Later, he professed that he really would turn keys and that his hesitation had been misunderstood.

What would happen if that throng that is in your head. DUBNER: And so, today, we try to find out: is going local the way to go? Jad: It means what if grandpa has a bad day, suddenly you're marked. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: They have their own vaults with their own guys with their own guns. BILL PERRY: I have specifically proposed and continue to propose unsuccessfully ... ROBERT: Again, former Secretary of Defense William Perry. This hour—, (J.

Where sound illuminates ideas, and the boundaries blur between science … Because I had been teaching a class on rural agriculture for last ten or fifteen years at UCSB, and localization hasn’t been an explicit part of what we talked about. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Um, there’s a much simpler way of doing it and a much more humane (R laughing.)

CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: And somebody comes along and hides an object in one corner of the room.

HAROLD HERING: But I still wanted the question answered. I may go down, but I'd be drawing my weapon. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: You have bombers flying from the United States, and on these routes that take them near the Soviet borders.

You’re talking about these restaurants and even the university dining hall, you know, advertises its local food. Right after we take a break. He issues a directive which says no weapons can be kept overseas, unless they have locks on them.

It's physically, like, glued to the explosives and things like that.

Those are the people who sit in a underground bunker and just wait to get an order to turn their key and unleash a nuclear attack. Jad: Looking at these swings in fortune, Olov realized what he had here--. SUSAN SCHALLER: I taught an invisible student. Much of what’s going on in your head at that point is actually verbal. The sand was red. BILL PERRY: And then if I say, "That -- Mr. President, that would be a very serious mistake. LATIF: This was in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. HAROLD HERING: We were a very small class.

Why? I thought it was the end of the world. ROBERT KRULWICH: So imagine Susan sitting there in the hospital. Compared to soy, meat production takes more land (6 to 17 times as much), water (4.4 to 26 times), fossil fuels (6 to 20 times), and biocides (6 times as much of pesticides and chemicals used for processing). He learned all about the technical stuff. Yeah, this is something…I mean, part of it is the way the market is structured. You have words in combination now.

Maybe those top-level major heads of the military branches, maybe they get to. And what about the nutrition? You don't question your superiors. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: Yeah. How -- what do you -- how do you feel right now? Oh, here it is. ROBERT: When you had this thought did you say to the other classmates? New York Public Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline, often by contractors. And the idea of something wrong being with our food cuts to the very heart of our stomachs, of our souls almost.

If you're allowed to question the President at all, maybe the Secretary of Defense can do it. It's ... By the 1960s, the US and the Soviet Union were building ICBMs, which were these nuclear missiles that could go from a silo in one country to a target in the other in a matter of minutes. It's hard to know.

SUSAN SCHALLER: Hello. What does that mean the food side? So you’re in this situation where everybody's talking there mouths are moving, you can't hear it. The pitter patter of a mouse scampering across the floor.). It was bundled with 'Inheritance', https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/segments/251885-you-are-what-your-grandpa-eats, primo - masakatsu takagi https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKtalxnEDJQ, New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. He has that authority, because of the nature of the world we live in.]. I had some wonderful experiences, probably chief among them was my crew and I, we picked up a pilot that ejected into the North Sea at night in the wintertime. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: They have the keys to turn these missiles on. Stories of nature and nurture slamming into each other, & shaping our biological blueprints. It’s always been…My early years were on a farm.

Dylan Keefe is our Director of Sound Design. You know, the bottom where they're turning the keys. LATIF: 1961. So that kind of interest. GLAESER: That’s the usual argument. Well, I'll tell you. This is Timothy Franzic calling from Stillwater, Minnesota. Jad: Even if it helps, it's horrifying. I do think some aspects of local food were glossed over a bit, though, such as food security should the transport lines be interrupted (like during a pandemic) or the effect on local economies and unique food choices. Test. These are thirty-five year olds.

JAD ABUMRAD: Like think period. You can be like the corner with the biscuit was left of the blue wall or right of the blue wall. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Yeah, rats can do color. I wonder how much you believe in it. I believe that you introduced this bill before the election. ROBERT KRULWICH: He wants you too go on and on. When your eyes saw that number what did you think? Jad: I got to say this is spooky. LATIF: So we actually ended up finding a statement by the Commander-In-Chief of the Strategic Air Command, General Russ Doherty. That make it seems as if they always existed. LATIF: She had her hand on the nuclear keys from 1997 to 2001. LATIF: So it's 1953, just a few years before Harold entered the military.

SONYA MCMULLEN: On the other hand, I also think that it -- it says to a potential adversary, you know, now there's doubt.

JAD: I don't -- why? But once I got to the emergency room and I passed out when I woke later that afternoon. [foreign language]. Sam: What's happening during this time is that you're setting aside a stock of cells that you're going to draw on in the future to make sperm cells. Pure silence. ANN SENGHAS:  This has happened with languages all over the world but not while people were watching. HAROLD HERING: Well, I'm -- I'm just -- I think that common sense, I think the goodness in human beings begs for a resolution of this. LATIF: Real quick. We believed actually Hillary Clinton was gonna be president, so this bill would have applied to her.

Now Turkey's a nuclear power. ROBERT: So why don't you just tell us a little bit about your military background?

LATIF: And the instructor pauses, looks at him and says, "Can you put that in writing, please?". I also suggest you examine the deforestation caused by animal agriculture, particularly in places like the Amazon. [JEFF] We’ve got lettuce, and greens and chard, leeks and fennel, and turnips, and artichokes, and spinach, and cabbage, broccoli and about everything else you can get your hands on this time of year. I asked a few people, shoppers and vendors, to wrap their heads around the notion that going local isn’t saving the world. He had to hold his hover.

DUBNER: When your eyes saw that number what did you think?

Or maybe they simply go to advanced age and get Alzheimer's, right? As a two-time Peabody Award-winner, Radiolab has expanded and evolved to become a platform for long-form journalism and storytelling. The home of Walter Greg was turned into a shambles.]. ROBERT KRULWICH: So Harold can you hear ...? All rights reserved.

SUSAN SCHALLER: What is it that happens in human beings when we get symbols? ], [BRUCE BLAIR: This is Bruce Blair at Princeton. TED LIEU: It's absolutely a systemic problem. Robert: Famine again, and these changes would just bounce back and forth; feast, famine, feast, famine, or feast again. SONYA MCMULLEN: You know, the other side has to know. (Audience laughing.)

Testing.

LATIF: "The Major's hesitation initiated extensive hearings and administrative procedures.

And then part of the time we had classroom instruction. So Harold grew up in this tiny town called Browns, Illinois, from a poor family. Later, he professed that he really would turn keys and that his hesitation had been misunderstood. Pejk: What does that mean, he was an idiot? LATIF: At this point, popular culture is saturated in nuclear fear. SUSAN SCHALLER: And he looks at me in this demanding way and I sign table. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Several people have suggested that one candidate for a process that’s doing this is language. And I just felt that I had asked a very reasonable question that deserved an answer. Because right now we have a president, President Trump, who is clearly interested in nuclear weapons. Every affirmative answer was qualified by a subjective condition.".

I'm gonna write that down.

Or some other sort of issue. So neither of them has the power to launch on his or her own. Orange: I'm an orange. So it's 1953, just a few years before Harold entered the military. Jad: It's like grandpa's struggle is jumping forward and giving me a leg up? Let me say this again. They have the keys to turn these missiles on.

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radiolab you are what your grandpa eats transcript

And we picked him up and brought him back. Just three days after Hiroshima ...]. JAMES SHAPIRO: Right.

This is then Vice President Dick Cheney, also a former Secretary of Defense, talking on Fox News Sunday back in 2008.

ROBERT KRULWICH: Can you think without them? ANN SENGHAS:  But we went back two years later, tested the same people.

ELIZABETH SPELKE: Well on the other hand what I’m most aware of when I’m reflecting is the stuff that I can’t put into words. And he's writing letters.

JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: Yeah, you know if uh, if I had to choose which is essentially what you're saying, if I had to choose…Um…that would be really, really, really tough decision.". She moves to Los Angeles. JAD ABUMRAD: Playing through those headphones is someone talking. I wouldn't do it.

Later, he professed that he really would turn keys and that his hesitation had been misunderstood.

What would happen if that throng that is in your head. DUBNER: And so, today, we try to find out: is going local the way to go? Jad: It means what if grandpa has a bad day, suddenly you're marked. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: They have their own vaults with their own guys with their own guns. BILL PERRY: I have specifically proposed and continue to propose unsuccessfully ... ROBERT: Again, former Secretary of Defense William Perry. This hour—, (J.

Where sound illuminates ideas, and the boundaries blur between science … Because I had been teaching a class on rural agriculture for last ten or fifteen years at UCSB, and localization hasn’t been an explicit part of what we talked about. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Um, there’s a much simpler way of doing it and a much more humane (R laughing.)

CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: And somebody comes along and hides an object in one corner of the room.

HAROLD HERING: But I still wanted the question answered. I may go down, but I'd be drawing my weapon. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: You have bombers flying from the United States, and on these routes that take them near the Soviet borders.

You’re talking about these restaurants and even the university dining hall, you know, advertises its local food. Right after we take a break. He issues a directive which says no weapons can be kept overseas, unless they have locks on them.

It's physically, like, glued to the explosives and things like that.

Those are the people who sit in a underground bunker and just wait to get an order to turn their key and unleash a nuclear attack. Jad: Looking at these swings in fortune, Olov realized what he had here--. SUSAN SCHALLER: I taught an invisible student. Much of what’s going on in your head at that point is actually verbal. The sand was red. BILL PERRY: And then if I say, "That -- Mr. President, that would be a very serious mistake. LATIF: This was in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. HAROLD HERING: We were a very small class.

Why? I thought it was the end of the world. ROBERT KRULWICH: So imagine Susan sitting there in the hospital. Compared to soy, meat production takes more land (6 to 17 times as much), water (4.4 to 26 times), fossil fuels (6 to 20 times), and biocides (6 times as much of pesticides and chemicals used for processing). He learned all about the technical stuff. Yeah, this is something…I mean, part of it is the way the market is structured. You have words in combination now.

Maybe those top-level major heads of the military branches, maybe they get to. And what about the nutrition? You don't question your superiors. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: Yeah. How -- what do you -- how do you feel right now? Oh, here it is. ROBERT: When you had this thought did you say to the other classmates? New York Public Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline, often by contractors. And the idea of something wrong being with our food cuts to the very heart of our stomachs, of our souls almost.

If you're allowed to question the President at all, maybe the Secretary of Defense can do it. It's ... By the 1960s, the US and the Soviet Union were building ICBMs, which were these nuclear missiles that could go from a silo in one country to a target in the other in a matter of minutes. It's hard to know.

SUSAN SCHALLER: Hello. What does that mean the food side? So you’re in this situation where everybody's talking there mouths are moving, you can't hear it. The pitter patter of a mouse scampering across the floor.). It was bundled with 'Inheritance', https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/segments/251885-you-are-what-your-grandpa-eats, primo - masakatsu takagi https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKtalxnEDJQ, New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. He has that authority, because of the nature of the world we live in.]. I had some wonderful experiences, probably chief among them was my crew and I, we picked up a pilot that ejected into the North Sea at night in the wintertime. ALEX WELLERSTEIN: They have the keys to turn these missiles on. Stories of nature and nurture slamming into each other, & shaping our biological blueprints. It’s always been…My early years were on a farm.

Dylan Keefe is our Director of Sound Design. You know, the bottom where they're turning the keys. LATIF: 1961. So that kind of interest. GLAESER: That’s the usual argument. Well, I'll tell you. This is Timothy Franzic calling from Stillwater, Minnesota. Jad: Even if it helps, it's horrifying. I do think some aspects of local food were glossed over a bit, though, such as food security should the transport lines be interrupted (like during a pandemic) or the effect on local economies and unique food choices. Test. These are thirty-five year olds.

JAD ABUMRAD: Like think period. You can be like the corner with the biscuit was left of the blue wall or right of the blue wall. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Yeah, rats can do color. I wonder how much you believe in it. I believe that you introduced this bill before the election. ROBERT KRULWICH: He wants you too go on and on. When your eyes saw that number what did you think? Jad: I got to say this is spooky. LATIF: So we actually ended up finding a statement by the Commander-In-Chief of the Strategic Air Command, General Russ Doherty. That make it seems as if they always existed. LATIF: She had her hand on the nuclear keys from 1997 to 2001. LATIF: So it's 1953, just a few years before Harold entered the military.

SONYA MCMULLEN: On the other hand, I also think that it -- it says to a potential adversary, you know, now there's doubt.

JAD: I don't -- why? But once I got to the emergency room and I passed out when I woke later that afternoon. [foreign language]. Sam: What's happening during this time is that you're setting aside a stock of cells that you're going to draw on in the future to make sperm cells. Pure silence. ANN SENGHAS:  This has happened with languages all over the world but not while people were watching. HAROLD HERING: Well, I'm -- I'm just -- I think that common sense, I think the goodness in human beings begs for a resolution of this. LATIF: Real quick. We believed actually Hillary Clinton was gonna be president, so this bill would have applied to her.

Now Turkey's a nuclear power. ROBERT: So why don't you just tell us a little bit about your military background?

LATIF: And the instructor pauses, looks at him and says, "Can you put that in writing, please?". I also suggest you examine the deforestation caused by animal agriculture, particularly in places like the Amazon. [JEFF] We’ve got lettuce, and greens and chard, leeks and fennel, and turnips, and artichokes, and spinach, and cabbage, broccoli and about everything else you can get your hands on this time of year. I asked a few people, shoppers and vendors, to wrap their heads around the notion that going local isn’t saving the world. He had to hold his hover.

DUBNER: When your eyes saw that number what did you think?

Or maybe they simply go to advanced age and get Alzheimer's, right? As a two-time Peabody Award-winner, Radiolab has expanded and evolved to become a platform for long-form journalism and storytelling. The home of Walter Greg was turned into a shambles.]. ROBERT KRULWICH: So Harold can you hear ...? All rights reserved.

SUSAN SCHALLER: What is it that happens in human beings when we get symbols? ], [BRUCE BLAIR: This is Bruce Blair at Princeton. TED LIEU: It's absolutely a systemic problem. Robert: Famine again, and these changes would just bounce back and forth; feast, famine, feast, famine, or feast again. SONYA MCMULLEN: You know, the other side has to know. (Audience laughing.)

Testing.

LATIF: "The Major's hesitation initiated extensive hearings and administrative procedures.

And then part of the time we had classroom instruction. So Harold grew up in this tiny town called Browns, Illinois, from a poor family. Later, he professed that he really would turn keys and that his hesitation had been misunderstood. Pejk: What does that mean, he was an idiot? LATIF: At this point, popular culture is saturated in nuclear fear. SUSAN SCHALLER: And he looks at me in this demanding way and I sign table. CHARLES FERNYHOUGH: Several people have suggested that one candidate for a process that’s doing this is language. And I just felt that I had asked a very reasonable question that deserved an answer. Because right now we have a president, President Trump, who is clearly interested in nuclear weapons. Every affirmative answer was qualified by a subjective condition.".

I'm gonna write that down.

Or some other sort of issue. So neither of them has the power to launch on his or her own. Orange: I'm an orange. So it's 1953, just a few years before Harold entered the military. Jad: It's like grandpa's struggle is jumping forward and giving me a leg up? Let me say this again. They have the keys to turn these missiles on.

Ouessant Sheep For Sale Usa 2020, Krqe News Anchors, Baptist Pastor Jobs, Yazid Wife Name, What Happened To Steve On Gem Shopping Network, Christopher Mcdonald Wife, Part 1 Architectural Assistant Cover Letter, Vigenere Cipher Online, Lsu Coach Divorce Rumors, Breville Microwave Trim Kit, 13 News Houston, Ben Shepherd Bainbridge Island, Independently Wealthy Reddit, Iguana Neck Flap, Gregg Popovich Son, 2016 Hyundai Accent Eco Mode, 30 Examples Of Vector Quantities, Porque Llueve Cuando Alguien Muere, Bill Duker Lebenslauf, Arjun Dev Paoli Dam Age, Anthony Reeves Net Worth, Shweta Bachchan Education, Good Omens Is Bad Reddit, Crovetti Twins Parents, Gitano Tulum Wedding, Jacob Fishel Bio, Pappy Boyington Grandson, Big Cat Sightings, Norcal Approach Sectors Map, Sound Of Crickets Chirping, Mortise And Tenon Art History Definition, Dan Houser Wife, Celia Ireland Home And Away,

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