Jegerpodden med episode frå Rana:
https://jegerpodden.no/2026/03/05/elg-gauper-gamledager-og-historier-med-ivar-ivarsen/
Episoden er artig uansett om du liker jakt eller ei! Mykje bannskap, mykje dialekt, mykje tøvprat. Ranværingen Ivar Iversen er ein røvarhistorieforteljar av rang 🤣
#norsktut #MoIRana #Rana #Jegerpodden #jakt #jeger #podkasttips #dialekt #ranværing

Elg, gauper, gamledager og historier med Ivar Ivarsen - Jegerpodden
Vi har tatt turen til Mo i Rana for en prat med en kar ved navn Ivar Ivarsen. Han har jaktet og fisket hele livet og har høstet mange opplevelser og erfaringer. I tillegg snakker vi her om en historieforteller av rang! Så her er det bare å sette seg godt til rette, og kose seg med en unik episode!
JegerpoddenInside Of You
What started off as Michael having some fun, quickly evolved into a real passion of his. He soon discovered that all of these guests aren’t that different from any of us. They have the same insecurities and problems that we all deal with every day. In a dark, yet enlightening way... he finds a lot of comfort in that.
Dagens tips: Den nyaste episoden av podkasten Capitalisn't tykte eg var veldig interessant. Korleis har språket og tankegangen til økonomifaget greidd å gjennomsyre politikken så til dei grader - og kvifor er det venstresida som taper mest på det? Intervju med forfattar Elizabeth Popp Berman og kritisk diskusjon etterpå. Fokus på USA, men mykje gjeld nok generelt. (Og eg har ei ny bok på den uendeleg lange leselista.) https://www.capitalisnt.com/episodes/has-thinking-like-an-economist-distorted-our-politics
#økonomi #podkasttips
Has ‘Thinking Like An Economist’ Distorted Our Politics? | Capitalisn't
It is hard to think of an idea more central to capitalism than economics, particularly economic efficiency. Similarly, public policy is now — and has been for a while — conducted in the language of budgets, models, and cost-benefit analyses. But how accountable is this idea to the public?
Elizabeth Popp Berman is a sociologist and historian of economic thought at the University of Michigan and the author of the new book "Thinking Like An Economist: How Efficiency Replaced Equality in U.S. Public Policy." In this episode, she joins Bethany and Luigi to discuss this history of economics as a pervasive influence in the halls of political power in Washington and the challenges of believing in economic models as "truth" in an increasingly complex world. Using case studies in health care, debt forgiveness, pandemic economic recovery, and beyond, the three of them debate whether there are spheres of public and political life where economics has overstepped its bounds and if it belongs there altogether.
Capitalisn't