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    longview

    Explore " longview" with insightful episodes like "Bonus Episode: Kiley & Ranger", "Police Chief Murdered In Oregon, Officer's Actions That Day", "[REBROADCAST] EP15: Longview", "Realty Talk: Shrinking Yields + Leading Data and Local Knowledge + Property Facts vs Fiction" and "The Oxoymoron of the Bible: Bob Gray Jr" from podcasts like ""Straight Outta Studio B", "Law Enforcement Talk: True Crime and Trauma Stories", "Echoes of the Vietnam War", "Property Hub - Investment Insights & Inspiration" and "Turning Point Sermons"" and more!

    Episodes (12)

    Bonus Episode: Kiley & Ranger

    Bonus Episode: Kiley & Ranger

    Jill and Maverick are at church camp this week, so me and Ranger had a funfilled few days of doing whatever Ranger wanted to do. Enjoy my co-host for the day, our 7 year old Ranger!

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    Police Chief Murdered In Oregon, Officer's Actions That Day

    Police Chief Murdered In Oregon, Officer's Actions That Day

    Police Chief Murdered In Oregon, Officer's Actions That Day. Police Chief Ralph Painter, from Rainier, Oregon was shot and killed. He responded from neighboring Longview, Washington. The shooting, his response and how it affected his life's mission.

    From Odmp.org on Wednesday, January 5, 2011, "Chief Ralph Painter was shot and killed after responding to a local car stereo shop on Rock Crest Street in which a man was attempting to take a car that did not belong to him. When Chief Painter made contact with the man a struggle ensued. The subject was able to disarm and fatally shoot him. The man then exchanged shots with responding officers before being wounded and taken into custody." Doug Kazensky was a Police Officer, acting as a Supervisor in the bordering city of Longview Washington. He was dispatched to the scene along with numerous other officers. He talks about the shootout, giving first aid to the mortally wounded Chief Painter and the hard lessons learned that day. Doug also talks about how that incident affected him when it came to training and how, after retirement from policing it motivates what he does with Vector Solutions.

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    Background song Hurricane is used with permission from the band Dark Horse Flyer.

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    Realty Talk: Shrinking Yields + Leading Data and Local Knowledge + Property Facts vs Fiction

    Realty Talk: Shrinking Yields + Leading Data and Local Knowledge + Property Facts vs Fiction

    As commercial property values have increased in recent times, rental yields have compressed. Scott O’Neill from Rethink Investing joins us to discuss the impacts, the winners and losers and where the commercial opportunities will be moving forward.

    How can you combine tangible national data with intangible local knowledge to achieve the best property outcomes?  Warwick Brookes from LongView buyers advocates joins us to reveal the science and the art.

    If you listen to the headlines and nightly news you’d think that the property is headed for a crash. But does the doom and gloom line up with reality?To balance the books, Terry Ryder from Hotspotting unpacks the property facts versus the false fiction.

    RealtyTalk is your trusted voice in property investment and Australia’s most popular online property show. 

    RealtyTalk is brought to you by Realty, Australia’s leading search and social property distribution platform that helps investors like you beat the crowd, giving you the earliest access to property opportunities, listings, and insights. Check out Realty.

    RealtyTalk is hosted by top property investment expert, author, and founder of KnowHow Property, Bushy Martin. Find out how Bushy’s KnowHow team helps investors unlock freedom with finance and property here, and check out Bushy’s podcast Get Invested

    RealtyTalk is supported by BMT, a company that helps property investors save thousands of dollars each year by maximizing tax deductions from investment properties. Find out more

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Episode 172: Remembering the Career of an American cousin: Bluegrass innovative pioneer and bandleader J.D. Crowe

    Episode 172: Remembering the Career of an American cousin: Bluegrass innovative pioneer and bandleader J.D. Crowe

    Remembering the Career of an American cousin: Bluegrass innovative pioneer and bandleader J.D. Crowe (August 27/37-December. 24/21) - “Kentucky Mountain Boys”, “J.D. Crowe and The New South”, “The Bluegrass Album Band” and “Longview”); selections of his music with interview clips.

    https://www.facebook.com/ron.moores.18

    Gregg County Historical Museum in Longview, Texas

    Gregg County Historical Museum in Longview, Texas

    We've always said museums can be one of the most haunted locations we would ever have the pleasure to explore. It's simply due to the fact that museums hold artifacts drenched in energy from the physical world. Longview, Texas is home to one of those attractions - The Gregg County Historical Museum. Stepped in a rich history dating back to the founding of the city, this site was one of the last robberies for the notorious Dalton Gang, in which a member was shot and killed. The gun used in the shootout is still located within the museum. 
    We decided to turn the lights out on the exhibits and walk the darkened, eerie halls. The walls hold disturbed artifacts and voices desperate to talk. Just how desperate? We couldn't fathom the outcome. 

    LINKS TO VIDEO EVIDENCE
    Full Livestream of podcast: 
    https://youtu.be/f-q9tRER6a4
    Shelly and Staci alone in the museum: 
    https://youtu.be/zskohZeQs-4
    Massive MEL-Meter Spikes: 
    https://youtu.be/ClBG-u6GKD0
    Blake Estes Method #1:
    https://youtu.be/sPjMSJdf0QQ
    Door Closes on Command: 
    https://youtu.be/wXJ5z3crRHI
    Ryan Estes Method: 
    https://youtu.be/NFATGimZVPw
    Paula Estes Method: 
    https://youtu.be/u_C_q_8RE0U
    Blake Estes Method #2 and Being Jumped: 
    https://youtu.be/4nuGvZzR3lI

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    There Is No Justice Here: The Red Summer of 1919

    There Is No Justice Here: The Red Summer of 1919
    A constant threat of violence hung over the lives of African Americans in the early 20th century, an unrelenting terror that served to deter economic progress and enforce a racist social order. But 1919 was different: violence spread out of the south into northern and midwestern cities and took the form of random, terrifying riots. But the response of African-American leaders in 1919 was also different. They decided enough was enough. The time had come to fight back.
    Whites-only beach in Chicago Chicago's beaches in 1919 were not segregated by law, but any attempt by African-Americans to stand up to convention could prompt harsh and sudden violence. This is the white beach on the South Side, which started around 29th street.
    African American beach in Chicago The beach used by African-Americans was a few blocks north, around 25th street. The two beaches were divided by a rocky inlet--and as five teenaged boys discovered that July, the line between them was all to easy to cross.
    Jim Crow laws enforced racial segregation In the South, the Jim Crow system enforced the segregation of all public places. African-Americans couldn't eat in the same restaurants, sleep in the same hotels, sit in the same movie theaters, use the same restrooms, or even drink the same water as whites.
    Ida Bell Wells-Barnett Ida B. Wells had not intended to take on the cause of lynching until her friend Thomas Moss was dragged out of jail and shot in a railyard. Her investigation into lynching was a bombshell that shattered the Southern narrative about racial violence. You can read Wells' original report, titled "Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases," (https://www.gutenberg.org/files/14975/14975-h/14975-h.htm) online.
    Men of the 369th Infantry Regiment General Pershing likely never intended the 369th Infantry Regiment, the Harlem Hellraisers, to fight on the front lines, but under pressure from the Allies he turned them over to French command. They served with courage and distinction and won the respect and admiration of the entire French nation.
    Private Henry Johnson Private Henry Johnson fought off a 24-man German patrol alone while wounded. He was awarded the French Croix de Guerre--but received no medals from his own country.
    James Reese Europe James Reese Europe served as the 369th's regimental band leader. A brilliant musician, conductor, composer, and arranger, he brought jazz to France.
    W.E.B. Du Bois Author W.E.B. DuBois electrified readers of the NAACP magazine The Crisis with his essay "Returning Soldiers," which urged African-American veterans to fight racism at home. You can read the essay online (https://glc.yale.edu/returning-soldiers).
    Man pulled from trolley during riot Riots broke out in early summer in Charleston, South Carolina; Longview, Texas; and Washington, D.C. This sort of scene was happened frequently--black men were dragged out of trolley, as well as seized walking down the street or yanked out of businesses to be beaten by a white mob.
    Claude McKay Poet Claude McKay wrote "If We Must Die" in 1919 in the same spirit as Du Bois' "Returning Soldiers." It was a call for African-Americans to stand up and defend themselves against white attacks. You can read the poem online (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44694/if-we-must-die) or listen to Ice-T read it. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqy7uUdNwK0)
    White rioters in Chicago During the Chicago riot, bands of white men prowled the city looking for African-Americans. Here a group of men are running through a black neighborhood.
    Soldiers challenge man in Chicago Order was finally restored when the state militia arrived. Generally, the soldiers were impartial and prevent further attacks on African-Americans, but encounters between white troops and black men were still fraught.
    Mob in Omaha surrounds courthouse The riot in Omaha, Nebraska drew an enormous crowd, estimated at anything from 5000 to 15,000. Here you can see some of that mob surrounding the Omaha courthouse, which they eventually set alight.
    Arkansas newspaper Arkansas Newspaper 2 Arkansas Newspaper 3 Newspapers across Arkansas ran headlines about the supposed uprising of African-Americans in Phillips County.
    Walter H. Loving Conductor and intelligence agent Water H. Loving submitted a report to the Department of War that explained that socialist, communist, and labor organizers had nothing to do with the violence in 1919; rather, African-Americans had decided enough was enough. His report was shelved and ignored.
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