35 Burst results for "RYE"

James Kearny: God Was My Catcher in the Rye

The Eric Metaxas Show

00:53 sec | Last month

James Kearny: God Was My Catcher in the Rye

"Talking to my new friend James Carney. Okay, so you ask God, yeah, should I be an actor or whatever? And you get this pretty heavy handed message, maybe not. Yeah. He said, he was my catcher in the rye. He was saying, stop, don't you're heading towards the cliff. These people were not you will not receive shame. You have not received help nor profit, but only shame disgrace and humiliation. So I said, okay. I won't. Okay, I won't go. What do I do? And I look down in the scripture came off the page and said, you shall see, you shall hear a word behind you saying this is the way walking it, whether you turn to the right or turn to the left. So it was come follow me. That's simple.

James Carney
Vitalik Suggests Using Eigenlayer For RAI

Ethereum Daily

01:04 min | 2 months ago

Vitalik Suggests Using Eigenlayer For RAI

"Ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin proposed the use of oracles as stakers for addressing the opportunity cost of minting ride. Currently, Ethereum staking provides a low risk competitive yield compared to minting rye and using it in DeFi. Support for stake the eth collateral would allow Rai mentors to capitalize on staking rewards. Multi collateral rye is being explored, however, vitalik believes die already fills that need and says the rye ecosystem should not compete. Instead, he suggests a version of rye that uses eigen layer, a restating solution that allows validators to secure other networks by directing their staking withdrawal address to a conditional contract. This would allow stakers to open a collateralized debt position by setting their withdrawal address to the conditional contract. The collateral would then be returned once ride that is paid back in full. In the event of a liquidation, the protocol would trigger a staking withdrawal to allow a liquidator to fulfill their obligations.

Vitalik Buterin Ethereum Vitalik
Elon Musk, Chief Twit, Makes Big Moves at Twitter

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

01:20 min | 5 months ago

Elon Musk, Chief Twit, Makes Big Moves at Twitter

"I want to outline some of Elon Musk's steps. He comes into Twitter. First of all, he's labeled himself chief twit, which is kind of amusing. Shows that he has a rye approach to Twitter. And he comes in carrying a sink and he goes, let that sink in. So that to me is a little zany, but nevertheless, he's in the building. He brings with him his Tesla engineers. I think this is really important because part of what Elon is saying is I don't trust the engineer as a Twitter. And I want them to explain the code to my Tesla engineers, they will sort of take it from here, and he locked the Twitter engineers out so that they couldn't alter the code. They couldn't basically fool with the company kind of on their way out the door. A bunch of these engineers will let go and most importantly, the top brass at Twitter were all fired, including para gagar wild, the CEO, and vijaya got a basically, I call it, you know, she's the mem sahib of censorship. She was the one running the so called content moderation. She's the one who played a key role in banning Trump off the platform. She's the one who played a key role in suppressing the Hunter Biden story. This is absolutely a horrible person, a kind of apparatchik would be at home in any kind of Maoist or stalinist or Castro white regime. They look for these kinds of people.

Twitter Tesla Elon Musk Elon Vijaya Hunter Biden Castro
Elon Musk Is Clearly Having Fun on Twitter

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

01:08 min | 11 months ago

Elon Musk Is Clearly Having Fun on Twitter

"Elon Musk is clearly having fun on Twitter. And it's nice. I mean, if you're gonna spend $44 billion to buy the platform, you may as well have a little fun. And I think what we're seeing from Musk is a little bit more self expression than we're used to because I've followed Musk for a while and typically he was he would post things that were going on with SpaceX and things going on with Tesla once in a while he'd offer a comment, but it looks like he's, well, I can't say letting his hair down. He's got a little bit of the king Kim Jong-un style. So he can't really let his hair down. But he's having fun. And he's really showing by example what it means to have free speech. By which I mean that you've got all these people bashing Elon Musk. In fact, here is a comment by someone on Twitter. They say that Elon Musk has invited the world to abuse them verbally on his own property. That's my definition of a gracious and generous host. And Elon Musk has a rye, but very telling response, he goes, freedom of speech means freedom of speech.

Elon Musk Spacex Musk Twitter Tesla Kim Jong UN
Book Banning (MM #4055)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 11 months ago

Book Banning (MM #4055)

"The mason minute. With Kevin mason. Book banning has become a hot topic over the last year or two as more and more governmental bodies attempt to ban books. In fact, according to the American library association, 729 materials were challenged last year, most of which targeting books featuring black or LGBTQ characters. Yes, it has to do with red politics and blue politics, but in Texas, one state lawmaker requested the public school libraries disclosed whether they held any of the books on a list of 850 books about topics including race and sexuality. It's startling to see, so what are libraries doing? In Brooklyn, New York at the Brooklyn public library has announced that young people across America can register for a free digital library card, which gives them access to a bunch of banned and challenged books. We had book banning back in my day, stuff like the catcher in the rye was banned because of the drugs and drinking. Times sure have changed, haven't they? And I don't know if and when that's going to change again.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings American Library Association Mason Brooklyn Public Library Texas Brooklyn New York America
Book Banning (MM #4055)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 11 months ago

Book Banning (MM #4055)

"The mason minute. With Kevin mason. Book banning has become a hot topic over the last year or two as more and more governmental bodies attempt to ban books. In fact, according to the American library association, 729 materials were challenged last year, most of which targeting books featuring black or LGBTQ characters. Yes, it has to do with red politics and blue politics, but in Texas, one state lawmaker requested the public school libraries disclosed whether they held any of the books on a list of 850 books about topics including race and sexuality. It's startling to see, so what are libraries doing? In Brooklyn, New York at the Brooklyn public library has announced that young people across America can register for a free digital library card, which gives them access to a bunch of banned and challenged books. We had book banning back in my day, stuff like the catcher in the rye was banned because of the drugs and drinking. Times sure have changed, haven't they? And I don't know if and when that's going to change again.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings American Library Association Mason Brooklyn Public Library Texas Brooklyn New York America
Book Banning (MM #4055)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 11 months ago

Book Banning (MM #4055)

"The mason minute. With Kevin mason. Book banning has become a hot topic over the last year or two as more and more governmental bodies attempt to ban books. In fact, according to the American library association, 729 materials were challenged last year, most of which targeting books featuring black or LGBTQ characters. Yes, it has to do with red politics and blue politics, but in Texas, one state lawmaker requested the public school libraries disclosed whether they held any of the books on a list of 850 books about topics including race and sexuality. It's startling to see, so what are libraries doing? In Brooklyn, New York at the Brooklyn public library has announced that young people across America can register for a free digital library card, which gives them access to a bunch of banned and challenged books. We had book banning back in my day, stuff like the catcher in the rye was banned because of the drugs and drinking. Times sure have changed, haven't they? And I don't know if and when that's going to change again.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings American Library Association Mason Brooklyn Public Library Texas Brooklyn New York America
Current event: Boat launched by US students lands in Norway

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 1 year ago

Current event: Boat launched by US students lands in Norway

"A boat launch by some New Hampshire students have been found in Norway students at rye junior high launch the six foot boat in the Atlantic Ocean in October twenty twenty it contained photos fall leaves acorns state quarters and a tracking device that went silent for parts of the journey but sure enough the Portsmouth Herald reports the boat was found four hundred sixty two days later by a sixth grader at eighty three hundred miles away on a small island in Norway the student who found the boat took it to his school and he and his classmates eagerly opened it last week the school in Norway is now planning a call with the New Hampshire students on my campus

Rye Junior Norway Portsmouth Herald New Hampshire Atlantic Ocean
"rye" Discussed on Couples Therapy

Couples Therapy

02:30 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on Couples Therapy

"Now, it's my tribe. Yeah. Definitely. Okay, wow. You guys, honestly, Jenna, you really helped me come around to this because initially I was like, oh, you gotta keep that job. And find other ways, but I think you guys are right. I think it's about if you can plan this a little better, a little more, like financially take some time to really set it up, set it aside, and especially if you do, as you said, you plan on selling the house, moving someplace even cheaper. You know what I mean? And this can be done. This can happen for you. Yeah. I mean, don't you feel better? Doing stand up than when you worked at an office. Like absolutely. Absolutely. And now that I'm more used to the ebb and flow of this business, granted, I still don't know how to set my own schedule or meet my own personal goals. I am still way better. Well, and also your bringing so much more to your community, you are engaged. You're probably so much more engaged in your relationship and your friendships, you have time and energy to give to other things. And I always, I just always think if you're experienced in poverty, you're getting it. You're really good at it. What's the harm? You've already done it before, so you know it. And if you know it short term, that's even better. Did you mean to be like, all right, all right, that's been a year. Be afraid of ramen again. You know what I mean? I remember those good old days maybe. I do, and I love a ramen. And now I know to put a couple, put a couple of veggies in them. Come in a little frozen. Just tell you. You get yourself a half loaf of Arnold rye. You get yourself some fake Turkey slices. Take place. You gotta have a side salad too. I always gotta have a side salad, but those bags are like three 50. Yeah. Three 50 for bagels that you get my language. Yep. I want it right now. Honestly, here's the key. You're toast. You toast the rye bread. I like where you're going with this. It's just that meal right up. So I gotta say. You did that a couple nights a week. Honestly, I still do stuff like that now. And I know you do it. I do too. I always say, splurge on butter. If you're gonna splurge splurge on butter 'cause you're putting butter in a lot of things. Oh, okay. That's very smart. Get that carry on. Wow, wow, wow, wow. Okay. That's right. Jenna. Delight. How do you feel now that you were half asleep? I know..

Jenna Arnold rye Turkey
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

01:42 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"Far. Cova teachers out here express themselves to kids more in really let them know what they mean to them. Is i think that a lot of times especially parents who really are kind of tough on their kids about their grades comes from a place. Care the my biggest thing is i. It means so much to kids to know that they're safe into know that like even if you can't be everything for them i mean. Even though i struggled allies a young guy always knew. My mama's there told me in just like so i would encourage people to just express that right however you feel comfortable but kids need here it and when you're thinking about academics and stuff think about everything that goes into their academics like self regulation motivation disciplined like hard work or severence like the fact that we had to just completely shift our entire school system and just expected the kids to deal with it on. There's a lot of stuff to really praising lift up in if if you are looking at just their grades you're missing opportunities to really see and help them shine so even if they have low braids i would really offer to people to push to find ways to lift them on because there are more than their grades. Right well an amish out onto the cova teachers we see. Y'all we love you and we thank you for holding down. I know the job will never take these teachers for granted. Again or the youth advocates. Mister donovan taylor hall. Thank you for all you're doing. We definitely see you. We honor you for your work. I cannot wait to see what you do next back and be a part of it. I'm right here. I mean that. Thank you been such a blessing all these videos. Unless i love the suit frames..

Cova Mister donovan taylor hall
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

08:08 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"Going from teaching to bis. But i yeah. I just i would love to. Pd's i would love to talk to. Schools are interested in this kind of stuff. Because i do really think it's important. I think not going to school for education and not being financial is what allowed me to really develop this respected outside of that when i go to like a teacher trainings. And they're talking about data and they're talking about this. This is what y'all are learning in school. i'll k. right his i'm not learning any of this In his beautiful. I think if we can even combine those two right so it's not about getting rid of the other one but it's like have we make this work. More in service of kids thing is like what 'bout nab black and queer in an all white environment in virginia. And i'm wondering at some of the conversations that you've experienced some of the criticisms that you've experienced from colleen's has a trigger any of the stuff that you experienced growing up. You know where you're lying okay. I'm on the outside again just for trying to do the right thing. Maybe that it was. You know being nice to other people or to make sure that you were performing at school and you were behaving and now you're like i'm just trying to make sure that kids feel good about themselves in addition to being able to achieve not instead of but you know still kind of feeling misunderstood in ostracize. Yeah i mean i. I've had like teaching situations where like parents have been reelecting lifting the workup in my bosses have been like no in. They refused like i had a boss who literally withheld a gratitude. Letter apparent wrote me because they were like. That's not what our company's about and it's just. I'm doing this work so i i would have bosses like mad at me. I've had people tell me like a trying to control my energy. So if i'm quiet suddenly i'm being aggressive right. I've been told like me your energy. I can just feel your energy. And i'm like i'm just sitting here so people want me to perform a lot And i think that sometimes these teachers Until they really learn about what my work is. They think that it is just like you know. Be positive. and that's not all what it is and so it's frustrating to me. But i don't really care about them like you know what i mean like. I don't really care. I care more about the kids in. It's just like if it works for you in the resonates view at school but when we have teacher meetings and i'm the only teacher that doesn't have any disciplinary hayes. Made it never doing something right. Maybe originally or what about Now's say what about from the black community. I know you mentioned two knives. Our podcast producer. That you've gotten a lot of press attention but it's been mostly from white press. We know historically not even just in our schools black teachers but also in our homes. We err on the side of wilbon behinds and disciplined right. And so your approach. People rely on. Ask white people steph right like year. You know Black folks even run angela. Like i'm going to healing process in their moments. People like would you your kids if It depends you know i don't i don't want to do that. You know what i mean but it's like you get frustrated if you don't know what to do. I wonder how you feel about that. Do you feel received appreciated in seen by your community in doing this work. I mean that's that's such a big question for me too. Because i just moved to oakland i think four years ago. I was the first time where i was around all types of black people where i was aroused originally from. I went to school with black kids and i had a couple of friends but for the most part they separated us because i was like i was in a different part of the city is i didn't get to build relationships and stuff with them so for a long time like i'm mixed In when i was younger feeling like being black and not seeing black around me and not having my dad in having like we had racist neighbors and stuff like it didn't feel safe inside. Lifted up the german part of me. I lifted up why mix. I'm not all black right and i. I got really upset with myself when i was in my early twenties. Why did i do that. Like kind of sold myself out. But then as i got older especially when it came to open a realize pretty quickly like i had to. That was like a safety thing in that like i was i was literally adapting to feel safe in seen in like in this community where i knew that i didn't belong in so being in the clear communities also very similar because i don't identify as gay in a lot of people will just say that i'm gay. I'm kind of on the fringes. Just like i am with being mixed right. I don't belong in one of those groups And so i think i've always kind of felt like not received by the black community in. I was getting really nervous in the beginning. So it's like. I'm grateful for all these people i wanna be. Reassure about this. I have a white grandmother eight. So there's nothing against white women memory grateful for it but also a party was like where the black people. Because i want them to see this work as well because really mine came from black women a my mom and my sister-in-law kadija. They are the best teachers. I've ever seen in light. Day are firm but they are loving their kids adore them and they stand up for their kids and they care about their wellbeing. They're passionate about what they teach and they hold them accountable and i i would literally like call mom. She would tell me like what she would do in that situation. And i'd like that's exactly what i said. I didn't even know you did that. And learn from them. And i think that black women are the backbone of this country shining air the really the the the change makers in education In so for me. I think there is someone named mr david. Johns who Yeah he shared my stuff and then people started. I'll tell you how emotional people started like commenting and someone was like. They're talking about like past the collection plate around the first time like i cried. It was like the first time where i was like. Okay like i'm saying like i'm doing the bright. Where like they siemian apart. Didn't want to need that validation but it is important because if i'm doing this work in service of kids and i'm only really supporting let me tell you make david literally like created this hashtag back in the day. Teach the babies so he is serious about this. I was to tell you that. I thought josh should meet but i just forgot. That's exactly where i saw yourself was on on david's instagram david. Johns we love you shadowed. David john he's into office lack educators in our lives including my mother dr andrea. Ri- love. You mama you love you. We love you so much. I've just being in school systems in seeing the way that they are used in the way in. It's not like they don't know they're being used in. That's the thing that's hard is because they're pulling on there they. Their relationship building with kids The fact that they put in so much as sure emotional labor and work in their coworkers want them to put that labor in for them and it was happening to me as well but right. Now that's why i was just at the wildest thing was i was on the seventh grade team and it was all men of color. There's one woman one woman who was raised. She was learning specialists but for the rest of it was all men of color. There's like relaxing on. This and i was like in seventh grade. That is fasting heaven on. So i have one more question. Bree i wish. We had more time. But i have one more question for you. And this is just the same way that you encourage. The students who need to fill seen who may be exasperated. Don't have what they need at home or the support they need or fill under resource. This is for all the cova teachers out there. I am talking about the parents who may not have all the resources that others have. Maybe they don't have any maybe they can't afford a tutor. And maybe they are trying to hold it down with forty hour week. Plus job and their kids mister donovan. What encouragement do you have.

wilbon colleen steph hayes virginia mr david angela oakland Johns dr andrea david David john josh Bree mister donovan
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

07:49 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"You don't. You're not used to being seen unless you're doing something that you're not supposed to do here. Thursday i'm just telling you i see you participating more like you're showing up i see you. What adult thing to do. Yeah it's just they're so receptive to it in that age is dr i. Because that's they're really starting to. I think that's a lot of trouble with like how you ourselves. That's when it starts for a lot of us right because we're old enough to understand our identities a little bit or and I just having an opportunity to poke this. I've i've been doing that for years. Is to get in trouble at jobs where we need you back over here on my coat on right like i just wanted to like old kids aside all the time and i had kids i just worked at the summer camp a couple years ago and it was like i mean i cry all the time like it's like you know i'm very open with emotions but there's some times where it's like. It's very rare. That i go back like later and cry again because of it but this moment just really liked it. Blew my mind. This kid was in the background right. Always doing the right stuff. He was always cleaning up after his like other people. He's always helping. He was always like first in line When they call like additives cut arab like he was like twelve. Maybe came from a military background. And i i just pulled him aside. And i was like buddy like i see how hard you were like. No one else has anything about like. You are literally helping this camp run right now like we should make you an honorary late. Staff member appreciate how much in egypt started falling in like hugged me so tight like my arms like pressed against me. Who's just squeezing. And i was like. Oh man i'm so sorry music noise it's okay. I just needed to hear it like a dude. You probably go your whole life doing exactly what you think to be doing because of doing what you're told right being quiet not seeing not hurt and just looking for someone z. You and it's such a powerful moment to be able to tell kate. I see you know like off tone. I'm telling kids. Icu is like i seen me. You know like telling. Donny is e e i see you as well You just never had that it was. It was crucial. I didn't see myself husbands day. yeah Many of us adults have to go through therapy learning that now. There's a wounded inner child in all of these other things you talk about how on for life which is a program that you stood up. In addition to teaching the importance of helping kids exploring their personal helping kids to explore their personal power. What is that look like it. How do you define personal power so a couple of ways that we do by personal power would be just like what is it about you that makes you you right in. Not just because your grades are not. They're not within you. You know what. I mean even can outta my grades it's like. What did you do to get those grades. A like i worked really. Aren't i stayed some like i managed my time and i was like. That's what we want to list by. The guest is great but also you're one of the hardest working line. No right you're in you're like perseverance. Define instead of being able to give kids access to that. We even do a unit on geared restraints. And i think that there's a couple of kids when we did it. Who were just like who never thought they'd had a strength because strains don't show up in school the way that they would like to things that i'm at my strength tonight patient we're dot me how i didn't get raised for and i got into a classic around and stuff like that but in reality. Communication is like the biggest deal. I have what i was trying to do is use by skills and so i teach kids like at the excellent because the accident or like they when they hit their teenage years out in their powers to come out and sometimes they like overuse them and they don't understand them and it's it's scary sometimes arms. People are sometimes it gets them into situations in about like you can learn these things and then trained minh these things that feel out of your control are things that you need. You can't explain about yourself can become your greatest tool as you get older and grow with yourself. You know that your business. You can apply in pursue opportunities that allow you to use restraints that are connected to your values and i just think that giving kids out language in the space to understand it. Seeing humor is a strength is so like my grounds who could be in trouble all the time just a quick switches like the language. It's everybody we are over using our humor right now. Bro reason that stranger like okay. I'm good right in. It's not like e quiet rights not appropriate. It was just like. I know that's your thing but like right now. We need to stay focused right our like. Hey like classes feeling a little low. Play a game using humor and it's like yeah yeah like giving them opportunities to really see these power. Shine the kids who are super involved. Everyone's drama and super involved at the right. They care about what everybody's is doing because they care about how people feel. They're always caught up and stuff like that and try and take care of their friends. And so we're and just seeing kids recognize that there's aims to these things and that these were so valuable in the world Versus like like what you like. Math science english. And you know what i mean. Those things are not important but they don't give you access to your knowledge of me. Teaching kids about personal power is how lowering them to access their inner knowledge right which everyone has access to if they're given the states in the tools right. Math may not feel accessible to every english. May not you consider on you like to be. Call us advocate as opposed to teacher. Have you thought about Sharing kind of what is really a paradigm shift in our educational system for other educators. Their training that people can go to to learn how to mister donovan. Their classrooms like they had a no. It's interesting because for so long. I felt kind of like the black sheep in a lot of educational basted and i would even have teachers. I tell me like. I'm not a real teacher or that like i just do like the feel good stock and we do the real work Had a coworker my last job literally say like we do the hard stuff. You just have fun with them and make them feel good. And i was like bats wild because when they're missing what they don't understand. How a kid us themselves. How could feels about themselves through Join just how they show up in their learning kills solid. They're going to take risks going to be able to grow and not feel like afraid of their academics and stuff Now so no no. You're spot on it's it's you know. Are there opportunities for other teachers who want to not worry in protest. But who wants to mister donovan. In their own classrooms in their own interaction with children. Maybe they're not teachers. Maybe there are a lot of young people in their neighbourhoods right google. They wanna help mentor. Help guidance shake is their training program on the horizon.

Donny buddy egypt kate mister donovan us google
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

01:43 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"So many kids that experience that i think probably are pointing privileges. We had parents who did see us created space but there are so many kids who don't have that opportunity or that blessing in here is mr donovan to share the hand. Speaking of seeing students. I have one more that i have to show you. This is the one where i was like. My eyes are sweating. So here's this and this amazing here by the way. So i think you're in trouble. What do you do you own.

mr donovan
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

05:54 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"We look data vanak names. Do you have any teachers like that There who you. I didn't bet you can use week. I'm richard cj. He says you're his teeth. I love that. I love that. That's that is what i'm talking about. Right is the people that we trust in the people that make us feel safe in the people that we learn more world is the show throw drove. Hey ryan can ask you a question. So what is it about angela. Evac what do you call her. What is it what is about her. That makes you feel safe or there makes.

richard cj ryan angela
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

03:14 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"Started to play this role of like all right and it was like no matter how much i was struggling. I got good grades. I had friends. I didn't get into trouble. And what i was trying to do is create safety for myself. I was trying to feel better by playing that role. And i didn't even understand when i was doing as a kid and when it stops feeling good and when i realized i wasn't getting the love and support i needed turns to like substance abuse. That's when i kind of re lost myself. That's when i like started to having depression and stuff like that but it all came from like. Don't you see like doing what you're telling me to like love me and my mom loves me unconditionally. Enjoyed offer me support and stuff like that. But i think one of the things i appreciate about my position is i get to be that outside perspective. Because after a while if you have disapp- your parents telling you positive stuff he kinda push away from that it's like yeah you're saying that you're my mom right. You have to say that. And i just didn't have anyone else in my life. No other adults in my life. That i felt like saw me or cared When i was doing well. Or when i was at okay i'm gonna try to get my dad's come up here. He stands eleven. On june thirtieth. Being out of school during quarantine has been tapped ryan. Also last his dad think he was five to a motorcycle accidents. I just wanna have a moment so people can see you. Connect in addition to to the videos. Badges thing is so important for people to understand like you have in the church we call it an anointing but a very special to be able to deal with with young people and it is radical. I don't know that. I had that many teachers who felt accepting no matter high performed. I felt like Teachers who are like. I had good chemistry with like we jailed and they were cool no matter what but i still like. There was some type of disappointment when i didn't achieve and part of. I feel like you were referencing when you were talking out. Performance is on like this devotional. I have come here. This devotional i have about a Denying the shadow weeden our shadow. So so we put on like we start performing because we know that that's when we get those those compliments that encouragement that that That allowance this a little bigger than shopping trip. And we'd start doing all of our all of our Our lives so It's interesting this is ryan. Let me see if i can just move the camera. Ryan all your hair. You like you related to me. This is donovan. I wanna show you wanna mr dimas videos in that. I want him to talk to. He lost his dad when he was six so i wanted to to connect with them one of teacher but also because you guys have something in common and you guys are both very smart. So here is mr donovan talking to one of his students. And i want you to see this or this is all glass area. Being stays already. Maybe.

depression ryan mr dimas donovan Ryan mr donovan
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

07:57 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"I show up for people. Help kids feel safe. I think that is like one of the biggest gifts i can offer. Anyone is is just helping kids feel like to be. They are to make learning about groves. Instead of learning about accomplishment and comparison competitiveness and no Just making kids bill. Say that's really really well mister donovan. I wish that we all had a mister donovan I know that for me in middle school. I spent a lot of time. Going to the counselor's office at my school saint therese Where which is to first through eighth grade and in sixth grade. It was uniquely tender for me. I was like just to be crass about it. As flat-chested peach was was on sleep it was repeat. My teeth felt like they were growing out of. My is literally like i needed braces. So bad it was just a rough here. And i can tell you you know you talking about creating safe spaces for kids when when kids don't have safe-space is they grow up to create unsafe spaces for other adults and so that is such a remarkable thing. We spend so much time telling kids that all you'll get over it. It's not that big of a deal and that very thing is the thing that triggers so much other stuff throughout their adult lives. Is that one of the reasons why you're focusing on creating the safe spaces for young people. I mean it's yeah because kids are seeking safety. Kids are also seeking identity. Basically my goal is to help. Kids create positives of identities. They can create safety within themselves. Because a lot of a lot of parents will say like you know. I think they will misunderstand kind of the work. I do and say well you know they. All do is play video games go on social media like you should tell them to care about school. Mike you understand that school is just another thing that we put on kids right. It's another way for kids to feel like that's where they have to find their identity in the academics in education system in this country is so limited in its so A creates boxes that so many people kind of get shoved into if you don't find yourself within your school where if you don't find yourself if you don't get good grades or feel passionate about what you're doing then like where's your identity. Where's your value and for me. It's like so many adults will say like you said like it's not a big deal in these kids are just like their dramatic at that age. And i'm like honestly. I talked to adults. They'll tell me the same thing is like. I just talked to a thirteen year. Old girl in y'all going through the same thing but for some reason you're allowed to feel like this is a serious thing for you but we invalidate that for them and like he's like a lot of those things that are starting with them that we kind of sleep under the carpet or day like you're just a teen that becomes like their soundtrack for their life. That's when it starts you know and it's like it's just wild that we miss out on that really help them build safety so wherever they go or whatever. They're doing whatever they they're exceeding their failing if they're struggling to have you with end. Inner sanctuary is the goal. And it's remarkable to me because it really turns the system of schooling on. Its head and i think. In a lot of ways you referenced. Even from a personal development standpoint a lot of that is structural any oppressive to us and so here is one example of your video. We'll have this cut different for the purpose of the podcast. But i want you to react to this. This is why you are a tic tac sensation. Here's this first video and teacher for very long But i just wanted to tell you all that. I really really really love you and i really really appreciate you in a really really happy to be able to work with you I've said this. Before but i wanna come back to it. Your grades like know. What i'm saying is your grades. They do not matter to you when it comes to me loving him. So if you have all zeros i care about you just as much as if you have a horse. Okay and like your grades. Do not determine your value in graves. Do not matter when it comes to you being a human being deserving love. I feel very very lucky. I felt very happy to get to be your teacher to be able to see you guys every day. Our first positive born posted And it's kind of like a the the core might teaching philosophy integral and i think that Sometimes people when. I'm really excited. Have opportunities like this to really discuss because sometimes people will think. I'm saying that we should tell his grades. Don't matter at all and stuff like that and it's not what that is what. I'm really trying to help. kids understand. Is that their innate value. In this world doesn't come from their grades Net grades literally like it. Sounds kind of silly but kids don't know this unless we explicitly teach them that grades. Just help us kind of track where we at aratu are learning. But because there's so much emphasis on vowed in safety. I have to get good grades if i don't get good grades. Parents won't love me. My teachers won't like me. The world won't need me is what feels like for these kids and so i talked to a lot of kids who get lower grades. Who really left out. But i also talked to a lot of my high achieving students who have panic attacks when they can't finish their work right or panic attacks if they stayed up two days in a row work on a project and too tired to present in are pushing themselves to present and stuff like that because their safety comes from. I'm a good student. I get good grades. And so when kids aren't giving us base to really kind of create their own identity in really look at it in name it right giving like core values and strengths. And if they're given that opportunity and that is solid that goes with them. They grow that they can control. They can train. They can condition. They can strengthen these these skills but if they don't have that and they're getting lower grades than it's like who cares about me and kids have said to me multiple times and it's been shocking. The first time it kids at it is like maybe. It's just this kid but multiple times. That teacher hates me. Why because i have bad grades. That's wild that's wild to me and to tell kids that to tell that i care about them. Despite their grades the fact that that's radical inaugurals is is is shocking to me because for me it's kind of it should be in my opinion. It should be the core of what we do is like you need nurtured support in in positively in. It's not just lincoln encouragement right on. I don't believe in telling kids. Look through glasses. It's like you're going to struggle right. But i'm here for you in that struggle right. I'm here for you when you're doing well here for you and you're not doing well here for you. Say from a teacher of a mother who is a lose a teacher. Did you see her model. This type of Teaching style in her classroom. Where did this come from or is this something where you were just like. I know what. I didn't have any be exactly the thing that i needed Well my mom taught me. My mom showed me unconditional love You know my dad passed away. When i was a kid so i very early on my own i was i was six. Yeah and i very early on in my life Through things that people said to me which is why. I'm so in like big on languages. Through like people in my family would say things like you're okay like we can always count on you to be all right where i.

mister donovan Mike lincoln
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

05:55 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"You like when i think about all of your activism. It's almost been centered around dr king. The holiday the street name the county like even Some aspects of affirmative action to me. Feel like it's a fulfillment of a dream. Bright that he had in the way that he talked about economic. That's why dr team because i think that He is a person that articulated the knees of black folks in this country than anybody else and Still you can hear listen to speeches. And they're lifting educational uplifting and that's the sad thing is how little things have changed and how we're going back to jim crow and how we have to fight and be resilient to make sure everybody. That's eligible boat encourage others to stand up and he had to stand up for justice too because If you know demand things especially where your tax dollars concern if you don't demand inclusion you're not gonna get it and that's why people i encourage people who have civil rights issues join the n. Double acp but I president the on. Wctc our branch kill reilly. Pain is also involved with economic justice. She's one of the board members But they have okay. God and prominent issue this on Working with the brothers and sisters in technology companies They have a postal train. Twenty four hundred african descendants united states slave and or people who worked in our community over the next two and a half years when you consider how activism is going now The country just got to the point where they could say black lives matter in. It's not an argument. Theoretically it's dilemma. Argument when you look at our paychecks policy in otherwise. What's the thing that you would tell. Young activists coming up or people who are considering getting involved as activists or as advocates. What would you tell them. Bake sure that it's about helping the people to not so number one. You can't be focused on. Well did they. They say at this about me or what not. They didn't quote me. You got to do it from your heart. And as long as your heart is leading in your brain leading the way and don't be caught up with no individual kind of accomplishment And another thing too. It's don't wait for oils as to take up an issue that you see the problem situations create leaders so you have to have you stand up for the right reason people get behind you. The other thing is is that you don't have to be in the street protests. Demonstrate like me. you could send emails. You can make phone calls. Everybody can do something. And the most important thing to do is vote at the most important thing because you have a say so on the policies laws in representation as good. Well daddy My parting words for you are that. I'm so proud of you and proud to be your daughter and this is very educational. I learned today that you've met dr king. I did not know that. I learned today that You met a philip randolph. Did not know that and that situations make leaders. That is incredible. Vote in definitely the honest to god truth so people are willing to stand up to the situation in the situation. That is where leadership resides. I think that I'm so fortunate to have you as my dad. And i know that when they say You know parents choose their kids and the kids choose their parents. I know that's true. There are so many moments where I'm filling down and you call right at that time and You know from all the meetings that you took me to that. I didn't wanna go to For all the times that you took me to dunkin donuts to get a maple bar in the morning the milk unbeknownst to mom every single day. Mommy second-grade For all the times used it up my coat even when you got much in For every time you made me sit in the middle of the backseat. Because you thought a truck was gonna hit the guard and kill me And yes the answer to your next question which is yes. I'm still here this. You're still here And really for all of the tender loving care that you show my friends. Who are i pop. Thank you for being a father to those who lost their to those. Who didn't like there and to those. Who just extra fatherly support. I love very much. And i'm so grateful. Bring all arkansas is. You were very important to have dr andrea m rai. Is your mother father saying they should. We did all mother's day. Yes mommy knows that. We add ski troops much every day through the end of ninth grade. We got Her grades is better than mine. She was four point. Oh straightens at school would be interacted but yes. Mommy knows some. It's ski trips every saturday you broke your ria born on once each trip. I did came out up here to glasses sideways skin for it ribs. It was six crack ribs. But that's when you stop smoking vain. God all right but i love you daddy much..

dr king jim crow philip randolph reilly united states dr andrea m rai arkansas
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

08:04 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"Very very meticulous. Very ridiculous issue Is there a father in your friend group. You're like they are really good dad. Guess what. I looked in the mirror. No i mean i mean. I've seen a lot a lot of my brands like pastor. Joe carter in dr charles mitchell. Bob bowers was making were Saving by nikki always together with those guys. They did they did. They did a real good job. I think about ross. Flowers doctoroff lowers dr. Chris lowers you know. So where do you when you are. How do you define success as a father. Jail having Jaylen it wasn't your fault. Like your wrongfully accused. That's that's a different thing altogether. I'm talking about committing a criminal act. I don't mean criminal trespassing but that will and sometimes they had come and take me. And i was going to be to struggle anyway. So now being adjudged you're only no. I mean just the success that you know that that i see with you That you know that that to me it also Actually all of all of the the young ladies young people in your your group. Acp axel they're all options so many things. Yeah so pleased to see the successes out of your your group west. The tempest moment that we had as Bothered daughter which is like this. Like ood is a hard time on how we're gonna make through this one. I never felt that way i did. I know you you never felt like you never like liking. Wait she being a teenager. She crazy would like to say that shooting the best well at the custom music owner and i got not fair. Tell your story when you became. You had who's plan some route by nature anyway so i'll say turn that c. H. t. o. h. i. And you were. You wanted it to come off. Because why did you want the music off. Because they were using profanity. We're casting at me to turn it off. And then i said this is hypocritical in trouble. Yes apple well. I think though the one moment that i think is so That stand out for me. Is i remember getting ready for church. It i don't know what we were near fussing at each other about something and i said the more i get closer to god the further i get away from you. Do you remember saying that. Ms seven altogether. They was so crazy. But i said it and then i'm like you know. I wonder you know has gotten older. I'm like. I wonder how i saw god in that moment Because you know it was a very legalistic you know. You can and can't do kind of god that i had created. I don't really feel like the god. That you guys tommy about or the one that i feel like i experienced now and the more that i've thought about it I realized that like the freedom of expression the the jesus that is a giver. And that is so sacrificial is exactly who you are and so it's like it's so crazy to me that in my judgment of what was right or wrong. At the time that i would have missed all of the many ways that you show up as the social justice hero in advocate for many And your christ. Likeness is in your Your love that unconditional love. Bike your your lack of judgment for Always joke about you've never met an enemy in your life And you find commonality with anybody like. We'll get an uber car. You'll be like oh my car seat belts to and then there's a conversation instead of that which i admire that i don't have it i like i'm like i don't know how to strike up a conversation with this person. Where do you get that from that that ability to find common ground with anybody of nothing for my father and i think that was because he was a pullman porter in organizer so he had to constantly because a lot of people go to shelves like you said a lot of brothers. That wasn't really that educated. They will go into a shell so he had to have found a way to bring them out to get them engaged and stuff like that. So it where's your show. I don't have a show though. Do you think you were like born that way or do you feel like you were groomed. That way wasn't think Watching my father an early age and you know saying how As a little boy saying they gotta respect. They had bill randolph ad. Man yeah yeah. We'll never tell me that. All the pullman. Does you well dad. That's how we got to see him in. The northwest organizers. But i didn't know you remember. I was about house about Eleven or twelve. Did you guys get pitchers. We didn't have ourselves. These days is a cbc members. All the selby's okay. I didn't know that. Wow okay so we normally do this thing. Called rapid round on the podcast and I didn't write rapid ground questions for you. But i think are good some some some good ones Okay what is your nickname from. The rice added a family. Yes it came from dui. No came from johnny billy. Granny said kick like a horse in her stomach. So she named johnny bill which was okay. That was friendly. Most of these won't be that bad. What is our father daughter favorite song. She'll be slammed the family so but with the song. If you want me to stay yes yes. What is your favorite james brown. Phone saturday's toys of the ghetto. And what is your favorite brand of clothing casual or wiser by. Where's your favorite To where to protest it all depends on where it is to have a suit on. The mayor's office. Well i've seen you were nike switz- to a hearing ray your testify. We would probably ready to do something else that that after the protest is in the back. Okay what is your your favorite morning drink of choice starbucks brandi almond milk cap. Have la with one raw sugar. Is it decaf now. Ordering you caffeinated.

dr charles mitchell Bob bowers Flowers doctoroff Joe carter nikki pullman porter ross Chris bill randolph tommy apple johnny billy johnny bill cbc Granny rice james brown nike brandi almond starbucks
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

04:07 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"All fifty four countries on the continent of africa wage. They protests at the united nations in behalf of black people in the united states. And what we've been going through and so That type of pressure is what brought about change. So now we're talking about this law. But since george floyd's torture and murder there has been lost a changed all over the country in cities in counties and states and and the people who were on the streets who feel that nothing changes need to understand they brought about change. We're just trying to move the ball. Further but change has happened. And i think somebody would be great if somebody compiled all of that and looked at all of the laws that have been changed sense now. Obviously we can get gill and obviously more and more needs to be done but we do need the celebrate what we did accomplish because a lot of times when people are in the streets in protest and they see someone else getting murdered. They think that nothing came out what they did. And it's not true that you said that i am before we get ready to open up for a few questions Again this is our very first on one alive by gas on clubhouse E- will also be able to see this podcast inherit everywhere. Podcasts are available Miss vast to this point around on much oaks on the ground protested in made a difference folks off though often. Talk about jonah. Taylor's our jonah. Floyd's taylor arcing. Rob brianna taylor got it. So many so sad. John employed talking about her father that her father was going to change the world. And he's already done that. I wanna know what you say to. The families are families out here who are struggling the ones who had hashtags for their loved ones in those who did not Those who are frustrated with the movement because of things both real and just imagined And then there are folks who are frustrated that yes is. Bill has passed the house of representatives twice under your leadership and even though you're eighty to ninety percent certain that the senate will move. They haven't yet. What do you say to the families to provide them with some hope on this will happen and you will keep fighting will I just have to express my own commitment to them. That i'm not gonna stop until this is done These are issues. I've worked on for decades and And i know what it's like to get. That phone call experienced that loss personally and and so i just tried to share with them my commitment and also to encourage them that they're they're coming on the hill they're talking to members. All of that does make a huge difference and And so we are talking now and they were on the senate Several families were on the senate floor last week meeting with tim. Sky meeting with lindsey graham. And and i think it's very important for them to know the power of their presses really really honored that i was a part of your first. Show thank you. Yes myra clubhouse for those of you that know you can reach the us than it by calling two zero two two two four three one to one and miss bad said. Don't call the house. We passed twice all new. They have worth ado. Thank you so much his bass we so appreciate you providing likewise in fact eastern. You are have a great evening. Thank you for joining it much..

george floyd Rob brianna taylor jonah united nations gill africa united states senate Floyd Taylor house of representatives John Bill lindsey graham tim myra
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

06:49 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"You have the standard so high that and that's why communities get so upset and we view it as that's just racist will. Yeah but it's actually institutional racism yet in the sense that it's not just that the people in the city decided not to prosecute somebody will it is but i mean they have the law to provide an excuse for it. So what's an example of how we're going to address. Some of the root causes of racism we have to look at the institutions that perpetuate it and why they do in change those structures. So that's the reason why we want to lower the standard in which to prosecute an officer when you big it. So this is another provision that i am fascinated by because i know how triggering the images are for me when i see it on screen. You know when you see protesters standing in front of police officers with a sign that says black lives matter The name of eric garner or rashard brooks or mci bryant and on the other side of that. Protester is a law enforcement officer with a shield. A bat a you know a face mask like all of these pieces of equipment. That look like they came from the military. Ms bad probably because they did so. There's another prison in the bill that would limit what the pentagon can transfer to local police department. How important is that provision to you. While i think is very important. I mean i'm. I'm trying to struggle to understand. Why a local police department needs a rocket launcher grenades. And then you know what i often say. Because as angela mention know i focus on foreign policy in africa it when we see other countries in we see the militarization of their police departments. We're ready to talk about human rights in all these other issues but our police departments of more and more looked like the military. This is actually something that started after nine eleven and so It is a part of what we are looking at. I will tell you though. I've learned along the way in some jurisdictions some of the things that make no sense in la might be needed in an area that has hurricanes and has natural disasters on an annual base where they need vehicles that can move in and out of water by thought about that. You know before so so that is a very important provision in the bill. Yeah actually. I hadn't considered that either. Maybe we could just put something in. There says not for protests like right. It's you know angela. Let me just mentioned something. I think it's interesting on our side that over all these years that we've been struggling with this. We've never framed it as a human rights as should yes and it is a human rights issue if what was going on in our country happened in another country which of course it does. We are the first of the microphone to talk about human rights abuses. We need to sanction that government. We need to hit them with international. Shame and the world is looking at us going. Excuse me how many people are they die at the hands of police. And you wanna talk about us. That i know i've had to pull a couple of ambassadors in my office to tell them about different cases and to say well you know we. We are really encouraging you to have an independent investigation and we want to know the results of that investigation. I have to catch myself. And then i have to acknowledge what we hope the investigation in george floyd case comes out right to in other words. I have to acknowledge the very thing that is going on. Here is what we penalize other countries to do. So we need to think about in the community framing mrs human rights because then it puts it in the international space and says we're part of the world but we act. As though in the united states there are no human rights issues. That's only what happens in other countries and we probably act like that because it depends on who we deem as human which we know is the foundational problem to this country right. You have a provision in here that That deals with law enforcement training and one of the things that i've really been wrestling with on lately. I've been reading this book that talked about almost on every segment. I've been on airport Call my grandmother's hands by resmo minicam. Who actually helped to train some minneapolis. Police department folks. I think derek shopping list of been sick that day. I need to ask raza. But i'm sure didn't go to the training and one of the things that i'm really wrestling with just from the earnest standpoint. Not trying to you. Know engage in talking with but just really curious much. Do we believe that you can train. Inherent fear out of people rasma addresses what he calls white body supremacy black body trauma. Police body trauma. Anybody goes into the force automatically kind of adherence. This trauma and his point is really trying to force us to engage in Trauma therapy somatic therapy dealing with what we carry in our buys. How do we feel when we go into these different spaces. When a law enforcement officer gets out of a car these a black person what were the phillies that come up clean you train that inherent fear out of people for is it time for us to also look at other ways to help law enforcement cope with trauma will you. Don't you raise a. I want to answer it in in the broader sense because even though obviously i'm promoting the bill and promoting training limoges. Tell you the one thing that. I want to deal with the day after biden sciences. What the heck are we even talking about. I mean training. Training is the training evaluated. What's the nature of the training neo soul. So i question it beyond what you were saying. I question to again. I'm supportive of you. I wanted to happen. I know it's critical. But then i want to not just leave it at that. Tell me who the trainers are. What are their credentials you know. What are they bringing you know. What are they bringing into it. So i it's definitely not something.

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

07:13 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"Legislation. Right when will we learn so. I think that's discipline back to george. Cloy justice in policing we definitely understand that really really difficult standard. I want people to understand a little bit more about this bill. Miss bassey we've had conversations about you know. This doesn't go far enough. What do we do in an indeterminate. Like the united states senate that we have where there again are democrats. Who don't think are. Don't think this is feasible and they can win. An election don't they. They think it goes too far. And meanwhile we're saying okay. Well the longer we wait the more people who are going to die if you know karate it holds were banned already. Perhaps we'd still have. George floyd this man might have run afoul of the raw law given his record though. And then you look at Brianna taylor killer. Of course no. Not warrants would be banned if this bill were already in law or put flip it into live things that other thing that that is worth discussing is today As you probably saw the police officer who was initially fired to wheeling rashard books is now reinstated. The bill address. Some of these things is passing. What do you think are the super important. Provision sure will thank you One of the issues was the bill. That's really important is as the federal government. We only have jurisdiction over federal police but one of the things that happens when a federal law is passed you have this rippling effect and other jurisdictions on the state the county and the city tend to follow suit because frankly they're afraid when the federal government acts now the federal government also has the purse so the way we can impose change on a city is to say well. If you don't do this we won't give you federal funding so we can have some influence but we can't tell the city of atlanta how to run. Its police department and we have eighteen thousand police departments around the country. Eighteen thousand different ways of doing things so one of the things that we can do in the bill is to create national standards for police and lift up the profession so that it had functions like any other Just think about it. What other perfection has the ability to take away your freedom and your life. What has no accountability or transparency. And so these are important pieces of the bill. I would mention a couple of other ones. Angela one tamir rice boy. Twelve years old gets killed after second and officer jumps out of the car and shoots and kills and it turns out he had just been fired for being violent in another jurisdiction in another city. So when you see these officers like the one that killed sunday right. The officer quit right. There's nothing to to block her from going to the next town and getting higher and derek shaw van. If he doesn't go to prison the you realize he could be back on the force because he could do what the officer did in in atlanta appeal using his using his union. So those are some of the other provisions one provision in the bill that i'm particularly excited about is the provision that provides grants to communities to reinvasion public safety. It's time for people to say. What do i need in los angeles to feel safe. As long as police. Departments measure of success is their number of arrests. Will you go to to arrest you. Don't go to beverly hills you go to wear. It's easy to arrest people so we need to rethink this whole thing in our country but while we're undergoing massive change we gotta get done what we can get done now. And that's the basis for george fly justice and policing act. I would never argue. That goes far enough. Do you think that after implementing this bill. This bill signed into law. The you think that there will be an opportunity to do additional police reform to the point of you know. I don't think it does enough. We can push again when you think about the likelihood of that. I think we have to do that. The day after it signed can't wait for implementation and been in frankly about him. Some imitation heyday only way. Any law gets gets implemented laws that impact us laws that impact communities of color lower income communities. Is you gotta do the public pressure to make sure supplemented implemented have to make sure that the police the federal police in your area or following the law. So it's not like everybody just sits up straight and says new law. Let me just change everything i was doing. We gotta keep pressure on before during and after we on the in the bill. One of the things that i think is really important in not discussed. Enough is this The federal criminal statutes to prosecute police officers harrison bass when our was easy of the of the caucus. I remember the anguish. That attorney general holder experienced You know just trying. To hold these officers accountable. The standard is so high in the lally. Call the men's ray as the criminal intent standard. It's willful in section. two forty. Two at a you have a provision in this bill that would amend that standard to reckless out has failed the have those conversations gone in the senate. This is something that would make it a lot easier for federal prosecutors to try cases against police officers that violate our rights. That kill us the interest in some way. Have those conversations been angela. Rye the attorney speaking. I think like people don't know angela. Rising attorney. I feel bad for them. Forward okay. I can't well Ought to be honest with you. Actually more concerned about that provision that i am qualified immunity i mean everybody talks about qualified immunity. We as your ability to sue an officer. But you know. I want these folks off to st i. I want to prosecute and so Those discussions i i would say are is those two are the most difficult discussions that were having and And if you think about it just for your for your audience we would have to prove that. Derek shaw van intended to kill george floyd. It was in his mind he was planning to. I don't care what was in his mind as what he did. So if you run out in in run through a stop sign at fifty miles an hour. It's supposed to only be twenty five and you mow down a bunch of people. Well we to know what was in your mind whether you attended to but you've got to go to jail regardless because as reckless right.

Cloy Miss bassey george floyd federal government Brianna taylor tamir rice derek shaw rashard george atlanta karate senate united states Angela beverly hills federal police los angeles angela harrison Derek shaw
"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

On One with Angela Rye

07:41 min | 1 year ago

"rye" Discussed on On One with Angela Rye

"The steady strap into right doors. Sixty god and everything. B-batty a luck to this edition of on one with angelo ri-. I am so so elated to have someone who i've heard about so often have seen her on air on breakfast club tack to her talk about her with my good brother menard brecca's club in have heard wonderful things about her podcast which is helping black women. Focus on therapy. It's called therapy for black girls. Dr joy hardened bradford is a licensed psychologist speaker author media personality and the host of this podcast. We just talked about. She went to xavier university. So i have to ask her. She knows my good sister friend. She's also aka which is different is one and she is the resident psychologist for. Oh they're oprah magazine. she has all of the accolade. You've seen her everywhere as you should. And today she is gracing us with their presence. Hi dr joy helu With you alarm. So i'm so thrilled on. We know that this month is very very special for mental health awareness. I know you've got to be very busy but Especially in the midst of a pandemic. How important is it for us to focus on our mental health. No absolutely i mean. I think it's important all the time. But i definitely think with the pandemic we have seen a greater need for us to be paying attention to armijo healthy. No there's just been so much anxiety so much in uncertainty. All of our schedules have changed. Sleep is all out of wag. So i do think it is critical for us to be paying attention to how we're taking care of ourselves right now. When made you focus on black women in therapy I know so often. We talk about the stigma surrounding mental health. A mental health awareness in the black community. I know that i in particular Will say this all the time show. You might chain but i have a harriet tubman necklace on and i keep this as a reminder how much she went through and no matter what obstacle comes. That comes my way on like i can do this. She had to go back. Nineteen times to get three hundred people. And so i'm often thinking about you know how much they had to endure. And i'm always like when i'm carrying is nothing compared to that. I saw you talk about how we should stop doing that. Talk out why and why they focus on black therapy graduates that question because i was going to gently push back on that kind of narrative right because i think that that kind of strength narrative this i can push through anything you know. My ancestors have had to go through far words. Like i think it can be helpful in terms of developing what we call resilience right. Which is our ability to bounce back after difficult situations but i think the trouble with that is sometimes. We don't know when to stop right so if if all of your life is a struggle. If all you're doing is kind of pushing pass then you really are not setting good boundaries for yourself and so you end up with just a whole host of concerns you know so you see physical health concerns as well as mental health concerns. You know that high levels of stress heart disease blood pressure rising like all of those kinds of things come from us being chronically stressed and so when we are saying like i gotta keep fighting. I gotta keep fighting. I think we need to think about how we can do. That within limits like yes. You can't keep going but at what point are you going to stop yourself so that you are refueling so that you can kind of stay engaged in the fight at that is It's so powerful and i. I'm interested in the balance between standing on such strong shoulders in tapping into a resilient so that we can overcome when things come our way and also recognizing when we need to be like help you know his team too much right now so i. I'm not saying you know i. I gotta believe that. Harriet had some footsoldiers with to help for all of those times. So it's not about necessarily standard on our own. But i do definitely deal with like they had way tougher. I can get through this that kind of mentality. You talk a lot about the importance of pop culture in the mental health. Space kind of making these connections is that to normalized. Therapy would is what has been your reason for ensuring that you have kind of these pop culture tie-ins in one second dr joy there's I don't know if that isn't that door that's open. Maybe shari it was like the lomb or you probably can't even here but it's distracting me a little bit inaccurate when i was saying something about the pop culture tiny. Oh yeah so when you when you figure out ways to kind of finesse pop culture into certain analogies around the importance of therapy wise ass so important to you. is that to kind of remove the stigma. It definitely is related to removing the stigma. You know i know that. Not everybody will go to their office or with him. Virtually right but a lot of us are watching different kinds of shows and movies and things on where we can relate to some of these mental health concepts you know. I think sometimes the perception is that mental health is only something we pay attention to in times of crisis right but the truth is that we all have mental health that we can take care of and so using analogies in examples from pop culture. I think really help people to see what mental health looks like in our everyday lives. You know so. We can look at How olivia pope is not doing. A good job of setting boundaries or. We can look at the relationship between mali and easily on insecure. You know it can help us to have some really important conversations in our own lives. And i think that that's really helpful. You know therapy. I think it'd be helpful for a lot of people with everybody's not going to go. And so if there's a way that i can share something on. The podcasts are on instagram or whatever that helps people to make healthier decisions in the interests of prioritizing their middle hill. Then that's what. I think it's useful for so speaking impact college here on this lovely app. That are over us instagram. You have on here There's a quote graphic that you put up. I don't know if it was your quote or if it was Your your guest from your podcast. But it says this whole ride or die. Thing is dangerous and problematic. It is very often women who end up never choosing themselves. We kind of touched on that a little bit already with you. Know maybe overcompensation as the masters resilience right. But why is that so important for us to get. I love saying i'm writer die. That's my i'm like. Well you know how. I am battered. I so talk about why. We should be careful of of using that that that team that that i'm saying to apply to ourselves. I think so much of what we have been taught especially as black women about who we are in relationships is sacrificial right so it is somebody else's knees in somebody else's wants always coming over our own and of course there are compromises in relationships. You know you don't want to be selfish all the time in a relationship but i think so much of what we are taught in socialized in is that we are always to be self sacrificing in so when you are doing that then who is taking care of your needs and your wants you know i think. Sometimes we get to the point where we don't even identify having our own needs in wants anymore. Because we're so focused on the other person and so i think that it is fine of course to be loyal in relationships with it should not come at the expense all the time of you.

What Is the Healthiest Type of Whole Grain Bread?

Nutrition Facts with Dr. Greger

01:22 min | 2 years ago

What Is the Healthiest Type of Whole Grain Bread?

"Would the healthiest type of whole grain bread. Should i bake it myself. Okay well the problem with bread. The reason it's a yellow light food processing plant foods because you require salt and we don't wanna add salt anything but if you were going to do a bread then the healthiest type of healthiest type of bread would be something like pumpernickel because actually his whole intact. Rye berries right growth in their ideally. We should dollar grains whole intact form. So we buries a ride bury's owed growth Barley grow it's That's the best way. And so the fact that something like pumpernickel may have actually not just all whole grains but actually have some growth in there. That's the way to go so yeah. So ideally we should deflowered died. We shouldn't be far foods. There's ways to make sprouted grains breads and can also buy sprouted grains that'd be healthier but best way to eat your grains whole intact arm but if it were going to buy bread you wanna get the lowest sodium at least one hundred whole grain but again and something really healthy on it. If you're going to eat it

U.S. Distillers Bitter Over 25% Tariffs Set to Double in June

News, Traffic and Weather

00:32 sec | 2 years ago

U.S. Distillers Bitter Over 25% Tariffs Set to Double in June

"Hangover from Trump era tear of disputes could become more painful for American whiskey distillers unless they're entanglement in the transatlantic fighters. Results soon Bourbon Tennessee whiskey and Rye whiskey were left out of a recent breakthroughs here to greet you rebuild US trade relations with the European Union and the United Kingdom. But the use and you cage 25% tariffs on American whiskey remain, and the use rate is set to double in June of spirits advocate is imploring the top U. S. Trade envoy to not leave whiskey producers

Bourbon Tennessee Whiskey And European Union United Kingdom United States
Chicago Deli Offers Free Sandwiches If It Goes 30 Days Without Correcting Customer Masks

The Savage Nation with Michael Savage

00:43 sec | 2 years ago

Chicago Deli Offers Free Sandwiches If It Goes 30 Days Without Correcting Customer Masks

"Age of covert 19, a decades old Chicago deli issues a challenge to its customers. Manny's cafeteria in Delicatessen has been around since 1942. Now there's an incentive for customers to chew on. Besides the food, the giveaway works that we're trying to go for 30 straight days of not having to ask customers to properly wear their masks or put their man Gone. Dad, Raskin is the fourth generation owner of the legendary spot on the South Loop. He issued the challenge Sunday on Twitter, with the reward being a day of free sandwiches. So far, we have the restarted after two days, But Raskin believes customers who wouldn't mind gobbling up a load of free corned beef on rye or another delicious choice will seal the deal. People come prepared and we can give away those sandwiches

Raskin Manny Chicago Twitter
"rye" Discussed on The Bureau Boys

The Bureau Boys

08:15 min | 2 years ago

"rye" Discussed on The Bureau Boys

"A receipt for mma callahan's detective rally. This is for grosses upon grosses of pizza dough. Now we saw back at gordon freeman's bedroom. He had bags upon bags from michaela hands as well he did. We were expecting mcconnell's mckellen. Yes and terence here. He's ordering from both of these rival grocery stores. Well and i just found a bag an empty bag so he must be in rice straight from the bag. Are you suggesting in gordon. Freeman's bedrooms eating. He no no here this. I found this bag of empty business. Empty bag of bread bagley used to contain marble. Dry bread out. Empty gordon freeman. Alwyn his desk and here in terence's desk okay. Detective i think there's another piece of the puzzle that we might need to connect the dots. Here give me one second detector. Potter rummages through the desk and finds terrence has day planner. Detective rally. I'll give you one guess who was in charge of booking. The entertainment for tonight's castilian pazzi. No detective riley. Who's day planner. Did i just pull out of. Who's desk gladiolas simpson. Obviously she's in on it. You know what detective rally. no it was. Terence terence was in charge of booking stone temple pilots for this event and stone temple pilots is us to take at love your commitment to the character but no we're not stone temple pilots. You're sort of a dog person. And you're a wolf at one point. I think you were raised by wolves. What your whole story is but detective riley gordon freeman loves stone temple pilots and guess who else love stone temple pilots. It would appear terence heritz. Very good wow all right well. That means i'm betting that both tear terrence is such a big fan of stone temple. Pilots and gordon freeman is such a big fan of stone temple pilots. Then guess who's going to be at this quick quintet allience performance tonight starting in thirty minutes from right now detective riley. I don't wanna blow your mind even further but considering the hard time. We've had finding gordon freeman. Do you think there's any possibility that terrence is gordon. Freeman the bureau. Boys look at each other shocked in awe. Not knowing what to say or what to think. See something difficult. Riley thinks something. Detective riley's brain was filled with images of gladioli hanging on that wall. Detective rally. Are you thinking about sex with gladioli. She's too old for you. For god's sake riley celebrity wanna porno mags into his back pocket. Detective rally. I feel like we have to go to the dance. Let's just try and get down there back stage to start serving seen just to see what's going on and position ourselves you know so we can survey are suspects okay. Has that barrow. boys are leaving. Tarentaise room rally. Kicks a little loose floorboard for this is a very old school also built on a pet cemetery. They have a shitload pet cemeteries in this town. Well this floorboards it's loose. He's smells the boy. Detective riley starts gyrating is whole body. He gets down on all pause. The floorboard starts to rummage through the old bones of mice and cats and fido's and a little snakes stake bodies with your pause refers that riley hit his off on a fod metallic container and yelps. Good boy dead potter reaches for the container and pulls out. What looks like one of those bank things that they put stuff in and it goes up that nomadic tube time capsule. that's what happens with those things when you put them in the bank they go through time and get to your teller right. I know how they work narrator. You don't have to explain to me. Okay sorry didn't mean narrate explain that to you wo- detective riley. Were you just doing a kiana impression. Because i think this is a time capsule first of all detective. Riley canneries is timeless and also this time capsules seems to have been here for ages ages and ages almost back to the time when gladiolas simpson was in that portrait with that young man. Hey she's still looks good for our age back off. No that's not what i'm saying. Detective rally. I'm just saying that with it being buried among all these bones. It's clearly an older time. Capsule not from this year's class is all. I'm saying i'm just saying detective. Riley don't make any references to this year's class. Because you already have a restraining order against it anyhow. I think this is an older one. It's definitely older. You can tell because it's real metal not that aluminum carafe automobiles out of these days. Thought bear all boys twist off the lid of a time. Capsule is exactly right married. I was getting to it. There was a faint his. I was a little more descriptive second to get through but forgive me narrator. Uh i'm just trying to get their. Why don't you tell us what. Brand of time capsule it is. Narrators and specificities is your thing if that take your time. O- matic time capsule from the time automatic company circa nineteen o nine la barra boys gaze into the top of the time capsule and gasps. What did the barrel boys see. When they opened up the time constantly is gladiolas that old could it be from her class. And waspa- deal with the tactile violate chasing skeletons around auburn connections between this time capsule and today's red makers mikailah hand on the mcconnell will be are all boys be able to get into the billion disguised as scott and eric from the stone temple pilots. And what songs you think. That famous band will be playing. Will the real stone temple pilots actually show up this gig arguably the first on their calendar of the year. Find out the answers to these questions and many more next week on the bobbled dry mystery. If you enjoyed this episode helped a ball solve this case by submitting your clue at the bureau boys dot com. They may use it on a future episode. Why why not join their informant network and tell all your friends and family to join too. But don't tell the criminals because bureau boys dot com for them..

riley Riley thirty minutes Freeman tonight Potter terence heritz next week today riley gordon freeman circa nineteen o nine both Terence terence terence eric mikailah gordon this year michaela terrence
"rye" Discussed on The Bureau Boys

The Bureau Boys

07:33 min | 2 years ago

"rye" Discussed on The Bureau Boys

"Detective riley was still staring at the nude painting. Detective potter had turned his attention to the initials on the grand scoff which surprised both of the boys. The letters they're written with such grace and style they're beautiful. This is such an old scarf. It's tender almost almost non existent so thin and lovely detective riley. This is evidence now and have to ask you to stop fondling and smelling the scarf. Detective gladiolas scar. First of all you said to yourself in your vision that the scarf presumably was the boys that used to run with gladioli. I did and i meant it. i'm sniffing and what. I smell is a man's. Musk a delivery man or a delivery boy could be a young man but the cusp of manhood fright in that sweet sweet middle spot or a boy becoming a man growing into himself again. Detective rally. i'm gonna have to ask you. Please just hand me the scarf. Detective riley hands the scarf disappointedly. To- detective potter now detective. Potty go ahead read out those letters because it surprised us both and that way we when you read it out loud. I'll remember what they are. Okay that's true you have a horrible photographic memory. What's the opposite of a photographic memory and audio graphic memory. That's what i have. I have a great audio graphic memory terrible photographic memory. Do you want me to spell it out so you can remember it. Pictures photos exactly i. I can't no photographic. Now i remember you said it grow good detective rally then. I don't want to remind you that there is a nude painting of your new little girl toy over in the other side of the room. First of all she looks girl woman to me and she's beckoning okay. Detective rally. I'm gonna read these. I have to stay strong. I'm trying to stay strong craig. Thank you for doing that okay. Detective rally well. I'm going be honest. The reason that. I gasped. When i first saw these letters is because these are either letters or this is just the word ass and detective rally at first. I was like this is very insulting that these letters are saying s on this scarf. Then yeah i remembered detective riley gladioli. I don't know if she how close you guys have gotten but gladiolas told me a lot about her father. And i think maybe you should know that. Her father's name is arnold strongman simpson. Now is strong man in quotes or as that legally on birth certificate well detective riley. I did do the work when i was. I don't wanna say stalking. But i will say investigating gladio. And i will say that it is on his birth certificate and gladiolas middle name is abraham so her name spells out gas. I don't think that's relevant at all. Detective riley but i thought it might be an interesting tidbit to bring up when you guys go on your date. Just none. detective. Reilly looks into the corner and sees gordon freeman social security card. Sticking out from little dress draw he goes to inspect. Look this detective potter gordon. Freeman's middle name is alf that it'd be ingrid like gif. It's like gaffe so we have asked gas and gaff. Okay detective rally. Do you think you think these things are interconnected. And i'm not gonna do use such a disservice detective riley by asking for your middle name or frankly your first name thank you. I will return the favor. Thank you because we are professionals. Yes we are professionals and damn what the better business bureau says. Yeah and if i ever get my hands on timothy macdonald who's been leaving who's been blowing up. Our our yelp page with bad reviews. Thought you might what did what did you think i was gonna do. I thought you were going to be mad about. Angie from angie's list because that pitch has said some nasty things nasty things. She's on the hit list as well. I'm growing kill list. Don't tell the bureau it's against bureau policy. I don't even know how to contact them. Heads are gonna roll. Okay ask gaffe s. and gas and gas. We got all that. I'm just saying detective riley you saw in your vision. That gladioli was on some sort of tryst with this boy who had a scarf around his neck but around his arm right. That scarf appears to be the same scarf that i'm holding in my hands and i would really appreciate if you stop trying to sniff it right. Now get the smell off it detector. Potter a. slaps detective riley's knows with a rolled up newspaper. Now learn your lesson. Detective rally riley tuxes tail between his legs and goes to the corner a little frightened. I can do better no. I'm sorry i'm sorry. I should praised not punish praise not punish here. Detective rally techno potter holds out a biscuit and waves it in front of detective riley. Detective rally scampers over. You can be a good boina. Not sniff yes yes. The second detective riley's knows turns away from the scarf. Detective pot rewards him with the biscuit the appropriate way who train detective riley to check the potter. You're welcome you're you're so you're so much kinder to me than that shelter that you found me in. We should talk about that sometime time but not now detect a rally. Were hot on the trail of the hottest case. We've ever had all right. Let's bring up old history. Let's bring up this history. This scarfs history which you just did. Yes now that we have asked. We've got to figure out whose name matches these initials. That's my point is active riley gladiolas father arne strongman simpson. Did you not know it's burned into my memory. Now i've got it. I said it of loud so you would commit it to memory unlike writing it down so i don't understand why you're having a hard time. No it's their. It's their job. The retrieval process took a little bit longer also. I would blame your physical abuse on you. Know breaking my memory circuits. Okay sorry as detective riley. Arnie simpson is miss strongman. Right that two or a strong boy. I don't know this case has been very strange on that another us. He's missing he's member he disappeared. They drag a body of the lake a few weeks back but we don't know if it was arnie simpson or not but we do know he was. The body was supposedly wearing the same trench coat that asks us to wear detective rally. I think we maybe need to go to the memorial. Org disagree reminds. You are case a few months ago spooky okay. Let's go south apparel boys. Leave gordon freeman's house without even so much as thanking patsy maccallahan for letting them inside. They jump into their.

Arnie simpson timothy macdonald arnie simpson Reilly two riley gladioli gladio abraham gordon Freeman riley gladiolas simpson both first second riley potter gordon Musk Angie arnold
Africa's Great Green Wall to combat desertification secures $16.8 billion  in international finance Impact

Science Magazine Podcast

11:48 min | 2 years ago

Africa's Great Green Wall to combat desertification secures $16.8 billion in international finance Impact

"Now we have science writer. Rachel danske with an update on africa's great green wall project which will soon see an infusion of billions of dollars from the world bank and others this project. The great green wall is intended to serve as a bulwark against desertification of the land south of the sahara desert while at the same time supporting communities that live in this region. Okay rachel how're you doing. I'm doing well. Thanks for having me sure. This is a rape big wall. This is a big project. It's basically supposed to be this green band that spans about seven thousand kilometers across the whole hop of africa. It launched back in two thousand seven. Rachel what would you say. The progress has been since two thousand seven now to two thousand twenty one almost non-existent which is why they launched this new round of funding last month. There was an assessment that found that a fraction of the goal had been achieved so far and the goal is for twenty thirty so they realized that time was running out right throughout this piece. You make this really important distinction between planting a tree and growing a tree. Why is that so important to think about when you know thinking about restoring lands or planting trees to help prevent desertification. The first time. I heard it. I just thought well. That's a really good way to put it. And then when racer after another would phrase it that way that we don't plant trees we grow them because that's been one of the missing pieces in restoration. Efforts globally not even specific to the great green wall but just in restoration landscape and forest restoration. Generally there has been this focus on planting trees but little focus really on looking at what gets planted in the first place in paying attention to the species diversity in the planting material and making sure that it's the right tree for the right place. There's also last follow plus maintenance of the tree then there needs to be talked to someone in west africa who was saying that. He's traveled to so many countries throughout the continental. Seen so many trees planted. But where the forests. Yeah that's a really interesting way of thinking about it. Basically tree planting mania that's been happening has come from all these different projects foundations quotas. That are saying oh. It costs a dollar to put a tree in the ground and we're going to offset our carbon. We're going to green the world but no one's looking after these trees and making sure that they live beyond that for sheer gas so now that we know that. That's not a good way to go about this. There's actually a lot of research. That's found some of the best practices for restoration projects. What are some of the recommendations have come out from research. In the past ten years when paper published last year talked about ten golden rules for reforestation. And they think those summed up a lot of the recommendations really well in addition to just protecting existing forests which probably sounds obvious. But there's a lot of research on the new. I don't have the same benefits that existing ones do and it's hard to replace that beyond that involving local communities has been just incredibly important component that researchers are saying was not really part of the focus before because the restoration ecologists are focused on the physical research and they aren't trained to think about how people play into the picture and it's just so important to the survival of the trees because it's people who are planting trees and it's people who are maintaining the trees and if you don't have community by an investment in rye these trees there and interested keeping them there. The trees aren't going to last and the trees only have their benefits when they last going back to trees here for a minute you mentioned keeping old us in place for protecting them. What else is being looked at. So that's when using a diversity of species so that there can start to be restored. Biodiversity rather than just monoculture of trees. They're starting to be focused now. Also on the quality of the seeds. And what you're actually planting. And how do we build. The systems and infrastructure for collecting and improving. Seeds is going to be the most resilient seed for that species but then it's also about the genetic diversity because there can be inbreeding with plants. If you're not collecting from wide enough geographic area than you can start to sort of limit. The gene pool and that can be problematic. You talk about this example in ethiopia of a seat initiative a network that is supposed to improve the quality of seats. Can you talk about how that would work. And how it would involve the community. The provision of adequate trees deep portfolio or pets. Bo is a project in ethiopia that they're calling it a functional trees seed system. It's a multi-pronged effort. They're trying to develop standards for seed collection and sharing that. There's high quality seed that will ensure that the trees that are planted can be their most resilient they're developing maps for how to source those seeds they're trying to strengthen the research system the infrastructure and the the research system to improve seed quality and they're linking all of that to the people who will use the seeds seeds there's technical training for farmers and the local language and there are diagrams of how to store different types of seeds. They're really trying to get that knowledge to the community to farmers and local nurseries to scale up the capacity of local decentralized infrastructure. Is there another model project that people might be looking at to expand as the money comes in. Are there other areas. That are doing good things. Yeah there was one of their project that i came across the one billion trees for africa project. And it's led by this man from cameroon tabby jota. He talked about how he grew up in this thriving economy system and he went off to university and when he came back the lands that he new as a forest with no longer for us. He started planting marina cheese and cola nut trees and mingo trees and all these different trees that would restore some of the soil health that he thought had been lost but also produce food and income generating opportunities for people so that they would be invested in keeping the trees there. He called his approach. The contagion approach. Because it's just sort of caught on. He got a bunch of men and women in this one community to be involved in the tree planting the neighboring communities saw what was happening and he was very clear that it's not like a drastic change where their community sedley rich where they weren't before but the small benefits were noticeable and so the neighboring community wanted to do something similar. And so it's just been a word of mouth approach so as he developed this very grassroots success he's gotten funding from more international sources than use it to do the work on the ground in these different communities mostly in west africa. And he's starting to do more and more with the great great wall which seems very exciting so there are a couple of different findings that we talked about that suggests the way forward for this type of restoration project involving the community diversity of. They're planting making sure that they're not just putting stuff in the ground but they're actually supporting plant growth and the communities around it but another thing that comes up a lot in your story is now we kind of what should happen. Researchers have come to a lot of conclusions that are very useful. But then there's the practice what's actually happening on the ground and maybe even what will happen on the ground. What are some of the biggest impediments to implementing the results of this research. One interesting comment. That i heard was that the implementing partners people with the money don't have scientist on their teams. They don't realize how complicated it is to plant a tree into get it right and to make sure that grows the lack of knowledge in the right places and the lack of communication between the people with the money and the people with the knowledge and also the community who is going to be involved. Those conversations aren't being had something else that a here is the expectations that donors have. They want fast results. And that's not. How trees in general work. But it's especially not how effective restoration works because all of these things need to happen and they take time getting communities involved. There's a lot of upfront investment. That needs to happen. In developing all of this infrastructure and research systems with a lot faster to just go and say just plant a bunch of eucalyptus trees. Because that's what they have the seeds and planting materials for. There's a disconnect between the speed that donors want to see results and the reality of what needs to happen. I've seen that you've written about this project for years now. What do you think you're going to see if you check back in two years. I hope to see that things. Like the pats project and this other effort the one billion trees for africa a hope that they have scaled and and that they inspire or serve as models for other projects. I don't know where. I'm placing bets. It feels like there is enough of a resounding message coming from the research community about the importance of this and the importance for the effective ecosystem function restoration and the community development but also for the climate benefits and if the global fenders governments who want to plant trees for the climate benefits if they are serious than they will start listening to these researchers. This is like thousands of miles. Four thousand miles. That's like the us plus another third right east west a huge huge area to cover an across countries. And all these different people's. How is this. possible. Rachel i mean this is a global scale. This is a huge project. it's huge. It's huge and that's probably why it sounded like the great idea when they announced it. And why didn't go anywhere for ten years but it's the partner agencies that i've spoken with involved in this project. The great queen wall are really clear that it's an environmental program but it's also the social alliance when that's meant to economic development but also really impart some resilience. See into these communities. Who are the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. That's why they're really ramping. Up this funding now because they see the value for the planet from a climate change perspective but also for the millions of people across this gigantic area. Pinks rachel thanks for having me. Sure rachel Danske is a science writer based in denver. You can find a link to story on the episode page for the podcasts. At science mag dot org slash podcast.

Rachel Danske Africa West Africa Sahara Desert Ethiopia Marina Cheese Rachel BO Cameroon Cola East West United States Pinks Rachel Denver
3 people injured in movie set explosion in Los Angeles

Tim Conway Jr.

00:32 sec | 2 years ago

3 people injured in movie set explosion in Los Angeles

"Explosion on Debra Mark Live from the KO Phi 24 hour news room. Three people have been critically hurt in an explosion on a movie set in Santa Corita. Photojournalist Austin Dave tells NBC for several people in the area of Rye Canyon Loop, reported hearing a very loud boom. But he says it's not clear what caused it. There is a movie pyrotechnics. Location that is over here Nearby. We have seen brush fires here in the past and firefighters defending that location. The explosion today did start a small brushfire, which has been put out The news is brought to you by

Debra Mark Live Santa Corita Austin Dave Rye Canyon Loop NBC
"rye" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

01:44 min | 2 years ago

"rye" Discussed on KCRW

"Knew single right here from Nikola Cruise. It's the individuality ridden New project on the way Sub Tropic Nikola Cruise Logic 1000 with another tasty one that's called perfume. Also heartbreak attract from bonobo and totally enormous extinct dinosaurs Brand new remix thereby carry Chandler Chris Paul that Raul Campos on the remix of movies Refuge. Magic from orchestra, two B's one whites and at the top of the on test of window. I know that when the spring time comes Coming up music from effect something new out of Brazil from Clementina DeJesus, Clara newness. Song, so orchestras and classic rare Earth knew Roshi Murphy. New music from Rye enjoying this new album from actress it's called Karma and design are going to share something with you. New plants and animals. Juana Molina, the Kunar in electric thin bands. Speaking of bands, new music from the meta hand Street bands..

Sub Tropic Nikola Cruise Logic Nikola Cruise Juana Molina Raul Campos Roshi Murphy Chris Paul Rye Brazil Clementina DeJesus Clara
States say they're receiving fewer doses of vaccine than expected

Here & Now

03:22 min | 2 years ago

States say they're receiving fewer doses of vaccine than expected

"States are receiving fewer doses of the corona virus vaccine than they were initially promised. And they're now calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to explain why Washington State Governor Jay Inslee says the state's second shipment of visors Corona virus vaccine will be cut by 40% for more. Let's bring in Anna Boiko Rye Rock, a reporter with K U Ow in CIA in Seattle and Anna Visor says no vaccine shipments to states across the US air on holder delayed in millions of doses. Are actually waiting to be sent out. So what's going on? Yeah, I'd like to know that, too, Actually, so the state of Washington hasn't been given a clear explanation on this and yesterday, Washington State Governor Jay Inslee said. He's hoping it's just a communication issue which will be fixed soon. Easily was speculating that the different federal agencies involved in vaccine distribution are not talking with each other very well. And essentially, there was some mix up or miscommunication somewhere along the line. Mm. Visors Vaccine requires two doses per patient and states are in the process of now giving out those first shots. So how are these shortages expected to impact the rollout of those first doses there? Well, some hospitals were just starting to get word of what their allotment was. For next week, At least one is putting its vaccination plans on hold for the moment over Lake Medical Center in Bellevue, which was one of the first places to treat covert patients in the area back when Seattle was the epicenter. They were going to get 975 doses and start vaccinations Monday or Tuesday. But now that's on hold, and they don't know when they're going to get doses or how many. The Washington State Hospital Association says they're hopeful vaccine shipments aren't delayed beyond next week. Mm hmm. And how is the deployment of vaccines washed in Washington state? More broadly going so far? Well, they started out really slowly early this week. So you had just a handful of health care workers. Just so hospitals could run through everything sort of do a test run, and then within days, the hospital started vaccinating hundreds of people, you know, including this morning, So earlier this week, 17 hospitals received doses and we know that at least 1000 people have been vaccinated in the state so far, but it's probably a lot more than that, because the data likes behind a few days. Um, So far, Hospitals haven't gotten enough doses to cover all their frontline workers, but a wide variety of health care workers and first responders air getting vaccinated, and it's really quite remarkable to see. Actually this week, I saw Seattle firefighter get injected with the vaccine he does testing for covert at the city's free test sites. You have workers who are handling biological waste from covert patients. You know, the cleaning up hospital rooms after Kogan patients and these workers are now getting vaccinated. One guy who fits that category. I saw him get injected. He pumped his fist in the air after the dose went in. You know you have health care providers in the R, who have to live with the uncertainty of This new patient who just showed up. Do they have food poisoning or do they have cove it and this week I saw them get vaccinated, And they said this is a relief from that uncertainty. Thank you so much for this update. That's Kay. You Ow! Reporter Anna Boiko. Why Rock in Seattle again? Thank you. Thank you.

Jay Inslee Centers For Disease Control An Washington Anna Boiko Rye Rock Anna Visor Seattle Lake Medical Center Washington State Hospital Asso CIA Bellevue United States Kogan Anna Boiko
PS5 outperforming Xbox Series X

Joey's Totally Tech

03:30 min | 2 years ago

PS5 outperforming Xbox Series X

"So the s five as outperforming the xbox series x the xbox series x may be the world's most powerful console but an early game test up. He has five has been outperforming. It digital foundry has been analyzing new games across both the playstation five and xbox series x the xbox series x is capable of twelve teraflops of gpo performance as opposed to the ten point. Two eight teraflops on the ps five. The xbox series ads is in the lead slightly and four k and ray tracing performance modes on a devil. Make pry five but the high frame rate mode brunt noticeably better on the playstation five with more than forty frames per second gap at some places the. Ps five is outperforming and other games too such as assassin's creed mahala and dart. Five differences could be down to bugs. But it's microsoft only allowed developers to submit games for the xbox series x certification in june after an update to its game developer's kit developers had access to the place agent. Five deaf heads farther and advance see. I don't know if there's anything to worry about I know generally console when a new console comes out. The quality of performance is noticeably worse than the beginning that the end just because his people as a developers learn how to develop for that platform they just get better at getting the most out of it right. Yeah this may be something to worry about but it's also not be. Yeah i don't think yeah That's not anything to necessarily worry about. Not worry i mean. Obviously it's not that big of a difference things here and there but yeah i think i think the reason we're not seen as good of performance on the xbox is because they have a hat as much time to optimize probe xbox series act as we saw they had only starts the bidding in june where liked they could submit for. They had much more time to develop For the playstation five. Yeah so they've had more time to do the optimization on that also. An issue with xbox platform as far as development is like the series x in the series. S are fundamentally. Two different consoles series s has lower specs than the series x So a game for the xbox who essentially to make to two versions of that game run on the excellent around this so You know the. Ps five you know they have the digital edition but the digital edition is the same as far as expressed to the. I don't know that had to necessarily two versions of the game. I mean on pc for example. It's like there's optimize levels of rye. So he can run. A yakuza has with pc's like one version of the which are three enough yet at rod zone. He with all sorts of different configurations different. Gpa's and whatnot but yeah they did have to focus on two different consoles Configurations rather that's true.

Dart Microsoft Rod Zone
A Conversation With Cheryl Contee Of Do Big Things

How I Built This

06:49 min | 2 years ago

A Conversation With Cheryl Contee Of Do Big Things

"Hey, everyone. Welcome to how I built this resilience edition on these episodes were talking with entrepreneurs and other business leaders about how they're meeting today's challenges with new strategies and ideas, and today we're GonNa hear from Cheryl Conte founder and CEO of do big things. Cheryl was part of the how I built this summit both in twenty eighteen and twenty nineteen, her digital agency do big things helps organizations like Google, the N. W., C., p. and Oetzi with creative strategy website, development, campaign content, and much more. Tell us a little bit more about two big things. Tell us about your company. Sure absolutely. So do make things as a digital agency as you mentioned that specializes in working with the world's leading causes, campaigns, candidates, corporations with mission driven initiatives to the narrative and new tack for the new. Era in which we all are living in today where working really hard on the election. But also on the pandemic we've been working on eviction prevention campaigns were likely to start working on. A, campaign targeted at misinformation around vaccines were out. You're really trying hard to help people in a tough time. And sort of give me a sense of how you work with companies like campaigns, of course, and serve creative marketing strategic advice things like that. Sure people come to us for a lot of different reasons right know we are a digital full service agency whether you need strategy you need research online influencers and who to target wear for what whether you WANNA run ads for persuasion or for acquisition were building APPs We build websites, It just depends on you need to do something online to reach someone usually not to sell anything we're not selling things widgets to face cars were helping to promote. Positive ideas that created social change. So I know Sheryl before you launch two big things. You actually created another business attentive dhadly attentively, which was a social marketing software business and one of the first tech startups with the black female founder and then was acquired by Nasdaq company. Can you just kind of walk us through the journey of that business and how was acquired and then how you decided to start do big things? Well, that's a long story of. How I started attentively basically, we saw a gap in the market and I think especially in this time for those people, maybe you have lost your job or your job is changing, you know look at the gaps around you and see if you're able to provide a solution to that problem. That's what we did. We saw in the corporate marketing segment that there were a lot of people using social listening influence or engagement and marketing automation in various. Sophisticated ways online that nonprofits didn't have access to or a lot of different reasons price. The tools weren't really tailored to the way that they talk about their audiences. So that's why we created a ton of lead to meet that need fill that gap and you know we had competition of course, and we were very visible also as an all female team with a black female co-founder easy to get funding. We had to work really hard and I experienced. Real discrimination despite running at the same time another digital agency that had pulled in millions of dollars in revenue. You know we were still seen as risky, which to me seemed very, very strange. Long Story Short we grew over time we became the dominant player in our market and we were an impact startup that then became acquired by an impact corporation laugh bod, which is one of the leading purveyors of nonprofits software right? So it's possible to do good. By doing good and that's what we do here. Do big things and what we did at attentively I know that you've got a blog and you write for different publications a lot about increasing diversity and entrepreneurship. Can you talk a little about some of the ways that you are trying to push this idea out into the world? Absolutely well, when you look at the field right now, they're still this socialization in our country and our world a an entrepreneur looks like Mark Zuckerberg and no disrespect to mark. But you know he's not the only person who's got great ideas entrepreneurs in common every shade, every size, every color, and that's the thing that I think we need to work hard especially now as our economy is rebooting to work on. So I wrote a book Mechanical Bull. How you can achieve startup success. It's the story of my journey, but there's also a lot of friends of mine who are investors who are founders themselves. It's their stories as well of you know, what did it take to get through every part of the startup cycle which is tough. I named it mechanical bowl in part because it's a wild rye have startup no question. Especially, if you're a woman when Women Rides Mechanical Bowl people have a different. Response to that. Then a man, you know when a man rides with mechanical boulder looking at a strength strategy has stamina when a woman is writing a mechanical bowl. You know they're watching Gigli parts right and they're not really on the same amount of effort may be more effort that it takes for a woman that same strength strategy and Stamina. So you know I did it the tough way. Okay. Like being in the tech world as a black woman not easy at all absolutely dancing backwards in heels you wrote an article in the Harvard Business Review's called advice on launching a tech startup when you're not a white man and it's a really terrific article. One of the things you talked about was that when founders of color are pitching, the sees their pitching ideas that may help their communities out but may not solve problems or impact the lives of the rich. White men who they're pitching. So what advice do you have for up and coming founders and founders of color to kind of demonstrate that they're big ideas are worth it are worth backing even if the potential funders you might not be directly impacted by that product or service. I do hope that people check out that article as we worked really closely with Harvard. Business Review on it, and it has a lot of practical tips in that I. Think people from US right now. But at least what worked for me was data data, data data, right and showing look you might not get this totally a problem that I'm solving for you wealthy white male investor. But there's a lot of people for whom this is an issue and here's how much money we can make. We can do a lot of good some investors really care about that especially right now but also you know this is a pathway. To making a lot of money in creating a successful business that builds

Cheryl Conte Harvard Business Review Google Founder And Ceo Harvard United States Mark Zuckerberg Oetzi Sheryl Co-Founder Founder White
Dont Mess With Notorious RBG: How to Fight For The Supreme Court

On One with Angela Rye

05:55 min | 2 years ago

Dont Mess With Notorious RBG: How to Fight For The Supreme Court

"To this week's on one with Angela. Arrived podcast. NATORI is a CB does not have the same notoriety as notorious RPG and what is really notorious is the Senate Republicans for trying to bulldoze the traditional Supreme Court nominations process. So we have assembled an all star legal panel today that also reflects how Supreme Court should look it probably also think here to break it all the way down like a fraction are Kristen Clark President and Executive Director of the National Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law Christopher. Kane. Chief counsel of demand Justice Ellie Misao justice correspondent at the nation and Tina Johnson President and CEO of times up. Hello everybody. Angela. Thank you so much for being here. So I want to start with giving honor where honor is due in. That is to start with Ruth Bader GINSBURG who we lost on September. Eighteenth. I feel like she held on just as long as she possibly could end for that I say thank you. To our BG to the to the real story is and I just wanted to give you all the opportunity to share some thoughts on route Baiter ins, birds passing on her impact in jurisprudence in which he wrote some phenomenal opinions including just two words, I dissent and you know anything else on your hearts to share about that because then we're going to get into the battle that is the Supreme Court nominations but I really WanNa give her some some time just do. Well, if you're a lover of justice than you definitely are feeling this, you're feeling the loss of Justice Ginsburg on the court right now having been inside the court was always great to see her in action. She was always an active questioner questioner always asking all of the tough questions and and really pushing. The. The Orleans before her. I also think though about Thurgood Marshall and what he meant for the court and Thurgood Marshall is somebody who dedicated his career to the practice of civil rights law when he was appointed in one, thousand, nine, hundred, sixty, seven, and justice Ginsburg frank lease the only a second civil rights lawyer to sit on the court. So right now we're at a moment where there's that void that vacancy in terms of somebody brings that lens to the issues that come before the court. So for me that really matters because we're not getting that with this nominee has been put forward. I'm. Christian I agree with you completely, I mean this this her career even before she got on the court is astonishing in all of us who are working women who are women who can sign around credit card applications and hold a mortgage in our own name and pursue our careers including. Alexis. Johnson wrote this morning you know including the current nominee to the court. We are -bility to do that to repair Berg I mean she dreamed up the idea that the equal protection clause should cover women equally as we weren't in there we were you know the kinds of. Laws kept women out of the economic life of our country. Were not challenged until she had the foresights quite frankly and the legal ability to think that up and percents that and so even before she got on the court Mike Thurgood, Marshall's she had transformed landscape forever for all of us and my dog is Getting this okay. Tina go ahead see. My my story about Ginsburg is is a personal one. So I was in high school I was on trial and a week with states or nationals whatever and one of the guest judges was at school year. And then after the thing he he gave a talk for for the kids and we got to ask questions I asked him a question and answering made fun of. I I asked him how he squared his opinions about originalist. I didn't know what was called originalism. Downing intangible whatever. But how he's wearing those opinions. Brownie. Be Bored event, which was obviously against the original intent of the founding slavers. Yet like super important right and he laughed at me and then everybody else laughed and you're like I. Don't know what they're teaching school and everybody else. A bunch of jokes and then some like really not really credible answer I would later. So he kind of any make of me dismissing it is sat down kind of embarrassed son how GINSBURG heard this story? I am magid now that since they were friends was probably bragging. Point about how? Of. This seventeen year old or sixteen year old. But anyway she's GonNa Message to remark. That was held back. Kids they keep descending. which you know is again, I didn't even realize how awesome and amazing was. Sixteen seventeen year old kid. But it really to me goes to show that at even kind of social setting in A. In a private setting as it must have been for her earth the story. The her her commitment to raising credible questions and raising the sense not backing down She lived at right and she gave me a nice little note when I was a kid. To keep trying.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg Supreme Court Thurgood Marshall Tina Johnson Angela Justice Ellie Misao President And Ceo Kane Senate Chief Counsel Mike Thurgood Kristen Clark National Lawyers Committee President Trump Executive Director Magid The Orleans
Interview with Kamala Harris

On One with Angela Rye

05:16 min | 2 years ago

Interview with Kamala Harris

"Senator. Harris. It is so great. Our refrain from calling you Connell today because I think it's important that they put respect on your names on the start lead. By example we know you are in the middle of debate prep. I wish I was in the room with you to give you some one liners but hopefully we can get you ready and most comfortable today how you doing how you feeling I am well Angeles so good to see you and I just wanted to thank everybody. Chairman Russell for that introduction. Thank you for mentioning not only the head of the NAACP. But also my pastor Dr Amos Brown thank you to dare Johnson for your ongoing leadership. We talk. So often these days about the importance of everything that is at stake and making sure everyone's voice is heard. So it's good to be with everyone and Angela. It's so good to see a good. You know one day at a time thirty, nine days before. An election that will determine the course of A. History generations to come. Here will and with that are WanNa because I know that part of what's happening in debate Prebisch, they gotta get you with rapid round. So in my favorite things to do for the PODCAST is irap around part of that is to just loosen up you're ready to just die right in we WANNA consider family. So, here we got less third. Okay. You are Proud Aka how y'all normally greet each other. With a hug. A not but not during cove it. Okay with what are you guys say with the low thing you say Greeting sorer. Along elite but I. Know when when you go through the process of becoming one, then we can have that confidence. Not Happening I am black in that Greek I'm Eddie reg out. Okay negatively. Did, you know that you an suit dog share birthday. I did I actually did. And I talked to him recently. About voting actually. About all of US voting yeah. Yeah that's that's really important right now. Yeah. Okay your favorite professor at Howard. Oh. Doctor How skains. I there were so many but I'll start with him. He was yeah he was one of one of the the ones who had been a a real barrier breaker in his own career in life and But. You know there's so many and the thing about the professors at Howard. Is that they were the best in the brightest in their field, they could have taught anywhere that they wanted to teach, but they chose to teach us, and in that way really inspired us in ways that very special and long lasting. Well now they're Howard has their their commercial from this to this little plug. We've keep going round. Okay. Go through the. But. HEC. That is but no truly that isn't Hvac experience and. Universal in that way Okay who threw the best shea during the Democratic primary debates you've gotTa pick one. Beside myself. Okay. Now, you can say you're so you could save yourself. Okay with. You in the morning. Oh A combination of things but prob read is one of the first I do. Favorite thing to cook the people don't know you can slay down in the kitchen with yes by. A roast chicken it's kind of my go-to. Annan, a best rapper alive. To Pop. He lives on. I I to. Listen West Coast girl think to park lives on. I'm with you. I'm with you so. He Goering, doing that. On. WHO WOULD I say? I mean there's so many i. mean you know it I. There are some that I would not mention right now because they should stay in their lane. But. Others, I. WanNa. Know who? Keep moving. Didn't that was not supposed to be comfy there about. Okay Aka was founded. When and where? In one, thousand, nine, hundred, eight at Howard you. Okay person who you would fan girl over the most if you met them right now. Angela, why are you doing this to me? The person I would fan girl the most. I don beyond say.

Howard Angela Naacp Eddie Reg Dr Amos Brown Connell United States Senator. Harris Chairman Prebisch Russell Johnson A. History Goering Annan Professor