that level. Yeah, yeah. What do you think it is about Tolkien that Lewis so loved and admired? I think it's a tribute to Tolkien's own capacity of soul to see and love magnificence, which one is drawn into in the saga of the Lord of the Rings. Do you remember when you read the so -called space trilogy, when you read those books? You mean Lewis's... Lewis's The Anselm and the Paralandra and That Hideous Strength? It must have been while I was still in school. I'm not sure whether I had gone on to college by that time. I was a slow starter. Yeah. I often think that Paralandra is maybe Lewis's best book. I've never heard anyone share my opinion, but I think that well of it. Well, I couldn't disagree with you. I mean, it's a terribly hard choice, you know. What's Lewis's best word? Right. Well, there are passages toward the end of Paralandra which are just flights of beautiful language like I've never read. I mean, people crave about Gabriel Garcia Marquez or, you know, I've never read anything better than some of the passages there. But even the idea behind Paralandra, I mean, I think of it as I assume you taught Milton over the years. Yes, yes. So I think of Paralandra as his response to Paradise Lost and it ought to be taught in classes. In tandem with that, yeah.

Tom Howard Eric Metaxas TOM 1958 Lewis Walter Hooper First Chapter Second Part Three Volumes Howard Eric Paradise Lost Both C .S. Lewis First Hour Bible Jesus That Hideous Strength Gabriel Garcia Marquez Maudlin College
Milton Friedman: How the Government Spends Other People's Money

The Dan Bongino Show

01:58 min | 3 months ago

Milton Friedman: How the Government Spends Other People's Money

"Their own prosperity I want you to listen to this this is the greatest explanation of why government is just too stupid to spend people's money check this out well you know you can spend your own money on yourself and when you spend your own money on yourself you're very careful of what you spend it on and you make sure that you get the most for your daughter you can spend your own money on somebody else you give gifts to other people you take people out to dinner when you spend your own money on somebody else you're very careful that you don't spend too much you try to keep down the amount you spend but you don't worry very much about what the other fellow is getting from it you don't pay anything like as much attention to the gifts you you buy for other people as to the things you buy for yourself or you can spend somebody else's money as when you're spending the government's money i say the government's money the taxpayer's money which the government has control over now spending you're somebody else's money let's say you're spending your boss's money you're out to lunch on a expense account but you're spending it on yourself you're very careful that you get good things for your money you try to go to lunch and pick the right things but you're not very much worried about whether you get the cheapest...spent all you want...spent all you want you'll be careless now what happens when you spend somebody else's money on somebody else you're a distributor of welfare funds well you're interested in making your own life as good as you can and most people have humane instincts and want to do the best they can but you're not going to be anything like as careful in spending somebody else's money on somebody else so there are four ways in which you can spend money here's another reason that's just genius someone in the chat there thinks it's uh too complicated it's not too complicated the essence and the beauty of what he just said is its lack of complication why shouldn't we give the government any additional money than it needs to fulfill basic

Four
Milton Friedman's Wise Comparison: Inflation Is Like Alcoholism

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:28 min | 5 months ago

Milton Friedman's Wise Comparison: Inflation Is Like Alcoholism

"Let's play cut 39. Great wisdom from the legendary Milton Friedman played up 39. Inflation is just like alcoholism. In both cases, when you start drinking, or when you start printing too much money. The good effects come first. The bad effects only come later. That's why in both cases, there's a strong temptation to overdo it. To drink too much and to print too much money. When it comes to the cure it's the other way around. When you stop drinking, or when you stop printing money, the bad effects come first. And the good effects only come later. That's why it's so hard to persist with the cure. Why is the west been so great? A lot of reasons. One of them is delayed gratification. We used to be a civilization in a country that believed and delayed gratification, delayed gratification from how we ate, to our exercise, and how we raised our children, to how we invested, to yes, even how we appropriated money via public policy decisions. Delayed gratification is all about leaving the next generation better off. But the temptation to retire. Delayed gratification as a core value was irresistible. The leaders in the early 1990s primarily led by baby boomers, and I know I'm gonna get a lot of emails about this. I'm not blaming every baby boomer, but this is a generational fact, okay? There was a decision made in the early 1990s to retire delayed gratification and prioritize instant gratification. And it was hard to resist that temptation. The guard was dropped after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The 90s was the tech boom. It was roaring. It was the best time to be in America. The stock market just kept on going up, wealth kept on getting created. It seemed like it seemed like boom times was going on forever. Delayed gratification when it said, hold on a second. We're not going to engage in mala investment or relaxing monetary standards. And everything changed after 9 11. And again, I'm not blaming every member of the baby boomer generation, just so happens every person who made these decisions were largely baby boomers in power. And 2001, 9 11, 2001, and the Rubicon began to get crossed.

America 2001 Milton Friedman Both Cases First Early 1990S 9 11, 2001 90S 9 11 One Of Them Berlin Wall Much Second 39 Rubicon
Speaker McCarthy: Biden Wants to Spend More Money Than During COVID

Mark Levin

01:51 min | 5 months ago

Speaker McCarthy: Biden Wants to Spend More Money Than During COVID

"In a mister speaker there are already trying to set up you and your fellow Republicans for a fall here Schumer is already saying you won't deal So in other words they lie through their teeth they're very good at it They are given voice by the corrupt media you know they're going to just try and turn the tables Anything you propose they'll say oh the little guy is going to get hurt and so forth and so on They have run this government for years now several Two or three anyway And the situation ran is thanks to them Do you think you're going to have a united front where people can go out and talk to the media talk to their constituents Because this is going to need to be done This has to be we need all the voices out there because if we do nothing in the next ten years we'll pay 10.5 trillion just in interest But put that in perspective since 1940 until today we've only paid 9 trillion in interest in 83 years The bill problem here is not the revenue We're at our highest point of GDP 20% of GDP we're bringing in a revenue to 50 year average only 17 The problem is the expenditures He's moved it up Normally spend 21% of GDP he's at 23.6 going to 25 He wants to spend more money next year than we did at the height of the pandemic He added 6 trillion and that's not counting what he did during COVID That's what brought his inflation We've got an unstable world where our allies are running to China If you want to become less dependent on China we've got to curb this spending We got to bring the jobs back to America grow If you want to curve inflation you got to spend less Remember what Milton Freeman said My favorite it's only Washington that can create inflation And that's what they've done

10.5 Trillion 21% 6 Trillion Schumer 9 Trillion 20% 23.6 Next Year 50 Year Milton Freeman 25 TWO 83 Years Three 17 Today China 1940 Pandemic Covid
A Look Back at the Federal Reserve's Coffers

Crypto Voices

02:12 min | 6 months ago

A Look Back at the Federal Reserve's Coffers

"I left off the last video, we started to talk about compound annual growth. What does it really mean? The Federal Reserve, when it opened its doors in 1914. They had 300 million or so. Dollars in total assets at the time, they did jump to a billion plus pretty soon after that after World War I and as World War I was ending. And then you go all the way out here a 108 nearly a 109 years out. And you see that as of last week's balance sheet 8.7 three $1 trillion, remember a thousand billion is a $1 trillion. How do we compare those numbers? Over such a long time frame. One way is to look at it on log scale, which we are doing, and we can start to see trends. We can see when it's gone up, down, just with our eyes. But there is, of course, a more scientific statistical way to look at this using trendlines is one, as well as percentile bands around the trendline, which I showed last video. But we can also measure the trendlines at different epochs, different periods. From here, obviously, in the Federal Reserve themselves have kind of said this, as I mentioned in the last video, Ben Bernanke told Milton Friedman that he thought they didn't do enough during The Great Depression he would never make that mistake. Again, he told Milton Friedman in the end of the 90s. Of course he did not make that mistake. He followed through with his word on certainly doing things. Once the markets were in trouble. Nonetheless, yes, the Federal Reserve balance sheet did plump here at the end of World War I. It pumped at the end of World War II. But still, we look at this period, what's called the great moderation, and then of course we have the global financial crisis, which it just goes, haywire. Trillions and trillions of dollars were printed. Again, it's not completely technically correct to say that the Federal Reserve's balance sheet equals the printing press. It's very close, but you have to look at the liability side.

Ben Bernanke $1 Trillion 1914 World War I Last Week 300 Million Milton Friedman Federal Reserve World War I. 108 World War Ii. One Way 8.7 Three $1 Trillion Trillions Of Dollars The Great Depression End Of The 90S Thousand Billion Trillions And ONE A Billion
"milton" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

03:12 min | 7 months ago

"milton" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"To the podcast, this is Milton Friedman, explaining why government spending. Won't work, government spending money on people, won't work because it can't work because there's no incentive for it to work. Because the people spending other people's money on other people, which is government, they take your money and give it to other people. Have no incentive to care about anything. They don't care about the cost of what they're buying because they're not buying it for themselves. And it's not their money. And they don't care about care about the quality of what they're buying either because they're not even buying it for themselves. Listen to this. Well, you know, you can spend your own money on yourself. And when you spend your own money on yourself, you're very careful of what you spend it on and you make sure that you get the most free your daughter. You can spend your own money on somebody else. You'll give gifts to other people. You take people out to dinner. And when you spend your own money on somebody else, you're very careful that you don't spend too much. You try to keep down the amount you spend. But you don't worry very much about what the other fellow is getting from it. You don't pay anything like as much attention to the gifts you buy for other people. As to the things you buy for yourself. Or you can spend somebody else's money, as when you're spending the government's money. I say the government's money is a taxpayer's money, which the government has control of. Now you're spending somebody else's money. Let's say you're spending your boss's money. You're out to lunch on a expense account, but you're spending it on yourselves. You're very careful that you get good things for your money. You try to have a good lunch and pick the right things. But you're not very much worried about whether you get the cheapest. Spend all you want. You'll be careless. Now, what happens when you spend somebody else's money on somebody else? You're distributor of welfare funds. Well, your interest didn't making your own life as good as you can. And most people have humane instincts and want to do the best, but you're not going to be anything like as careful in spending somebody else's money. On somebody else. So there are four ways in which you can spend money. It's not the government spending won't work, folks, it's that it can't work. It is incapable of working. By simple rules of logic, that's why we limit it to areas of mass consensus where there's no sensible alternative. Military, you can't have a private military. I mean, you could, but the potential for disasters high. You also probably don't want a set of privately run courts because some of the incentives could be destructive there too. So we reserved disastrous government spending bound to fail for areas where there's really no other plausible option. But that's not our government now. Government does everything. It buys mill, farmland, baby formula, governments your retirement system. It's your healthcare system. That's why it's destroying everyone's life and taking the country down with it. I got more on this, including some really tough numbers to digest on a program. Many of you rely on. Coming up next we'll be right back.

Milton Friedman government
Andrew Klavan Discusses 'The Truth and Beauty'

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:21 min | 9 months ago

Andrew Klavan Discusses 'The Truth and Beauty'

"Things that I just loved about this book, and there's so many things. But you bring these figures to life. When you describe coleridge and keats and all of them. And I realized that's something that also had fallen out of fashion by the time that I was in college. In the 80s, where we didn't seem to care about these figures as figures. And you sort of you bring them to life. So in some ways, it's not a novel, but there are a lot of fun stories in this book about amazing, crazy, brilliant people trying to work these things out in their lives and in their art. But if you think about it, Britain is an island the size of Oregon. And on it in this one generation, or it's two generations of the same time, is coleridge, wordsworth, Blake, Shelley, keats and Byron. The 6th greatest poets in the English language besides Shakespeare and Milton are all living together on this island. And so they're all nuts because they're poets. They're wild men. They're falling apart half the time. Coleridge is an absolute ruin of a human being. Byron has screwing everybody male or female, he can get his hands on. Shelly wants to be doing that. But isn't quite. And then, and one of the people that I deal with is Mary Shelley, one of my favorite chapters in the book is on Frankenstein because Mary Shelley adores Shelley. She adores this man she's run off with his left his wife and she's run off with them. And she adored and worshiped her father and now she adores and worship Shelley. And he's basically treating her as Byron and Shelley treated all the women they came in. He was basically like crap. And he believes in free love and he doesn't know why she's so depressed when her children die. He's depressed. She's not paying attention to him. And she writes this book, Frankenstein, where she says it's about a man who tries to steal God's thunder by creating life. But I point out that we all create people create life. We create life of the things that we have. What Frankenstein, what doctor Frankenstein does is increase life without a woman. And her nightmare is essentially the nightmare of femininity, the female aspect of life and femininity and womanhood, becoming obsolete.

Coleridge Keats Shelley Byron Mary Shelley Frankenstein Wordsworth Blake Milton Shakespeare Britain Oregon Shelly
The Socrates in the City Event Featuring Andrew Klavan

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:15 min | 9 months ago

The Socrates in the City Event Featuring Andrew Klavan

"Are airing my conversation from Socrates in the city with the extraordinary Andrew clavin. One of the best ever, if you want more information, go to Socrates in the city dot com. And now, here is that event. But in Paradise lost, Milton is trying to show that there's a difference between rebelling against a king, which he had done. He had endorsed the beheading of Charles the first and had to run for his life after Charles the second came in, and he was trying to show the Paradise lost as his attempt to show the difference between that and rebelling against God, which is rebelling against goodness and creation. And so that idea, how do we now rebel against kings and rebel against the church and yet not rebel against God was where wordsworth and coleridge kind of started without even knowing it. They didn't know they were doing this. He was so brilliant. But they wrote this book called lyrical ballads, which transformed English poetry. And it's a book in which they sort of say, we're going to show how the imagination in collaboration with reality transforms and enchants reality and how it brings even the smallest of people, nobility. And they basically reinvented this Christian ethos through nature through looking at nature, which they didn't, like I said, Colbert knew he was doing it, but words were, I'm not sure actually understood words with ended his life as a Christian. But it took him a long time to come there. And they sort of passed this journey on to John Keats, who was the greatest English poets and Shakespeare. He lived 25 years, he had about one month about 6 weeks of writing some of the greatest poetry that has ever been written and then got tuberculosis and died. And this period of great creativity. I just want to say there's one thing because it's so fascinating to me. His brother had died of tuberculosis, his poetry was getting terrible reviews. He was poor. He had a coffee. He started to think, oh my God, I'm getting tuberculosis. He's absolutely depressed. He can't write. He's taking a walk in Hampton heath, and he looks up and who's coming toward him coleridge.

Andrew Clavin Charles Socrates Milton Coleridge Wordsworth Colbert Tuberculosis John Keats Shakespeare Hampton Heath
Ludwig Von Mises: The Philosophy of Today

Mark Levin

02:00 min | 10 months ago

Ludwig Von Mises: The Philosophy of Today

"Ludwig van mises who's Ludwig von mises He's from what they call the Austrian school of economics What's that It's essentially libertarianism He was a genius Frederick haig and he were close friends Milton Friedman and the other two were very good friends so forth And they had an enormous influence on Walter Williams and Tom sol and Bill Buckley Among others And one of the things he wrote In his book Marxism on mass from delusion to destruction In 2006 he said the philosophy of today is that of Karl Marx He is the most powerful personality of our age Karl Marx and the idea of Karl Marx ideas which he did not invent develop or improve but which he combined into a system are widely accepted today even by many who emphatically declare That they are anti communist and anti Marxist Even by many who emphatically declare That they are anti communist and at time marxists To considerable extent without knowing it many people are philosophical marxists Although they use different names for their philosophical ideas What's he talking about there He's talking about people who embrace various degrees of classism of centralism of redistribution and ultimately in the end are not pure marxists But people who embrace the fundamental ideas of Marxism

Ludwig Van Mises Karl Marx Frederick Haig Tom Sol Austrian School Of Economics Ludwig Von Mises Walter Williams Bill Buckley Milton Friedman
"milton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:34 min | 1 year ago

"milton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Relationship with the company like now? This is a very key point. It is Trevor Milton that is on trial not Nicola. Nikola has carried on and become frankly a pretty boring, normal truck company that makes battery electric. Semi trucks and in the future hopes to make fuel cell semi trucks among as well as hydrogen infrastructure. Now Milton is the single biggest individual shareholder in Nicholas still, but he holds no company responsibilities, no company titles. He's no longer on the board. The company I read has spent more than 20 million on his legal defense. Are they still footing the bill for his defense? Well, we know that the amount is 20 million from the legal and regulatory filings that Nikola has made. Each of the most recent quarterly earnings has disclosed that it is continued to pay the legal fees for Trevor Milton. What I would say in addition to that is that the $125 million civil penalty, Nicola started making payments on that in February and they have always maintained that they would pursue mister Milton for reimbursement at that $125 million civil penalty even though they continue to pay his legal fees for this case on an ongoing basis. That case will be very interesting too. Thanks so much, Ed. That's Bloomberg's Ed ludlow. Coming up next. When lawyers lie why the First Amendment doesn't protect them. I'm June gros when you're listening to Bloomberg

Trevor Milton Nikola Nicola Milton Nicholas mister Milton Ed ludlow Bloomberg Ed gros
"milton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:41 min | 1 year ago

"milton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"11 ceremonies today, President Biden says the U.S. one hesitate to use military power against terror threats. First Lady Jill Biden, attending a ceremony for flight 93 in shanksville, Pennsylvania at a New York commemorations for the thousands who died in the World Trade Center attack. By the hundreds people are flooding to green park on the grounds of Buckingham Palace to bring flowers in memory of Queen Elizabeth, the funeral for the queen will be a week from tomorrow. Russian defenses are crumbling in some places as Ukraine retakes key territory in the northeast, although details are still sketchy. An authorities in Xinjiang apologizing for shortages of food and medicine as a COVID lockdown there continues. The government issuing a video recording, promising to rectify the situation the number of COVID cases there does appear to be falling. Global news 24 hours a day on earth on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than a 120 countries. In the newsroom I'm Denise Pellegrini. This is Bloomberg. Denise, thanks very much. The time here coming up on ten minutes before the top of the hour. Well, let's take a look at the media here, the outside media. The nikkei is running a story saying that Japan is making some arrangements to end its daily limit on arrivals from overseas, and we'll do so by October. The paper says that Japan will consider removing other barriers to foreign tourism at the same time. The removal of the 50,000 people per day cap alone won't return Japan's borders to its openness pre COVID, but it will get a lot more tourists in. From Dow Jones, Trevor Milton, the Nikola founder, faces a securities fraud trial that begins this week. And you will face allegations that he lied about his company's development of environmentally friendly technology. Milton enticed auto industry leaders and investors with his promise for a revolution in electric trucks. Federal prosecutors accuse him of running a scheme to enrich himself and boost his stature as an entrepreneur. They say he falsely hyped Nicholas prospects and duped investors, especially first timers to stock market trading. And from the FT, China has doled out tens of billions of dollars in secretive emergency loans to countries who have been at risk of financial crises in recent years. The story says that Beijing has become a formidable competitor to the western led IMF. The bailouts represent a pivot from the huge infrastructure loans that China has given out over the built in road initiative. And a final quick note, the Bank of England has delayed its next interest rate decision a week to September 22nd, and this is to allow a period of mourning after the death of her majesty, the Queen Elizabeth II. All right, the time is 9 minutes before the top of the arm, that's the media Rashad. All right, well, let's get a regular look at what's been going on in the world of these exchange traded funds and who better to do that with Eric bell Tunis ETF analyst for Bloomberg intelligence. Eric, how was the week that was and how is the week that follows likely to be? Yeah, well, I don't professor to the future, but I will say, I'm sensing a trend this year, which is sell the rip is the new buy the dip. Every time the market has a nice little run, typically kind of goes back down. I think people are recognizing that is going to continue to hike. And so I think this sort of dark cloud over the market and the flow show that over the past week 15 money going to treasuries. And we've seen overall money come out of ETFs. Normally that's a bad sign. Typically, we had a nice run there in August where there was some risk on each taking inflows. But then it sort of turned. And another is that the inverse ETFs are now trading more than the leverage song ETFs. And that hasn't happened in like 8 years. That tells me that there's more interest in things like sqq, then TQ Q, people are definitely piling in more to buy those inverse and trade those inverse funds. That's definitely showing a short bias in the market as well. I've seen among companies of late more of these new kinds of CFOs, chief future officer, chief futurist offer. And you point out that arc has announced one, but you say that this might mean that this particular role or person could become the heir apparent. Yeah, so a lot of times Kathy gets asked, look, everybody loves you. But what if you leave? And she's, I believe in her 60s, although you need plans to leave. But it's a question she gets. So she has promoted Brett winton to chief futurist. He was director of research. So in my opinion, knowing that company, I believe he would be the sort of heir apparent down the road. So that's one thing. The other thing is arc really is selling the future. I think it's smarter than themselves with the word future. Because they're not selling fundamental stock analysis, clearly. What they're selling is, hey, all this stuff may change 5, ten years down the road. And we have stocks that we believe will benefit from it. So we sort of live in the future. So I think it's smart of them to own that brand of being it literally trying to live in the future. So I'm not surprised by this. Definitely knew title. I have a friend actually at this shop that verify, who is also a futurist. So it's not the first time I've heard it, maybe we'll hear more of this, but I thought those are the two takeaways from that decision I thought. All right, you know, slightly more a bit less soft as a story. What about the Federal Reserve? And what does that actually do for active fund managers? Yes. So the fed is really, one of the big victims of the fed's

President Biden Lady Jill Biden shanksville Denise Pellegrini Japan Bloomberg Trevor Milton green park Buckingham Palace Xinjiang Eric bell Tunis ETF Bloomberg intelligence World Trade Center Queen Elizabeth Nikola Ukraine Denise China Pennsylvania Dow Jones
Franklin D. Roosevelt Was an American Dictator

Mark Levin

01:08 min | 1 year ago

Franklin D. Roosevelt Was an American Dictator

"Now the great Milton Freeman explained many times over and deposited in my view That it was monetary policy that took us from a bad recession under Hoover and moved us from the depression that went on for ten years on needlessly But it was an opportunity for the American marxists to vastly expand the power of the central government and to do grave damage to our constitutional order His name is FDR FDR in many ways was an American dictator The way I use the IRS the way I use the FBI The way he centered information and on and on and on But they loved him because he was a radical lefty And we also had a war going on certainly starting in 1941 And so he got a pass on many things He's not rated Is one of our great presidents certainly not by me

Milton Freeman Hoover Depression IRS FBI
Mark Levin Recalls the First Time Meeting Mark Meckler

Mark Levin

01:38 min | 1 year ago

Mark Levin Recalls the First Time Meeting Mark Meckler

"And so when you hear these state senators in this case in South Dakota saying I'm concerned about it That means they're not textualists That means they're not originalists There's nothing to be afraid of Milton Freeman said this was really the only way to fix things even Dwight Eisenhower looked at it and said this was probably the only way to fix things It many you older people like me You know who he pointed to it And as a matter of fact James Madison pointed to it as a way to trying to avoid what would become the Civil War So this is a very very important lever that we had And if we don't use it we're going to lose it right Mark Yeah look I mean it's there It's for us to use It was put in there for a time such as this Another thing I'd like to address Marcus I get people in senators and state legislators who question me like who are you Are you some kind of secret less dis I get accused of being funded by Soros I know you and I have known each other for a long time I remember the first time we sat down and had dinner together Would you mind talking a little bit about because you know the history of this organization and an independent kind of third party view on that Well the organization came to be around the time I booked liberty and exchange of my book the liberty amendments came out Mark and I had coordinated We hadn't planned it's just so we studied this issue And at the same time we said we need to push this We didn't say it again We never talked about it in any coordinated way did we No No we had no advanced discussion We were both very surprised to find the other one involved in this

Milton Freeman Dwight Eisenhower South Dakota James Madison Mark Marcus Soros
Why Do Liberals and Socialists Love Inflation So Much?

The Dan Bongino Show

00:48 sec | 2 years ago

Why Do Liberals and Socialists Love Inflation So Much?

"Why do liberals and socialists love inflation so much Ladies and gentlemen they love it because it is the quietest most pernicious tax of all It is a way to take money out of your wallet without ever touching your wallet The government exists especially liberals and socialists and fake Republicans in it for one reason To take your money and spend it on what it wants not what you want Now it's hard to do that when you see it coming out of your check in your pay stump That's another reason they love withholding and they don't want you writing a check at the end of the year They don't want you to ever acknowledge how much you're really paying Here is a great cut however Milton Friedman explaining how governments running deficits which they have to finance by printing more money creates inflation and how that's the quietest tax of all because the government takes your money and they don't even have to tell you it's beautiful

Government Milton Friedman
No. 9 Notre Dame Escapes With OT Victory Over Florida State

Dual Threat with Ryen Russillo

00:51 sec | 2 years ago

No. 9 Notre Dame Escapes With OT Victory Over Florida State

"Florida state. Are they better. They have to be better. They're down thirty twenty. They hang in there. George travis quarterback in a weird way they got back in this game running the football because notre dame stayed with a three down linemen formation and then florida states. Like this is what you're giving us. We're just gonna keep taking. It kept running the football down. But mackenzie milton if you remember him at. Ucf to top ten heisman finishes had played a game since november. Two thousand eighteen. He gets back in. It was the story of this game. A starts i think five or five numbers actually could have been a little bit better than that and they tie this game up and send it to overtime for state missed the kick at home. So notre dame's probably gonna pretty get no one's gonna care for state might be better. It's kind of one of those momentum losses when you've been down as florida state but you have the expectations that you should have when you're in tallahassee. But i'm not sure and again notre dame no one's gonna care because the playoff losses.

George Travis Mackenzie Milton Florida Football Notre Dame UCF Tallahassee
"milton" Discussed on Strong Opinion Sports

Strong Opinion Sports

04:01 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Strong Opinion Sports

"And I started tearing up, and then what happened was he led a touchdown drive. It wasn't one play. It was two plays and three plays. He went four for four on his very first drive as a new Florida state quarterback, replacing Jordan Travis. And they left him in the game. And he led another drive to make the game tying field goal happen. Game goes to overtime, and you're like, dude, is this gonna happen? Is he gonna lead a comeback against Notre-Dame? And unfortunately, it didn't happen, right? Unfortunately, in overtime, Florida states kicker missed a field goal, Notre-Dame's kicker made their field goal. They win the game. But I just, I don't really care. It's a movie, still, it just had a bad ending. Just because it wasn't exactly what we wanted. It didn't make the moment any less special. It did a little bit. I would have loved to see. I can acknowledge that. I wanted to see we all did Mackenzie Milton make a comeback win the game. We didn't get that. But the fact that he even made it interesting was like incredible. And I thought, of all the games I watched this weekend this game Florida state Notre-Dame was the one that stood out to me and I was like, wow. And he had to throw on third and 11 to it was like a 15 yard throw down to the four yard line. McKenzie Milton, I put it on my Instagram stories, a video of him throwing over the middle. Geeks drilled as he's hit. It's a throw up and over a linebacker into a perfectly small window, that's an NFL throw. And I don't know that Mackenzie Milton's an NFL quarterback. But that one throw was like, dude. This is what Florida state needed at all game. They needed a guy to hang in the pocket and deliver the ball rather than whatever Jordan Travis was doing running around. They talked about before they gave him how Jordan Travis had all these problems and was struggling with confidence. And I'm like, why is this guy you're starting quarterback? No offense to the guy, but it was so clearly Mackenzie Milton, who was the better quarterback at Florida state. And I think everyone watching was like, where was this all game? I don't understand. Now, here's the last kind of weird, crazy thought..

Jordan Travis Mackenzie Milton Florida Florida state Notre McKenzie Milton Notre Dame NFL
"milton" Discussed on Coach's Corner with Paul Ybarra

Coach's Corner with Paul Ybarra

02:44 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Coach's Corner with Paul Ybarra

"Do me a huge favor. My friend and dropped me a review down below here on apple. Podcast you can also follow me on spotify and iheartradio and we're also on audible and pandora and all your favorite podcast apps so with that being said. Let's dive in good morning and welcome to another episode here on coach's corner. Thank you so much for coming in. We got into ayala coming in all the way from salem oregon. And i'm telling you ladies and gentlemen you wanna get your coffee. You wanna get your t. You wanna get your water. You want to get all that stuff ready. Because today's episode is going to be jam packed twenty five or thirty minutes of power and so today. I've got a very good friend of mine that i met through clubhouse. If you ain't part of the club they need to get to the clubhouse if you are an apple user clubhouses one of the greatest networking tools that are out right now and so when i heard dr shah charlene allen milton speaking. I said listen. I gotta have her on my podcast and so this is who she is. She was in high school. She had a gpa of one point seven. I think i had like a one point. Three but look at what god is doing right if somebody would told me years ago even three years ago you're gonna be on podcast. You're going to be able to reach the world. I'd have been like y'all be tripping but this is the this is the god that we served all right and so through that time and i'm gonna let her share her testimony She was told that you know what college just may not be for everybody and so it just like a lot of us it wrecked her self esteem and that is not what god wants us to be and so her whole missing is helping women empowering women to understand that the struggles of life being able to bring all the overwhelm and Allow them to be empowered to know that they can get through a marriage they can get through raising kids. They can be that doctor they can be all of that and so that's what her story is so she can tell it better than i can but remember you can follow me a set. Free life dot net. My my website is getting worked on to be revamped but you could still follow me there. and you can Reach out to me at identity of one coaching gmail.com and so without further ado. I'm my mouth. And i'm going to bring on dr charlene allen milton so that she can share her story but also share her after. Where is she at after the adversity after the struggle after the challenges so tune in and here we go doctor allen. I mean doctors charlie..

iheartradio dr shah charlene allen milton apple spotify ayala salem oregon dr charlene allen milton allen charlie
Middleton Sends Bucks Past Suns To Tie NBA Finals at 2–2

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 2 years ago

Middleton Sends Bucks Past Suns To Tie NBA Finals at 2–2

"The Boxster controllable friends of the court of the fourth quarter and even the series at two apiece but the one oh nine one oh three win over the sons on a night when the shots were not dropping for most of the box they work for Chris Middleton who scored forty points including ten straight in the final quarter as the box sees control of the game Milton says the game eventually turned their way I think for the majority of the game we had to do a lot of great looks we missed a lot of laughs a lot open threes me just hope at some point they're going to fall but at the same time you have to get stops in thus the main thing the fourth quarter but against us when we needed to the sons had a six point lead heading into the fourth quarter when leading scorer Devin Booker picked up his fifth foul and had to spend considerable time on the bench Booker finished with forty two points check Freeman Milwaukee

Chris Middleton Milton Devin Booker Booker Freeman Milwaukee
This Is a New Battle Against American Marxists

Mark Levin

01:48 min | 2 years ago

This Is a New Battle Against American Marxists

"There's a lot of hand wringing about conservatives and libertarians and free market conservatives and Lot of hand wringing about how They don't represent the people. How they've never really represented the people. Of course. Ronald Reagan got To the biggest massive landslides and electoral presidential history. Sure if he were alive today he would disagree with that. But to me, this is the problem. This is the problem. Our battle today is not with libertarians. Free market conservatives. Many of us are free market conservatives. Battle today isn't With dismissing Milton Freeman and And Bill Buckley, another tremendous minds as if somehow will be able to claw our way back. That's not the battle today. That's not the battle at all. Our enemies are not the libertarians. Our enemies are not Fiscal conservatives are enemies are not free market conservatives are enemies are not social conservatives. Our enemies. This American Marxist. Movement and individuals that I'm talking about. And yet this is what we hear constantly. Constantly. The great middle class. The Great middle class is under attack, not by the libertarians, not by free market conservatives. It's under attack. In our classrooms in our universities and colleges are economic system. While so many people are navel gazing as if these are the old battles. This

Milton Freeman Ronald Reagan Bill Buckley
Middleton, Lopez, & Portis Lead Bucks to Pivotal Game 5 Win

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP Show

01:08 min | 2 years ago

Middleton, Lopez, & Portis Lead Bucks to Pivotal Game 5 Win

"Would have four starters Middleton, Bobby Portis, Brook Lopez and True Holiday Each goal for more than 20. Bobby Portis would deliver one of the dagger Chris Middleton, middle of the Rings, guarded by Bogdanovich tend to shoot runs him through Lopez screen passes to the corner. Reporters open three Good Bobby parties with a triple 3 20 to go. 1 14 98, Milwaukee. Wide open quarters in the corner for his seventh assists. Bobby Portis with the three he had 22 Middleton finishes, 25 points, 13 assists and then for the icing on the cake. Milton fires a pass inside the Lopez, who turns and puts the hook in a 30 points game. Five delivery for Brook Lopez, and they all been in the paint. I don't remember anything outside it he has dominated in there. 1 16 12 bucks two minutes to go when it was all said and done. J B six 36 points in the paint for the Milwaukee Bucks tonight. Out of their 123 No, Yannis. No problem.

Bobby Portis Chris Middleton Brook Lopez Bogdanovich Middleton Lopez Bobby Milwaukee Milton Milwaukee Bucks Yannis
Caller Shares Their Frustrations With Demo-Marxists

Mark Levin

01:40 min | 2 years ago

Caller Shares Their Frustrations With Demo-Marxists

"To make a long story short there, BT's hear Oprah hitting in this what I just heard from the previous president and smoke. I'll be honest with you. They are trying to act. They are the sinew. Segregation is these are the demo Marxist of America there in Democrats, their demo Marxists and in the process they want to use race and and edify individualism. That thing called Equity. I am not a piece of property like a pickup or house or a piece of land. I am an American. First. I have my values come from Judeo Christian values we shall walk about and we shall do The Lord's will as a founding father, Abraham, Amen. Billy Graham, Bob Jones and everybody else that helped to bring us about and I'm trying to go through and discourage. Anybody because the European legend and try and put that crap in our schools unacceptable will not be tone and I'll challenge any of these fools who was called Got a Klansman because I spoke truth, man. You know what you do on that people? You don't get mad. You just said I didn't hear that Klansmen part. I don't hear that. Well, sometimes I don't hear that. Yeah, they call me a Klansman. I'm I'm assembling Puerto Rican redneck that slow down. Puerto Rican and they call you Klansmen. Yes. Well, I call myself that I do. Team roping all over the valley here. Willamette Valley, and I was in 115 greedy down Eagle Point, Oregon with my friends. And you know some whether from Milton, three wives of Northeast corner of the state or down to the southernmost part of stick. I'm treated like an American because of my character by work, ethics, my sincerity, my charity. I mentored all sorts of kids in this valley and they have done well and I give God all the

Oprah BT Klansmen Bob Jones Billy Graham Amen Abraham America Puerto Rican Willamette Valley Eagle Point Milton Oregon
"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

Elliman Daily Podcast

03:52 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

"Again. It's a run on sentence but the other person's going to take it as their many art one more and then we are done with the milton model and this we actually talking about on the Role play call. A couple days ago which is utilization and in nlp and hypnosis. We utilize everything. Yeah someone just wrote. Let's eat grandma. I think it's funny. So that's a good one. Yeah it's the old eob it's like eats shoots and leaves without the punctuation is old kids. I think it was a kids. Book is about punctuation. Eats shoots and leaves. Does it eat then shoot and leave or does it eat shoots and leaves and stay in. Had she's leaves again. It doesn't make sense because it's a run on sentence without punctuation or to somebody it makes perfect sense. It makes perfect sense. Utilization is in nlp in hypnosis and hypnotherapy we utilize everything that's going on around us when someone says to you. I don't understand that's right. You don't understand yet. Because i haven't covered that one thing that's gonna make it. Just click in totally help you understand. Would you like me to cover that next. Hey this doesn't make sense. You know what. It doesn't make sense yet because i haven't x. So what i'm doing is i'm utilizing anything they're saying We were role playing this the other day the last week in the role play. I was being the role play partner. Someone's role playing with me in the middle. I turned around and say bob. Can you grab me. A beer and the response utilization should. Are you drinking beer beer. You drinking utilize that to build rapport in hypnosis. We use things like When a person blinks. I see a person blink. I'll be that's right because as you blink. You're beginning to deeper. Because i'm going to utilize anything around so anything. The person says anything. The person does. They're walking around the house as we walk around this house. You're going to make the great decision. I'm utilizing them as Around that's so that is the total of nineteen of the milton models has really nineteen of them. I strongly suggest you go back. And listen to this audio and the previous audio. That's on soundcloud. I tunes and spotify. 'cause you'll get more from it as you listen to things i say. Don't you think ted question so any questions. That was a tag. Don't you think shouldn't you couldn't you. You should go back with these. shouldn't you. absolutely. I think definitely so any questions because i was once in the conversation would stand. Who was to avenge la and peter had said in that conversation that next week. We're actually make covering the meta model so with the meta model actually is is how to get someone from abstract to concrete when the person says something like is too expensive. You're charging too much instead of arguing. What were charging the expense. How do we get to the root of what the specific reason is. They're saying what they're saying so that we're covering next week. The meta model is a toll mirror image or mere opposite of the milton model. So peter as always thank you. Thank you dr stamp. Stay i love you. I love you. I loved you that you had that book very much. Call jeffrey i do. Don't you see if they just did this. The recording is going to be on itunes soundcloud and spotify so feel free to get from austin awesome that email out again after accession with the handouts. Also enjoy thank you. Everybody have a great day..

peter next week nineteen spotify last week soundcloud itunes dr stamp jeffrey couple days ago call one models A milton austin
"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

Elliman Daily Podcast

02:40 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

"What does that actually mean the difference in marketing compared to what and this all lets people take the information because again with the milton model. They're putting their information into the sentence unconsciously to make sense of getting that's a far see people shake hands so we'd have to assume yes the next one is and this i love especially in presentations is an this is what Milton erickson was notoriously known for its called pacing current experience so we talked a whole bunch of weeks ago and a whole bunch of sessions ago about building report. Will you pace lead someone. You do what they do and you continue do what they do with bills report and then you lead them so i cannot match a match and mirror you and then you know if you move a little bit on me a little bit if you lean forward and forward and then eventually when i go to touch my nose you'll go and touch your nose to and that's how you lead someone but we can pay some experience and this is a great way to get to yeses. Excuse me and to build report so the client the person you sitting down there with your significant other is having their own internal and external experience when you're sitting there with them or your zoom with them where you're having a conversation with them so i can say something like this as you're sitting there looking at your screen listening to make so as i say as you sitting there you're saying yes i am sitting here looking at your screen. You're saying to yourself yes. I'm looking at my screen listening to me. You're saying yes so by pacing your experience by while describing what you're doing to you it's report because you're like. Hey he understands me understands what i'm going through. He gets this. And you're getting those little little yeses so if i'm sitting there with a client at table swing so you know what as we sit here at your kitchen table and talk about the sale of your house. Now they're going to say yes as we sit here. Yes we're sitting here at the kitchen table. Is he s. Talked about the sale of your house is another. yes so since. I'm pacing their experience. I'm getting yes and as we walk around you and you give me a tour of your property and you point out all the things you love about the property. They're going to say yes. Yes and yes because if the current experience they can't say no to that so pacing. Current experience in. Pierre have noticed hypnosis. We use things like you know as your as you're seeing there hearing my voice you'll notice that as you blink blank..

Pierre Milton erickson milton weeks ago of
"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

Elliman Daily Podcast

05:44 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Elliman Daily Podcast

"The real estate deconstruct with jeff. In peter and peter. I don't even know if you realized in the role play call. You'll be doing the tag questions that we were talking about last week. So i don't know if you do not naturally or we're doing. I was totally so tell me what i did so i can at least learn for myself. So what you did you tag. We ended last week with in part of the milton model of the tech questions. It's making a statement or asking a question and then ending it with you. Know you think is at the brad near the market goes up and down all the time. Doesn't it do that doesn't it. Couldn't wouldn't shouldn't it old tagore tie-down questions as we end the last week on the dots goes to the resistance so the resistance isn't what you said. The resistance isn't on the is only on the shouldn't you don't you couldn't you doesn't it right. You did like three of them in a row. And it's weird because once you get used to using them you start adding them into your language and a lot of times it happens unconsciously that you just a throwing out the statements there. I think i learning this stuff osmosis most despite just being on these calls right so i'm not well it's subconsciously happening. The there there is an when people always say jeff you go back and listen to the podcast when we listen to it live and then they go back the podcast again. Email the other day from someone in california northern california not even one of our agents not even element agent said. You said this this way. I found that a little weird. When i listened to it the second time i understood why you set it that way because as i've always said i think of from the beginning we started these sessions. It's it's not what you say it's how you say and more importantly what the other person who is you say. So there's a reason with delivery king and with the milton model. It's ambiguity and those ambiguities as we discussing last week allow you to build rapport and agreement. Because it allows you to put some of your own interpretation until what i'm say- so last week we on the ted questions is making a statement. You know. this is something you wanna do now. don't you. And so the resistance goes onto the don't you so we're going to continue those and we'll finish up on the milton model questions today and really what what actual emails calloway paddle. I get good at this. Good at using the tag questions using the tie downs. Good at using 'ambiguities whatever happens to be and for me. It was just writing examples of them. Or when you hear a good example running down because what i've noticed in people's language people use more ambiguity in their language then.

last week peter jeff second time today one three california northern california milton our agents
"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

Feliz Dia Novo

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

"Susceptive fallen eight yard to kill his own show now away. Apparently saw rosco plants. In main for food they'll stick on these. They need just yours name for my phone us phones to put without did it so i myself on sale is is with us just put up by the gee ma specter does all prepare is. Quincy make speed of what doors a month ago. I does bad as a liberal is. How old was i. Don't yes did sumo using also while moored into dinars Up on the throw system afa. Thank you cannot resembles both stems probably must know was leaving us. Thorns in all stems zero pillow. Yes zipping enough without formal predictable. Genetic your from will say focused on playing in central bank will he genetic is proposal saving home all spread onto the you despite sunshine. We'll stay plus my last present semi on fighting definitely seeming. Listening you practice. Have more damning. Bootham was seen him much. Pass this bill. School methodist as it gets zacchaeus. Popkin mill marcus dome via with commercial. You are saudi ragas with blessed who nipashe gap now through the anti drug as i want. Amelia's organisers susan cuidad police at. The police view possible uses dealers. Id hippie says as as the path come to commodity apples radical mistake separate out of black usa savvy zone when easter is this except william meal to procure proper. You police l via think view. So who's why you know on criminal laws whose wadih el gangsta dependency jobless cer scientists who mccoy's a hip middle traffic or mccoy's of your ticket up with rise in our chiaki that s up though there's noise echinacea as long as i'm by dale saw. Would you vivo move. Planner deficiency daddy. Hey our gernika placebo. Sag committed baby sky. Zero s. the six died gary mcnamara amoeba saddle the inaugural season that each evening assets versus boas. Getting dick was scheduled. Germ s up to speed. It is an obstacle his his noise meals. Ladan nevil there. the style Gina the keough also with a gravel that roger muscle make us value meal. Tom melilla damp dampen his instant. You can take you a lot of japon dyson guy. Bill cds super needle program..

Tom melilla Bootham a month ago super needle six both stems Gina the keough dale saw eight yard gernika william meal Bill zacchaeus gary mcnamara amoeba black each evening Ladan nevil echinacea marcus dome central bank
"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

Feliz Dia Novo

08:30 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

"Gala as you'll sit on you has is cheaper door. Didn't follow a boost. Cassandra arvanitis deposit lab. You'll do suspect visit in mice. Gopi see i had the job you're on does august fowler declared to make despise us if he will step out for london our would be as little spice defect. Don't blame a same thing you our. You don't know saab falana as is a spy for probably for mice. Poco moulmein to say to allow us for this auto. The build things addictive to main alaso be follow. Praise deserted local days. You up partic- momento will set up a sink that no social but rather politics revised august now. I saw colossal draws politically finance. A congress on so he'll he'll simply followed by warm water. is it. now you ask say saints the living so much that all of this. I can canadian. You'll as it should be this phone. Washy resolving daddy for all their second spies divide us. Don't apply to the moment he will sit thing. Is this possible stockholm so feeling go simply follow cash back on. So he didn't always present. A lot of things are also possible. Feeler haystack. presenting put ourselves daily mundi. This does to put soya. Gained subcu- acetazolamide xango mothers school. So it is entre. Courtesy group was miserly xiaojie to present their to university preoccupied young shares. Do the sanity is get into pack. William move to sack wear us pull the moon. Who's put obama's within terror plot ragas components that paso llano sale prissy pow imaging almost file filed. Yoga was struck body sale controversy amigos strenuous to take some solid pursue. It tap ourselves busy meets in automobile. Don't think coca-cola komo over the komo do my. Yeah plug in again guadalupe building. Amiga go come is adjara was propolis. Amiga fast dog com. Sl is agenda. Perky baby mizpeh kills demise early of south loop miami that typically today quarter than being new ambient. She could've as mice here. Does organizations was at the organization is put gas organizations to establish parabas infamous for meals. But i see who's zoo kissy taking fifty present much an mir. the his. they'll still a fiesta. Melia moon if he'll would eventually quizzes lhasa. Poker usage eight of laputa support akilah them. Anthony signal visuals cadet donor. So i don here comex employers who make as previous boarding coma pursue penelas attack. Don't kill scott to kill a vcr usa As cheaper share album sequel present software me. They are chipper sample or less vinci percent because i sedan no brazil passenger those draws you discipline sink a my own voice ball most like you said i i can calabrian pinochle thomas say. Virginia tomo pra being what that out at intervals. I i'm ahead of shadow was almost is his dobson. We consider sense doesn't homeless fouls of august normal for to you on a soap allegra bal mckenna or the fifth or this and wants to who will saying did he. Those does not fall under the rug. Least least up presents waffle. What is antifa momodou proportion. Where officing has he austin. Whiskey follow is the momentum for moms who's just pissing. Bush amis narrating sudden bang. These are the asu have been commuted his own just defect. Thus still thousand august no knew who the fuck owner some of monday monday limbaugh conceal. You've read the problem. Is you know fellow. Jewish allow shy people. Essentially all i would think he wou monies i don't wanna make president beck Thousand comfortably must own baraga depending on what was a defendant feeling annoyed brutal. Who go for my al-motakhassissa this other propylaea don't think actually s s official a shown tammy as talent warm brutal palo sal that union. 'cause i don't think opportunity jacket with a food delivery hoofing though. I'm president kazakh. Daughter of his own woman is either g pasqua on such a basis used to sing recommend and normal following hip. Chino nagging been used for property. The border his easy formal process of his new ball. Mass same rather try single ahead of the armenia. North atlanta oprah to simply air season familiar with the same thing the opening of your view aeko versa. There does organiser soyuz than being view. Davis equiment meant he thaddeus who call more marcus. Don't go look at stony speed it to our komo cats. Don't you know see his. Obviously please made me border. Mela has simply medical loughrea so utterly sending kasuga nancy. Avi court todos mayo's economic with skill thing this somebody it. It'd take their. Because he'll mix don't really was a pricier was it will get the apple. Two boys buzzer blue. Bosnia by the faculty is only board of there being assessed. Get the footage these to give us a face. This tiptoed silicone police view. Mazzone mahaffey those police elsie view. But give us a key. Leader coeli basilea. The settlement onto is neither butter basically puts swami son was a big castle initiative. 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london congress Anthony Bush William Amiga guadalupe brazil Mela paso llano marcus Two boys Jewish today canadian august fowler monday fifty Melia moon Bosnia
"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

Feliz Dia Novo

06:23 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

"It for his accu. Simple game day. Will kid zero huge at the nasa gov. Vs that sugarhill pathogen wa. Soon to move into important and not orgy. Komo fuji do assu cloud give us a zik as he says as least those magister. Luckily cafe st. briskly so magic thing southern get their vast though myrna key aqap bob compliment complement to view your saudi thus familias. They ordered them. Be suppler possum. Win to grand in organza soy's magazine careers. Yoka plsy who milton seniority. Kia police elsie view. Lead that we assume dip bertus mayes. Turkey are moving to tampa. Anything of value volunteered this car. I asked cows mutant cynical over guard also his own bone jia edendale for i'm positive stock even steelers also air kellyanne dividend third supervisor to based ramiro pretty middle. Programming league was active opening got Keep katya vega suspect sabotage but august sugar and chicago com with the facility. You claim your gun is aldo. Mcclure kill travel. Took murugan is out exit team. What we saw them a copy diaby sudak at tingey told us classes is nothing material. Zhao's days does not. I saw gay ios died not i'll gave fowler louise despite annella wing theories Last comb work huma familiar killed ourselves. Faulk was detail you could make him a familiar. Vector maxima familiar party b. Yakult srb sit calculus driving la border. Dial the ulta till the civil Kudos died hispanic your mother Ifas research He'll dane through hit. Police sought hepatocellular stilo auspices of almost faouzi for Vice principal aboard Presently gs sequenced Snowing yael in a disaster. Alleging as the dog has is not far thirty. Other people say lucia is main jewish. You know saw about the brio or does not as loud as he will say this bangladesh festival seattle or annoys these to away by now watch. It also said don't us back the fittest business narrow earnings policy. Nyse you himself citizen modell's has crews of potomac will by money inside the mishima before the war. She value baying shooting during for the housing. The miso spices. Thank you. there's mice bid as smooth as the. Tom and we'll feel your feeler other guys. I in fact you our sacks remain on my soul. Lena's voice involving putting wallace and don't put into i let them put the little the hip into the for who is allow them to the wire modell's blues physical put them hindi mints. Colored is a my equal familiar. Asiatic cpap bahrain's don't pay modell says jammies december twenty four th. There's a mess a mess. Sugar as a yet instinct about boston normal mantis as all of us. Misogynist sale like is say saved by silica makita from delia. Handyman of now. Don't put us thickness Hire phones are also dea By my boss Younger assad locations soul trial as a minute per said as visit Caching to the now present on the flood seat propeller by propelled your problem elements of the most little. Thanks frank you'll mice. Half the city fittings drug taboo by spies in shutout theme whom attitude you police. Elliot's few much to retire. Es is distant feel to maintain lower hip authority on saturday. Thought he does so. It's also the main thing. I thought to stay little zone. The zone bones suez. This is always the suic- scoreless posture spearman hours. You know south of as apostles czar my genome a my hickory. Buffy color go come. We'll surveyors as ragas elise either. Postal tubing nowhere being seen by followed by thinking thing they also versa dean thing. The universe ragas. We fit the macintosh avail. Saturday and as roma the empty gaza the them q. Spicing failed catalog. Born victim some cities that sick. Yeah we cut a promo via cable. Think deploys the ball giving maquis spice body hlavac lee's found out game.

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"milton" Discussed on WSB-AM

WSB-AM

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on WSB-AM

"Milton teenager remains in FBI custody this morning a connection to the violence of U. S Capitol. Five federal charges for that 18 year old include assault on a federal officer. And number three is the weather a few mild days that cold again for the weekend, we'll go from lows of the forties. The highs in the forties Kirk Miller full talk about what's happening in his five day forecast. In just a moment. WSB news time is 7 17. It's part of the article of Impeachment. Now Georgia's secretary of state investigates the phone call from then President Trump to swing the election his way no what they did and you're not reporting it. The find the votes phone call, then President Trump to Georgia's secretary of state, Brad Rapids, Burger alleging massive voter fraud in elections. Year. None of the claims proven we believe what we do have an accurate election. No, no, you don't know through a spokesman, The secretary of state confirms to us. The investigation underway sparked by a complaint filed by a George Washington law professor. This is called fact finding an administrative in nature. Any further legal efforts will be left to the attorney General Edgar Trey gets 95.5 WSB. The Biden administration as early as today may ask all U. S attorneys appointed by former president Trump to resign that would include Bobby Christine in South Georgia, then President Trump That's Christine to take charge of the Atlanta office to after B. J PAC was forced out last month. The Northern District is now under the direction of acting U S Attorney, Kurt Irks Kind, Long time first assistant in the office, Stacey Abrams and Fair Fight about a challenge Republican attempts to rewrite Georgia election law. Abrams calls the victory of Democrats on the national level in Georgia a stunning upset but accuses Republican lawmakers who have filed a serious of election reform bills of using baseless conspiracy theories to try to change the very laws they enacted. And the worst response to ally is to further that life by embedding it in state law bills introduced so far would do away with no excuse absentee voting ballot. Dropbox is an automatic registration with obtaining a driver's license center Parish 95.5. W Best Space Six Democrats are running in a special election today to fill a vacant seat in the Georgia House. Two cabs state rep in Stevenson of Lithonia, which you her candidacy in the fall, with a half dozen candidates on the ballot today, it's very likely that the House district 90 race is headed for Runoff in March. WSB.

President Trump South Georgia WSB Stacey Abrams Georgia House president attorney assault state rep FBI Bobby Christine Dropbox Milton Kirk Miller Georgia U. S Capitol officer General Edgar Trey
"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

05:51 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

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That's <Speech_Male> that's way we are <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> will leave ordering <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> details on <Speech_Music_Male> on that there's <Speech_Music_Male> also apartments <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> facebook side <Speech_Music_Male> which <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> is maintained <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> With great sincerity. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> But my <Speech_Music_Male> wife rather than me. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> i <Silence> blame yeah. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Yeah <Speech_Male> 'cause you'd <Speech_Male> be on that stuff all <Speech_Male> day. 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It's just <Speech_Male> the face facebook <Speech_Male> account for the apartment <Speech_Male> perfect. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Thank <Speech_Male> you so much. <Speech_Male> This really been blessed. <Speech_Male> I've it's been awesome <Speech_Male> chatting with <Speech_Male> you and learning <Speech_Male> about the history of <Speech_Male> the band and <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> how <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> it's funny <Speech_Male> unit for me talk <Speech_Male> about this <Speech_Male> stuff like particularly <Speech_Male> you're going <Speech_Male> back through <Speech_Male> the years because i'm just <Speech_Male> thinking about this stuff <Speech_Music_Male> for the full of <Speech_Male> for the first time <Speech_Male> because i'd have obviously <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> the landscape <Speech_Male> of regret. <Speech_Male> I'm very comfortable <Speech_Male> in so often. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male>

"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

03:11 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

"And i didn't know what i was when when he name and i was definitely not gonna do that with bison drums so everything just atmosphere in came. The atmosphere came from the lyric on it. Came from the melodies. Came from just playing an acoustic guitar in things just little brushstrokes. Almost made the song it was not like we some bass and drums united's like we had kindled drums in a you know the company's global just splashes of things film so that was me that's right that's how i approached this album on That was the thing that i did learn from. No solis dono magical. I never had the title track. Radi like that title track Medical adjust said that vamping awhile and a again while. I have no idea how this will go. But i'm going to record this with and the drums and sing vocal while we while we do it all play piano even though account play piano and then anyway back anything he said. This is not right. the field is in danger from these other people feel. Is there in european going said yet but you know i made a mistake in digital. Just wipe out the mistake man. Thank applying ended up playing piano. Chris x plane with chris. Before and yeah as i say he is a piano player. He what he he doesn't think about playing the piano. He thinks about playing the song and i had worked with him on a track on a life. Full of farewells. In it's It's it's a track coach. She seems to forget you. And i remember how we did. That and chris recorded his his tight end. He said to the producer at the time. I was out in the control room when he did his and he said a really. Don't think like that. I think i played too much and paul said well. Now it sounds pretty good to us in here and kristen Would you mind coming in here and singing at the same time the clan e show thing you know pull. The producer said well. We won't waste this. Maybe they'll be something here in this. So we set up a mock so you can actually hear identically. Apply these tracking your show but you can actually hear the door slamming when poll over us awards.

Radi chris Chris kristen paul
"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

08:00 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Pantheon

"With a rare autoimmune disorder. In one thousand nine hundred nine at three years and eight months of age riley lost his battle and peter stepped away from music. Sixteen years later he was convinced to give you the another go. He'd been playing and writing ever since banned. A strong music is honest to the man who wrote it in and out of the light saw peter trying new techniques with a wonderful results. Check album wherever you buy. Music or at the apartments dash music dot com or on their facebook page. Follow us at performance annex and maybe by us a cup of coffee at keio dash f dot com slash performance anxiety. Let's get right into peter. Milton walsh performance anxiety. Right here on the pantheon podcast network. I it's walsh from the apartments We have a new album mail in and out of the light and it's good to be on performance anxiety man. He didn't screw that up at all. I want to start off with finding out about how you got into music in the first place and i don't know a whole lot about australia. Actually only the second person from australia. I've had on the show. The first one i had was anthony. taras does a lot of work with patent from faith. No more so that's about my extent. Australia is talking to him. Saying i want to know a little bit about how you got into music. Was your family musical. And what we you listening to that really got you excited about music and one in new to play. Sure sure okay. Well look you know No i don't come from any kind of a musical family in my my name. Is peter milton. That happens to behead been like my father's name of father. Was jack milton walsh. It was a truck driver Lift schooling never read a book in his law. Share different character to me is his father. Was thomas milton motion. He was a train driver. Had absolutely no interest in any kind of transportation matters of being interested in music. And so i'm a child of the sixties grew up in the sixties and radio was a big deal to me and i used to chase songs from Three there were three top forty. I i grew up in a town called brisbane which is in a state. Go queensland on the east coast of australia okay. As while it was a nolan stymied is the government and the feel of the state. Was mary much like the american south of lots of things happened just is like the The feel about leaving there was in the heat of the not. Because down in which. I grew up with cool brisbane that was capital state but is in very slow. Hough town kind of like a big country town end. The government was daily conservative. corrupt You know the cops were in with the government Also politically repressive you. You couldn't have street marches You know the the hadn't electoral college system to elect that government way by that government was elected with thirty percent of the popular vote the distributed in such a way that i could still win government so it was like a really Corrupt environment political environment in also very poisonous -ly conservative and punishingly conservatives. So like as a kid. You didn't feel that so much as a kid but you also growing up in a very isolated contemplate so by i do think is thing about growing up in the territory. Which is why some people in trying to get out of the and they just look at the world and lots of lots of my friends at the time we to look to new york i wanted to neil and lots of my friends want to move to europe Anywhere are often people would move to england so about seventy seven. Aband- came out of the cooled. The science and essentially the science were kind of like the stooges and science signed by the science put together a single which i paid for themselves and they got themselves and it was released by saw and then signed in sarin steitz and in england that was signed to emi. So they left town on the record. Companies ticket and moved to england and savvy no For a lot of us who like united twenty at the time you're looking at that and thinking that's what i could do so that it's a very Like an inspirational moment in the history of the town for people who were injured into music and also what happened at that time. Was the town kind of a conduct. Like seventy seven seventy eight. There was this just also mean of places. The bands could play and prior to that rod. To that time you know clubs who are very few and far on the ground people just started opening up places where people could play for awhile. Cops didn't deal with that. The cops were constantly coming along bashing people up dan the flag that but that changed after a while and then it became sort of like the great wave of of bands and music was happening. A law all around the world at that time that satellite seventies period. They couldn't i couldn't stand the wave and so you know it became. That's how that's how you do it. And the band's playing prior to that were all covers bands and dina apply what was on the radio. That sort of thing. And this whole thing was built around this whole new thing that i came out of was built around playing your own zones and the people had never heard before. That was a very different kind of thing you know because if you go it's it's a comforting people. It's a comforting thing for people to hear songs that they know but it's a very exciting thing people to his sons that they don't know and that was the that was like the town was just late out that kind of cut in That's essentially in how it came about but you know. I always rotting songs from the time. I was about fifteen very terrible song fortune. Fortunately the technology was just real to reel cass in so in none of it survived. I cannot be blackmail broadcast at least at least at bottom apo- ryan but but.

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"milton" Discussed on Harvard Classics

Harvard Classics

05:17 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Harvard Classics

"In vain would symbols ring. They call the grisly king in dismal. Dan's about the furnace blew the brutish god solve nile as i isis and oros and the dog a newbies haste nor izzo cyrus scene in men fiene grove or green trampling the on showered grass with low ings loud nor can he be rest within his sacred chest not but profoundest hell can be huge crowd in vain with tim. Road anthems dark the sable stole source errors. Bear has worshipped are. He feels from judas. Land the dreaded infants hand the rays of bethlehem blind his dusky nor all the gods beside longer dare abide nor tifon huge ending in snaky twine are babe to show his god head true canon. His waddling bans control the dumbed crew. So when the sun in bed curtained with cloudy red pillows. His chin upon orient wave the flocking shadows pale troop to the infernal jail. Each fettered ghost slips to his several grave and the yellow skirted phase fly after the knights. Deeds leaving their moon loved maze but see the virgin blessed hath laid her babe to rest time as our tedious song. Sure here have ending. Heavens youngest teamed star has fixed her polished car her sleeping lord handmade lump attending and all about the court stable bright harnessed angels cert- an order serviceable a paraphrase on psalm. One hundred fourteen by john milton when the blessed seat of tourist faithful son. After long toil their liberty had one and passed from ferry and fields to canaan land led by the strength of the almighty's hand jehovah's wonders were in israel shown. His praise and glory was in israel known that saw the troubled sea and shivering fled and sought to hide his froth-pak hurled head low in the earth jordan's clearstream's recoil as a faint host that hath received the foil the high huge bellied mountain skip like rams amongst their use. The little hills like lamb's wife led the ocean and why skipped the mountains why turned jordan toward his crystal fountains shake earth and at the presence. Be aghast of him that ever was. And i shall last that glassy floods from rugged rocks can crush and make soft reels from fiery flintstones gush psalm. One thirty six by john milton. Let us with a glass of mind. Praise the lord for he is kind for his mercies. I endure ever faithful. Ever sure let us bless his name abroad. Four of god's he is the god for his mercies. I endure ever faithful ever sure. Oh let us his praises. Tell that death the wrathful tyrants quell for his mercies. I endure ever ever sure that with his miracles. Doth make amazed heaven and earth to shake for his mercies. I endure ever faithful. Ever sure that by his wisdom did create the painted heavens so full of state for his mercies. I endure ever faithful. Ever sure that did the solid earth ordain to rise above the watery plane for his mercies. I endure ever faithful. Ever sure that by his oil commanding might did fill the new made world with light for his mercies. I endure ever faithful ever sure and caused the golden trust sun. All the day long is course to run for his mercies. I endure ever faithful for the horned moon to shine by night amongst her spangled sisters bright for his mercies. I endure the ever faithful..

izzo cyrus john milton bethlehem Dan israel tim pak rams jordan lamb
"milton" Discussed on Harvard Classics

Harvard Classics

04:46 min | 2 years ago

"milton" Discussed on Harvard Classics

"If such holy song and wrap our fancy long time will run back and fetch the age of gold and speckled vanity will sick and soon and die and leprous in will melt from earthly mould. And hell let's self will pass away and leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day yesterday. Truth and justice then will down return to men or dinner. Rainbow and like glories wearing mercy will sit between thrown in celestial sheen with radiant feet. The tissue clouds down steering and heaven has had some festival will open wide the gates of her high palace hall but wisest fate says no. This must not yet be so the babe lies yet. In smiling infancy that all the bitter cross nust redeem our loss sold both himself and us to glorify yet. I to those each chained in sleep the wake for trump of doom most thunder through the deep with such a horrid. Clang as on mount sinai rang while the red fire and smoldering clouds out break. The aged earth aghast was terror of that blast shell from the surface to the center shake when the world's lust says she on the dreadful judge in middle air. Shell spread his throne and then at last hour. Bliss full and perfect is but now begins four from this happy day. The old dragon underground in straighter limits bound not have so far casts his usurped sway and roth to see his kingdom fail swingers. The scaly horror off his folded tale. The oracles are dumb. No voice or hideous hum runs through the arched roof in words. Deceiving apollo from his shrine can no more divine with hollow shriek the steep of dill foles leaving no nightly trans or breathed spell inspires the pay allied priest from the prophetic sale. The lonely mountains or and the resounding shore of voice of weeping heard and loud lament from haunted spring and dale edged with poplar. Pale the parting genius is with sighing. Sent with flower in woven tresses torn the nymphs in twilight shade of tangled kits mourn in consecrated earth and on the holy hearth the lars. And as mon with midnight. Plaint in earns and alters round a dreer and dying sound a frights the flavorings at their service. Quaint and the chil marble seems to sweat while each peculiar power foregoes his wanted seat peel and balin him foresake their temples. Dim would that twice battered. God of palestine and mooned urged her oath heavens queen and nother both now sits not girt with tapers holy. Shine the live. Bec- heaven shrinks his horn in vain the tyrian maids their wounded. Thomas mourn and sullen moe fled has left in shadows dread his burning heidel all of blackest hue.

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