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    Marginalized Communities

    Explore "Marginalized Communities" with insightful episodes like "#2096 - Josh Dubin & Sheldon Johnson", "410. Discussing Impact Investment and ESG's with a BlackRock Executive | Terrence Keeley", "ARRAY: Filmmaker Ava DuVernay (2021)", "Side Effects of Climate Change (with Céline Semaan)" and "How to Train Kids in the Practice of Temperance" from podcasts like ""The Joe Rogan Experience", "The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast", "How I Built This with Guy Raz", "Small Doses with Amanda Seales" and "Here's Where It Gets Interesting"" and more!

    Episodes (12)

    #2096 - Josh Dubin & Sheldon Johnson

    #2096 - Josh Dubin & Sheldon Johnson

    Josh Dubin is the Executive Director of the Perlmutter Center for Legal Justice, a criminal justice reform advocate, and civil rights attorney.

    Sheldon Johnson is a criminal justice reform advocate. He works with at risk youth at the Queens Defenders in New York.


    https://cardozo.yu.edu/directory/josh-dubin

    410. Discussing Impact Investment and ESG's with a BlackRock Executive | Terrence Keeley

    410. Discussing Impact Investment and ESG's with a BlackRock Executive | Terrence Keeley

    Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with investment expert and author Terrence Keeley. They discuss the recent success of the ARC conference, the reality of climate narratives and the ESG mafia, the cost effective solutions to some of our most pressing problems, and the positive side of societal betterment via impact investing.

     

    Terrence Keeley is an American investment expert and author who has worked with and managed some of the largest investment organizations in the world. Besides having been an executive at Blackrock, Terrence also founded and served as the Senior Managing Principal of Sovereign Trends, LLC, an advisory firm for and about sovereign institutions. From 1987-2010 he was a senior managing director at UBS Investment Bank, where he oversaw the firm’s transactional and advisory relations with central banks, sovereign wealth funds, ministries of finance, public pension funds, and multilateral organizations, including the IMF and World Bank.

     

    Terrence served as a consultant to Pope Francis’ financial reform commission, overseeing the Vatican bank. He is also a founding director of the Financial Hippocratic Oath movement. From 1982-85 he served as one of the first young trustees on the Notre Dame Board. Today he is also a frequent commentator/author on all issues relating to international finance, cross-border capital movements and global financial governance. He is married to Saskia Bory of Geneva, Switzerland. Their two sons attended the Lycée Français de New York.​

     

    This episode was recorded on October 13th, 2023

     

     

    - Links -

     

    2024 tour details can be found here - https://jordanbpeterson.com/events

     

    For Terrence Keeley:

    Learn about how to go beyond ESG investing here  https://www.1pointsix.com/

     

    Sustainable (Book)

    Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Sustainable-Moving-Beyond-Impact-Investing/dp/0231206801

    Columbia University Press https://cup.columbia.edu/book/sustainable/9780231206808

    ARRAY: Filmmaker Ava DuVernay (2021)

    ARRAY: Filmmaker Ava DuVernay (2021)

    By her early thirties, Ava DuVernay was already a successful entrepreneur, having founded her own film publicity agency in Los Angeles. But after years of watching other people make films, she started to get an itch to tell her own stories onscreen. Ava's first films were rooted in deeply personal experiences: growing up with her sisters in Compton, performing Hip Hop at Open Mic Night at the Good Life Café in L.A. Her self-funded and self-distributed projects began to draw attention, and in 2012, Ava won the award for best directing at the Sundance Film Festival. She went on to direct powerful projects like Selma, 13th, and When They See Us; and through her production and distribution company ARRAY, she's created a movement that is helping change how movies are made—and who gets to make them.


    This episode was produced by Rachel Faulkner, with music by Ramtin Arablouei.

    Edited by Neva Grant, with research help from Liz Metzger.


    You can follow HIBT on Twitter & Instagram, and email us at hibt@id.wondery.com.

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    Side Effects of Climate Change (with Céline Semaan)

    Side Effects of Climate Change (with Céline Semaan)

    Designer, educator, and entrepreneur Céline Semaan of environmental non-profit Slow Factory joins us to talk about the ways race and climate intersect, how corporations get away with polluting low-income neighborhoods, and the devastating impact of Green Colonialism.

    Sources cited: 

    UN Climate Action Note

    Genetic Literacy Project: GMO Fear Mongering

    Slow Factory Open Edu

    Slow Factory Applied Utopia Textbook

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    How to Train Kids in the Practice of Temperance

    How to Train Kids in the Practice of Temperance

    Today in our series about Prohibition, we learn more about the crusade to turn America into a dry nation. It may surprise you to learn that it wasn’t spearheaded by only white Christian women who disapproved of saloons and whiskey. Leaders in the growing civil rights movement also pushed for temperance, and one woman convinced the government that the path to prohibition was best paved through the public school system.


    Hosted by: Sharon McMahon

    Executive Producer: Heather Jackson

    Audio Producer: Jenny Snyder

    Written and researched by: Heather Jackson, Valerie Hoback, Amy Watkin, and Mandy Reid





    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    UFYB 238: The Invisible Labor Load for Women & Families of Color: A Conversation with Amelia Pleasant Kennedy & Shawna Samuel

    UFYB 238: The Invisible Labor Load for Women & Families of Color: A Conversation with Amelia Pleasant Kennedy & Shawna Samuel

    There’s been a lot of talk about the invisible load the last few years (especially through Covid when women were literally trying to do it all). Pushing back against the invisible load can look like “dropping the ball.” But “dropping the ball” isn’t always safe for those socialized as women who also belong to other marginalized identities.

     

    Listen to this interview with two of my Advanced Certification in Feminist Coaching students, Amelia Pleasant Kennedy and Shawna Saumel, to learn how the invisible load is connected to your emotional and physical energy, the importance of negotiation in a relationship, and how living in other marginalized identities can exacerbate a woman’s drive to achieve and do more.

     

    Get full show notes and more information here: https://unfuckyourbrain.com/238

    A Post-Roe America, Part 2: The Abortion Providers

    A Post-Roe America, Part 2: The Abortion Providers

    This episode contains descriptions of sexual violence. 

     In Part 1 of our two-part series, we spoke to anti-abortion activists about their preparations for a future without Roe v. Wade.

    Today, we talk to people working in abortion clinics about what the potential change could mean for their patients.

    “Everybody’s scared,” said one provider from Oklahoma. “Every single person that walks in our clinic, you can see the fear on their faces.”

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    Background reading: 

    For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. 

    Ep. 814 - Sane People Are The Most Marginalized Community In America

    Ep. 814 - Sane People Are The Most Marginalized Community In America

    Today on the Matt Walsh Show, the backlash against Dave Chappelle grows, as the media insists that any and all jokes about, or criticisms of, LGBT people are out of bounds and automatically bigoted. They say that LGBT people are marginalized and that’s why you can’t make these jokes. But if you aren’t allowed to joke about a group of people, isn’t that an indication that they are the exact opposite of marginalized? Also, the high school student who shot a teacher and two classmates on Wednesday was released on bail on Thursday. What’s going on there? And the New York Times claims that 900,000 children have been hospitalized with COVID, which isn’t even close to true. And a new study confirms that women are attracted to men who can provide for them financially. What does it say about our society that we needed a study to confirm that obvious fact? We’ll talk about all of that and more today on the Matt Walsh Show. 

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    Burnout, the Media, and Twitter’s Business Moves

    Burnout, the Media, and Twitter’s Business Moves
    Jason Kint, the CEO of Digital Content Next (@dcnorg), joins Scott to break down Australia’s News Media Bargaining Code. Jason also shares his thoughts on the broader digital ecosystem, including Section 230, how cryptocurrencies might come into the digital media space, and why he’s bullish on Clubhouse. Follow Jason on Twitter, @jason_kint. (15:03) Scott opens with his thoughts on COVID-19 vaccine news, Robinhood planning for its IPO, Target’s partnership with Apple, and Amazon launching a digital currency in Mexico.  This Week’s Office Hours: Twitter’s recent business developments (43:52), deciding to double down on product development or content creation (49:020, and dealing with burnout (50:59).  Algebra of Happiness: the passage of time (56:01). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    The Field: The Fight For Voting Rights in Florida

    The Field: The Fight For Voting Rights in Florida

    This episode contains strong language.

    During much of this election cycle, Julius Irving of Gainesville, Fla., spent his days trying to get former felons registered to vote.

    He would tell them about Florida’s Amendment Four, a ballot initiative that extended the franchise to those who had, in the past, been convicted on felony charges — it added an estimated 1.5 million people to the electorate, the nation’s largest voting expansion in four decades.

    On today’s episode, Nicholas Casey, a national politics reporter, spends time with Mr. Irving in Gainesville and explores the voting rights battle in Florida.

    Guest: Nicholas Casey, a national politics reporter for The New York Times.

    For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily

    Background reading:

    One Meat Plant, One Thousand Infections: Revisiting Achut Deng

    One Meat Plant, One Thousand Infections: Revisiting Achut Deng

    For the remainder of this week, “The Daily” is revisiting episodes with people we met in the early weeks of the coronavirus pandemic to hear what has happened to them since our original conversations were aired.

    One of the largest coronavirus outbreaks in the United States was inside the Smithfield pork factory in Sioux Falls, S.D. Today, we revisit our conversation with a worker at the plant, a refugee who survived civil war and malaria only to find her life and livelihood threatened anew — and ask her how she has been doing since. Guests: Caitlin Dickerson, who covers immigration for The New York Times, and Achut Deng, a Sudanese refugee who works for Smithfield. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily

    Background reading: