35 Burst results for "Toke"

"toke" Discussed on Scientific Sense

Scientific Sense

04:52 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Scientific Sense

"Important composers recognized at some of the earlier tangle. So that's some is interesting. And i think that's true. Also i mean. I think that actually i think the beatles were trying to achieve that in may went to india and of course actually it was. British violinist will what you call him nelson paladin but you could menuet of another generation teacher about well known current violinist daniel toke the first classical musician to play with indian musician rub action sitter and now i think everybody knew that and it became somehow infiltrated. Plus still pop. Because that's when we started seeing the robinson's migrating to or making a pilgrimage to india to get enlightened and and so if if i recall they make not a scholar at the beetles arts but once some album that had distinct indian elements and not so much other asian but also african. I think that some more recent musicians have adapted african use. Chris certain african. i mean not that. That's a monolithic. It's either form rose. Bowl poll silent would be a great example. He really did that very well. With and see you mentioned you menu. He he also Played a lot with stephane grappelli. Who is a great jazz so that they very sort of breaking out in Which months classical positions which is unusual and had he not been so well established as possible musician. I don't think anyone would have been impressed. Rested and the fact cappelli was Or would they be interested in the fact so he he was to stature in the world to to effect change grow. But he's a change Frozen i yes. I came out or did you say so on this in some sense might be opposite assists that music video indecision medium for creating evolution Nobody gets maybe he doesn't notice Fraud play cow Thanks so much david mate. Thank you as loved it This is a scientific sense. Podcast providing unscripted conversations with leading academics researchers on a variety of topics. If you'd like to sponsor this podcast please reach out to in four. At scientific sense dot com..

nelson paladin daniel toke india beatles stephane grappelli cappelli robinson Chris david mate
"toke" Discussed on The Daily Zeitgeist

The Daily Zeitgeist

04:36 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on The Daily Zeitgeist

"It's every day the show never ends. Why is courtesy of the girl with the chitral pet. And i'm thrilled to be joined as always by my co host. Mr milo toke him by myself. And i've had too much cold brew and i was reading bell horse pace and there he was is good to switch. Yeah they're in the zoom room on. My screen is smell. Do and coal gas. Who's that lounging in that chair. Who's that flashing blind in in my direction surely must be jack. Obi okay. Shut the ginger fish on the newcomer to the and you just don on us with that. Marcy playground wading mail. A thank you windmill. Three hundred sixty vince carter. I dunk contest the sorry culture personality to the handyman my head but it wasn't playing anyone else's hit us. Oh maybe we'll cut that one down. Never never Well we are thrilled to be by the correspondent and host of vice news reports Before that they hosted boxes technology podcast reset and they were the first climate change correspondent in american nightly news on the emmy award. Winning buys news. Tonight they were awarded the twenty nineteen science in society journalism. Award press story. They wrote about a predominantly black community living in poor rural region of alabama where failing septic tanks and pulls raw sewage had increased the risk of hookworm and other infectious diseases. All of that to say they are a first rate guests on a second rape pod Please welcome the talented. The esteemed the brilliant arielle duo. Those thank you so much for having me guys really loved that rendition of sex and candy. So matt good so good like actually so enjoyable. Thank you. There's just something about that song. I have Voice felt connected to. I don't know all. I felt like at a certain point..

Mr milo toke Obi okay vince carter Marcy jack emmy award hookworm infectious diseases alabama matt
"toke" Discussed on Unladylike

Unladylike

08:06 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Unladylike

"And lots of love. Okay kristen years ago. Now i ordered the eva from dame and though she is small she be mighty goto dame products dot com slash unladylike today and get ten percent off with code unladylike again. Go to dame products dot com slash unladylike for ten percent off with the code unladylike in We're back with cookbook. Author julia torsion before. She was a fulltime cookbook author. Julia worked as a private chef cooking for birthday parties or weddings each time. She try out different recipes or put spins on old ones and make a note of what she'd cooked. Those notes became the recipes in her first cookbook. Small victories advice and hundreds of ideas for home cooking triumphs published in two thousand sixteen. I will say recipe development in general is a really interesting thing. You can copyright a cookbook but you cannot copyright a recipe. And that is because i really believe. There's only a handful of actual recipes in the world like irate recipes for things like i don't know chocolate cake and caesar salad and roast chicken and coffee and stuff like this. You know. I didn't come up with any of these dishes like what i have. Ownership of is not the dish. But you know the way. I am sharing it with you like the way i am offering instruction and the story i'm attaching to it and what to me is so cool about cookbooks is that of ownership is shared with the reader. Because the whole point is for you to make it. You know like it's it's about the author shorter but it's also just as much if not more about the reader and about you taking this thing and making it yours. That's a far cry from what cookbooks started out. As centuries ago the western cookbook tradition began as a way of showing off rather than sharing. And hey that was before. A whole bunch of gender nonsense got baked in sounds like a recipe for some claptrap caroline for listeners. Who are unfamiliar. The claptrap is our little unladylike nickname. For finding out why things are the way they are so strap on your aprons. And let's dig in now. The earliest european cookbooks were really status. Symbols just meant to showcase what chefs were serving in royal palaces. Like oh look at all the fez and we can prepare. And even the first non-royal cookbooks were still intended for aristocrats. Given this culinary classism. It's kind of ironic. That cookbook authoring was seen as second rate writing in eighteen. Seventy one one critic warned popular author. Marion harland that. She was ruining her reputation by publishing a cookbook. This guy said that anything marian wrote. After this preposterous new departure would be tainted with the odor of the kitchen. Not just sounds like guinea. Soclean is kitchen. honestly now marion's reputation. Weathered the cookbook controversy. just fine. She was one of a growing number of women getting into lifestyle and cooking guides in the nineteenth century. But still a lot of the women offering these books and making money doing it. Were walking a fine line. They worked hard to present themselves as domestic mavens not professional chefs instead. You had some women cookbook authors. Adopting fictional spinster personas like someone non-threatening who of course had nothing better to do than share her domestic knowledge but spinsterhood wasn't the only thing some of these cookbook authors were faking white women. Liberally compiled the recipes that black cooks and domestic workers came up and publish them as their own. And in some cases they went for full blown culinary black face in nineteen thirty seven for instance a white lady named blanche elbert cure published a collection of recipes from her domestic cook. Emma jane and blanche wrote it in emma jane's voice. Oh god yeah oh god it was bad so bad like i'm not even going to quote it. It was just worldly racist. Well the big reason that most of these white ladies were even able to break into cookery in the first place was the assumption that women were writing explicitly for other women like marion harland for instance addressed her readers as sisters and the subtext can be boiled down to gender tropes. A woman's place is in the kitchen. The way to a man's heart is through his stomach. And you really see the strength of those expectations in the way they were used against a lot of women so you've got opponents of women's voting rights constantly ragging on suffrage is as terrible cooks. Who would just like abandoned the kitchen altogether if they their way. Meanwhile a lack of interest in cooking was considered something only lesbians had in common like. This is not a bit. Y'all one nine thousand nine hundred seven paper. We found described the average lesbian as knowing little about cookery and does not like to make use of what little she does know. Rude but women have also uses cookbooks to subvert the stereotypes and claim their own space in the kitchen. For example. Many suffrage organizations published their own cookbooks to fundraise and bust the myth that politics and home cooking don't mix and decades later second way organisations did the same through cookbooks. Queer women also brought an even more radical idea to the table that cooking could be an act of love between women that feeding your family doesn't necessarily involve husbands and two point five children a groundbreaking example of this is the alice. B toke lous cookbook published in nineteen fifty four. One of the first literary cookbooks of it's kind it weaves recipes together with memoir about alice's love of her life poet gertrude. Stein funnily enough though. It wasn't the same sex relationship that made the cookbook so famous. It was alyssa's recipe inside for hashish fudge aka pot brownies. Nice alice all right well. In the early nineteen eighties openly. Queer women really began making their mark cookbooks. The first were written explicitly. Four other queer women and they had to contend with the stale old stereotype. That lesbian home cook was an oxymoron. Hence the title of one. Oft-cited nineteen eighty-three cookbook. Whoever said dykes can't cook as just like julia said like cookbooks are total trojan horses for ideas about relationships gender class politics. Julia published a cookbook right. After the twenty sixteen election for instance called feed the resistance it features a diverse array of chefs and centers around the idea of bringing activists together over. Food and julia doesn't just talk the talk here like she's also an activist in the kitchen. She cofounded a searchable database called equity at the table. It highlights the work of marginalized folks in the food industry with a focus on lgbtq people and people of color. It's also directory that encourages those in positions of power to look beyond.

Marion harland julia torsion Soclean emma jane blanche elbert kristen royal palaces Julia marian guinea marion blanche toke lous gertrude Stein alyssa alice julia dykes
"toke" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

05:00 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"We're back all right. I do that with a lot better than the original than than the studio version that ended up on the season one soundtrack had funny enough. We were just making fun of that song because it does sound like the adam sandler catalog sort of a adam sandler vibe to it. Yeah but the other one. I got from it. The other artist is actually springsteen if you hear that sort of harmonica. I root for the harmonica right. Now let's do this now. Let's do it now. 'cause i keep the people waiting right because they've been clamoring for this okay for some reason My wife and i went to mass general store several weeks ago and i was listening. This is when. I was prepping for our series on. Tom's so i've been listening to. I listened to almost nothing. Tom petty and in the course of doing that. Obviously i heard a lot of for monica toke. We're at mass general store. And i decided to buy a six dollars. Ninety nine cents. Learn to play the harmonica toy. And and i've been doesn't around with it here and there and the first thing that i learned to play was this but i but i'm not. I'm still not good enough to do it from memory. I have to have the little tabs down in front of me all right. Let's let's see if i can do this. Having had a couple of beer three. Okay all right all right. No monica thing of from you don't know how sales you are almost like john popper except for you don't have hollow tipped bullets that that's the only thing that's the only thing separating it's razor's edge man yes yes i was inspired enough to buy a learn to play the harmonica toy harmonica and i can play that and Happy birthday to you. And i think oh susanna x number more songs you can hit the bar circuit. Yes absolutely and i'm gonna now the deluxe version of laos hours box. It has one collection of reworked and alternate versions of songs from the original wildflowers. It's good to be king as a little more strip down and it's not as lush as the finished product just for an example. You read me is a much more piano driven version. Salt and the vocal delivery is completely deliver a different on that version of honeybees. Then we come to the laws disc that is present on the wealth hours and all the rest deluxe collection that calls live performances from as far back as nineteen ninety-five in toronto and as recent as july. Two thousand. Seventeen in new york. A mentioned that This ryan guys basically the keeper of pettis vault and at this point a duty. He earned basically because he said he kept good notes. That pretty much how he got the distinction of mainly keep palms balts because it took good notes variety asked him if he was so familiar with everything in pettis fault that he was able to say things. Like what you know the version of. It's good to be king from the fillmore. Nineteen ninety seven is the best one we've got. He said no but he said through his spreadsheets and computer files. He does know that they have one hundred and thirty. Five live recordings of that song hundred and thirty five. Jeez because they recorded so many concerts this was done painstakingly by tach campbell and adria petty just sitting and listening. Wow if you wonder like well how did they pick the version of. It's good to be king ended up on the lab. This and the wildflowers box it that group of people just sat there and listened to recording after recording after recording. Those down one hundred thirty five options. Yup now that's something that campbell said was a very emotional experience at times. He said he tried to put himself in the mindset of petty in terms of judging float note this oops or quote. Yeah this is. I wanted to play one song off the live. Compilation thought about planets. Time to move on because it's such a fantastic song. Yeah and oddly given that it was never single and it wasn't a concert staple by any stretch of the imagination. It is apparently they said that's most streamed tom petty song in thomson tar catalog on spotify kidding really mopping dozens of his much bigger hits however. We're going to close out with a late. Backtrack here shortly. So let's just rock out on this one. This was recorded appropriately at philips arena in georgia back in two thousand ten. This.

adam sandler monica toke mass general store john popper Tom petty pettis springsteen susanna monica Tom tach campbell adria petty toronto ryan new york campbell thomson philips arena
"toke" Discussed on Ross Patterson Revolution!

Ross Patterson Revolution!

01:54 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ross Patterson Revolution!

"It's really messed up. Say to make paper airplanes and fucking throw him and shit. I don't whatever man. What do you do in an eye for dinner. Ross state. I always do and i'm not lying and eating burger. I am really doing that. It doesn't seem like you wanna be goth anymore. Do i do i do. are you sure. Yeah i'm into it. i'm super into it. Like the blood like everything because all the things that i've been talking about all show about putting more blood and more tattoos on thing you seem a little put off by it. I said it. I said nice. I said it was cool. So yeah i'm here to the end like toke death toll death favorite singer go and your loyalty go favorite singer wrong. Answer the osborne favorite day of the year. Go obviously halloween. Halloween or pearl harbor. That's the only accessible answers favorite food. Go buddy buddy steak yes. And if you're having a bloody steak. Get a bloody mary with that as well okay. It's really important to keep the blood going next up favorite celebrity daf. Prove your loyalty.

Ross toke pearl harbor
"toke" Discussed on KFC Radio

KFC Radio

08:22 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on KFC Radio

"His cousin mammary while now shape got answer. Me and i think we're with no one. The peak stole child and trump. Cut the you gotta shave razor blades. Shaving cream to get on the next day. I've got to get my haircut game by no idea but argue ship if you would other question yet when when did you Bring it home and shave your head. probably like a couple of years ago a couple of years but i think they're called calix where the hair grows up spiral one here one here And so it's not like it was. I wasn't going bold everywhere. I was only going. It was like the here was getting light like right in the middle And i usually have like the presidential comb over it. Looked as if i was purposely trying to cover up even though i wasn't and so this is my like anxiety. Oh no you'll know they're going to think i'm trying to hide it and so i was like why am i doing. I agree that once. You start even cuts. No thank you. I the way when the ability do yourself. I shaved my head for a while when i was living in hoboken and it was just like the minute kind of touches. Your ear whatever's done. How long is this going to go on. What are you what are you thinking. What's the plan along two days. Go brother you get trimmed or coast and can pay the same amount for a trim. Right i can't do it. it was heavy. They took like a lot out of the backfield. So you'll let it go or do you wanna battle. I think it's about as long as i don't know i mean fleishman i. I used to have short wish. She said no she said no. You don't cut long hair. she does. It is kinda like cutting girls hair. That's not her style. She does like the short hair. The doing fleischmann like i used to. I was in the in between. I didn't like a shaved head didn't have long hair. That's the worst. Alex that looks like you don't know what you're doing half going. You're rolling it out. It looks bad. Wouldn't pull the trigger for years that auburn zagreb. He has nobody. Nobody cared but yeah that is just. It's it's The we had a question if you had a barber who perfect and every time you walk out of there. Everyone's all cover short every time you walk out. Oh my god through but he is very openly and blatantly racist. Keep to them. I don't think. I told because. I think you could find somebody close to you. Can't this is the second gene of fucking barbershops. Like he is the best. You know what it depends on whether or not he's looking for like affirmation honey. He's not awards. I'm saying yes can't ingredient because this is you just do that would you like me. I don't know which way we must travel together to settle race. Ask you really can't i. Hate just looked at the same socks. I know but it's kind of like when they say you got to get through the itchy period of your beard. There was like a waiting period for my hair and then it got long enough that because once again long enough like at this stage you gotta worry about my hair on my neck and once he gets long enough. It's kind of like about it. Just know but gets too long and then couple mine is if you look down and have a hat on. It's in my yeah. You look like cousin it man. I mean it's covering but the thing with doug's we have good shaved heads which a through it. Yeah so we might as well just do it. And that's the i was weekend. This girl was talking about you. Know not many guys can really pull off the ball. And i got a friend. Who's like the highest fucking guy in the world. He's bald head. Looks like vin diesel body shredded up and as she was saying it he walking frame and she was like like. This is matt he. He has a regular jobs regular guy and he looks like he should be a movie. Nobody who than like a personal trainer should look like this. Show the bachelor party. Me and my best friend is getting married. I was like. I'm not even take my shirt off around the sky. We're all playing cornhole. This recent toke said my bachelor party seemed to be well. You can do that too. I didn't want to elaborate. I love his brother. Let me tell you this much. The one minute manifest is very real. I have never been recognized so much. I almost i always flattered. And i really like it. It was overwhelming. I like at one point. They wanted to go to a new bar. And so i knew there'd be like another travel and i was like oh i'm going on you guys go. I can't do it then. My friends were joking that they said it was a communion line at one point nine of this one guy and i like i said it's always nice and it's super cool for the ego and flattering for then people start getting fucked up and everything that comes over. And he's lay brother. I just got a thank you you have given me years. Endless pleasure as like as overcome breath come on man. We can do that a little bit better know. Is it managing a bachelor party. Like if i went to a bachelor party. Now it's different than years ago like is it more chill. I let me tell you this much. I said this on the kevin clancy show. If you are old like me. You're washed up. You know party as much anymore Please go episode like two or three ago. Because i laid it all out there. We got up. We went out at like noon. We've got to the track to track like all afternoon then. There's a bar that everyone goes to post track worship. Yes report many. Yes i said. I said this already. Viable short live music tent beers flow. And then there's only a few other bars to go at night so there's a line to so the first night we go. I am not drinking. Like i used to at all. I'm i'm always nursing beers. I'm pretending faking shots online hangover. But the second day was like ten twelve hour marathon. And i had to go home not because i was too drunk because my legs her might he. My legs act and the dude who had described super shape. He was doing the same thing you could tell. There was a couple of guys who are single looking at falcon party and shit a couple of guys who were like start chance to rage a couple of guys were like. What does your fun and and they were like. I'm sitting there. I'm like. I'm like. I'm like dude fucking calisthenics. I'm laughing. maniacally to myself. And they were. Like what is it. And i was like. I can't. i took perching you. I wish i could like we should making us feel what i felt because i was like i am in painting because i just haven't been on my feet long and when i used to do those bartha marathons who shouldn't be so i wasn't feeling fucking thing so i get home on the way home. I order seventy five dollars for the taco bell. I got a bunch of the housing crisis for me. I opened up hot now. Here's an advocate in the uber. And you know when you take the weight off you know so then we get back. And then i get back on my feet and i was walking to the house like bits and people were obviously what happened. I'm doing. I just went out with friends. Get in the hot tub and then this is how you know you're really washed up. One of the guys in the party brought his thera gun air at the last in my feet as it was it was a pleasure. Paul absolutely love it. all right. we'll see you guys next week for New pints. Chris tell the people where they should be following.

calix auburn zagreb fleischmann hoboken kevin clancy toke Alex doug falcon party matt bartha taco bell Paul Chris
"toke" Discussed on The Adam Carolla Show

The Adam Carolla Show

08:17 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on The Adam Carolla Show

"This is part of today's episode. And we'll keep the clips go and we'll stay in twenty ten. What do we got this adam. Cruel show three fifty two featuring rich schneider jordan brady racists ross. Brian bishop rich and jordan joined in the second half. It will be in tomorrow's cruel classics partout in the cruel classic speed. So make sure you're subscribed to hear that until then we have a killer. Show opening with adam theresa brian adam corolla show three fifty two part one. Check it out. Yes complaining about my daughter. manipulates me. here's what you're what i did today Toke everyone out for a walk took took the daughter the sun and the dog out for a walk. Now here's what my son does my son. Just he just trots ahead. It doesn't really doing you. Just sorta walks. He's owning a son. Say yeah i own them. Yeah their mind you paid for them a paid for all right Owning a son and owning a daughter one. It's like having cat and temperamental dog. Like i'm telling you my son is like a cat just leave that bowl of kibble out. It'll find his way he's off being bring him in at night. So the coyotes don't get him he'll be fine. They just kind of do their own thing going to make their own fine. That kind of you know. They're up on the fridge. He's up on the fridge all day long to sleep and up on the fridge. No but seriously he's like he goes for a walk. He's not going for walk with me. he's going for a walk with him right. It's nice that you're there but isn't really need you to be. There would be scared if i split. Yeah every once run away screaming to freak them out No he goes walk and when he goes for walked. He's walking himself. He's like out ahead of me picking up a stack. He's looking at stuff. My daughter not only has to enlist me in the walk but has to enlist molly. Her leash must be around italian. Scooter harness harnessing the power of mali and then pulled like a lesbian. In the i did arrive up the hill. The leash goes around. That's a little little four wheel scooter. So it doesn't really fall over. And she sort of stands on it and then she mush is molly and then molly pulls up the hill and when we get to the top of the hill simon head back down and she insists on me walking her. She gets back on the school after walker down. She hangs on me. And i tell her you steer and also of keep my hand on it so you don't go to fast and she refuses no use their use to use their. She just hangs on me. And so i basically walk in probably about the worst posture you can be in that sort of half slumped over like i walked with a posture of yeti. Just sorta that like trying to bend down walking down a hill and trying to bend down low and hold the scooter and then we get. We come to my driveway and she hops off for scooter. And she's like i put it up. Put it in the garage down the smell her new bus tomorrow morning. I remember all those plastic cars. She said i keep it. Close keep a close. Yes in case. She felt like another ride. Doesn't want the valet to take away. Here's a ten keep a close. Yeah so she. She brings she she. She sets me down to bond with hill there. And she's said you know bring it up and you know. I don't do much parenting which is double short old. You're not a good parent. Had all these like daddy and me young. You know what i am you know like when you make an independent movie. There's some financier. That's never on the set very much. Yeah he's paying for everything. That's me your name in the credits. That's all. I wonder what my my daughter a walk on roles of going to be there. I'm in denver most of the year. This is really just a tax. Write off for you. Yeah i don't care for makes money just wants you mean the credit. I wanna go. I wanna go the showing. Want to the opening lying producer. I'm not setting up catering there like suggesting lines and fucking with the script. And that's how i parent couple bucks. And i just stand back. And then he showed up on opening night. That's right have turned out a toast with everyone and then go back. Go back to denver. Yeah college to be nice to see like what are you like to tell you what college late one or the other. That's like two and five years or whatever it takes depends depends the point. Is this i decide to do just a little bit of parenting. I say italian. You take your scooter and bring it up. You bring it up the hill you bring it up the driveway. No she she. She argues she bitterly. Disputes this. I can't. I can't come on. The things made a plastic. And it's nothing to it and she scrappy pick it up and push it up the hill or mmediately belly like really like like. I took a red hot spring. Just seared her inner thigh service like come on honey and she's put now meanwhile she now she's caring it up the hill. The great thing about being a kid like crying belly while they're doing whatever it is. They say they're doing. They can do it with brushing their teeth. They can do it with caring. Something's but they're doing the doing it with ease as their bellyaching about it so she walks it up and she gets up to almost the top of the driveway and then she parked about five feet from the the sort of end zone and she goes she falls down or like william defoe in platoon. That's what she looks like. Slow motion overhead concussion of the helicopter. Blades going around behind. Foles them this. So i say listen. Come on creating five feet. She's pushing it around like a rag doll so then she's crying about she pushes it up. She gets the top of the drive. Good oh no now. She's emotional wreck she's a rack and out she's sobbing and whatever and she wants me to pick her up and then i pick her up and carried her up to the door and i want to get to the door she spell. Oh what happened that she roll down the hill that than sushi's wife. She's screaming bellyaching again. What happened daddy. And it seems really took around the woods and writer remain Plastic scooter upscale. And she's crying. And the point is this as i was saying yesterday. This is this is. I should get a i sonny season in the pool. Face down the voice he's show. I don't even know who sunny point. Support he just. She squeaked sheesh weaken like a wheel and she's the grease and everyone's paying attention to her and so in her mind. I know in our little psyche little psyche. All say oh well daddy went and took you for a walk up. The hill went down. The hill spent all night never touch hunched over the whole way down. The hill ignored sunny. One little nice. There was a nice moment. Don't you love that stuff where people have to witness stuff. Like sonny's like i gotta take a p. I got pp and he wanted to make right there in a road. And i was like no no no you walk off the road you know. Walk into the scrub. Brush a little bit here and we'll take a whiz behind this bushier. Just you know. Let's get off the street car coming up streets so there's nobody there. Nobody walks up this hail to dead and there's nobody around. There's nothing you never see human being on this hill. And if you do -cational car going up there but that's about it so take take sunny into the scrub walk. Walk off the street about eight feet. Go behind a bush. No sooner does this cock come out and he starts whizzing when a woman comes walking up the hill with her dog..

schneider jordan Brian bishop rich molly adam theresa brian adam coroll Toke coyotes ross mali denver jordan adam william defoe Foles walker simon sushi sonny bush
"toke" Discussed on Unexplained Mysteries

Unexplained Mysteries

01:33 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Unexplained Mysteries

"On a cold evening in nineteen ninety two journalists jennifer toth accompanied six new york police officers on their patrol through the new york city subway. She'd been inside the tunnels before. But this was the first time with a police escort. The cops hopped onto the tracks. Flashlights in hand. Toth was careful as she climbed down after them. Stepping over the electrified third rail the tracks were live which means that one accidental touch of the rail could kill her instantly as they walk deeper into the tunnel. Toth noticed a few discarded. Needles and glass vials. That used to hold crack cocaine a disgusting odor filled the space. She spotted human feces everywhere. The tunnel was silent except for the faint echoes of dripping water and scratching rats. Then a figure moved in the darkness. A behead heavy footsteps move toward them. One of the cops swung his flashlight around his hand drawn to his sidearm. Ready to draw and fire bay saw the figure race up a rusty ladder leading to a small room hidden in the tunnel. Ceiling toke was sure. It was one of the infamous mole people. She and the cops gave chase but the figure seemingly vanished. The cops weren't willing to go any deeper into the tunnel so to meet the real mole. People toth had to go into the darkness alone.

jennifer toth Toth new york city new york toke
New York's Legendary Mole People

Unexplained Mysteries

01:33 min | 1 year ago

New York's Legendary Mole People

"On a cold evening in nineteen ninety two journalists jennifer toth accompanied six new york police officers on their patrol through the new york city subway. She'd been inside the tunnels before. But this was the first time with a police escort. The cops hopped onto the tracks. Flashlights in hand. Toth was careful as she climbed down after them. Stepping over the electrified third rail the tracks were live which means that one accidental touch of the rail could kill her instantly as they walk deeper into the tunnel. Toth noticed a few discarded. Needles and glass vials. That used to hold crack cocaine a disgusting odor filled the space. She spotted human feces everywhere. The tunnel was silent except for the faint echoes of dripping water and scratching rats. Then a figure moved in the darkness. A behead heavy footsteps move toward them. One of the cops swung his flashlight around his hand drawn to his sidearm. Ready to draw and fire bay saw the figure race up a rusty ladder leading to a small room hidden in the tunnel. Ceiling toke was sure. It was one of the infamous mole people. She and the cops gave chase but the figure seemingly vanished. The cops weren't willing to go any deeper into the tunnel so to meet the real mole. People toth had to go into the darkness alone.

Jennifer Toth Toth New York City New York Toke
"toke" Discussed on Unexplained Mysteries

Unexplained Mysteries

01:36 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Unexplained Mysteries

"On a cold evening in nineteen ninety two journalists jennifer toth accompanied six new york police officers on their patrol through the new york city subway. She'd been inside the tunnels before. But this was the first time with a police escort. The cops hopped onto the tracks. Flashlights in hand. Toth was careful as she climbed down after them. Stepping over the electrified third rail the tracks were live which means that one accidental touch of the rail could kill her instantly as they walk deeper into the tunnel. Toth noticed a few discarded. Needles and glass vials. That used to hold crack cocaine a disgusting odor filled the space. She spotted human feces everywhere. The tunnel was silent except for the faint echoes of dripping water and scratching rats. Then a figure moved in the darkness. A behead heavy footsteps move toward them. One of the cops swung his flashlight around his hand drawn to his sidearm. Ready to draw and fire bay saw the figure race up a rusty ladder leading to a small room hidden in the tunnel. Ceiling toke was sure. It was one of the infamous mole people. She and the cops gave chase but the figure seemingly vanished. The cops weren't willing to go any deeper into the tunnel so to meet the real mole. People toth.

jennifer toth Toth new york city new york toke
"toke" Discussed on The Running for Real Podcast

The Running for Real Podcast

02:48 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on The Running for Real Podcast

"Was honestly to be honest. My initial and then i was like we just had a phone conversation with this woman in our texting. She's multiple times a week. Yeah guy toke tiv naito come by friends. So apologies apologies. To some of my friends that i still have listened to their markelle polls responded so it just happened organically in i think Because you are so open and so genuine. It was just very organic very comfortable versus at first i was like on. Yeah why she want be my friend she here. She's doing all these things. I'm just run locker. You think i had a motive on no not really. No i think When you first reach out about talking. I wasn't sure signing wanna make assumptions which is something on working on doing a good job of that from what i see. Thank you thank you. I'm trying i'm trying and then But then when we spoke it was just like. I'm talking to a friend like an everyday human in everyday person and then it just went from there so i felt very nice very genuine in our one with yeah spent. It's been so nice and an an one thing that i really love about. You is just this. As i've said earlier this positivity that you put out into the world now you call yourself a change agent. I'd love to start with that. Like what does that mean to you. So i mean a lot of people in either the social work field or even people that are involved in community building community. It's a big word agents of changer. Change agents in its vowel. Everything in anything that you're doing you're involving yourself is really about trying to create some change in whatever capacity. That is in. It could be something as small as you know. Change in a person's life wars vegas changing a whole system or a whole community you or even larger right on in. I think we talked about this. On the live. But i think we talked about the ripple effects that rock or you skip that rock on the water and you just keep seeing the ripple effects. Sometimes you don't even realize until years later somebody comes back or a diy Now technology you're able to see sometimes more often these ripple effects resist growing up for me. I didn't see the many of those But it's really just an. I've said this to many people in will continue. Probably the rest of the knife. Cnn like i am a product of the community. I wouldn't be who i am today..

toke tiv naito vegas Cnn
"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

03:54 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"Over emphasize. I have excited. Look what just to just his. We're going to end year. If that's the only thing you lens look to the solomon solomon sorts of god's will blessed to me more than what the acts for uneven what's easy access for god blessed him. Why don't you see gore. I know he's the one you need yet. Talk to about like bookworm philippi ounces. You need something or gently. Talks about was seghal. Seek him. Go what what i wanted to do. Seek him video by those because of going to church short. Attend meetings. Simi seventy appre as i'm talking to myself because these things. I'm reminds us with multiple subsequent out their money. Because i need one new. I'ma no secrets things. Okay god i want to hugh the secret kinney who presents and me and god bless her on the league. God bless because it's so good. Bill goes hats and it got more than what the actual what. I know that you guys are good through things. I know that you might lock things. I know as charged at his principal for this was on you as in.

Simi Bill seghal God one seventy
"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

01:59 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"Than actually. Okay once get this job. What happens are joel portrays. He's true what would you get the job after after after after you get the money because he is always. The devil is probably looking like roland for him to develop. If you're not connected good you are open to the devil will bring for you. Let me tell you. The truth defy in this world and s. You go through you to troubles so would you. Would you troubles alioune over. Treats we go kirk court because even christians Things by like boeing. You know your father is very easy. Like pizza walked on this stone. Jesus the storm was still there. What was ingrained you walk on. Because he fixed his eyes on jesus to walk on the storm without even even maintain fixing your eyes on. Jesus i want to sink like when he moved is is a song because his is. How would you out go routines by yourself. What are good which is when you go to easier crew. You should not see gourd because of what you it's not just get this gets your father. God is your five days a better life policies tests and see that the lord is good test and see you would never know until you taste. And don't let the devil deceiving because so many stands Deceived the few business. Better life in christ brain few woody fuel. Those been deceived the board. There is a better life requires taste on see that the lord is good. There is a better life and don't seek seats. what is your own nestle. i'm happy. I'm happy to cayenne.

joel five days Jesus christ jesus roland christians nestle cayenne
"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

04:10 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"Choose of they can hear house of people in the dark will be a that. There's always a need to sacrifice some years we're good as inside or has paid off. The debts have been paid with christ's but on the other side that you have to sacrifice sophie to lead Another to get more amazed. That song in nigeria. Go school. I said on of people carrying their gourds. You don't with me put me bike..

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

01:51 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"And i was like relevant perfectly. I won't be happy. Because it is and i was like i was saying jesus did not lock. And the reason why. Because he had relationship with the father and is by harvey knowing god because that is what seeking his knowing like seeking to know having relationship seeking let a number one gives us new. Gold is is by knowing god. I realized that these things are seeking. This is what i want. Is i can get instant like example. Jesus lacks food. Ledgers example food. Jesus needed food. But jesus new gold each just blessed the grid and multiplied. He knew the father. Jesus knew like imagine. Jesus many to am impulsive. Obviously the bible a story about bread thousand about four thousand british those stories. Where to defense. But jesus nebula this. Oh jesus you like do. Hey what you knew gourd goes..

jesus Jesus bible each thousand about four thousand british one
"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

05:52 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"Was actually very good. Thank you that's that's the you got. You guys should think of think of for for you. Like i always the same. Doesn't have to be like big little. Like i can't be president. Look at that kind of thing. Does the simplest things that they'll be able to say thank you to kick. God bless you so me. I'm going to start simple. i am so like. I'm so grateful for 'em new angle. That i have good love. I'm always like is just good for goods loving my life. Like goal is novi. I'm i'm giving fighter like him because sondhi's patient last time. God is very patient these very. I can't stress. That would will go is patient. And how the entire oxford the chew drainage josue mind-blowing sam blue for that. I'm also giving for the fact. That god is vita gordon is provided like i didn't have any further that is not only able to provide football. Fight his willing to provide for you. If i'd had these generous gordon very rich our god is always willing to provide for us is shooting and we will have lack. Something goes on to talk to good. And i'm is able to provide doesn't matter what i'm needed. Used to be whatever. I'm happy to fight like always go to go. I rely on god richly. Rely on go and i'm so grateful that i have someone that have a good one humans because humans. I know you must change. But i'll go. Because god is good never changes on the last night we from harvard. I have. I have a hilltop. Obviously is Speed of what is obvious. Speed of god is god himself so so before that. I have always there to help me in my time of need. Always there to help me always there to help me. This is an extra. I'm going to say something extra. The wisdom of go today was talking to a friend of mine. And i just think this prayer point preez warp. Why was this house. And i want to on my head. I said go please go. Please give me the wisdom to mellow. I was talking to this person under was coochy that i've i've ready to normally would have come to my mind. He did he came. I might wow thank you. Go that each wing togo to give you wisdom. He's going to give them. Obviously he gives. Lee does now think about your paseo photo. It doesn't know gives you gives you beeston james. Fife see everything we think would for that. So i'm gonna go today. That is seek first. The kingdom of god i think improvisation provision general c. Yes okay what do you think about that. Seek first the kingdom of god improve my every.

today Lee harvard each Fife last night james first novi vita one
"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

Ayobami's Diary

02:33 min | 1 year ago

"toke" Discussed on Ayobami's Diary

"Shows us. You guys really know your corn cam and before we go into. I think he's just. He's just eight yoga's together was go. Go as we did with me this. We got nominal seeking workforce. And i really learned in because i was talking to this weekend was oxygen. Good to be a good leader. Teach me. I want to be a good leader. Not only up. This just realized the go taught me not to seek. You have to see good. I one you also have to bike was the judge said gonna be available for william to in the except without good gives you an palaces something very powerful you said you need to make yourself. How really like is not just about you. Don't think everything is about. you know. no no you are using you your tests being to be your attention. We fixed on god yes but also to be to save and to serve. Does that god has given you. Kn- mika so far babies. Not just about you so one going to do something. Don't just think a bicycle without god wanted to influence that. For instance now my pleasure give an example pizza. Cornelius is again. I think it's the angels. India indus come preach the gospel we believe as the ones that i'm being su- if pizza was billy boo got know who we who guarded guys. Pitched what have got to cornelius family. The book of acts is gentile. Became a christian so I think so. We need to seek god. For god's will and all that people good as towards it's about you seek to like me personally i don't like maybe for example god gives me. Someone likes like to do something with. But i wanted. I'm tired i wanted to sleep. It's not about me. God has given me the person for these in. So yes seth godin sort without giving onto you kind of thin. I really wish i along the line is going to change. I'm going to really get that. Welcome i'm looking for a pass. Cloud words us justice. So i want to go straight to five group before. Thank you guys for being here. Thank even even here. Thank you for tuning to thank you. Stay here to this particular moment. God bless you. So we're gonna go shirts defy things that we are for for took you. Please let us give me to them. Obviously three.

cornelius Cornelius three william five group this weekend India christian eight God indus
Wu-Tang, Power And Possibility With Sophia Chang

Good Life Project

02:07 min | 2 years ago

Wu-Tang, Power And Possibility With Sophia Chang

"So my mother tokes. Chang was born in north korean. Nineteen thirty two. We share a birthday which is kind of extraordinary. Yes i was my mother's birthday gift and She fled north korea. When she was fourteen she was one of nine siblings and her two brothers had procedure the eldest children. The two oldest brothers had preceded her than shoot. She and her older sister were the next age down and they followed them and the assumption was all of them would follow and so she went on this heroin. They went on this harrowing journey. They got to the train station. They were supposed to get off at she and her sister and they got off a stop too early because there was a north and south which they didn't realize and as soon as they got off the police were there because they were already anticipating the people were going to try to be escaping and you the country had already been kind of divided you know the north of the communist and then the south would be with the americans and so a lot of people were fleeing and she also came from a relatively wealthy family and they also knew what this means is all this is going to be taken away so they get off at the wrong stop. They get taken in by the police and interrogated there two teenagers. I mean she's fourteen. Her older sister sixteen. They didn't arrange a story. They separate them and of course they don't come up with the same store and they said okay. You're trying to escape. We're gonna send you back on the first train tomorrow morning and there was a man in the station who overheard it and he was clearly somebody greater authority and he said what are they get back to the hotel and in the meantime i'll give them a tour of the city and so he gave them a tour of the city while they're walking around the city. The actually see the name of the hotel that was supposed to sneak them self and so they. They clocked it that night. They go to the hotel. My mother's sister gets incredibly ill. The police come the next morning to take them to the train station. And they see how she is and they say we'll give you data rest will take you tomorrow morning.

Tokes North Korea Chang
An NFT-backed jpeg sold for $69.3 million at a Christie's auction

This Week in Tech

03:28 min | 2 years ago

An NFT-backed jpeg sold for $69.3 million at a Christie's auction

"This week at christie's which is the big Auction site for for art. A creator of art named people sold one of his japex digital creation for sixty. Nine million dollars Is it dollars. Or is it crypto. Well it's worth sixty nine million. Whatever it is it is the. He's the third largest price paid for living artists. People is up there now with jeff collins and david. Hockney sixty nine nine to be fair. Nine point three million dollars went to christie's which immediately i'm sure turned the theory him into american cold hard cash sixty million of it was a bid by an anonymous bidder using a pseudonym although we think we now know who it is and i'll explain that in just a second sixty million dollars what did you get for the sixty million. Did you get something you can hang on your wall. No did you get did you get. What did you get you got. You didn't even get the j. peg. You can have the j. peggy at address which would give you this. J peg which by the way consists of five thousand images that people has taken he. Does it daily art image. Over the last Well since two thousand seven whatever that is fourteen years so it's ki- it's kind of the collected works of people but you don't even really get anything except a toke a thing that says you own it it it can be infinitely reproduced. You can print it. Anybody can print up but you own it only you can own it. And that's a. That's a affirmed on the blockchain. Sixty million dollars. Now the guy who bought it uses the name medic cova. But amy caster who i. I don't know from adam but wrote in the blog and i convinced me. That in fact is a crypto entrepreneurs. Been on the scene. For about seven years named vig. Nash some dorasan and furthermore amy caster kind of explained for the first time to me. What's really going on here. So it wasn't Medico vans own ethereal that he spent in effect he created a another crypto bundle called b twenty bought the painting with that and is selling shares. Bits fractional portions of the people artwork to other people in other words. Step three prophet fifty nine. He owns fifty nine percent of be dot twenty. Motta's who else owns it. Be people owns a two percent stake so in effect people bought his own painting or part of his own painting. I'm not that there's any conflict of interest there or is there. But really i think if there is if in your mind there is some question and i'll ask you guys now to comment but if they're in your mind some question about what the hell is. How could how could jay peg be worth sixty nine point three million dollars. And why would somebody a medico van. Spend that kind of money on jay peg. It now becomes clear. He's gonna make money on it

Jeff Collins Christie Amy Caster Hockney Dorasan Peggy David VIG Medico Nash Adam Motta Jay Peg
"toke" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"toke" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"Just he's looking for love. He wants to celebrate the change course. By the way, 504 Texans is a rod, the new J. Hey, Rod, the new Jesus saves guy at every event. Over rock and roll in Polly, the Rainbow Afro of a Rocket Roland, Of course. And Polly, the dark turn. It took two. Yeah, well, you gotta He fell, as you would say fell on some hard times did fall. I always wanted to know. How did he get those great seats? Like I was always right behind the plate. First row. He was like Marlin's man before there was Marlon's man or every every kick that went through uprights. He was then there with the John 3 16 and the Jesus saves and right. You know that so well, Coach wanted to make sure that we all knew that you know, Conseco. It's a long running bit of him to roast a rod everywhere. It's a long running every New Year's Eve. He sends out a tweet that says, Happy New Year to everyone except a rod. Wait. What's behind that? I don't know the history Conseco and a rod. What? I don't know what start. I honestly don't know what started it, but he's gotten personal to where haven't they hasn't Conseco put out information about a Rod's Infidelities and all that, and I think, he said stuff like that, like a continuous was trying to take more. People out, you know? Yeah. Yeah, He's unbelievable, man. So there you go. Rico. That's a man who, by the way once dated Madonna He did? Yes, it's a long, I guess. Maybe that doesn't make him the unique could sort of mark message today, Rod. He must have didn't delete the rod was saying I was riding in the matter now. Positively. Yeah, he took a turn. Yeah, I got to imagine that that Iran had some point Stop. I'd be a little too young. Or if there is such a think it wasn't Roger was a cheater? Because it was one of them. No, You're totally right, Murph. This is I don't remember. Really too young. Wasn't she with you? I mean, she thought about how great would it be, though, if she was at the center of the turmoil, you guys she was with a rod. It's true Madonna Bam! 16 years older than a rod quote, brainwashed him. Apparently she told the support of this New York Post article number. Yeah. So do you think Madonna is at the center of the A Rod Conseco field? I'm trying to get to the bottom of it. One way or another. And all roads lead to and through Madonna. Yeah, so to speak, Material girl. By the way, and also just from my head Because I go crazy on these things. I was asking you earlier Copes been playing themed rejoins today and he played in Cuba's and I said, Oh, yeah, I still can't help you. I don't know. It was finally a listener. Help me out. He said I was thinking of the band primacy. Polly primacy. Those guys reminded your privates. Okay, well, yeah. Possible. Two bands that end in the letter U s. Okay, Fair enough and then promises from here, aren't they? Yeah. Yeah, well, Clay pulls up there in the cinema. I believe he's great, Great bass player. Great dude. Shut up to the whole promise community. Murph, As they say. Promised sucks. That's how they celebrate the band. But you you're here to tell me that when it comes to the musical tree, they're not on the same branch. I'll tell you one thing right now. The band that copes played in that rejoined did not sound the Incubus. They did not sound like promise to me. I think I was going with the just the fact that they ended us Fair enough. And the local you know, I mean, yeah. Yeah, Thank you. E don't know his keep this local From Southern California. Okay, All right, so they're away from Calabasas. Yeah, I'm old enough to know when Calabasas was kind of farmland. Where is it? Where's Coyote Land? And now it's where Bieber and everybody lived. Shut up to the time where I was in a garage in Calabasas. Maybe passing something around with the laugh You just heard Do with this time, My boy Shane and Kawai in Calabasas best Celebrity toke sessions are underrated due before before their celebs to this guy's hands are huge. I can't tell you exactly who this was, but once again is a creative Tony story that I'll tell on his behalf. He was in celebrity Toke Circle once with a very well known San Francisco giant, who, at the end of the toke session, this giant that will not be named on the year. Wound up walking away with creative Tony's pipe. Yes, yeah, no close, but not not to me. Who is that? All right, so I can see it on the year. Okay. All right, All right, but I'm just saying Not only did he talk with him? The guy took his pipe is well, I'll set on their plate. I talked with Kawai. Uh, thanks. Go out there. You know, I know, I know that's against the code to write or make tol walk away another man's pipe, right? Yeah, I would say it's not recommended. Yeah, The lighters could be mistaking like I'm a notorious lighter skin lighter, lighter in your pocket. And you realized later but the pipe he can't do that. It could be very person exactly. Can Tony had this very cool Yoda pipe where you put the The contraband, right in the middle of Yoda's head. Yeah, it was pretty cool. Don't take my apple, Paulie. Yeah? Yeah, I'll make it happen. Whatever did you just give me an empty empty paper towel to about make something happen when a mechanical pencil when he knew? Yeah, I can't do algebra. But you give me some cardboard. I'll make something happen. I can engineer a pipe. Cue the Larry bit there. All right. So the doses, everybody the doses. Things, the salmon even playing a little bit. He was on October and Steve carries on with Silver Kruger and Brooks yesterday and was sort of asked a sort of assess 13 games in 13 out of 72. Excuse me for like, 39 72. You know, we're getting a little bit into the into the season now here. Where Steve Curs assessment of the squad. We have a lot of flaws.

Rod Calabasas Madonna Conseco Polly Murph Tony Steve Curs New York Post Marlin Marlon California engineer Rico Iran Roger
Congress stuck as McConnell rejects COVID-19 stimulus deal.

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis

02:01 min | 2 years ago

Congress stuck as McConnell rejects COVID-19 stimulus deal.

"Aid package from a bipartisan group of lawmakers all but collapsed thursday after senate majority leader. Mitch mcconnell said republican senators weren't support a hundred and sixty billion dollars in state and local funds as part of a potential trade off in the deal mcconnell staff conveyed to top negotiators that the gop leader sees no path to an agreement on a key aspect of the lawmakers existing proposal slimmed down version of the liability shield. He's seeking for companies and organizations facing potential covid nineteen lawsuits in exchange for the state and local funds. That democrats want the hardened stunts mcconnell who does not appear to have enough votes from his republican majority for a far reaching compromise creates a new stalemate over the nine hundred billion dollar package. Despite days of toiling bipartisan group of lawmakers to strike compromise other legislative pileups now threatened. Today's must pass government funding bill. If it doesn't clear congress that would trigger a federal government shutdown on saturday the breakdown over the covid aid package off. The days of the scenes tokes by a group of lawmakers fed. Up with inaction comes as donald trump has taken the talks in another direction insisting on a fresh round of six hundred dollar stimulus checks for americans with his name on sending direct cash payments to households was not included in the bipartisan proposal but has been embraced by some of the president's fiercest critics including representative alexandria ocasio cortez and senator bernie sanders. Trump's top negotiator on covid nineteen financial aid treasury secretary. Steven mnuchin reported headway yesterday before the package from the bipartisan. Senators group fell upon

Mcconnell Mitch Mcconnell GOP Senate Donald Trump Congress Alexandria Ocasio Cortez FED Senator Bernie Sanders Steven Mnuchin Treasury
Bitcoin Bounces, Alt Coins Follow

The Trader Cobb Crypto Podcast

07:24 min | 2 years ago

Bitcoin Bounces, Alt Coins Follow

"Roddy so small. Watch this today. I mean the market con of played. What are we not. I mean we. We certainly saw off Throughout the session in fact from the break of yesterday's law yesterday now the die before we move roughly three percent low so you know it was continuing that selling momentum it was starting to increase in the price of which it was coming off but then it reversed and now we've got bullish candles now. The interesting thing for mayo. The most important thing for me is how far we recovered from the low. All of the die we recovered about five point four percent now as much as the only closed off what it close up one point two percent. It's way price came from. Its reading the information accessible on that shot but that candle align its tokes to make it says a lot to me and it's now bullish candle. It's in the cradles. Aren't certainly not a crime. Tried from our point of view given the fact that we do not have that wonderful. Simplicity fantastic trend. But it's there The two days also in that cradles iron as well now not decide that they want further not at all but if we were to move higher i six three. I think thousand six hundred thirty We go to break but this looks like the market is still a little bit on will at wants to do and that the guy in comes from that daily candle it was selling off it had broken. The pride is low. it was. The friday was down. Four point five percent down over three percent at one stage there yet. We bounced back. I want to look at the journey of bitcoin. What it did throughout that some threat session. All to for example there was a little high low in ohio and of course it's not the cleanest clearest transnational another trend that. I'm looking to try but a detroit. Sell off a guy from the cradle zayn and filed. It did not get to move law. The market decided out to the market saw that not. We're gonna continue to move higher. All is it just david pullback before the next ditlow these are things that are right now right now. I certainly still short tried. I have a couple of the that are their modest but a guy. It's the clarity of direction is just not really strong right now especially given yesterday's selloff in pull back up to closing strong will was closing strong close than where it was at its lows of course and of course the ball. We've got something very similar again. Bitcoin was up one point. Two percent closed. I ten thousand five hundred forty. Where now down point four four hundred and seventeen and not ready telling me too much a guy like i said the The cape point ready. The high obviously is closed. Eighteen thousand six hundred thirty bragged that with what you see it. Climb back towards nineteen thousand but again the the there is not a real strong confirmation there of trend on a theory actually looking for short. Yes tonight closed up three point four percent and the guy just to talk you through. I will let kendall tells me from. Its lies to its close. It recovered point full sent. That's my main fate. That's a big move under though it didn't close up three point six percents nothing to be studied that Dying in that cradles the two days still hanging in there with could continue to console it for a while but if the high of yesterday's candle for seven twenty six we might see further nothing really special that exile pay close up four point two percent yesterday which ends up being recovery was on its lies. Fifteen point five percent a big recovery from excel pay still continues to be a quad volatile. Dies saying some big moves up and down quite frequently. There are fifty seven point six cents carney game and one percent today so far with them only just opening about forty minutes ago Bitcoin cash. I'm not really interested in bitcoin. Cash still back within that channel and it's very messy now. It closed up point full of percents stick with the same fame That was a recovery from its lies of five point six seven percent where two hundred and sixty nine dollars right now which is flat on the lot going closed up point five of a percent and as much as there are lower highs and lows and a twelve hour clearly showing downtrend. There's no notebook leah a great short traits to meet the staging a guy and just requires a little bit more patients and two white to say if that market can deliver. What is that. We're off to in terms of confirmation of direction. A guy from its lawyers to where it closed way recovered seven point five percent at seventy seven dollars and eleven so right now down point four percent on the day Still busy guy. Still very messy shot up point three percent yesterday. The recovery on yesterday was fox. Six percent there's not much interest for me for aol. Still it's just not ready. Got himself in any sort of position to be. I guess capturing more tension to eighty rot now. This one of the closed down it closed down one point six two percent now the recovery for they a very messy job was also six point two percent. It's a very horrific looking shot. It is really really ugly. It's lacking a great deal. The four there is a down trend. somewhat it's just not very good in. It's not a child i'm really Sorry considering for any directional trading he hundred sixty nine ninety four Cost to buy one right now. bonnets pulled back the twenty seven dollars closing the One point seven percent which also recovery was from its lows on that support roughly around about full point seven percent. It's the only one in the top ten currently up at some point one of the percents not a great deal and at the twenty eight dollars and nineteen cents a game. A market looked trend. Number four is not bad but without support twenty seven. It's not one that i'm going to be. I'm able to thrive myself out. If i'm honest. Cow donna no no the daily it was up. It was well full point eight percent at a giant recovery from its lies and thirteen bounce back. Thirteen point eight percent from its To where it closed a guy hip. It is a bit choppy. It is a bit messy much assignments. You pretty much majority of the market. There is potential for a shorts It's just it's the now that's really the one that would have more attention more than any of the other time frames at this stage but a guy white for that confirmation. Fourteen point six cents is what will cost you to baucau donna right now which is down point. Six seven of sent yesterday for lake. It was well a three point. Eight percent and the recovery from its lows. It isn't a bit of a downtrend. Rotten handle the smoothest but today recovering from life is nine point six percent of a strong rejection of those laws which is pretty much saying across the entire market yesterday so much we have seen a little bounce off. We're gonna continue haro Pullback for more down with momentum

Ditlow Roddy Mayo Bitcoin Detroit
As Brexit looms, the U.K.'s Conservative Party fights for survival

Monocle 24: The Globalist

04:37 min | 2 years ago

As Brexit looms, the U.K.'s Conservative Party fights for survival

"Continue. Now today's newspapers on the globalist joining me is Phil Clarke professor of International Politics at Says University of London Hello Fil. A morning ever good to have you although I'm slightly baffled why you've chosen an article in the Daily Express Kickoff newspaper review. I. Know We live in Unusual Times And Fill. It might have come to that point where the the Daily Express is getting this morning at basically something that I think we've suspected in the UK for Awhile which is. The Conservative Party is going gangbusters to try to get a no deal brexit I think this has been building for a while at the UK has been playing a I really dangerous game of brinkmanship with the the European Union and today the Dow expresses reporting that. Bicycle UK saying that they will not toe the line on one of the issues. Absolute stipulations over the Brexit negotiations, which is that the British government cannot. Provide massive subsidies to be British companies. And I must sign up to an agreement with the EU on. Labor and environmental standards. These are the sorts of things that the EU is really worried about that. That basically that the government is going to tilt the tried situation. So heavily towards British companies that they're to have this completely free wheeling lack of regulation, which will allow British companies to violate anything that looks like a great international standards on Labour and environmental. Issues, and this is the kind of thing that really does push these brexit tokes right to the edge, and so it does look like we're getting closer to a what I think disastrous no deal Nigel brexit indeed I mean the the whole of the weekends newspapers was saying UK's ready to walk away from brexit trade talks. You case chop stocks trail in recovery as fears over Brexit 'cause invested jitters PM threatens deal Brexit and even over the Weekend we heard this is a European Union senior meeting in a couple of weeks time in Germany brexit will not even be on the agenda. I. Wonder whether this isn't just the the the brinkmanship that is absolutely necessary although being paid by two sides. One of which knows what it's doing and the other one is seeming that's an eleventh hour agreement can be made, but that's not how this thing works because it's too complicated isn't it? I think so and and the noises coming out of Brussels and this is part of the Daily Express Pace. This morning is that the European Union seems to be preparing for Nigel Brexit as well This is the first time that we've seen such a a stock statement by Michel Barnier the negotiated that this is what this might come. Up until now, the you have basically talked about the the no deal option as completely off the table as an absolute impossibility will that the EU tone on this say seems to be changing I think a real sense that perhaps when it boils down to it, this is what the Johnson government really wants that they want an ideal brexit have for all of the talk of doing deals. The last few years, what they want is this completely. Unregulated economic situation that Nigel Brexit a would deliver an and then that's the kind of thing that really fits with the ideology of of this British government at the moment. So it it does seem like the no deal possibility is is looming ever-larger. What's interesting though is, of course, a lot of people are talking better called. Brevard it popped up in the evening standard last week and it's floating around in Lamont at the moment which is. The moment when you have that perfect storm of Brexit and Covid, and there's a suggestion that because of covid the the brexit negotiations could actually be forced into agreement because you have a bigger fire to fight. So sort of clears your head when it comes to the other stuff. Yes I've also seen these reports of and this is much more favorable rating I guess on the current situation I think unfortunately, there's a more negative reading of this which is that. Covert may provide exactly the kind of covid the Tories want for the no deal brexit that. The undoubted economic disaster that would come from an ideal brexit can be covered by the narrative that look you know we were heading towards this. Economic Wonderland if only the BREXIT had allowed us at the kind of thing that we were looking for but but cove got in the way and completely undercuts at grand plans and and so I think the other narrative is that covert is giving the Tories. The kind of cow die wants to get to this completely unregulated brexit scenario that I think many many members of the Tory party wants at the moment CICADA making this worse. I. Think.

Nigel Brexit European Union British Government UK Daily Express Brexit Phil Clarke Professor Michel Barnier Conservative Party Brussels International Politics Johnson Government Covid Says University Of London Brevard Germany Lamont
Hormones in Lockdown

The Emma Guns Show

04:51 min | 3 years ago

Hormones in Lockdown

"Delight to have talked to Elaine the back on the side now elaine hard. nicey cranky. Is Nice to have you hit, so you all just you into context? Even though I'm sure many listeners will remember you fondly from a previous episode, you are a doctor, a functional medicine and a bio identical Komen specialists as an ex NHL doctor. You are joining me because we all currently at the time of according. To and a bit months into lock down here in the UK. That's why it is yeah. It's the day the MO- moving into an online. Yeah number that may expected unguessed. And I noticed a few weeks ago. Amongst many friends, a feeling of Real Block and lots of people feeling out of sorts I'm sorry that there isn't a word to describe it. I'm just going to get that freshen hopefully. Appropriate definitely feeling out of sorts, and and you would imagine it would be to be expected, but then I started to wonder about hormones. Which is why I called you. I wondered whether. The sudden change in lifestyle of having to go into lockdown. Could actually be impacting our hormones and therefore affecting our mood affecting how we feel. and. Could it be? It certainly cake. Yeah, I! MEAN WE'RE! We're in a really stressful period. That sort of. Mass external stress that's going on as well as sort of. The stresses that are. End. The toke before by whatever's going on in the word is A. Big External stress is going on and on the other people are having a big change in their lifestyle or whom? The two types of people that I'm seeing the people who are at home on the road. Who are really honestly I'm in itself. Massive strikes the lack of content than the help. They the other people here. Or tied up at home with families. They probably aren't spending so much time with which is creating a lot of stress from. The underlying people constantly an index change of energy, and not really having an escape or usual and business, work and jam. Whatever it is that we can do to hit those stress or just set up time to enjoy ourselves so. So there's. Not Pressure really say we're being fed of external stress from the news from the media. Always, there's a lot of uncertainty to one on. We don't know what hotline. Has a massive impact on your hormones to the bodies produce no-load Cortisol whether we realize it or not, you know among people who, in feeding at what you wealthy and. Will be on Cortisol. Dot Hostage. And took a cop or the female hormone so the what he produces auditoriums from 'em classroom. They will join T. pathways to the cortisol properly separate from the hormone pathway I on if you're under distress was expanded my patient loss. Boy Has the fighter flight moved. And if you're in the fighter, flight, major bodies and a half to compensate for your digestive system, your or your sex hormones, your thyroid oil going to be affected, so you're only husky sort of. Going to. Just take to use up the resource. So Producing Cortisol and why not? Tomlin your female hormones are being affected your progesterone drops, which something quoted gesturing statement, so it can affect your hormones balanced. And Cortisol also depresses your thyroid function cook to accommodate about more sluggish and weights. And at affects your insulin. Your function of your pine clear A to ship sugar metabolisms with more craving sugar, which again put the hormones out of balance, so there's things going on internally. That are affecting. The waiver faded and. The and The humble West alleviate the stress away nearly doing things, exercise and her friends. and. The usual to an mechanisms that we have and People are quoting the leap and endless fear. Thing I think people are beginning to come out of it. Am well happen. Is Your team will especially for somebody like and people? We talked last minute podcast. Peak were already sort of. Semi hormone imbalance menopause. Apparently, menopause is going to knock might add further. People who are sort of not vh on appropriate so symptoms people who are stressed into Miss Periods Anyanwu three periods where. They're hormone balance at the MS. gets worse things like that, so it has go amount for strengths as massive quotas on those must have been system.

Cortisol NHL Elaine UK DOT Tomlin Progesterone
Irish politics is about to change forever as old system collapses

Monocle 24: The Briefing

05:06 min | 3 years ago

Irish politics is about to change forever as old system collapses

"It is now two weeks. Since the elections in the Republic of Ireland created a seismic change in its politics with the end of a two party system which switch between finagle and final full and the emergence of a third powerful voice that of Shin Fain now Ireland's political parties are preparing for a week of talks to try to work out a deal on the formation of a new government. And as you would imagine it's hard work a little earlier I was joined by Namie. O'leary she's hosted the Irish passport podcast and Europe correspondent for the Irish Times. She began by explaining how much progress has been made since the elections. There's been an initial round of exploratory talks between the parties. We've had the first vote to try an attempt to pick T. Chuck and no one has been successful. So now it's moving onto the second stage This week they'll be more talks between the parties on the next time. We expect to have a vote in parliament On to try and elected Ishaq is march the fifth. Although it's not particularly expected that one will be a elected by that stage so the main thing that's changed since the election is that immediately after the election it appeared that fearful had opened the door to some kind of deal with Shit Sane. The left-wing Nationalist Party unexpectedly got the most number of first preference votes But last week they're quite acrimonious exchanges in the Dole between the leaders of those two parties. That made it quite clear that that wasn't an option that was on the table on this really leaves only one option left with the numbers that there are some sort of deal between the two traditionally dominant parties fearful fingernail. Chin Feng stay. They're still going to try and form a government to the left government of change and their plan to hold rallies around the country in in favor of that government But it's it's very unclear whether they have the numbers to do that so we are now in a situation. The way you've just described what I learned could be taken into absolutely different directions. Xinfei wanting one thing and the two old traditional party thinking if we get together we might be able to keep control in some way. Well it's very politically difficult situation for Phoenix. I'm fearful to manage because in a way there's no bod- option for champagne. So she would be delighted to get into government but equally if they can be the main opposition on they can cast the two old parties essentially two sides of the same coin. No difference between them and clubbing up to keep the might of power. That's also you know that's a good political narrative from their point of view note. That can help to kind of rally their base for next time on the other option of courses that we go to the polls again in another election. Although I don't think that's particularly likely on Xinfang could with hindsight run more candidates and perhaps do better than they did this time We we shouldn't expect any kind of resolution soon because the mats are quite complicated at this time given the result on if we look at the president of the last election it took seventy days time to to form a government and it could be even more complicated this time so we might not be looking at government until April. I'm just looking at the way things are going in. And the idea that shouldn't fain was approached and and now is being pushed out. How acceptable a situation will that be given as what you describe the popularity of Shin Fain in the elections and the changes it caused yes certainly Like I say it's a. It's a narrative that the party will say is them being excluded from power. They'll say that you know the old guard is coming up to preserve their hold on power and won't let them in But also from the point of view Finnegan and fina full they they. There are opposed. To should vein. I mean they. They don't want to simply hand them to keep the keys to government and also a lot of the same way so there's quite a lot of division particularly within fall about whether the right thing to do is to to do a deal with champagne or to exclude them. That that's a split that runs right down through the Party and in the end me home. Martin seems to have taken the attitude that the best option is to exclude them But it's a it's a tricky one for them. They're in a difficult political decision. How happy will voters be though? However if this seismic change isn't actually reflected in the way that the governments are made up. It's a tricky one. I think what Finnegan unfruitful are. Perhaps counting on is that as the weeks go by there will be more of a Desire for stability especially as the brexit negotiations become more pressing. Because that's going to become an issue this week. When the European Union is due to agree they're negotiating guidelines for the next stage of tokes which has massive implications for Arden. It can really make or break the Irish economy so the more in state unstable. Thanks get on the International Scene. I think On funeral are perhaps wondering whether overtime Irish voters might say. It might not be such a bad thing to have a stable experience government in place that was naming leary hosted the Irish passport podcast in Europe correspondent for the Irish time. She joined on the line little earlier on at talk to me about the Irish

The Irish Times Europe Finnegan Shin Fain Republic Of Ireland Nationalist Party Ireland Fain O'leary Phoenix Ishaq Chin Feng Xinfang European Union Xinfei Dole International Scene Leary President Trump
UK government drops Claire O’Neill as president of Cop26 summit

The Sustainable Futures Report

03:50 min | 3 years ago

UK government drops Claire O’Neill as president of Cop26 summit

"Cup Twenty Six is the next United Nations Conference on climate change which will take place in. Glasgow in November is being called the most important cop yet. Justice Com Twenty five twenty four twenty three and all the rest who described but to be fair. That's an oversimplification because cop. Twenty six is the event five years after the Paris Agreement where the one hundred ninety plus countries signed the agreement pledged their future actions to control emissions Paris. The target was to hold global temperature increases to two degrees centigrade although it was estimated the Pledges made at the time would only hold them back to about three point. Five degree Centigrade since then scientists have decided that the increase should be able to one point five degrees Centigrade on since then. President trump has withdrawn the US from the Paris Agreement. Claiming acts against American interests coincidentally summations fell by about two percent twenty nineteen but this is largely due to the replacement of coal by frank gas for Trinity Generation. It's unlikely that this will be enough to meet the Paris targets over the long term given the importance of twenty six eighty s concerning to find the prime minister has dismissed conference President Claro Neil prior to the December election. Clara Neal was at Union step. Decided not to seek reelection so that she to concentrate on her row at Cul. Twenty six announcing a departure. The prime minister said the Danneal did not have the Farney expertise or experience needed to broker a consensus between the nearly two hundred countries that had signed the Paris Agreement. He says the conference would Nabi Chad. Government Minister Savant. No appointment has been made. Both David Cameron Foam Prime Minister William Hague former foreign secretary on known to have declined to take the post writing back to the prime minister. Miss O.`Neil said the cabinet sub-committee on climate that you promise to chair and which I was to attend has not met once in the absence of you'll promise leadership departments of four internal Whitehall bottles of who is responsible and accountable for the conference. She said this days the UK should have clear actions to communicates the diplomatic network. An agreed plan to ministerial international. Engagements led by the prime minister and a roadmap for the proposed year action. But so far. None of this had been dumped. The Prime Minister supported by David. Adam wrote went ahead host launch event for culture into six president although for the moment the prime minister has declared that he will take lead himself. That O'Neill skeptical to anybody to Boris's making promises whether it is voters world leaders ministers employees or family members is to get it in writing. Get a lawyer to look at. It might show the money's in the bank. She told BBC Radio Four's Today program main while other countries have started to express concerns that the UK does not have a clear vision for the Tokes. They can trust the extensive preparations carried out by the French in preparation for the twenty fifteen Paris agreement with the lack of action from the UK that concern also the COP. Twenty six will be put into the portfolio that business ministry at the same time as that ministry will be engaged in crucial post. Brexit trade talks for the moment. It appears that the appointment of a new president will wait until the Cabinet. Reshuffle expected in the next couple of weeks said one prominent attendee at the launch event. We aren't getting no direction. That's what's missing

Prime Minister Paris President Trump COP Government Minister Savant UK David Cameron Clara Neal Glasgow United Nations Miss O.`Neil Cabinet Trinity Generation Nabi Chad Danneal William Hague United States Claro Neil Adam
Ruby Autoformatter! with Penelope Phippen

Ruby on Rails Podcast

09:53 min | 3 years ago

Ruby Autoformatter! with Penelope Phippen

"Been all. What is your developer? Origin Story That's a great question I guess I got started when I was a kid my birth. My parents have computer or computer adjacent jobs and I was sort of always fascinated so I started programming when I was I was very career young. I think I wrote my first Java program when I was age. Twelve and one of the things does mean is I've been using eclipse for more than half of my life which is always Funny to me but really it came from a instinct to sort of Tanka to really understand how computers walked. And that's that's sort of carrying me through My entire life really like what are the things is that I find myself like messing around with software in my hubby time. As much as you when I'm walking and that has been a really consistent throughout my life And so you're like where I am today. Like is really a product of having been fascinated by computers in my entire life and having sort of manipulated and what with them for a really really long time. I think you're so lucky because I got introduced to computers when I was in high school. My parents encouraged me to take computer science classes and so I felt it was lucky Dietz. Who get that experience early on but for you to know so early on that you enjoyed it and wanted to make a career of it is just something that I feel is still kind of rare in our industry free? Yeah it's I I don't know I find that most of the people I talk to you. like found owned computer science like much much later in their life so like even high school is sort of like relatively early rights are like I know some folks who didn't really look at programming at all until like the second or third. He is of the undergraduate degrees even like later in life career switched switched from a different profession through boot Camp Lasalle teaching or whatever it might be And so yeah like I like. Excuse me I in a sense. Consider myself to be very lucky that I like sort of have developed technical superpowers superpower's just from having been able to do it from a very very early age. That's great well. Our SPEC is a very love framework in the Ruby Community of course and so I would absolutely love to hear how you got involved. Yeah that's A. That's a great question. I'm so I got involved through aspect actually while I was studying full my computer. Science degree Sawyer Iowa's like alongside my degree like teaching myself ruby learning how to build rails applications because Like the community. Not at that time was sort of like just beginning to really exploited out onto the internet like I remember being Sawyer so fascinated by all of the conference Tokes That will sort of coming out of the community. And like the learning and teaching and sort of like niceness that was associated with that And so one day while I was working on rails APP and writing tests with us back doc I encountered a bug and I like looked into the source code of us back and what how how to fix it and sent a poor request request but along the way I was finding lots and lots of places in the SPEC Code base that could like we're meetable to factoring And so I spent maybe like a good six to eight weeks of my life just as a college student. I had loads of free time. I'm like just refer factoring The tunnels of aspect and I ended up sending them so many. Poor quests that essentially they will like. Hey we're going to give you a commitment because these greats and we would like we would like for you to keep doing this and stop bugging us like please please just merge these yourself And so I ended up basically just joining the cool team through like share application an off Wanting to make it better. So where did you gain that experience that you were able to look at the arse back out source code and be able to pinpoint pinpoint the possible re factories that you could do. Did you gain that from school or did you have other open source. Experience Neither I oh this is this is like this is a somewhat difficult question to you on Sir. But essentially essentially just sort of like an aesthetic for wanting to remove jeff location or things that were proving hot to change And so like actually back back at that point in time aspect had Code climate mounted in all of Repos and basically just sort of took it upon myself to just stop moving the code climate grades of the entire base like upwards towards those as really sort of using the insights code climate was providing To find those places and then sort of just thinking about house collapse things together or create new abstractions or whatever it might be right and like at the time Really Oh code. Climate was doing thing was running the flag and flame gems like rubies solo spaces and those just spot sort of like joop located Covered all oil like curd. That is extremely complex so like I was like. Oh yeah this. Totally is a three hundred line function with Grizzly two nested. If statements we can probably make that like like less nested and shorter rate and so like really it was it was an application of stuff I had being directly taught Through those aforementioned sort of like Ruby conference talks I had been watching so there was this like very sort of tight. feedback cycle between the things. I was learning and getting to apply them That was like a very unique experience. I think that was really interesting. I think that's great because even though that happened to you in college I mean we're GonNa get into Ruby format. It just seems to be a pattern throughout your career so aside from the sixty eight weeks that you contributed during your university time What contributions are you most proud of with our SPEC so basically I think perhaps the most interesting thing that happened to us? Back in my tenure I guess there are two things so one is when I joined the aspect team aspect was still on major Russian to And now it's on major three and I did a lot of the work along with the other team members at the time to actually like like deliver that and so I was sort of on the front lines of implementing some of the new keywords and doing method clean Alpina. Actually a big part of it was just deprecating code in a way that didn't break people's test suites which is what we use. The major version for so like aspect has a very strict adherence to semantic brushing and gut. Like when it is people's test suites you like literally cannot break them right like like breaking someone's suite would be like a sort of horrifying thing for aspect to do and so part of it. Frankly just what that people couldn't really detect to make sure that moving from two to three was a seamless as possible in terms. uh-huh of tangible stuff. People have actually probably seen I managed the sort of like rails compatibility of aspect through reversion five and up to version six point zero including implement implementing the compatibility for rail system test which replaced placed feature specs. Basically wholesale and like the system tasks are just like way better than feature specs F. O. were And so like I'm really proud of that one because it sort of took a standardized piece of work that was done by the rails team and specifically I lean you should tell and Sort of integrated with AAs back and that was a lot of fun because like it was done very collaboratively. It wasn't it just sort of me. In a lab that one was like reaching out to folks who have applications like test prototypes and see what upgrading onto those might look like and whether or not there are bugs and that sort of thing but yeah so like broadly. Speaking most of my tenure on our SPEC was either a fixing bugs in aspect all SPEC mocks or maintaining aspect rails through Russians five and up

Sawyer Developer Camp Lasalle Dietz Joop Iowa
Deep Dive into DevSecOps

AWS Podcast

08:41 min | 3 years ago

Deep Dive into DevSecOps

"Joined by two of our finest A specialist when it comes to security joined by Rice ashamed I Russia as Ivan. Thanks for having me on board and pull the Hulk. Hogan's can I feel so. Let's do some quick interest to set the scene so racer. What's your role here at Amazon? So I am a devops. Security Specialists with data lists professional services and in my identity I would help enterprises I guess enhance their security posture. optimizes security posture secured automation and And yet just as migrating through their workloads to Ida Bluer basically optimize that process protested employed by yourself on a security solutions solutions architect and I help customers with security risk and compliance in the cloud and low conversations. I've been having recently around GonNa desiccation. How do eventually build applications more securely? So that is the topic of today is sick opposite. Because we didn't think that devops enough of a Buzzword we wanted sick in the middle but the good thing is uses with guest today we have we have pulled talks about it and Raisa. Who actually makes it real but you still have working there for a long time in terms of sharing a lot of the knowledge Asia and techniques and things at work in the field and things that don't work in the field you've done some really great talks on which will link to in the shots sort of persona by top tokes but maybe before even Donald J blitz talk about what what ease even copes? Okay I'm going to let you stop house pointing at Eupol arrogant okay. Well I'll go and you can kind of fill in the gaps Vilamoura with Villamor. I miss when I talk about desktops. Firstly the thing tell us you can't go and buy self cups. It's not a thing that you can kind of say I will install one of these and everything will be fine and it's kind of like it's it's Kinda like devops Realizing that security is a requirement that everybody has that is actually important to all people in an organization not just people love security and the title and when we talk about devops. It's a case of is the modern technology that's available in the cloud that helps us build applications more quickly something something that also helps us build. Applications better and better in terms of security is making sure that we doing design as possible. We're catching things things like before. We even get to production and then how do we ensure that the thing that we intended to build walls the thing that we actually bill and we can do that really really quickly. So we're trying to help people ship ship security fundamentally the position of the sick in the deficit cops is not accidental. If we think about wanting to Hamas more the developer and the the operational racial experience into one having security being pervasive is is really important. So rice ahead you say it from from your perspective of what customers are doing i. I guess I'll just go back a little bit so for me deb. cyclops is the capability that an organization have to ship securely and to move move fast securely. So it really does span. All across the people process culture is a really big one and then of course technology is what sort of all of that our help. Sort of Make that come to fruition right but but I guess for me when I sort of work with customers day in and day out I see a lot of the no in the people in process. I didn't love the automation. Actually ends up being in the people and process side and the technology components kind of exist in each of the teams with each of the parties involved. But it's kind of the integration. Point between the teams is where a lot of the automation capability really exists. So that's what I kind of worked with so almost automating the bureaucracy out of the system away exactly so but before we get into some detail. Let's let's look at outcome so it's one thing for us to stand here and say well you know you get to faster you can ship. It's all secure Blah Blah. What can you give us some examples of of what customers you've seen have achieved in terms of Tom Devalue speed to market cycle? Tom's we give feeling what good looks like. So it really does sort sort of span customer to customer and it really does also depend on the maturity of where the customer is apt. And that's key one for Say One of the mys- recent once in the morning. The most recent customers have been working. It has been national Australia Bank. They've kind of been a quite vocal about this. So in a in a lot of the capabilities we've worked with them on has been around Really accelerating this sick ops teams to be able to keep up with the development teams so in that case. Hey you'll see that a lot of the benefits come out in how fast they're able to react when Sort of vulnerabilities found or have thousands even detect the vulnerabilities ladies. And then also How they're able to deploy controls across environments at scale and that's been one of the key takeaways I think at least for Knob because because previously there was a lot of teams talking to each other say security operations will talk to security architecture to get something approved and then you know before that could do deployment? They'll we'll have to talk to the platform team to say. Hey access to all these accounts and I need these sort of role changes to happen But now basically all of the communication has been gone unlike has kind of disappeared. Because we've changed that all took event driven architectures income so essentially as soon as a team is ready That basically generates in writing event that another team can consume and then they sort of part of the process started so no. There's no talking in between teams anymore. and then what that enables is that basically works works it trigger for other teams through their deployments and and that changes sort of continues And so from time of fifteen to twenty days of doing wing deployments across controls across accounts then are down to thirty to forty five seconds. So it's very very rapid movement and completely taking away sort of people people in those integration points between the teams is cops relating example of where we we saw okay in the cloud everything's driven by and so we can order might the leaving dials out of it if we want to. But you have to Kinda culturally except celebrate and emphasize that so that you can have these handles be automated which is really only gets you from thirty days to thirty seconds isn't a hundred percent hundred percent polled. You WanNa make any comments on this. Otherwise must be easy bryson mixer like a really good point that it's it's enabling security people to do the things that they still need to do and the things that are important to an organization organization Trading situation where people are building applications so focused on it is Chelsea. Don't have to wait to and get a response from a security person. Typically there are fewer security people in inaugural developers. I was talking to a seven. They were saying that they were for every seven security. Thirty people dislike one hundred developers something of that nature. So if you've got a blocking processing the traditional security architecture flow is very mocking where somebody hands you a Dogra you draw fouls go and handed back and tell them. I've done something wrong. Rather than wooden capability which allows application team is to keep moving and make decisions which which appropriate for them because they know how the application works. Give them fast. They'd back give them event driven as mentioned Programmatic feedback so they can make some form decisions without having weight. Have without having to wait for human to come back and say oh you should have done this thing and I think that's the important thing there is. We're not. We're not actually saying dying. Don't check you don't chick things rushie saying. Be Really specific about what you're checking full and apply it without tolerance bicycle you. You're just saying e e it it's either going to be there and he gets the teak automatically or it's not going to get the tea and it's actually easier organizationally and culturally if you tell people upfront what you expect. So big part of this is the security oracle the risk org. I'm saying here are the things that I expect our organization Asian to do here are the things that are important to us. These are the security non-negotiables. These are the things that are actually appropriate for your particular application and to support me going. We need to encrypt volumes at rest. All we need to have certain network configuration. I'm going to provide a bunch of capability that will check that for you even before you've built in some cases and then that will enable you to move faster so we're trying to get from security is the department of no two securities enabling function.

Ida Bluer Rice Hogan Amazon Hamas Russia Professional Services Asia Eupol Villamor National Australia Bank TOM Donald J Chelsea Developer
SpanBERT

Data Skeptic

10:16 min | 3 years ago

SpanBERT

"So on the show we've been talking about burt night every episode come out but I'll take for granted that listeners at least should by now know what burt is so I'll skip that question and just ask you if you could put into context may be some Wayne which you've been applying birt has had an incredible affect on the P. Community. I think that's pretty obvious by now in one sense and this has also affected me personally burt kind of killed a lot of projects that were trying to create or design a model that is specific to a certain task came along you know this this kind of massive pre trained mass language model all that within three training e pox on on the target task it's getting stead of the results and putting those handcrafted models leaving the way behind a lot of people's first impression of bird is to be impressed with it what was your journey towards questioning where it's boundaries lie in span. Burt were not the per se trying to understand what the limits of Bert are but that is still a really really interesting question I have had other work that tries to kind of analyze what Bert Learns we actually just got a paper award and the Blackhawks NLP workshop for that paper that's work with with Kevin Clark does she khandelwal Chris Manning and other people have written similar papers in basically found out the bird is kind of learning the whole traditional NLP pipeline implicit manner and it's getting a lot of gains from that but I don't think that we have seen kind of what the limits of burt or Bert like models are at this point can you tell me a bit about how span Bert which is the shortest way to describe your contributions what's the long way what do you guys innovating on in your research since pampered what we tried to do is improve the pre-training tasks that bird is using bird is not a model but a- pre-training methods in that pre training method birt has two objectives one is the mass language model the other is accents prediction we focused on mainly proving the mass language model so the mass language model itself the way it works is that you get a sentence say I had a nice chat with Kyle at then you randomly pick some of these words mask them that say we must chats and the model needs to predict the missing word in I had something with Kyle is chats to make that after kind of to force the model to capture more interesting things about language and I'm keeping this vague intentionally will road to that in the second what we did was I instead of masking random tokens we masked random spans of tokens so we're not saying we're not giving the model as input I had a nice something with Kyle were saying I something something something something with Kyle and that is that a bit more flexibility in terms in the things that it could potentially predict by making the task more challenging basically forcing the model to learn more about length. approach the other thing we added was that we're not only forcing it to predict these missing words dismissing span from each of the individual mask Toke John's but we're forcing it to predict the information from the boundaries off the mask span so from the word I and with with Kyle were trying to predict everything that was in between tell me more about that limit does that mean I'm not going to consider things like the length of the span we didn't change the length of the sequence so the model knows what what legs it's trying to predict but it needs to kind of saying in a bit of a hand wavy way in needs to learn longer range dependency so it needs to learn not only what kind of immediately neighboring words I wanna be but what the next three words are gonNA be or forward depending on the length of the span the idea is novel and appeals to me and thank you put it pretty succinctly when you said we want to force the model or the learning process to learn more effectively but as I also think about it I wonder Well Okay you've made the problem harder if you train your model with your method on the exact same training data set we hope that that effort doesn't fact force the model to be murder do you have any way to quantify the degree to which that's true so that's a great question and we actually put a lot of effort and especially Taiwan resources into making sure that we're giving Berta real fighting chance the original of fighting chance to beat us in addition to taking Google's version of burt and just download you know whatever they may publicly available we also re implemented burt ourselves and we did a bit of hyper parameter tuning and every kind of training trick bit data or hyper parameters or training for more rations that we also applied to the baseline so we had baselines that were actually much much stronger than the original birds and we were still able to outperformed them when we added the span birds objectives on pre-trading tasks very neat and is there any way you can measure do that or is it more qualitative as you introspective results if you'll allow me to go on a bit of a of a tangent here please this is a question asking since two thousand sixteen when along with Felix Hill we ran the Rep Avowal Workshop this was twenty sixteen since then Sam Bowman joined us and actually kind of took the lead on this we came together to make this shared task that everybody's been running on glue I think most of our listeners have heard of a now we have also superglue which is kind of the next generation much harder tasks as well glue as a really really good way or was a good way until I got maxed out by by all these models but it's a really good way of evaluating how will these pretrial tasks are actually working because it evaluates a diverse set of tasks with different types of training set sizes different levels of complexity of difficulty if you manage to improve the results glue by say two points that's really really meaningful I'll mention another work that we did kind of concurrently it started actually from kind of the same parent project but split off into two things one of them was span the other being Roberta so Roberta the the idea was basically let's try to replicate birds but do a lot of hyper parameter you name and scaling up that original bird just didn't do because I know they thought it was big enough and good enough to really was at the time but apparently what we found in Roberto was that you can do a little bit of tweaking to the hyper parameters for example just training and get for a bit longer maybe try training with bigger batch works really really really well in fact it works so well that on glue for example we were able to outperform xl nets by a little bit so kind of that's really saying something yeah I would say within variance but basically without adding all commodification exit added to the model so we just you know we basically had the simple model even simplified it even more we removed the next symptoms addicts in the NFC objective didn't spend Burton as well and used just a single sequence to train each example and just scamming it up training for longer using slightly better vocabularies just really really improved performance on a bunch of tests and not only glue we also just east results and Superglue as well where there's really really big leap it's not at human level yet because superfluids significantly harder it has a bunch of tests that are significantly harder than the ones that we have in glue but still it's a huge advance in Yeah absolutely I seem to recall the paper on a lot of tasks like putting your your approach to the challenge with the famous squad and squad two point Oh data sets that you were eking out those arguable percentage points improvements on span burt when compared to Vanilla Google burt and a few others I know all deep learning a little bit inherently blackbox but do you have a sense of you've the mechanism or or what it is is allowing your model to outperform I really the most impressive results were in what we call span selection tasks so squad squad to a lot of the machine reading question answering our task data sets that we ran on we see this really significant improvement there this is probably because Spaniard is focused on representing and predicting the content of Mrs Expense and I think that's why we're getting gains on these are also mentioned one other task that we ran on which which most people don't run on because it's a bit more complicated which is correct resolution reference resolution is a really hard task for a models currently the state of the art on this it's it's about seventy nine F. One whereas before us the best model was from Lee and others which was about

Burt Birt P. Community Bert Wayne
The Falklands War

Brief History Podcast

14:07 min | 3 years ago

The Falklands War

"The Falklands war was a ten week undeclared war between Argentina on the United Kingdom in nineteen eighty two over two different territories in the South Atlantic the focus winans territorial dependency which is south Georgia and South Sandwich Islands the conflict got on the second of April when Argentine forces invaded and occupied the Falkland Islands this was followed by an invasion of south Georgia the next day in an attempt to stop the sovereignty claim them over on the fifth of April the British government dispatched a naval task. also to engage with the Argentine navy and Air Force before making them amphibious assault from the island this conflict lasted seventy four days and ended with the Argentine surrender on the fourteenth of June we're turning the islands to British control in total six hundred forty nine talk military personnel and two fifty five purchase personnel and three Falkland Islanders died during the hostilities inflict was a major episode in the protracted dispute over the territory's sovereignty Argentina asserted maintains that they all were Argentine territory an Argentine government that's characterizes military action as the recommendation of its territory the British governor my regard the action as an invasion of territory in Crime Colin leases eighteen forty the folkman islanders who had inhabited the island since the early nineteenth century with predominantly descendants of British settlers and strongly favored Britches sovereignty leave estate officially declared war although both governments declared the islands a war zone hostilities was almost exclusively limited to the territories UNDIS- disputes and the area Allante with a law. The conflict had a strong effect in both countries and has been the subject of various books articles films on songs patriotic sentiment ran high in Argentina outcome prompted large protests against the ruling military government. Hazy listen it's downfall in the United Kingdom the conservative government boasted by the successful outcome was reelected with an increased majority to follow in the empirical fact of the conflict has been less than the UK done in Argentina where remains a common topic for discussion diplomatic relations between the United Kingdom and Argentina were restored in nineteen eighty nine following a meeting in Madrid which the two government issued a joint statement no change in either country's position regarding the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands Made Explicit in Nineteen Ninety full Argentines claim to territory was added to its constitution in the period leading up to the wall in particular form the transfer of power between the military dictators General Jorge Raphael General Roberto Eduardo Viola late March nine thousand nine hundred what Argentina have been in the midst of a devastating economic stagnation and large scale civil unrest against the Military Gentler that been governing the country since nineteen seventy six in December nine thousand nine hundred there was a change in the auditorium military regime. bring into office in New Jersey headed by General Leopoldo Galtieri acting president an average Adele but the Llama Dosa and Admiral George Weah was the main architect unsupportive of a military solution for the longstanding claim over the islands calculating that the United Kingdom would never respond militarily by opted for military action the gala tear recover go to mobilize the wrong standard patriotic feelings of Argentines towards the islands there started the public attention from the country's economic problems on the regime's ongoing human rights violations of the dirty such actions would also boast a dwindling legitimacy see the new space last press speculated on the step by step plan beginning with cutting off supplies to the island and indirect actions late in one thousand nine hundred eighty two if the UN tokes free ongoing tension between the couteau countries Orlands increased on nineteen March where a Military Group of Argentine scrap metal merchants they actually infiltrated by audience I marines raised the Argentine flag at South Georgia island a knocked that would like to be seen as the first offensive action in the war the Royal Navy patrol vessel hates must endure it was dispatched from Stanley to South Georgia on the twenty fifth in response the audience time miniature Genta suspect in the UK would reinforce Atlantic pulses altered the invasion of the fulcrum islands to people fool with to the second bankroll the UK was initially taken by surprise by the Argentine attack on the South Atlantic Islands despite repeated warnings boil naval captain Nicholas Barker it commanded their endurance anivers- Balk at believed the defense side St John Not one thousand nine hundred one review in which knots described plans to redraw the George the Yolk case only naval presence in the in the South Atlantic had sent a signal to the Argentines that the UK was unwilling would soon be unable to defend his territories and subjects in the Falkland silence on the second April nineteen eighty two the oftentimes forces mounted amphibious London's known as Operation Rosario on the could the invasion was met with nominal defense organized by Fulcrum Islands Governor surrendered hunt giving command to major might normal on on the Royal Marines the events the invasion included on of left commander Admiral Sanchez supply. Thomas I'm Fabius Command There's group the attack on barracks the engagement between troops of Hugo Suntan bill trip at Stanley on the final gauge moments surrender at Government House worthy invasion first reached UK from Argentine sources administered defense operative in London on the show tally tax conversation with governor. Hunt's telex operation it confirmed that Argentines on the island and in control later that day BBC journalists lorrimore Golez spoke with an Oil Linda at goose green via amateur radio who confirmed the Solarge oftentimes fleet and Argentine forces had taken control of the island richest military operations in the fulcrum were given the something Operation Cobra Commander of the Task Force was John Fieldhouse operations lasted from first of all April Nineteen take to the twentieth of June nineteen eighty two the British undertook a series of military operations as a means of recapturing for wins from Argentine occupation though the British royalty taken prior in that second April invasion in response to the events on salary order the submarines h Miss Splendid and H- H Mess Fox was ordered to South to south on twenty four March whereas the the ship Royal Fleet Accelerate our effect for Austin was dispatched from the western Mediterranean h messengers. all currency had wished to send a third submarine with his decision with deferred due to concerns about the impact on operational commitments coincidentally on the second March two separate left Gibraltar and it was just seemed it was in the press to be headed south that has been since in speculation the effect of these reports were panic the Argentine genta into invading the Falkland Islands before nuclear powered submarines could be deployed the following dight join a crisis meeting headed by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher the chief of Naval Staff at Henry Leach Advice doc quote recent could and should send a task force skip the islands were invaded and quote on the first April Lynch sent orders to NATO force China exercises in the Mediterranean to provide south-south invasion on the second of April after emergency the governor approval was given to foam task force to retake the islands this was backed in an emergency session of the House of Commons the next day on the six April the British government set up a war cabinet to provide day-to-day political oversight the campaign This was the critical instrument crisis management to the British with his remittance the end to keep under review political or military development relating to the South Atlantic and to report as necessary to Defense Overseas Policy Committee the war camping matter at least daily until it was dissolved swath of August although Margaret Thatcher is described as dominating the wool cabinet Lawrence Friedman notes in the official history of the Falkland Islands campaign that she did not know opposition without concern of however once a decision was reached she did not look back end quote on the evening of April United Kingdom's nations on Buster possible and for a draft resolution to the United Nations Security Council resolution which condemned the hostilities and demanded the immediate Argentine ritual from the island was adopted by the council the following day as United Nations who's not council resolution five to which possibly ten votes insulin we'll when against which Panama enfor up stations China the Soviet Union potent the UK received Fervor let's go support from members catches the Commonwealth of Nations and the European Economic Community Australia Canada and New Zealand withdrew that diplomats from bodice Ariz the EEC also provided economic support imposed economic sanctions on Argentina oughtn't itself was politically backed by majority countries in Latin America of crucially not chilly and also some members on Aligned Movement the New Zealand government expelled the Argentine ambassador following the invasion Prime Minister Robert Muldoon was in London when will grow cap on a in an opinion piece published in science he said quote the military rulers of Argentina must not be appeased newseum will back in order wide end quote will cost it on BBC World Service he told the Falkland Islanders quote this World Mood and we all thinking of you and we will give full support total to the British government is in his endeavors to rectify the situation get rid of the that s concentrate elite class frigate available to use when the British could fit to release Romeny vessels from the Falcons in the House of Commons afterwards Margaret Thatcher said quote the New Zealand government and people have absolutely magnificent in their support for this country in Senegal and France provided this minimum aircraft training so the Harrier pilots could be trained against the French aircraft used by Argentine Lena intelligence also cooperated with Britain to prevent Argentina from an exit missiles on the international market in a two thousand two interview on in reference to the support you're not the Dan Defense Secretary at disquiet France at Britain's unquote greatest ally in quote in two thousand twelve. He came to light that we've while this was taking place a fridge technical team Loyd assault and ordine Argentina remained death throughout the world despite presidential decree the team had provided material support

Argentina Falkland Islands United Kingdom Argentine Navy Assault South Sandwich Islands Falkland Islanders British Government South Atlantic South Georgia Falklands Government House Georgia Hunt Air Force Undis London Loyd Thomas Seventy Four Days
Tuk-tuk world record

Correspondents Report

05:38 min | 4 years ago

Tuk-tuk world record

"Now a British man, let's light it up a little bit of British man is just broken the Guinness Book of records for speed in a took talk which got out South East Asian correspondent, Liam Cochran thinking about these plaque little vehicles. We all love them. Anyone who travels in south of Southeast Asia's, probably had a Ryden won his limb in Bangkok. The story of how a British man came to own a tight took to unfolds pretty much exactly as you might expect a lit- owner. Matt Everett takeover. My winter a friend's wedding in Thailand. We had to stop over in Bangkok. We went on a few rides with the family. We just have a great from. I'm a complete petro head. I'm always spending more time looking at different cars and internet. I was on EBay one nine my wife had gone to bed, and I found this took for three thousand pounds onto saw does going to have an oppressed by now. I know that with the consequences in the morning in this telling Mr. Everett skips over the part about being quite drunk, the night, he decided he needed took took in his life, but found from buys remorse, he did what any self respecting Riverhead would do? He pimped his took took replacing the three hundred and fifty engine with a one thousand three hundred CC monster with these cousin in the back he got the modified took. Up over one hundred nineteen kilometers an hour setting a world record and realizing his rather specific drain. The took took seems to have originated in Japan and exports to Thailand back as far as nineteen thirty two they've spread across the globe, including parts of Africa and Europe with electric took talks quite the thing now in Portugal, while they went out of fashion in Japan in the sixties, they've come to be an iconic pot of Thai life. I must admit here in Bangkok I don't use. Took took that much. Even speaking basic time, it's hard not to get ripped off with tie friends shore. And I model at the low low price, but also Bangkok is one of those rare cities where taxis at cheap plentiful and Mercifully air conditioned in Cambodia though, I love taking took talks, but only the old ones. So we'll talk took Tokes up Tyler made three wheelers. The Cambodian vision is just a motorbike sometimes just a scooter with a kind of buggy attached on the back that will easily seat, four people. These buggies often have intricate wooden. Carvings kamai. My silk, frills and any number of quirky add ons to give the thing, some style. You tend to form a relationship with your local took took drivers. I'm sure it's the same in quite a parts of Bangkok and elsewhere in Thailand. But it's been on pen that I know best and their took took Sam much more than an impersonal transport service drivers come to know your local spots. And when you tend to go there, so annoyed in the morning is all it takes to get you to the office. Well, just saying the name of a suburb will get you right to the doorstep of your friend's house without any further directions necessary. I remember in my younger days as a cub reporter at the Pentagon post newspaper, sometimes walking out of a bar after a generous session of cultivating. Sources to be greeted by a small throng of took two drivers. Oh, jostling and yelling for my business and the line, Mr. Liam. I know where you live wasn't at all weird or threatening. But more reassuring as if an old friend had come to pick me up. Over the years trust forms. I was outside court last year covering the James Ricketson case. And on this particular day, the officials decided we couldn't store our bags at the guardhouse as we've done previously. So a quick phone call in a few minutes later, I handed over at several thousands of dollars worth of camera gear to a trusted took to driver to watch over for a few hours. Some drivers are big brash characters. But most tend to be quiet reliable softly spoken because of all the time spent sitting around on street corners waiting for fizz took to bribers have an uncanny ability to know what's going on for journalists it's a useful way of capturing the mood on the street. Although I sometimes wonder how many took took tales of ended up as unsourced quotes in the print stories of lazy journalists over the years that said, it's generally assumed that some took to drivers and motor taxi drivers double as spies for the Cambodian intelligence services one. One of the main reasons I prefer Cambodian took to serve a talk talks. Is it the Cambodian ones? A more open to the oncoming air and I can see out the sides while sitting up straight the tire design means I have to slump down to look out and the windshield blocks the breeze. But the lovely old Cambodian took talks are under threat right now in the last couple of years, smaller Indian style. Order rickshaws have boomed with an apt to call them and calculate a very low price rather than the casual agreement between driver and passenger these pass apps as the new three wheelers an iron a boxy and cramped, okay for two people three at a pinch. And again, it's hard to see out the sides or the front. Meaning a more claustrophobic ride. There's no doubt poss- apps. I'm more convenient and cheaper, but I still seek out the old buggy style took talks, while I'm in Cambodia drivers whose names. I know a charming viewing platform for the world rushing by who knows may. Maybe when I returned to a strategy as soon after a few drinks EBay. This is Liam cocker in Bangkok for correspondence report. They found out. They leave Cochran there.

Bangkok Thailand Liam Cochran Matt Everett Cambodia Southeast Asia Ebay Liam Cocker Ryden Mr. Liam Japan James Ricketson Reporter Portugal SAM Pentagon Bribers Tokes Africa
Crossing the ts: China-America trade talks

The Economist: The Intelligence

05:39 min | 4 years ago

Crossing the ts: China-America trade talks

"Trade talks between America and China appear to be entering an endgame discussions between the two countries will resume this week. After a tit for tat trade war that has cast a shadow over the world economy detail on what's been discussed so far has been vague. But the mood music from both camps has been positive. The Chinese have spoken of tangible progress Steve Mnuchin, America's Treasury Secretary says the talks are in a final laps and President Donald Trump who last week suggested a visit from his counterpart Xi Jinping could be on the cards has played up the significance of any agreement. Would be one of the I guess it is and you think about it because deal ever made they can't be deal. This no matter where you look they can't deal like this. This is this is the granddaddy of them all this week. The American officials have gone to Beijing. Samantha canes are US economics editor we've got probably lighthizer the United States trade Representative. He's going and also Steve Mnuchin is Treasury Secretary. So both sides have been fairly tight lipped about how things are coming along for as much as you know, how are things coming along. Well, we've been hearing some positive noises coming out of the talks there was an Email from the White House describing the content of this week's discussions, and so they going to cover trade issues, including intellectual property forced technology transfer non-tariff barriers agriculture services purchases and infotainment. It does sound like a fairly broad palette of stuff that they're there. Talking about what are the most important ones in which the stickiest ones as you said they've been Feddie tight lipped about what exactly is going on. Although we have been getting some signals of of what is very important to the China hoax within the Trump administration. So Robert lighthizer has made a big fuss over enforcement, and historically that has been a problem whereby the Chinese will make promises, and then they'll not actually implement them what they need to find some mechanism where the Americans can actually trust the Chinese will do they say they're going to do in that they can hold them to account. What that means in practice is that the going to be to king about one. What circumstances that would have to be full the Americans to be able to punish the Chinese? So what would allow the Americans to be able to apply more tires on China? And then to how quickly will the existing. Tariffs on China, the removed that is I think a huge bone of contention, obviously, the Chinese won't the tariffs in place to be removed overnight immediately and the Trump administration saying, hey, not so far. I we need some sort of carrot to give you the incentive to what she fully through. We take these off immediately. What incentive do you have to do any further reforms? Steve Newton has hinted that talks renting entering the final stage for his part. President Trump has been hinting Xi Jinping could be visiting the White House very soon. The White House is a place of history seventeen ninety nine that's a long time. Now when president she comes from China, and I say seventeen ninety nine he thinks that's a modern house because their culture is very very old five thousand years is this talk of a visit from Mr. g and overture we can or should read anything into. I think we should I think that speaks to the strong desire of President Donald Trump to see a deal that a talk this week. They're going to be another round of talks next week as the Chinese are going to come to Washington doesn't of reluctance on the Chinese side to sign up to an official summit between the two heads of state before the final deals announced they want to avoid embarrassing situation of essentially present she coming to the USO meeting the President Donald Trump from tiny round of the Nelson saying saris. No good enough. So that waiting until the -ffective goat the outline of a deal before they range that summit. Interestingly it does. Look there is an opening in the president's schedule between his trip to Japan in late may on his trip to the UK in early June. So there are a few days that that could be used as schedule in this summit, but I think. These next two weeks of Tokes. We'll get better signals of whether that summit is going to happen over the course of this. There's there's been hints and various reports, that's you know, talks could collapse at this point. And this is a crucial point four for them. Is there any sense that the the talks could still collapse altogether? I don't know I think given the generally positive tone of the two sides. I think it's much more likely that the tools are delayed rather than that they collapse. I think it is possible that they do some kind of deal and then at some point down the line fee Americans judge that the Chinese broken the rules in they tried to use this mechanism put tires back on relations sour again. But I think now given the noises from from the president he does want to be seen to be the steelmaking in chief be very surprised if we don't get some kind of summit at some point in the near future. Thank you very much for joining us. Thanks.

President Donald Trump President Trump China White House Steve Mnuchin Xi Jinping Donald Trump America United States Steve Newton Beijing Robert Lighthizer Samantha Canes Feddie USO Washington Tokes Japan Representative
Russia and Japan at odds over seven-decade-old Kuril Islands dispute

Monocle 24: The Globalist

03:46 min | 4 years ago

Russia and Japan at odds over seven-decade-old Kuril Islands dispute

"The leaders of Russia and Japan are in high stakes Tokes in most today as tensions rise of series of disputed islands. The diplomatic row has worsened in recent weeks of the Russia furiously accused Japan of refusing to accept the consequences Lovie, second world, warm in a moment. The Russia analyst Stephen DL will share his insides, but first Monaco's Asia editor at large Kenji whole joins us on the line from Tokyo bureau Kenji this row was partly renewed of Shinzo Abe's New Year's Eve address. What was it that ignited the tensions? Yeah. You're absolutely right about that office spoke in his new year speech about the need to help Russian residents on these four disputed islands. Accept and understand that the sovereignty of their homes will change obviously that didn't go well down don't down well in Russia Moscow, summoned the Japanese ambassador's protests and Russia has also complained about a Japan's official maps which show the four krill islands inside Japan's borders, the Russian side seems unwilling to part with any of the islands. What's the what's the end goal here? As far as Japan is concerned yet. So Japan says that the at the time the Soviet Union illegally seized the four islands in nineteen forty five. And then kicked out the seventeen thousand Japanese residents there since the nineteen fifties took his position has been that it wants all four islands returned. And until there's progress on that agreement. Tokyo will not sign a peace treaty, which would. Formerly end World War Two hostilities with Russia. The biggest problem with these discussions is that both sides think of the islands as their own sovereign territory. And Russia doesn't really think of it as a territorial dispute at all. So you can't really have constructive constructive talks here about a compromise. When two signs of very different views about the most basic assumptions that said there are a couple of things that have raised hopes in Japan about a possible breakthrough. First of all, it was that Japan. Russia cooperated on joint economic development projects for the islands since two sixteen. They've even set up a billion dollar investment fund. And the second thing was just the meeting between Ave and Putin last November in Singapore. That's when the two leaders talked about what's called, the nineteen fifty-six joint declaration, and in that the Soviet Union agreed to hand over two of the four disputed islands that would be tan and Hubbell my Japanese. Knees to Japan after the two sides sign a peace treaty. Now. Just the fact that the nineteen fifty-six joint declaration came up suggests that abyss position is flexible that he might ask for two islands and hold osc. Hold off asking for the remaining two until later. But you know, it's not really clear what is clear is that are they really wants to break the deadlock and he wants to do. So by the time Japan hosts, the G twenty summit in all soccer in June. There's a parliamentary elections scheduled for the summer. So that's a factor as well. Kenji hole in Tokyo. Thanks for joining us. Now, Stephen yellow bring you in now here in the studio foreign policy adviser for the Russian president admitted that the meeting would not be easy clearly spirits have been high going into this from the outset they haven't in many ways, the last five years, we say in Russian politics have made this even more complicated issue than than it was as can you suggesting there have been times when better but curiously going to run to the other side Russia, and I've actually brought in shown to brought him my MAC because it's just recommend anyone who's interested in this store.

Japan Russia Tokyo Soviet Union Kenji Shinzo Abe Stephen Dl Asia Lovie Monaco Analyst Editor Stephen Yellow Putin Singapore Soccer
Dow down around 200 points after weak China data sets off alarm bells

0 Show

01:34 min | 4 years ago

Dow down around 200 points after weak China data sets off alarm bells

"Week. This key economic meeting in Beijing. What are we expecting what might those Chinese leaders actually do? Well, this is the planning that matter fair to earlier to to come along into or meeting hall next week and set targets and set the tone for China's economy in two thousand nine hundred one hundred you would assume that they will be keeping an eye on activity indicators suggesting that they need to pump a bit more stimulus into the economy both through to fiscal channels and on the central Bank side of things not necessarily the gargantuan stimulus of old in China. But certainly they will be putting a foot on Dixie little bit. But you know, despite all of that they're also flying blind a little bit. Because it all depends on these trade talks go with the US taking a deal by March one will then that will surely lift a big cloud hanging over China's economy, and if he can't agree deal with vendor backward. I started it's always suspect. Would they will with here? Some noise around more proactive making steps to stoke stoke growth, but also they can only do so much until you know, the the trade negotiations is the waterway issue. No longer. A concern connected to the trade negotiations. It complicates things. And it's certainly a huge token point here, so far optically at least you'd have to think it appears though they're being kept separate by both d US on China, by the way, no sending President Trump's comments earlier this week, it looks as though China's pushing ahead with measures such as buying soybeans for the first time since the trade war started or colleagues in Beijing wrote about how they're planning to water down or considering a watering down of their made in twenty twenty-five strategy on the lake. So it seems as though they're taking these measures which would appear in good faith. And of course, skeptics say China has more to do on the trade story. But nonetheless, the hallway issue appears those been kept separate from the trae Tokes for now at least whether or not it all gets muddle together in the coming months, I remains to be seen. I think the I mean, at least from my perspective, the mood music seems to have shifted somewhat between Washington and Beijing. The question is if that will carry through in the next few months and a car and Bloomberg's chief. Asia economics. Correspondent thanks so much for talking as three thousand details this morning. Let's get the world national news now for that. We're going to say MacDill off Sandra good morning. Matt members of the yellow vest movement plan to protest in Paris and across FRANZ tomorrow despite mounting security concerns following the terror attack in Strasbourg, according to spokesman, the government hasn't decided whether to ban the protests, but will deploy security forces, regardless. Meanwhile, French prosecutors say the man who added three people in Strasbourg this week has been shot dead. Police were attempting to arrest of Chicago's on the street when he turned into opened fire his Strasbourg mayor Roland Reese, I am personally very relieved for my colleagues around me for Strasbourg for France. I think that it is good news and as much as the people of Strasbourg grind settled terrorist among us and where he had run to not known. So I think this will bring about a return to normal life that we can now get on with again. The news comes as a fifth person has been arrested in connection with the attack. Kosovo's? Parliament is expected to adopt laws that will turn its police force into a fully-fledged army. Bloomberg's Michelle salvage says it raises tensions in one of Europe's most volatile regions. The move is controversial because the neighboring Serbia religious pulsa was the city the decade ago fears, it may be used against the dwindling minority living in the predominantly ethnic Albanian possible. The Balkan senators are not likely to ease with emerges of yet. Another military in beltway, Bloomberg daybreak Europe. And virgin galactic has successfully sent it spaceship to rocket ship to the edge of space legend boss, Richard Branson, says he expects to start taking into space within months is this a very very very exciting time for investors. Investing in commercial space companies and the market we believe is enormous seven something like eighty percent of the people we research if they could afford it would love to go to space, and it's up to us to do. Global news twenty four hours a day on air net. Take talk on Twitter powered by more than twenty seven hundred journalists and Anisimov, the one hundred twenty countries Kilhof.

China Strasbourg Beijing Bloomberg United States Europe Dixie Virgin Galactic Trae Tokes Richard Branson Twitter Serbia Roland Reese Macdill Asia Economics Washington Anisimov Paris Chicago
Urban Meyer says he would have fired Zach Smith if he knew there was domestic violence

Glenn Beck

00:32 sec | 4 years ago

Urban Meyer says he would have fired Zach Smith if he knew there was domestic violence

"North Carolina to survey damage, here's Norman Bryson director of emergency services for unsold county, so far what we're dealing with is probably the most catastrophic disaster that this county has seen in the last. Fifty or sixty years, the mother of Reagan Tokes with some harsh words for the Ohio court of claims which last week tossed out the wrongful death suit that was filed by the family Tokes was kidnapped raped and shot dead in February two thousand seventeen by convicted sex offender, Brian golsby, Lisa Tokes on six ten WTVN. What matters with Mindy and Michaela wreath. He's

Reagan Tokes Norman Bryson Michaela Wreath North Carolina Lisa Tokes Mindy Director Brian Golsby Ohio Sixty Years