CoinDesk Podcast Network - BREAKDOWN: The Top 10 Things That Happened in Bitcoin 2022
From Lightning startups to Taro and beyond.
This episode is sponsored by Nexo.io, Circle and Kraken.
On this year’s final “Long Reads Sunday,” NLW reads “The 10 Biggest Developments in Bitcoin in 2022” by Cory Klippsten, Tomer Strolight and Sam Callahan.
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Nexo is a security-first platform where you can buy, exchange and borrow against your crypto. The company ensures the safety of your funds and keeps innovating with products like the Nexo Wallet - a non-custodial smart wallet that allows you to create your Web3 identity. Get early access at nexo.io/wallet.
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Circle, the sole issuer of the trusted and reliable stablecoin USDC, is our sponsor for today’s show. USDC is a fast, cost-effective solution for global payments at internet speeds. Learn how businesses are taking advantage of these opportunities at Circle’s USDC Hub for Businesses.
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Kraken, the secure, trusted digital asset exchange, is our sponsor for today's show. Kraken makes it easy to instantly buy 185+ cryptocurrencies with fast, flexible funding options. Your account is covered by regular Proof of Reserves audits, industry-leading security and award-winning Client Engagement, available 24/7. Sign up and trade today at kraken.com/breakdown.
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“The Breakdown” is written, produced by and features Nathaniel Whittemore aka NLW, with editing by Rob Mitchell and research by Scott Hill. Jared Schwartz is our executive producer and our holiday theme music is "Spike The Eggnog" by Two Dudes. Music behind our sponsors today is “Back To The End” by Strength To Last. Image credit: Andriy Onufriyenko/Getty Images, modified by CoinDesk. Join the discussion at discord.gg/VrKRrfKCz8.
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Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons - Reset Music Faves: Please Have A Seat And Listen To Nnamdi’s New Album
Motley Fool Money - How Much Does Santa Weigh?
We're taking a break from investing and stock talk to discuss: - Santa's actual weight - Murder's surprising popularity as an entertainment device - Best movie Santas - Alcoholic holiday drinks - "Cereal Derangement Syndrome" - Fascination with the NY Post's front page - Rule changes we would make in the NBA, NHL, and MLB - Who should narrate a classic McSweeney's essay To cast your vote for your favorite sports rule change, email podcasts@fool.com. Host: Chris Hill Guests: Bill Barker, Bill Mann Engineer: Rick Engdahl
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NBN Book of the Day - Kenneth B. Moss, “An Unchosen People: Jewish Political Reckoning in Interwar Poland” (Harvard UP, 2021)
The early 1930s constituted an ambiguous moment for the roughly three million Jews that resided in the Polish Republic. On the one hand, as recent scholars have emphasized, Polish Jews found numerous opportunities to partake in flourishing cultural and political projects that spanned the ideological spectrum from Zionism to Yiddishism to Polish integrationism to various brands of socialism. In addition, Josef Pilsudski’s government – while by no means an ally to Polish Jewry – was the lesser of two evils compared to the explicitly anti-Semitic Endecja regime that ruled the country by the end of the decade. At the same time, however, trouble lurked around every corner. Polish Jews found their earning opportunities deeply limited, due to both economic depression and a widespread social prejudice that blocked them from getting jobs. Even more concerning, the rise of fascist politics – in Poland and abroad – made clear the fledgling state’s weaknesses, and cast a shadow of doubt over any sense that acceptance would prevail over national hatred. Polish Jews now grappled with the possibility that Jewish life in Eastern Europe might not be feasible going forward. What was to be done amidst these precarious circumstances? How was one to plan for the future, both as an individual and as a member of a minority community? How was one to handle the anxiety of unclear and multifarious dangers?
In his new volume An Unchosen People: Jewish Political Reckoning in Interwar Poland (Harvard UP, 2021), Kenneth Moss has resurrected the mentalité of those that struggled daily with these questions, illustrating what it meant for Polish Jews to grope for meaning in the face of constant uncertainty and real dread. To accomplish this task, Moss has assembled and examined an astounding breadth of documents produced by people from throughout Polish Jewish society. Readers will find analyses of Polish Jewish intellectual luminaries like Max Weinreich, Jacob Lestschinsky and Chaim Grade, each of whom allowed recent events to influence and mutate their understandings of Jewish life and community. Moss also shines a light on more common Jews that no less vociferously sought to forge practical and pragmatic solutions to their increasingly dire situations. The result is a monograph dedicated to the daily experience of minority life in the modern world; a world permeated by a sense of unease at what tomorrow might bring.
James Benjamin Nadelis a Ph.D. student in the Department of History at Columbia University.
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Everything Everywhere Daily - Christmas Foods
Of the many traditions associated with the Christmas season, one of the biggest is food. Foods that are often eaten only at this time of the year and seldom outside of the season.
Unlike other Christmas traditions, food can vary greatly in different places, as well as through time. Many Christmas foods eaten in the past can’t even be found today.
Learn more about Christmas food and how these traditions differ around the world and throughout history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Subscribe to the podcast!
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The NewsWorthy - Special Edition: Celebrating the Good of 2022
On this Christmas Eve, we’re taking a break from the serious headlines and focusing only on positive news stories that resonated with audiences this year. The founder of “Good Good Good” and creator of the Goodnewspaper Branden Harvey joins us again for what’s become an annual year-in-review here.
If you’re not familiar, “Good Good Good” is an independent media company focused on the good in the world. Today, we’re talking about how to seek out more good in the news each day and how to become the good news in our own lives. Plus, Branden shares some of the most popular stories from Good Good Good’s website and social media as we celebrate the good of 2022.
The good news stories referenced in this episode:
- Instead of a Wall, a Binational Park To Be Built on Border of Texas & Mexico
- Patagonia's Founder Has Given His Company Away To Fight Climate Change
- Building From Rubble: How To House Internally Displaced Ukrainians
- Sportsmanship between Little League players
- Harry Styles helped register voters
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.com/newsworthy and the Moms and Murder podcast
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More or Less: Behind the Stats - Numbers of the Year 2022
Tim Harford discusses the numbers that help explain some of the biggest stories of the year, including the war in Ukraine, soaring inflation and a breakthrough for women?s football, with the help of Olga Ivshina, correspondent for the BBC Russian service; Chris Giles, economics editor of the Financial Times; Linda Bauld, professor of public health at the University of Edinburgh and Georgina Sturge, author and House of Commons statistician.
It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 64
All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file.
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