28 January, 2007

Listen Live: Monday Free Talk Live

Posted by alex in Free Talk Live at 12:20 am | Permanent Link

Show concluded

Join host Geoff Beck along with callers and guests this Monday. Alex too will be joining the broadcast and rescheduled special guest Robert Wewelsburg returns to discuss Aryan religion, the Nazis and National Socialism.

Note: Aryan hero and Canadian internal exile Tomasz Winniki is scheduled to appear.

Preshow begins at 6:00 PM CST / 7 PM EST

Talk begins at 7 PM CST / 8 PM EST

For those with plain old telephones we have a conventional phone number: 660 675 4388, though we prefer skype calls. Regardless, please attempt to send a chat message with skype before calling.

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Note: to use skype you’ll need a headset and PC.

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This Monday at 7 PM CST / 8 EST / 23:00 GMT click this icon:


  • 9 Responses to “Listen Live: Monday Free Talk Live”

    1. kiess/.308 Says:

      Viacom
      — Thu, Dec 21, 2006 —

      Media Blitz: Fat Guy, Skinny Wife Sitcom Plot Loses Another Veteran

      • Jewish newspaper is okay with Judith Regan hating on Jews, so long as she hates on other ethnic groups too.

      • Rupert Murdoch gets feet wet in National Geographic Channel.

      • CBS moves things around to finally get rid of a nine-year run of Fat Guy, Skinny Wife.

      • The dude from Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle is the new weather guy?

      • Viacom no longer interested in being Person of the Year.

      • In Fox vs. FCC, we’ll have a good laugh no matter who reigns supreme.

      Read More: CBS, FCC, Fox, Judith Regan, News Corp., Viacom, YouTube

      (1 Comments)
      This Minute: Paid $ix + Awards + Gossip Industry + Time Inc. + New York Times

      • Media Blitz: Fat Guy, Skinny Wife Sitcom Plot Loses Another Veteran
      • Battling YouTube is Priority No. 1, Unless It Gets In the Way of Ego Massaging
      • Media Blitz: Rupert Murdoch and Si Newhouse, Now Connected By Just 1 Degree
      • Boycotting Viacom Is Like Boycotting Wal-Mart: It Can’t Be Done
      Send tips! [email protected]

      — Mon, Dec 11, 2006 —

      Battling YouTube is Priority No. 1, Unless It Gets In the Way of Ego Massaging

      Some of the nation’s top media outfits – including NBC, CBS, Viacom, and Fox – have met to discuss a possible partnership to create their own YouTube rival and battle Google against web video dominance.

      Some of the media companies have been discussing creating a YouTube competitor since the beginning of the year. Fox, CBS, NBC and Viacom, for instance, discussed a proposal from News Corp. that video content be hosted on Fox’s MySpace Web site, a popular social-networking site. But CBS, NBC and Viacom weren’t willing to put their content on a News Corp.-owned outlet.
      And then the networks realized their egos were larger and far more important than the possibility of earning gobs of online video ad revenue.

      Read More: CBS, Fox, NBC, Viacom, YouTube

      (2 Comments)
      — Fri, Dec 1, 2006 —

      Media Blitz: Rupert Murdoch and Si Newhouse, Now Connected By Just 1 Degree
      • News Corp. gets in to bed with Conde Nast. In Australia.

      • Daily Show and Colbert Report exec producer Ben Karlin steps down (resigns?) after seven years with Jon Stewart. His legacy? Ruining Jon Stewart’s set.

      • Hearst doesn’t know who to give the Seventeen job, but they’re hopeful!

      • On the Internet, nobody knows you’ve got a paper product.

      • Treehugger.com is so in demand, every glossy home magazine editor wants ’em.

      • Those closed-door discussions about MSNBC’s The Most? Perhaps just a time slot switch.

      • Viacom’s new chief Philippe Dauman knows how to run a company: keep a beautiful woman by his side.

      • Jack Shafer says the newspaper industries woes began 30 years ago — before there even was an Internet to blame.

      Read More: Conde Nast, Jack Shafer, MSNBC, News Corp., Seventeen Magazine, The Daily Show, Viacom

      (0 Comments)
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      — Fri, Nov 17, 2006 —

      Boycotting Viacom Is Like Boycotting Wal-Mart: It Can’t Be Done

      What better way for YouTube enthusiasts to get their message across about copyright infringerment than by a Star Wars-esque video posted on YouTube? That’ll teach those bullies at Viacom.

      Read More: Copyright, Viacom, YouTube

      (0 Comments)
      — Thu, Nov 9, 2006 —

      Jiblets: Lindsay Doesn’t Have A Cute Name Like ‘Firecrotch’ For Paris

      • “Paris is a cunt.” Said often, but not by Lindsay Lohan.

      • Unable to give her a win, Fox gives American Idol contestant Kellie Pickler her own show.

      • The networks still don’t really “get” bloggers. Not that there’s anything to get.

      • Courtney Love stripping down for a magazine spread is actually something we’re less interested in seeing than Anna Nicole stripping down for a magazine spread.

      • CNN gets scaredy-fraid about letting Bill Maher out politicos on Larry King Live.

      • News Corp. profits surge, Viacom not so much — giving new chief Philippe Dauman an excuse to dismiss CFO and Tom Freston hanger-on Mike Dolan.

      Read More: American Idol, CNN, Censorship, Courtney Love, Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Viacom

      (0 Comments)
      — Tue, Sep 5, 2006 —

      Tom Freston Out At Viacom, Sumner Redstone’s Memo In At Jossip

      Magazines aren’t the only place where top-level shifts go down. Today, Viacom (owner of much-in-the-news Paramount) announced Tom Freston, its chief of 26 years, has stepped down and will be replaced Philippe Dauman. Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone’s memo to staffers, after the jump. The real reason for Freston’s departure, soon to come.

      [More]
      Read More: Sumner Redstone, Tom Freston, Viacom

      (1 Comments)

      — Tue, Oct 25, 2005 —

      Media Blitz: Wenner Books on life support

      • Dick Cheney is the original source of the Valerie Plame leak, despite what the veep’s chief of staff Lewis Libby told a federal grand jury. Scooter says he got the name from journalists, while some legalese leakers say it was Cheney who informed his wingman. (And then the game of telephone stopped when Sally’s mom made the girls turn the lights off.) [E&P]

      • We heard over the weekend that Wenner Media was dropping its book division entirely, but now it turns out it’s just department chief Bob Wallace who, along with his assistant, is out the door (who, it’s no surprise to share, we hear has “long been unhappy” with the gig). The publishing unit will stay on, but only because its ties to Disney’s Hyperion Books allow Jann Wenner to maintain control of a media “empire.” And just when Wallace actually got a staff! [WWD]

      • Don’t get the wrong idea: When Viacom splits itself into two major units, chairman Sumner Redstone doesn’t plan on exiting, nor (he says) did he ever give that impression. Instead, he’ll help fuel ego battles between Tom Freston and Les Moonves. [NYDN]

      • Three hours of American Morning just isn’t enough, so CNN is cutting Daybreak from the 9-10am slot for a fourth hour of O’Brien Squared chatter. [TVNewser]

      • Meredith’s purchase of five magazines from Gruner + Jahr might actually have been a wise decision: first quarter profits are up 11 percent. Morale, meanwhile, hovers at Conde Nast levels. [Des Moines Register]

      • As expected, David Lee Roth is taking over Howard Stern’s West Coast market on Infinity, while Adam Corolla mans the East Coast gig. Stern, fresh off learning his studio would be outfitted with waterproof walls, is already disinterested. [SmartMoney]

      • Diane Sawyer is not taking over Peter Jennings’ World News Tonight gig, lest you think a major media company would put a woman in such a commanding position. For the record: We said “woman,” not Elizabeth Vargas. [Houston Chronicle]

      • Does anyone want the top spot at Men’s Journal? Zinczenko? Foxman? Essex? Bueller? [WWD]

      Read More: ABC, CNN, Cable News, Dick Cheney, Howard Stern, Jann Wenner, Meredith Corp, Peter Jennings, Robert Wallace, Sumner Redstone, Valerie Plame, Viacom, Wenner Media

      — Thu, Oct 13, 2005 —

      MTV spreads its legs for Madonna

      How many ways can MTV love Madonna? They’re managing to love her nearly the number of times she’s reinvented herself, in fact.

      Because the “music” network’s promotion of Madge’s 2003 American Life went so splendidly, they’re going at it again for her upcoming Confessions On A Dance Floor. Let’s take a look at just how many manager blowjobs were dished out:

      • Madonna takes to TRL this Monday (Oct. 17) to play her first single “Hung Up”
      • MTV airs her documentary I’m Going to Tell You a Secret on Oct. 21, spawned from her Re-Invention Tour
      • The following week, VH1 and Logo will also begin airing the film
      • VH1 will premiere the video for “Hung Up” later this month, following by heavy play on MTV
      • Interviews will start running incessently on all Viacom properties remotely related to music

      And somewhere in the middle, Madonna’s album will actually drop.

      MTV to Premiere Madonna Videos, Film [AP]
      Earlier: Madonna at The Roxy?

      Read More: MTV, Madonna, Music, Viacom

      — Fri, Sep 30, 2005 —

      Media Blitz: Eisner checks out of Hotel Disney

      • Without that house in the Hamptons to let all his friends crash at, Men’s Health editor David Zinczenko is having a hard time getting anyone to laugh at his jokes.

      • Coincidence that the Weinstein brothers leave Disney today, the same day Michael Eisner is splitting after 21 years? We thought not.

      • Martha Stewart’s supposed TV comeback isn’t exactly wowing viewers and, in turn, isn’t exactly wowing advertisers.

      • If Janice Min gets anymore press this week, we might actually have to buy a copy of Us Weekly.

      • Sumner Redstone isn’t content with Rupert Murdoch being the only one using family members to infest his media empire, so he’s signed on wife Paula to “audit” some of Viacom’s L.A. media properties.

      • The New York Times really scored with its editorial on Palestinian Prime Minister Abbas. Except they didn’t.

      • Donny Deutsch is finally getting around to understanding hatred, but not the type aimed at him, apparently.

      • With the new divorce magazine Rosenkrieg (it’s German, kids), you can start reading about your future in a glossy instead of a fortune cookie.

      Read More: David Zinczenko, Disney, Donny Deutsch, Janice Min, Martha Stewart, Michael Eisner, Sumner Redstone, Us Weekly, Viacom

      — Wed, Sep 14, 2005 —

      Media Blitz: ASME ‘targets’ New Yorker

      • Fox is raising the stakes for American Idol advertisers, raising 30-second spot fees to $700,000 (reportedly the largest ever for a regular primetime show).

      • The New Yorker got a slap on the wrist from ASME for its all-Target issue that didn’t include much (if any) notice that the retailer’s illustrations were indeed advertisements. You know, because the mag’s high-brow readers might’ve thought otherwise.

      • Martha Stewart is working on a new lifestyle magazine that’s already a month behind its schedule to premiere on newsstands by Spring 2006. They’re testing titles with focus groups and right now it’s just being referred to as “the new magazine.” But no matter what, Martha’s name won’t be appearing on the cover.

      • Despite the New York Post’s alleging Viacom and Comast were working together to create new super niche cable networks, heads at both media companies are denying any such arrangement.

      • After much busy talk Google is finally launching its blog search engine, which is only going to give even more undeserved authority to our likelihood. Interestingly, a Google search for “blog search engine” doesn’t yet include its own site.

      • Rick Kaplan’s appointment of Situation Room’s exec producer Bill Wolff as executive of MSNBC’s primetime is being met with generally positive reviews (“There’s nothing negative about him”). Beside winning nicety awards, he can be seen chewing plenty of Nicorette, which we hope he’ll share with Keith Olbermann.

      Read More: ASME, American Idol, Bill Wolff, Blogs, Comcast, Google, MSNBC, Martha Stewart, New York Post, New Yorker, Viacom

      — Tue, Sep 13, 2005 —

      Media Blitz: Rick Kaplan getting the MSNBC boot

      • The days of Keith Olbermann bullying may be numbered, now that Rick Kaplan may be on his way out as MSNBC president. After getting passed over to head NBC News when Neal Shapiro announced his departure, his tenure there might not last the year.

      • Howard Kurtz is joining Geraldo Rivera’s cause, calling for the New York Times to issue an apology to the talk show host for claiming he staged a Hurricane Katrina rescue for the camera’s benefit.

      • While Rodale couldn’t make Organic Style work (though it still appears on the website), the publisher is going ahead with a full-scale launch for Women’s Health, the Men’s Health spin-off. Finally there will be some David Zinczenko-style loving for the ladies.

      • TV Guide president John Loughlin is quitting for the greener (and more stable) pastures at Hearst, taking over as vice president of the publisher late next month.

      • Viacom and Comcast are working together to launch a new swatch of super-niche cable channels, because the YES Network and The Food Network aren’t specific enough.

      • Clear Channel is clearing the way to get song from new artists and unsigned bands into the hands of listeners by debuting tracks on their website.

      • Is Men’s Vogue an oxymoron all by itself? If Anna Wintour falls out of her seat and nobody there’s to see it, did she really skip Diane Von Furstenberg’s fashion show?

      Read More: Clear Channel, Comcast, Geraldo Rivera, Howard Kurtz, Hurricane Katrina, MSNBC, Men’s Vogue, New York Times, Rick Kaplan, Rodale, TV Guide, Viacom

      — Tue, Sep 6, 2005 —

      When Les Moonves’ profile is more long-winded than he

      Sometimes, 8,000 words is just. too. much.

      We’re sure New York Times Magazine editor-at-large Lynn Hirschberg worked very hard on her Les Moonves Sunday piece, spending months attending meetings, conducting interviews, performing research and suffering through Joan of Arcadia.

      But surprisingly, there just isn’t enough about Les’ crusade to bring CBS to the number one spot while NBC dropped to fourth to warrant so many paragraphs.

      It could’ve been an enigmatic David vs. Goliath story of perseverance and dumb luck. But we’re as sorry to learn even 2,000 words of retelling 60 Minutes II’s cancellation (because it attracted older viewers, not because of Memogate, he claims) would’ve been excessive.

      If you were brave enough to get past his “leadership meeting,” Moonves himself could probably use your stamina. As for us, we’re going to stick to blogging, where churning out 300 words is exhausting.

      (And for a television network chairman that concedes Americans “do not like dark,” his cover is anything but.)

      Read More: CBS, Les Moonves, New York Times, Viacom

      — Fri, Sep 2, 2005 —

      Media compete for the biggest Katrina donation

      Since they’re doing a fine job exploiting (or is it “reporting on”?) Hurricane Katrina, the media are reaching into their deep pockets to help in the recovery efforts. They’re throwing around cash like Pat Sajak (and penning conservative editorials about as often), but for the benefit of the victims, it’s their egos that are driving their checkbook zeros.

      Hoping to top one another, media companies continue announcing just how many millions they’re handing out. Disney wrote checks worth $2.5 million, Comcast upped the ante with a $10 million donation and Viacom shortchanged New Orleans sufferers with just $1 million.

      Then again, every media org with a TV outlet is clamoring for a celebrity-fueled relief concert and the donated air time is probably worth more than the checks they’re writing. They’re just lucky the fall season hasn’t started yet — we’re not willing to miss any of The O.C. Even encore plays.

      (Image via AP Satellite)

      Read More: Comcast, Disney, Hurricane Katrina, Viacom

      — Wed, Aug 17, 2005 —

      CBS values its interns, at least more than AMI

      Perhaps American Media Inc. is having such a hard time finding interns because they’ll all decamped to CBS, where their opinions are actually being considered.

      Okay, let’s call it “being entertained.”

      A summer-long initiative that asked the network’s nearly 100 college-aged interns on how to attract younger viewers to its news program culminated in a meeting with top execs. As the New York Observer tells it, interns were free to submit ideas ranging from anchor switches to set design so long as they didn’t suggest moving the 6:30pm time slot of the evening news.

      Among the suggestions: Replace Bob Schieffer with a younger anchor, more international news coverage, upping the time slot to a full hour, canceling the anchor-to-correspondent “debriefings” and adding weather and sports segments.

      Nearly all of which were shot down by top brass.

      The only warmly-received tips included a suggestion for MTV-style reporting and more coverage of minorities.

      So how’d the NYO grab the story? By loud-mouthed interns, of course.

      Several interns spoke with The Observer about their experiences, asking that their names not be used. (Shortly after an Observer reporter contacted a CBS coordinator last week, interns received an e-mail instructing them not to speak with members of the press.)
      It’s the responsibility of all unpaid help to speak eloquently to the gossips, and it’s a pleasure knowing Viacom’s minions are fulfilling their journalistic responsibility. Least of all because, as it turns out, CBS actually didn’t give a shit.

      “The purpose was so they could see how the business works,” Ms. Mason said last week, adding that the project was “for them. This was for them to learn. It was not for us. Frankly, we weren’t looking for ideas for the evening news. We have a whole group of people working on that right now.”
      And they’re doing a great job, too! One minute while we reference your Nielsen scores.

      Read More: American Media Inc., Bob Schieffer, CBS, Internships, Viacom

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      Gossip? Rumors? Tip us off at [email protected].

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    2. Mati The Estonian Says:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teM4T3TylFc

      Vids like this makes me sad :-(

    3. Olde Dutch Says:

      Here’s one to kick around tonight—consider the political implications:

      Nuking The Economy
      Immigration Numbers Outnumber US Job Growth By 7,000,000
      By Paul Craig Roberts
      1-27-07

      Last week the Bureau of Labor Statistics re-benchmarked the payroll jobs data back to 2000. Thanks to Charles McMillion of MBG Information Services, I have the adjusted data from January 2001 through January 2006. If you are worried about terrorists, you don’t know what worry is.

      Job growth over the last five years is the weakest on record. The US economy came up more than 7 million jobs short of keeping up with population growth. That’s one good reason for controlling immigration. An economy that cannot keep up with population growth should not be boosting population with heavy rates of legal and illegal immigration.

      Over the past five years the US economy experienced a net job loss in goods producing activities. The entire job growth was in service- providing activities–primarily credit intermediation, health care and social assistance, waiters, waitresses and bartenders, and state and local government.

      US manufacturing lost 2.9 million jobs, almost 17% of the manufacturing work force. The wipeout is across the board. Not a single manufacturing payroll classification created a single new job.

      The declines in some manufacturing sectors have more in common with a country undergoing saturation bombing during war than with a super- economy that is “the envy of the world.”

      * Communications equipment lost 43% of its workforce. Semiconductors and electronic components lost 37% of its workforce.

      * The workforce in computers and electronic products declined 30%.

      * Electrical equipment and appliances lost 25% of its employees.

      * The workforce in motor vehicles and parts declined 12%.

      * Furniture and related products lost 17% of its jobs.

      * Apparel manufacturers lost almost half of the work force.

      * Employment in textile mills declined 43%.

      * Paper and paper products lost one-fifth of its jobs.

      * The work force in plastics and rubber products declined by 15%.

      * Even manufacturers of beverages and tobacco products experienced a 7% shrinkage in jobs.

      * The knowledge jobs that were supposed to take the place of lost manufacturing jobs in the globalized “new economy” never appeared.

      * The information sector lost 17% of its jobs, with the telecommunications work force declining by 25%.

      * Even wholesale and retail trade lost jobs.

      * Despite massive new accounting burdens imposed by Sarbanes-Oxley, accounting and bookkeeping employment shrank by 4%.

      * Computer systems design and related lost 9% of its jobs.

      * Today, there are 209,000 fewer managerial and supervisory jobs than 5 years ago.

      In five years, the US economy only created 70,000 jobs in architecture and engineering, many of which are clerical. Little wonder engineering enrollments are shrinking. There are no jobs for graduates. The talk about engineering shortages is absolute ignorance. There are several hundred thousand American engineers who are unemployed and have been for years. No student wants a degree that is nothing but a ticket to a soup line. Many engineers have written to me that they cannot even get Wal-Mart jobs because their education makes them over-qualified.

      Offshore outsourcing and offshore production have left the US awash with unemployment among the highly educated. The low measured rate of unemployment does not include discouraged workers.

      Labor arbitrage has made the unemployment rate less and less a meaningful indicator. In the past unemployment resulted mainly from turnover in the labor force and recession. Recoveries pulled people back into jobs.

      Unemployment benefits were intended to help people over the down time in the cycle when workers were laid off. Today the unemployment is permanent as entire occupations and industries are wiped out by labor arbitrage as corporations replace their American employees with foreign ones.

      Economists who look beyond political press releases estimate the US unemployment rate to be between 7% and 8.5%. There are now hundreds of thousands of Americans who will never recover their investment in their university education.

      Unless the BLS is falsifying the data or businesses are reporting the opposite of the facts, the US is experiencing a job depression. Most economists refuse to acknowledge the facts, because they endorsed globalization. It was a win-win situation, they said.

      They were wrong.

      At a time when America desperately needs the voices of educated people as a counterweight to the disinformation that emanates from the Bush administration and its supporters, economists have discredited themselves. This is especially true for “free market economists” who foolishly assumed that international labor arbitrage was an example of free trade that was benefitting Americans. Where is the benefit when employment in US export industries and import- competitive industries is shrinking? After decades of struggle to regain credibility, free market economics is on the verge of another wipeout.

      No sane economist can possibly maintain that a deplorable record of merely 1,054,000 net new private sector jobs over five years is an indication of a healthy economy. The total number of private sector jobs created over the five year period is 500,000 jobs less than one year’s legal and illegal immigration! (In a December 2005 Center for Immigration Studies report based on the Census Bureau’s March 2005 Current Population Survey, Steven Camarota writes that there were 7,9 million new immigrants between January 2000 and March 2005.)

      The economics profession has failed America. It touts a meaningless number while joblessness soars. Lazy journalists at the New York Times simply rewrite the Bush administration’s press releases.

      On February 10 the Commerce Department released a record US trade deficit in goods and services for 2005–$726 billion. The US deficit in Advanced Technology Products reached a new high.

      Offshore production for home markets and jobs outsourcing has made the US highly dependent on foreign provided goods and services, while simultaneously reducing the export capability of the US economy. It is possible that there might be no exchange rate at which the US can balance its trade.

      Polls indicate that the Bush administration is succeeding in whipping up fear and hysteria about Iran. The secretary of defense is promising Americans decades-long war. Is death in battle Bush’s solution to the job depression? Will Asians finance a decades-long war for a bankrupt country?

      Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.

    4. Geoff Beck Says:

      Olde D.

      If our special guest, mentioned in the original post, arrives will have a very full show.

      Though your Robert’s post is noteworthy.

    5. ROB Says:

      Hey, guys, are we going to see an archive for this show uploaded reasonably soon after the show’s finished and in its entirety? We still don’t have an archive for the last edition, hosted by Dietrich, and we only got a partial archive of the edition before that. Please, somebody keep an eye on the RECORD button.

    6. Dietrich Says:

      It got recorded. Why they don’t get archived is anyone’s guess. I had some space offered to me to put these up.

      http://nationalistplanet.com/Theseus1/VNNFTL070126-01.mp3

      http://nationalistplanet.com/Theseus1/VNNFTL070126-02.mp3

      http://nationalistplanet.com/Theseus1/VNNFTL070126-03.mp3

      http://nationalistplanet.com/Theseus1/VNNFTL070126-04.mp3

    7. sgruber Says:

      Mr. Beck is always doing something annoying during these shows. This time it was eating, chewing, lip-smacking all through the show – munching chips or something.

      When you broadcast, put the food away. If you must eat continuously for health reasons, keep your mouth away from the microphone. Thank you.

    8. jackumup Says:

      VNN media Broadcast in general is like a freight train its started slow and now is picking up momentum and won’t be stopped.
      Do what I do tell your friends to listen to free talk live, don’t tell them what its about or who is doing it, just that it is interesting and then watch them get hooked.

    9. AcropolisNow Says:

      It was a pleasure to listen to Tomasz- He seemed very natural and unaffected, not like he was putting on a false persona of what a nationalist is, just doing, believing and saying what is natural ,healthy and good for a white man to do and be (and ofr white folk in general). It’s so very good to hear from folk like him.

      He mentioned sometimes he feels like “What’s the point? People aren’t/don’t want to listen”. Don’t give up, Tomasz, keep on even if they don’t listen- so at the end you can say you tried, that you were never defeated, keep doing it because it’s right, period, and if you stop, it will only make you weak and sick inside.

      What’s my investment in encouraging you so much? Oh , not much *only* my children’s future and generations to come.