35 Burst results for "Nari"

AP News Radio
On this week's AP Religion Roundup, a sacred, sinking town in India faces a grim future.
"Hello. For months, residents in joshima, a holy town burrowed high in India's Himalayan mountains, have seen their homes slowly sink. Local officials say various agencies are conducting surveys to determine what caused the damage. But other authorities have ignored expert warnings. Moving forward with costly projects in the region. Now, deep cracks have emerged in over 860 homes. Subsiding earth caused roads to split with crevices and multi storied hotels to slump to one side. Authorities declared it a disaster zone and came in on bulldozers, raising whole parts of a town that had become lopsided. A pretty steady local temple says it's been a religious capital of Hinduism for more than 2000 years. So it must be protected. The Lakshmi nari and temple is in one of the only parts of the village still standing. Accord last year directed authorities to stop dumping waste near the historic temple, which was once the last rest stop for devotees on a religious pilgrimage. I'm Walter ratliff

The Cedric Maxwell Podcast
"nari" Discussed on The Cedric Maxwell Podcast
"Was it going to be some bonus? Was it going to be miles Turner? Who was he going to hurt you? Well, here there's a clear pecking order between brand Tatum and then it goes down here from that. The other thing which you talk about when brogden is the fact that this essentially could be a rental because he only has one year left on his deal at about $22 million. So you'll get the chance to put him in your lineup, see how it works out. And if it doesn't, then you can move on to somebody else. Yeah, I like the way you put that max because I think one thing that everyone was quick to jump to was who's going to start a good start. Is it going to take the job for markets? The market is going to react to it. Well, wait a minute. What about the line of to close out games, right? Because that was the one that was given the subject 5th during the NBA files in particular, right? Being able to close out games close game situations when you need a closing lineup. And I think having a backboard like smart and brogden will get you a lot of stops, you know, those guys will be responsible for defending the best players on the opposing teams backwards. So I think you get a huge extra muscle down the defensive end and you have a guy who can score as well, you know? So it's a two way player who, yes, he is on an expiring deal, but at the same time, max, there's a lot of value there, right? And it's a lot of value when guys like Malcolm Brogdon, who have never played on that sort of state that the southern were on less than a month ago. The NBA Finals, you know, he's ready for that. He already put that up on social media. And again, we talked about this a couple of weeks ago, max. Seeing it seem like the self things come two wins short of an NBA title. That's an inspire guy. And I think Malcolm Brogdon certainly fits that criteria, for sure. Well, you think about your players with the Celtics. There are opportunities when the NBA Finals this year probably hands on that fourth quarter they had in game number four in Boston where they and Boston, that was a crucial loss. Late in the basketball game, they take a lead and then Steph Curry comes back and scores somebody else scores and then they eventually break the self respect but you know there were so many great opportunities for the Celtics and but you still look at that with brogden company and we're going to come in and go nari has always been a tremendous three point shooter definitively could be a liability, but with his ability to knock down shots, he's going to stretch the floor. He's going to insulate Brown and Tatum that much more because he's one of these corners on the wings. He's able to knock down the three. Big enough to get to the basket. Great free throw shooter will compete, you know, the rebound the basketball is about 6 9. So, you know, the NBA game is perfect for him. So coming into this situation, I like what the subjects have done. He's a veteran scorer coming off the bench, man.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"nari" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Mean, you got that too. That's a tough job. All right, last pick for you. Charlotte. Oh, okay. What's the case? I like the Atkinson hire. They brought in a guy that wants to coach people. They just get rid of that guy, borrego. Right. Your best player doesn't play. I think there's going to be a little bit of a growing pain thing with lamelo of like, this is awesome in your dynamic. But there's going to be some other stuff we're going to need you to do a little bit more. And MJ is an owner. He's MJ, so he gets kind of treated differently, but what evidence is there other than he's really bad at being an owner of a basketball team? And it's not really a destination place. And they've got to figure out some financial decisions. There's some players that I kind of like, but ultimately you're probably as soon as you pay them, you go shit, I can't believe we're paying this guy this much. It's a good pick. For my last pick, I had Atlanta, I think they're in a weird spot and they clearly have to make moves, but everyone in the league knows it. And I think that's a hard job to take over. I've got to pay Trey at some point. The max or supermax, whatever he's worth, I'm not sure ultimately how far I'm going with a guy who can't really guard anybody is my best player. As we seem to realize every year when we get to the final four, how important defenses and then who do I put with them? They got weird contracts, the Collins thing is weird. Capella, gal nari, I think, is expiring. They're going to have to pay hunter.

Audio Theatre Central | Exploring Family Friendly Audio Drama
"nari" Discussed on Audio Theatre Central | Exploring Family Friendly Audio Drama
"Then after after the podcast wrapped up. Oh you know what we should say. Give give the listener a little. Bit of a teaser. Yeah we i had this idea. Let's just throw some characters at these guys and actually was that your idea remember. We talked about it but it costs me back backing for a joint. We okay. we're gonna. I didn't mean to take credit if it was yours. I actually remember. But i know i know we did talk about it. But you know we ended up flushing it out and And rented by the guys nato and jonathan because both of them are really versatile actors and they're able to just pick up these different characters. And so i said let's. Let's throw a couple of different scenarios adam and see what they come up with. And so you're going to get to in the next to say. Oh boy it was so so good and then after the podcast just got to hang out with some audio drama alliance members and some people just talk about adventures in odyssey in you know other audio dramas that we we like it. So it's just been a jam packed fund day and i went over to rehearse the jazz for tomorrow's debut of yours truly johnny nari with the amazing cast. You know it's it's really great. It was it was a great time. They're they're so good they're they're. I'm so so fortunate so happy to be able to work with them on this super super cool. Yeah i'm excited for that tomorrow. So i think that about covers all the highlights for today but Tomorrow is going to be another pack day. And you know. There's there's some really cool things on the schedule but one of the things. I'm really looking forward to is having two hours in the exhibition hall. Just getting to talk with people getting to meet people. and we'll do some more interviews. You grab a couple of great interviews today so We'll be hearing those in an upcoming episode. So i think that about wraps it up for today. That'll do it. That'll do it for for day to recap of sonic on twenty twenty one and again. This is not a normal typical episode of the show. But we're just doing these special things because of the the event this year that we'd try something different and you guys said you liked the idea so well here you go so we'll talk to you tomorrow. Denies josh yep..

Conversations pour Elle, partages de sagesse féminine
"nari" Discussed on Conversations pour Elle, partages de sagesse féminine
"He s momoa syriacs join preemies on and foam perjury. Her in reactivity known care news omni. rei Presents on news on volley epa. Stay koon achieve. Do repoen demand you had quits said activists Stem nail worked puna. Visita tyson towns. The data can on meme noonday suzie. Q. savoir secure annetta epa. Stay indoors ray on finding stem new and do her story in sausage on security allen area. Do zahn kate and on call poor campbell on street the restaurant it acadia to ski poyser betsy. Non gnomes was Kamasiyah pal position. Keystone don kelly escape capacity measure patsy over twitter kayla look salvation the lita would system now im- kennels with every buoyant ninety situation themselve eq- with stem now dumped puto activists tic- komis q. Vive conforti with the town over. Bamut doug monty with capacity natori hunts Allows expect the experience. Clapham tap civil that conscience the hukou janet lee tatton system now who supports his to moaned army. Fam- minivan see shocker. You're not you know khloponin shows occasion invidia. Hannah fossey hannah city. On the limo booze wind do highlands year the sorta unduly georgians nari kalem per santia baffour pru kumasi upon return the contact notova santeria or asuncion system now with obey suppo- sisters. Do around finding the whole pogo miami. Natwest system now. Villalpando nuxie impulsive app. Hundred down kiva noon..

IDMC Movement
"nari" Discussed on IDMC Movement
"Took a pound of expensive appointment made from pure nod and anointed the feet of jesus wiped his feet with her hair. The house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume was four was five. Say's why was i'm not sold for three hundred dinar. Ian given to the poor judas was thinking about how much perfume cost. It was three hundred. Nari you've been on understand what did not he did. Not one one. Dinara is one days of age. Three hundred days of denying three hundred dinar is three hundred days wage in others almost a year wage. A woman laid upon the feet of jesus no cost too much because there was love in the heart nor time is too much because there was love in the heart. No workers too much because there's love in the heart when you don't have love that it's drudgery that's not washington when there's no love all you have is still logical understanding a knowledge and competence and leads to aggregates but when you truly have love in your heart love for jesus left for people love for the leadership love for the church love for the loss that theology that theological competence will make you humble and make you worshipful make you grateful and will make you common fall in love with jesus and say lord how much i love you. Listen to me carefully you and i. We need to come back to that place. Were where we have departed. So how do we increase our laugh. We increase our love. I john chapter four in verse. nineteen safes. We love him because he first loved us. We love him because he first loved us. Remind yourself of love of god. The love of jesus the only way you can remind yourself love of jesus to come back to the image of the cross look at across the bible says in first john chapter three in verse. Sixteen by this. We know love that. He laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers in other words. This is how i know love. He laid down his life for me. This is how i know love. I lay down my life for others..

JOHN16AND12.COM
"nari" Discussed on JOHN16AND12.COM
"In a wide since i record and I it so good that that you heard about the in the last episode. She come and talk and she made a bad things to me at the big coast of that. I didn't care for her when matter at the hospital. When i was sixteen years old and soon stan she being like Cursed me my life. And when i left last time i've talk about her a i in the night i will vary sake. I threw up i. It was so hard sickness. I couldn't come to the bathroom in time. So a i opened the door to the bathroom on night on only threw up before i could come to the toilet so it's was very very very bad and it has happened before in my life that When i touch someone that tells the the devil in the them that. I have been very sick that i through l. m. burrito of them. They tried to stay in my body but throughout They be cast out the cost. They are cast out from my policy and it had been hard to record in this thing. Because i need some response from people but i never get then the response today. It was someone that say that i entertain him. Hit more her and I don't really think that that person have listen at my podcast. Because that's what in the mind that mind was that i entertain that it was something fun like that but god is serious. The talk pick garden. God's kingdom it's serious is not entertainment. It's but that's what people think about how it should be like Go into the church and be entertained to go Bid going to a bar or to a club to have found with with each other. And that's not. God you know the the the jesus come into the temple when they were doing those kind of things that they have like marketplace selling and buying things in the temple and say that this is should be temple for god to be in the relationship with god. That's what the temple is about the Also those some entertainment. That's in another place but the that you can see also that it's more more that the church leader is coming to the church in jeans with same clothes. They were when they are working when they are older. Nari day they have those clothes zone and or at least they are like a christmas tree. Have so much clothes on with them. Bickering very expensive clothes on these things. That's not a real short. The there's a real Have no high heels or have lots of gold.

Yanks Go Yard: A New York Yankees podcast
"nari" Discussed on Yanks Go Yard: A New York Yankees podcast
"A ton of these all hands on guys like you. You don't wanna think of a world where garrett cole gets knocked out and like the first or second inning that would be a not good hopefully. It's a home wildcard game. That's what you want. that's what you play for. What they have the control their destiny right now but on the off chance that he doesn't like you can't tell me that this team has never been more prepared for situation like that with a guy like nestor and he'll behind him who can easily just absorb the next like six innings between them and get it too low iza and get it to chapman like there are a ton of dudes who right now are in the the rotation and have been like borderline ace level guys. Who if you need them to. The playoffs can easily be the is. Just give you three all out. Innings of weirdness and think about think about following kohl with nestor and then falling. Nestor with he'll that's fun. I mean that's very fun. And even just nester. And he'll that's a fun playoff game. Maybe one goes for one goes three like it's funky. It's fun it's interesting. i don't hate anything about it. I let's let's talk a little bit about you. Know let i mean. We're going to talk about luke voight agan before we sign off. I do want to give the twins credit. though wh- mean we beat the shit out of them. three dominant victories. They almost came back from six. Nothing down in the first game kind of sort of six nothing to six four six nine six three two six four two seven four seven five then went with squad and the game the next two games. They were nowhere close but a lot of people are doing all you. He's always beat the twins. It's true the twins it's hilarious. It's weird makes no sense but a lot of people are following that by being like they're worse than normal this year they're terrible. You know what that's said nothing about anything. Prior to coming to new york which again the twins always have problems here but prior to coming to new york the minnesota twins who have struggled this season foreshore went to cincinnati early august august third and fourth split that series seven five and lost six five since as now in the wild card. That's like one of the hot teams in baseball. Split that series on the road went to houston took three from the astros minnesota twins. Oh sorry took three of four from the astros. Nari read that wrong one. Another gate got another game. One it white sox come to minnesota. Minnesota takes two three raise. Come to minnesota. Minnesota takes two three indians golden minnesota minnesota takes two of three. One of those wins was a walk off. Two of those indians wins. We're walkup so the twins are coming in having split series with the hottest team in baseball taking three or four from the astros beating the white sox and raise and indians and three series in the yankees decimate them in three games. Great job yankees. Twins are at their hottest. The hottest the twins ben all year twins are supposed to win the division easily. Are i mean. I don't know people like the white sox playoff team. They aren't and that's fine but they've played like a playoff team in august and he just took them.

Science Friction
You Can't Handle the (Scientific) Truth!
"I am in the very fortunate position of being able to set the scene for tonight's debate and that's actually very easy. Because the scientific truth is forty-two diet nari according to date thought a supercomputer in douglas adams's hitchhikers guide to the galaxy that spent seven and a half million years competing the answer to the ultimate question of life the universe and everything the answer to that question and therefore the ultimate scientific truth is forty two so i mean i think we don russ semi point obvious. Is that often. The truth is not very helpful tight. The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. That's mathematical constant. It's a scientific truth. And when it's expressed in decimal form it has an infinite number of decimal places but but the question is actually how are an infinite number of decimal places useful to us an approximation of twenty two seven three point. One pfoa is what we can actually use in practice. We don't need a want the truth. We want something we can apply to achieve what we need to solve problems to build things to ensure the well being of our children so tonight ice with my esteemed colleagues greta and jack we will convince you that the scientific truth is not helpful to humanity particularly now and arguably more than any other time in human history. The truth is not useful for tackling the global challenges that we currently face. Greta will show you how without optimism and hype in our scientific messaging about climate change. People retreat from the truth. They feel disempowered and helpless. Jack will round out argument by showing how the relationship between science and society is changing

Bald and Blonde
"nari" Discussed on Bald and Blonde
"Yeah i think you bring up a really good example. I've i've observed many many times people who need to one up the story. I think that's a common kind of behavior that i see and i don't know if the people doing it are aware of it or not but i do see it law and so. That's a good place to start a sofa inventory. Am i in a conversation with people. And i feel like i need to do one better. Nari.

KCRW
"nari" Discussed on KCRW
"Morgan Stanley with now, what's next? A podcast about what post pandemic life might look like journalists. So Nari Glinton talks with CEOs, college students, delivery people and others. Where podcasts are available. At 6 45. It's morning edition from NPR News. I'm Steve Inskeep. And I'm Sasha favor the cost of living keeps going up. The Labor Department said this morning that consumer prices in June were 5.4% higher than they were a year ago. That's the highest rate of annual inflation since 2000 and eight and within the past year, prices jumped almost a 4% point in just one month from May to June. Despite comes as the economy is roaring back from the pandemic recession, But some of the big contributors to recent spike price spikes may be easing up. NPR's Scott Horsley joins us now. Hi, Scott. Good morning and Scott. I think many people have experienced this sticker shock of all sorts of consumer items. I recently overheard someone saying he paid $98 for a piece of plywood. So what are why are we seeing this run up in prices? Yeah, There's a lot of demand and not enough supply. As we emerged from our pandemic cocoons. Consumers are spending freely and a lot of businesses are having trouble keeping up. That's a recipe for higher prices. We're seeing higher prices for gasoline for transportation for food. One thing that really jumps out in today's report is the price of used cars and trucks. That's been a big driver of inflation for several months now. And it's really a byproduct, the lack of new cars on the market and we've talked a lot about the semiconductor shortage that's been dogging the automakers this year. Economist Jonathan Smoke who's with Cox Automotive, says car makers have also had to contend with that deep freeze in Texas during the winter that cut into plastic production as well as recent flooding in Michigan. It's just been a series of perfect storm events that have prevented the new vehicle production from getting back to normal. And while that supply has been challenged, we've had surging demand. Used car and truck prices jumped 10.5% between May and June and then accounted for more than a third of total inflation last month. I understand that you've found that, at least in terms of used cars and trucks, prices may be topping out. That's right. Smokes been keeping an eye on the wholesale market for used cars. That's where a lot of dealers by the vehicles that then show up on their lots, and those prices topped out about four weeks ago, and they've been coming down since then. Assuming the retail market follows suit. We should see used car and truck prices decline in the second half of this year, which would help to reverse some of the inflationary pressure. A smoke says You can already see less frenzied buying in the wholesale auto auctions and there are more cars to choose from now on used car lots around the country. It isn't that demand has completely cratered. It is simply that we've gotten past what has been crazy spring. And that's the kind of correction the Federal Reserve is counting on when it says it expects to jump in inflation will be temporary. The central bank is arguing a lot of these supply bottlenecks will eventually get resolved. Demand will cool off a bit. And this era of elevated inflation will slip into the rear view mirror. Many people wonder if the Fed will eventually raise interest rates, which would be good for people with savings accounts, but would make loans and mortgages more expensive. So what do you expect the Fed to do related to inflation? What's the broader outlook for inflation? Well, for the time being, the Fed is keeping its powder dry and hoping it can ride this out. The Fed's long term target for inflation is 2% were obviously well above that right now, but we've been well below 2% for a long time. We are going to have a stretch of higher inflation now, but both the Fed and the forecasters On Capitol Hill. Think we're likely to see lower inflation next year that this is not the beginning about lasting upward spiral in prices like we saw in the 19 seventies. If that turns out to be wrong, though, Rate hikes would be the tool in the Federal Reserve's toolkit to address higher inflation. That's NPR's Scott Horsley. Scott. Thank you. You're welcome. I don't know..

Pond's Feed
"nari" Discussed on Pond's Feed
"This is the fifth six against Schemers simmer fines. And after that i played city skylines which is my other simulator game. I'm getting this semester. Year renault stimulator games strategy games. that rpg's so In the city lines. I don't remember what the what the with the population was last. But i know. I just hit the big c Milestone check which population number that is shown in cities so it is seventeen thousand knowing. Yes no i thought okay. Yeah and we have a little firming area at called marlins farm psych seen the industry. The also you so you pick a based on. What's on your land resources. You can go into that. Specific industry and has basically kind of distribution chains You set this part. You've gave mine Gather harvest land have mattered. Beat whether it be a royal or oil or trees farming something else but act farming over in this particular city that is named that chat some chats named Tude and it's pretty sweet. Renames maze district for to be a have a european themes will area and pre pretty sweet Deaf injuring all that. What else saturdays Normally started saturdays. We i've been doing a co-op with michaela high twitch and drink in year two and arrest viant nari three no three it when you to and yeah in exploring we've got bottom of the regular minds and it's a.

The Holistic Nutritionists Podcast
"nari" Discussed on The Holistic Nutritionists Podcast
"Instant energy in serbians billions at that Another thing that. I do actually sounds a little bit woodward about i'm doing it. Is i make a spice clearing sprite. You can actually ride as well. But basically it's just like an essential oil mix on scott things like sage Frankencense etc. Now your big essential oils. Fan yeah i literally just spray that on myself. So it's kind of like have the cool thing that i can do to sort of break that emotional i don't know. Do you know what i'm saying. What i yeah. Yep yeah. I get that. Describe myself assim. High box That yup and they're not just go for My dog so cannot good is a poppy. Cuddle i on a game changer. Absolute game changer. Also okay next question is what does success main tier. Sorry this nazi keypad k. So you're not how. How do you answer that in a nutshell. Good luck thanks to the state shot. Believe previous anytime. Go nor i think in this probably sounds like tardily But success to mate which really just means being happy in who you are and happy in the life that you've kinda created for yourself side having good relationships in your life actually locking the peasant that you are. I think is really important but also started beyond being happy in myself and my relationships etc thing that makes me feel successful. It makes me feel. Happy is getting really great results from patients so i heard recently that a patient. I've been working with rb twelve months pregnant and that was what we're working on together and literally just like made my wife nari back those messages. I'm pregnant. I got my period or He is a picture of my baby. Probably some of my favorites all. I just really amazing bowel motion. And they're all the same level simple things in life right totally no i. But that's what's that what success means today really being happy in just yet getting results patients to Loved that are unlucky..

Warrioress
"nari" Discussed on Warrioress
"I'm gonna step to this. Like i'm going to step up to the plight. I don't care how scared i am. I'm doing this. Because i know might be a bigger purpose and my biggest vision. He an amazing sorry. Tell me what you've got going on. Now what's on the qods fee own much at the mormon i've got the empress sedan. Pre-programme surrey This is a whole brand new programming launching on the twelfth of july. My birthday when i'm twenty nine. I'm super excited. Is that oh canada. Jeff energy yes. Yes sorry yes. I'm watching not really excited Really excited about that. I'm watching my whole website among twelve july Shaimaa our input costs business. Infrastructure costs behind the scenes. I've got mandalay. Rising coming out. Release the shackles. Broken in i've got my own bocom riding also that's coming up on on creating my own foundation at the moment. Sorry one of the things. I'm really passionate about helping people like yourself. That anger is like the not only to recreate a business that makes profit that also purpose. Sorry behind the scenes at the moment. i'm creating a foundation. These foundations wanna give frayed programs in education materials. People say that they don't have to go through. The labels of mental unison sexual abuse. That i can have a deep understanding of the emotions. Not be able to pathology is for sexual abuse paypal the Prevention of these hack. And i help young men women tonight how to speak up to have strong boundaries. Nari what he's six voces sacred sexuality so creating foundation to get those materials at the issues that people can have free access to everybody that buys into the empress import program they helping to fund that foundation to really give a widespread change with these These issues because what i stand for is in my life. I'd like to end mental illness sexual abuse. And what i mean by that. Is i wanna end the label of mental illness. Because i believe it's just a misunderstanding. At of the agree he. I completely agree with you. Go yes yeah. And i think it started cool that you just named all these things that you've got going on right and a lot of people listening might be like. Oh my god that's soy much. Like how can how is she superwoman. Like how does she do this. It's like no i. I've done the work. And it's it's what you teaching programs business impressed business amp relic. Yes you have the capacity to do all of this and take care of your own needs like you have said you have a lot of time. Wanted three hours to let copter. Your needs a message and all this stuff and that is possible. We don't have to be killing yourself thinking that that's the way it has to be. You know i think in business and it turns a lot of people often for someone who is like me star dedicated and driven and has been myself out so many times. It's like oh my auto won't won't because then it's going to be like too hot. And that's what the business coaches being told you. Just gotta do it. You just gotta push hot up like this is just how it is yet. You work sixteen hours a day nonstop and on a one that kind of life. If that's what it's gonna pay then noy and it sat again that sadness of like awo dreams have to be put behind..

Bald and Blonde
Rejection - How To Cope?
"Especially being a lebron and bang the waco defense scissors i would say i think we have a unique perspective or an unique ability to see all the points of us lebron's so from that angle. I've come up with this little theory that rejection can be reframed as seeing someone self exiting from your life. Wow i think this is overcomplicating things. This over complicating matters. Welcome to my brain. I understand that your theory is helping you cope with the situation and we like to find justifications to endure the pain or the rejection itself. I would like to give you just rights trade at your head. Something very important and i wish for you. Keep it for the rest of your life and beyond spread it. Just no it with every single cell in your system. So when someone's rejecting you lemme ask that. Why would you want to have anything to do with the person who apparently does not want to have anything to do with you. Why that's a great christian dicey but it doesn't really. I laugh the emotional attachment that you would have to that person in circumstances so what you're talking about jiming is asking a logical question to an emotional state which in turn helps you to change. Emotional state thoughts lead to feelings feelings. Need to behavior so When you change your thinking you will change how you feel about it and therefore you will be able to behave in a different way. Even the person who rejected you. But i am catching you in here. Because here's the thing when you tried to cope with the situation by justifying other people's behavior. It's a trap. it's not your purpose. it's not your job. It is not your life purpose to justify anyone else's feelings emotions actions spirituality. And i could go on the list. A-to-z it's not your purpose. That's one way of looking at it. That i'm justifying it but it's not about buying it for me about understanding why is happening because for me and i am quite logic based if i can understand something than i can do with much much. Easier and understanding human behavior is one of the great learning curves. I'm on right now. i appreciate that. It's it's a never ending learning curve. The problem i see with this what you're trying to achieve. I understand you correctly that you're trying to understand. Why now in order to understand their why whoever they are you would have to think like them feel like them have had the same experiences as they had an have had to give the same meaning that they gave to specific sections that they went through. So it's impossible. So why would you try to participate in mission impossible. Unless you're tom cruise. Then you can do that though. Hang on now. You're saying that empathy can't be achieved. We did not hear you say maybe you saw. I have not heard hang on. I can't let me expand because for me. Empathy is understanding why they do that. What led them to that understanding what it feels like for them to me that sympathy and that's the same thing as when i'm saying i won't understand from their point of view. Why they join that. It makes it easier for me. That's the same thing is empathy to you. Well i'm glad you clarified undefined. The word empathy for you in this particular context or in this context very important. I feel and i feel strongly that empathy not necessarily includes that i understand. Why another person's doing what they do widely do what they do. I do believe that empathy is something that i'm respecting the choices their decisions and i'm accepting them because they empathy when we are going on the emotional level. Let say i hit my foot here. Because i kicked the neighbor stock. I never would do that by. It's just an example. But let's say. I kick the neighbor stock because again it came over here and whatever chewed on my cushions on the lounger and now i hurt my foot and you may say to me. Oh i'm so sorry all. This must be really hurting. Do you really believe that you can feel exactly the way i feel about me hurting my foot including the emotional charge to it to really believe. That's possible i think it is if you've been in a similar situation implies don't believe exactly nari but i do believe that you can get to an understanding of what it's like them based on similar things happening to you. I believe you can only relate to how another person feels but you can never feel exactly how another person feels. Well not exactly. And why. I'm saying that is because even identical twins in the same situation growing up in the same household do not perceive the same situation at the same time executive same. Neither emotionally not rationally. I case let's say that given. But the actual point i think is that you mentioned it being a justification of their behavior and i don't believe that's where i'm going it's not a justification is an understanding that intern helps me understand. So that's the angle. I was coming from when i was speaking about trying to understand the reason for the rejection and why framed it to myself is self exiting was a way for me to not be so hurt and not take it personally but say from their point of view this is not right for them and their life and so they need to exit themselves. That makes it a lot less hurtful for me now. Maybe that is over complicating it. Sure i'll love you. That and i do like the fact that you've pointed out that asking you so flood questions while you're an emotional state can help change your state. So that's really clever. And i think something that is easily put into action in anybody's life. So maybe that's a great direction to go down here when we're talking about how to help how lisa's when they of feeling rejected which. I'm all about behavior. I do believe behaviors all that matters.

ABA Inside Track
"nari" Discussed on ABA Inside Track
"Better <Speech_Female> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Advertisement> <Laughter> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Female> believe <Speech_Female> you need to know <Speech_Female> about the lgbtq <Speech_Female> a <Speech_Female> movement. You need <Speech_Female> to know about pro <Speech_Female> like you need to know about <Speech_Female> this because scientifically. <Speech_Female> There's a high <Speech_Female> correlation between <Speech_Female> autistic <Speech_Female> in particular <Silence> individuals <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> people <Speech_Female> are identifying <Speech_Female> as <Speech_Female> Lgbtq <Speech_Female> a <Speech_Female> place. <Speech_Female> I think we just have to <Speech_Female> kind of make it our business <Speech_Female> to <Speech_Female> know about <Speech_Female> people to know about <Speech_Female> their lives and <Speech_Female> then to take it a step further <Speech_Female> and figure <Speech_Female> out. Okay how <Speech_Female> can i <Speech_Female> really <Speech_Female> align myself with <Speech_Female> its value in. <Speech_Female> I think especially as business <Speech_Female> owners you <Speech_Female> know if you <Speech_Female> are a business owner. You <Speech_Female> can definitely do <Speech_Female> that by <SpeakerChange> by having <Speech_Female> airy <Speech_Female> clear. <Speech_Female> Warriner leland <Speech_Female> has taught me. This <Speech_Female> vote. clarity <Speech_Female> is chi. Although <Speech_Female> apparently <Speech_Female> is not the original <Speech_Female> quote <Speech_Female> warner's the one who <Speech_Female> told me that but <Speech_Female> you know just very clear <Speech_Female> boundaries in very <Speech_Female> values about <Speech_Female> like <Speech_Female> what your company <Speech_Female> represents <Speech_Female> and being sure that <Speech_Female> you really are <Speech_Female> protecting the <Speech_Female> communities that <Speech_Female> you claim <SpeakerChange> to <Silence> be advocating for <Silence> <Advertisement> exxon <Speech_Female> has <Laughter> <Advertisement> said <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> this thing also <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> am i in <Speech_Female> my hand. I was like <Speech_Female> yes. <Speech_Female> There's so much <Speech_Female> right. I mean <Speech_Female> we could keep <Speech_Female> wind and other <Silence> areas you know. I think. <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> think as why <SpeakerChange> folks we <Speech_Female> need to work on educating <Speech_Female> ourselves first <Speech_Female> and foremost right <Speech_Female> and and <Speech_Female> do that deep <Speech_Female> work that <Silence> needs to occur <Speech_Female> and then <Speech_Female> like you said <Speech_Female> there are systemic <Speech_Female> changes <Speech_Female> as well. If you're talking about <Speech_Female> like what. What did <Speech_Female> you do in your personal practice. <Speech_Female> There's <Speech_Female> across the fields. <Speech_Female> Like jackie nari <Speech_Female> working on our program <Speech_Female> to try to make <Speech_Female> sure that we're <Speech_Female> incorporating <Speech_Female> all of these <Speech_Female> concepts <Silence> throughout <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> but you're <Speech_Female> right there's no <Speech_Female> oversight that says that <Speech_Female> that needs to occur <Speech_Female> or that anyone necessarily <Speech_Female> even going to know <Speech_Female> that that has happened <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> right. So <Speech_Female> there's there's a lot of <Speech_Female> work to be done. I think on <Speech_Female> all like <Silence> you know when we think about <Speech_Female> like <Speech_Female> change on the <Speech_Female> individual <Speech_Female> level and <SpeakerChange> the cultural level <Speech_Female> all <Speech_Female> levels right <Speech_Female> now <SpeakerChange> needs <Speech_Male> to be involved here. <Speech_Male> Can we thank <Speech_Male> you so very much for coming <Speech_Male> on the show tonight and <Speech_Male> talking with us about <Speech_Male> this topic i <Speech_Male> was. It was a lot of fun <Speech_Male> but you know it's <Speech_Male> a heavy topic. But i <Speech_Male> was <Speech_Male> good. It was a <Speech_Male> good. It was a good topic. <Speech_Male> It's always good to have <Speech_Male> someone who can <Speech_Male> bring perspective that <Speech_Male> we do not have to <Speech_Male> our show because <Speech_Male> we know we're not going <Speech_Male> to be able to. <Speech_Male> We're not going to be able to do justice. <Speech_Male> So thank you so much <Speech_Male> for for coming on and <Speech_Male> being able to share <Speech_Male> and talk with us. <Speech_Male> Let us ask <Speech_Male> questions and <Speech_Male> give your consent for <Speech_Male> virtually our our <Speech_Male> question answer <Speech_Male> for today's episode <Speech_Male> of thank you <Speech_Male> before we <Speech_Male> go. You mentioned at the top <Speech_Male> of the show but if people <Speech_Male> want to either reach out <Speech_Male> or hear more <Speech_Male> of your <Speech_Male> show and <Speech_Male> your discussions. Where <Speech_Male> can they find <SpeakerChange> you. <Speech_Female> The <Speech_Female> actual episodes <Speech_Female> they air <Speech_Female> really anywhere. I believe <Speech_Female> you can find podcast. <Speech_Female> So that's just love sex <Speech_Female> and applied behavior <Speech_Female> analysis <Speech_Female> on instagram. <Speech_Female> That pages <Speech_Female> at <Speech_Female> love sex. <Speech_Female> Aba <Speech_Female> and then my personal instagram <Speech_Female> is. <Speech_Female> Cam <Speech_Female> will <Speech_Female> made it <Speech_Female> with an underscore. <Speech_Female> And then you'll also <Speech_Female> see me on. Like the <Speech_Female> defy page <Speech_Female> latte which are page. <Speech_Female> There is defined defied <Speech_Female> community in.

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"nari" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"And the amish leading that an are divided into that it cannot set for free sale. My poor old platform also test for secure victoria also mitigated for all the master lessee or the i thought the spanish malla dynasty lead over on calabash. Avila sell thor hiding you. All that for diaz not guilty to smith everyone evidence the dog the dog you in school did a team holt for drug foot market chef in liga while the tiddle our for star at skew ahead of that or video soup bit outgoing free. I oh my dog. Manley arctic is on the out. There have for my free some or health from till Nari savoy at all key. Motzer thing believe read for absolute all two-ticket on on chung citigroup mueller dead or the system i would have bought a project for or gosawx obsolete man the or cintas. Oh my where you are some you win out to them. Partial men dapper moth that all this on austin marcel for manu forty to hate them for endre or moola ceo. Maverick themselves fought at would muscle football night. Edmund have all but or your skin is then log in astra stop. Got the low of marcell Inefficient puck mashhad. Asked all the answer that it's won't screw the whole lot and the ford a dog for no one else. Set the marcel. Visual ian wouldn't believe are for my and here. I am e often latins lease maher all ice on me so the story is special. Ironically would don e all on the shed the would on nikolai robot. It had the pasuruan tea or at the jet yielded. Brung guffaw come been that women from their sky discotheque dorgan's episode or their accu madame. Some haste to my and hands basile yes. Some of accident scene liamine sociale muslim. Modern stadium stood l. elite emit or their animal's system. In you lose a high yet. Komo's garate tuesday And some hot expediting witness at all the league table. Slow methodic tommy after. Yeah i'm in. the ashton. Do horizon so poor air lead that you the hail at my here. Buddha at some distance she for more of salute do. Nc stu tag issue of or Debacle on me or something. Many dog. High relegate fish gemstone dog and then vat song at health. y'all mascot. I'll start i o male. Ceos they're going to muster saw soom footed lessening spence dismissed immune areas cosmos. Shed my latin gillet jahn for also probably shimmer for myself some free. I work up on the floor doing enforce on egg and also sat them on that holiday job. I stood skirted to get a medal also good for of the year for your whole community ivanka toward l. Ed baba jahmil teething punished. We'll see. Sticky schematic poor. Wash dang men or so. Thank you okay if they ever done for. Martha many found the how 'bout is shed or shadow shading. Yeah committee. I get a mid cork as a pep some. Oxo's mccoy dammit it. On the abdomen commute i shall we. I think the dumb omega. So i do help sucked gerry. Use dandelion effect warn shoes. The added snowflake gold apple ceo processor with seattle sucks. Snazzy football mark is uh. Dan demo should be done. The mnay didn't deal.

Casandra Properties Real Estate Podcast
Learn How To Transition Investment Properties Without Paying Any Taxes
"Welcome everyone to the cassandra properties podcast episode. Today that we think is going to really deliver a significant significant amount of value. We're gonna be talking ten thirty one exchanges by one of the best in the business. We have dave foster who's the founder of the ten thirty one investor. He's a self proclaimed deal junkie and we. We had a little back and forth banter. Going before the podcast. So i think we're going to have a little fun today. Dave we doing. It's awesome to be here. James and it's awesome to be warm you doing well. It's ask it's awesome to be here and it's not what he's he opened up. The opening bali was. What does that. you're wearing a vest. I don't wear vests these down in saint petersburg florida and i'm up here freezing my butt off in staten island new york. So you know. I've i've actually spent a bit of time down in florida. I was on the east coast. And i did some investing in north palm beach and singer island. Excuse me singer island. What's the market like down there today. Florida like every player in the country's booming it's all just booming a relative term no You know what is someone's entry point for mom-and-pop real estate is another person's palace and so it's really interesting and actually a lot of our work with ten thirty one. These days is transitioning investors from these highly appreciated areas. Your neck of the woods california where there's no cash flow of able for people that want on rental real estate and cash load. But there's these knicks of the woods. Where you can still find things that are that will cash flow from florida overpriced right from california that the floor is cheap. Thinking the neighborhood right so this would be a good place for us to jump off from what i understand. You moved your family from denver to tamper using the section twenty one homestead exemption and there's a lot of folks picking up and moving from state to state today. Can you speak to the audience about twenty one home. Said yeah. Exactly so actually. That's kind of the other side of real estate and we actually used both the ten thirty one end at one twenty one so the one. Twenty-one is for the house that you live in when you buy abuse of property move into with your family and live there so that when you sell it you lived in the last five years. It has a married couple. You want to take the first five hundred thousand in profit tax free and you get a two that once every two years so when nari tells us the national association of realtors tells us that the average person stays in house five to eight years. That means that her nine times in your life you have the opportunity to sell an asset at take money tax free now best mogollon now about half a million dollar exemption. If it's your primary residence is wonderful but the on not half a million dollar exemption over your basis in profit. You're not eligible for ten thirty one correct. That is absolutely correct. Hands the other shoe. That's about to drop the ten thirty one exchange exist for investment real estate and with the thirty one you can sell investment real estate. That's highly appreciate it or that. You deeper shade a lot on your taxes by new investment real estate and you get to indefinitely deferred the payment of the tax now james. We talked about dancing girls the beginning of the show. You better have been reserved. Because if i go to my next statement with you it's going to be all over. The ice cream is off the milk. And we're gonna have to shut it down because no one's gonna listen but there is a way to combine section one twenty-one and ten thirty one if you have more than five hundred thousand dollar profit let's say you got a million dollars in profit. You could sell that and you could take your first five hundred thousand tax rate okay. Nice but no big deal day. I want to eliminate the other five thousand. So what can i do. I step move out of that property. Go by your ex partner residents right now go read a property go to home exchange for a year whatever turn that primary residence in to investment property at it a year later. You're going to sell now. You're selling and investment property. Aren't you at. That's what the law requires. Forgive thirty treatment. So you're going to do a ten thirty one exchange but you're gonna take five hundred thousand dollars if what we would call boot. Normally boot is taxable but wait. Did you also live in that property for two out of the previous five years absolutely did so the first five hundred thousand dollars is tax-free the rest of it goes a deer. Ten thirty one exchange to go buy new real estate and you've effectively deferred or eliminated a million dollars a game index.

IINK Podcasts HI
"nari" Discussed on IINK Podcasts HI
"I'm dr revision. Strategic may nadi giza clifford up nipping. Ever suit gardner. Darren and there are still relatively spur. Said he had the government or nadi media. Been dan obsolete asami. The student to suck sucky ninety. Good is so good to hide it thirty. Do g. in these. Oh oh no good is a good. They had to to go two key. Oh no the c. See no body calling bouma bird. Feed auto body chose peaky whole body. Mama mighty good who good. Hey do holiday party do own son. Some soup own nonni being shared eighty to show birdied the chew but no no no good. It's a head to hide it already. Do this to me. Oh forty shrew One could only shrew goody a very goodison through mona to achieve this. Oh only to. Hey it is oh no.

Coronacast
When will I know when I can go and get a vaccine?
"Hello this is corona cast a daily podcast all about the coronavirus. I'm health reported teigen tyler physician and journalists culture. Norman swan choosy the twenty third of february the second day of national immunization. That's right and we've had saw so many questions from audience about how the vaccine role it's gonna work how you're gonna know when it's your turn in the queue and rather than us answering those questions we thought we'd bring in loren roberts who's a health report at one of our colleagues in the abc science unit because lauren's been looking into the vaccine rolette and how it's gonna work and she's here to answer your questions. Welcome lauren thank you good morning. Carl orange relief is test. Somebody on carcass cass. She knows what they're talking about talking about. I'm talking about the okay. Whatever lauren. let's get straight into it. We've got dolores asking. She's just by heggie practice and they have no idea how the vaccine is going to be rolled out. They waited eight weeks for their flu vaccine last year. What are the logistics. That are involved in the vaccine. Rollout will because there's lots of different phases when not certain about how people are going to be notified through the light rollout. So we're talking about rollouts gonna happen in the latter half of this year. We do know that people that are included in the phase. One eight of the vaccine rollout. So that's i care. Workers people that are currently living in h care. Quarantine workers a lot of these people. They're going to be told by the employer and have the coronavirus vaccine lined up by their employer and then probably get the vaccine at work so people that can h care for example. They'll probably get their vaccine de but it's the latest stages that we're not too sure about. We know that there's a good chance that will eventually be up to register online to get the coronavirus vaccine. I'm but at this stage there is to register. It's a little bit of a white and say so just to be clear. Lauren and give us a flavor as well. In israel people were contacted because they had the electronic health records in the insurance public insurance companies. You're saying is that this whole strategy is going to rely on us registering and then seeing how we qualify at. What stage of the priority list. But it's important thing now to just make sure your medicare details up tonight And if you can have it linked to you my gov and then we know that the federal government has spent about thirty one million dollars in a public information campaign and a lot of the details about the light of rollout which moisture israeliens going to be included in is going to be coming out there so it'll be posted. tv campaigns. That'll be a lot of information on the website but right now it's just that fight that we really nari. They are going to be getting their vaccine soon. We know that they can probably be finding out through their employer but everyone else. We're kind of just going to have to wait and say

Radio 22: Who's Next
"nari" Discussed on Radio 22: Who's Next
"I love it. And i had to bring that up discuss that. It's so unique but especially with everything going on. It's important it. it's so important also on the website. Yes yes. There are frequent into your website a few times acid. Everybody else and say that. I think i'm actually going to bring up for those That A chance to to view the website. There's website at the bottom here to the left There's a quote on there that i found interesting And i'm going to go ahead and read it. It said that If it wasn't for an ally i wouldn't be where i am today. The community invested in me. And now i'm able to get out there do the work and share that with the community for those. That aren't familiar with an ally. Could you please tell us you know what it stands for. And what is its mission. Sure i just got the chills just hearing you say. That noaa stands for neighborhood organizing institute in. It's a citywide leadership development program created for madison base grassroots leaders advocates. in community organizers. Now the mission is to build. Capacity of local community organizers to create change in their neighborhoods advocate for investments in grassroots leadership within marginalized communities and to promote collaboration and coalition building with madison's organizing community so with them being said and and with you you know taking the time to really highlight that organization. How's that particular experience within a y shaped you. How's that kind of molded you to be at this point of a running for alter well for me. It really like i said Just fine tune. Those skills that i already had and i was already doing this work. I just didn't know that i was doing it. So really laid out the ten steps of organize it organizing. It really laid out. Who is my target in an. How do i go about getting in front of the target to get that. Ask mom so it really just laid down the foundation for me to be able to be right here in front of you because what did is the number. One thing i take away from an ally is that. Ny showed me that. i have power. You have power. We all have power and our power is our voice and the more voices we have the more power we have. And that is that has is what led me to be right here today to say that i'm running for alder of district nari. That's something that's something..

Monocle 24: The Foreign Desk
Uganda Election Marred by Violence
"Uganda is a young country. Many if not most of its citizens have known of the leader. The nari savini who has held uganda's presidency since he first seized it in one thousand nine hundred eighty six. But any ugandans wanting to see a change at the top are going to have to wait a while longer earlier this week. Musevenei was declared the winner of uganda's latest presidential election convincingly defeating his main rival. Bobby wine a pop star who has leveraged his popularity among uganda's youth into a political movement. The election campaign was violent. Dozens of people were killed. The election itself is perhaps legitimacy they were no international observers. Either or both because ugandan authorities refused to accredit will because they recommendations had been ignored on previous occasions. The internet was shot off the authoritarian over each did not cease after president. Musevini's victory was officially confirmed. Bobby wine was placed under house arrest confined to his kampala home by the army. Musevenei commands if uganda has to resign itself to another five years of yari musevenei. What is the best. It can hopeful. All might bobby wine and the generation he represents actually have been strengthened by this loss. desk.

Plantrama
"nari" Discussed on Plantrama
"Our diocese plants. Well basically we're talking males and females here that there are some plants that have flowers that contain both male and female parts for example and they pollinate themselves and then there are other plants that some of the plants have male flowers and produce pollen and some of the plants have female flowers and those are the ones that get pollinated by the male. So maybe the most familiar example of a d. Shis plant that most people. Even if they didn't have a garden or love plants would be familiar with is holly we all know that the female holly plants produce those red berries and the male holly plants sit quietly in the background doing their duty. The male sprawl out. I know for most tallies. The males are not attractive plant as females. They're kind of e and whatever but they do the job right. They get the job done. They are necessary yes in terms of pollination and producing those berries. I think also more and more people are familiar with the idea of male and female plants because of cannabis cannabis is a diocese plant. Right and <hes>. It is a plant that males and females. Now unlike <unk>. hawley for cannabis growers. In less they are breeding cannabis. They don't want the males. They don't want their females to be pollinated and why it. Why is that because once. The female flowers are pollinated. They don't go on to produce bigger more cannabinoid rich bud. So they're they're producing seeds instead of exactly so for those who grow cannabis. They want female plants not male plants but another plant. That is dialysis that has male and female that people only want males are gingko. No no no no. No you say this. As if it's true for everyone. If i could be guaranteed of buying a female gingko tree i would be all over that because for nari gingko feeds are frigging delicious and and the reason that many people don't want female is that the fruit is stinky. Yes it is smells horrible. This is often used as an urban tree <hes>. Because it's lovely and it doesn't get too large and you know it has a lot to recommend it an urban tree the last thing you want to smell fruit walk. You know in the washington. Dc area if it turns out that because you can't tell what sex ginko is until it gets old enough to fruit so you plan to all these beautiful street trees and then ten years down the road people in the neighborhood start complaining about the stinky fruit in the dc area if enough people at a certain percentage in the neighborhood complain the city will come in and cut down the female gingko really criminal. Well you know what. I hoping you were going to say. I was hoping you. We're going to say that the city would come in and pick all the fruits when he was young so that it didn't fall on the sidewalk and be a problem but no now that's never going to happen. What other plants to that are familiar to people. But that might surprise them. Begonias begonia dialysis so the male and the female flowers of the begonias. They're both pretty. But if you look at them you can most definitely see how they are different and another thing that people might not realize is dialysis is asparagus. If you grow asparagus in your garden and you notice at the end of the season that some of those plants those pretty little red seeds on the fernie. Franz those are female asparagus plants. So asparagus is another one. You know. those are two pretty common plant. I think people just don't realize that they're on separate male and female plants. Asparagus is one plant. That people often prefer to buy males and that is because the females of course put a certain amount of attention into making needs and the males put more attention into growing more shoots and so when you purchase slips of asparagus plants to start an asparagus bed. There are many companies that offer all male plants.

Plantrama
Sexing Male and Female Plants
"Our diocese plants. Well basically we're talking males and females here that there are some plants that have flowers that contain both male and female parts for example and they pollinate themselves and then there are other plants that some of the plants have male flowers and produce pollen and some of the plants have female flowers and those are the ones that get pollinated by the male. So maybe the most familiar example of a d. Shis plant that most people. Even if they didn't have a garden or love plants would be familiar with is holly we all know that the female holly plants produce those red berries and the male holly plants sit quietly in the background doing their duty. The male sprawl out. I know for most tallies. The males are not attractive plant as females. They're kind of e and whatever but they do the job right. They get the job done. They are necessary yes in terms of pollination and producing those berries. I think also more and more people are familiar with the idea of male and female plants because of cannabis cannabis is a diocese plant. Right and It is a plant that males and females. Now unlike hawley for cannabis growers. In less they are breeding cannabis. They don't want the males. They don't want their females to be pollinated and why it. Why is that because once. The female flowers are pollinated. They don't go on to produce bigger more cannabinoid rich bud. So they're they're producing seeds instead of exactly so for those who grow cannabis. They want female plants not male plants but another plant. That is dialysis that has male and female that people only want males are gingko. No no no no. No you say this. As if it's true for everyone. If i could be guaranteed of buying a female gingko tree i would be all over that because for nari gingko feeds are frigging delicious and and the reason that many people don't want female is that the fruit is stinky. Yes it is smells horrible. This is often used as an urban tree Because it's lovely and it doesn't get too large and you know it has a lot to recommend it an urban tree the last thing you want to smell fruit walk. You know in the washington. Dc area if it turns out that because you can't tell what sex ginko is until it gets old enough to fruit so you plan to all these beautiful street trees and then ten years down the road people in the neighborhood start complaining about the stinky fruit in the dc area if enough people at a certain percentage in the neighborhood complain the city will come in and cut down the female gingko really criminal. Well you know what. I hoping you were going to say. I was hoping you. We're going to say that the city would come in and pick all the fruits when he was young so that it didn't fall on the sidewalk and be a problem but no now that's never going to happen. What other plants to that are familiar to people. But that might surprise them. Begonias begonia dialysis so the male and the female flowers of the begonias. They're both pretty. But if you look at them you can most definitely see how they are different and another thing that people might not realize is dialysis is asparagus. If you grow asparagus in your garden and you notice at the end of the season that some of those plants those pretty little red seeds on the fernie. Franz those are female asparagus plants. So asparagus is another one. You know. those are two pretty common plant. I think people just don't realize that they're on separate male and female plants. Asparagus is one plant. That people often prefer to buy males and that is because the females of course put a certain amount of attention into making needs and the males put more attention into growing more shoots and so when you purchase slips of asparagus plants to start an asparagus bed. There are many companies that offer all male plants.

Scuba Shack Radio
DACOR - An Original Five
"When you own a dive shop people routinely either stop by or call us to see if we're interested in buying their old scuba gear or they have equipment that they used many years ago and went to try to get back into diving and wonder if we can service it. Well that's a whole different discussion than where i wanna go today. Many times the gear that they bring in is from decor one of the original five. Us manufacturers scuba diving equipment in the united states. We've already covered two of those five here on scuba shack radio voice and health ways and i'll get to the other to swim. Master stivers down the road today. We're going to talk about decor. The davidson corporation was founded in nineteen fifty three by samuel davidson junior. Sam took the da from davidson and decio are from corporation and put them together to form decor i read somewhere online at sam patented the name and even gave the patent number three dot one two eight four eight one. Why tried to find that specific patent and couldn't find that where he patented the name but that number came up with something called a safety float that was submitted by samuel davidson junior filed in nineteen sixty. One so interesting. So how did sam davidson get interested in scuba diving. Well sam richard klein who started health ways was also in the united states marine corps during world war two he was stationed on guam and it said that he had gotten hold of some japanese goggles and started to explore underwater after the war. His interest in exploring underwater continued back then. Getting reliable. scuba equipment wasn't easy. So sam hooked up with an old neighborhood friend named bob olsen and they decided to build their own double hose regulator well somewhere along the way a buyer from montgomery ward department store chain found out about the regulator and purchase ten later. They update to three hundred. Sam had a business. He borrowed ten thousand dollars from his mother and got rolling by nineteen fifty five decor was producing what they called their dial breath. Double hose regulator sam along with another engineer while he mitchell continue to work on regulator development along with other scuba diving equipment from my review of the old decor catalogs. It looks like they didn't introduce their first. Single hose regulator the decor dart until one thousand nine hundred sixty two although they had developed earlier some say four years before sports ways introduced. There's but as a as we've seen with health ways and dick anderson's work a lot of folks who are innovating at this time. One of the ways. I like to research. these early. Manufacturers is look at their old catalogues. The cg forty-five website has a lot of reference material. Along with these old catalogs the earliest decor catalog that i was able to review from thousand nine hundred sixty one. That was the same year that see honda ended. The catalog was a whopping four pages. Long it had there are three double hose. Dial breath regulator for eighty two dollars. They complete single tanks system for one hundred and forty four dollars and a double host set up for doubles. Set up for two hundred and twenty nine. You could pay an extra five dollars to get yellow tanks. The cadillac had one mask one snorkel and one set of things by nineteen sixty two their line expanded with the d one day corridor. Single hose regulator and a new are four dial breath double hose. Remember that patented safety float. Well it was in thousand nine hundred sixty two catalog over the next couple of years. They continue to innovate with the dart d. Two and a dart with ajay valve for three hundred psi reserve on the first stage they also had the clipper series double hose regulators c two and c three by nineteen seventy decor came out with yet another new regulator line the olympic series with the one hundred two hundred four hundred and eight hundred. The last catalog. I went through was from one thousand nine hundred eighty and decor was touting twenty-six years of diving innovation with a doubling of their space at northfield manufacturing headquarters and the installation of a hyperbaric chamber for regulator testing. Looks like nineteen eighty was the year. They introduced what they touted. As a revolutionary regulator their decor pacer regulators pacer is short for positive air controlled equalizing regulator claiming to have totally balanced first and second stages with a remarkable point zero five inches of water. Cracking pressure wow. That's pretty low. They say they harnessed venturi with something called. Ventura matic something really innovation at this. Time was there microsoft Circuit dive computer. It looks like it took up. Most of your forearm with indicators for deco cent rate depth time readouts and more. It was quite a marvel for the time. Sam davidson passed away in nineteen eighty seven and sam's wife. Joan became ceo by nine thousand nine hundred ninety eight. Joan sold decor tomorrow's an overtime the decor named faded into our diving history. I did see a short article in two thousand five edition of sport diver and it was from nari and they indicated that they could no longer get replacement parts for decor regulators because the parts suppliers had destroyed their mold before they can move all of that to the marez a facility in palo italy. So that's a little bit of the history of sam davison junior the davidson corporation and decor one of the five original scuba equipment manufacturers in the united states.

BIG Esports Podcast
Fan Ownership - With Chris Hana - CEO At The Esports Observer
"Talk me through like some of the acquisition process because there's. I mean could be right in saying that there's probably like twenty acquisitions, and all of as sports history of a business that's more than say five thousand dollars for a t three sports team like an acquisition, and that number's Rod, or not I think the point trying to make. Is this billionaire acquisitions ever in a sports at the moment unless it's a team that say optic which is? is like a distressed asset or something like that? Mommy and there's a couple of there's a couple of also peripherals depending on what you what you consider east boards, and you know where we draw the line between gaming. I mean there's been there's been some. There's been some some proper requisitions to like to me. That was different because we're you know. We built us a startup. Everything. Yoho edge all you are right when you got to react to a fast paced market, lucky sports, and then all of a sudden your. You're dipping your toes into the corporate world. Again, And then you get like the all the requirements that kind of all read wants from you, and then all of a sudden you you get you get into this wheel of okay cool. We gotta do this. We gotTA THAT IT'S A. Different so I think so, the story is we got investment a year before same company, and then got acquired later, and the the big due-diligence was before prior to the investment and I think like I think that blocked me for probably two or three months completely, so you know I had a team that was taking care of things but I was really like I was really working on this on all the numbers compiling data sets, and you have that stuff left and right, but then you got to put in the right form. You know it's all these talks. That was a time you know. Before we went live, you know we talked about lifestyle getting healthy again and losing all the kilos. On. It was really with a lot of what a lot of stress in a positive way, too, but it's just. Fun You know. It's I looking back now I'd say it was a really good experience. Like at the time it's hard when you've got to act fast, and you got to work on your company, but then also your completely blocked in the process, my soul. Really in a really interesting like number video information that someone gave me today. WHO's well versed in traditional businesses? We're just talking about public. Elucidate sports companies in the industry AALIYAH. They have to release the financial reports by the thirty fester. July some extremely interested to see what comes out from those guys and anyone. I've essays and you know what he was saying. He's it costs about. About a million nosy year in day to public illicit business, and it really is because you need all of these. In when the I six says proved to us why your stock just went up by forty percent. It's been a lot time going through that. You need to prove that you haven't done something illegal. You need to use your extending entitled Potties to justify that stock price into. Your releases and to check through the bold reports, and that kind of stuff takes a lot of time and none of its shape. Recent prices? Everybody seems to be three hundred dollars an hour, so it takes a Lotta time. The and that's why I feel like. If you look at these sports industry right now I'm not saying it's not saying it's not mature, but it's a lot of startups. It's a lot of people just getting in doing things like doing things quickly and you. If you grow that like if that mature Swiss, certain point, you know you have a, you have a time where there's different skills that you need, and we just have different requirements. Right I mean if a company grows like your co changes like you know you need. You need different skills to complement. Would you can't do anymore? Because of time, constraints as well so yeah, it's. It's a very different thing. Yeah, that makes sense to me. Is like a really wish on. You wear a hood this from, but it's a good. Saying that say all the time which is like. The founder doesn't always make the best see. I think that's extremely important like it. You know direct example. I think is a good friend and a mentor CAL flurries from Unicorn. Who's the CO founder and the Chief Product Officer? It makes much more sense. I think the Rahul debate to say call isn't like doing public talks and I call isn't like being divisive the company and every time I talked to him. He's so passionate about the technology in the product, so it makes perfect sense, so rawls the for him to be the Sapio, but also like you were saying as as the company styles. Would maybe make sense to get A. You know inefficient him. Gray hit suit. Come into today the because ultimately it's up to them to run a smooth and profitable business. It's not up to them to Nari who the next best counterstrike's taint team is that you should pick out fanatic to up to them to make sure your reporting to the board properly and the numbers of flying.

Short Wave
Understanding Unconscious Bias In The Brain
"The human brain is a marvellous sponge that can process eleven million bits of information every second, but like a sponge it's leaky are conscious minds. The thoughts we are aware of can only handle forty to fifty bits of information, the second, which means that way more is entering our heads than we realize this much information coming at us, we consciously process all that information on a very rational logical manner. Otherwise we would be I'm going over every decision we make. Progress Auger Wall is a behavioral and data scientists in the UK and looks at this in her new book. So. What's the human brain to do? While progress says we sometimes take cognitive shortcuts help make those decisions easier shortcuts that can lead to implicit bias or as is sometimes called unconscious bias, which is what her books sway is all about these are some of the biases or prejudices that we carry within us, and we might think that we are really fair, minded and Galley -Tarian, but they often spring up on us when we least expected often via tired or distracted or Nari including of course. Course Racial bias progress gave me a short example from her own life raised in India. She came to the UK over twenty years ago and now lives with her husband and three kids in a beautiful seaside town. The Sandy beach is like ten minutes away, which is great for the dog Abud not very multicultural place at home running into others, bias is kind of an everyday experience especially since brexit up into a supermarket, Wiedeman recently told me Oh. This is now how we do things here. From member has been living in the UK for over twenty years. Biased really is all around. Yes, exactly. advertently quoted love actually which is an expert. About line. How many times have you washed? Love actually? Anyway. Today on the show Prageru Wall on what science has to say about unconscious bias where it comes from and how we can check our unconscious biases in the moment. I'm emily along and this is shortwave the daily science podcast from NPR.

Casefile True Crime
Julie Dart and Stephanie Slater
"In July of Nineteen, ninety-one things looked promising verizon year old Julie Dodd. bobbly spirited teenager with wavy brown hair and a smile she had recently finished high school, and was hoping to fulfil locked long dream of joining Britain's armed forces. Julie had grown up in late the largest city in the northern English county of West. Yo Shaw where she still lived with her mother. On Tuesday July, nine, nineteen, ninety-one Julie, spent the day with her boyfriend twenty year all Dominick Nari who lived in the nearby suburb of gitten. At six o'clock in the evening, the couple went to dominique sister rose's house where Julie helped prepare meal of Roast, Lamb and Yorkshire Pudding. After They Dayton, Juliet excused herself to start not shift at the hospital where she'd recently started working as an orderly. At seven forty five PM. She cased Dominic Goodbye and departed wearing a black skirt with a pink and black jacket. At, nine Peon Julie Find Dominique to say she would be working until eleven thirty PM and would then return to her Gnheim. Dominique noticed that there appeared to be music. Playing in the background is though Julie were calling from a POB. Two days past and dominate could didn't hear from Julie. Then on the morning of fraud. Agent Lights Twelve. He received an unexpected visit from his sister rose, who had found a handwritten envelope addressed to hin amongst her male. There was a letter inside written in Julie's handwriting which read. Dominic helped me plays of Ben. Kidnapped and obeying held as a personal security until next Monday night. Please go until my mom straightaway. Love you so much, dominic? Mom find the police stride away and helped me. Have not eaten anything, but I'll have offered food. Feeling a bit sick, but on drinking two cups of Tape Day. Mum Dominic. Help me. Love You all? Julie. Upon rating the letter Dominic Cold Julie's mother. Lynn Dodd to rush Daiva to rate it for herself. She noticed that despite being pending Julie's handwriting, some of the woods and freising didn't Santa luck daughter at all. More IVA lean couldn't understand why Julie would be abducted and held for ransom. Has Family had little money? Lynn immediately called the police to report her daughter missing and gave them the lead off. Police began looking into JULIE'S LAV Born on March one, nineteen, seventy three, Julie Anne Dodd, was the first chart of Lin and Alec Hill who went on to have a son named poll two years later. When Julie was four years old. Alex left his young family and in Nineteen, seventy, eight Lynn remarried and electrician named a and dot. The Julianne poll what close to their stepfather? Calling Him Dad and adopting he surname? Lin and day in separated when Julie was sixteen years old, but a in maintained a relationship with these stepchildren. Although Julie was brought. She wasn't a dedicated student and instead preferred to focus on her athletic abilities. A talented Rana. She participated in school and county competitions, accumulating a number of trophies, which her mother proudly displayed in the family In her spare Don Julie locked, socializing dancing and performing Karaoke with her friends. While she was still at school. She go to Tom Job at a cafe, which was wish she met Dominique a CO worker, who was two years her senior. They dated for three years, and when Julie was just seventeen, they became engaged.

LensWork
Innovation and the Clich
"Years the editor of Lens Work Publishing Brooks Jensen as an introduction to this topic. Let me begin with a little bit of inside baseball as they say. Did describe how it is that these podcasts come about. Oftentimes they're sparks from something. I read or something someone says to me or an idea. Get an e mail. Sometimes it's ideas that just bubble up out of nowhere. As I've often mentioned this happens a lot in the shower for some reason so I actually have a divers where I can jot down ideas before I forget them while. I'm still in the shower. And that's what happened this morning at phrase occurred to me out of the clear. Blue Sky jotted down. I had no idea where it was going. But I've been thinking about it all day in it's led to a very interesting train of thought. I WANNA share with you. The phrase is as a pursuit in life. The creation of art seems to be a dance between innovation an execution dance between innovation and execution. And here's what occurred to me while I was thinking about this. I've been listening to two different kinds of music of late. I've for reasons I can't explain really gotten into the piano concertos of Rachmaninoff. And I've mentioned that these are available on Youtube Etcetera. Play by this brilliant Chinese Pena's named Eugene and by sheer coincidence. I've also discovered a composer. Young woman who is very talented at composing classical music. And she's been exploring lots of other genres of music are names Nari Soul and she has been discussing of late in some of her Youtube Videos John Cage and his work. With what's called a prepared piano. He would take an open up a piano and attach things to the strings. like paper clips and whatnot and and the piano would make very funny noises and oftentimes. He would not really play music. He would just play notes and things and very innovative very creative. Very modern very sort of avant garde out there and she's been exploring some of his ideas so I I had these two things that are clashing in my brain the extreme precision and accomplishment of the execution of Rachmaninoff by Eugene Dong and John Cage and is prepared piano as explored by Nari Soul. I think these two extremes are what got me thinking about the dance between innovation and execution. LemMe ask the question. This way in terms of piano music which is a higher form of accomplishment. The extreme innovation of John Cage thinking way outside the box not only thinking outside of meter and normal harmonies and progressions but thinking about outside normal instruments. And how they can be modified in played with talk about innovation way out there so we applaud that to some degree and then at the other end of the scale is you. Juwan and her unbelievably precise playing Rachmaninoff. And the the execution that she brings to his scores are not only extremely high in terms of technical proficiency but also in terms of emotional content. So that's a very high measure of success. But can't we agree that these two are at essentially completely opposite ends of the creative spectrum? Both forms of music can bring out emotions. Strong positive and negative is zoom and both of them can be seen to fall in some sort of competition or scale of things. And which do we appreciate more? Well obviously the reason I bring all this up is because I'm thinking about this relative to photography to what's more important in photography extreme innovation here. I'm thinking of the inventive work from the imagination of photographers like Jerry. You'll Zeman or John Paul Capela Negro or Huntington Witherell or dominic rouse or the incredibly precise execution on very traditional lines. And here on thinking of Bruce Marne bomb and John Sexton and and even people like Steve McCurry. Which do we value more? The key idea here seems to me to revolve around our expectations. If we go into a piece of artwork with the assumption that what we're looking for is incredibly talented sensitive execution and we see something like the prepared piano of John Cage or the innovative of Jerry yells men or someone we might say. Well that's not what I call a picture because it doesn't look like what we expect a fine art photograph to look like on the other hand if we go in assuming that what we value. Is something really innovative? Something we've never seen before then we can look at work like. Oh maybe even Louis Balsam Robert Atoms and Lee friedlander Gary Winner. Grand and say well. That's that's not what I call a picture. But wow is that fantastic. Because it doesn't look at all like we expect a fine art photograph to look. I think it's easy for us to appreciate the fact that there are two camps. It's perhaps even easier to fall into one of those two camps without even realizing it if we're a traditionalist we're gonNA look at the innovative and the Avant Garde is being weird and certainly when people look at oh do sharp or Mcgraw eat they might look at those paintings and say that's weird. That's you know. Because it doesn't look like Rembrandt Raphael. On the other hand if greet and duchamp painted like Rembrandt and Rafael. We might look at it and say well. That's boring because it's not innovative so therefore it doesn't seem to add much to the history of painting and so we're not interested in it. Well we can do exactly the same thing in photography. How do you evaluate work when you look at it? Do you evaluate it based on its execution and how well it conforms to the cliche or do you evaluate it based on its innovation and how different and unique it is. There is a position in the Middle. Which gives me pause for concern. Because if what we're trying to do is have the best of both worlds have innovation and traditional execution for example. Then the only thing that's left is what you point your camera at that is to say trying to find something that hasn't been photographed as artwork before and turn that into your bailiwick or your creative vision. In hopes that people would look at it and say beautifully done traditionally printed man fantastic execution of something. That's never been photographed before and isn't that Nice. Do you realize that that's exactly what happened? In the early history of painting this has been discussed by lots. And lots of people. Certainly not a unique idea. And certainly not my own but basically the idea's this for generations for literally. Hundreds of years painting was of the human figure primarily religious pictures descent from the cross kinds of things but usually what happened in those paintings as they had to be set in some kind of scene and so there would be introduced in the background. Some little bit of a tree or a little stream or a building or something and with enough passage of time and hundreds of years. Painters started saying to the figure move over. We're we're more interested in what's going on in the background than we are in the human figure or the story and landscape painting was born but when landscape painting was born that way there were probably lots and lots of people around who said well. That's not what I call a painting because whereas the people this is just a bunch trees that's not very interesting so it was innovative but it wasn't traditional and it certainly didn't measure up to the kinds of execution that were expected in a portrait of a person or the painting of a of a story seen or some such thing

ESPN Daily
NBA Storylines Down the Stretch
"Doris Burke is an NBA analyst for ESPN so doors the All star break is over and NBA. Games are back. We wanted to talk to you. About what surprised you so far this season. And how you see the last couple of months shaping up as we enter the homestretch before the playoffs. Let's start in the East right where there is an unequivocal number. One team in Milwaukee they have the best record in the NBA and they are destroying teams winning by an average margin of victory of more than twelve points per game now of the eleven teams that have had a double digit margin of victory over the course of a season. Eight have gone on to win it. All Doris. Is there something that stands between Milwaukee and the NBA Finals? Yeah this is a great question. So in their eight losses the one thread that is consistent throughout those are teams are averaging sixteen point nine threes and philosophically. Their priority is protect. The paint. First and foremost they are so elite. At that that we have not seen this kind of rim protection in the modern NBA. With the possible exception of Spurs team that had both Tim Duncan and David Robinson but the fact of the matter if a team gets hot and really can create shot opportunities then. I think that they can be beat. The other thing that happens is your and you saw in the All Star game. Jaanus is the first player to go twenty five and eleven back to back all star Games but he was over to note points in the fourth quarter because they did playoff teams. We'll do they set up a wall and they said somebody else is going to beat us so well. No one's really doubting the bucks at this point. I think there is still a lot of skepticism about the number two seed in the east the Toronto Raptors. I mean after losing finals. Mvp Kawhi Leonard. They were not seen as favorites coming into this year yet. They have the same record right now that they had at this point last season doors one hand the raptors have been under five hundred against winning teams but on the other they had a lot of. Are we underestimating them? While I'm definitely giving them punchers chance to get to the Eastern Conference finals and a punchers chance to come out in the past historically particularly when Demar Derozan Kyle lowry. Were on the team together. What we knew was they understood how to win in the regular season but they're always seemed to be this level of doubt in their minds when the calendar turn to April but the fact of the matter is. They changed that a year ago with championship. There is a different feel a different presents a different countenance about the entire group and yes unequivocally the record versus plus five hundred versus minus five hundred is concerning but let's remember that their top six guys including Serge Ibaka. Who's having the Best Year of his career? Kyle lowry Markelle Saul Fred Van Bleed. Norman Powell Pascal them. All six of those guys have missed at least ten games so I don't know that we have the clearest picture the other thing working in their favors they have one of the best coaches in the league. Nick nurse wears that head coaches mantle with ease. Why because he's been calling the shots for the vast majority of his career. In any number of circumstances his creative he's fearless. He's a little bit irreverent. And I'm telling you mean ah I give them a punchers chance to get to an east finals and a punchers chance to get out. Did you see this coming at all? Doors not even close and this is the question really ultimately. Do they have enough offense in what you're seeing is to me. What appears to be this grooming of Pascal? Ceac him of all right. You gotta go get your own in those minutes and a playoff circumstance where you don't care whether it's a mid range to a fall away jump shot a jump shot under duress of excellent defense. What matters is I need to put the ball in the basket right now because this game is teetering on our control or there's and we've got to have one and you're watching Pascal. Can he deliver in the postseason? He's been excellent in the regular season. I can't wait to see a play out. I think it feels right now. Like you've got the bucks in a tier of their own and then you've got the raptors celtics heat kind of swirling around each other. There was a feeling ahead of the trade deadline that the heat could vault to that number. Two spot perhaps even contend with the bucks if they really went all in and added Gala Nari. They didn't they did add Igwe Dolla. Do you think that's enough? You know the the last prism through which I saw. Andre Gonzala was a man who was battling an Achilles in the playoff series and seemed to be showing the signs of some age. But what I know. Unequivocally is this man from a basketball intellect standpoint. According to Kerr is one of the smartest in the history of the League. He has got championship. Dna He's got positional versatility on the defensive end that basketball intellect and the ability to process information quickly and to do it under the spotlight of the playoffs. He has all of that. I'm anxious to see how he changes the dynamic the Miami Heat. You know this. They're going to play hard defensively every single night. They're going to mix in one of the most effective zones we see in today's NBA and Eric's bolster is outstanding coach. So right now sitting in that fourth spot how far Jimmy Butler can take them. That'll be interesting. Those young guys. Right Duncan Robinson Tyler Hero Kendrick Nunn all those guys who have performed so well in the regular season when the calendar switches. Can you win with them? Let's see

Monocle 24: The Menu
Wolfgat, a Far-Flung Destination for South African Coastal Cuisine
"Just a few years. South African Chef Cobras. Fundamentally has is boosted restaurant Wolf cuts to the Toba many lists ranking the world's best dining spots located in the fishing village of Party Nostra a hundred and fifty kilometers from Capetown. This small restaurant with seats for just twenty diners as the reputation for serving dishes made of some of the greatest local South African ingredients. I met Cobras at Kadoorie House studio one to discuss his success the south-african cooling the identity and first of all how his background as a journalist has been free tamers arrest or two and chef working with restaurant news At the DOT website. You kind of differently. Open up your eyes and your ears to what's happening globally. So I think that must have definitely played so some small role in the output when I started applying myself restaurant sort of scenario if that makes sense in wait sort of yeah I suppose it stimulates your your thoughts you know in terms of what's possible and what what can be done. And what's a gap in the market. Because I think in South Africa we still only just starting to realize what amazing things we have on home turf and to appreciate. It are indigenous produce and to present that as something that can be on a global stage and we sort of forging a South African culinary identity not which hasn't existed. In my opinion you're also talking about the importance of good storytelling. You learn as a journalist your I suppose definitely am. I still still do a lot of research for menus for the kind of inspiration for the restaurant. We situated historic voting on a very significant archaeological site with an old cave. That's located right underneath. The building said there's a lot of storytelling these a lot of early history that inspires everything everything what we do and how we compare the menu. How while we'd like to serve the Food and what we want to think of when they when they eat these things? It didn't more about your cooking philosophy as you are already making clear. We're talking about very very local food super local ingredients and so forth. Yes very intuitive menu. In a way whatever inspires us you know seasonally from the landscape. The way they're the history very much of that coastline and then picking indigenous succulents seaweeds wild herbs the whole teams involved every morning. Literally we up picking what's necessary for today's menu and it's about a six kilometer radius around the village. Everything comes from that radius. Not Everything I mean. We do get flour away from a neighbouring village a couple of hours away and we get of course we get more dry goods supplied like like any other strong on all local but not everything is sourced from you know that six kilometer radius but in each dish we always highlight an element that we've picked in that. Very like hyper local location. What are some of your favorite dishes just to paint a picture of listeners of what you get served at this restaurant I like really simple food? I like the combination of textures and flavors to be the surprise element around like things is to be to overwork. Layered all complicated so often dishes have only three or four ingredients. I like to combine elements of the land and the sea. So it could be an alien being that we puree and then serve with and some local green succulents or on the current or the menu. That just finished because we're now in a break Our our ultimate menu. We actually served one of the simplest dishes ever for our main course which was venison with seaweed so yeah literally like two elements like a surf and turf with local Springbok served with a kind enough Nari same species what's used for Sushi that grows in our local rapports poor fire and we found out in sort of a happy accident went way of this very special technique to get really really sulky. So it's always quite a nice surprise for gas because you see the sort of big almost chunk of seaweed on the plate and it looks like it's going to be a textual challenge and there's like this really silky smooth Emami slightly smoky seaweed that just really complements the venison quite well so two elements on the mate and it looks really simple. I mean you can't really do too much in terms of plating even so it's very pared-down pared-down and minimalist dish but then the flavors are just completely unexpected. And I'm quite new. Well we're resolve African food. Now what do you think is happening in your home country. It's a very exciting time because for so long we've had a bit of a Lack of confidence in our own produce and We have so many different cultures in South Africa. It's such a melting pot of different cultures and histories and traditional foods that we don't really have one single so African cuisine but now finally people are realizing that we need to create this momentum and for us the way to start in a small more way was to look very locally so to do something regional because then at least you get a little bit of an identity already and that you can work with but I think in the bigger context South African shapes differently becoming a lot more conscious that these sort of collective thing that we need to work together to establish. Tell me about your principles at work. I was reading that in your restaurant. There is no really high rocky over there and and it's interesting what people you've been hiring over there they don't necessarily we have massive qualifications so I work with a team of five For Women One man all born and raised in paternoster. None of them have any for more food background. Whatever or restaurant work our training and yes? We don't have any hierarchy or any distinction between kitchen in front of House. How does it work quite well? We're a Small Well oiled machine and we everybody does everything and often. It will mean that you you pick ingredients for a dish that you'll be doing the preparation for you know you do the part of that dish this necessary during service to finish preparing and you'll often often carry it to the table so it's kind of you come full circle and you can explain to the guests exactly what the dishes made up of and even the technique so for me. That's a real synergy energy in being that hands on in creating and serving the menu so you know just the way drawn or a or a chef you basically fulfill all the

Democracy Now! Audio
"Guardian" of the Amazon Killed in Brazil by Illegal Loggers
"We begin today's show in Brazil were an indigenous this forest protector named Paolo Pollino Wajda was shot dead in the Amazon by illegal loggers on Saturday it's the latest attack in a wave the violence targeting indigenous land protectors since the election of Brazil's far-right presidential you're both Sonata last year why did you gotta was killed when he and another forest forest protector were ambushed by a group of illegal loggers inside the Aurora boy reservation in the northeastern state of Miranda he was part word of a group called Guardians of the forest Wajda spoke to Reuters in September about his efforts to save the Amazon sin sauce nervous listen Y zone the we're protecting our land and the life on it the animals the birds even the tribe who are here too there's so much destruction of nature happening include trees as with would as hard as steel being cut down and taken away the myth obscured sometimes but we have to lift up our heads and act we were here fighting attacks against indigenous people in the Amazon have spiked since Bolt Sinato came to office his administration's work to open the Amazon even further to logging mining and agribusiness business companies while violating the land rights of indigenous peoples earlier this year eight former environment minister warns Sinatra's administration was systematically destroying Brazil's environmental policies with one former minister saying Brazil is becoming an exterminator of the future to find out more about the situation in the Amazon John and the murder we speak to guests shriram Queen Sosa is a field coordinator and legal advisor Amazon Watch he's joining us from solid waste and the northeastern state of Mara now the state where Paolo Pollino Guavas Yada was murdered and in San Francisco Christian Party is program Director Amazon on watch we welcome you both to democracy now let's go to Brazil to speak with our I guess Schramm Queen Bre can you explain explain what took place in the Amazon what you understand happened to this Gordon of the Amazon for civil Good morning and thank you for having me so the situation that the the Gorgonzola forest face today is the struggle for survival and protection of the way of leaving the digits people the Amazon and they have little protection from the state government from the federal government and as as you setting the wrestler leric from both not of speeches further entitles landowners and logging and an illegal oh minors to invade for the more indigenous lands so these struggled at the plight that that that indigenous people have is to protect the forest to to protect the wail of leaving and they all live so what happened to to to Bala Boolean is that he was he went hunting with his his cousin when when they were ambushed by five gunmen and last you look luckily luckily enough he he was shorting be armed so he could hide unfortunately all Lino was federally shot in the head and and died right away then the the other Guarino the forest as you said last whether he ran ten kilometers at wounded to to close by Aldea which is how indigenous villages cold here Brazil then he was helped by by his fellow glazier and took to a hospital and and this is why we know all of this in such great detail I want to go to a clip break now. of the Guardians of the forest that was produced by Vice Survival International Paulo Pollino appears in the clip as the Guardians Coordinator Olympio Budget Datta Warns of the risks to their our lives we're hearing the boys indigenous territory. We are the guardians of the forest contributor blogger pin gunmen to kill some of the Guardians of Harari Boyce thumbs father we're all worried about these threats justify the gunshots have been fired at some of the guardians houses you don't want war we want to resist here Nari boys there to indigenous peoples thing which has had a question genre and Wa where the most vulnerable people in the world you want the president authorities to help protect the lives of the guardians whose lives are threatened boost to I'd like to bring in Christian Party as well into this conversation Asian program director at Amazon Watch if you could talk about the community you have worked with as well Guada- Shahdeh one of the largest indigenous groups in Brazil and talk about who the Guardians are and how what they're fighting eating fits into the whole fight for sustainability on the planet and to save the lungs of the planet the Amazon rainforest yes thank you amy the question Jadida like other indigenous groups in Brazil have been abandoned by the state to defend their territories with volunteer tair groups basically policing massive territories buoyant territory is sixteen hundred square miles that's larger than Rhode Island and they're doing this without any federal support and what they're doing to defend these territories either some of the last forests left in the state of mind you know which the state that straddles both the Amazon and how by incredibly important for us that are left in this area they're doing this on behalf of all humanity because they they are protecting the critically critically important Amazon forest that sustain our climate protect our climate power our should say fuel the rainfall all over Brazil would also here in this country instead of California rainfall is slackening due to the fact the Amazon what is being decimated today and the guardians of the guards the forests are doing this work therefore on behalf of all of us but without the support that they deserve observe their their rights are enshrined in Brazil's constitution their rights to territory and to their way of life they have been systematically deprived of these these rights and what we witnessed today are two days ago with the murder of polly you was example about a manifestation of violence growing in these communities I wanNA turn to another leader of the guardians the forest democracy now spoke to Sogno glad you're Java during the climate strike March here in New York in September she's a leader of the Brazilian indigenous peoples articulation I'm here today to participate in the climate march bringing on the voices of the Indigenous Peoples Brazil to denounce all the destruction of environmental airman destruction of the Amazon and the legalization of genocide against indigenous people owner he was in the for five hundred thousand nine hundred people in Brazil have been resisting resisting by Friday against the political and economic powers under the name of development and in the name of progress

Science Friction
The Trouble With Embryos
"This sounds a lot like that battle of thoughts going on inside Fiona mind about her embryos if they were destroyed then what if my child needs something from a sibling medically in the future and I've just destroyed that option and then also what it might sense of identity on the flip side she might be completely and utterly with her identity and I'm just thinking well it's a single children out there exactly right exactly right it's hard to see how these complex questions could be easily on a single form Ivy clinics themselves also bear some responsibility for helping parents decide what to do after all they make money from it with IVF treatments and the storage of excess embryos Louise Johnson again in my experience clinics are very supportive of patients is when they having trouble deciding what to do with your embryos and you say thinking about donating their embryos clean counselors will spend considerable time with paypal helping them to make sure that that decision is the right one for them in fact the national health and Medical Research Council's ethical guidelines for IVF clinic state that they we must discuss with patients their options for using or discarding embryos but the level of counseling clinics a legally required to offer varies across Australia and some argue that this counseling is more focused on the start of the IVF process than the end look I think that's also the focus of paper taking treatment as well that's the focus is to try for baby but one of the medicine needs to be coveting canceling in Victoria and elsewhere he's what to do with embryos at the end of the day if treatment is successful or not successful so it is a matter that is coveting canceling right from the Gar so let's come to another option you have a small proportion of people decide to donate the embryos they won't use no one else who wants to have a child that might be a family member or it might be a total stranger they really want us to have a chance at having a baby maybe and and they would prefer their embryos to be used by others then allowing them to succumb on auto bar tree bench but that's not a common path people choose to take so in Victoria in two thousand seventeen to eighteen they were only seventy embryo donors compares with four hundred and twenty four sperm donors and three hundred dollars so the number of embryos donald is much smaller and why do you think that is I think it's a really hard decision they know that any children born or before to nick siblings if there are in children and that's hard decision to make let's come back then to the two women you've met in this program funeral and Desa neither of them want to donate their embryos to other families that just not comfortable with the idea of someone else raising what would be the potential children Fiona feels a great sense of responsibility for her embers the joined the spam dialup would never eight and would never have created those embryos I created them so giving them to somebody else to raise a family where I'm not I've got no sane or I'm not aware of what sort of parents apparent though built sort of family situation you know what if I go to a family or a situation that puts him in Ham then I would feel very responsible about that of course I'd Never Nari but it would always be there Jessica on the other hand says that she's been advised that the law in her State Victoria prevents her from donating her embryos to someone else because we've got Dana Sperm we count on donate to anybody unless the law has changed or I think it has correlative more than us for them and I said to her even if a Kudankulam to you because there's a diner involved in Victoria Dan can legally donate sperm to up to ten women that number varies around Australia. Gab Kovacs is a professor of obstetric gynecology at Monash unit acidy as we had last week he was also the clinical director at the Queen Victoria hospitals. IVF program back in the eighties then he helped create some of Australia's first frozen embryos for infertile couples the couple's Godal over Kabul the Women Guthrie stimulated saw monitoring surgery and the hassle and the expansion credit is embryos and then when they reach their five-year use-by date to then have them discarded to me a terrible waste he's opinion is donating your excess embryos to another person or couple wanting a child is a good option and always tried to encourage couples to consider donating and not can understand how couples who understand the pain of subjectivity who understand how difficult is to create these ambers war they don't donate their embryos to somebody else this Rodney having destroyed and when we ask people about this today are now we don't want somebody else bringing up children but I'm sure there's other ways with that could be involved the children and be updated and have some sort of a situation where they can visible if they want to but to give us the chance of law rather than being left on the inch to succumb okay so let's come to another option the final we're considering on science friction today and that is to donate excess embryos to scientific research what does that involve before here from an IV scientist here's Fiorina's first response to that idea instantly for I'm not having any conflict whatsoever I instantly just thought of horrible scenes from old movies of crazy scientific research that might happen Dan and again the fact that even though I don't see them as children I do see myself as being responsible for them desa maybe watch the same movies because she owes so has similar worries about embryo research limbs might grow that that to me I couldn't carp tonight at that we're doing that it just worries me that and I put electric shocks in that soulful of just thinking I'm just thinking I watch too much science fiction professor Alan Trounson helped pioneer the F. treatment in the eighties and he wants to demystify how scientists use embryos in research and locate the just short period of time the embryo is destroyed really by the processes of the research but they would be destroyed anyway if our terminated and that seems better than just disposing of them which is just to do that then to look at some data that you might mind from those embryos in the process of scientific study leader in stem cell research and he was involved in the public debate over whether we should extract stem cells from donated IVF embryos today there's less demand for embryos donations in scientific research because we now have other ways to develop embryonic stem cells from adult cells but they're still crucial for helping just to understand human disease and early development Professor Johnson says embryo studies can also be used to help improve the treatment of the modern be used to create a new technique luckily trip occasion where that's sides you know millions of embryos but you have to do the research in the beginning and you can't just sort of magic that's an area focused on the possibilities of replacing and repairing diseased cells organs and body parts I think it donating embryos for research bionic stem cells to work ahead of May an Ip so I- cells or induced pluripotent stem cells can be converted into different cells in the body you to perform different functions and that is the core element for so therapies for regenerative medicine now the lots

WSJ What's News
To Keep Exports Flowing, Saudi Arabia Looks to Import Oil
"We're going to turn turned back to the attacks that happened over the weekend in Saudi Arabia and we're going to look at just how deeply they've abandoned the global flow of oil. We're reporting this morning. That Saudi is now considering importing oil in order to ensure it can continue to reliably expert oil got that here to explain it. All is Sarah McFarlane. Who's in London so Sarah. Walk me through what you're reporting found. Why are they importing oil so over the weekend. Saudi Arabia had around half of its oil production production knocked out by missiles that equates to around five or six percent of global oil production now. Saudi is a massive export of crude oil the royal you get out of the ground it also Cape some of that crude oil and it refines it into high-value products like diesel which is I used to help generate electricity in Saudi and gasoline which is used for vehicles for transport fuel at the moment. What we're seeing is Saudi. He's really working hard to preserve its crude oil exports and by doing this. It's actually looking to the market. The global market to import more of the products sucks that it normally would refine it so so it's looking to import more diesel for instance than ordinarily it would be at this time of year and second to that. It's also looking to import crude oil. This is really unusual for a country that such a massive supply to the rest of the world of crude oil. It's turn into one of its neighbors Iraq and asked whether they might have capacity to export some crude oil which could then be used to refine into products for Saudi Arabia's domestic markets so for making that diesel in that gasoline. Why is Saudi doing this. Saudi really really wants to preserve its reputation as a reliable crude oil supply to grow global markets. one of the ways it can do this is by trying to maximize is what it can send out in crude oil to the global market at the cost of what it is is actually able to refine locally so instead. It's going to cut back its refining activity and it's instead going to take diesel for instance from the global market rather than making it itself. Is this the first time that Saudi has imported oil in this way. Nari Saudis always imported some products it's more the scale title of what Saudi is looking to import the moment. That's unusual you know this week. Saudi Arabia's state oil company ARAMCO was looking to buy three hundred thousand listen barrels a day of diesel fuel oil and gasoline that is pretty unheard of Saudi to be looking for those kind of volumes games and what about global oil reserves I mean is this something that Saudi Arabia can control on its own or will we need to release some extra shoyer from someplace else so the International Energy Agency overseas a large amount of the global oil reserves and so far they have said that this is not enough of a crisis for them to release those stocks however we have had president president trump in the US authorized the release of some of the US's domestic strategic reserves but at this stage we haven't seen lean him say anything on what volumes he think he thinks it's necessary to release no have we actually seen anything released as yet at the moment. The main thing that we're seeing in terms of Goebel reserves is Saudi Arabia is drawing down its own stock so that's one of the ways that the feeling the gap caused by the the attacks on their facilities on the weekend. They're releasing some of the oil that they already had in storage. So where do we go from here. What's this going to mean for heard the global oil market at least in the short term well at the moment. Saudi Arabia is saying it believes this is a short term issue that by the end of the month it will have a lot of the oil that's been knocked out of the market back online however some analysts more skeptical and feel oh that this could be an issue that takes months to resolve. We don't have a lot of clarity yet on the timeframe for repairs on exactly what the damage don these on who the contract is going to be and how they're going to go about repairing the different facilities that were hit on the weekend so it it really he is white and see at the moment you know. Saudi does sound quite optimistic. At this stage about how quickly they can return to normal not ever on in the market share that optimism

The 3:59
Facebook confirms human review of Messenger audio recordings
"This time a bloomberg report says that facebook page contractors to transcribe arrive clips of audio from users of services. The contractors told bloomberg that they did not know why facebook needed the audio transcribed now facebook confirmed it was was having audio transcribed and said quote much like apple and google. We paused human review of audio more than a week ago. Facebook says the audio in question question was transcribed from users messenger users of messenger. Excuse me who opted into having their voice chats transcribed now as facebook mentioned in a statement reports of apple and google transcribing audio have been the press amazon as well at this point claire. Do you think people are just desensitized to the amount of companies that are just listening to them. Facebook book facebook facebook. This is the one thing that has haunted them. Forever is facebook listening to me to deliver customize ads and this is just going to do them nari tamers in trying to quell that rumor. I do particularly love that. They said we've stopped it more than a week ago. Bloomberg incidentally probably started reporting on this and asking questions more than a week ago but that's another story. I think people are desensitized but i think this is the big elephant in the room with facebook and privacy. It's the one that certainly when i have conversations outside by tech circle with the normies as like whole them i. I definitely noticed that that's the question i get asked is facebook. Listening to me is facebook listening to me. I think this is going to do them favors. It's going to be a real struggle. I mean facebook is saying that people apple opted into this feature. I i'm sure people like they. They clicked right through and it just probably do they notice read every single line like they do every single chain yeah i certainly i was trying to think myself. I opt out of most things on messenger. Don't link my phone number to it. I think my contacts but i don't ever remember having the option of having my message is transcribed. I that's not fair. I even knew about so i sort of wanted. Have i opted into the privacy not clip probably not i know i trust in my nature nature to hate everything but i don't know of that is a feature so they would definitely be people there that have opted in without realizing and on the other side the contractors who were doing the transcribing. This is how we found out about this that they sort of raised a flag saying. We're not comfortable with this unethical. The fact that the contract is he's doing that. Robin facebook saying this is on ethical. That's a red flag and some of them said that that will really concerned that they conversations. They didn't feel that they should be listening getting into it. They were inappropriate to be listening into so i think they would certainly even if people have opted in maybe they opt in three years ago and forgot about it and wouldn't necessarily really be happy for having all of those kohl's transcribed you would take privacy over accuracy of what you're gonna say still. It's like you don't even nine me at all aw i think there are lots of great transcription services out there but i use them for work. When i'm interviewing someone not to transcribe my calls with my the mother or my husband and i think that in some respects for things like google home or things where you're calling up these devices so you know you're being listened to. I don't i agree with you. I think people probably didn't notice that they were opting in. Maybe the opt into like a bunch of things at one time. I do enjoy when things are accurate because if i'm doing a voice taxed or am i doing a voice in anything. I wanted to be clear. I don't want some miscommunication happening so i i think people are desensitized at this point 'cause like oh look. It's facebook now. That's like like every major company at this point. He's listening so say. You're happy that it's transcribing. Having a couple of humans do audits and stuff so that the a._i. Get smarter if i'm actually aware of it. I'm usually run the show so we report this. I'm aware of it just like all right. I know what i'm getting. I don't know if like everyone else is paying attention to that. Yes we're we're talking about