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Dec 29, 2023
12/23
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well, judge robert henry is a very loose i have enjoyed is now retired from the 10th circuit but he's a very lucid writer justice neil gorsuch of the supreme court is a former 10th circuit judge and he has a very converse occasional more or less folks style of writing, even as a justice of the u.s. supreme court that carries over from his time on the 10th circuit and i. so my perception that that tendency by justice gorsuch to use more contractions, for instance, has has had an influence on the writing of other judges, with it has tended to, i think, to make us a little bit less stilted because after all, if if if a justice of the supreme court can write in a conversational, folksy way, then why can't we? and is that what you go for, that that folksy way? and i'm specifically remembering back to the vaccine mandate case. you talk about deciding it on both the legal opinions, but the common sense and that they both pointed to the same decision, as i recall, in that in that opinion, i probably actually shied away from anything that could be considered to be folksy because the issue was
well, judge robert henry is a very loose i have enjoyed is now retired from the 10th circuit but he's a very lucid writer justice neil gorsuch of the supreme court is a former 10th circuit judge and he has a very converse occasional more or less folks style of writing, even as a justice of the u.s. supreme court that carries over from his time on the 10th circuit and i. so my perception that that tendency by justice gorsuch to use more contractions, for instance, has has had an influence on the...
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Dec 30, 2023
12/23
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well, judge robert henry is a very loose i have enjoyed is now retired from the 10th circuit but he's a very lucid writer justice neil gorsuch of the supreme court is a former 10th circuit judge and he has a very converse occasional more or less folks style of writing, even as a justice of the u.s. supreme court that carries over from his time on the 10th circuit and i. so my perception that that tendency by justice gorsuch to use more contractions, for instance, has has had an influence on the writing of other judges, with it has tended to, i think, to make us a little bit less stilted because after all, if if if a justice of the supreme court can write in a conversational, folksy way, then why can't we? and is that what you go for, that that folksy way? and i'm specifically remembering back to the vaccine mandate case. you talk about deciding it on both the legal opinions, but the common sense and that they both pointed to the same decision, as i recall, in that in that opinion, i probably actually shied away from anything that could be considered to be folksy because the issue was
well, judge robert henry is a very loose i have enjoyed is now retired from the 10th circuit but he's a very lucid writer justice neil gorsuch of the supreme court is a former 10th circuit judge and he has a very converse occasional more or less folks style of writing, even as a justice of the u.s. supreme court that carries over from his time on the 10th circuit and i. so my perception that that tendency by justice gorsuch to use more contractions, for instance, has has had an influence on the...
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former national security advise rare robert o'brien will talk with me about henry kissinger later. but with all that, i would like to begin with a discuss about how donald trump's bankers blew up the letitia james, case against the former president. that is right. couple deutsche bank folks, who have been lending millions of dollars to trump and the trump organization, down through the years, absolutely destroyed the stupid left wing new york socialist attack on mr. trump. brilliant jonathan will be here later. but, in not legal terms, number of deutsche bank employees, the story, they told new york judge, they made millions of dollars from mr. trump's businesses and saw no fraud in the loans they approved, they told the judge that trump repaid his loans with interest, there was never a concern that trump defrauded the bank and unveiled a parade of e-mails going back years where bankers praise for the trumps and their businesses. bankers story goes back to 2011. that is 12 years ago, regarding renovation of the dural golf club near miami that was a success story. bankers testified
former national security advise rare robert o'brien will talk with me about henry kissinger later. but with all that, i would like to begin with a discuss about how donald trump's bankers blew up the letitia james, case against the former president. that is right. couple deutsche bank folks, who have been lending millions of dollars to trump and the trump organization, down through the years, absolutely destroyed the stupid left wing new york socialist attack on mr. trump. brilliant jonathan...
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Dec 2, 2023
12/23
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and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. >> maria ressa, welcome to "firing line." >> thanks for having me. >> you're a filipino-americanjo, and you've spent your career focusing on preserving freedom of the press. you've done this in the face of harassment from the government of the philippines. and you detail all of this in your new book, "how to stand up to a dictator." last year, you and russian journalist dmitry muratov won the nobel peace prize. why do you think it was so important that journalists were recognized by the nobel committee, something that hadn't happened for 90 years? >> i've always thought that the quality of a democracy's journalism, quality of a nation's journalists, determine the quality of its democracy. i've covered southeast asia since 1986, and i've -- you know, i began my career with the pendulum swing where it looked like democracy was unsto
and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. >> maria ressa, welcome to "firing line." >> thanks for having me. >> you're a filipino-americanjo, and you've spent your career focusing on preserving freedom of the press. you've done this in the face of...
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Dec 9, 2023
12/23
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- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessahenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - leopoldo lópez, welcome back to "firing line." - thank you, thank you very much. - you spent nearly four years in solitary confinement under nicolás maduro's regime in venezuela. since your escape into exile in 2020, you have been advocating for freedom and democracy in venezuela and around the world. how do you see your current role in venezuela's opposition? - so for me, it's been more than 25 years or 24 years struggling in different roles against the autocracy that we now have in venezuela. that started with a democracy but it eroded into what it is now, a criminal autocracy that is being processed at the international criminal court. i did not wanna leave venezuela. but like millions of venezuelans, you can see outside here in new
- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessahenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - leopoldo lópez, welcome back to "firing line." - thank you, thank you very much. - you spent nearly four years in solitary...
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Dec 9, 2023
12/23
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- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessahenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - leopoldo lópez, welcome back to "firing line." - thank you, thank you very much. - you spent nearly four years in solitary confinement under nicolás maduro's regime in venezuela. since your escape into exile in 2020, you have been advocating for freedom and democrac venezuela and around the world. how do you see your current role in venezuela's opposition? - so for me, it's been more than 25 years or 24 years struggling in different roles against the autocracy that we now have in venezuela. that started with a democracy but it eroded into what it is now, a criminal autocracy that is being processed at the international criminal court. i did not wanna leave venezuela. but like millions of venezuelans, you can see outside here in new york
- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessahenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - leopoldo lópez, welcome back to "firing line." - thank you, thank you very much. - you spent nearly four years in solitary...
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Dec 2, 2023
12/23
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and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. >> maria ressa, welcome to "firing line." >> thanks for having me. >> you're a filipino-american journalist, and you've spent your career focusing on preserving freedom of the press. you've done this in the face of harassment from the government of the philippines. and you detail all of this in your new book, "how to std up to a dictator." last year, you and russian journalist dmitry muratov won the nobel peace prize. why do you think it was so important that journalists were recognized by the nobel committee, something that hadn't happened for 90 years? >> i've always thought that the quality of a democracy's journalism, quality of a nation's journalists, determine the quality of its democracy. i've covered southeast asia since 1986, and i've -- you know, i began my career with the pendulum swing where it looked like democry was
and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. >> maria ressa, welcome to "firing line." >> thanks for having me. >> you're a filipino-american journalist, and you've spent your career focusing on preserving freedom of the press. you've done this in the face of...
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Dec 16, 2023
12/23
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and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - jonathan greenblatt, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. - within hours and days of the october 7th attack by hamas against israel, anti-semitic incidents were already on the rise. - yes. - how do you explain how the floodgates opened with anti-semitism after an attack against the jews? - yeah, it's really quite something. it almost felt to us like some of this is not exactly grassroots. it's more astroturf. - what do you mean? - we saw a mobilization of many of the groups on campuses and off campuses as early as october the 8th. - do you think it was coordinated? - yes. - what do you mean? - i believe that these different groups are all in communication with each other. i believe as soon as the- - hamas is in coordination with? - well, i am unable to say with certainty that hamas was directing this from overseas
and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - jonathan greenblatt, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. - within hours and days of the october 7th attack by hamas against israel, anti-semitic incidents were already on the rise. - yes. - how do you explain how...
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Dec 23, 2023
12/23
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- [narrator] "firing line" with margaret hoover is made possible in part by: robert granieri, vanessaenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by: stephens inc. - jewel kilcher, welcome to "firing line." - thank you. - you performed in public for the first time when you were five years old. you were yodeler, and you performed with your father and your family in hotels in anchorage, alaska. 40 years later, you've sold more than 30 million records worldwide. and i wonder if you could give your five-year-old self advice, one piece of advice, what would you tell her? - my five-year-old self. i think i might say that the most heroic attribute is steadfastness and curiosity. - why did she need to hear that? - growing up in the household i grew up, and like many of us do, we think we have to be more or extra, something other than what we are. and it's very hard to trust that you have an innate ability,
- [narrator] "firing line" with margaret hoover is made possible in part by: robert granieri, vanessaenry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by: stephens inc. - jewel kilcher, welcome to "firing line." - thank you. - you performed in public for the first time when you were five years...
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Dec 30, 2023
12/23
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- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessa and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family fountion, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - baratunde thurston, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. it's good to be here, margaret. - standup comedy, digital media, bestselling author, successful podcast, a pbs series based on the outdoors. what's the throughline for you that connects the various pursuits you've been involved in? - the throughline is how do we get to the future? and the throughline is my mother. my mom was a computer programmer. my mom was a community organizer and a politically active person. my m was very black, as am i. and my mother was a avid lover of the outdoors and our connection to nature. - arnita thurston. - yes. - was your mom's name. - yes. - you describe her as a pro-black pan-african tofu-eating hippie who had me memorizing the
- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessa and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family fountion, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - baratunde thurston, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. it's good to be here, margaret. - standup...
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Dec 30, 2023
12/23
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- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessa and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - baratunde thurston, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. it's good to be here, margaret. - standup comedy, digital media, bestselling author, successful pcast, a pbs series based on the outdoors. what's the throughline for you that connects the various pursuits you've been involved in? - the throughline is how do we get to the future? and the throughline is my mother. my mom was a computer programmer. my mom was a community organizer and a politically active person. my mom was very black, as am i. and my mother was a avid lover of the outdoors and our connection to nature. - arnita thurston. - yes. - was your mom's name. - yes. - you describe her as a pro-black pan-african tofu-eating hippie who had me memorizing t
- [announcer] "firing line with margaret hoover" is made possible in part by robert granieri, vanessa and henry cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness family foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation, and damon button. corporate funding is provided by stephens inc. - baratunde thurston, welcome to "firing line." - thank you for having me. it's good to be here, margaret. - standup...
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Dec 23, 2023
12/23
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- [narrator] "firing line" with margaret hoover is made possible ipart by: robert granieri, vanessa and cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness fily foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by: stephens inc. - jewel kilcher, welcome to "firing line." - thank you. - you performed in public for the first time when you were five years old. you were a yodeler, and you performed with your father and your family in hotels in anchorage, alaska. 40 years later, you've sold more than 30 million records worldwide. and i wonder if you could give your fiveear-old self advice, one piece of advice, what would you tell her? - my five-year-old self. i think i might say that the most heroic attribute is steadfastness and curiosity. - why did she need to hear that? - growing up in the household i grew up, and like many of us do, we think we have to be more or extra, something other than what we are. and it's very hard to trust that you have an innate ability, and th
- [narrator] "firing line" with margaret hoover is made possible ipart by: robert granieri, vanessa and cornell, the fairweather foundation, the tepper foundation, the asness fily foundation, the mckenna family foundation, charles r. schwab, and by the rosalind p. walter foundation and damon button. corporate funding is provided by: stephens inc. - jewel kilcher, welcome to "firing line." - thank you. - you performed in public for the first time when you were five years old....
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and as an interpreter for henry kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey is now the director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states. and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. bailey is good to have you with this on this friday, when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever altered? you know, they knew that they were doing something historic and that it was likely to unfold in ways that they couldn't anticipate so that they knew the scale of what these meetings uh you know, with the scale of change that they imply. but they didn't know the specifics about what they imply they were trying to solve nixon and kissinger. a far more specific problem, which is the problem of balancing against the soviet union. that was what this move was primarily about. they knew that it was going to have larger impacts and that, but their goals didn't involve all of the subsequent changes t
and as an interpreter for henry kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey is now the director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states. and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. bailey is good to have you with this on this friday, when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever...
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and as an interpreter for henry kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey is now director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states. and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. danley is good to have you with us on this friday when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever altered? you know, they knew that they were doing something historic and that it was likely to unfold in ways that they couldn't anticipate so that they knew the scale of what these meetings uh, you know, with a scale of change that they imply. but they didn't know the specifics about what they imply they were trying to solve nixon and kissinger. a far more specific problem, which is the problem of balancing against the soviet union. that was what this move was primarily about. they knew that it was going to have larger impacts than that, but their goals didn't involve all of the subsequent changes that you
and as an interpreter for henry kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey is now director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states. and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. danley is good to have you with us on this friday when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever altered? you...
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kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey, is now the director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. bailey is good to have you with us on this friday when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever altered? i know they knew that they were doing something historic and that it was likely to unfold in ways that they couldn't anticipate so that they knew the scale of what these meetings uh you know, with a scale of change that they imply, but they didn't know the specifics about what they imply they were trying to solve nixon and kissinger. a far more specific problem, which is the problem of balancing against the soviet union. that was what this move was primarily about. they knew that it was going to have larger impacts than that. but their goals didn't involve all of the subsequent changes that you just described. yeah, yeah. the
kissinger and for former us president jimmy carter, robert dailey, is now the director of the wilson centers kissinger institute on china in the united states and he joins me tonight from washington, dc. mr. bailey is good to have you with us on this friday when henry kissinger, when he helped open china in the early 19 seventy's. was there ever any speculation that the fundamentals of global economics and also doing a politics were about to be for ever altered? i know they knew that they were...
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♪♪ matthew henri: we have the most pinball machines in san francisco.s, like, almost like a kid in a candy shop. like, there's so many different options. there's so many lights. it's a great place to come. if you want to play pinball, come here. it's, like, my own little place i like to go and just escape from the world. ♪♪ matthew: when we first got in here, this was just a straight-up screen printing shop, just a place where you would go if you needed t-shirts, along with a screen printing shop, we had and have our own brand of clothing. every single shirt that we printed here and sold in stores came with a very long hang tag that had a gold watch printed on it, and that was your free gold watch, hence the name. just had an idea at one point to say, "you know what? we should get some pinball machines in here," because when people see pinball machines or arcade games, it just screams, basically, "hey, come play me." and that's kind of how it started. andrei massenkoff: some old-school pinballs dating back from the '50s until 2022, some brand-new ones.
♪♪ matthew henri: we have the most pinball machines in san francisco.s, like, almost like a kid in a candy shop. like, there's so many different options. there's so many lights. it's a great place to come. if you want to play pinball, come here. it's, like, my own little place i like to go and just escape from the world. ♪♪ matthew: when we first got in here, this was just a straight-up screen printing shop, just a place where you would go if you needed t-shirts, along with a screen...
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Dec 6, 2023
12/23
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henry ford built the assembly line. robert oppenheimer. the atomic bomb. and today, if you handed any of those men seven and a h halfe billion dollars, just imagine what they'd build. >> you. but you give joe biden seven yod a half billion dollars and he can't even build you oneg electric charging station. seriously,in not one. st has been over two years. and biden hasn't built anything. he's done nothing. >> but biden's bureaucrat, gabe klein. hi.biden' who's in charge of building these ev charges? says don't quote, you have to go slow to go fast. gabe, i get it.ilding no it building is better than building. >> if he was building lots of ev chargers lot e, it wouldnd be good because he wouldn't be going slow. . and slow is good. whenou you say say the world's about to end the devastating toll of climat>> devase change s essential threat to all of us is the threat to humanity. >> climate change. i think climat e change is an existential threat to to our globe and to our future. >> so if thi s is an unprecedented existential threat to humanity, why isn't bi
henry ford built the assembly line. robert oppenheimer. the atomic bomb. and today, if you handed any of those men seven and a h halfe billion dollars, just imagine what they'd build. >> you. but you give joe biden seven yod a half billion dollars and he can't even build you oneg electric charging station. seriously,in not one. st has been over two years. and biden hasn't built anything. he's done nothing. >> but biden's bureaucrat, gabe klein. hi.biden' who's in charge of building...
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Dec 15, 2023
12/23
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esos son los planes de nahuel guzmÁn, andrÉ—pierre gignac con robert dante siboldi.s, pero por otro lado tiene a jardine, acompaÑado de "la bomba de yucatÁn", henry martin. todo es culpa de layÚn, que se quiere retirar levantando un tÍtulo del fÚtbol mexicano, como aquel que levantÓ en 2014, que le ganÓ precisamente a tigres. por eso decimos que es la final soÑada, porque son los dos mejores equipos de la Última dÉcada. una final inmejorable. "kikÍn": son amigos y rivales. que no la toque! quÉ gusto estar con ustedes. final de pronÓstico reservado. casi fuerzas iguales. tienen un fondo de plantel. la banca de los dos equipos estÁ sensacional. lÍnea por lÍnea estÁ muy pareja esta final. lindsay: no solo llegaron dos de los mejores del torneo, sino los dos mejores equipos de la Última dÉcada en el fÚtbol mexicano. "bam—bam": me parece que son los dos equipos mÁs protagonistas en la Última dÉcada. un amÉrica que cuÁntas veces lo hemos visto llegar a esta instancia, pero ha fallado? y tigres creo que sabe jugar finales. por eso para mÍ es un partido muy parejo, donde el
esos son los planes de nahuel guzmÁn, andrÉ—pierre gignac con robert dante siboldi.s, pero por otro lado tiene a jardine, acompaÑado de "la bomba de yucatÁn", henry martin. todo es culpa de layÚn, que se quiere retirar levantando un tÍtulo del fÚtbol mexicano, como aquel que levantÓ en 2014, que le ganÓ precisamente a tigres. por eso decimos que es la final soÑada, porque son los dos mejores equipos de la Última dÉcada. una final inmejorable. "kikÍn": son...
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Dec 31, 2023
12/23
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henry to look at the financial cost. and i think this illustrates how unsustainable this was. so in 1863. henry county, virginia,. spent $49,704 just for this program, just to feed the widows orphans in their county. that is three times larger than their annual operating budget for the county. so so this is not sustainable. now, while offered some remarks and insights hopefully this morning about various ways the governments and other agencies attempted to support widows and fatherless children, i think it's important, remember that, no matter how much food, no how much financial compensation offer, there is nothing, nothing, nothing that can ever replace the loss of a loved one. this is certainly something to me that transcends time and place every single one of us in this room has lost loved one and there is no object. there is no memento there is no amount of cash on the face of the earth that can replace the you feel for for some individuals, again, transcending time and place the thought of going through life without their husband. their most beloved cherished companion i
henry to look at the financial cost. and i think this illustrates how unsustainable this was. so in 1863. henry county, virginia,. spent $49,704 just for this program, just to feed the widows orphans in their county. that is three times larger than their annual operating budget for the county. so so this is not sustainable. now, while offered some remarks and insights hopefully this morning about various ways the governments and other agencies attempted to support widows and fatherless...
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so it could be dedicated to his robert controversial stance on india is all tease ones. and so on the, on the statements and journey from foul mouth runs against india. and then they're a gun. they should be coming. it is mara, i've never enjoy moody. so henry gets injured, an influential member of the us government. also, nobel prize winner often labeled as a war longer by many has died of age of 100. he's left behind a very complex legacy, a very fully rising imprint across the world. and especially on india, i'll tell you why. it's a little history. it starts with his racist remarks against india and ended leadership to well recently to sing up to you, daddy. i take you back to 19 seventies where his recordings, his teeth bends against a then prime minister of india ended up gone be with then pass it into the united states. nixon, board very, very distasteful. this is just the point when she's a, well the indians have busted. so anyway, they're starting the world. they're. so you'll see those statements recalls hatred towards india. only many years later, kissinger di
so it could be dedicated to his robert controversial stance on india is all tease ones. and so on the, on the statements and journey from foul mouth runs against india. and then they're a gun. they should be coming. it is mara, i've never enjoy moody. so henry gets injured, an influential member of the us government. also, nobel prize winner often labeled as a war longer by many has died of age of 100. he's left behind a very complex legacy, a very fully rising imprint across the world. and...
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Dec 31, 2023
12/23
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name he went by his stepfather was henry jackson. and there's the book, my my two awards, which i'm proud of. i'm going to wear them tonight. but i was like, oh, that's kind of bragging next. and if you have any questions, love to entertain them. i'm very passionate about this subject and. yes, it was a thursday. it was on a thursday, yes. yeah. that's what i was wondering. i was just assuming maybe that it was alcohol fueled. i'd say week, end of the week or. oh i'm sure there was alcohol. yes alcohol for you. and one of the things. that's a good question. a good point. the local papers in the coming days, you know, one of the things they try to claim is, oh, these weren't local people that did it. these were out of town, ruffians, railroaders. they did it that local people, which is nonsense, but that was one of the things they tried to sort of use like yeah it was now where the railroad is, their i'm sure there were were there out of towners there? i'm sure there were there were hotels all over the in that area. but it wasn't the
name he went by his stepfather was henry jackson. and there's the book, my my two awards, which i'm proud of. i'm going to wear them tonight. but i was like, oh, that's kind of bragging next. and if you have any questions, love to entertain them. i'm very passionate about this subject and. yes, it was a thursday. it was on a thursday, yes. yeah. that's what i was wondering. i was just assuming maybe that it was alcohol fueled. i'd say week, end of the week or. oh i'm sure there was alcohol. yes...
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is you, henry. is he right then? is robert jenrick right? yes, he's entirely or entirely correct.uld have done something it. done something about it. >> would have been >> yeah, that would have been good. in power for a good. they'd been in power for a while. benedict spence. >> well, the other two >> yeah, well, the other two said been nice if said it would have been nice if the actually the last 13 years had actually seen done about it seen something done about it rather than just tories waiting until an election until there was an election cycle thinking it. >> all right, so it's all yeses by looks of it, what do by the looks of it, but what do you home? i mean, what you think at home? i mean, what are thank so are your thoughts? thank you so much to commentators, much to my commentators, benedict and also conor benedict spence and also conor tomlinson, and also security and border international expert henry . thank you so much. henry bolton. thank you so much. right. let's a quick look right. let's have a quick look at you've saying, at what you've been saying, because lots of
is you, henry. is he right then? is robert jenrick right? yes, he's entirely or entirely correct.uld have done something it. done something about it. >> would have been >> yeah, that would have been good. in power for a good. they'd been in power for a while. benedict spence. >> well, the other two >> yeah, well, the other two said been nice if said it would have been nice if the actually the last 13 years had actually seen done about it seen something done about it...
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thank very much, henry hill thank you very much, henry hill from conservative after from conservative , professor robert tombs, gives his review of ridley scott's latest blockbuster, napoleon. first, though, your news headunes first, though, your news headlines with aaron armstrong . headlines with aaron armstrong. >> it's 1232. very good afternoon to you from the gb newsroom . a 2500 people are newsroom. a 2500 people are without power in cumbria as snow andice without power in cumbria as snow and ice continue to cause problems in the county. electricity north—west says they're struggling to reach sections of the damaged network warning services may not be restored until tonight . restored until later tonight. emergency teams also work to help people trapped in their cars with a large number of vehicles abandoned on the m6 overnight . a man's been killed overnight. a man's been killed and two people, including a british tourist, were injured in a knife and hammer attack in paris. it happened near the eiffel last night in what eiffel tower last night in what the president the french p
thank very much, henry hill thank you very much, henry hill from conservative after from conservative , professor robert tombs, gives his review of ridley scott's latest blockbuster, napoleon. first, though, your news headunes first, though, your news headlines with aaron armstrong . headlines with aaron armstrong. >> it's 1232. very good afternoon to you from the gb newsroom . a 2500 people are newsroom. a 2500 people are without power in cumbria as snow andice without power in cumbria...
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Dec 10, 2023
12/23
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and anyone what robert harvey's home address was in 1910. what's that is what his home address right house the white house. why is that. his dad was president united. so henry clout was not classmates, but friends with arguably the most powerful family or one of them in the country. and he could have used that relationship that that entry into the kind of leading educational and perhaps the kind of economic strata of american society for self or economic attainment of various kinds. he didn't do that he decided to make those educational policies that richard henry pratt established a carlisle the of his political and educational efforts. and so they built he and elizabeth as indian preparatory academy, known as the american india institute. and we have a photo of i got a photo placed into the volume. and so he's one of many native american educators and leaders who understand that this policy that the federal government had to be changed. and this chapter 11 chronicles his and others kind of efforts to modify and reform indian policy and ult
and anyone what robert harvey's home address was in 1910. what's that is what his home address right house the white house. why is that. his dad was president united. so henry clout was not classmates, but friends with arguably the most powerful family or one of them in the country. and he could have used that relationship that that entry into the kind of leading educational and perhaps the kind of economic strata of american society for self or economic attainment of various kinds. he didn't...
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Dec 18, 2023
12/23
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so i would just say, is robert rubin and rubin is an interesting figure. he's not a capitalist with a with a black top hat on. he's welfare state democrat. his mother voted for henry wallace. campaigned in south florida for civil. he voted for and raised for george mcgovern. he was a racial liberal. he opposed actually oppose the clinton welfare plan, which was very controversial. so he said, look, capitalism produces, winners and losers and some people are losers and we have to take care of them. and he you know, he was hated and he didn't buy into that. oh, you let's incentivize work and that'll that'll be solution to everything. he said no. so he was so he was very charming and that was and he was very popular. but what believed in was absolute mobility and liquidity of capital. he'd spent 25 years at goldman sachs, the arbitrage desk. and what that meant was, you know, you you went to companies are going to merge. you know, you figured out, you know, where the imperfections he knew there were imperfections in the market and you you know place your bet
so i would just say, is robert rubin and rubin is an interesting figure. he's not a capitalist with a with a black top hat on. he's welfare state democrat. his mother voted for henry wallace. campaigned in south florida for civil. he voted for and raised for george mcgovern. he was a racial liberal. he opposed actually oppose the clinton welfare plan, which was very controversial. so he said, look, capitalism produces, winners and losers and some people are losers and we have to take care of...
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Dec 18, 2023
12/23
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so i would just say, is robert rubin and rubin is an interesting figure. he's not a capitalist with a with a black top hat on. he's welfare state democrat. his mother voted for henry wallace. campaigned in south florida for civil. he voted for and raised for george mcgovern. he was a racial liberal. he opposed actually oppose the clinton welfare plan, which was very controversial. so he said, look, capitalism produces, winners and losers and some people are losers and we have to take care of them. and he you know, he was hated and he didn't buy into that. oh, you let's incentivize work and that'll that'll be solution to everything. he said no. so he was so he was very charming and that was and he was very popular. but what believed in was absolute mobility and liquidity of capital. he'd spent 25 years at goldman sachs, the arbitrage desk. and what that meant was, you know, you you went to companies are going to merge. you know, you figured out, you know, where the imperfections he knew there were imperfections in the market and you you know place your bet
so i would just say, is robert rubin and rubin is an interesting figure. he's not a capitalist with a with a black top hat on. he's welfare state democrat. his mother voted for henry wallace. campaigned in south florida for civil. he voted for and raised for george mcgovern. he was a racial liberal. he opposed actually oppose the clinton welfare plan, which was very controversial. so he said, look, capitalism produces, winners and losers and some people are losers and we have to take care of...