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    mobs

    Explore " mobs" with insightful episodes like "When Gods Fall | Acts: How To Be A Jesus-Filled Church | Week 30", "Anchored Evidence | How You Respond Matters", "9-28-22 - Gaslighting The Planet - Nord Stream 2 Takedown", "Lake Mead" and "Folge 66: Start in den Nether und Phileas besiegt Marshmellows / Ghasts in Massen👻🧉🗡⚔️ Let’s go" from podcasts like ""Grace City Church", "Grace City Church", "15 Minutes Ov Flame With Robert Phoenix", "U.S. Phenomenon" and "Die Brüder der Blöcke | Minecraft, Games und Dies und Das"" and more!

    Episodes (18)

    When Gods Fall | Acts: How To Be A Jesus-Filled Church | Week 30

    When Gods Fall | Acts: How To Be A Jesus-Filled Church | Week 30
    Christians need to expect the gospel of the Jesus Christ to clash culturally with the worship of false gods. Sometimes even the enemies of Christ have a more coherent understanding of this transformative power of the gospel than some Christians dare to recognize. 

    In this power-packed text, learn 3 things Jesus’ enemies get right, 1 crucial thing they get wrong, 3 tactical contrasts between Jesus and Satan, and a much needed lesson regarding self-contradictory worldviews.

    Thanks for listening!
    visit www.gracecitychurch.com for more content.

    Anchored Evidence | How You Respond Matters

    Anchored Evidence | How You Respond Matters

    Anchored Youth yearly update from Pastor Brian Blair.

    Anchored Evidence - It matters how you respond to the person and work of Jesus - his work in you and his work in others.

    Look and see how the students at Grace City church are responding. Be encouraged and challenged by their example and let the message ring out!

    Thanks for listening!
    visit www.gracecitychurch.com for more content.

    Lake Mead

    Lake Mead

    This week on the show we cover the latest findings at Lake Mead with our guest Michael Parker. We check with Mark Christopher for our paranormal story of the week. 

    Thank you for listening find us on twitch, tiktok, and instagram.

    Episode 6: The Lesson

    Episode 6: The Lesson

    The centennial of the massacre attracted international coverage; camera crews, T-shirt vendors, and even a visit from President Joe Biden. It seemed as though all this attention might ensure that history finally, would never be forgotten. But a month later some Tulsans worry that a backlash has begun. The city’s mayor and other elected officials have spoken against reparations for victims of the massacre and their descendents. A new law in Oklahoma limits how teachers can teach the massacre in schools. "If you care about the history of America's Black victims of racial violence,” says educator Karlos Hill, “You live in the world differently than if you are indifferent or simply ignorant about it."

    EPILOGUE

    In the days following the massacre, some 6,000 Black residents were forced to live in internment camps and many were made to clean up the destruction of their own community. The Red Cross set up tents and hospitals; they stayed for nearly six months. Many people and organizations outside of Tulsa sent money and other contributions. Soon after, Tulsa’s city officials declined any additional aid saying that what happened “was strictly a Tulsa affair and that the work of restrictions and charity would be taken care of by Tulsa people.” Nearly half of Greenwood’s residents left, never to return. But those that remained rebuilt Greenwood and many say it came back even stronger. That is, until the 1960s, when the city allowed a highway to bisect the neighborhood. Like so many other thriving Black communities, Greenwood was divested from and disenfranchised. 

    The people featured in this podcast series who survived the massacre went on to live rich and varied lives:

     

    Mary Elizabeth Jones Parrish—the journalist whose book Events of a Tulsa Disaster is a primary source for much of what we know about the massacre—taught high school in Muskogee and ultimately returned to Tulsa. 

     

    Buck Colbert Franklin—one of the first Black lawyers in Oklahoma and who served Greenwood residents from an internment camp tent following the attack—practiced law for more than 50 years. He published his autobiography My Life and An Era with the help of his son, the legendary civil rights leader and historian John Hope Franklin.

     

    A.J. Smitherman—the crusading newspaper publisher of The Tulsa Star—lost his home and newspaper offices in the attack. He was among the dozens of people indicted for the massacre, blamed for inciting the violence. He fled east, ultimately to Buffalo, New York, where he founded another newspaper, The Buffalo Star. He never returned to Greenwood and died in 1961, at age 77. Nearly fifty years after his death, Tulsa County finally dropped the charges against him. 

     

    Mabel Little—who ran a beauty salon in Greenwood—also lost everything during the attack. In the years afterward, she and her husband Pressley built a modest three-bedroom house and adopted 11 children. Pressley died in 1927 from pneumonia; Mabel blamed the massacre for his declining health. In her later years, she was a tireless activist for desegregating Tulsa’s public schools. When she died in 2001, she was 104 years old.

     

    Learn more about Greenwood and the massacre:

    Episode 4: The Massacre

    Episode 4: The Massacre

    This episode contains descriptions of graphic violence and racially offensive language.

    Over two days — May 31 and June 1, 1921 — a mob of white attackers systematically looted Greenwood and burned it to the ground. Estimates vary, but reports say the marauders killed 100 to 300 people; and they left thousands homeless, faced with the daunting task of rebuilding. We experience the attack through the eyes of lawyer B.C. Franklin and reporter Mary Elizabeth Jones Parrish — each left personal, comprehensive written accounts of those terrible days. 

    We also hear how their experiences have affected their descendants. “They had a lot of family trauma,” says Parrish’s great-granddaughter Anneliese Bruner. “Some of these are behaviors that arise because of the chaos that is passed down from generation to generation. The responses and the symptoms are just the outward manifestation of the suffering that people are enduring and carrying around.”

    Episode 3: The Two Wars

    Episode 3: The Two Wars

    This episode contains descriptions of graphic violence and racially offensive language.

    When the U.S. entered World War I, W.E.B. DuBois and Tulsa lawyer B.C. Franklin saw a rare opportunity: Black Americans serving in the military might finally persuade white citizens that they deserved equal respect. But the discrimination they faced in civilian life continued in the trenches and on the homefront. After the war, white mobs plundered and burned Black neighborhoods throughout the country. And during the “Red Summer” of 1919, whites lynched more than 80 people, including Black veterans. Groups like the African Blood Brotherhood responded by urging people to defend themselves — with force, if necessary. On May 31, 1921 the fight arrived in Greenwood.

    The Left's Violent Double Standards

    The Left's Violent Double Standards

    # 007 - The left would lead you to believe that conservatives are the violent ones. What about the rioting they approved of for most of 2020 because it advanced their narrative?

    Are we to believe that they suddenly turned into the arbiters of peace? What about the real lives that they destroyed with their rhetoric?

    Also, as conservatives, we need to be careful that we don't use the same sort of double standards to justify our actions. There are enough hypocrites in the world already as it is.

    Links from this episode:

    If you haven't heard my discussion with Josh Raimundo, a journalist who was on the ground during the Capitol riot, I encourage you to check it out here:

    fairlyimportant.com/episode6

    Here is the YouTube video I played showing the left's violent rhetoric.

    How did you think it would end? Democrats and Progressives Inciting Violence.

    Please subscribe to the podcast and review the show!

    Leave a review here!

    Want to stand up to the radical left but don’t know how? Check out my free resource:

    Seven Steps to Stand Up for Your Values Today!

    I'm on Parler! Will you ever be able to access it again?

    Follow @FairlyImportant on Parler!

    I'm on Twitter too!

    Follow me on Twitter. :)

    Check out the website:

    fairlyimportant.com

    Support the show

    Finding the Right Balance for Combat Encounters

    Finding the Right Balance for Combat Encounters
    This week we look at how to make build a combat encounter that is both challenging, and fun -- deadly, yet winnable. We discuss all the different factors at play, from multi-monster battles to Boss fights. If you want something that is scary, something where the players feel the heat -- while also providing them opportunities to shine -- we've got ideas to help you create a truly "balanced" encounter. Yet, even with balance, death does happen. And it can be great for the story. We talk a bit about what to do if the fight takes an unexpected twist. Welcome to Like Dragon Like Son, a podcast hosted by Jay and Jack Oatway where they discuss everything D&D, from character builds to personal experiences. Stay tuned for new episodes on Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you love Like Dragon Like Son and want to help us out, you can support us by sharing this podcast with your friends. It's the support of listeners like you which motivate us to put out more episodes, so thank you!

    suck my (fan) news - xiao zhan and falling

    suck my (fan) news - xiao zhan and falling
    tune in now as alex covers the breaking xiao zhan and archive of our own news story! (not clickbait) don't forget to follow suck my (fan) news on social media and youtube! https://twitter.com/suckmyfanfic https://www.facebook.com/Suck-my-fan-fic https://suckmyfanficpodcast.tumblr.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqdIDIgKS-F1dgBcDWUBl2g you can also give them all (at least some?) of your monies if you feel so inclined https://www.patreon.com/suckmyfanfic

    Chapter 11: The Race Riots in Barry,

    Chapter 11: The Race Riots in Barry,

    The Race Riots in Wales in June 1919 started in Newport on the 6th June but on the 11th June they started in Barry, Wales. This Docks town was the scene of the first death in the Riots when a seaman from the Caribbean stabbed a white local man during a fight. The fact that the white man (Frederick Longman) did nothing to stop the crowd violence that was to follow but there were no further deaths.
    Charles Emmanuel went to prison for the killing of Longman.
    This chapter of `secret' history is not taught in local schools.
    The riots may have been a turning point for Black seaman and soldiers because despite the State trying to persuade them to accept repatriation (they were British Subjects and could not be officially be deported against their will) , they did not take the offer of a one way ticket home, the men and their white wives decided to stay and because of that their ancestors are Welsh citizens.

    Universal Monsters at San Francisco Comic Con 2018

    Universal Monsters at San Francisco Comic Con 2018
    Is the Wolf Man a Peeping Tom? Is Frankenstein a “person” under the law? Joshua Gilliland discussed these issues and more at San Francisco Comic Con. The audience had great legal questions on the creatures that go bump in the night. Support the show


    No part of this recording should be considered legal advice.
    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok @TheLegalGeeks

    Matt Weinhold from Monster Party on Frankenstein (1931)

    Matt Weinhold from Monster Party on Frankenstein (1931)

    Matt Weinhold from Monster Party joined me to discuss Frankenstein (1931) in part four of our Universal Monster series. Matt and Josh bring to life the legal issue of whether a reanimated corpse is a “person;” discuss due process rights of the Monster; and how lynch mobs are the real monsters in Frankenstein. Matt shares his love of the film, his favorite Frankenstein toys, and why the story of Frankenstein has endured for 200 years.

    Introduction Music is Ectoplasm by Audionautix and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Artist: http://audionautix.com/

    Support the show


    No part of this recording should be considered legal advice.
    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok @TheLegalGeeks