Episode 5761: American Journal: WWIII On The Horizon? Putin ‘Ready’ To Use Nukes As NATO Doubles Down On Ukraine
The maniacs running the planet into the ground may be ready to launch the catalyst for the 'Great Reset'
We propose that the conflict in findings may derive in part from the focus on different facets of these constructs in different studies. Thus, we seek to obtain a more complete picture of the specific content of today’s gender stereotypes by treating agency and communality, as multi-dimensioned constructs.
Gender stereotypes often are internalized by men and women, and we therefore focus both on how men and women are seen by others and how they see themselves with respect to stereotyped attributes. We also plan to compare and contrast charcterizations of men or women as a group with charcterizations of self, something not typically possible because these two types of characterizations are rarely measured in the same study. In sum, we have multiple objectives: We aim to develop a multi-dimensional framework for assessing current conceptions of men’s and women’s characteristics and then use it to consider how men and women are seen by male and female others, how men and women see themselves, and how these perceptions of self and others in their gender group coincide or differ. In doing so, we hope to demonstrate the benefits of viewing agency and communality as multidimensional constructs in the study of gender stereotypes.
The maniacs running the planet into the ground may be ready to launch the catalyst for the 'Great Reset'
Welcome, to our dark descent into the depths of Lemuria – the continent that sunk like a stone... or did it? Today, we embark on a journey through the mists of time, where legend and reality blur into one unsettling enigma. Picture it: a land lost to time, shrouded in mystery and cloaked in shadow. The tale of Lemuria begins in the 19th century, a time when Victorian scholars fancied themselves as armchair adventurers, sipping tea and spinning tales of lost civilizations between rounds of croquet.
Why will Ramadan bring about jihad - and not just in the
Middle East? Terrorists want us to be afraid, be very afraid.
Is there reason to be? Check out this episode of the
Terrorist Therapist podcast, and you decide.
Ramadan is the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, because
it is believed that this was when Allah revealed the Koran to
Muhammad. It's the time Muslims pray, fast and do good deeds.
According to the Hadith (ascribed to Muhammad), the reward in
the afterlife for good deeds of spiritual significance are magnified
during Ramadan. Now, you may not think the killing of those who
terrorists call ‘infidels’, like Hamas’ October 7 savage rampage,
is a ‘good deed’, there are some who do.
You will hear how Israelis and Palestinians are ‘waiting for the
storm’ during Ramadan and how the holy site in Jerusalem, called
the Temple Mount by Israelis, and called the al-Aqsa mosque by
Islamists - plays a key role. You’ll also hear about the Houthis,
who have already begun their Red Sea terror campaign and plan
worse for Ramadan.
We’ll also look at what the Pro-Palestinian ’terrorists’ have been
doing - from destroying an historic painting of Lord Balfour at
Cambridge University, to their mob protest outside the opening
of Amsterdam’s National Holocaust Museum to causing chaos
at the Oscars in Hollywood. Terrorists don’t believe anything is
off-limits, especially when magnified rewards in the afterlife are
at stake….
Listen in Renegade Nation
Not without permission. Your healthcare is in the hands of bureaucrats, not the
doctors. You will live if the insurance company says you can. This is socialized
medicine. How is working for you? Not for me at all.
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