DiscoverHard Corners with Tom Synan
Hard Corners with Tom Synan
Claim Ownership

Hard Corners with Tom Synan

Author: Jesse Waits Media

Subscribed: 3Played: 16
Share

Description

Hard Corners is a term we used on SWAT when clearing buildings and rooms. Soft Corners were the things you could see, this was not the biggest concern. It was the Hard Corners that had the hidden dangers and challenges. Focus on the Hard Corners and you expose those challenges.That is what we will be doing with this Podcast. Exposing the tough, challenging and dangerous conversations. The conversation that make us uncomfortable and vulnerable. Rhetoric simplifies a topic in order to win an argument. I don’t care about winning arguments. I want to get into all the complexities of an issue. The raw, real and honest layers of an issue. That’s where understanding is found. Understand the human in each issue and we will learn the stories of humanity.
10 Episodes
Reverse
Police reform has become a hotly debated topic in policing, public and politics. There are controversies on all sides. Is it divert or invest in police? Should reform include our communities and society? Has the role of policing changed so much that the term law enforcement is not enough to describe the need and service provided? Are police warriors or servants? Can they be and do it all? Our guests join us for one of the most comprehensive discussions on police reform you will hear. A conversation where all points can be valid and a middle ground found with examples and solutions. Guest:Neil Gross-former officer, now sociologist and author of, Walk the Walk: How Three Police Chiefs Defied the Odds and Changed Cop Culture. nlgross@colby.eduKristin Daley-Executive Director of New Blue. kristin@newblue.orgMike Butler- Public Safety Chief for Longmont, Colorado. urantia101@gmail.comEric Jones- former Police Chief of Stockton, California and current Deputy County Executive for Public Safety in Sacramento, California. joneser@saccounty.gov
There was a time psychedelics were used to escape reality. Now they are being used to heal reality.In this episode we talk to Diane Goldstein with Law Enforcement Action Partnership (LEAP). Sarko Gergarian, LEAP speaker and Peter Grayson, Director of Addiction and Recovery at Nushama psychedelic wellness clinic.Our guest discuss the use of psychedelics for first responder and military treating PTSD, depression, anxiety and other mental health treatment.What was once a drug seen only as “bad”, may have some “good” when used as medicine. 
Social Justice

Social Justice

2023-06-0101:23:21

The Urban League of Greater Southwestern Ohio, Center for Social Justice- Gabriel Fletcher and Fanon Rucker join us to have an open, raw, sometimes uncomfortable conversation about police accountability, race and community. We ask the questions- is the criminal justice system fair and just? What is justice? How can we collaborate to improve policing as well our communities? 
For this episode we are joined by former General Counsel to the White House Office of Drug Policy Robert Kent. Drug policy in the U.S. has been shifting from enforcement to diversion, deflection and treating addiction as a chronic health condition. Robert takes inside national and international drug policy. Impact of illegal drug supply. Why his work is so important to him and the importance of treating the person, not just the addiction.
The Chiefs Roundtable

The Chiefs Roundtable

2023-03-0201:38:59

This is a real, raw and perfectly imperfect conversation of policing, being a police leader and what it all means to be the human under the uniform.There are not enough words to thank and express my gratitude to Chief Thomas Wells, Chief Scott Hughes and Capt. Steve Saunders; for their incredible insight and opening up about their police careers, how the job has impacted their mental health as well the officers they serve with and the human journey. Thank you! This was recorded before the Memphis incident and the heartbreaking loss of a Cincinnati officer that took her life.If you have struggled with depression, mental health or felt alone- you are not alone. There are those who walk the same path you do but have found a way with an overall well-being plan to help manage it all. The ask for help is a guide in a better direction. The national suicide and crisis hotline at 988. Samhas national helpline at 1-800-662-helpIf you are a police officer you can call 1-800-coplineFirst responders in ohio can go to mha.Ohio.gov
Fentanyl: What is real? What is myth? Dr. Ryan Marino, Addiction Specialist and Toxicologist joins  us via Zoom to discuss what fentanyl is and what it isn’t. His passion to ensure the media doesn’t help spread the myths. Which has gained the attention of high profile national media personalities. And, setting the record straight about fentanyl. 
Serial killers and active shooters fascinate us in part because most of us are not capable of comprehending how someone can be driven to commit such heinous acts of inhumanity. In this follow up to the “Super power of empathy” episode, trauma specialist, Melissa Adamchik, offers some insight into why and how human behavior can take this hard turn away from connecting to others.
The Super Power of Empathy

The Super Power of Empathy

2022-08-0501:06:12

Empathy can be both emotional and cognitive. A conscious decision to understand the plight of another. Empathy has been called “the currency that can change the world.”  If it is so valuable, worth sharing, such a superpower; then why do we need use it more often? In this episode we invited Melissa Adamchik of the Tristate Trauma Network to help us learn more on these topics and explore the impact of trauma, isolation and the skill of empathy.  
Confidence in the Media?

Confidence in the Media?

2022-07-1501:23:27

The Founding Fathers believed one of the most critical principles to maintaining a democracy was a free press. So important they made it part of the 1st Amendment. As confidence in many institutions has diminished, including the news media...Has our faith in the 1st Amendment diminished too? A conversation with Mike Canan former news director at WCPO and now Director of Journalism Strategies at  Scripps Howard Foundation will help us deep dive on this topic and so much more. 
I have often told the story of an entire family, an entire generation in my community dying from addiction, it changed my life as a cop and human being. I wanted to know how it impacted the third generation of addiction as a human being. Not everyone that deals with addiction makes a choice. Shelley was exposed to the family “normal” of substance use at the age of 12. By 14 she was addicted to heroin, then fentanyl and on the streets. Today she helps others to be inspired in recovery. Our host Tom Synan shares his side of the story and the empathy he felt for her, her family and others like her struggling with addiction.
Comments 
Download from Google Play
Download from App Store