24 Burst results for "Seddon"

"seddon" Discussed on Mind Pump

Mind Pump

04:03 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Mind Pump

"I'm a lebanese ju. Apparently on a white supremacist neo. Nazi right so details. Don't matter to these credence right but seddon thing. That was amazing to me. Is that when we spoke at the rescheduled events. A few months later the amount of security that we had around us not only do we have the toronto police security but apparently there was private security. I think it was the company that had also done private security for cold. Play the The group or something. I saw walking into this gigantic. Where i'm gonna give a talk about the importance of freedom of speech and so on and i'm like surrounded by a thousand guards and thinking what world do i live in the. This is not a single word that i'm going to say that is even remotely controversial. And yet i need this much protection as it. By the way as a result of that thing that happened where the first eventless cancelled. And then the second one was rescheduled. One of the members who had who was originally supposed to speak at the first event was not invited to the second event. I had nothing to do with other than the event organizer asking us whether we thought that that person should be invited or not. We gave our opinion but it wasn't for us to decide. Now that person have a lot of fans among some actual you know supremacists type white supremacist. So i started receiving for about a month or two an endless number of death threats. You know this is how we're going to boil you ju- this is how we're gonna skin you. This is how we're gonna do this to you. Here's when get do this. As i put together this whole montage of death threats and i went to university. They were of course. Very concerned So then i had to go on campus. Whenever i would lecture with security and that they would lock the door to my university classes. That student could leave freely Come back to open the door..

seddon toronto
"seddon" Discussed on Anne Ortelee Weekly Weather Astrology

Anne Ortelee Weekly Weather Astrology

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Anne Ortelee Weekly Weather Astrology

"You know you know that you know rocking a cliff in the are in arctic or in the arctic is not a fun life so she pleads to come home and her father goes to get her and then of course seddon as mad or the forces of the the god who she'd been sold to were mad so they rocked sees and made it really or the father threw her overboard. You know thinking well. If i get rid of her i'll be okay and of course it didn't come the see she's hanging onto the boat so he cuts her fingers off. I know it's a little gross but this is a this is an air blue story. He cuts her fingers off and she falls to the bottom of the ocean and she drowns but her fingers become the seals and porpoises and the fish of the bigger fish. The the whales the ocean and so the shamans would go and visit sedna and comb her hair. 'cause she doesn't have any fingers before they would go out on a hunt. She's notion goddess. She stations this week. She stationing today right Today tomorrow and of course we see this huge hurricane bearing down on louisiana in our friends down south in the united states. On the anniversary of katrina Sedna stop no. She's also a slow mover right so they were saying. Oh you know. This is the anniversary of katrina. Which i'm sure is making everybody. And then no now. She's a category for. Will you know so sadness stationing. We're going to see the power of the ocean. And then mars comes in on september first and second and has an opposition to neptune. So we'll see the the power of water. I i became aware of as she recently was discovered and then we had the boxing days tsunami in indonesia. She got discovered that year and then boom that boxing day. Soon nami and up up. Until then i hadn't really know much about sue nominees but when that puppy landed all over indonesia from the earthquake i was like oh how the ocean is powerful. Water is powerful so we have a lot of water. This week with mars opposite athena mars opposite. Neptune the beginning of the week september first september second and and of course we have sedna stationing on august thirty s. So as she stops we know these outer planets that were discovered by the hubble telescope. So we can anticipate you know the power of that and so she's not a particularly happy got. We appreciate mike brown at the jet propulsion laboratory wanting to put more women in the pantheon of gods as the hubble telescope discovers them but he's picking some people with some pretty hard stories but also when sedna got discovered one of the things that really came to the front in our consciousness was the ocean. You know and what's going on with the ocean and how it's changing and shifting and how it's currents are based on temperature you know there's a thing called the escalator that comes up the gulf of mexico and goes across greenland and then down europe which is why britain and ireland those countries that are very high are actually temperate because they get the they get the warming from the gulf current unlike the west coast of the united states alaskan canada asinine. It's cold up in that part of this guy. So you know. I never knew there was an escalator..

arctic katrina Sedna seddon boxing indonesia louisiana katrina united states earthquake mike brown gulf of mexico greenland britain ireland europe alaskan canada
"seddon" Discussed on F**ks Given

F**ks Given

10:11 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on F**ks Given

"Hey florence you're looking low glowing from your holiday sweat like the tan is real. I swear i might. Yeah you look like brown. Well brennan them. We fucking in this country anyway gene. It was eighty five degrees in croatia. Put her can you bring some bluey. I tried obviously did not work grays for london. He did not suck the right decks. Man was sticking. Be like your. Jesus make it happen. What cheeses and god are the same person. How are you. My lovely was going on almost as left this recording because i cheetah and on the screen for the recording on like guys like do today i was looking north. Hoquiam is finished with his baby. Why was going on. Tell us tell. Auntie read and the curious focus. Why came back from curry. She yesterday and the whole trip was like my heeding holiday. I did a lot of light. Self-reflection out there yoga every morning and john laying. Listen to podcasts. How law of realizations about myself and my relationships and sort like an actual proactive bona hair. I was And i was like carrying grief for the whole holiday. It was hard to you know it was hard. I don't think i've ever been on holiday in such a negative place before was quite weird because you get away just like i should really be happy being here. Because i'm like our of london. During a pandemic i this beautiful country with like beautiful lapping. See like everything was wonderful on. Light private island. But then you're saying that. I bought i fool ready. Saad stow and i need to go on a walk around the island and have a beer the cry and like seddon look at a sunset and journal this stuff as well. Yeah when my mom. Which was really good. Because i end up doing some puddle boating and i didn't i would have done if no one took photos of me paddle boarding experience wildlife. They were great photos. Momma did whoa. I like on sunday experienced. My first moment was i. She happy again. Like i feel like i was feeling happiness for the first time since my break up which was obviously a huge milestone in terms of the break stuff paddle boarding fast homemade on it and it was so good i loved it. I feel like it's such a metaphor again. You being not so like like afraid of the sea and then being able to do that on your own and like pushing yourself through. Yes like fair of see exactly like i think the breaking down of that affair and phobia was a yeah. It was like a metaphor for like just pushing past the fear like believing myself to do anything else. If i can do that if i can get over the fear of sem paddleboard in the middle of this. The croatian. see do anything you can do anything. Have you taken anything away from this holiday. Like have there been any big realizations that use of clutch to and big big moments. Where you're like holy fucking shit. My mind is blown. Yeah something that. I grew up in my therapy session earlier today. Which was at my first therapy session in two weeks. Intense like was soon as come as where we've hit. You would like all the come curious. Work you've had ceremonies. Work is holiday blues like the reality sinks back in. It's it's it's it's a hard fucking day. It was always going to be day but you hear your showed up. You'll hear you're on the podcast and you're giving your very of light realizations about Connections with friends and realizing that i have so many boundaries walls up around being vulnerable with friends so which means i put so much pressure on the person i'm in a relationship with because they literally are the only person i can give me like everything and the only person that i'm vulnerable with. Which is yes a lot of pressure and i just had a bit of acre. Lots of little moments therapy was like. This is the sucks like any little cry and yeah getting back from the holiday. Kind of the whole of the hall breaks off kind of like seeped back in massively like on my train journey back from the airport. My mosque was wet from his would not stop fully out my eyes. But it's good. The crying is good right. That's like how physically process the the emotions. The release let we need to happen. Even if you like. I have no more tears left to cry like leave me alone. The is quite overwhelming. 'cause i thought really good like on sunday my loss day in croatia and then like coming back and i was like i've got this got this. Do this goes back. I was like i don't got this. Don't got this just another wave. Only i do. I have this But it's just there are waves and there are lots of you. Know huddles along the way So i'm just waiting very vulnerable right now. Basically 'cause open loads of wounds in therapy this morning and just food like those just a lot of people pulling me in different directions. And i'm just like the middle like hey are you know. I'm struggling with getting out of this depression and like only goldberg. Like my breakout was three weeks ago. Today it's not very long ago I have my best friend like to be there for me right now. So it's just really halt we. We just assume that it's going to be easy and that we've gotten over a head on when we feel good that it's going to be good from now on on it's not like as you said it's waves and we have to accept those waves where there are going to feel good and there are going to be moments where you feel low and that's You have to ride those ways like that fucking paddle boat and try and get through it. Because each time he do each time. You ride that way. It will get a little bit easier. Not massive amounts of easy but it will become easier that little hole in your heart will just send up closing up and you'll be able to beat like no more that you just have to listen life. Life is overwhelming. Life is very overwhelming. Yeah i can imagine right now especially after everything that's going on and big parts of me just want to run away not gonna lie shutdown skirt. Hide in the cupboard. I mean yeah that will be the safe-space but pushing yourself through these moments of uncomfortably. You you grow as a person and yeah. He's his past and the fact that you're doing everything so right no one could fort. You know one could say you should be trying harder. You're doing all the journaling and the therapy and all the good things and supporting and also fucking listening to yourself because as much as we talk about. Communication communication means nothing. If we're not listening to ourselves out body once and our brain ones and so it's trying to trying to figure out what side you want whether or not you do need a day or whether or not you d need to push yourself for work or the destruction and only you can make that cool purchase myself to do everything so i find it really hard to say when i'm struggling. I find that when. I do say that i'm struggling. People don't really take seriously. Because i always turn up And i find it really hard to be decisive about. Why one in terms of all that staff as well. But it's it's weird when i during what we do because whenever we do show up when we we are here is how it helps because of the topic. What we're doing is just sitting here and chatting now is better than sitting and just feeling like arm so it's going to sit here in silence in. Yeah we always do this. I would like especially. If we're not sure about paul call so don't don't wanna do this film and then afterwards sometimes it just gives us the extra boost of energy in life and it's really surprising but it's having to push yourself through that first boundary is tough and as you said what we do is very taxing. We all switched on twenty four fucking seven constantly. we don't have evenings. We don't really have weekends. It is constant from our side. You know not to lie. You rob the pro- productivity in anyone else's face if you have a job that allows you to switch off like relish in that because you might not and that can that can be fucking damaging fuel mental health them. We really need to take that into account that we need to do that. We need to make sure that we have. I mean we've got sean. Yeah we set boundaries for ourselves evenings. That's not talk about what was it. It was like every morning we would just message each other like. Let's let's say fucking good morning. I feel like hey good morning how are you. I'm ben the words yeah exactly. We're we weren't doing that too. Especially when we had like other jobs and we were like working normally doing curious like in the evenings and weekends and it. Just fucking stressful..

Hoquiam Saad stow croatia london seddon brennan phobia brown john goldberg depression paul rob sean ben
"seddon" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

Lex Fridman Podcast

06:00 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

"I mean because you've read russia literature. Let me ask this one last question I might be lying. There might be a couple more. But woody things the meaning of this whole thing. You're you got a nobel prize for looking out into the trying to reach back to the beginning of the universe listening to the gravitational ways But that still doesn't answer the why. Why are we here beyond. Just the you know the matter. And anti matter. If philosophical question phyllis philosophical question about the meaning of life. I'm probably not really good at I think that The individual meaning I would say rather simplistically is whether you've made a difference positive difference i'd say for anything besides yourself Meaning you could have been important other people or you could have discovered gravitational waves the matters other people or something but something beyond just insisting on the earth as an individual so your life has meaning if you have affected either knowledge or people are something beyond yourself. It's a simplistic statement. But it's about as good as i am. I have that's that may've in all of its simplicity. It may be very true. Do you think about Does it make you sad that this ride ends. Do you think about your mortality. Yeah are you afraid of and not exactly afraid of it but seddon by it and You know i'm old enough to know that i've lived most of my life and I enjoy being a life. I can imagine being sick and not wanting to be alive. But i'm not and so I'm not a good ride. Yeah i'm not. i'm not happy to see it. Come to then. I'd like to see it prolong but I i don't I i don't fear the dying itself for that kind of thing it's more i'd like to prolong What is i think a good life. I'm lee living and still living. What's kind of. It's sad to think that the the finance of it is the thing that makes it special and and also said to To me at least it's kinda think. I'm using too strong award but it's kind of terrifying the uncertainty of it. The mystery of it..

woody phyllis russia seddon lee
"seddon" Discussed on The Mom Voice

The Mom Voice

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on The Mom Voice

"Like complain pretty much decided on it and she gives to what you do. You give your your good advice and input to omega. I mean what about you. Well i would have to say my scariest. One was when kate had mersa mercy. I don't think we've ever talked about that on here. I don't know i'm you might have have we. I don't remember but yeah it was after a disneyland trip of ours right. She caught a infection and man. By the time we got from california to phoenix. It was the size of my fist. And before i knew it we were in surgery and she was at the children's hospital for a week and it was super scary and she was my only child. My baby and i just remember being terrified. Never having heard of it before. Like i had no idea what mirsky i you had to tell me. What mercy seddon. Everybody's coming at me with life threatening it is and how scary it is and all of this stuff and it was like a presence in her early childhood we were watching for it and she arrestable yes. She had multiple cases but then she weirdly grew out of it which is a strange thing so getting for heaven. Yeah i mean. I can remember having the hardest time with 'em it's reflux. Yes seen beside myself for months and months. Is this ever going to end or the breastfeeding a right. And you're speeding right. And you've you finally being the one like you don't have to breastfeed. Just go to the bottle. Just do it. I know. Sarah beat herself up for a while about i to keep nursing especially the last one and working in all things and you know what you know. I just thought the other day fed is best not model or breast fed and being healthy and love ever needs to work for you and those are just even mostly like baby things we know. The biggest is yet to come. And it's going to even get harder with the real challenges in my gosh sedating and the college in you know driving the scary thing stephen com which is wild. Most of your mom's not like just buckle up girls because you're part you said something the other day that made me like wait. What if that really happened. You said something. Like what if emmett and kate go to prom together and i was like. Oh my gosh. Can you even imagine what if our children develop a crush on each other. Absolutely that they could totally crush on each other because we have three the same age my twins her oldest are the same age but not even that even if they crushed but even almost as like a cousin relationship if she didn't have someone to take it would always emmett to sadie or homecoming or whatever because he would be fun and he's out and would be loved to go and hang out. Hey what are some things. We bonded over and our early friendship. Oh and the early days. Jeez oh sorry. I lost yeah. We bonded so fast. It was just so natural. We loved our like fun. Tv shows are introduced me to a lot of tv. Shows like the one tree hill or gilmer girl. Gill more girls. Svu svu oh yeah. And absolutely and lauren introduced me to disney. Yeah i kind of did. I totally your first timing. that's right. we went spring break one year. Oh yeah and she'd never been to disneyland. And then i loved it. Yeah you did to it. Yeah and we later got to have..

mirsky kate seddon phoenix emmett california Sarah stephen sadie Gill lauren disney
"seddon" Discussed on The Mini-Break

The Mini-Break

05:07 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on The Mini-Break

"All right all of that seddon. You can tell him. Still getting my mini monologue legs under me. But let's get into the nitty gritty of this twenty twenty one western southern opening and again on this episode were focusing on the men's singles results. Let's start not with the top seed. The next gen guys. I was referring to in medvedev seats. You poss- in zero bullet start with a big week for felix all the assume and i know sometimes i feel like i'm just an advocate for felix because i see it i see the power tennessee plays with when it looks good. It doesn't just look you know top twenty. It looks dominant his serve his forehand our top ten weapons when they're landing in the court decisiveness with which he hits through the court. It doesn't matter the opponent. It doesn't matter the court speed. He has the league weapons. When they're landing and the problem for felix's sometimes he is a bid one dimensional the serve beforehand where he wants to rip through the backhand as well. He's one of those guys. In my opinion who can hit through someone by hitting a cross court back in that list is like jovovich zero. Have i mean doesn't hit through you cross court but he can't step up in the baseline rip it for a winner again. It's a very very elite group of players who can confidently step up and hit through court cross court with their backing and faa's getting better at it. Oh yanic center did not include yanic center on that list. I apologize bionic look for felix. I mean his servants forehand were landing against matteo bertini in a six four six three win a to advanced to the quarterfinals. Of this event you look for felix the numbers from the matchy one eighty nine percent of his first-serve points. He was broken once in the match. Now he but he only faced one break point throughout the match and know again. He did he only he only one forty two percent of his second serve. That's a testament to bear tea's ability to step up and hit a first forehand with it. You know gets around that ball so well sneaky quick for a guy his size but you look for felix in the match to the exact same thing and just was. The steadier of the two players had eleven break point. Chances only converted three of them but only needed the three six four six three victory for him. Here get to win over martin. Future vich seven six six three in his first round match and that was the match that he didn't play his best only made fifty two percent of his first serves faced ten. Break points in the match. But it's gotten better and better as the tournament progresses in his second round win over hatching of in three sets meet sixty one percent of his first serves one ninety percent of those first-serve points sixty eight percent of his second serve points was a dominant day on sir for him and then against bertini again up to sixty four percent of his first-serve go in he still winning eighty eight percent of those first-serve points. He's got another fascinating match up in the quarterfinals against the final deposit listeners of this podcast will know. That's a rivalry that dates back to their junior days in obviously for felix he's had success against cpap particularly when they were younger in the junior seats passes had his number a bit of late. But it's because felix has the sort of pace the big serve in the heaviness of.

felix yanic center seddon matteo bertini medvedev tennessee faa bertini martin
"seddon" Discussed on Physical Activity Researcher

Physical Activity Researcher

03:45 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Physical Activity Researcher

"And basically there was the research field exercise physiology. And then we've when we found out more about sitting there was specific field of inactivity physiology which came up should be a think there should be the same thing in psychology that this should be specific field which is concentrated on on the set into behavior. Well that's that's a good observation. I whether we need a separate field. I would probably say no but i would like us to develop understanding and more knowledge around the psychology of sedentary behaviour. The reason. I'm suggesting that we don't really want to make it. Stand out as a separate field. Is i think we need to understand that. Physical activity in central behavior of become more Is become more recognized that they are interrelated. So perhaps if i backtrack just a little when we first got into century behavior as a as a field of study outta just made myself but lots of people. We tended to see century behaviors completely separate from physical activity and one of the reasons for that was that we knew that people could be physically active during the day. They got around for example but they could also be highly sentry. Watch a lotta tv screen time in the evening so if you can be both physically active and century over a period of time maybe the to behave is somewhat independent. Yes there's some logic in that and statistically the to behaviors are not very highly correlated. But you can't say that the health effects of sedentary behavior are completely independent of how much physical activity you do. So the the the move within physical activity signs his to recognize that. There's a continuum of movement if you like from sleep to sedentary to light to moderate to vigorous even highly vigorous then it. It tells you that there is a continuum and the twenty four hour movement model. That's been used for some guidelines. Typically for young people Will tell you that you need to look at all these things in combination so in terms of the psychology of central behavior that may be a slightly different psychology to promoting less sitting more standing and moving. But we don't really need album a completely separate field and claiming that it separate. I think it's part of the kind of physical activity. Psychology feel and we just need to develop a better understanding of the behavior of sitting and of seddon sri not just borrow from physical activity psychology. Yes yeah that's that's a good point. I came to this we. We made one scientific abstracts some years ago and we actually looked at the psychological theories for exercise and whether they are actually applicable sedentary behavior ambitious actually quite many things different if you think for example intrinsic motivation when you do exercise you might get runner's high it might be really exciting or what not but if you think avoiding sedentary behavior for example standing you probably don't don't get though so insane same exciting feelings if you look at competence basically anyone almost anyone can stand but they probably cannot.

seddon
"seddon" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

03:47 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

"Dripping drops making loud slats as they struck. The leaves glittered the forest floor. Joanna closed her eyes. Inhale the sent off of ocean breeze and for a moment was back stewards cove when she opened arise for just a heartbeat. She expected casey to beat her side. She looked around at the forest. That blind gravel drive. The mayor was right. the storm has passed. She walked up to tall metal doors. The main building come on rusty. Let's find out what. I've got myself into a modern padlock luke through common whole created when the two metal doors came together. The key slipped in easily. She wiggled a padlock loose and pulled it out. Who can it on a belt loop honor jeans until she could find a place to keep it. Each door had a large handle. She pulled on the right one. I to our surprise to move easily. She pulled it around until it lay flat against the building. Did the same with the left hand or then step back and admire the to twelve foot. High wooden doors had been revealed. Read with large gold high chinese characters. We're going to have to find someone that can read these. Joanna seddon lucked out rusty unless you read chinese rusty smith at the base of the doors. I didn't think so. In place of a door handle for the wooden doors was a large key shape piece of wood inset into the door on the right it was nearly a press fit. Looks like another key now. If i could just pry it loose unable to get a finger in to force who wouldn't key out. She pulled the pocket knives. She always carried pride and tell she thought she'd break the blade. Joanna could feel the frustration of just one more thing bubbling up. She took a common breath for crying out loud. How the heck am. I supposed to get this thing out in a fit of frustration. She made a fist unlikely. Punched the wooden key and watched him fascination as a sprang out revealing a keyhole son of a gun. She said an inserted the key with some effort. She turned him. One hundred. eighty degrees and step back out. Size door slowly moved out of the door. Jamb she folded back against the melador. Step over the threshold and covered her mouth nose. Everything was coated. Blanket of dust. Smells just like his side of the vacuum cleaner bag. Rusty was less. Put off marched in leaving dog prints in the dusty floor. She waved a hand in front of her face rusty. Come i have the feeling my apartment maybe in the same condition. She climbed the steps wondering for umteenth time. What she got herself into the key turned the law. The door opened in. Thank god sheets. I wonder what the furniture looks like. She walked to a sheet that had been draped over a chair now. Weighted down with a layer of dust gingerly brought the four corners together carrying it at arm's length out the door on onto the platform at the top of the steps leaned over the rail. Let it drop and watch. The saddam separated from the cloth and formed a clown. The drifted away on a breeze. The club chair. She doesn't cover was upholstered in a rich red leather. As was the couch the kitchen counter was seasoned wood the stained at rusted porcelain for sink. When rusty sneeze she had to laugh he was covered in dust is black knows now. Dusty brown two bedrooms. I can't wait to see the bathroom. She said she walked down the hall. Look down a rusty. The door was ajar. Do you want to do the honors as if he knew. She said he pushed the door. The rest of the way open with his nose. Good boy hey. It looks like someone brought the bathroom into the twenty first century..

Joanna Joanna seddon rusty smith casey rusty Rusty saddam
"seddon" Discussed on Behind the Steel Curtain

Behind the Steel Curtain

09:31 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Behind the Steel Curtain

"Let's let's crack straight into it so full of break wilted tj wants contribution to the fifty six sacks two thousand thirteen quarterback pressures eighty quarterback meltdowns. Let's outsize me the draft peak lost you heir-apparent by debris in a way had to step in when buddipriyo dingy. And now he's gonna any played in sixteen games star five now Said he may. He's going to really be front and center for the pittsburgh. Steelers beyond these five tackles for awesome went on told him that talks for would they sort of a baseline steelers addressing or rushing numbers. And we'll ferguson. The and rushes oxides He had two sacks full quarterback knockdowns and twelve prussia's. So sit there. And you're like whoa hang on. That's not that much from the rookie. But when you look at bud dupree know. He had socks. He had under the fifteen quarterback hits name would have had more precious than that. So you don't have the full sample size. They've molly but definitely think alex hospitals to replicate sidna right sex waiting to quack knockdowns. If he's going to get those that that's sort of a number. he's probably looking at thirteen. All sort of quarterback knockdowns to contribute to the i eighty that we had and when it comes to precious but probably looking more at twenty five. Where his contributing. I've to the pressures now. They're the numbers we need from. Howard sauces again. He's another player that if we are going to have the pittsburgh steelers latter up. Today's numbers we need that from hosni. We really really do. It's not something that i keep their he can you can check right from. It's not something that i think you need sir. And it's something that he's while capable the what will be interesting to saves. What proportion to. Alex smith threw fifteen sixteen seventeen games makeup of the fifty fifty six sacks Doting quarterback pressures will eighty quarterback knockdowns. The next player. I wanted to talk about with melanie. So melvin ingram overseas required in the last couple of weeks. Fanfare quite fairly proven. Now i've lost threes. And as i said earlier i'm done his based in the advance stats because crossing between the two. Get quite confusing. I can only go back three seasons. Which means that. We're not getting the full picture. Melbourne's career their loss threes average five sacks twin precious five quarterback meltdowns. Now mrs postseason. Now that's really helpful for us. That's a tenth of the quarterback pressures may need to get to. That's released a seek stained to the quarterback markdowns. Sorry you sit there and say well hang on. He needs to lost here. I think he played in five games. Lost year therefore women looking phase numbers. He's actually upside to him. As a sitting taught one that might be some players that have have up such. Melvin ingram's one of those plants That that he's gonna pretension have some these upside. Can he go back to our genius. Seddon saxwood sitting before his injury can go inner differently average at twenty five to thirty pressures. Can he average ten if he's gonna get seminar at saks. Probably looking at your the best part of between fifteen and twenty five quarter quarterback pressures in probably about fixing quarterback nope downstairs did sorta stat ones. That are looking out for melvin ingram needing to providing if the steals it can continue this excellent sack pressure knockdown Numbers merging on to accused from the year. But he to save very quickly. Because i've only talked about on the you can talk about these full gaza currently on the roster. Jonathan will hang on leaving advocate wa the pokemon king while not putting in there because i don't know whether really he may will make the rostock inner he may will make the practice squad. Roster is the veterans spots. But i'm not including view. Because i really don't expect him to be a massive attributed shape or massive control next year hurtful i haven't put the injury cloud replay by saying that but i definitely think looking forward to twenty twenty. Two one of the about god's could be on the real stuff and yes you can say november might not be but if he has a good year for the steelers and steals come close. I can bring him back on a year on shake. -til one that's the view i think after Optimistic positive view so the queue from the year. now this is a really hard one because i daren't rejoin actually available stat lines that we do for the other place because it's simple stats over cooling differently. I golf exports reference which is which is a college vision of profitable but quits. You are shea had averaged seven sacks through each year of college career seven sacks. Now we're gonna sit here and say we expect you to me not really looking to start in gangs unless it's toward this injury Event it's can market loss when the loss veloce because of next the you know the one remaining to have a top ten on the paddock full. But we might need to use until the end of the season is spelled different guys but quincy shake contribute three sacks. Can he go over. alex smith. He's five games. Can contribute files quarterback knockdowns critic contribute fame quarterback pressures by easily thinks. Different plays what we really need to save from. Quincy shays backing up. Some of the great proven performance to the out of the college level in to the nfl level but equally. What are his numbers. Gonna be like in twenty twenty two and i think wherever you see alex haas me. Over around between human melvin ingram. That's the sort of error we wanted to develop the fact that not a remains that twenty twenty tone beyond quincy rochet will have important contribution to the fifty six sack. Two hundred dead Eighty quarterback markdowns. And if the steals gonna get close to that stopped so many keep in mind because just especially as now. we're about to go in to the preseason with gang the whole fan game in the three subsequent games we wanna start seeing signs. Quincy your share will be able to deliver on that because that will demonstrate whether he was these rosie's fantastic value. You're in the six round and someone that we rely on the short. You know in the first round the first only switch to warren to stop previewing draw fees are talked about quincy. Russia was a massive fan of him. That's what's really exciting rolette. Let's cost are is ahead. Crystal-ball gaze is actually getting a number big name age rushes that are available in twenty twenty two run as of right now on according to over the cap nice plays now whether the sills want to spend money on someone's gonna be Four by channel. Germans who we know know resort Requested to lay the cardinals. He went to ourselves from the texans He's optioned to the steals. You've got jason pierre paul again Knees pretty. Well this season whether you're wants to go around again. Who knows jerry hughes is probably gonna retire outside of the bills today young clammy i think we we know that ships out and wild. We want him to better previously. The melvin ingram. You know this is much better option. And then you've got an annual okla has a bit younger from the dolphins. Meyer addison's in the bills. You'd probably Time has unready from the panthers again. Someone that we really want to look at you dante. Foul you know. From from the falcons and plays son really get on into that. Two thousand nine hundred eighty. You've got mckinley from the browns. Or he'll be interesting for us to sort save his season what he does fall. The browns and against the steelers. Anyone's melvin ingram and we norway sitting the other guys in there is down dennis garlic bid if he has this little. Caesar neon wall street is business way. The cardinals releasing human. That's going to be a really good defense. I'd critique team to really do well again derek on it could be an interesting one from the eagles. But i know that they'd cap situation Improved so whether we're able to get him on not skin me interesting any snow on whether we whether we want you to zella guys like landry that come up as well from the totten's i'd expect to get a pretty decent deal and from there you can get an also different names. Like why cassius marsh. Why panel mcveigh like vinnie. Cari likened swansea from the charges. Who i think. They'll you know they definitely race on him. Some degree newton's cap number james how high these and then get into the rest matza where we sort of seeing if you drive through some of those names unless you want to spend some pretty high or get someone you just do the replacement for melvin ingram as it stands. We're kind of looking at the draft but the steals can have a number of different people that they need to look you know in the nfl draft. By people i mean. I guess mean multiple different people at different positions poss- russia is going to be out there in my view so quarterback ben ben. Ben doesn't come back so it could a cornerback. We've really need a token cornerback under that in shiva's down lebron's swines. Steel is picking a cornerback in round one. But you know. I was surprised. We didn't necessarily get one in office near to take the second round that i loved the frame of We talked about him much. Ferret only any good undrafted prospects..

melvin ingram steelers bud dupree sidna Alex smith Seddon saxwood prussia tj hosni Quincy shays ferguson alex haas quincy rochet molly pittsburgh saks melanie alex rolette
"seddon" Discussed on Developer Tea

Developer Tea

04:48 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Developer Tea

"Of a scenario where implicit hypotheses ultimately could lead you to make bad decisions after we do this by the way. We're gonna talk about why implicit hypotheses are not always bad but i was talking about a scenario where they are. Let's imagine you're on a team and your team has been working in start up mode. This really means that you're trying to ship features as fast as you can without breaking everything that you touch is might mean that you write as many tests as possible but maybe you're not covering everything that you know you should then as a result you're also making a few shortcuts here and there and building up seddon technet and tech is no stranger to any of us but you've recognized that there is one area that seems to be producing a lot more bugs than you're comfortable with and so you bring this up at a team meeting with you and the other engineers and engineering manager or maybe a product managers there with you. Then you say that you bike to pay this technical debt as soon as possible product manager talks to you and the other engineers about what it would take you estimate to some decree of of accuracy but ultimately the product manager says well. I don't think that we can do this now. We're willing to continue experiencing these bugs but we need to get these other features shift. This is a classic problem. Because how can you really perfectly prioritize in a situation like this. It's very hard to do. Now let's imagine that you choose to work on this technical debt outside of the scope of your normal work in other words you say okay. Well i'm going to keep doing this other work my kind of main work but i'm also going to work on. The technical debt of this moment is where you've used an implicit hypothesis. There could be multiple implicit hypotheses. And in fact they're almost always are multiple hypotheses in a given scenario. Sometimes you can even have a mix of explicit and implicit hypotheses.

seddon technet
"seddon" Discussed on Malicious Life

Malicious Life

06:18 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Malicious Life

"Early. Two thousand and four and one of the two or three greatest cybercriminals to ever walked the planet. Albert gonzalez is on the payroll of the united states. Secret service and not just working for them thriving with them for months sometimes. All day and night he works alongside bonafide agents out of a satellite office in army repair garage in jersey city and those agents actually like him one prosecutor later told the new york times quote. It was kind of a bonding experience. He and the agents developed over time a very close bond the worked well together and quote they even gave him a nickname soup playoff his online persona soup. Nazi and albert is teaching them all kinds of new things. It's like when he was fourteen and the fbi b. i. Visited to figure out how kid who only just reach puberty managed to hack into ness. Remember what happened an agent to albert into a room the set there for an entire afternoon and by the time they came out. It was the agent not the child who has left these. This kid is amazing. Albert's lawyer recalled the man saying he's running circles around me now at twenty. Three albert is winning circles around the secret service. The prosecutor how quote spending this much time. We've an informant this deeply into cybercrime conspiracy. It was a totally new experience for all of us. And by springtime the service trusted albert enough to make him the fulcrum for the biggest ever cyber operation. It's ironic actually that there were about to use one of history's greatest cybercriminals to attempt the most ambitious sting in the history of cybercrime today. Albert is an administrator on the on the shadow crusade and he actually begins to climb even further within their ranks as he at the same time that he's working with the secret service that's sherry davidoff. Ceo of ellen be security and author of the book data breaches. You might have assumed that once he went clean. Albert left the cyber underground for good but the service had him do the exact opposite stay active become more embedded in the community. It was all part of the plan. The other thing to understand about this time. Is that the dark web doesn't exist. And that means that as all these hackers are visiting shattered crew and buying and selling credit card numbers. This is all on the normal internet. The web domain for show crew is www dot schiro crewe dot com as simple to type into your browser as google dot com. That means all this. Cyber crime is hiding in plain sight shadow. Crew users are in real need of more reliable ways to cover up what they're doing one way you can hide yourself on the open. Web is via virtual private network or vpn if he began is basically a remote computer that functions as a proxy for all your data transfers as an analogy say. I wanted to send a letter to been all our sound designer to tell him. I really love music. He adds two episodes. But i don't want him to know that i wrote a letter since he might ask for a raise. So i write deal been all. I really love your music and i played the note in an envelope but i don't send a letter to been all i send it to nate our producer. Instead mate then takes the letter removes the original envelope that had my name and address on it and replaces it with new envelope with his name and address is then sends it over to. Oh who gets the note. Wow gee thanks and sends. The note came from nate. And not me. He has no idea that. I'm the true originator of the letter. I recognize rans handwriting everywhere. He probably doesn't want me to ask for a raise. Such a cheapskate. Jeez vpn's work in a similar fashion. You establish a secure encrypted connection to a remote server and tunnel all your browsing activity through that remote server so that your true identity is hidden there are ways to supersede. Vpn connections to figure out. Who's behind seddon internet activity but it is difficult so you can imagine how useful vpn would be for members of shadow crew. The secret service knew it so albert says to everybody. Hey i've set up a vpn service soup. Nazi starts promoting his own vpn. You i this quietly behind the scenes and he gets the shadow leadership onboard and then after a few months he starts offering it to the whole shadow crew community. Albert is a well respected member of the community. He's got crin eventually. The whole shadow crusade. It was moved onto servers. That the secret service could monitor. It's not like the members didn't realize the risk there were certainly times that members said hade jokingly there are certainly times that numbers jokingly said things like hey the secret service had a back door they could listen to everything.

albert Albert gonzalez army repair garage Albert sherry davidoff jersey city the new york times fbi united states nate ellen google seddon hade
"seddon" Discussed on Fresh Air

Fresh Air

07:52 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Fresh Air

"Those videos. What what did they show. These were videos. You can find them on project veritas. You know website or on youtube now on these were videos of you. Know one case democrats or people working for the government who were you know. It seemed like they were slow. Rolling the president's agenda or trying to thwart it or using they were part of the dsm democratic socialists of america. And they admitted doing you know. Be engaging in political activity while working for these government institutions. Which project veritas Assorted was You know wrong or even you know. I can't remember if they said it was illegal or not. Did any of these in resignations firings criminal investi. They did in the end. The people who are involved. I think we're you know slightly humiliated you know. Was it effective. I don't know did it. Help project veritas. Raise more money. I don't know you'd have to ask mr keith. Now one of the more well known operations because well you reported on. This was an effort to embarrass. Trump's national security advisor. Hr mcmaster he was the one who replaced. Michael flynn after he was fired. Why were they targeting. Hr mcmaster what did they want to embarrass him to get him out of. The government individuals were. Were not exactly sure who was behind this effort. But it's clear that they believe that you know. Hr mcmaster was was thwarting the president's agenda right and you know that probably in terms of you know iran monopolizing out of the the agreement the agreement with iran Jcp la and you know mcmaster. You know wanting to keep troops in afghanistan trump. Of course one of the pull out and they thought mcmaster had fired. Several people who the president had brought on and or mike flynn his former first national Advisor brought on. And they you know i think it seemed like they were seeking revenge and this was not james. O'keefe has said project veritas was was unaware of this and they adamantly deny knowing anything about this. Our understanding of the operation is that mr seddon employed in fact the project. Bro toss was involved in this and Another individual named barbara ledeen who worked for a prominent senator He's committee chuck grassley. She admitted her involvement in. She had actually said she had met with a project. Veritas operative so. What exactly was the plan to took to catch. Mcmaster saying something. Shouldn't the plan was to. It was basically you know. In some ways it was a classic sort of honey trap. There was certainly using attractive women to lure people out on dates and you know typically they would have a male individual working for project veritas. Who'd accompanying these women on these dates. It's sort of a security. They were going back on us. A former project veritas operative named tara price who lives in the dallas area to Possibly ensnare mcmaster at a restaurant Get into say something ill toward or maybe negative about trump something that would compromise him and i think the end goal was make a video and if necessary try to get The white house to fire mcmaster there were steps taken to advance this plan but in the end It didn't happen because mcmaster was fired. And it's a fascinating story. We still don't know everything about it when we're trying to learn more about exactly who was behind this and if money was paid and so on so how did you come upon this. Couple bowen sophia. Well as we started reporting on eric. Prince and richard seddon. I became deeply interested in learning. Who in fact was working for this organization and Last year i learned that bowen. Sophia had been working out of this house in georgetown. And then i started googling them and doing some research on them and i realized they were giving money to democrats in wyoming arizona and colorado and of course. This was really weird. Because they work. For project veritas. These two are conservatives. Right it's conservative organization. So i thought to myself wire day giving money to these people. These democratic politicians. I knew something was off immediately. In fact i wrote a memo about about what i found. The whole thing was completely was really weird. And then as i sort of gathered started gathering information on this i knew i knew this was going to be a story but then january six happened the insurrection and i we got swept away reporting on that and eventually was able to come back to it and you know we wrote the story about the operation targeting master in the georgetown. But i didn't reveal that. I knew and so the had lifted that house at the time because we were working concurrently working on this larger story about them so it was a fascinating moment in time last year when i realized what i suspected bone so they were doing and mark mazzetti. My colleague who's just. He's an extraordinary journalist. We you know we manage to the suss out what was going. We think to a great degree. What was going on wyoming and these other states yes it really fascinating example of the power of database reporting now. Because you knew they were doing the thing in georgetown but the their campaign contributions in wyoming have to be publicly reported. That's how you found him. And that's what raise the question. Yeah well that. And by the way at some point. I don't know the time period. But when i learned about boeing sophia last year. There's a website project veritas exposed and this. This website is devoted to Revealing the identities of project veritas operatives. And so so fi as picture was up there but it was not her. Real name was maria and as i was reporting this. Somebody said well you know her picture you know. She's on that website. And then i talked to somebody else and they said well you know she works for project veritas and so i was able to piece that together so i what i'm saying is from richard seddon standpoint. The fact that she had a picture. Up on project veritas exposed. That was a real risk. They were taking right and ultimately did blow up in their face. It was a risk because she couldn't effectively work undercover. If they'd been exposed by this organization that's critical very toss. Yes and her picture wasn't her name. It was a fake name. Maria but her picture was on this website so somebody was just waiting and it turned out to be me and mark to come along and make the make the connection between the sophia della rocca out and wyoming and maria quote unquote on the project. Veritas expose website and by the way as we began reporting this. We started learning more about about bose connection to people His uncle is The conservative commentator glenn beck and bows mom. Is the the ranch cook at the eric..

mcmaster mr keith mike flynn mr seddon barbara ledeen richard seddon tara price Michael flynn iran bowen sophia georgetown chuck grassley keefe wyoming Trump Veritas Mcmaster youtube veritas mark mazzetti
"seddon" Discussed on Fresh Air

Fresh Air

08:03 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Fresh Air

"Is he actually providing those kinds of serve. I think yeah. I think the latest is you know. He's worked his latest adventures and is in libya. I believe he was involved in an effort to battle pirates in somalia so he certainly moved in this world before he Was at a meeting in the seychelles. The islands in the indian ocean january twenty seventeen That got a lot of attention was investigated by robert. Muller what was going on there. What does that tell us about eric. Prince well some people had speculated. This was some sort of back channel the russia because it was a believe there was a russian investment manager there who has ties to vladimir putin the president of russia and there was another individual from the emirate. Who was there seemed to be it. What it showed was Princes well traveled and and is always looking for business opportunities and prince comes up in the in the special counsel report raw rubber mothers reported. You know again as When barbara ledeen the staffer for the senate judiciary committee which was run by chuck. Grassley was trying to find hillary clinton's missing emails and prince gets involved in that too so an active player in the in the trump world. Yeah i would say an active sharon active player and certain certain parts of trump's world. Yeah or conservative. The conservative world. And you know and he is. You know he's an international businessman so he's going to pop up and all sorts of different places. So he's the guy who hires this british spy Richard seddon to train operatives to gather intelligence from you know democrats and progressives win. Does he do this and do we know why well again this is. This is a little murky. We're still trying to fully understand. How project veritas. Which is founded by james o'keefe Actually came in the contact with eric. Prince but what we know is there was an arrangement made and eric. Prince allowed project veritas to use his farm to train. Its operatives and as part of this effort Richard seddon was brought on to handle training and really professionalize Project veritas undercover operations and said and was out at the farm. He was leaning training. It's my understanding. He designed the training exercises. Which could include like going out to bars. And cody and trying to get people's names and numbers had a pitch. Somebody elevator how to spot people who could potentially provide you information. You know there was one exercise. I believe where they had a cop. Local cop who was there and they stopped the they would actually stop the operatives in a car in the operatives had to give you know to get a cover story under duress so you know this is not something i ever done as you know. This is not something journalist do but but there seem to be the training out in wyoming. And then seddon he stays on. He comes in late sixteen early seventeen around that time period and then he stays on working. For project veritas to roughly june of eighteen. When richard seddon. And eric prince got connected with veritas and cooperated on some of these operations. What was the effect on veritas. That did expand the number of people that they had working to expand their operations. Yeah i think they nearly tripled the number of people they hired and you know saddened then reached out to you. Know a family a an old an old friend who had worked at the fbi and his son. He brought his son who was a former army officer on board to help. He recruited british commando to help this guy. Gas thomas Who i guess had new seddon through his days. Am i six. And so these people were brought on to help manage these many many many many operations. Richard seddon in two thousand eighteen guest decided to stop working with project veritas. We know why time understanding there was a disagreement and and how project toss should be run. You know we re talked many many people who work there and you know they described seddon as wanting to do more long term operations right Not quick quick. Hit videos or you know or shorter term operations which i think People say oh. Keep mr akif wanted to do. I think part of mr keeps motto. I think it's important for him to have regular and consistent content right now one now one expose every every every year not saying. This is the case with mr keith. But it took a harder to fundraise that way if you're only doing one thing a year or if it's you know there are long periods of silence between each expose. Now you mentioned project veritas. There's there's there's a long backstory there are people have probably heard of this organization reminds who they are and what they've done. Project veritas as founded by james o'keefe. It's a conservative group and they conduct undercover operations for instance to expose bias or what they would describe as you know wrongdoing primarily and and and liberal circles targeted the teachers unions. They went after democratic staffer and in washington. They there's a wide wide wide range of targets and many of them have been exposed and they the purpose for they themselves will will launch this undercover operation and then secretly record you audio video and then make video out of it and you know expose what they described as this wrongdoing they targeted acorn. They targeted npr. There was a meeting at lunch which which led to a resignation. I believe they targeted they targeted our editor deemed decade. They've targeted cnn. They targeted the washington post but then they got reversed by the post which was quite a moment right. They hit a someone came to the post. This was when there was the special senate election in alabama right and avoiding. We're all more exactly and they targeted a reporter washington po. Very good washington reporter stephanie. Mcgrath and who they picked up on a very very very quickly right and figured out that this woman was not who she said she was right. It was the woman was was claiming she had been impregnated by the senate candidate Thinking that the washington post would be so excited to to get dirt about a conservative that they would publish a bogus story. And it all kind of went south. When when the post exposed it overall how do conservatives regard project veritas. It's it's not clear to me. You know oh. Keefe has clearly raised a lot of money. Millions of dollars. Those a billionaire in i don't know if he was obeying arab but he was extremely wealthy conservative and and in wyoming named foster freeze. Who actually run for governor. Eighteen passed away recently. And mr kief disclosed that foster had actually given project veritas money and we've talked to. We've talked to people who have given them including people who Gave smaller donations right. Five hundred thousand. Do we know of. Connections between project veritas and james o'keefe and trump donald trump or the trump family..

Richard seddon seddon Prince barbara ledeen eric senate judiciary committee james o russia eric prince seychelles vladimir putin Muller Grassley indian ocean somalia libya keefe mr akif hillary clinton mr keith
"seddon" Discussed on The Young Turks

The Young Turks

02:31 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on The Young Turks

"It out. I just totally blanked on his name but there was a republican operative. We actually did end up going to prison. As a result of that and then later trump had Pardoned him now. Let me give you some of their other tactics so Said and also secures the funding to do these operations from this wyoming heiress i mentioned before that susan gore she's very wealthy very much against legalizing marijuana for some reason. That's like the hill that she wants to die on so she was very much involved in funding these operations but she also has a long history of financing The republican party or any type of conservative effort that goes along with her views One of the things. That sophia laroque did was She took a picture with a democratic candidate. Who didn't end up winning. A congressional seat that she ran for in wyoming And this was actually for the wyoming legislature The woman that she's pictured with is marcie kindred again. She didn't end up winning but what was interesting was that sophia rocca took this photo with her and then immediately posted it on facebook as a profile picture right and so that was another trick to make. It seem like. She was supportive of democratic candidates and marcy kindred said about that whole incident. It was kind of odd that she put it on facebook. We weren't really that close now. It makes total sense. She was playing the long game trying to be my friend in the hopes of me getting into the legislature and if she had gotten into the legislature And if they had a close relationship maybe there's a possibility to get some personal information about her. Dig up dirt about her and slowly but surely destroy Members of the democratic party both on a local level because this is the wyoming legislature but also on a national level as well with some of these National politicians And then all of a sudden the couple just disappeared right before the november election. Mayor and laura disappeared on october twenty first. She wrote an email to her boss saying that she had to leave the country writing quote. I have a family emergency. And i'm going to venezuela's my grandmother is gravely ill others. She had worked with and befriended over two years. Said they had not heard from her in months but the new york times actually found that in fact the couple never left the area mayor and seddon have also been working together on a business venture importing ammunition from overseas. According to a business document linking the two men that was obtained.

wyoming legislature susan gore sophia laroque wyoming sophia rocca marcy kindred trump marcie republican party legislature facebook democratic party laura Mayor venezuela the new york times seddon
"seddon" Discussed on The Young Turks

The Young Turks

05:28 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on The Young Turks

"Please supporter all right. Let's move on one second all right so the new york times is reporting that the gop specifically trump related operatives had infiltrated various democratic groups in the west in an effort to destroy their chances of ensuring they're candidates win but more importantly ensuring that donald trump had the upper hand the twenty twenty election. What's fascinating about. This story isn't just the fact that the opera is operatives had infiltrated the democratic organizations in western states but that they were also trying to infiltrate republican groups that just weren't loyal to donald trump enough so called moderate republican groups. So let me give you the details on what they found Large donations to democratic national committee to the democratic national committee. Ten thousand dollars each had brought bowe mayor and sophia larrocha arocca tickets to the democratic debate in las vegas so this couple gives a massive donation to the dnc and then they're able to go to the democratic primary debate. That took place in las vegas but merrin louis rocca were part of an undercover operation by conservatives to infiltrate progressive groups political campaigns and the offices of democrat democratic as well as moderate republican elected officials during the two thousand twenty election cycle using large campaign donations and cover stories The operatives aim to gather dirt that could sabotage the reputations of people and organizations consider threats to a hard right agenda advanced by president donald trump. So here's the couple. Posing an cutesy little picture in las vegas on the day that the democratic debate primary debate took place for the twenty twenty elections and they looked like a lovely couple right and the democratic party was unsuspecting of the fact that they were actually pro-trump republican operatives that were looking to dig up dirt on The democratic party and progressives and progressive groups who were also of course trying to get their preferred candidate elected and that was senator bernie sanders now at the center of the scheme was an unusual. Cast a former british spy connected to the security contractor. Eric prints and susan gore. A wealthy heiress to the gortex fortune publicly available documents in wyoming also tied maher arocca to an address in cody used by the former spy. The british spy richard seddon. Okay so richard. Seddon plays a huge role in this effort So what exactly happened. What had seddon do well. Sudden aided a network of conservative activists trying to discredit perceived enemies of trump inside the government including a plan sting operation in two thousand eighteen against trump's national security advisor at the time. Hr mcmaster and helping set up secret surveillance of f. b. i. employees and other government officials prince had set sudden's work in motion recruiting him around the beginning of the trump administration to hire former spies to train conservative activists in the basics of espionage. And send them on political sabotage missions. So that's pretty serious and the way that this couple actually ended up getting caught was they weren't so great in making up the stories right so there's sometimes their claims wouldn't add up. You know they would say things about why they were missing in action on some issues By making up a story of course and then changing the story later. So at one point The democratic party in wyoming decided to start like slowly but surely restricting laroque. 'as access to the party's email system. And that was a smart thing to do but my new. They were blinded by the fact that this couple donated a large sum of money to the dnc. And so when you are fueled when you're funded by various interest when fundraising tends to be the most important thing in our political system. It's easy to be duped when someone provides a massive campaign contribution or massive contribution to the democratic party and so that's a problem obviously not only for the democratic party and our political system but more importantly not more importantly but also it's a problem for The couple because if they had made campaign donations or political contributions and then we're reimbursed by an organization republicans. Whatever whoever was helping them pay for those contributions. That's illegal that's what That dopey guy went to prison for what's his name again. The one who's done a bunch of those movies You guys will remember The one who's kills close with. Ann coulter all right. We'll figure.

democratic national committee donald trump bowe mayor sophia larrocha arocca las vegas merrin louis rocca democratic party president donald trump senator bernie sanders susan gore dnc maher arocca richard seddon gop new york times wyoming Seddon seddon laroque
"seddon" Discussed on Riot Podcast

Riot Podcast

04:33 min | 1 year ago

"seddon" Discussed on Riot Podcast

"That piece you don't you don't have to answer the man you don't have to justify yourself you don't have to come up with some well. I guess i hope so. No you have confidence and you could plow through after god gives you the thumbs up and say. I know this is what god wants us to do. I know he's going to provide. I know he's going to direct. And i know his hands going to be upon it. So let's go and so we all need that piece guide when big decisions that we're making we need to know that we are walking in step with what god wants but within the hard part is to accept it when when he says no. That's hard right when we want to go a certain direction and he says no. Then the question comes up. Not do i have the piece ago. But do i trust god that he's acting on my best in my family's best behalf right when god says no he says it because he cares enough to keep from out of the pit. He cares enough because he knows what's going to happen down the road. He knows that that decision is not going to only impact you but it's going to impact the whole family and others. He may say no to the your dream house because he wants you to buy a better house in a better neighborhood that is could you right beside the person that he wants you to influence. That will become your best friend and you'll lead that person to christ see. That's the stuff that god cares about more than more than our our comfort and our stuff on earth he cares about people and he cares about how our decision affects others. And that's our last point right. That's our next point is how does decisions impact others and in considering that right speaking of peace. I mean david seddon..

david seddon christ earth god
"seddon" Discussed on Emma & Tom's PGCE Podcast

Emma & Tom's PGCE Podcast

09:54 min | 2 years ago

"seddon" Discussed on Emma & Tom's PGCE Podcast

"Today i'm joined by ellison who's a student teacher on our secondary religious education program. Hi l. s. that thomas. Thanks for coming today. You've carried out a piece of literature based research for your lead partnership school who we can't name because of the terms of the ethic approval for the research project but this school and they gave you a topic to look into because of interest to them for their own kind of school development. So what was that topic that the school gave you said topic was an kind of split into three parts. They gave us a choice of either looking at vulnerable learners. And whatever that might be whether it's saw or more able and talented excetera ben. They said we could do a study on blended learning on how we teach in a blended learning environment or the third option was to combine those two together. So how do you help. Specific categories of vulnerable learners within a blended learning environment. And given the time that we're in to me that was the one of most interested. That's the one. I counted -able so vulnerable learners in the blended environment. And did you need to narrow that down tool anymore to make it manageable. Did you come from a subject tangled. Did you have to do anything with that topic. Once he picked option three from the hat yes exactly yeah so we had to narrow it much further because obviously vulnerable learners and such a white category and we a recommended that we could narrow that down to a a subject specific points of view a religious education point of view in my perspective in my work in my literature review after a loft inspiration. I actually didn't do that because going through the research i felt like it was applicable from what i knew to a wide range of topics so i didn't feel like bringing it down to a religious education spending was going to bring it was going to enhance it that much more but what i did do was never the butler winning side of things down to adhd specifically and. I did that in all honesty. Because i had an interest in learning more by. Adhd i'm really have a worked with many students with adhd. I didn't know too much about it. So i thought this was going to be a prime community within my sinement to try and understand. Adhd a little bit more given so pregnant and use it. Mapping it onto not blended learning environment saint tyne fascinating. Okay so you got your choice of adhd you justify your choice of looking beyond your subjects harry so then you were able to go out and search for literature and you had to pick six sources that will kind of help get a handle on that topic area so it might be a bit of a bit of a big question to ask but can you talk a street the six sources that you ended up with and so broad sense of what they were saying yes absolutely each so the one thing i should really mention i is that when i started this literature review trying to marry up trying to find resources which spoke about adhd within blended learning environment. There was next to nothing if not nothing at all and so it was a bit of panic. Could bit of a worry at the beginning. But i pushed through. I decided to do in. The end was focused on a selection of literature which focused on adhd specific late at some literature which focused on blended learning specifically. and then. i drew my own conclusions between those two. I'm using a variety of websites and sources as well to try in a match up in a meaningful way and i started by actually looking at the. Adhd you k charity website and there was a really interesting on on quite lamesa. Statistics on eighty nine percent of teachers teach or have taught students with adhd and yet sixty three percents of teachers feel that that training and of understanding adhd on supporting adhd students is a par inadequate So that was quite alarming statistics. So i started from that before. I took a deep dive into more literature. Adhd and blended learning specifically. That was loads of resources. When i looked at them separately. But i'll try and go through on now. My six down spitball. I'll just say best that. I looked into these articles mainly online because of the situation wherein they were mainly searches. Either through google laura our our learning platform at cardiff matt and i prioritized terms. Which article twits mentioned engagement mentioned. Adhd additional learning leads blended learning online learning hybrid learning excetera and the scope for narrowing down. Those obstacles was quite slim. Because as i said the amount of articles that looked at them together that what many of them so narrowing down was quite slim but i prioritized any which kinda did mention allen's on blended learning in one with was the best the easiest way to get more of a focus on my first article which i came across was by how graham relatively recent to the two thousand seventeen on it was titled learner engagement in a blended learning environment and it was a conceptual framework. And this what date. It had a huge skype through research. It had a thousand dollars. Coups chapters and other articles of engagement instruments have engagement. And what they really really. Interestingly came up with they spoke about the inconsistencies at the term engagement itself and then how that gets even more complicated when you transfer into online learning but they came up with indicators of engagements and that was what was really fascinating about this obstacle. We talk and teaching about. How can we. How can we facilitating gauge. How can we increase engagement. A little bit better argument was actually before we do any of that you need to know what the indicators aw. When do you know when your students are engaged. So that was what was really tickly interesting about this. And why recommended it to my league partnership school. They came up. With a whole framework within not they had six indicators of cognitive engagement and seven indicators emotional engagement which i thought were particular interests but within the cognitive engagement. One was based on attention. Which obviously i ate pricked my ears up because oh is robert. Because it was specific to eighty can be specific trade hd and what they aim to do is show you. What the indicates attention within within cognitive engagement by might look like and what you can do about it to understand it and enhance a little bit more now. Within this article on some of the things i thought were a little bit etched. Maybe for example under the intention indicator they said about how you might want to track rain whites or movement and it's not really sure that's going to be possibly the most affluent secondary schools around the country. But the undestanding is that you need to know when your students are engaged. Not indicated first before you can change your teaching style to enhance that facilitated and so it was my suggestion that maybe we could look at using. That's marks of teams with google cross. Rooms trying see when they are most engaged. See what the data. It's like really take a deep dive into that than students are engaged to take up over the second article most cattle again. It was a twenty seventeen obstacle a written. Interestingly was all about the motivations of adhd students so it was titled what motivates individuals they hd it was a qualitative analysis specifically for the adolescents. Point to the so what they did. They hypothesized that there are qualitative differences between motivation attitudes between students with adhd and their typically developing peers. And so they did this study which was largely in a more clinical environment. And that was one of my Concerns i suppose one of my hesitations about the article because they students were interviewed. Sorry the children were intimate in a psychology clinic. That was seven all those order. Which from a psychology background. So my argument was that if you brought in somebody from a different background to maybe the confidence in having no analysis response by us we may have a little bit more confident. That was different backgrounds. Connecticut election is still a valuable valuable. Be such an what they found was the rule. The motivation axe cheats. And this is interest. Day-today life it's not necessarily at school but additional attitudes between students with adhd and students non adhd rudely of very very similar. But there were two very distinct difference is which were really interesting. Adhd perspective the first one was the students with with adhd had a very specific aversion to the slow passing of time to time going slowly was just an absolute. No no for them. They just couldn't stand it on the second one was that students who didn't tough. Adhd also cased venue in having familiar and predictable tasks to toss it. They've done before they know how they works. They know what's expected of them. That value did not appear in students with

today Today harry ellison two third option thomas one adhd saint tyne three parts Adhd option three
See if your favorite shows are nominated for an Emmy

Chicks in the Office

01:14 min | 2 years ago

See if your favorite shows are nominated for an Emmy

"It is time to get into the twenty twenty emmy nominations for this year. Super Exciting. Not really sure how they're going to show the EMMYS I. Think it's going to be virtually either way I'm watching I'm tune in I'm rooting for all my favorite shows and for all my favorite people. So let's get into a let's talk about. The nominees? Loved I. Really Liked that open trophy I felt like maybe with a little game show music in the background, it would have been like, oh Gentlemen. We're here to get into the twenty twenty Emmy Awards. I'm hoping though at Seddon. Yeah he's not paying attention. When he listens. You'll hear it when he listens stock. Okay. We'll start from the top will go through a bunch of the good ones. Number one outstanding comedy series, curb your enthusiasm dead to me insecure shits creek the good place, the Kamensky method, the Marbles Mrs Mazel, and what we do in the shadows now I know of all of these shows and the only one I don't know of is what we do in the shadows have never heard of that but if That one either but it's nominated. So it must be good.

Emmy Awards Mrs Mazel
23rd International Meeting of National Mine Action

UN News

13:21 min | 3 years ago

23rd International Meeting of National Mine Action

"So here we are at the urine stool in Geneva and we are speaking about the twenty thousand International Meeting of Mine Action National Directors and United Nations advisors so basically basically unmastered say the United Nations Mine Action Service in addition to Sarah Jerry. He's a researcher. From King's College in London has been looking at research approach into on the link between climate change and vulnerable populations affected by unexploded ordinance stuck in the ground and elsewhere. Welcome everybody body. I'm going to just dive in quickly. Going to Richard Baltimore's Program Manager for South Sudan with unmasks wretched. Tell me the main thrust of the meeting being here at the United Nations in Geneva what you can to achieve this week well simply putting the importance of mine action back on the map. Reminding people there's a problem exists exists around the world that is being addressed but it needs constant support to keep his going a mine-free world is achievable. We simply need to keep doing what we're doing. Just talk me through what the process. Who says you go into a community in south Sudan? Can you give me a particular example of an area is cleared recently. How you've held community? We're helping hundreds of communities Aziz every single day we're going into villages where mines were laid possibly thirty or forty years ago wet forests have grown up around them. People wonder into those forests in search of natural resources to cut wood together the forest vegetables and plan selves up working to render the ground safe and the the the reality is the poorest of the poor go into minefields knowing they all taking a risk. Studying Cambodia showed eighty five percent of mine victims victims. New they're in a minefield at the time. They had their accident but they also knew they were going to be hungry at night. So they take the wrist to go and get it and not not. de-mining is not an option. People will still take the risk and go into the minefields. We need clear those minds to make the land safe. Just start with a level playing field being out to grow awesome food. It is astonishing it comes down to having to live from day to day and Edwin fake money. If I can come to you know you were in Cambodia. Do you share richards. Experience experience. There is that what you were finding radio program officer unless now but you were working for a long time with U. N. D. P. The UN Development Program. Yes you actually see that people take risks risks. When they're hungry they will try to the forest to find food if they have piece of land contaminated? They will try to farm it so that they can grow the rice. It's basically subsistence isn't farming for everything there. And if they contact us the land and they will take measures to go in and see if they can actually get food. What's your message to the conference? Is this week. There is a need for us to address this theory's hope for example specifically for Kamalia. Two hundred twenty five is a goal for them. It can be achieved there to clear. All of known remaining landmines by twenty twenty-five how many we talking about. It's there still about nine hundred square kilometers of land mines but it was like a lot. I mean look look and you say twenty. twenty-five it is a lot but the government has actually committed themselves. You know Wait I left Komodo last year. They committed themselves that they will give ten percents counterpart funding to any international funds. Subtle coming for Mine Action and you be assumed that in the sense that last year we got ten percent of those about about two hundred thousand dollars last year from the Komo government which is a first big step for them taking responsibility for the problem that they have so there is progress and hopefully by two thousand twenty five and quickly back to Richard. You said that South Sudan continues to be contaminated by mines laid out decades ago but their goal is twenty twenty. He's seven four title Clearance Twenty Twenty Six if the current peace can hold if we can get access to all areas then. It's reasonable with current levels of funding as long as that maintained that we we will complete clearance by Twenty Twenty Six but ordinance will continue to appear for decades. There is still ordinance turning up across Western Europe that was fought over a hundred two years ago. Being ploughed up in the fields of Belgium reality of any conflict affected country but in the short term you need sustained funding to help South Sudan Dan. As many other countries need to decontaminate. You cannot come quickly to use Aruna Jerry from King's College London research only be looking at the link between climate the change and unexploded ordinance or nine months contamination. Can you tell me a bit about what you felt. I've been looking specifically at the conflict context. I've been looking at mine. Action in how they interrelate from post conflict peacebuilding framework and the climate. He's something that I've come into recently looking at how that is adding the levels. Abelson wonder ability because I was in Angola in September doing some work where they went national saint for Humanitarian De Mining on a research project. Nick and what we saw there was that once fields are cleared that the farmers there are grateful because clear and provide quite a lot of land. And what they're doing is resorting to the cotton slash methods of cultivation now. What that does the environment is? Just at the the time the fires in the Amazon on but in Angola there was second highest fires when the satellite team. It is dance so while we can clear and and the farmers were saying yes but the drought has impacted so yes. The farm has been returned to the farmers. But there are other you know beyond the mine in action and my take into that is can we incorporate as a sector. Can we bringing other lessons for these people when we out there with them saying once we've cleared the farm may be a certain sense of responsibility in the ways. We cultivate and all so integrating being innovative in our practice to dealing with communities to reduce their ability interesting. So what you're calling for really is for broader approach to helping communities once the areas made safe. So I don't know maybe I could turn to you. Seddon Threat Mitigation Officer with the Mine Action Service so he didn't a lot of work into be at the moment. I don't know how house access you have there. Because we've had talks recently here in Geneva for ongoing between opposing parties fighting outside Tripoli to the South how are you UH helping communities get safer and be free of this sort of scourge that must induce mentality among populations yes. There are two real issues to addressed. ICED firstly is that Libya has the world's largest uncontrolled ammunition stop palm. It is estimated that there were between one hundred fifty thousand two hundred thousand tonnes of uncontrolled control munitions across Libya. Also what we've seen recently in the fighting which broke out in southern Tripoli in April of last year is the expenditure ordinance and the threat posed by explosive remnants of war as increased and sadly many of the areas that were previously cleared of you exit have now been reconsolidated as a result. The current fighting some specific concerns that we've got amendment relates to some of the more complex munitions that The Libyan's require assistance to dispose off. And the previous Qaddafi regime for example bolts some quite complex missile systems that use talks ick propellants and these toxic propellants pose a very considerable threat to the environment went and also to the Libyan people which live close proximity to their storage depots so one of the projects that are mass. Lear initiated with support from the German government his to safely dispose of some of these very hazardous liquid propellants in Libya. Thank you Bob for that. Now I'm going to turn to leave because you're the Global Communications Honcho Four. Unless you could tell me how many countries on Mrs Operating in I'm what stays sort of information sharing between those officers who are involved in making community safe and and maybe what are the new ways that we using computers not officially intelligence to help us improve decontamination. Everywhere yeah the United Nations by action service we of nineteen programs in countries and territories around the world the UN as a whole is a little bit over thirty so the UN is. We're mine action. United Nations mine. Action has the Inter Agency Coordination Group for Mine Action which we helped to service and facilitate and that's really is an information exchange so and this meeting that we're at this week in Geneva Leyva where we have the national directors from all over the world from every mine affected country. I'm comes in. That's a big part of it is to share lessons learned best practices and the technology which is very important specifically with with improvised explosive devices. I mean we've been working for years in Afghanistan. We've seen a lot of devices that were used in Afghanistan that show up in other conflict zones specifically today's in Somalia we've seen stuff in Iraq. There's an innovation there. There's obviously on the dark web. People have access to figure out WHO's building. What and how are they building yet? What type of charges etc.? So you have to stay alert and you have to be following that. Obviously that's not something terribly new military out there in the world The United Nations. We don't don't particularly do intelligence service things but we are starting a database now in order to try to bring in academics and the governments that want to share that information in order that we make our people on the ground safer so that people would have some type of place to go to look at the type of devices I see they can do photos of directly and put it up in this database and then people can look at it from other parts of the world and say immediately. I've seen that. Don't touch that wire. I mean if you WanNa get it simple or this is probably how it is or the or the charter is going to be. You know. Two hundred meters. There's away or is that kind of thing and somebody mentioned earlier today when we were speaking about infrared Is that you know the technologies that exist out there. They are extremely deadly. It's a little bit different than a landmine. I'm where you're just using a metal detector and you're going along and something beeps and you're saying okay is that you know a pop top or is that something more dangerous when you deal with. ID's there three hundred sixty degrees so you don't know where they are And I mean there was just an attack recently in Afghanistan for example where somebody stuck a charge on the top of the roof of a car which killed the UN employees it was UNDP and that's an example of something which smit this new database that's going to be soft launch today at this is meeting with look into. So what specs do you need for your car roofs when the UN by vehicles because that's obviously a weakness right when a car sitting in traffic and somebody puts a bomb on the roof of of it and nobody thought about that but there are ways to know if there's devices on a car magnetic sensors that tell you. Something's been added this car and that's the kind of stuff that we need to know. The the United Nations need in order to keep all personnel. And all NGOs safe. It is frightening. You could be totally paranoid radio studio. They want to step foot outside. Because it's you know I've read the English patient I've read the some of the mindset of somebody who's laying mines encounters and things. I think my goodness this is just extraordinarily frightening writing and terrifying. And I'm Bob you're saying earlier the the threat of mines is not going away. Sadly the very effective asymmetric form of Attack Jack and the effectiveness of the ID as technology level is now very much understood by. The extremists are employing days. I mean sadly that knowledge is now the Leah's mentioned the information is disseminated now across the Internet. It is relatively easy now for people with no previous experience or training to acquire The knowledge from the web to make homemade explosives and to build quite sophisticated audience systems from scratch. You know with any external intervention. So so you're suggesting earlier Bob that it's not just a question of getting the minds out of the ground. It's a broader approach. Can you maybe explain what that means. Yes certainly insufficient really just to deal with the the explosive threat itself itself when one considers the threat posed by ideas. You really look at the the. ID system so it requires an effective whole of government approach. And that's very much based on not just the entity that's dealing with the explosive straight itself. But you got to look at the forensic organization that recovers evidence the analysis of that of the good police squirt this required to identify locate arrest and then process the perpetrators through the judicial system and Libya. This is happening. It is happening. Actually the The Mass Libya team has worked quite closely with Libyan authorities. And we've been trying to develop the forensic skills of the Criminal Investigation Department such that the Libyan police. I can do this themselves. Thank you very much. I think we've pretty much come to the end of this discussion very brief Look at what your and Mine Action Service is doing. It's been a delight to have you here but I'd love often any final messages or thoughts that you have before you plunge back into the dark recesses of the UN Pele here in Geneva and share information which is obviously why you're here simply that clearing clearing the wolves. Lamont problem is achievable. It's very very achievable. I started de-mining in nineteen ninety-three when the world talked about it being a thousand year problem problem now it down to single digits of years with realistic assessments. Credible Clarence methods. We're winning this fight. Unfortunately the fighters moved on on the problem is not being replaced by problem. The crux of this issue is ending grievances. If people want to find a way to kill each other's they will do so but in those countries where the wounds have healed such as Cambodia. We can go on and complete the Job Sarah Jerry Richard. Bulte Bob Seddon ugly really would yeah. Many things

The United Nations Geneva Bob Seddon Libya South Sudan Cambodia Clearance Twenty Twenty Six Twenty Twenty Six Afghanistan United Nations Un Development Program Tripoli Mine Action Service Sarah Jerry Richard Angola Richard Baltimore King Researcher Aziz
Russia's undaunted voice of dissent

FT News

08:33 min | 3 years ago

Russia's undaunted voice of dissent

"The Russian activists Alexei Navalny has been a thorn in the side of President Vladimir Putin for a decade now. He's brave persecution. He's been imprisoned and yet he seems don't Klis correspondent Max. Seddon met him for lunch in a food court in Moscow recently league. Max is on the line now with me to discuss his impressions but first I'd like to open with a clip from the meeting. which gives a flavour of the character of the man? Another big Mac this my Russians rather rudimentary. What what he's saying here so we were wandering around the food court where he took me for lunch which is just across the street from his office in slightly out out of the way but rapidly gentrifying art a southeastern Moscow and this is the sort of place that even if it didn't exist in Russia they've had food around the world from your burgers ears Pasta Sushi to dahgestani dumplings and who's back Pilaf and other things and saying is a place like this that shows you in his mind that Russia As a whole could the really made it economically if it weren't for Putin and he described nisus glass ceiling that's more like a hideous moldy Soviet ceiling the Stop Russia from economically developing. Stick Landy Patillo. Then is a mere ski navy of the numbers suggest that he thinks that despite the huge spike in wealth in the first two years of Putin's rule which was mostly due to rising oil prices. He views the last two decades lost decades because he Says that so much has been stolen. That could have gone towards economic development and there are so many repressive rules and regulations that are holding it back. You've covered Russia for quite a while. Now these are quite strong and outspoken. Remarks how rat is it for a Russian activist to speak out like this. How brave is it to speak out like this I? I interviewed Navan nebout seven years ago in the thing. That is really remarkable about him when you speak to him as I've done many times sense. Sense is just how much breath of fresh air he is. Compared to your official Russian politicians who come from the Soviet bureaucratic addict tradition. They are very bad at talking to normal people in on manage settings you almost never see them give interviews to the independent media where they might says difficult questions. The volney grew up completely outside the system. He someone who was formed by the Internet and by the street and even compared to other people in the opposition and he's a very charismatic person. And this is what is really set them apart even amongst all the pressure that he faces to become the undisputed most popular challenger the Putin in the last few years ears. You say you've known him for a while you've covered rushing for awhile. Tell us how he entered politics. I mean what made him take on this role not only art Ukrainian on his father's side and he has relatives who live near Chernobyl outside Kiev in Ukraine for the first ten years his life up until the blast itself itself in Nineteen eighty-six. He will go and stay with his grandmother. Who lived in this village right near the nuclear power station and the aftermath of fat that we know so well the incompetent Soviet attempts to cover that were very big part of what shaped him because he doesn't have any of this nostalgia for the Soviet Union that Putin has been very big on a lot of people older than the volume has just forty three share? He was very much convinced by this early childhood experience that the system was wrong in the future. Russia's move away from it as far as possible more towards a European liberal democracy as he sees it the other thing. He told me that really shaped him was when he was already in his late twenties he he was working pro. Bono was a lawyer for an opposition party but it was official opposition party in Russia. There are the official parties. who were there to create a semblance of a real political system? They're really they facto controlled by the Kremlin the end. The parties themselves are run like Chiefdoms. Just like Putin's own party and the leaders are these many Putin's and he was working on Moscow City Council elections thousand five and ran against Russia's incredibly corrupt court system. Any said gradually just made him so furious that he became even activist. It's quite a story. I mean you say. He's not nostalgic for the Soviet Union. Interestingly he is though it seems something of a Russian nationalist. Can you talk us through who they send what influence it has on him. And how nationalist is he. Welna volley was actually kicked out of the Liberal Party that he was a member of in two thousand seven for his nationalist nationalist views. Of the sort that you would never hear discussed in polite company among liberals in Moscow and the US the express were very different from from the nationalism that you might think of associated with Putin which is more of the Soviet imperial stout in the Valdez was much more. Russian ethnic Chauvinism Virjee into race says. I'm against people. From the periphery of the Soviet Empire. So the caucasus-chechen Augustan and places in Central Asia Pakistan Cure Augustan Tajikistan stamp who provide millions of laborers who come and do construction jobs. And other things like that in Moscow the center of the Empire and he filmed in some pretty startling videos including one which showed him comparing people from the Caucasus. The cockroaches and mocking shooting them with a gun. He spent several years organizing organizing this annual nationals rally which was attended by all sorts of Neo Nazis and skinheads as well as other people at one of these rallies he used an anti Semitic blood libel trope to talk about Jewish guards. Did you talk about this of your lunch. Does he apologize for any of this. We did. This is something that the money is criticized for quite a lot even though no it's not really very big part of this program anymore. E only really says he wants if these regime for guests laborers from Central Asia but he has no regrets his explanation was that in two two thousand seven. There was this enormous gap between living standards in Russia's back Stan and millions of people were coming from Central Asia to work in Russia and it was a big political issue so the message disorder by rhetoric was a way of trying to get people interested. Max The interview you did with Nevada was for a weekly lunch with the F. T. Slot which normally unfolds in fanny a predictable lines could a swanky restaurant. Just two people the F. T. journalists and the interviewee this was rather different. You joined by someone feel interview view. Can you tell us about this weirdly enough. This is my third lunch with the F. T. that I've done in every single time I've been joined by someone who I don't expect to be there. And this time we were followed by the troll who apparently works for one of the fake news farms run by a Guinea per goes in the Kremlin caterer who runs the infamous Saint Petersburg troll factory. So you walked out of the office building. This guy yelled Alexei. Can you tell us where do you buy your okay involved. He told him to get lost. And the guy follow this rounds we wandered around the food court court and then when we bought our food then sat at the table across from us and watched us through the entirety. The two hour interview and you know all the said for the last six nine months or so ever since his foundation started investigating promotions catering contracts needs people who've been following him and his family around everywhere they go was he listening to you or oh just sitting there to be kind of threatening ish. It was more intimidation. I mean this was someone who was twenty five at most maybe younger and it's not being paid a lot of money to do this but the point is clearly just to harass him the entire time. He is trying to laugh about it he said. It's a good way the practice Zen but he came pretty close snapping a few times and it was obviously of your family's being harassed like that. He's accused promotion of being behind a physical assault assault with arm bar on husband one of his top aides. I mean the impression you get from this story and from other accounts in the valleys life is is that the pressure he faces is utterly relentless and he's been facing this for a long time how does he keep going one of the questions. I've asked many many times over the years. He always finds himself. Trying to explain is your. Why aren't you in jail? Why aren't you dead? And the answer is best as anyone until seem speed. The he's almost almost become too big to jail because when they tried to do it in twenty thirteen he was sentenced to

President Vladimir Putin Russia Moscow Soviet Union Official Alexei Navalny Landy Patillo MAX Soviet Empire Seddon Kiev Liberal Party Tajikistan Assault Central Asia Ukraine
"Shark Tank" star involved in boat accident that left two dead

The Morning Toast

00:58 sec | 3 years ago

"Shark Tank" star involved in boat accident that left two dead

"Shark tank judge kevin o'leary on boat in collision that killed two. Oh my god it's fatal boat accident and now he is. He's in the cross right. Mr is also wonderful entrepreneur kevin o'leary who is best known for his appearance in the t._v. Show shark tank was involved in nighttime boating accident. That left left two people dead his agent told c._n._n. The incident happened over the weekend in ontario. Canada o'leary was a passenger in a boat when it collided with another his agent chase shirts seddon the agent told c._n._n. That o'leary's win life not our own wife. Linda was driving at the time life went. Do yeah spooky. The collision left a man in the second dead said joe scully spokesman for the west parry sound ontario provincial police a woman. The second boat succumbed to her injuries tuesday. Police said a a passenger in o'leary's boat was also injured. Police say three other voters were injured and were treated and released from a local hospital. No charges have been filed. Linda o'leary was given a d._u._i. Test which ritchie past according to our leary's egypt

Canada O'leary Linda O'leary Kevin O'leary O'leary Ontario Joe Scully West Parry Ritchie Leary Egypt
Shopping for iPhone 6 replacement

Talking Tech

04:38 min | 3 years ago

Shopping for iPhone 6 replacement

"Talking Tech is brought to you by WICKS DOT COM creatine published a stunning website all from one powerful platform go to wicks dot com to create your very own professional website. Today that's W.. I. X DOT COM in stay tuned after the show to hear you can take advantage of Wick special offer for talking tech listeners as we discussed earlier this week apple will stop offering new software updates for the iphone six in September and that's going to cause many longtime fans to begin a search if they have already for new model so here's your weekend talking tech projects start thinking about a replacement. Maybe you want the latest and greatest. Perhaps you'd rather save money with an older less powerful iphone surprise we just went over the specs between the iphone ten are which which is the most current entry level model and the two preceding devices the iphone eight and seven and the differences are slight in every category but photography okay. The iphone ten is seven hundred fifty dollars. You get a six point one. An inch screen twelve megapixel camera eight twelve processor chip sixty four gigabytes of storage in the best resolution at the three models by far seventeen ninety two by eight twenty eight the iphone eight has a smaller four point seven screen green the same twelve megapixel camera and a eleven processing chip sixty four gigabytes storage and resolution of thirteen thirty four by seven fifty. It'll cost you six hundred dollars to buy it iphone. SEDDON originally released in two thousand fifteen is four hundred fifty bucks you get the same four point seven inch screen of the iphone eight the same twelve megapixel camera a slightly less powerful attend chip thirty two gigabytes of storage. That's a big difference and the same thirteen thirty four by seven fifty resolution ocean now so far you can see the ten are is bigger has better resolution in a slightly more powerful processing chip. How does that affect you if you're into games if you're into augmented reality if you're into high end photography like kettering capturing? Capturing images in slow motion and processing them right away. You will miss the extra power for the person who just uses the phone to go on facebook's and text messages read email. What's Netflix listen to spotify and YouTube clips flips? You see a difference now photography of course you do see a big difference if you're happy snapping quick cell fees and group shots capturing your food is it's being delivered your table along with quick video clips. You'll have no issues with the iphone seven Avenue camera however you get a perk with ten are and the plus versions of the iphone seven eight and ten versions that bringing extra features in the portrait mode setting this is where you can blur the background in the style of a professional level D._S._L. C._S._l._R.. Camera now ten are eight and seven all have one camera Lens The plus versions of the eight and seven have to cameras a wide angle and medium Portland's so if you really into photography like me. These models make more sense because they're more. More versatile I personally would live without the two cameras but that's really your call. The new models of IPHONES are expected to be released in September and we expect to see three new models with a top of the line model in line three cameras lenses. I can't wait you have questions about shopping fry phones. We're here to help. Look for me on twitter where I'm at Jefferson Graham. You've been listening to talking tech. Please subscribe to the show wherever you listen online audio whether that be apple podcast spotify stitcher or wherever ever and don't forget that I'll be back tomorrow with another quick it from the world attack these days businesses of all sizes need an online presence whether you're an established name a brand new startup or something in between you WanNa make sure the people know where to find you at wicks dot com. You'll find all the tools you need to create a stunning professional website. You'll get access to hundreds of design elements and features that can help you grow your brand online email marketing tools and accustomed domain to name a few Wicks is creation without limits choose from one of their five hundred templates or start from scratch. You have the freedom to build your site anyway. You want plus. Everything is optimized for any device so you'll look great on desktops and mobile's alike.

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Mexico to discuss 'safe third country' deal with US

Larry Kudlow

03:49 min | 4 years ago

Mexico to discuss 'safe third country' deal with US

"US already. So now the latest on President Trump and his tariff push on Mexico so late last week, I gave credit on the show to President Trump because there are bunch of reports. The President Trump was going to be able to leverage a significance concession from the Mexican government. That's significant concession was a safe third country provisions. So the United States has what's called the safe third country, deal with the Canadian government. What that safe third country deal? Does it says that if somebody is trying to escape a human rights abusing country, and they want to get out and they go to Canada? They have to apply for asylum in Canada, the first country that they Lee the first country that they reach rather is the country where they have to apply for asylum. She can't go to Canada and then apply to asylum in the United States because then it really is more. Just wanna come to the United States. It really isn't about you applying for asylum. We have a safe third country provisions with Canada. Well, we'd like one of those with Mexico and there was talk last week late last week like Thursday night and the Mexican government was going to give us one that finally we were going to get a deal with Mexico, where people entered Mexico from Welham Guatemala, or El Salvador, that people would I have to apply for asylum in Mexico before they could apply to enter the unite. States and president from Sarah forgiving credit for that. And President Trump came online on Friday, and he said that the tariffs would not go into effect because he made some sort of deal with Mexico. So we have a bunch of conflicting reports on this, what exactly the Mexican government gave up. Did they give up anything did they make concessions six months ago? And then basically Trump's people sold that to him as new concessions to avoid the tariffs, all of this is eminently. Unclear. So the Washington Post has a piece called hell Mexico talked Trump out of tariff threat with immigration crackdown. Packed says, Mexican negotiators persuaded president from tobacco from his tariff threat by greens, when unprecedented crackdown on Central American migrants, and accepting more expansive measures in Mexico, if the initial efforts don't deliver quick results, according to officials from both governments and documents reviewed by the Washington Post infotainment measures Mexico's promised include that appointment of militarized, national guard at the mall in border, thousands of additional, migrant arrests per week and the acceptance of busloads of asylum-seekers turned away from the United States. Border daily all year toward cutting the migrant flow sharply income. Weeks. The measures described by officials from both sides and included in Mexican negotiating documents reviewed by the post appear to be more substantial than what the Mexican government has attempted thus far during the precipitous rise in migration to the United States border since heralding, the packed in a Friday night tweet Trump has filmed at criticism that he capitulated to Mexico, and that is a court amounts to a series of previously agreed to measures, Trump officials on Monday, described, the, according is a breakthrough, the president considered Mexico's plan aggressive enough to suspend his tariff threat, even though he liked the idea of imposing the duties over the house from members of his own party. US officials say they were particularly impressed with Mexico's pledge to six thousand national guard troops to its border region with Guatemala Mexico described its plans officials as the first time in recent history. The Mexico has decided to take operating control of southern border as a priority, according to Mexican government documents such language amounted to the kind of rhetorical shift, Trump officials were looking for from the leftist, governments of president, hundreds manual Lopez door who asked your dismissed migrants enforcement in Mexico, as dirty work at the behest. Of the United States. From said, Monday zeal of Mexico was fully signed documented and has provisions that have not yet been fully disclosed Monday afternoon at the White House from said that the agreement has been locked in, and we'll be announced very soon. Most asylum-seekers reach the US are now process and leased into the United States. Interior, Mexico has repeatedly said it will not agree to a safe third country accord, that would require it to take in US bound asylum-seekers transitioning. It's transiting its territory but Mexican officials have been willing to negotiate something that would function similarly if responsibility for Silom seekers were shared among others, in the region changes would require approval from the Mexican lawmakers from Seddon.

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Archbishop of Pope bombshell claims to be 'at peace'

Rush Limbaugh

00:23 sec | 4 years ago

Archbishop of Pope bombshell claims to be 'at peace'

"Center at the news a two-thirty facing protests in a noticeable dip. In his approval ratings President Vladimir Putin has made rare concessions to a deeply unpopular pension reform package that increase the retirement age. For Russians while Putin said the general idea of the policy was justified. Due to Russia's economic and demographic trends he said the retirement age for women, would increase from fifty five to sixty and for men,

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