20 Burst results for "Newcombe"

"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

05:40 min | 3 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"With us as doctor nukumi asked me, why is Connecticut the constitution state my only other guests would be if my memory is something about the fundamental orders you tell me, doctor? That's exactly right. The fundamental orders of Connecticut. That was the first fully developed constitution written in American soil, Connecticut was founded by Thomas hooker, the reverend Thomas hooker. He led his followers from Boston, Massachusetts. They had a minor disagreement among their fellow Puritans. But as they created this settlements in 1638, he preached a sermon based on due to Ronnie many deuteronomy. One and the gist of it was that the lord God was giving them an opportunity that through their people, they would choose for themselves their rulers. It was self rule under God. And then a year later, 1639, they developed the gist of what he said in that sermon into the fundamental orders of Connecticut, the first fully developed constitution on American soil. And it talks about the reason they made this settlement in the first place was for the purity and liberty of the gospel of our lord Jesus. And historians tell us that the fundamental orders of Connecticut is in lineal descent to the U.S. Constitution. It is the constitution itself is derived in part from what you find in that fundamental orders of Connecticut. That's why to this day. You see a license plate from Connecticut, our constitution state. And it's so sad, by the way, you were, it was interesting to listen to Marjorie Taylor Greene about the politics and different states. Unfortunately, Connecticut today, like most of the New England states, is very, very liberal. It is not in any way faithful to the original ideas that help give it birth and the freedom that they enjoyed initially because of the gospel. Yeah, they are far from adhering to the beauty of the constitution. I want to just reemphasize one part of what you spoke about, which is that 150 year period where the colonists wrestled with toiled over this idea of self government. And then obviously the awakening revival leading to the American Revolution, we might be seeing a modern day revival break out today, what are the signs that history tells us that would say yes, we are in the middle of an awakening or a revival. Well, I think one of them would be the great interest in getting back to our true roots. And I think there is an interest. You know, Charlie, I mean, think about this, you're a very young man. And I thank God for your interest in these things. By the way, I must commend you. I was at the gym doing workout and I was listening to Tim Clinton, doctor Tim Clinton, filling in for doctor James Dobson and they had interviewed me around Thanksgiving time and I pushed the wrong button and it ended up with a lecture that you were giving, some sort of it was a speech, not an interview. And it was like, well, this guy is fantastic. It's really good. It was a wonderful, wonderful message, but that interest is great. I remember when Peter Marshall, the son of the chaplain, he wrote a book or co wrote a book in the 70s, the 1970s, the light and the glory. And that was one of the first steps towards reminding Americans about our true history. You know, in the modern era. Because so much of this was rewritten, not just in the 60s and 70s, but even as early as the 1930s. You're probably familiar with doctor Peter low back, perhaps. And I co wrote a book about the faith of George Washington. It's called George Washington's sacred fire. It's a real big thick book about his faith. And so forth. But doctor Liu Beck was showing how, even as early as the 1930s, there were some historians that were trying to, you know, miscategorized George Washington take him out of the category of Christian and put him in the category of effectively unbeliever. And then in the 1960s, that was definitively done that would book about George Washington's religion. And in fact, our book George Washington sacred fire really responded directly to that and I think one of the highest compliments I got if I could say tell the anecdote real fast George Washington's main church before he died, it's where the funeral was, Christ church and Alexandria, Virginia. It's Episcopal Church, Church of England. And anyway, the docents there told my co author doctor low back when they saw him after the book came out and so they said, we want to thank you because you gave George Washington back to our church. We used to have to tell people, you know, well, the scholars say he's an unbeliever or a deist and so forth, but it's beautiful and really believe all this stuff. You gave him back to the church. Thank you. George Washington had a copy of the book of common prayer that he made for his own, you know, in a Reddit all the time, read the Bible all the time. And so anyway, we've been robbed of our history, Charlie. Doctor Newcomb, wonderful job, come back anytime. Thank you. Thanks so much for listening, everybody. Email me your thoughts as always freedom at Charlie Kirk dot com. Thank you so much for listening and God bless. For more, on many of these stories and news you can trust. Go to Charlie Kirk dot com..

Connecticut Thomas hooker Tim Clinton nukumi George Washington Marjorie Taylor Greene Ronnie Peter low Massachusetts Boston Liu Beck James Dobson Peter Marshall New England Charlie U.S. Christ church Church of England Episcopal Church Alexandria
"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

04:36 min | 3 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"You can not get to a place of repentance if you think that you're doing everything right. Hey everybody, Charlie Kirk here, run roe versus wade fell as the law of the land last year, all it did was increase what pro abortion states are doing to entice and mislead women to abort their children. States are now advertising to travel just to get an abortion. It's become abortion trafficking. So the need to provide the truth is girls and women are contemplating what to do about their pregnancy is greater now than ever before. Ultrasounds say babies because ultrasounds give the truth at a time. Everyone else is saying it's not just a baby, it's just a clump of cells. When you introduce a girl to her baby by providing an ultrasound, you are giving her the truth at the most important time of her life. And more than 85% of the time, that she will choose life. You don't have to make a lot of noise to make a big difference for life. Just give an ultrasound a pre born dot org to be a hero for life that is pre born dot org, a $140 gives 5 mothers a free ultrasound and saves babies, $200 can save ten babies. Go to pre born dot org. I love this organization. I'm a donor to it. Check it out. Pre born dot org. Let's play a piece of tape here. It is from doctor Newcomb's a film that he helped produce, cut 47, the road to independence. Please play cut 47. The great awakening was a spiritual movement with political consequences. It reached its zenith with George whitfield, but this powerful series of religious revivals all began with a humble calvinist minister named Jonathan Edwards. His life and his preaching helped bring about what's called the first great awakening in America. That led to the Salvation of up to half of the south and one third of the north. The ideas of the awakening as historians say laid the foundations for what became the revolution, the awakening was the sowing the seeds for what became the freedom of the revolution. So I'm a great admirer of whitfield and Americans should appreciate his immense contribution. Anyone who's able to get Oz Guinness in a documentary or a film deserves great credit. Doctor newcombe, how do we watch that film and tell us more about it? Thank you very much. And there are other great guests too also in this whole series. Dennis prager and rabbi Daniel lapin and Janet Ellis and Eric metaxas, and my good friend, Bill Federer. And as well as Bill Peter low back. Yeah, he is, Bill, Bill is one of a kind. In fact, I remember when Bill and I first started to get to know each other in the early 2000s. And I said to him one time, we were walking on the streets of St. Louis. That's where he used to live. And I said, you know, Bill, the more you study, America's true history, the more you realize how the Christian faith, the Bible, played such an incredible pivotal role. And he said, yeah, it's like digging in a well and the more you dig, the more and more, or like a mind digging in a mind, the more you dig, the more you come out with all this, you know, gold and so forth. And it's true. It's true. When you read the original sources and so forth. So yes, I really appreciate that Providence forum dot org is the website where I have a clearing house of information on the whole series of films. It's called the foundation of American liberty series. And if anybody asked me, well, what's the foundation of American liberty? It's our judeo Christian heritage. And there's a 7 part series, one of the most recent ones to come out was called we the people. It deals of course with the constitution. Later in the summer is endowed by their creator. Of course, dealing with the Declaration of Independence. But the bottom line is the goal of the whole series. It's a show how the Bible played a pivotal role in America. We often forget that even in the life of George Washington. I love that. In government schools, though, where I grew up, I was taught the founding fathers were deists, or they didn't have much fascination with religion. Is that true? No. No, it's really not. I mean, for example, you take the Declaration of Independence. It was 56 men that met in Philadelphia in 1776. And of those 56 men, the vast majority of them, 52 approximately were not only professing Christians, but they were involved in trinitarian churches..

Charlie Kirk George whitfield Oz Guinness Doctor newcombe Bill rabbi Daniel lapin Janet Ellis foundation of American liberty Eric metaxas Bill Federer Bill Peter Newcomb Jonathan Edwards America Dennis prager whitfield St. Louis
Dr. Jerry Newcombe on 'The Road to Independence'

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:46 min | 3 months ago

Dr. Jerry Newcombe on 'The Road to Independence'

"A piece of tape here. It is from doctor Newcomb's a film that he helped produce, cut 47, the road to independence. Please play cut 47. The great awakening was a spiritual movement with political consequences. It reached its zenith with George whitfield, but this powerful series of religious revivals all began with a humble calvinist minister named Jonathan Edwards. His life and his preaching helped bring about what's called the first great awakening in America. That led to the Salvation of up to half of the south and one third of the north. The ideas of the awakening as historians say laid the foundations for what became the revolution, the awakening was the sowing the seeds for what became the freedom of the revolution. So I'm a great admirer of whitfield and Americans should appreciate his immense contribution. Anyone who's able to get Oz Guinness in a documentary or a film deserves great credit. Doctor newcombe, how do we watch that film and tell us more about it? Thank you very much. And there are other great guests too also in this whole series. Dennis prager and rabbi Daniel lapin and Janet Ellis and Eric metaxas, and my good friend, Bill Federer. And as well as Bill Peter low back. Yeah, he is, Bill, Bill is one of a kind. In fact, I remember when Bill and I first started to get to know each other in the early 2000s. And I said to him one time, we were walking on the streets of St. Louis. That's where he used to live. And I said, you know, Bill, the more you study, America's true history, the more you realize how the Christian faith, the Bible, played such an incredible pivotal role.

George Whitfield Newcomb Oz Guinness Jonathan Edwards Doctor Newcombe Rabbi Daniel Lapin Janet Ellis Eric Metaxas Whitfield Bill Federer Bill Peter Bill America Dennis Prager St. Louis
"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

05:03 min | 3 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Should he be best known for that message? Is that just the one that got the headlines? Or do you think that is actually centers in the hands of an angry God, a proper summary of the message he was most well known to deliver? Well, it's certainly his best known sermon. Earlier, I referenced Paul Johnson. Paul Johnson said, ironically, while Jonathan Edwards is best known for that particular servant centers in the hands of an angry God, he preached more about the love and the joy of God than he did. The other. But the point of the sinners in the hands of an angry God is one that people should not forget that if you are. Separated from God, which we are naturally and you've not been born again, you have not been regenerated, you are in a precarious, dangerous state spiritually. You are not covered by the blood. I mean, if I could use an analogy from the Passover, 1400 years before Jesus was even born, God instructed the people of Israel about the Passover, and he said, what you need to do is you take this land that's without blemish, you sacrifice that land without breaking any of its bones and then you take the blood and you put it on the top and the two sides of your house, then when the angel of death sees the blood on the top and the two sides of your house, you think I'm making the sign of the cross, you bet I am 'cause that's what they did. You know, 1400 years before Jesus died and through faith in the lamb of God whom Jesus is, you know, when John the Baptist saw him, he said, behold, the lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. And so through faith in Jesus Christ, God takes away our sins and he passes over the judgment because we are covered under the blood of the land. God made him who knew not that his Jesus who knew no said to be sin on our behalf that we might become the righteousness of God. The basic gospel message sometimes gets obscured, even in a church context, Charlie, where people may go to church week after week and in effect, they think that essentially what they're being told is don't do this and do that. And you know, in a real sense, the message of Christianity isn't due or don't, it's done. Jesus paid it all all to him, I owe. And so the bottom line is that when the true gospel just gets preached, even in simple ways or in sophisticated ways, it has a profound impact. And in the case of Jonathan Edwards, he was focusing on how people were in their natural states in a very dangerous condition, even if they were church members. So the idea of repentance was a core theme, why is that so important? Because a prideful nation seems to look at the idea of repentance with disgust. Repentance is the precursor to an awakening, is it not? Absolutely. Absolutely. And in fact, during the Civil War, president Lincoln issued a proclamation of prayer and calling for fasting and calling on God. And it's a really beautiful proclamation. It was, as I recall, March 30 18, 63. In fact, you can even just Google Abraham Lincoln prayer proclamation 1863. And he basically talks about how, as a nation, we have been so blessed. And one of the lines in that says, intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too proud to self sufficient to call upon God and so we talked about how we need to basically repent and realize that we have offended God and get back right with him, you know, otherwise this scourge will continue. He called for that prayer. And he said, by the way, that that day of fasting and prayer should take place. One month from now. And so that was at the end of April, 1863, and within two days, someone Jackson was shot. And you know, that's an amazing thing. I just don't want Jackson seem to have his own personal relationship with Jesus, but he was born south of the mason Dixon line. I don't want to get into the civil warrants over by the bottom line is somewhat Jackson was one of the best generals America ever produced and as long as he was alive, you know, the ongoing scourge of the Civil War continued. So bottom line is Lincoln was saying we need to repent. By the way, I believe someone will Jackson personally would have said, yeah, we need to repent..

Paul Johnson Jonathan Edwards Jesus Israel Charlie president Lincoln John Abraham Lincoln Jackson Google mason Dixon America Lincoln
"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

08:09 min | 3 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Thank you. Great to be with you. So doctor Newcomb, how many awakenings are revivals have there been that are notable in American history? And when did they occur? Well, you could define it in different ways. But I would say in terms of the real big pictures, being changed Kennedy, who will just mention the founder of BP independent ministries and noted author and so forth. Said in the big picture of things, we looked at it this way. America was born because of the first great wave of that was in the 1730s and 40s in America, okay? And that helped propel really the whole course for independence. Then the second major great awakening was in the early 1800s. And that pretty many people started to about the evils of slavery and the inconsistency of having slavery with a country that's based on the idea that all men are created equal. And it really helped for ultimately the end of slavery. Obviously, it happened through the Civil War, but there was a great deal of push for that. And then he said, doctor Kennedy, now we are in need of a great third rate of will you pray for that. Now, obviously, Charlie, we've seen many different sporadic weight gains, even in our own time, business in the last couple of weeks. This amazing event at asbury college and I remember about 20 years ago, there was like that at Wheaton college and my wife and I met and we graduate school about 45 years ago by God's grace. It was so grateful for that. But anyway, so there have been these little movements, but I would say, I kind of tend to agree with doctor Kennedy that in the big picture you're looking at the first great awakening, the second great waving and now the need for a third great way to see part of the difference is that sometimes these spiritual movements that happen here and there, they don't necessarily reform and transform great portions of the society and the people. And that's, I think, maybe where the difference goes down to how you define a great revival or great awareness. Well, let's talk about the first great awakening that led to the American revolution. What period of time was this and talk about the major characters, mayhew, Edwards, whitfield, and talk about how that led into the American Revolution. It created the framework and the foundation. Yes, John had said our second president said that, in effect, the revolution occurred in the people's hearts a generation before the actual American war for independence. And he's referring to, in some ways, this whole push for the great awakening. I would say that really historians would credit Jonathan Edwards, reverend Jonathan Edwards, calvinist preacher, congregationalist minister in Northampton, Massachusetts. In a pulpit there, and an under his preaching on a series of sermons about justification by faith alone in Jesus Christ that that's really when revival began to start taking place and that was in Massachusetts and the character of New England began to solely be transformed into and then George whitfield came over from England and he preached not only in Massachusetts, but the up and down the whole North Atlantic coast in all the different colonies. In fact, doctor Paul Johnson, great British historian who wrote a book that's a wonderful book called the history of the American people. It's 1997. And he said that George whitfield is likely the first American or the first American first person because he wasn't he was British, not American, but the first person that we know of that visited all 13 of the colonies in America. And it was for all this preaching. So in effect, the whole thing begins with Jonathan Edwards and then spreads through George whitfield to the rest of the colonies. And there were different preachers that were involved. You mentioned Jonathan mayhew who died. I believe in the 16 1760, but he was a minister in the Boston area, and he had some very interesting things to say about politics and even said in a famous sermon that when the king does so many evil things in tyranny, he does for all intensive purposes on king himself. Now, he was writing this in 1760 and he was I'm sorry, he wrote it in 1750. He died in 1760. But he was actually referring to the hundredth anniversary of the execution of Charles I, who was a tyrant. And King Charles I was the one with the star chamber where Christians, Puritans, presbyterians, quakers, were being persecuted for believing in Jesus and it was a terrible, terrible thing. In fact, there was a Civil War in England and it was brought about, frankly, through Charles the first is intolerance and persecution of the Christians. And so anyway, bottom line is that God was what worked in different ways. But I want to say this about Jonathan Edwards, because he really is the one under whom God really sparked the first great awakening. Jonathan Edwards was humble. He was brilliant. But he was humble. And you know, Charlie, everybody knows, probably everybody in your audience could quote second chronicle 7 14. If my people who are called by my name, will humble themselves. And I think that's one of the key elements that we need today in American Christianity. We need more humility. I believe it was that humble spirit that God used in a very special way in Jonathan Edwards. If I may, may I tell a quick anecdote. Please do. Yes. Okay. Unfortunately, you know how it is, Charlie. Sometimes with church politics or organizational politics, you would just talking a moment ago, but, you know, project baritones and James O'Keefe and so forth. Here he's a victim in a fact of office politics. Okay. Well, Jonathan Edwards, despite God using him in a special way, he ended up getting fired by his own church. And this is jumping ahead to 1750. He gets fired by his own church, and yet they didn't have somebody to fill in the pulpit. And so week after week on a Saturday afternoon, there'd be a knock at his door, and it would be one of the leaders in the church saying, you know, reverend, I'm sorry, but we don't have anybody to fill in the pulpit. Would you please preach tomorrow morning? And he would do it a week at a time because that's what God called him to do. And I just think that speaks volumes about him. I think we have to get to a point where we have to humble ourselves before God and repent of our wicked ways and that's one of the elements of revival that is so critical and so needed. And that is beautifully said. And I want to get into the detail of exactly what his most famous sermon was. Centers in the hands of an angry God. And what was the case he was making? And why did that resonate with the people of the colonies of America at the time? So deeply and with such impacts..

Jonathan Edwards George whitfield Kennedy BP independent ministries America Massachusetts asbury college Newcomb whole North Atlantic coast Charlie Wheaton college Jonathan mayhew mayhew whitfield Paul Johnson Northampton England Edwards Charles New England
America's Great Awakenings With Dr. Jerry Newcombe

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:50 min | 3 months ago

America's Great Awakenings With Dr. Jerry Newcombe

"Doctor Newcomb, how many awakenings are revivals have there been that are notable in American history? And when did they occur? Well, you could define it in different ways. But I would say in terms of the real big pictures, being changed Kennedy, who will just mention the founder of BP independent ministries and noted author and so forth. Said in the big picture of things, we looked at it this way. America was born because of the first great wave of that was in the 1730s and 40s in America, okay? And that helped propel really the whole course for independence. Then the second major great awakening was in the early 1800s. And that pretty many people started to about the evils of slavery and the inconsistency of having slavery with a country that's based on the idea that all men are created equal. And it really helped for ultimately the end of slavery. Obviously, it happened through the Civil War, but there was a great deal of push for that. And then he said, doctor Kennedy, now we are in need of a great third rate of will you pray for that. Now, obviously, Charlie, we've seen many different sporadic weight gains, even in our own time, business in the last couple of weeks. This amazing event at asbury college and I remember about 20 years ago, there was like that at Wheaton college and my wife and I met and we graduate school about 45 years ago by God's grace. It was so grateful for that. But anyway, so there have been these little movements, but I would say, I kind of tend to agree with doctor Kennedy that in the big picture you're looking at the first great awakening, the second great waving and now the need for a third great way to

Doctor Newcomb Bp Independent Ministries Kennedy America Asbury College Charlie Wheaton College
"newcombe" Discussed on Stephanie Miller's Happy Hour Podcast

Stephanie Miller's Happy Hour Podcast

04:18 min | 3 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Stephanie Miller's Happy Hour Podcast

"So the weird part is that this guy was a perfect storm. He was a Charlottesville rioter, you know, like doing the Jews will not replace us stuff screaming, carrying a tiki torch being his racist, this is possible in modern America on the streets and ultimately he was busted for bringing fentanyl across the Mexican U.S. border. Which is the big sound alarm from the GOP right now. That is the primary. That's their thing. Like, this is how Joe Biden's a failure. And it's one of theirs. It's one of what Trump would call very fine people. Right. It was one of Trump's very fine people. Yeah. Y'all are just overlooking the fact that his team is his name is teddy von newcombe. Yes. No, first of all, he changed his name because his name is wiener ville or whatever he's like. It just wasn't, his name wasn't. Coconut confirmed that, yes. Yes, he changed his name to, I want to say it was Joseph von newcombe, but his real name is just blurb. It's not shocking enough. It's not good enough for a Charlottesville rioter turn fentanyl poisoner right-wing activist who has a future with cpac. You know what I mean? You need. And speaking of me to Biden is better at not just seizing fentanyl, but also shooting down spy balloons. Which the Trump administration once again was proven to not even know about in the news story this morning. The president yesterday, here we go. If any object presents a threat to the safety security of the American people, I will take it down. I'll be sharing with Congress these classified policy parameters when they're completed. And they'll remain classified, so we don't give our road map to our enemies to try to evade our defenses. Going forward, these parameters will guide what actions will take while responding to unmanned and unidentified aerial objects. We're going to keep adapting them as the challenges evolve if it evolves. Yeah, so once again, it was confirmed that the defense Trump administration, they knew about these. Didn't do anything about it. Tell The White House, didn't connect it to China. I just completed. He did not want to know.

Charlottesville teddy von newcombe Trump wiener ville Joseph von newcombe U.S. Joe Biden Trump administration GOP Biden Congress defense Trump administration White House China
"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

07:27 min | 8 months ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

"And I think you'll be surprised how it ends. So a lot of your hunt stories are probably going to be about really great hunters to put a lot of preparation into their hunt and really go after a deer. They've seen on camera or seen my story is not that at all. To put some context in my story, it kind of starts with work. I work retail and work a lot of hours in the fall, especially toward holiday season, and this particular year, I think 2015, we had inventory in middle October, so it really cut down my ability to go scalp for good hunting places, or even really to go archery hunting. Moza loading season was right in the middle of inventory week. And I just decided I needed, I needed some relief from work, needed to get out and just kind of enjoy a day off after working for so many weeks and days in a row. And I mentioned it to Scott Brown, who I worked for at the time, who I consider to be one of the best hunters around. And he thought about it for a while. I didn't ask for a place to go, but he just suggested. Hey, I know where you should go. There's this great place that usually produces good bucks and you should know how to get there because we'd gone the previous turkey season and listen for turkeys up in the saddle. I said, you know what? I think that's a good idea. I don't have anywhere else to go, so I'll go give that a try. So when day was over, I got off at like 8 o'clock at night. And got home and rushed to put all my hunting gear together. And I'm usually real meticulous about having everything planned out and ready. I grabbed my powder, my extra powder, and my slugs, and I keep them in those little particles, tubes, and I went to bed. I got up early the next morning with what I thought was enough time to get out there, get on the top of this saddle on the mountain. On a guy out there, I'd forgotten that there was a bunch of down pine trees everywhere. You had to kind of snake your way through to get to the spot where you start to climb up the ridge. And the ridge was very, very steep. So I kind of slowly made my way up because it was really warm that weren't in two. So it realized how out of shape that I was also climbing up that and I started realizing that I could start to see the first little crack of daylight coming and I wasn't in that flow spot yet. And I wasn't going to make it because I didn't know exactly where it was with a headlamp on and I was going to pick a tree and do all that stuff in the dark and I said, you know what? I need to make something happen right now. So I kind of stopped where I was looked around and I noticed a really defined game trail. I mean, you could write a mountain bike through this trail. As much as it was getting used, I thought, okay, let me check the win. So check the win and it's like, okay, perfect. I can get above this trail a little higher up the hill and watch the trail, and that trail is headed to that low gap I was going to get to. And this will just have to work. And I'll just have to pray that I've got a good enough view on the sun comes up that I could get a clean shut off. But I know I can at least hunt that trail. So I did all the work, getting up in the tree and getting my stuff, and then once I got up there, I think I was smart enough to actually bring an extra shirt to change into, and then I pulled the Gary newcombe and sprayed myself down with the scent cover. And then I sat there for a few minutes, and as I said there, the sun start come up. And I kind of got mad at myself. I was like, you know, I've ruined this hunt already. I'm sweaty. I'm not where I'm supposed to be. I don't even know if I'm gonna have a good shot. This is gonna be a waste of my time. But I'm here, so let me just, I'll just enjoy being outside. And I sat there for about two hours with nothing, didn't hear nothing, thought, you know, I'm gonna give it one more hour, and then it'll take me about 45 minutes to climb out. And then I'll go home. It's like, this is just gonna be a bust. I just probably would have killed one if I'd been in the saddles what I thought. And not more than 5 minutes later, I heard the loudest what I would call a growl, but it wasn't really a growl. It was just a loud noise. And I had no idea what kind of animal did it. My first thought was, all right, there's about to be a bear walk down this trail. It's gonna go from a deer hunt to a bear hunt. So I turn aim a gun, start looking down the trail and out of the corner of my eye, I start to see three doors kind of walking the top of the ridge right above me. Just grazing their way around, it kind of ease in through, and I'll watch them until I had to swing around the other side of the tree and watch them until they went completely out of sight. And they never winded me, which is they should have, but they didn't. So I thought, well, that's pretty good. But a lot I need to focus my attention back on this bear that's going to come down the trail because there's still something down there. I don't know what it is. So turn my gun around, and I'm watching. And on the corner of my eye, I see movement again. And that's when one of the biggest bucks that I've ever seen by hunting walks out. Just a big body 8 point buck walks out. And I'm like, oh, this is great. Like I'm on him. I already know where those dough went. So I moved my gun to where he should have went. He walks right into it. I squeeze the trigger and nothing happens. I forgot it was a double safety gun, and I hadn't undone the other safety. I quickly under the other safety, he's moved by that point, so I have to swing around the other side of the tree. I've got one more chance to shoot this bug. I point the gun where those doughs had gone, and he walks right into the perfect spot, and I pull the trigger. When you hunt with the muzzle loader, you never know what you're gonna get when the smoke clears. When the smoke cleared, he was down on the ground, doing his final kicks, and I was like, oh, I got him. And then he quit kicking. I thought he's down. I've killed this big 8 points, the biggest one I've ever killed. So I texted two people immediately. I texted clay nukem and Scott Brown and told them that I've killed this big buck on this mountain. Well, while I'm texting Scott, that deer starts to kick just a little bit. And when he does, he's on such a steep slope, he starts slotting a little. And then he would stop. And I'm texting this to Scott, he's like, well, you better go ahead and reload, just in case you need to put another shot in him just to finish him off, and that's when I made it a realization that I made a huge mistake. I had grabbed two tubes of slugs in no powder. So I had nothing that I could finally dispatch this deer with. And then I'm starting to panic because as he kicks a little bit, he slides further down the mountain. At this point, he's even with my tree standings under my tree stand. And I'm convinced that it's a, it's a fatal shot. He's going to die, but the humane thing to do is to put him down why you see him. So I call Scott and I'm like, hey, you know where I'm at. I need some more powder. You're going to have to bring me some powder. And he forms me, well, let that deer get down the hill away from you. Climb out of your stance, stay up, good distance away from him, but don't lose sight of him. I'll find you in the Woods, and then we'll take care of it. No sooner than a hang up the phone, he makes one more kick and just really starts sliding off down the hill. It's almost like he's on a sled. And then all of a sudden, he just disappeared.

Moza Scott Brown Gary newcombe archery Scott
"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

04:27 min | 1 year ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Cool. That's pretty cool. Wow. The pictures are beautiful. To your left. Gary newcombe, the one. Good to be here. And then to my dad's left misty. Hey. My wife. Hi there. Good to have you, Missy. Good to be here. Hey, I got to tell you. I actually, when I didn't tell dad what I was going to do on this podcast. And I called him after I thought maybe he'd listen to it and I said, you probably didn't like that one very much, did you? I thought he might be like, why'd you go tell all this stuff? Yeah. But what did you say, dad? I said, I loved it. I mean, I do the same thing. But when I do something really stupid, which I have a propensity to do that. Game laws. No. But anything. I mean, I don't go to all my buddies and go something really low IQ I did. I mean, that's between me and me. Sometimes you just don't tell. Yeah, yeah. And I've heard stories like looking down the barrel of that good. Okay, there's no sense. What kind of talking about two different things?.

Gary newcombe Missy
"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

03:30 min | 1 year ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Respect for where you're at. Just go ahead and call maker. He's in the 80% yourself. He's kind of got to go. I've been here for a while and I can kind of just got to kind of read the room. And if it's particularly hostile, you go with acreage. Just avoid the subject altogether. Yeah, yeah. Well, now present company accepted. You gave us some great knowledge on the podcast. So are you going to introduce the rest of us? Yes. I was going to say, so the regular crew that's here. To my right, misty newcombe. Great to have you misty. Always, 'cause you guys know that most of the comments we get about the burger surrender are about misty. Yeah, because she's better than us. Yeah, very much so. Brett Reeves. Great to see Brent. Great to be seen. Josh filmmaker here. I'm glad to be here. Daniel roop couldn't be here. His mustache is excellent. I have that in my notes. What did you guys think? First thing I thought of was catfish hunter. Should we possibly get some context for why we're talking about Dan's mustache? Go ahead. Well, he would not out this information because we follow HIPAA guidelines here at the bureau's podcast. I've got rabies. We've.

misty newcombe Brett Reeves Daniel roop Brent Josh Dan
"newcombe" Discussed on The Tennis.com Podcast

The Tennis.com Podcast

04:52 min | 1 year ago

"newcombe" Discussed on The Tennis.com Podcast

"5 sets. Chris and Martina. Came behind you with three sets. And Johnny Mac and Connors had another 5 set. And that became the day after the U.S. open. Right. I mean, first of all, that was a long as day of tennis. But that became like the day at the open. If you got to get tickets, you got to get into super Saturday. Tell me about that day. Yeah, well, it became known as super sad event. The original super Saturday. Of course, those days U.S. open semifinals for the men were on the Saturday and the finals on the Sunday, which is brutally hard for the guys. And then the women's women's filing between. I mean, that was for TV. They had a big TV rights and it was CBS or NBC. I don't know who it was, but I said, yeah, we're going to play a big money, maybe we want everything on the weekend. So that just happened to be, I'm not sure it was one of the first ones or just the best one, but it started off actually before that with Stan Smith beat John newcombe 7 or 6 four 7 5 in the third and the legends event. We came on I had matched point on land of lost 7 6 and a 5th and having match point a fantastic lob over my head on match point. Yeah, Chris Martina came out and beat Chris ever. I think 7 5 in the third going right down to the last wire. And then just to finish it off, the biggest rivals of all time hated rivals, Macbeth, Jimmy Connors, 7 5 and the 5th. It was 12 hours a nonstop tennis. It was always the end of all the only unknown. Man, that's always a 19 year old sort of brash Aussie guy got to a semifinal Wimbledon. And I played one of the matches of my life. And yeah, it became known as a super Saturday, the greatest tennis day of all time. And it's still regarded as the greatest tennis day of all time. I mean, he's not had that anymore. He just don't have semifinals and finals. On the same time anymore. So it was just one of those crazy days and the crowd were going nuts and I was really excited to be part of. I was really disappointed to lose, of course, but when I woke up in the morning and I thought, oh my God, imagine if I had to play John McEnroe said I am fine. The next day. Next day. And it's funny enough, I saw Mac and McEnroe used to get him pretty low. It's basically love at guitar and how many still get on well..

Johnny Mac tennis John newcombe Connors Martina Chris Martina U.S. Chris Stan Smith NBC CBS Jimmy Connors Macbeth John McEnroe McEnroe Mac
"newcombe" Discussed on Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

08:23 min | 1 year ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

"To understand slavery better, it requires a distinct understanding of the papal bulls beginning in the 14th century. But more importantly, understanding it from the indigenous perspective. When you do, you may find yourself deeply questioning organize religious history. It is important to apply critical thinking in an evaluation of the history of where organized religion comes from. As well as the men that defined it. It is also important to consider the ongoing effects that the church had and has on past and present indigenous people. And what it will have on future generations to come. To begin, what is meant by a papal bull. Basically, a papal bull is a public decree or a letter or even a charter issued by a pulp of the Roman Catholic Church. Why is the document called a bull? Well, it was seen as a documentary of great importance backed by the Catholic Church, an institution heavily respected and thought of as the leading moral compass for European countries. These documents were sealed with a wax, which had a Pope's ring imprinted with it in the name of the Holy See of Rome, which today refers to the Vatican, or the government of the church where a Pope also resides. The wax also has a red and gold silk threads which hung from it. And at the end of those threads, was a lead ball called a bula, the Latin word for ball. Now, these religious decrees were seen as basically nearly the final authority of pretty much anything and everything for a particular country. The only higher authority than the church in the 14th and 1500s was that of The Crown. Or that of royalty. So it's here that another concept and some words which need to be discussed. They are discovery, and also the word, quote, dominance. The reason this is important in our discussion of indigenous slavery is that first, the church had to order a decree, again a bull, from the Pope, which defined in essence, claims to land through exploration. With that exploration, came the presumptive discovery of land. However, it also came with the discovery of peoples as well. Indigenous peoples. In his book, pagans of the promised land and later in his documentary the doctrine of discovery, unmasking the dominion code. Indigenous author Steven newcombe asks, quote the story of the doctrine of Christian discovery is a story of the doctrine of Christian domination and dehumanization. That doctrine is found in documents issued by popes in the Vatican during the 15th century, which declared war on the non Christian world and instructed Christians to invade, capture, vanquish, and subdue all saisons, pagans, and other enemies of Christ to reduce them to perpetual slavery and to take away all their possessions and property. If that's part of the Christian message, and by us speaking against that somehow makes us anti Christ because we're against the domination and dehumanization system, then what does that say about Christianity? Mister newcombe's research reveals that references of domination are found in various Vatican documents from as early as the 14th century. In some of those papal bulls, any indigenous people encountered as defined by the church were to be dominated. So take, for example, in the papal bull of May 4th of 1493. In it, Pope Alexander the 6th stated that it be pleasing to the divine magistry that barbus nations be subjugated. In this case, you have to understand what is meant by Barbie less. It is a derivative of the word barbarian. Which originated in Greece, and was initially used to describe all non Greek speaking peoples, who came from different countries than that of Greece. Further definitions explained that to Greek heirs, the languages from non Greek peoples sounded like they make unintelligible sounds. So if they are talking about people who are not Greek, then Pope Alexander must have been talking about virtually every other human being on Planet Earth, right? Also, the definition states that to be barbarous is to be vicious, cruel, or simply uncivilized quote. Therefore, given that indigenous peoples at that time had quite literally thousands of distinct languages and belief systems. It would not be a stretch to conclude that the Pope thought of all indigenous peoples as being beneath him and his church. The Catholic Church created many documents, which proclaimed itself to have superiority over any culture, which was not baptized or anything other than what they understood to be of the Christian faith. There are also earlier examples of these decrees. In 1452, for example, Pope Nicholas V persuaded king Alfonso of Portugal, to go to the western coast of Africa to invade, capture, vanquish, and subdue all Saracen pagans and other enemies of Christ to reduce their persons to perpetual slavery and to take away their possessions and property. That particular directive was used time and time again between 1455 and 1514. So this concept of domination, mister newcombe argues, was clearly an ongoing theme. In the earlier example of Pope Alexander the 6th, he also stated, quote it is pleasing to the divine magistry for the Christian empire to be propagated. Imagine that Christian empire. That's how they frame themselves. The emphasis of superiority over all non Christian believing peoples is arguably the basis for modern day white supremacy today. Followers of the Catholic Church at that time felt justified under God, to rule over an oppress anyone else who believed differently than they did. Especially indigenous people. Now in our next episode, we're going to discuss the discovery of land and continuing on that theme. I'm building upon that. So I hope you guys will stick with us. And we'll bring that forward probably in about another week or so. So I thank you guys very, very much for listening. And we'll look forward to talking with you. On the show, Saturday, January 8th. Thanks everybody. Take care. Bye bye..

Pope Alexander Catholic Church Steven newcombe Mister newcombe Pope Greece Rome Vatican Pope Nicholas V king Alfonso mister newcombe us Portugal Africa
"newcombe" Discussed on Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

03:56 min | 1 year ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective

"Is important to apply <Speech_Male> critical thinking <Speech_Male> in an evaluation <Speech_Male> of the history <Speech_Male> of where organized <Speech_Male> religion comes <Speech_Male> from. <Speech_Male> As well as <Silence> the men that defined <Speech_Male> it. <Speech_Male> It is <Speech_Male> also important to <Speech_Male> consider <SpeakerChange> the ongoing <Speech_Male> effects <Silence> that the church <Speech_Male> had <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> has on <Speech_Male> past and present indigenous <Speech_Male> people. <Speech_Male> And what it will <Speech_Male> have on future <Silence> generations to come. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> To <Speech_Male> begin, <SpeakerChange> what <Speech_Male> is meant by a <Silence> papal bull. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Basically <Speech_Male> a papal bull <Speech_Male> is a public <Speech_Male> decree <Speech_Male> or a <Speech_Male> letter or <Speech_Male> even a <Speech_Male> charter issued <Speech_Male> by a <Speech_Male> pulp of the Roman <Silence> Catholic Church. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Why is the <Silence> document called a bull? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Well, <Speech_Male> it was seen as a documentary <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> of <Speech_Male> great importance backed <Speech_Male> by the Catholic Church, <Speech_Male> an institution <Speech_Male> heavily <Speech_Male> respected and <Speech_Male> thought of <Speech_Male> as the leading <Speech_Male> moral compass <Silence> for European <Speech_Male> countries. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> These <Speech_Male> documents <Silence> were sealed with a wax, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> which had a Pope's <Speech_Male> ring imprinted <Speech_Male> with it <Speech_Male> in the name <Speech_Male> of the Holy See <Speech_Male> of Rome, which <Speech_Male> today refers <Speech_Male> to the Vatican, <Speech_Male> or the government <Speech_Male> of the <Speech_Male> church where <Silence> a Pope also resides. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> The wax also <Speech_Male> has a red <Speech_Male> and gold silk <Speech_Male> threads which hung <Speech_Male> from it. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> And at the end of those <Speech_Male> threads, was <Speech_Male> a lead ball <Speech_Male> called the bula. <Speech_Male> The Latin <Silence> word for ball. <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Now, these religious <Speech_Male> decrees <Speech_Male> were seen as basically <Speech_Male> nearly the <Speech_Male> final authority <Speech_Male> of pretty much <Speech_Male> anything and everything <Speech_Male> for <Speech_Male> a particular country. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> The only higher <Speech_Male> authority than the <Speech_Male> church in the <Speech_Male> 14th and 1500s <Speech_Male> <Silence> was that of The <Speech_Male> Crown. <Silence> Or that of royalty. <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> it's here <Speech_Male> that another concept <Speech_Male> and some words <Silence> which need to be discussed. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> They are <Silence> discovery <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and also the <Speech_Male> word <Silence> dominance. <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> The reason this is important in our <Speech_Male> discussion of indigenous <Speech_Male> slavery <Speech_Male> is that first, <Speech_Male> the church <Speech_Male> had <Speech_Male> to order a decree <Speech_Male> again a bull <Speech_Male> from the <Speech_Male> Pope which defined <Speech_Male> in essence, <Speech_Male> claims to <Silence> land through exploration. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> With that exploration, <Speech_Male> came the <Speech_Male> presumptive discovery <Silence> of land. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> However, <Speech_Male> it also came <Speech_Male> with the discovery <Silence> of peoples <Speech_Male> as well. <Speech_Male> Indigenous <Silence> peoples. <Silence> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> In his <Speech_Male> book, pagans of <Speech_Male> the promised land <Speech_Male> and later <Speech_Male> in his documentary, <Speech_Male> the doctrine of discovery, <Speech_Male> unmasking <Silence> the dominion code. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Indigenous author, Stephen newcombe <Speech_Male> asks <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> the story of <Speech_Male> the doctrine of Christian <Speech_Male> discovery is <Speech_Male> a story of the doctrine <Speech_Male> of Christian domination <Speech_Male> and dehumanization. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> That doctrine <Speech_Male> is found in <Speech_Male> documents issued <Speech_Male> by popes in the Vatican <Speech_Male> during the 15th <Speech_Male> century, <Speech_Male> which declared <Speech_Male> war on the <Speech_Male> non Christian <Speech_Male> world and instructed <Speech_Male> Christians to invade, <Speech_Male> capture <Speech_Male> vanquish <Speech_Male> and subdue <Speech_Male> all saisons, <Speech_Male> pagans, <Speech_Male> and other <Speech_Male> enemies of <Speech_Male> Christ to <Speech_Male> reduce them to <Speech_Male> perpetual slavery <Speech_Male> and to <Speech_Male> take away all their <Silence> possessions and property. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> If <Speech_Male> that's part of the Christian <Speech_Male> message <Speech_Male> and by us speaking <Speech_Male> against <Speech_Male> that somehow makes <Speech_Male> us anti <Speech_Male> Christ because <Speech_Male> we're against the <Speech_Male> domination <Speech_Male> and dehumanization <Speech_Male> system, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> then what does <Speech_Male> that say <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> about Christianity? <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Mister newcombe's <Speech_Male> research reveals <Speech_Male> that references <Speech_Male> of domination <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> are found in various <Speech_Male> Vatican documents <Speech_Male> from as early <Speech_Male> as the 14th <Speech_Male> century. In some <Speech_Male> of those papal bulls, <Speech_Male> any indigenous <Speech_Male> people encountered <Speech_Male> as defined <Speech_Male> by the church <Speech_Male> were <Silence> to be dominated.

Stephen newcombe Mister newcombe
"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

07:19 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"They and moon bronze. Where you're on podcast With our special guest. Peter desam feature ours Somebody of wanted to have on the show for a long time Anton newcomb from the band. And you probably know him. Better from the brian. Jonestown massacre but once again. I can't say enough. Good things about this album. Anton you guys you guys really. You hit a home run with it to use the the sports cliche. Well that's all fine and thank you. But what do you think about bob. Polar is right down the road. Yes you you tell them. I said hi when you're over at the dollar general store of course. Well actually. I've got a couple of friends of mine. That actually do see him from time to time. So i'll pass the word on mosley once or twice with them. We played once or twice them when the heads jokers. Fine with me. We were very good but Boy we drink his band so far under the table. They never seen anything like that. Well you know. I know i. I'm not. I'm not talking. Pbr's i used to be a serious drinker. I start with the leader. You know and move on into other. Keep going for months. I don't carry on one of those guys cowboy style. I just get anri. You know what. I mean like the english guys. They drink or viewpoints and then they're starting fights throwing up the street and all that stuff. I'm not like that. But i will get crazy or you know like if people 'cause people try that's why i never get these fights anymore because i'm never in bars right. It's so beautiful. But whenever trays yours you know i would you know if there was some to be had. I would keep drinking well when i spent a lot of time at all so people would say there's a guy from the movie or whatever to try it on. You know what. I mean that kind of stuff and i hate that so i'm so happy with my life now never house say i never saw the movie so good not even gonna worry about it at all. Good didn't get to one thing i wanted to ask you about but that's okay You know maybe we'll have to Down the road again one. We're just asked me a quick question. okay real quickly. How much was it When anthony bourdain came to berlin and and you guys did the show together. Can i tell you the truth. He seemed really two-dimensional. Like if you were sitting on the corner of house and you could see two of the walls and you kinda knew that there was more walls there but he was showing it whereas i am used to like three d. I look right through. People in concede their whole thing. So at first i was thinking. Is this just a face that he puts on for tv because people do that they just have the personality right right and the go. Hey we're back you understand what i'm saying. The picture right walks. Have everybody right. And i spent a couple of days with them so i couldn't figure that out i couldn't figure out if somebody stole a soul or what was going on or if you had a wall up against me or whatever and then he ended up dead right in a court. The i knew agent in there was so much weird his girlfriend so much weird crap with down. That was a real shocker. But it really enjoyed being with him in a really value friendship and support and all that stuff but there was something weird and i tried to talk to john laurie. Who's natura from down by law and all that stuff who is also just found out was just interviewed with him. He said everybody is like that. And i was he liked dismissed me so i quit talking to that guy. Because he he didn't really get what i was saying right. There was something deep and perplexing at that time that minute that he was with me that you can't see on the show that i picked up on in that i was just sitting there going. Wow here we are doing this. But this is real. And you're this real guy right but it but it wasn't tv land. It wasn't like my plastic face. So there's something there was something going on and i and i know a lot of stuff behind the scenes but it was like real quite deep. Do you know what i mean. Let let me let me polish this off. I want to be clear to listeners. That i've met i've met way more than ten thousand people and i look at them. You know what i mean. I'm not talking about just the people when we pay play twelve hundred people in the audience or something. I'm talking about people that say something to you. And i know people you know. I grew up very salt of the earth. People look at people like that. You tried to avoid problems you size people up and all that stuff right right immediately when you meet anyone you start making decisions right in to all that stuff but something was up there so i know i totally get it. I really i do understand what you're what you're saying there You know it's it's. I never my life. I've ever met anybody like that. And i used to date actresses i know everybody in the bed at least people the business. It wasn't that see what i'm saying. It wasn't like they were giving me the hollywood right moment to see what i'm saying. It is something that was just kind of often. The universe in that's where he was Is how is the occupied deeply. He was either preoccupied deeply that there was a whole inside him. That could never be filled. Do understand that that didn't exist like either he had no soul are something had his full. You see them saying yeah. Yeah use shell your which. It's a shame. it really is. Because he was on your regular acting we were interacting and having a good time at talking about things and and going. But i kept getting sense of a suspect boat. Something's going on you know. And of course i do. You know there's other stuff but it was very profound in my dad killed so it wasn't just like being tortured inside. Are having the depressant whatever they wanna say he ended up with or what you know what i'm saying right right was deep a lot cheaper than Than i hope. I ever get to be honest with. Yeah and that that killed me. I was on stage when i when i referred other thing with us it or not when i got into the situation with a in australia with a culture that was right when i heard i got a call on state at that concert that he was dead as people. Were yelling at me. And i just went off the tie that in. That's that's crazy You know. I would look to expand on on going. This really take a by all right for the for the shell eternal. thanks to anton.

Anton john laurie australia berlin anthony bourdain Peter desam twelve hundred people twice once anton two Jonestown massacre hollywood dollar general store one english Polar mosley bob more than ten thousand people
"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

04:48 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"You're listening to it right here Macaque la podcast july. These same jason. The queen died meaning and is.

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

04:31 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"You guest you know this Happened on me. Present don't know is cool risk wrong. Many earnings.

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

07:47 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"It is and that that's just not acceptable. But did your consciousness of the culture needs to change that much ensure america's same way so there's that side of it in the people that feel this strongly about these things then. There's these complex issues. You know like that you wait into the stuff. That's real complex like people don't wanna pay for three bathrooms which they should the ninety three baths just be one place coupon and p in in in one place to wash hands so you have these different stalls that goes into but then you you did this other thing but you know everything so crazy now like you on the one hand you've got women saying like will great. There's never going to be a woman champion at anything. Because some because some guys transitioned or whatever and they're just bigger and stronger and now they've made it a law so there's all this wild stuff going on in our time. This real tough just wanted to put some music you know and i feel for everybody but some of these battles like i've always been like we're not why we're worried about who's fucking in army right now. We're in a war. Whatever it is you know something like this is so backwards to me like it could be anything is going to say. It's you like to me up so tripping out on everybody. Some jumping for joy at mars. Mars base elon. Musk and all this stuff. And i'm like there are one hundred eighty eight countries that won't even have for the next two or three years. Even one shot of this virus that means nobody from those countries can technically come in really. You can't travel there. There's all these new variants you know. So it's like all. Those people are fucked billionaires suspecting around to build a bubble amar's for one hundred people in basically what's happening is you're your travel is limited and their travel is limited. So you're in a bubble and the billionaires are gonna a bubble themselves from you so you're going to be stuck in your in your generic bubble of of the guys that you're trailer park or whoever whatever you know your bill your billy to get their creating all these bubbles instead of like wow. Why don't we focus a little bit of that on how we all get more free. That's really the freedom hundred people go to mars. It's there's there's a seems like there's so many people that have lost the capacity. They've lost humanity but also perspective. Yeah that you. But i mean to be so focused as culture like so many people into the eon right that that okay. Well we've got a space exploration because we need the second chance because It just ignored you. Anything about the earth are making their lives better. When it's that simple it's a simple signing a piece of paper imaginary money like this one point nine trillion to help you out with these checks. How how simple is did you. You do it every day for the jets or whatever you do at rocket ships and just signed the paper during fix this problem which one of them is kkob. Get back to go into stripper bars or whatever we enjoy in life while going to concerts. Live music Yeah we're last. On the list. I very and You know being being a very extroverted person. That loves being around people. This last twelve months is really. It's been really hard on me Not not to say. I'm having a tougher to anybody else or not. But i've never felt like this before it's very. It's a foreign feeling. Is painful for me. Because i care about everybody is much as i dislike. Everybody i really care about people. This has been a hard one for me. It's been hard for me watching what happened in america in just feeling it feeling it everywhere you know like a told you my kid you know because one eight of his life just indoors now. It's it's a year at that age That you're shambles things at you know. That's he's never going to be able to experience that again. Whereas when i could not bring not playing with friends. Yeah it's been that much. I mean it's crazy anyway. Let's get back on track wherever you think it's fine. It's wide wang. How you look here. Let back to lupi. We were on tour. We took our break in december. We're halfway through. And then who had to cancel. Bring tool right. He wasn't even a the yet actually cancelled correct. Why we could go back. But now it's like i'm not be playing music so much more. Got his what he's had to do in the reality his life which means maybe work another job keep in house or it could be anything you know where he wasn't so flexible or whatever was the former life because businesses. You know all over went out of business. I don't know what he did. I can't remember but it's one of those things where it's a. It's a lot of people have a hard time just making ends meet. I guess would be the the term for it But it's just it's very rough just like you said you care for everybody you know. It's rough seeing people suffer And knowing that. I haven't been able to do anything to help because if i catch my doctor said i'd probably guy which is not good. You know not afraid of death. But i really am not ready to go yet. Also just the thing that you know germany's tried to help people. They gave like one of my guitar player. Five grand. he's from iceland long term. You know they're like here the the businesses that could prove something like okay. We'll give you seventy percent of your takings from the november before it started show as the so it supersedes your tax receipts whatever and so. They're you know they're trying to help. In in certain ways you know. Oh sure but i can only imagine all these different places they just you know the uk they just said okay. Three million people. We don't know what you do. See you indicated in the free food line which is just not cool. Okay so let's get on track. You know what for listeners. I'm sure should. I bring them through a loop at this point because it shows just come bouncing all over the place and that's fine. I'm okay with that Well who did you think you recall. I have wanted this you all over the place. Kids don't do acid. They tell you there's a reason why they tell you. Kids not to do acid end up. Scrambled scrambled eggs for brains. Yeah exactly exactly We need to play some more music. So let's plan on track from the album diabolic released in two thousand nineteen. This one is He's anton i'm raking. You're listening to it right here on the catwalk podcast.

december seventy percent hundred people one hundred people nine trillion mars second chance Mars Musk one shot ninety three baths november catwalk Three million people one place one hundred eighty eight count three bathrooms earth one point uk
"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

06:54 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"Pay regular on the cat club. Podcast That song right there. Anton was I think it was the very first song. I heard from this album One of his rules single yet. Like that song. It's a very very much a has a sixties vibe to it but it does sound very new and fresh to me. I like the cinema. The world creates a apocalypse. She's kicking down doors. Inner catsuit manual loves wearing a catsuit. I think it's so funny. She says so she's so let me tell you something. Funny she on names will come up with something you know moby lake. I'll say something. Like iggy played on his show yesterday or something in the uk into go. Oh i know iki. We did this song together. He loves me. And i'll be like andrew luke old ham from the role the rolling stones manager from back in the day. I'm having them write liner notes for us for this this this thing. I know andrew. We launched last year. He loves me. it's the dosing were friends. She always said. I know this person. He loves me so it is she strikes me and i couldn't be way off base. You're having having never met her but she strikes me as very much an on jonnu at times. She's a strong strong woman and she's nuts nuts not to go into a pers personal life but is like she like some of the worlwide stuff just like while you know what i mean. Since she's just like toward i. And i go on tv together and they let let her have it at some some things going on in she just like in these are like the biggest journalists in france and stuff from the papers and all that you know like they'll be all this around the table and it's this is like beyond going on the view this is like intellectual prime time kind of like that though you know you send him out of death as a whole audience may just like crunch ride into you. You know oh yeah. It's not it's not light in a she disliked goes towed tope. People i really like is a strong woman and probably the kind of woman that i would not want you to angry at me. Events just like the the seriousness of her. Some of her personal life stuck sure with from marriage. She's married to rumoured. Plant ski so obviously just a lot of heat. That goes in these last years with me to. That's come right at her. You know what. I mean and look at this. This is the situation. This is my life fuck off. not saying that. She's not empowering women something she is. Offer that there's so many people in it's especially true in the media. World is our journalists. They whether it's gotcha questions and they wanna try to nail you down for something or or get a rise out of out of the person that they're interviewing to me. I don't see the point in that. Maybe that helps sell newspapers or whatever else magazines but to me. It's it's not interesting. I would much rather well. There's this whole you know this interesting situation. You know like. I've been some some situations before i was in india These guys were attacking. It was a setup they were filming me in some girl was filming and they're not supposed to be filming and you know like that example. You just heard of me. Same what. I respond to people on the internet. Sure said one of those things like i talked like create like crazy old school cowboy guy at a bar. You know right. I'd say the most wicked thing i can think of to somebody's face and i and i said something really hard core to these guiseley filming in all of a sudden was in the biggest papers in the world in these girls saying anton just made a rape joke. I wasn't joking wasn't talking about anybody's said something really hard core but it wasn't a joke see. Yeah this comedy on. This is what you sound like to me. You know two giant guy so they tried to take me down get cancelled. Kent's petur the whole cancel culture castle tour cancelled group and it was just like no. It didn't work that way but it was. It was real hot for a little while like twitter. Even let you change the way. My twitter operates because it was a firestorm. See they had debbie daily mail. It all that so anyway. What i'm saying is the situations up and I'm just making music but you. There's a full extreme. I don't know if he's from ohio originally but like albania just like fuck anybody. Who'd like i don't wanna listen to watch a movie that from some director that has done this in the past good data. I'm like i'm just made a record with this person. Like all this other stuff is nothing to do with that. The thing i've never understood and and this goes right along with what you're saying is whether you want to call it the canceled culture because it was happening before that term came into vogue But people want to hold something somebody forever. Even though i understand. I understand all all sides in an progress that we have to make should should've made that at all these things. That can't can't happen anymore. you know right. They're they're they're almost saying that right now. Like for instance in the uk that every single woman as been harassed sexually harassed in the whole country. The that's how bad.

india ohio last year twitter yesterday france andrew uk first song Kent Anton One of his rules albania one iggy two giant guy sixties many people last years single woman
"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

Music in Motion Columbus

03:04 min | 2 years ago

"newcombe" Discussed on Music in Motion Columbus

"I say off jazz. I'm dr i.

Boston - Cape Cod Town Approves Memorial Bench for Shark Attack Victim

BZ Flashback

00:46 sec | 2 years ago

Boston - Cape Cod Town Approves Memorial Bench for Shark Attack Victim

"The victim of a fatal shark attack. It came as a shock to the Cape Cod community on September 15 2018 26 year old Arthur Medici of Revere was boogie boarding at Newcombe Hollow Beach when he was attacked by a shark. Efforts to revive him failed and he died at the hospital. It was the first fatal shark attack in Massachusetts since 1936 and now the town of Wealth lead is taking steps to remember him later this month of bench will be installed at the beach in his honor. The custom bronze plaque will feature Medici name a sunflower on a Bible verse. The more than $2000 for the bench was raised by local residents. Heather and Drew Doyle, that was W B. C's. Are Colin reporting, Dan walking?

Arthur Medici Newcombe Hollow Beach Cape Cod Revere Drew Doyle Dan Walking Heather Colin Massachusetts