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Genre: Politics X
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The Bigger Picture: The UK Chancellor’s Spending Review

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: The Bigger Picture

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The unabridged recording of Rachel Reeves’ speech in the House of Commons on 11th June 2025.


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Motley Fool Money: Friendship Breakup Costs Tesla (6/6)

Motley Fool Money

Original Broadcast: Motley Fool Show

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You can’t maintain all of your friendships from the school year through summer vacation. David Meier and Jason Moser join Ricky Mulvey to discuss earnings from CrowdStrike, lululemon, and Broadcom, Elon Musk’s feud with President Donald Trump and the impact on Tesla shareholders, and Docusign’s turnaround story. Then, 19 minutes in, Stacey Vanek Smith, co-host of 'Everybody’s Business', joins Ricky for a look at the tough job market facing college grads. Finally, 35 minutes in, David and Jason pitch two radar stocks, Asana and Amazon. Companies discussed: CRWD, LULU, TSLA, DOCU, AVGO, AMZN, ASAN. Host - Ricky Mulvey; Guests - David Meier, Jason Moser, Stacey Vanek Smith

Guests: David Meier,Jason Moser,Stacey Vanek Smith


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Thought for the Week: The Fallacy of Male Headship

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Male dominance has tracked humanity throughout our evolution from the animal world, but it's now presenting an existential danger as our ability to threaten the future escalates. Meanwhile society's call for gender equality without addressing the doctrine of male headship is delivering a generation of 'lost boys'. Men need to learn what comes naturally to women: 'servant leadership'. Jesus showed his disciples what it means two thousand years ago, but Christian churches still struggle to understand. It will enable us to care for others and to plan for a better future including bringing inspiration, as opposed to aggression, for young men. Background music: 'Leaders' by Text Me Records — Jorge Hernandez


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Thought for the Week: Change requires delivery, not just policies

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Nigel Farage's stunning electoral success last Thursday exposed the chronic failure of state-centred socialism and the policy vacuum at the heart of the discredited Conservative party, following a decade of errors of judgement. Thomas Jefferson set out his 'self-evident truths' in 1776, that all are equal in deserving life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness: these, combined with constitutional acceptance of the need for inter-generational rebalancing, provide the real alternative to the narrow populism of the far right. Background music: 'The New Order' by Aaron Kenny


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Thought for the Week: Bonds across Humanity

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Bonds can cement obligation, and the rising yields on long-dated U.S. Treasury bonds are currently closing down Donald Trump's options for bullying the world into submission. Other superpowers may be relishing the opportunity to wrest hegemony away from America, but would this change the world for the better? Bonds can also draw people together, using the example of servant leadership given by Jesus two thousand years ago when he washed his disciples' feet. Such unconditional love enables integration and definitely leading to a better world — surely a preferable way forward than superpower hegemony. Background music: 'Saving the World' by Aaron Kenny


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Thought for the Week: Everything, Everywhere — All At Once

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Donald Trump may think he's a deal-maker, but he's more likely to turn out to be an economy-breaker, putting the U.S. dollar's role as the world's reserve currency at risk. Recession may be the least of our worries — this degree of instant aggression could well bring on a second Great Depression. So while few would disagree that U.S. needs to find a way out of its chronic trade imbalances, a transitional approach to tariffs with cross-party agreement designed to run over at least 2-3 presidential terms — thereby giving time to make the necessary changes — would have made far more sense. Background music: 'When Johnny Comes Marching Home' Cooper Cannell


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Thought for the Week: Why ‘Non-Experimental Evaluation’ Matters

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Outcome assessment is vital for all new initiatives, particularly political, but traditional academic research, which is sequential in character, is not good at responding to the speed of change in our modern world. This is particularly the case in tackling Child Poverty, for which a UK-Government Task Force is due to report later this Spring. If we are to break the cycle of deprivation with inter-generational rebalancing, we need a new sense of dynamism and responsiveness. Background music: 'Peony Morning' by TrackTribe


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The Bigger Picture: Spring Statement 2025

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: The Bigger Picture

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Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves delivers her March '25 Spring Statement — this is an unabridged audio record of her speech to the House of Commons


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Thought for the Week: Monopolies provide no answers

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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Abolition of NHS England reverses the de-politicisation of the health service, but it leaves intact all the inefficiencies of being a monopoly: thereby rendering people complacent and satisfied with mediocrity, unless they're moved by the Florence Nightingale mindset. Competition enables progress, efficient delivery and innovation, but most of all it respects individuals as customers, not simply treating them as account numbers. No wonder that the Competition & Markets Authority encourages government to use competition effectively on behalf of consumers. Background music: 'Hopeful Freedom' by Asher Fulero


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Thought for the Week: BRICS in the Ascendancy

Gavin Oldham

Original Broadcast: Thought for the Week

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As the United States descends towards economic turmoil as a result of its new-found isolationism and unreliability, the BRICS group of nations (including Russia and China) will be looking forward to a new dawn for their mainly autocratic regimes and potentially an opportunity to replace the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency. If western democracies, particularly in Europe, are to turn that tide, they must discover long-term governance, a new approach to targeted welfare working in partnership with philanthropists as opposed to universality, and a significant increase in democratic legitimacy for global governance. Background music: 'India Fuse' by French Fuse


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