Jordan Jonas
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
is where i've been like almost provided for the most in life now i have this this career guiding people in the wilderness that i love like i genuinely love it i find purpose in it i know it's healthy and good for people and then i have an amazing wife and an amazing family like how did that happen but i didn't exactly aim at it i like i i consciously in a way
is where i've been like almost provided for the most in life now i have this this career guiding people in the wilderness that i love like i genuinely love it i find purpose in it i know it's healthy and good for people and then i have an amazing wife and an amazing family like how did that happen but i didn't exactly aim at it i like i i consciously in a way
I mean, I hoped it was tangential, but I aimed at something else, which was those lessons I kind of got from the Gulag Archipelago.
I mean, I hoped it was tangential, but I aimed at something else, which was those lessons I kind of got from the Gulag Archipelago.
I mean, I hoped it was tangential, but I aimed at something else, which was those lessons I kind of got from the Gulag Archipelago.
I love history. I find so much richness in knowing what other people went through and find so much perspective in my own place in the world. I have the advantage of, in my direct family, my grandparents, they went through the Armenian Genocide. They were Assyrians, which was a Christian minority, indigenous people in the Middle East. They lived in northwestern Iran. And
I love history. I find so much richness in knowing what other people went through and find so much perspective in my own place in the world. I have the advantage of, in my direct family, my grandparents, they went through the Armenian Genocide. They were Assyrians, which was a Christian minority, indigenous people in the Middle East. They lived in northwestern Iran. And
I love history. I find so much richness in knowing what other people went through and find so much perspective in my own place in the world. I have the advantage of, in my direct family, my grandparents, they went through the Armenian Genocide. They were Assyrians, which was a Christian minority, indigenous people in the Middle East. They lived in northwestern Iran. And
during the chaos of world war one, you know, and the Ottoman empire was collapsing and it had all kinds of issues and it, one of its issues was it had a big minority group and it thought it would be a good time to get rid of it. And, uh,
during the chaos of world war one, you know, and the Ottoman empire was collapsing and it had all kinds of issues and it, one of its issues was it had a big minority group and it thought it would be a good time to get rid of it. And, uh,
during the chaos of world war one, you know, and the Ottoman empire was collapsing and it had all kinds of issues and it, one of its issues was it had a big minority group and it thought it would be a good time to get rid of it. And, uh,
and you know they can justify it in all the ways you can like there's some people that were rebelling or this is that but ultimately it was just a big collective guilt and extermination policy against the armenians and the assyrians and the uh my grandparents my grandma was 13 at the time and my grandpa was 17 which is interesting because it happened almost 100 years ago but our gender just my dad was born when my mom was my grandma was pretty old so um but
and you know they can justify it in all the ways you can like there's some people that were rebelling or this is that but ultimately it was just a big collective guilt and extermination policy against the armenians and the assyrians and the uh my grandparents my grandma was 13 at the time and my grandpa was 17 which is interesting because it happened almost 100 years ago but our gender just my dad was born when my mom was my grandma was pretty old so um but
and you know they can justify it in all the ways you can like there's some people that were rebelling or this is that but ultimately it was just a big collective guilt and extermination policy against the armenians and the assyrians and the uh my grandparents my grandma was 13 at the time and my grandpa was 17 which is interesting because it happened almost 100 years ago but our gender just my dad was born when my mom was my grandma was pretty old so um but
My grandmother, her dad was taken out to be shot. You know, the Turks were coming in and rounding up all the men and they took them out to be shot. And then they took my grandma and her. She had seven brothers and sisters and her mom, and they like drove her out into the desert. Basically, her dad got taken out to be shot. So his name was Shalman Umar or whatever, took him out.
My grandmother, her dad was taken out to be shot. You know, the Turks were coming in and rounding up all the men and they took them out to be shot. And then they took my grandma and her. She had seven brothers and sisters and her mom, and they like drove her out into the desert. Basically, her dad got taken out to be shot. So his name was Shalman Umar or whatever, took him out.
My grandmother, her dad was taken out to be shot. You know, the Turks were coming in and rounding up all the men and they took them out to be shot. And then they took my grandma and her. She had seven brothers and sisters and her mom, and they like drove her out into the desert. Basically, her dad got taken out to be shot. So his name was Shalman Umar or whatever, took him out.
They were all tied up, all shot. He said a quick prayer before they shot him, but he fell down and he found he wasn't hit. And usually, of course, they'd come up and stab everybody or finish him off. But there was some kind of an alarm and all the soldiers rushed off and he found himself in the bodies and was able to untie himself. They were naked and, you know, hungry and all that. And he
They were all tied up, all shot. He said a quick prayer before they shot him, but he fell down and he found he wasn't hit. And usually, of course, they'd come up and stab everybody or finish him off. But there was some kind of an alarm and all the soldiers rushed off and he found himself in the bodies and was able to untie himself. They were naked and, you know, hungry and all that. And he
They were all tied up, all shot. He said a quick prayer before they shot him, but he fell down and he found he wasn't hit. And usually, of course, they'd come up and stab everybody or finish him off. But there was some kind of an alarm and all the soldiers rushed off and he found himself in the bodies and was able to untie himself. They were naked and, you know, hungry and all that. And he