The Veterans News Hour with David C Cory
Topics: PTSD treatment, coping with depression, and managing stress
John Oates met Daryl Hall while attending Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. The two began collaborating and playing music together, marking the beginning of their historic partnership. Since their formation in the early 70s, Daryl Hall & John Oates have gone on to record 21 albums, which have sold over 80 million units, making them the most successful duo in rock history. They have scored 10 number one records, over 20 Top 40 hits, and have toured the world for decades.
Every Day Peace with Dr Dravon James
Are the practices of meditation and mindfulness conflicting with your religious beliefs? Do religious practices have the same significance and important role in the modern life experience? Paul John Roach discusses the future of religion.
Here We Stand with Reverend Kevin D. Annett
Topic: A War to the Death: The History of an Ongoing Crime
The Roots of the COVID Tyranny: We ignore the crimes done to others to our own peril.
Kevin gives a live opener to a 2010 interview about Genocide - Global and Local (A rerun from August 23, 2020)
Chuck and Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden
Guest, Ted Trimpa
Win, lose or draw? Democrat Ted Trimpa joins Chuck and Julie today to talk about last night’s Presidential debate. Plus former FBI Director James Comey tells Senate investigators “I know nothing” when asked about the fake Russia probe.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tPAGUUh-3Gg&feature=youtu.be
The True History with Tara Green and Rama Arjuna and guests
Shadow Politics with Senator Michael Brown and Maria Sanchez
2020 presidential election, the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the president's choice to replace her and much more.
John McLaughlin began his career playing blues and rock in London in the early 1960s and went on to play free jazz with important British figures before moving to the United States in 1969. There he contributed rock- and blues-derived guitar passages to Miles Davis’s early fusion albums In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew (both 1969) and played in Tony Williams’s seminal jazz-rock trio Lifetime.