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Contralor (e) confirma que 26 EPS adeudan $25 billones; dice que 16 no cumplen la ley

En Caracol Radio estuvo el contralor (e), Carlos Mario Zuluaga, compartiendo detalles sobre el informe y la deuda que tienen las EPS




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Como siempre insistí, Icetex requiere una reforma profunda: Mauricio Toro tras renuncia

En Caracol Radio estuvo Mauricio Toro, director del Icetex, aclarando su salida y los logros en la entidad




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María Constanza García, Viceministra de Infraestructura




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Nuevos delegados del Estado Mayor Central de las Farc confían en el diálogo. ¿Qué dicen?




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¿Qué dice el informe de la Sociedad Colombiana de Ingenieros sobre el Metro de Bogotá?




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“Gustavo Bolívar me dijo que yo era una basura humana”: concejal Daniel Briceño

En 6M Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo el concejal de Bogotá, Daniel Briceño, para hablar sobre una queja disciplinaria en contra del nuevo director del DPS, Gustavo Bolívar.




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Pronóstico del clima para Semana Santa: IDEAM dice que marzo será de transición a lluvias




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“Hay desorden en las contrataciones por parte de la Alcaldía”: concejal Daniel Briceño

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo el concejal Daniel Briceño, quien tiene una serie de inconformidades respecto a las contrataciones que ha llevado a cabo la Alcaldía de Bogotá en sus primeros 100 días de gobierno.




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Emmanuel Briceño rinde emotivo tributo a Arnulfo Briceño en nuevo álbum ‘Canta Llano’

Emmanuel Briceño lidera emotivo tributo a su padre Arnulfo Briceño en álbum ‘Canta Llano’, con la destacada colaboración del artista colombiano Juanes.




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Estamos muy preocupados, Gobierno dice una cosa y hace otra: Fedetranscarga por aumento de ACPM

En Caracol Radio estuvo Henry Cárdenas, presidente de Fedetranscarga, conversando sobre aumento del ACPM




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¿Por qué tendría el viceministro Jorge Zorro los días contados en el gobierno Petro?

La ministra de Cultura Patricia Ariza no tuvo conocimiento alguno del viaje que realizó el viceministro Zorro para acompañar a Verónica Alcocer, durante su visita a Venezuela.




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¿Lo podrían multar por dejar a su mascota sola en casa? Esto dice la Ley

La senadora del partido Verde, Andrea Padilla, detalló en 6AM la normativa que permanece en Colombia para la protección de los animales y los proyectos que buscan un mayor impacto frente al maltrato animal




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¿Por qué visitar Amor-Acuyá, una de las mejores gelaterías del mundo? Esto dice la propietaria

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo Daniela Lince, propietaria de Amor-Acuyá, para hablar sobre esta gelatería, la cual hace parte de las 100 mejores del mundo.




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Carlos R. González dice que se estarían haciendo interceptaciones desde Palacio: René Guarín

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo René Guarín, jefe de Tecnología y sistemas de información de la Presidencia de la República, para hablar sobre la polémica que existe al rededor del tema de las interceptaciones ilegales.




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“Esperamos no haya más bloqueos en la vía Panamericana”: Viceministro del Diálogo Social

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo Gabriel Rondón, viceministro del Diálogo social y derechos Humanos, del ministerio del Interior, para hablar sobre los bloqueos de pueblos indígenas en la vía Panamericana.




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Le hemos rogado a la UNP que nos protejan y nos dicen que no hay recursos: alcalde Totoró

Tras el atentado que sufrió, Jorge Luis Pizo aseguró en 6AM que los alcaldes están desprotegidos y que han solicitado protección sin respuesta alguna.




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A esta hora no hay transporte, ni tránsito en la vía Bogotá-Villavicencio: Jorge Rey

Gobernador de Cundinamarca 




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Llevamos 16 horas en bloqueo de Vía Bogotá-Villavicencio: hincha de Millonarios afectada

Natalia Cajamarca, influencer, hincha de Millonarios en 6AM 




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Hay un conflicto de interés que no admiten: Briceño ante millonario contrato del Acueducto

En 6AM Hoy por Hoy de Caracol Radio estuvo Daniel Briceño, concejal de Bogotá, hablando sobre las irregularidades que encontró en un millonario contrato de la empresa de Acueducto de Bogotá?




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Hay deterioro en índices de libertad de expresión de medios: AMI sobre actos de violencia

En Caracol Radio estuvo Werner Zitzmann, director ejecutivo de la Asociación Colombiana de Medios de Información (AMI)




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A Fondo con Juan Carlos Echeverry: Índice de criminalidad y crimen organizado en el mundo

Varios países registran un alto índice de criminalidad, pero ponen sus ojos en Colombia ante los últimos acontecimientos




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No es posible que instrumentalicen niños en protestas: secretario Angulo

Roberto Angulo, secretario de Integración Social de Bogotá, hablo en 6AM sobre cómo va  a actuar el Distrito frente a la instrumentalización de menores en las manifestaciones de indígenas 




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Viceministra de Defensa confirma cancelación de concierto en El Plateado, Cauca, tras atentado

Daniela Gómez Rivas, viceministra de Defensa, hizo hincapié en 6AM sobre qué acciones están tomando ante los recientes ataques en la zona




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Viceministra de Defensa confirma cancelación de concierto en El Plateado, tras atentado

Viceministra de Defensa en 6AM




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Viceministra de Defensa confirma cancelación de concierto en El Plateado, tras atentado

Viceministra de Defensa en 6AM 




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Alcalde dice que salí a ganar reproducciones para no responder: afectada en Cartagena

Decire Díaz, mujer que asegura que le cobraron 100 mil pesos en taxi en Cartagena, habló sobre por qué la señalan de una acusación falsa 




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RECORDING: Award-Winning Jazz Hammond Organist Vel Lewis to Release New Single 'I Paid The Price' on November 15, 2024

Celebrated jazz Hammond organist Vel Lewis is set to release his highly anticipated new single, "I Paid The Price," a soulful and introspective piece showcasing his signature mastery of jazz, soul, and blues. The single will be available on all major streaming platforms on November 15, 2024. Lewis, known for his unmistakable touch on the Hammond organ, has crafted "I Paid The Price" to reflect his deep connection to life’s lessons, love, and the resilience that comes from overcoming challenges...




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Chicago may become the latest city to lose Greyhound bus services

Chicago may soon become the largest city in the northern hemisphere without an intercity bus terminal as Greyhound's downtown station is threatened.




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Voter frustration with rising prices had a major impact on the election

We look at the impact of inflation on the outcome of the presidential elections this week.




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President-elect Donald Trump still must decide who will lead the Justice Department

The incoming Trump administration has expressed a desire for a big overhaul at the Department of Justice and the FBI.




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Both houses of Congress need to elect leaders. How will Trump shape the choices?

Congress comes back for a lame-duck session with a packed agenda, including voting on a new Senate majority leader.





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How religious practice continues to transform through the pandemic

From the sounds of drive-in church services to a look at repurposing church buildings, how religious practice and its spaces continue to shift during the pandemic.




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Voice from Assisi: The Humble Friar with a Record Deal

Music has been part of the Franciscan tradition for centuries - but Friar Alessandro appears to be the first one with a big record deal.




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Voice from Assisi: The Humble Friar with a Record Deal

Music has been part of the Franciscan tradition for centuries - but Friar Alessandro appears to be the first one with a big record deal.




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Life-enriching advice from Harold Kushner

Rabbi Harold Kushner became a household name after he published his bestselling book Why Bad Things Happen to Good People. His signature blend of hard-earned wisdom, compassion and straight-talk have made him one of Tapestry’s most requested guests.




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She was sterilized without her consent at 14. Now she wants the practice made a crime

Author and activist Morningstar Mercredi is calling for an end to forced and coerced sterilization, in the hopes that women — especially First Nations, Inuit and Métis women — will never suffer the physical and mental trauma it inflicted upon her.



  • Radio/White Coat/ Black Art

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Alice Oswald on poetry, nature and the shedding of identity

In this 2016 conversation, Eleanor Wachtel speaks with the English poet about her poetry collection Falling Awake — and the enduring inspiration of the natural world.



  • Radio/Writers & Company

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Alice Munro wrote about life, love, sex and secrets — revisit her 2004 conversation with Eleanor Wachtel

Alice Munro died on May 13, 2024 at the age of 92. To commemorate her stunning legacy, Writers & Company looks back at a memorable conversation between Eleanor Wachtel and Munro back in 2004.



  • Radio/Writers & Company

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Jagmeet Singh tallies up the price for NDP to support fall throne speech: Chris Hall

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh tells CBC Radio's The House that he’s not looking to force an election this fall if the Liberal government follows through on commitments to help women and other marginalized groups affected by the COVID-19 lockdown.



  • Radio/The House

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Attacks on Kyiv, the myth of rainbow fentanyl, the rise of AI art, the price of Alex Jones' lies and more

Fear returns to Kyiv amidst renewed Russian attacks; Russia's new commander in Ukraine is known as 'General Armageddon' for his record in Syria; rainbow fentanyl is all the buzz on social media and so is the misinformation surrounding it; how Alex Jones piled on the trauma for the parents of mass shooting victims; watching a Louis CK show as #MeToo marks its five-year anniversary; why creators are divided over the rapid rise of AI-generated art; and more.



  • Radio/Day 6

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The lives of women, readers and Alice Munro

A group of women in St. John's, Newfoundland gather on a cold, autumn night for their regular book club. Over snacks, wine and tea, they discuss Alice Munro's work, and how her stories illuminate some of the deepest issues in their own lives. Munro's uncanny ability to shine light on darkened recesses of our inner lives earned her the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2013.




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Canadian couple rolls the dice on expensive yacht

It originated in Tibet. Then made its way onto a yacht. Then took over Canada. How the classic board game of Yahtzee came to be.



  • Radio/Under the Influence

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How are high grocery prices affecting you?

As Canada's inflation rate continues to slow, the same cannot be said for food prices. Groceries bought at stores are increasing at a pace of 11.4 per cent. And as some economists predict, there's reason to believe food prices could continue to climb because of currency and seasonal reasons. 



  • Radio/Cross Country Checkup

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How are you dealing with high prices in the lead-up to gift-giving season?

The rising cost of what sometimes seems to be everything has been one of the top stories this year. And the most expensive time of the year is now here. How have you gotten through the holidays in tough times previously, and what solutions have you come up with this year?



  • Radio/Cross Country Checkup

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CONTACT Open World: Technology leaders showcase best practices for digital transformation

Numerous new developments in CONTACT’s Elements platform and innovative digitalisation strategies will take centre stage at this year’s Open World.




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Systemic Racism in the Home Mortgage Context: We Don't Have Time to Notice


In 2020, pivotal events ushered in a season of antiracism rhetoric in the U.S. The brutal deaths of unarmed black Americans at the hands of police officers and white vigilantes, and the disproportionately harsh impact of COVID-19 in the black American community, launched the nation into a discussion about systemic racism. Unfortunately, it seems likely that the 2020 antiracism discourse was merely seasonal rather than enduring, and unlikely to result in meaningful change. 


Black American’s vulnerability in the face of systemic racism is not limited to death, sickness and injury as a result of COVID-19 or antiblack bias in police departments. Our vulnerability is precipitated by things like lack of access to nonpredatory financial services. This is just one of the contexts that compromise black Americans’ economic survival. Unacknowledged systemic racism destroys the wealth and wellbeing of black individuals, families and communities, sometimes causing working and middle-class black Americans to plummet into poverty. As 2020 comes to a close, an election that threatened democracy in the U.S. and the existential threats of an uncontrolled pandemic, eclipse a system of intentional antiblack racism on the part of the financial institutions that engaged in predatory mortgage lending in the years leading up to and beyond the 2008 recession. It is now well documented that lenders, brokers, and mortgage servicers engaged in conduct that was fraudulent and misleading. The mortgage market charged excessively high rates and fees, engaged in high-pressure sales tactics, imposed unnecessarily harsh prepayment penalties, and distorted loan structures to avoid the application of consumer protection statutes.  But, more than a decade later, many black Americans are still fighting to prevent financial institutions from taking away their homes. 


In a book I coauthored with Dr. Janis Sarra, a law professor at the University of British Columbia, Predatory Lending and the Destruction of the African American Dream (Cambridge University Press, 2020), we describe new iterations of predation that continue to target black consumers years after financial institutions settled litigation that alleged pervasive fraud on their part for steering black Americans into predatory subprime loans. But these renovated predatory practices are obscured by the nation’s focus on COVID-19 and a vitriolic election season. Meanwhile, more black Americans will lose their homes even after investing all or most of their wealth in attempts to keep them. This reality requires the calls for moratoriums on mortgage foreclosures to be answered in the affirmative.





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Corporate Justice at the Micro Level

Several years ago, my friend, colleague and mentor, andre cummings, and I created and defined what we call "Corporate Justice."  "At its core, Corporate Justice refers to a responsibility, even a moral obligation, which businesses and corporations have to engage fairly, civilly and responsibly in the world and community that they do business and from which they derive profits. More than that, the concept of Corporate Justice also focuses on the roles that shareholders, policy makers, other stakeholders and the community at large have in fostering a more just and responsible business community."  Our conversation led to the creation of a course, a book, several presentations, and this blog.  In conceptualizing "Corporate Justice," our primary focus was on large corporations and their impact on the world around us.  That perspective influenced much of the work we have completed on the topic as well as the way that we conceptualized its impact.  However, after a recent community event I facilitated here in Miami, Florida, I was presented with a thought provoking question “what does corporate justice mean for small businesses?”  I had never considered this question and realized that I had made a substantial oversight in failing to do so.  Small business are the life line of many communities and they meet the immediate needs of the people in areas in which they operate.  Given that reality, I have begun to critically think about what Corporate Justice at the “micro” level means.  Specifically, do small businesses have the same obligations that we might expect from large corporations?  Over the next few days I plan to think more about this question and welcome your input and insight.  Next week, I will provide you with my initial response.  I look forward to reading about your insights on the issue.  

 




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Ariana Grande’s ‘Eternal Sunshine’ dropped at midnight. Here are the Easter eggs fans have noticed so far.




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Loadsman prepares for big weekend on The Voice

Former Elizabeth Macarthur High School student Andrew Loadsman has progressed to the final eight as a contestant on The Voice, and will fight for a place in the top four on Sunday night.