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Species Unite
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24:55Text “Do people even want to know about some of these issues? Because I think some of the meat production concerns, it's kind of like people would rather in some cases, I think some people might not really want to know all the nitty gritty. They don't want to know how the sausage is made. That poses an interesting question and challenge about how you communicate about some of these issues, when maybe there's a resistance among a subset of people who don't want to know more.” - Patti Truant Anderson This is the fourth episode in a special four-part series where we go deep into the food system with some of the brightest minds from Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, an interdisciplinary center based out of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. One of the reasons that we did this series is because we're about to enter another four years with the Trump administration; and last time, as we know, the Trump administration was pretty terrible for the food system in terms of climate, public health, worker safety, and of course, for the animals. This conversation is with Patty Truant Anderson. Patty is a senior program officer at the center. Part of her work at the Center focuses on public opinion polling around the food system. These polls can inform decisions by lawmakers. The great news is we're not nearly as polarized as it might seem. There is a lot of hope in the results. Links: Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future - https://clf.jhsph.edu/ Patti Truant Anderson - https://clf.jhsph.edu/about-us/staff/patti-truant-anderson…
LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK explicit
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Contenu fourni par Jeffrey Schreckler. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Jeffrey Schreckler ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
LOST HIGHWAY is a unsolved network searching for age old questions of the life we live. Along this journey to discover the truth, we encounter and discover a little bit more about who we are. Regardless of the legend (bigfoot , lost dutchman area 51 etc) we search out the clues that will lead us to the answers of the universe . We are treasure hunters and the only thing that changes in our journey is the treasure itself . Knowledge also can be five times more valuable than gold . We risk "condtions" to find the clues that will make unsloved riddles "SOLVED" and we never stop. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
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27 episodes
Tout marquer comme (non) lu
Manage series 3214589
Contenu fourni par Jeffrey Schreckler. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Jeffrey Schreckler ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
LOST HIGHWAY is a unsolved network searching for age old questions of the life we live. Along this journey to discover the truth, we encounter and discover a little bit more about who we are. Regardless of the legend (bigfoot , lost dutchman area 51 etc) we search out the clues that will lead us to the answers of the universe . We are treasure hunters and the only thing that changes in our journey is the treasure itself . Knowledge also can be five times more valuable than gold . We risk "condtions" to find the clues that will make unsloved riddles "SOLVED" and we never stop. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
…
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27 episodes
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×1 APACHE WARS -Paul Andrew Hutton- BLACK FLAG PODCAST 1:07:06
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1:07:06Paul Andrew Hutton is an American cultural and military historian, an award-winning author, documentary writer, and television personality. He is also Distinguished Professor of History at the University of New Mexico, a former executive director of the Western History Association, and a past president of Western Writers of America. He was born in Frankfurt, Germany, and adopted as an infant by an American Air Force couple. Raised around the world--in Germany, England, and Taiwan--as well as in Texas and Indiana, he attended college at Indiana University. He received his doctorate in American history in 1981, and has taught at both Utah State University (1977-1985) and at the University of New Mexico (1985-present). He is a six time winner of the Western Writers of America Spur Award and a six time winner of the Western Heritage Award from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. His first book, Phil Sheridan and His Army received the Billington Prize from the Organization of American Historians, the Evans Biography Award, and the Spur Award. He is also the editor of Western Heritage (2011), Roundup (2010), Frontier and Region (1997), The Custer Reader (1992), Soldiers West (1987), and the ten-volume Bantam Eyewitness to the Civil War series (1991-93). He has appeared in over 300 television shows on the History Channel, Discovery, PBS, NBC, CBS, BBC, Fox and other networks and has written a dozen documentaries for television and state and national parks. He also served as historical consultant on such Hollywood films as The Missing (2003), Cowboys and Aliens (2010), and Jane Got a Gun (2016) and even has a speaking role in David Zucker's Naked Gun 33 1/3 (1994). He has five children--Laura, Caitlin, Lorena, Chelsea, and Paul Andy--and lives in Albuquerque with wife Tracy and pups Bucky O'Neil and Annie Oakley. His latest book is The Apache Wars from Crown Publishing Group. Winner of the Western Writers of America Spur Award, The Apache Wars Winner of the Best Nonfiction Book Award from True West magazine, The Apache Wars --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 AMERICAN APOCALYPSE WHERE WILL YOU GO ? WHAT WILL YOU DO ? LOST HIGHWAY PODCAST 2:20:41
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2:20:41AMERICAN APOCALYPSE WHERE WILL YOU GO ? WHAT WILL YOU DO ? Do you have a plan when the next pandemic strikes ? The next Black out ? Riot ? social unrest ? Be Ready NOW. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 ALIENS and COVID 19 LOST HIGHWAY PODCAST 20:00
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20:00COVID 19 AND ALIENS. join me on the LOST HIGHWAY --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 COVID 19 THE Great unknown. LOST HIGHWAY PODCAST WITH J.Schreck 17:14
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17:14The truth from the false .... The Myth from the Fact ....you decide it is your Life and Your decision ...CHOOSE WISELY --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 Human sacrifice and cannibalism in the America's 1:42:07
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1:42:07Human sacrifice is the act of killing one or more humans as part of a ritual , usually intended to please or appease gods , a human ruler or an authorative/priestly figure, spirits or the dead ancestors , such as a propitiatory offerings or as a retainer sacrifice when a king's servants are killed in order for them to continue to serve their master in the next life. Closely related practices found in some tribal societies are cannibalism and headhunting . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 CONSPIRACY THEORY 101. j.schreck LOST HIGHWAY 1:00:40
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1:00:40Take a trip down the LOST HIGHWAY as we explore the unknown the mystery and the history of all things on and off the beaten path , --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 BEWARE OF THE SCAMMERS WHAT CAN BE DONE TO STOP THE CON ? MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 39:55
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39:55The skeemers and the dreamers , the scammers and the rammers are out in force today . You can't lay back anymore at all or these people will take what you got . Why can't the goverment do something about this fraud . We investigate !!! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 THE HISTORY AND THE MYSTERY BEHIND THE LOST DUTCHMAN GOLD MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 42:25
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42:25The Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine (also known by similar names) is, according to legend , a rich gold mine hidden in the southwestern United States . The location is generally believed to be in the Superstition Mountains , near Apache Junction , east of Phoenix , Arizona . There have been many stories about how to find the mine, and each year people search for the mine. Some have died on the search. The mine is named after German immigrant Jacob Waltz (c. 1810–1891), who purportedly discovered it in the 19th century and kept its location a secret. "Dutchman" was a common American term for a "German" ("Dutch" being the English cognate to the German demonym "Deutsch", not to be confused with the Dutch people ). The Lost Dutchman's is perhaps the most famous lost mine in American history. Arizona place-name expert Byrd Granger wrote, as of 1977, the Lost Dutchman's story had been printed or cited at least six times more often than two other fairly well-known tales, the story of Captain Kidd 's lost treasure, and the story of the Lost Pegleg mine in California . People have been seeking the Lost Dutchman's mine since at least 1892, [1] while according to one estimate, 8,000 people annually made some effort to locate the Lost Dutchman's mine. [2] Former Arizona Attorney General Robert K. Corbin is among those who have looked for the mine. [3] --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 NIKE ...TAKE A KNEE OR NOT .. WE TAKE A LOOK ... MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES 12:31
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12:31Now that the first wave of controversy is in the books , we take a look at Kaepernick (he plays football James ) NIKE and AMERICA --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 EVER DREAMED OF BEING INDIANA JONES ? NOW YOU CAN ! THE ARIZONA TREASURE HUNTER WILL TELL YOU HOW ! 1:22:41
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1:22:41EVER DREAMED OF BEING INDIANA JONES ? NOW YOU CAN ! THE ARIZONA TREASURE HUNTER WILL TELL YOU HOW ! . J.SCHRECK AND James have a candid talk with the Arizona Treasure hunter on how you can find treasure Today ! Ever dreamed of finding Spanish gold ? The Superstition mine ? or countless other treasures that are outhere ? Now you can and this podcast will get you going . Treasure hunting is the physical search for treasure . For example, treasure hunters try to find sunken shipwrecks and retrieve artifacts with market value. This industry is generally fueled by the market for antiquities. The practice of treasure-hunting can be controversial, as locations such as sunken wrecks or cultural sites may be protected by national or international law concerned with property ownership, marine salvage , sovereign or state vessels, commercial diving regulations, protection of cultural heritage and trade controls. Treasure hunting can also refer to geocaching – a sport in which participants use GPS units to find hidden caches of toys or trinkets, or various other treasure-hunting games . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 DATA / ANALYTICS ...THEY GOT YOU BY THE BALLS ...BRO WHO ARE THEY ? MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 21:39
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21:39They are tracking you like wild game .... They say its for your own good ... the two biggest lies ever told 1 we are here to help 2 where glad to see you and by the way WHO ARE THEY ? --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 THE LOST PRICELESS PAINTING IN THE SUPERSTITION MOUNTAINS MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 15:30
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15:30Ted DeGrazia rode into the Superstition Mountains, a string of packhorses in tow. The packs were loaded with sleeping bags, camping gear, cameras and food. A bottle of scotch. It was early May of 1976, sunny and warm but not yet hot, and a group of the artist’s friends came along. They rode all afternoon and made camp in a valley of prickly pear and manzanita. There were ancient Indian dwellings in the cliffs above, a bright moon in the night sky. All his life, DeGrazia had struggled to earn a living as an artist. For years, the public ignored him, galleries rejected him and critics had little good to say about his work. But he continued to paint, surviving a failed marriage, the Great Depression and lukewarm sales until at last his work caught on with the public. By that warm day in 1976, his work was worth so much that the Internal Revenue Service told him it might create a tax problem for his heirs. DeGrazia decided to make a statement to the agency. He invited some of his friends to ride with him into the Superstitions and they set up camp. Some of the horses had carried unsold paintings in their saddlebags, which DeGrazia gathered up and took over to the stack of wood. Sometime around noon, he lit a match, and the wood caught fire. One by one, DeGrazia started to burn his paintings.DeGrazia rode into the Superstitions “with an entourage of 20 people,” the Johnsons write. They stopped for a snack around noon, got back on their horses and rode deeper into the desert. They could see Weavers Needle in the distance as they came over a rise and dropped into a valley of desert scrub. They made camp under tall cliffs, the valley bathed in moonlight. DeGrazia loved the Superstitions, their tales of lost gold and hidden treasure, their rugged beauty. He made frequent trips there, searching for gold, riding horses. He even started to build a gallery there but abandoned the project.Whatever the burning was, a publicity stunt or a political statement, it seemed to affect DeGrazia emotionally, perhaps because the artist painted not just what he saw, but what he felt. “I think it was like destroying his own children," Laber said. "That’s the kind of person he was." DeGrazia didn’t paint again for another two or three years. The story is he took two racks of paintings in cylinders and hid them in the mountains . A map was supposed to be given to his wife of the location . The paintings where never found . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
1 SENSITIVITY AND RACISM 2019 OLD VIEW VS YOUNG VIEW CAN'T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG 27:26
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27:26Have we got to sensitive ? How does that play out in racism 2019 ? Are we capable of even having this conversation ....Well we tru anyway come along for the ride stay for the view ............... --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 GOD VS THE DEVIL MYTHS LEGENDS LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 16:55
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16:55We all have our beliefs or non beliefs , what are yours ? This is a discussion for the ages ..................... --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support
1 THE FBI RAID A WAREHOUSE FULL OF BODY PARTS PLUS A COOLER FILLED WITH TESTICLES ..... NOT KIDDING 17:23
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17:23FBI agents stumbled upon a house of horrors after raiding a body-donation company in Arizona, discovering a warehouse containing a refrigerator filled with penises, buckets of limbs, pools of blood, and a human head sewn onto another body “in a ‘Frankenstein’ manner.” The Biological Resource Center (BRC) in Phoenix, a for-profit business that assists people with donating their bodies to science , was raided by the FBI in January 2014 as part of a nationwide criminal investigation. New court documents of a civil lawsuit against the BRC have now revealed more grueling details of the investigation, The Arizona Republic and ABC15 Arizona report. The former owner of the BCR, Stephen Gore, pleaded guilty to one count of illegal control of an enterprise in 2015 and received a sentence of four years probation. However, he now faces a civil lawsuit set to trial on October 21, 2019. At least 33 plaintiffs are suing the body-broking business, alleging the remains of their family members were obtained through "false statements" and their bodies were not stored, treated, or disposed of appropriately. Former FBI agent Mark Cwynar stated that he saw “various unsettling scenes” at the BRC in Phoenix, including numerous dead bodies that appeared to have been played with as a "morbid joke.” One of the most shocking scenes he witnessed was a small woman’s head sewn onto a large male body “like Frankenstein” that was then hung up on the wall. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
A tour along Northern Arizona's Route 66 and Interstate 40 which traces the original path of Route 66 is a nostalgic adventure as well as a geography and history lesson for the whole family. The tour passes through picture-perfect scenery including the cool pine country of Northern Arizona. Experience a plethora of scenic and historic attractions as you venture through small town America. Imagine walking back through time in a place where dinosaurs once roamed over 225 million years ago. A time when lush green forests ruled the landscape with 200 foot tall conifers. Volcanic mountains erupted toppling the trees. Swept away by waterways and covered with volcanic ash and sediment, these trees became entombed and over millions of years became petrified. Through gradual erosion, gigantic logs and remnant pieces became exposed for the world to experience.Arizona, arguably, boasts the most interesting geology in the country. Along with the Grand Canyon and red rocks of Sedona , Meteor Crater , known by scientists as Barringer Crater, is a testament to this statement. Located under forty miles east of Flagstaff , the location is a 50,000 year old crash site formed when a meteorite hit the earth. Travelers visiting this region of the state will want to plan a special trip to view this bit of cosmic history.Stand at the Walnut Canyon observation point and gaze across these canyon walls and imagine what life was like for the ancient Sinagua Indians that that once lived in the cliff dwellings at Walnut Canyon. For reasons that are a mystery, they left Walnut Canyon about 800 years ago. Take a hike along Rim or Island Trails and enter some of cliff dwellings and see many others nestled into the alcoves of the canyon walls.Mention Arizona and people conjure-up images of cactus and hot desert. Not in Flagstaff. This is cool high mountain country. At an elevation of about 7,000 feet, Flagstaff features thick forests, bounding wildlife and sky blue mountain lakes all back-dropped by the San Francisco Peaks , the highest mountain range in Arizona at 12,633 feet. Combined with its high elevation and low humidity, Flagstaff, Arizona is definitely a four-season, all year vacation paradise with all the outdoor adventure you can handle.Laid-back, rustic and still very much “western”, Williams Arizona still sustains the character of its rough and rowdy days. Although the saloons are still the gathering place, the brothels and gambling halls are a thing of its frontier past. Williams AZ is also located on the Historic Route 66 . Named after William “Old Bill” Williams, an early day trapper, William's history is best known as the center of the Sante Fe Rail Line, ranching and old lumber mills. Just 58 miles from the South Rim of the Grand Canyon , tourism began with buckboard and stagecoach tours of the canyon.Kingman is located in northwest Arizona just off Interstate 40 about 95 miles from Las Vegas, Nevada and about 150 miles west of Flagstaff, Arizona . Hoover Dam is about 67 miles northwest of Kingman via US 93. Kingman sits at an elevation of 3,336 feet east of the rugged Black Mountains. The population of Kingman and its surrounding area is about 40,000. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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1 TORTURE IN THE OLD WEST MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES J.SCHRECK 25:06
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25:06If there’s one thing that few of us like to consider, it’s torture. I know that when I watch THE LAST OF THE MOHIGANS, I fast forward through those scenes that are full of abuse and torture. And if this is the case, you might wonder why in the world I am posting about it. Well, in doing research for my next book, like it or not, I have had to take a deep breath and confront what others have written about Native Americans in those pages that I’m reading. If you’ve watched 50’s movies about the West, you might have noticed that thdemonstate torture now and again. Hero’s are tested by it — heroines are nauseated to the point of grief over it. And the Indians themselves test their enemies by it. It goes without saying that torture is a human rights violation (non-fair treatment of prisoners) and one could say — if they look closely at world history — that a culture which indulges in torture is a culture on its way out. Look at Rome, the Druids, the Eastern Indians, the Mayans and Aztecs, Egypt, Spain and the Middle Ages when the robber barons owned castles that came complete with dungeons and the “very best” torture equipment. In truth, history shows us — if you really care to study it — that times of enlightenment are noted not by outrage and war against one’s fellows, but rather by a people’s kindness and indulgence toward one another.This was not the case for the southern Indians, however. There is ample record of the torture of prisoners amongst the southern tribes, the Apache and Comanche and the Pawnee specifically. But why torture? Why torment another living soul? In reading over the book, THE DEATH AND REBIRTH OF THE SENECA by Anthony F.C. Wallace, we learn that Mary Jennison — who was a captive of the Seneca, described her husband at one time in these terms, “During the term of nearly fifty years that I lived with him, I received, according to Indian customs, all the kindness and attention that was my due as his wife. — Although war was his trade from his youth till old age and decrepitude stopt his career, he uniformly treated me with tenderness, and never offered an inslt… He was a man of tender feelings to his friends, ready and willing to assist them in distress, yet, as a warrior, his cruelties to his enemies perhaps were unparalleled… In early life, Hiokatoo showed signs for thirst for blood, by attending only to the art of war, in the use of the tomahawk and scalping knife, and in practising cruelties upon every thing that chanced to fall into his hands, which was susceptible of pain. In that way, he learned to use his implements of war effectually, and at the same time blunted all those fine feelings and tender sympathies that are naturally excited by hearing or seeing, a fellow being in distress. He could inflict the most excruciating tortures uhis enemies, and prided himself upon his fortitude , in having performed the most barbarous ceremonies and tortures, with the least degree of pity or remorse. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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1 MURDER OR SUICIDE ? WHAT DO YOU THINK ? THE JEFFREY EPSTIEN SAGA ...........MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 56:01
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56:01A gurney was wheeled out of the facility at 7:30 AM Saturday and taken to a nearby hospital following an apparent 911 call reporting cardiac arrest ... this according to the NY Post. There was a big development in the scandal Friday when legal docs became public, naming other prominent, private and public, individuals, including a senator and former cabinet member who were allegedly involved in Epstein's sexual exploits. Those people have denied involvement. Epstein was awaiting trial on charges of conspiracy and sex trafficking. Some of his alleged victims were as young as 14. The alleged abuse occurred between 2002 and 2005. The site of the alleged abuse was Epstein's swanky Upper East Side townhouse, as well as his Palm Beach waterfront mansion. 11:28 AM PT -- Law enforcement sources familiar with the matter tell TMZ ... Epstein was taken off suicide watch after he met with medical professionals who evaluated him after his first alleged suicide attempt. We're told Epstein was found to be well enough to be sent back to his cell in the Special Housing Unit without extra eyes on him. So, Epstein was briefly on suicide watch, but at some point between July 23 and today ... he was removed. 10:36 AM PT -- A federal law enforcement source tells TMZ ... Epstein was off suicide watch at the time he hanged himself. The source would not comment on why prison officials would remove Epstein from suicide watch given that they believed he may have attempted suicide days earlier. 9:44 AM PT -- Attorney General William Barr just weighed in on Epstein's suicide, saying, "Mr. Epstein's death raises serious questions that must be answered. In addition to the FBI's investigation, I have consulted with the Inspector General who is opening an investigation into the circumstances of Mr. Epstein's death." 9:19 AM PT -- There are now reports Epstein may not have been under suicide watch. Sources familiar with the case say that would be a violation of protocol, since anyone suspected of being suicidal is put on suicide watch, and authorities believed the first incident was a suspected suicide attempt. So, if he was on suicide watch, how did this happen, and if he wasn't on suicide watch, why wasn't he? 8:29 AM PT -- Law enforcement sources tell us, the protocol in the Suicide Watch Unit where Epstein was held is for monitors to record the movements of the inmates. So, there should be video showing exactly what happened ... unless someone erased over it. And this is especially puzzling -- our law enforcement sources say Epstein's cell was so bright he was complaining he was unable to sleep. Fact is, whatever happened should have happened in plain sight of the guards. The U.S. Dept. of Justice says the FBI is now investigating. 7:42 AM PT -- What's interesting ... the facility had Epstein in the Special Housing Unit Suicide Watch since the first incident. Guards were supposed to "maintain the inmate under direct, continuous observation," 24-hours a day. The lights in the unit are not even turned off, which makes this whole situation odd. 6:51 AM PT -- Federal law enforcement sources tell TMZ Epstein hanged himself in the facility. Jeffrey Epstein , the man accused of horrific sex crimes against underage women, has killed himself behind bars. Prison guards found him dead Saturday morning at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan. This appears to have been his second attempt at taking his life. He was found unresponsive in his cell last month, and it appeared to be a suicide attempt . --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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1 STORM AREA 51 !! PART 3 THE ATTACK OF THE CHADS/KYLES STORM THE GATE MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES J.SCHRECK 18:42
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18:42PART 3 In the middle of the barren Nevada desert, there's a dusty unmarked road that leads to the front gate of Area 51. It's protected by little more than a chain link fence, a boom gate , and intimidating trespassing signs. One would think that America's much mythicized top secret military base would be under closer guard, but make no mistake. They are watching. Beyond the gate, cameras see every angle. On the distant hilltop, there's a white pickup truck with a tinted windshield peering down on everything below. Locals says the base knows every desert tortoise and jackrabbit that hops the fence. Others claim there are embedded sensors in the approaching road.What exactly goes on inside of Area 51 has led to decades of wild speculation. There are, of course, the alien conspiracies that galactic visitors are tucked away somewhere inside. One of the more colorful rumors insists the infamous 1947 Roswell crash was actually a Soviet aircraft piloted by mutated midgets and the wreckage remains on the grounds of Area 51. Some even believe that the U.S. government filmed the 1969 moon landing in one of the base's hangars . For all the myths and legends, what's true is that Area 51 is real and still very active. There may not be aliens or a moon landing movie set inside those fences, but something is going on and only a select few are privy to what's happening further down that closely-monitored wind-swept Nevada road. "The forbidden aspect of Area 51 is what makes people want to know what's there," says aerospace historian and author Peter Merlin who's been researching Area 51 for more than three decades. "And there sure is still a lot going on there."he beginning of Area 51 is directly related to the development of the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft . After World War II, the Soviet Union lowered the Iron Curtain around themselves and the rest of the Eastern bloc, creating a near intelligence blackout to the rest of the world. When the Soviets backed North Korea's invasion of South Korea in June 1950 , it became increasingly clear that the Kremlin would aggressively expand its influence. America worried about the USSR's technology, intentions, and ability to launch a surprise attack—only a decade removed from the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Known by its map designation as Area 51, this middle-of-nowhere site became a new top-secret military base. To convince workers to come, Kelly Johnson , one of the leading engineers of the U-2 project, gave it a more enticing name: Paradise Ranch. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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1 HOW VICES CHANGED AMERICAN HISTORY MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 14:34
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14:34FROM a wake-up cup of coffee to an afternoon cocktail to smoking a cigarette, many people depend on chemical substances for a lift. Thus the reason for ''Altered States: Alcohol and Other Drugs in America,'' an exhibition at the Barnum Museum in Bridgeport through Dec. 27, which takes a look at America's use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs from the early settlers' involvement in the tobacco and rum trade to today's drug and alcohol abuse concerns. The exhibition, arranged by the Strong Museum in Rochester, N.Y., gained critical acclaim and became a traveling exhibition on mood-altering temptations. ''We brought it here,'' said Barbara Kram, the museum's executive director, ''because P. T. Barnum, a recovering alcoholic, was a temperance proponent. He used his promotional talents to make statements about alcohol and drug abuse. In his American Museum in Manhattan, he staged temperance plays and encouraged membership in a teetotalers' society.'' The Barnum Museum uses flags to lead visitors along a time line from the 1600's to the present day. In the first of five sections, viewers are propelled back to Colonial America where settlers, introduced to tobacco by native Americans, quickly spread it to the Old World. The period witnessed the growth of the rum trade as well. ''In 1656, water was unsafe, milk was scarce and tea, coffee and chocolate were luxuries,'' said Yvonne Fosse-Previs, the museum's curator of education. ''For these people, alcohol was a staple.'' During the 1700's Americans are seen distilling whiskey. But by 1784 the Philadelphia doctor Benjamin Rush disputed the belief that alcohol was healthful and diagnosed drunkenness as a progressive disease. Nonetheless by 1860 consumption had risen to record proportions. A temperance movement was born. Throughout, artifacts enliven the topic. A huge Wooten Patent Office secretary, its doors filled with labeled cubbyholes, was donated by the temperance-minded women in appreciation of Mr. Barnum's support. His theater -- like a grand opera house with tiers, balconies, archways and tassel draperies -- is pictured, along with a playbill with the title ''The Drunkard.'' Showcases displayed bitters bottles; many, like opium, were available without prescription. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 APACHE DEATH CAVE GHOSTS ON THE TRAIL MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES J.SCHRECK 13:46
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13:46When it comes to hauntings, you can't get much creepier than land cursed by Native Americans. There's a reason it's a common theme in horror films. Developer buys land, learns that there's an Indian burial ground there, builds anyway, dies a horrible death. But that's all just cliche Hollywood scares, right? Maybe not, at least when it comes to the terrifying tale of Arizona's Apache Death Cave. On a small patch of land near Canyon Diablo, just off Interstate 40, lies the ghost town known as Two Guns . Though there are still crumbling reminders of the town's use a 20th century tourist attraction, it's been abandoned for well over half a century... though the region's Native American tribes have been avoiding the area for a lot longer than that. According to their legends, the dead cursed the land, and anyone who dared reside there was risking the anger of spirits who met a terrible fate. Naturally, white dudes didn't listen, leading to some eerily-predicable ends worthy of their own horror films. But more on that in a bit.The angry spirits, hell-bent on revenge, are thought to be a lost band of Apaches, who in 1878 conducted a bloody raid in which they murdered every man, woman, and child in a Navajo camp (save for three girls kidnapped for, well, nefarious reasons), before ransacking the village. As soon as the Navajo leaders caught wind of the massacre, they organized their revenge, sending two dozen of their best warriors out to track the Apache through the desert. Soon, news arrived that there had been another raid, and a small search party was deployed near Canyon Diablo. Just when they were about to give up on their quest, they stumbled upon a bizarre anomaly in the desert. A blast of intensely hot air suddenly shot through the ground, startling the men and their horses. As the trackers took a closer look, they discovered that the Apaches had actually taken shelter in a huge underground cave, large enough to hold 42 men and their horses. The heat from their fires had risen through the ground, giving away their position.The scouts quickly returned to their party where they devised a plan to exact quick and terrible revenge. After silently taking out the Apache nightwatchmen, the Navajo warriors gathered up as much dry brush and canyon driftwood as they could carry. They quietly piled the materials at the entrance of the cave hideout and set it alight. It wasn't long before smoke began to billow through the cave, choking the Apaches who had been hiding.After using what was left of their water reserves in an attempt to put out the approaching blaze, the Apache raiders made a gruesome last ditch effort to snuff the fire - they slit the throats of their horses, saving what little oxygem that remained for themselves and using the animals' blood to douse the flames. It was no use. they were trapped, and they knew it. The legend says that a lone Apache managed to break through the brush, only to be quickly captured by the Navajos. The man begged and pleaded for mercy, offering to give back all they had stolen, and more, in exchange for the lives of he and his men. It was a deal that the Navajos were prepared to accept, at least until one of the men asked what happened to the three kidnapped girls. The answer so enraged the revenge party that they threw the man back into the fire and added more fuel. When the smoke and the screams had finally subsided, the Navajo party cleared away the ashes and were met with a gruesome scene. A wall of charred horses were piled high, a makeshift barrier between the trapped men and the flames. Behind the wall of burnt meat lied the bodies of the Apache men, 42 in all, who had suffocated inside the cave. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 ATTACK AREA 51 PART2 WILL THE ATTACK OF THE KYLES HAPPEN ? MYTHS LEGENDS LIES WITH JA. SCHRECK 27:46
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27:46PART 2 In the middle of the barren Nevada desert, there's a dusty unmarked road that leads to the front gate of Area 51. It's protected by little more than a chain link fence, a boom gate , and intimidating trespassing signs. One would think that America's much mythicized top secret military base would be under closer guard, but make no mistake. They are watching. Beyond the gate, cameras see every angle. On the distant hilltop, there's a white pickup truck with a tinted windshield peering down on everything below. Locals says the base knows every desert tortoise and jackrabbit that hops the fence. Others claim there are embedded sensors in the approaching road.What exactly goes on inside of Area 51 has led to decades of wild speculation. There are, of course, the alien conspiracies that galactic visitors are tucked away somewhere inside. One of the more colorful rumors insists the infamous 1947 Roswell crash was actually a Soviet aircraft piloted by mutated midgets and the wreckage remains on the grounds of Area 51. Some even believe that the U.S. government filmed the 1969 moon landing in one of the base's hangars . For all the myths and legends, what's true is that Area 51 is real and still very active. There may not be aliens or a moon landing movie set inside those fences, but something is going on and only a select few are privy to what's happening further down that closely-monitored wind-swept Nevada road. "The forbidden aspect of Area 51 is what makes people want to know what's there," says aerospace historian and author Peter Merlin who's been researching Area 51 for more than three decades. "And there sure is still a lot going on there."he beginning of Area 51 is directly related to the development of the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft . After World War II, the Soviet Union lowered the Iron Curtain around themselves and the rest of the Eastern bloc, creating a near intelligence blackout to the rest of the world. When the Soviets backed North Korea's invasion of South Korea in June 1950 , it became increasingly clear that the Kremlin would aggressively expand its influence. America worried about the USSR's technology, intentions, and ability to launch a surprise attack—only a decade removed from the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Known by its map designation as Area 51, this middle-of-nowhere site became a new top-secret military base. To convince workers to come, Kelly Johnson , one of the leading engineers of the U-2 project, gave it a more enticing name: Paradise Ranch. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 ATTACK AREA 51 PART 1 WILL THE ATTACK OF THE KYLES HAPPEN ? MYTHS LEGENDS LIES WITH JA. SCHRECK 25:26
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25:26In the middle of the barren Nevada desert, there's a dusty unmarked road that leads to the front gate of Area 51. It's protected by little more than a chain link fence, a boom gate , and intimidating trespassing signs. One would think that America's much mythicized top secret military base would be under closer guard, but make no mistake. They are watching. Beyond the gate, cameras see every angle. On the distant hilltop, there's a white pickup truck with a tinted windshield peering down on everything below. Locals says the base knows every desert tortoise and jackrabbit that hops the fence. Others claim there are embedded sensors in the approaching road.What exactly goes on inside of Area 51 has led to decades of wild speculation. There are, of course, the alien conspiracies that galactic visitors are tucked away somewhere inside. One of the more colorful rumors insists the infamous 1947 Roswell crash was actually a Soviet aircraft piloted by mutated midgets and the wreckage remains on the grounds of Area 51. Some even believe that the U.S. government filmed the 1969 moon landing in one of the base's hangars . For all the myths and legends, what's true is that Area 51 is real and still very active. There may not be aliens or a moon landing movie set inside those fences, but something is going on and only a select few are privy to what's happening further down that closely-monitored wind-swept Nevada road. "The forbidden aspect of Area 51 is what makes people want to know what's there," says aerospace historian and author Peter Merlin who's been researching Area 51 for more than three decades. "And there sure is still a lot going on there."he beginning of Area 51 is directly related to the development of the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft . After World War II, the Soviet Union lowered the Iron Curtain around themselves and the rest of the Eastern bloc, creating a near intelligence blackout to the rest of the world. When the Soviets backed North Korea's invasion of South Korea in June 1950 , it became increasingly clear that the Kremlin would aggressively expand its influence. America worried about the USSR's technology, intentions, and ability to launch a surprise attack—only a decade removed from the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Known by its map designation as Area 51, this middle-of-nowhere site became a new top-secret military base. To convince workers to come, Kelly Johnson , one of the leading engineers of the U-2 project, gave it a more enticing name: Paradise Ranch. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 PETROGLYPHS ARE ALIEN MESSAGES ? MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 11:40
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11:40The sandstone cliffs of Sego Canyon are a spectacular outdoor art gallery of petroglyphs painted and carved by Native Americans peoples over a period of around 8,000 years. They are characterised by more than 80 imposing and haunting life-sized figures with hollowed eyes or missing eyes and the frequent absence of arms and legs. Some claim that the mysterious figures are evidence of alien visitation in our ancient past, while scholars maintain that the strange beings represent shamanistic visions produced in trance-like states. Evidence of human habitation in Sego Canyon dates back to the Archaic Period (6,000 – 100 BC). But subsequent Anasazi, Fremont, and Ute tribes also left their mark upon the area, painting and chipping their religious visions, clan symbols, and records of events into the cliff walls. The rock art of Sego Canyon can be characterised according to a number of distinctive styles, and time periods. The oldest art belongs to the Archaic period and dates to between 6,000 BC and 2,000 BC. Some of the most spectacular examples of rock art in the Southwest are attributed to Archaic people. They were nomads, who hunted large and small game animals, and collected and processed wild plants. They did not build permanent habitation structures, but lived in caves and in small brush shelters built in the open --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 THE MYSTERY OF THE PHOENIX LIGHTS ALIENS ? MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 17:58
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17:58At about 18:55 PST (19:55 MST), a man reported seeing a V-shaped object above Henderson, Nevada . He said it was about the "size of a ( Boeing ) 747 ", sounded like "rushing wind" and had six lights on its leading edge. The lights reportedly traversed northwest to the southeast. An unidentified former police officer from Paulden, Arizona , is claimed to have been the next person to report a sighting, after leaving his house at about 20:15 MST. As he was driving north, he allegedly saw a cluster of reddish or orange lights in the sky, comprising four lights together and a fifth light trailing them. Each of the individual lights in the formation appeared to the witness to consist of two separate point sources of orange light. He returned home and through binoculars watched the lights until they disappeared south over the horizon. Lights were also reportedly seen in the areas of Prescott and Prescott Valley . At approximately 20:17 MST, callers began reporting the object was definitely solid, because it blocked out much of the starry sky as it passed over. John Kaiser was standing outside with his wife and sons in Prescott Valley when they noticed a cluster of lights to the west-northwest of their position. The lights formed a triangular pattern, but all of them appeared to be red, except the light at the nose of the object, which was distinctly white. The object, or objects, which had been observed for approximately 2 to 3 minutes with binoculars, then passed directly over the observers, were seen to "Bank to the right", and then disappeared in the night sky to the southeast of Prescott Valley. The altitude could not be determined; however, the object was fairly low and made no sound whatsoever. The National UFO Reporting Center received the following report from the Prescott area: “ While doing astrophotography I observed five yellow-white lights in a "V" formation moving slowly from the northwest, across the sky to the northeast, then turn almost due south and continue until out of sight. The point of the "V" was in the direction of movement. The first three lights were in a fairly tight "V" while two of the lights were further back along the lines of the "V"'s legs. During the NW-NE transit one of the trailing lights moved up and joined the three and then dropped back to the trailing position. I estimated the three light "V" to cover about 0.5 degrees of sky and the whole group of five lights to cover about 1 degree of sky --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 FLYING CARS IN LAKE HAVASU ARIZONA MYTHS LEGENDS AND LIES WITH J.SCHRECK 11:49
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11:49In 1926, Henry Ford displayed an experimental single-seat aeroplane that he called the " sky flivver ". The project was abandoned two years later when a distance-record attempt flight crashed, killing the pilot. The Flivver was not a flying car at all, but it did get press attention at the time, exciting the public that they would have a mass-produced affordable airplane product that would be made, marketed, sold, and maintained just like an automobile. The airplane was to be as commonplace in the future as the Model T of the time. In 1940, Henry Ford famously predicted: "Mark my word: a combination airplane and motorcar is coming. You may smile, but it will come.” In 1942, the Soviet armed forces experimented with a gliding tank, the Antonov A-40 , but it was not capable of flying on its own. The Aerocar designed and built by Molt Taylor made a successful flight in December 1949, and in following years versions underwent a series of road and flying tests. Chuck Berry featured the concept in his 1956 song " You Can't Catch Me ", and in December 1956 the Civil Aviation Authority approved the design for mass production, but despite wide publicity and an improved version produced in 1989, Taylor did not succeed in getting the flying car into production. In the period between 1956-1958, Ford 's Advanced Design studio built the Volante Tri-Athodyne, a 3/8 scale concept car model. It was designed to have three ducted fans, each with their own motor, that would lift it off the ground and move it through the air. In public relation release, Ford noted that "the day where there will be an aero-car in every garage is still some time off", but added that "the Volante indicates one direction that the styling of such a vehicle would take" In 1957, Popular Mechanics reported that Hiller Helicopters was developing a ducted-fan aircraft that would be easier to fly than helicopters, and should cost a lot less. Hiller engineers expected that this type of an aircraft would become the basis for a whole family of special-purpose aircraft. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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LOST HIGHWAY WITH J. SCHRECK
1 THE LOST DUTCHMAN MAFIA ...was it real ? 11:38
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11:38In the world of the lost dutchman treasure hunters there was a group of people that used to run the superstition mountains. Even though most of the "mafia" is gone there is still a group that still keeps a watchful eye on all the treasure hunters . This tale involves two German men, Jacob Waltz and Jacob Weiser. However, Blair argued that there is a strong likelihood that there never was a second man named Weiser, but rather that a single person named Waltz was, over the years, turned into two men as the legend of the Dutchman's mine evolved. Blair contended that this story can be divided into "hawk" and "dove" versions, depending on whether the German(s) are said to behave violently or peacefully. In most versions of the tale, Jacob Waltz located a rich gold mine in the Superstition Mountains (in many versions of the story, they rescue or help a member of the Peralta family and are rewarded by being told the location of the mine). Weiser is attacked and wounded by marauding Apaches, but survives at least long enough to tell a man called Dr. Walker about the mine. Waltz is also said to make a deathbed confession to Julia Thomas, and draws or describes a crude map to the gold mine. John D. Wilburn in his book Dutchman's Lost Ledge of Gold (1990), wrote that the Bulldog Gold Mine near Goldfield, Arizona , fits very well the description Jacob Waltz gave as the location of his 'lost mine'. Furthermore, Wilburn stated that geology indicates that there is no gold in the Superstition Mountains, which are igneous in origin. (However, in some versions, the 'mine' is actually a cache put there by the Peraltas.) --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jeffrey-schreckler/support…
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