Elizabeth Warren is the founder of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,
the senior senator from Massachusetts, and the author of the new book, “This
Fight Is Our Fight: The Battle to Save America's Middle Class.”You might have
heard of her.Warren is also one of the Democrats most capable of defining the
Democratic Party’s soul and message in a post-Trump era. In her book, she says
she had at least one big disagreement with President Obama — a disagreement
that speaks to the direction she wants to lead the party. Obama told
Americans, “the system isn’t as rigged as you think.”"No, President Obama,”
Warren replies, "the system is as rigged as we think. In fact, it’s worse than
most Americans realize.”In this interview, we go deep into Warren’s view on
how, where, and why the system is rigged — as well as what can be done about
it. We also talk about whether fighting Trump requires matching his tone and
tactics, how complex policies and processes create space for special interests
to take over, and why Trump’s abandonment of economic populism hasn’t affected
his support among his voters.Warren is an able, thoughtful advocate for one of
the Democratic Party’s possible futures: becoming a party that represents the
economic populism Trump claimed to champion, but quickly abandoned. But as
she’s the first to admit, that won’t be easy.Books:“Evicted," by Matthew
Desmond"Two Dollars a Day," by Kathryn Edin “The Little Engine that Could," by
Watty Piper
6 years, 11 months ago - 11 plays
Rob MacCachren is an American off-road racer. He raced the Mickey Thompson
Stadium Series early in his career and went on to win championships in
Championship Off-Road Racing, SCORE International, SODA, and Best in the
Desert. Bud Brutsman is a television show creator, executive producer, known
for shows such as Overhaulin', Rides, and King of the Cage.
9 years, 11 months ago - 11 plays
# *(Read Now) Killers of a Certain Age *Full online
Wooah this is the most sought after at the moment, and the good news is that
these two books are now available on our service, would you like to read them
in full ??
But before reading a little synopsis first, I will include it below ...
Older women often feel invisible, but sometimes that's their secret
weapon.They've spent their lives as the deadliest assassins in a clandestine
international organization, but now that they're sixty years old, four women
friends can't just retire - it's kill or be killed in this action-packed
thriller.Billie, Mary Alice, Helen, and Natalie have worked for the Museum, an
elite network of assassins, for forty years. Now their talents are considered
old-school and no one appreciates what they have to offer in an age that
relies more on technology than people skills.When the foursome is sent on an
all-expenses paid vacation to mark their retirement, they are targeted by one
of their own. Only the Board, the top-level members of the Museum, can order
the termination of field agents, and the women realize they've been marked for
death.Now to get out alive they have to turn against their own organization,
relying on experience and each other to get the job done, knowing that working
And this is as detailed as the book ...
Author : Deanna Raybourn
Pages : 353 pages
Publisher : Berkley Books
Language : eng
ISBN-10 : 60149532-killers-of-a-certain-age
ISBN-13 : 9780593200681
ARE YOU INTERESTED IN READING IT ?
Please visit the link below to read it ..
## https://offc-
unlimitesmedia.blogspot.com/?kintil=60149532-killers-of-a-certain-age" target="new">CLICK THIS TO READ & DOWNLOAD THIS BOOKS
1 year, 2 months ago - 8 plays
Want to be really happy? If so, it makes sense to ask happy people what makes
them happy. So we begin this episode by revealing what happy people say are
the things that makes them so happy so you can be happy too! Source: John
Izzo, author of The 5 Secrets You Must Know Before You Die
(https://amzn.to/2DdJDLA) The one word you likely hear more than any other
throughout your life is – NO! For some people no means no but for others it
means something else entirely. BJ Gallagher, author of the book Yes Lives in
the Land of No (https://amzn.to/2JXlPNh) joins me to give some great advice
for handling the word no when people tell you that you can’t have or do
something. Since you will hear NO a lot for the rest of your life – this is
well worth listening to. Who doesn’t love going to a live concert? And yet
when you really dissect the experience, it is probably not as good as we tell
ourselves it is. I’ll reveal what one writer has to say about the concert-
going experience that you may not have thought about before.
http://www.esquire.com/entertainment/music/a39525/live-music-overrated/ People
need people. We are social creatures. We do better when others are around Yet
many of us are alone and isolated with few, if any friends. Someone who is
very concerned about this is Radha Agrawal, who is an entrepreneur, investor,
inventor, speaker, and community builder. She founded Daybreaker, a
grassroots, early-morning dance phenomenon that is now in over 25 countries.
She is also author of the book Belong: Find Your People Create Community and
Live a More Connected Life (https://amzn.to/2DfaczU). Radha explains why
friends are so important and exactly how to go and find them. PLEASE SUPPORT
OUR SPONSORS! We really enjoy The Jordan Harbinger Show and we think you will
as well! Check out https://jordanharbinger.com/start OR search for The Jordan
Harbinger Show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Get 10% off on the purchase of Magnesium Breakthrough from BiOptimizers by
visiting https://magbreakthrough.com/something Follow Nine Twelve wherever you
get your podcasts, or you can binge all seven episodes right now on Amazon
Music or with Wondery Plus. T-Mobile for Business the leader in 5G, #1 in
customer satisfaction, and a partner who includes benefits like 5G in every
plan. Visit https://T-Mobile.com/business Discover matches all the cash back
you earn on your credit card at the end of your first year automatically and
is accepted at 99% of places in the U.S. that take credit cards! Learn more at
https://discover.com/yes https://www.geico.com Bundle your policies and save!
It's Geico easy! Visit https://www.remymartin.com/en-us/ to learn more about
their exceptional spirits! Download the five star-rated puzzle game Best
Fiends FREE today on the Apple App Store or Google Play!
https://bestfiends.com Never try to beat a train across the tracks. Stop.
Trains can’t. Paid for by NHTSA Learn more about your ad choices. Visit
megaphone.fm/adchoices
2 years, 6 months ago - 11 plays
When a 14 year old boy named Philip Chism goes missing in the middle of a
school day, his mother thinks the worst and calls 911. Little does she know,
that her son isn't the only missing person from Danvers High School that day.
A 24-year-old math teacher is missing also. She is Phillip's teacher which
raises some immediate questions, but after finally solving a mishap with the
school's 140-camera security system, police are able to come up with a theory
as to what happened that day. Another big clue, of course, is the body in the
woods. Colleen E. Ritzer was a 24-year-old math teacher at Danvers High
School. She had a warm smile and love of teaching. Some of her friends would
later say that she was "born to do this job." However, no one could have
imaged the darkness that would shroud the school on that particular day, and
when all is said and done we are all left with the nagging question of "why?"
6 years, 11 months ago - 1 plays
In episode #773, Eric and Neil discuss what you should do about pages that
rank, but don’t meet user intent. Tune in to hear how you can fix this issue
and keep your rankings.
TIME-STAMPED SHOW NOTES:
* [00:27] Today’s Topic: What You Should do About Pages That Rank But Don't Meet User Intent
* [00:55] People will bounce really quickly if your page doesn’t meet their needs.
* [01:26] Go to GSC and look at all the key phrases for which you are getting impressions (not just clicks!).
* [01:40] These key phrases aren’t keywords, they are problems; people are searching because they are trying to solve a problem.
* [02:14] If you find that your page is ranking for something it doesn’t entirely cover, you can make content that centers on those search terms.
* [02:30] Otherwise, you can take a risk and alter the content on the page. You may lose rankings, even though you are changing it to suit the key phrases for which you are ranking.
* [03:30] Search engines don’t put websites that meet their algorithm requirements at the top of the page, they put whatever site helps the user the most.
* [03:39] Even if the changes you are making aren’t the best for Google, but are good for the user, Google will catch up and increase your ranking.
* [04:00] Survey your users and tailor posts to their problems.
* [04:13] That’s it for today!
* [04:17] Go to Singlegrain.com/Giveaway for a special marketing tool giveaway!
Leave some feedback:
* What should we talk about next? Please let us know in the comments below.
* Did you enjoy this episode? If so, please leave a short review.
Connect with us:
* NeilPatel.com
* Quick Sprout
* Growth Everywhere
* Single Grain
* Twitter @neilpatel
* Twitter @ericosiu
5 years, 6 months ago - 1 plays
This week on the Sour Hour, we’re celebrating the most romantic day of the
year by examining the St.Valentine’s Day Massacre. Head back to the1920s
Chicago as organized crime rose to new heights mainly due to Prohibition and
the Tommy Gun. A brutal and violent era featuring the likes of Al Capone and
George “Bugs” Moran that culminated with St. Valentine’s Day Massacre on
February 14th, 1929. A horrific crime that was symbolic of violence used
throughout the last decade, leaving five Northsider gangsters, their mechanic
and an acquaintance dead inside a Chicago garage. This singular event shook
the nation’s soul bringing the entire atmosphere of the jazz-fueled Roaring
Twenties to halt and ending the public’s sensationalize love affair gangster,
bootleggers, shootouts and machine guns.
Interact with us on Twitter _,_
Instagram , and
Facebook _._ _
_
Join the Bad Buds Sour Hour
Patreon for exclusive content for
as low as $1/month.
5 years, 1 month ago - 10 plays
Un pasaje y una promesa de trabajo cambiarían la vida de Alika para siempre. Alika tenía 17 años cuando quedó sola al cuidado de su hermana de 11. Desesperada por conseguir dinero abandonó el pueblo para buscar trabajo. Y encontró uno en el lugar menos pensado: en el fin del mundo. ⇣ En nuestro sitio web puedes leer una https://radioambulante.org/transcripcion/en-el-fin-del-mundo- transcripcion" target="new">transcripción del episodio. ⇣ Como escuchaste al comienzo de la historia, necesitamos tu ayuda. Acabamos de lanzar nuestra encuesta anual y nos servirá mucho que la respondas. Gracias a esas encuestas hemos desarrollado nuevos productos y podcasts, como Lupa o El hilo. Para llenarla, ingresa a radioambulante.org/encuesta. ¡Gracias! ⇣ En el intermedio del episodio recomendamos un podcast en español que te puede gustar. Escúchalo, se llama DianaUribe.fm y cuenta historias del mundo con un poder narrativo extraordinario.
3 years, 1 month ago - 2 plays
Have you ever put your car in “Drive” while it is still rolling backwards a
little bit? People do it all the time – yet it is terrible for your car. I’ll
explore this and several other things drivers do that can ruin their car and
hurt the value.
3 years, 10 months ago - 13 plays
In the 1970s, thousands of Vietnamese refugees were left on the remote Anambas
Islands in Indonesia. They were stranded without food, water, and shelter,
forced to survive off the land. Now, almost 40 years later, one woman wants to
go back to those distant islands, one last time.
Check out the photo gallery from Kuku Island by Liz
Mak.
You can also listen to Liz's HowSound
piece, “https://transom.org/2019/interviewing-for-
emotions/" target="new">Interviewing For Emotions” about how she structured her interviews and asked questions that
provided the space for people to open up to her and be vulnerable for this
story.
Thank you so much to Carina Hoang. Carina is a
Special Representative for Australia for UNHCR. Check out her book, “https://www.amazon.com/Boat-People-Personal-
Vietnamese-1975-1996/dp/0825306906" target="new">Boat
People: Personal Stories from the Vietnamese Exodus
1976-1996,” available in both English and
Vietnamese.
Carina is part of an Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV series, “The
Heights." Be sure to check it out.
Our heartfelt thanks to Tony Luu; his mother Truong On, his brother, Daniel,
and the rest of the Luu family.
Thanks to the Outside Podcast from
Outside Magazine, where you can also hear this show. Also, check Public Radio
International’s The World for a
shorter version of this audio story.
_This story would not have been possible without the generous support of the
_International Women’s Media Foundation _._
4 years, 4 months ago - 6 plays
'New Yorker' staff writer Jia Tolentino writes about how social media shapes
identity, public discourse and political engagement, particularly for
millennials like herself. She talks about growing up in a Houston megachurch,
her devastating year in the Peace Corps, and how religion led her to MDMA. Her
new book of essays is 'Trick Mirror.'
Linguist Geoff Nunberg considers the use of the word "they" as a gender-
neutral pronoun, and jazz critic Kevin Whitehead reviews the new album, 'The
Balance,' from South African composer Abdullah Ibrahim.
4 years, 7 months ago - 6 plays
sin descripción
4 years, 10 months ago - 37 plays
Is there any way that people could know the world is sphere while standing on
the earth? Learn more about perceiving earth as a sphere in this HowStuffWorks
podcast.
Learn more about advertising on the HowStuffWorks podcasts at
[www.howstuffworks.com/advertisers.htm](http://www.howstuffworks.com/advertisers.htm)
And to learn about your ad choices when listening to podcasts, visit
15 years, 8 months ago - 7 plays
Lewis Howes is a lifestyle entrepreneur, podcast phenom, and the NY Times
best-selling author of The School of Greatness. In this episode, he joins the
MFCEO crew to discuss the power of vision, the advantages of adversity, and
what it really takes to pursue greatness.
7 years, 11 months ago - 2 plays
Pete Holmes (Crashing, The Pete Holmes Show, You Made It Weird with Pete
Holmes podcast) is an American comedian, actor, writer and podcaster. Pete
sits down with the Armchair Expert to discuss his three-way marriage with
comedy, the book that got him sober and how his life resembles the biblical
story of Jacob and Esau. Pete decides Dax’s mom would be played by Francis
McDormand and Dax predicts fatherhood will rightsize Pete’s problems. Dax and
Pete talk about the different tactics men use to appear attractive to women,
how modesty is an equally alpha move to being ostentatious and the two have
different takes on the fatherly nature of Bob Vila.
5 years ago - 2 plays
#QOTD: What do you think of
GaryVaynerchuk.com?
Questions, comments, concerns? What’s your $.02?
Email is definitely not dead. As most you may know by now, I’m a big fan of
marketing in the year that we live in. And so, email remains to be a very
killer opportunity.
Email is a channel that you can control without being at the mercy of all
these other platforms that are out there. But, we also can’t be naive to the
changes have been made, such as the promotions tabs that GMail implemented
recently. Sure, email is falling off and these changes have caused us to lose
touch with some email lists that we may have been paying attention to prior,
but it’s still very much in play so long as we leverage it wisely.
Are open rates at 90% like I had in 1997? Absolutely not. But, I still believe
email is very much something to be considered. There’s no question that email
will certainly be less valuable in 3-5 years. Heard me say marketers ruin
everything? That’s where this fits in perfectly. That’s what this is all
about. Platforms come along. They present value. And marketings pounce on the
opportunity to arbitrage against their audiences.
But, while us marketers are working to exploit and potentially ruin email
marketing, we’re still in a time where it should most definitely be considered
as part of any business’s strategy.
9 years, 5 months ago - 2 plays
This classic from previous hosts Sarah and Deblina explores the controversial
life of Caravaggio. He may not be as well-known as Leonardo da Vinci, but this
amazing painter has been receiving more and more attention in recent times.
Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-
advertisers
4 years, 2 months ago - 11 plays
Fate is a tricky thing, they say that it can’t be escaped. That when the
writing's on the wall or the warnings have been read, that’s it for you.
Because we can only be so cautious when facing the dangers in our path,
because unfortunately, even the best security sometimes just isn’t enough.
First, owing a debt means more than just owing money. Next, technology opens
unsuspecting doorways, right into your home. After that, we’ll do our chores
alone, in the dark. And finally, we end up in a place of healing, a children’s
hospital. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4 years ago - 11 plays
Relationships, Debt
As heard on this episode:
* LinkedIn:
3 years, 10 months ago - 3 plays
Burger King announced it's going nationwide with a meatless Whopper that tastes like the real thing. Is this the end for Big Meat? (Transcript https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX- 1vTFpsIXT4Spr1TNMjINzTkx4k3GVd_BRj1ByDpg1PWIr80kyWnjz0Q11BvEkoIMoqB62oqXFc7CsFxs/pub" target="new">here.)
4 years, 11 months ago - 1 plays
Hidden in the trash heap of commerce there is buried treasure. Abandoned
brands--including trusted, beloved brands--are waiting to be claimed and
reborn. Today on the show: A cookie comeback.
6 years, 7 months ago - 2 plays
Featuring Rampage Jackson, Pat Barry, Tyron Woodley, Eddie Wineland, Sean
McCorkle, Ray Sefo, and Jonathan Tweedale.
9 years, 7 months ago - 1 plays
Alex Honnold is a big wall free solo climber. As one of the best in the
world, Alex has attained a number of speed records and also has been featured
on programs such as 60 Minutes and Nat’l Geographic. Search for "Alex Honnold"
on YouTube and prepare to blown away by a skill that few in the world have.
Alex Honnold, Brian Redban - Date: 01/28/2013
11 years, 2 months ago - 3 plays
After months of being enslaved in Northern Africa in 1815, Captain James Riley
vows to buy his own freedom, and the freedom of his crew. His only option is
to pray that a merciful stranger will take pity on him. It was a gamble,
considering the fact that such a leap of faith is what enslaved him in the
first place.
Parcasters - This week on Crimes of Passion we take on the infamous case of
Lorena and John Bobbitt! You won’t want to miss this one! Listen today on
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
4 years, 7 months ago - 2 plays
We're here to ponder which schools would be the funniest first-time national
champs in college football (oh right, we cover college football). Oregon is
not discussed in this context, because Michael Dyer was down.
And first, let's discuss the funnest parts of the 2019 Charity Bowl, which
allows you to:
\- help people in need
\- shame your rivals
\- force Spencer to get a 1990 Citrus Bowl Champs tattoo
4 years, 11 months ago - 1 plays
For novelist Kevin Wilson, Tourette's syndrome means living with intrusive
thoughts that flash disturbing images without warning. His novel, 'Nothing to
See Here,' was inspired by visions of people bursting into flames. Wilson
talks about his experience of Tourette's and how writing gives him a reprieve
from his tics.
Also, critic John Powers reviews the second season of 'Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan'
on Amazon.
4 years, 5 months ago - 3 plays
What happens when the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land, seems to
get it wrong? Korematsu v. United States is a case that’s been widely
denounced and discredited, but it still remains on the books. This is the case
that upheld President Franklin Roosevelt’s internment of American citizens
during World War II based solely on their Japanese heritage, for the sake of
national security. In this episode, we follow Fred Korematsu’s path to the
Supreme Court, and we ask the question: if you can’t get justice in the
Supreme Court, can you find it someplace else?
Fred Korematsu, c. 1940s
(Courtesy of the Fred T. Korematsu Institute)
Fred Korematsu, second from the right, is pictured with his family in the
family flower nursery in Oakland, CA, 1939.
(Courtesy of the family of Fred T. Korematsu, Wikimedia
Commons)
The key voices:
* Fred Korematsu, plaintiff in Korematsu v. United States who resisted evacuation orders during World War II.
* Karen Korematsu, Fred’s daughter, Founder & Executive Director of Fred T. Korematsu Institute
* Ernest Besig, ACLU lawyer who helped Fred Korematsu bring his case to the Supreme Court
* Lorraine Bannai, Professor at Seattle University School of Law and Director of the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality
* Richard Posner, retired Circuit Judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals, 7th Circuit
The key cases:
* 1944: Korematsu v. United States
The key links:
* Fred T. Korematsu Institute
* Densho Archives
Additional music for this episode by The Flamingos, Lulu,Paul
Lansky, and Austin
Vaughn.
Special thanks to theDensho Archives for use
of archival tape of Fred Korematsu and Ernest Besig. __
Leadership support for More Perfect _ is provided by The Joyce Foundation.
Additional funding is provided by _ The Charles Evans Hughes Memorial
Foundation.
Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez® ,
a free law project in collaboration with the Legal Information Institute at
Cornell.
6 years, 6 months ago - 1 plays
The president “storms” out of another meeting with Democrats in the Oval
Office. The House inches closer to an impeachment inquiry. And a new analysis
of the 2018 midterms sheds light on the challenges up ahead in 2020. Then
Rebecca Traister joins Jon F. to talk about the recent wave of state laws
threatening reproductive rights and what’s at stake in next year’s elections.
Also – Pod Save America is going on tour! Get your tickets now:
crooked.com/events.
4 years, 10 months ago - 1 plays
this is an absolutely all - time interview, debuting as the first guest on
Travis Mills' podcast, ADHD. We talk garage saleing, why entrepreneurship's
suddenly become so cool and the bull shit of 18-24 year old "life coaches"
Would love if you checked out Travis' podcast:
on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCrk-0hQC3D5G-
wT_b1kNNzUcy_1fu22l" target="new"> https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCrk-0hQC3D5G-
wT_b1kNNzUcy_1fu22l
on Apple Podcasts:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/adhd-with-travis-
mills/id1444661169?mt=2" target="new"> https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/adhd-with-travis-
mills/id1444661169?mt=2
5 years, 2 months ago - 3 plays
The Vergecast is a discussion of all things relevant and irreverent in the
worlds of art, culture, science, technology, and anything else our hosts might
deem interesting. On this week's episode, Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, and
Dieter Bohn talk about Google's attempt to sell Motorola to Lenovo, the
declining sales of the iPod, and the obvious benefits of a Daft Punk helmet.
Audio: Download MP3 (34.3 MB) Subscribe to the podcast (iTunes audio)
Subscribe to the podcast (iTunes video) Subscribe to the podcast (RSS)
Subscribe to the podcast (Video RSS) Video:
10 years, 1 month ago - 3 plays
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