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Oct 14, 2014
10/14
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ericson. ericson: vermont is not business friendly because it's not business -- business cannot afford to pay the wages it would like to pay their employees. the students need to know why. the reason vermont is not business friendly is the federal government and the state government, the legislatures, are passing laws saying administrative officials may make rules and regulations. so the federal government, u.s. congress and state government, state legislature in montpelier are passing laws that are like blank homework papers, equivalent of letting the gender field and in. they are saying administrative officials who are not elected officials can make rules and regulations that businesses have to comply with. the administrative officials wind and died by lobbyists but that is a reporter because they're not elected officials or candidates. >> moderator: mr. peters. peters: the economy is not really good in the state of vermont because antibusiness, i believe. you've got to make business come to
ericson. ericson: vermont is not business friendly because it's not business -- business cannot afford to pay the wages it would like to pay their employees. the students need to know why. the reason vermont is not business friendly is the federal government and the state government, the legislatures, are passing laws saying administrative officials may make rules and regulations. so the federal government, u.s. congress and state government, state legislature in montpelier are passing laws...
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Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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ericson: he said it second. sanders: and with the transportation bill we will have $400 million to build roads and bridges and create jobs. we have greatly expanded community health centers now accessing the primary health care through the center's. we have expanded veterans' programs with primary health care all over the state. >>moderator: let's talk about gridlock we will start with you. what will you do to try to break the gridlock? laframboise: the biggest problem is 2.fingers at. of that is what i recognized immediately to think of the solution to the problem. by simply changing the way we go to to write the bill first to turning our representatives in two representatives instead of legislators then bypass the gridlock to go to almost directly the three bills that i have researched the most people agree with the areas that i wrote the bill. mcgovern: the question and? am i and favor of gridlock? >>moderator: what will you do to end gridlock? mcgovern: first come of focus on issues that unite us and not div
ericson: he said it second. sanders: and with the transportation bill we will have $400 million to build roads and bridges and create jobs. we have greatly expanded community health centers now accessing the primary health care through the center's. we have expanded veterans' programs with primary health care all over the state. >>moderator: let's talk about gridlock we will start with you. what will you do to try to break the gridlock? laframboise: the biggest problem is 2.fingers at. of...
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Apr 15, 2023
04/23
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how do you address the leif ericson story? you know, it's always interesting, especially when i when have a wonderful opportunity to talk to two colleagues about ericson and and everybody wants to all my norwegian friends, him as norwegian and all my icelandic friends claim him as icelandic. but you know, the greenland ticks also claim him as theirs too. so again, i think it's clear that leif ericson, his father, erik, the red legend theory at that period and certainly erik, the red settlement of in iceland and the leader in greenland and leif erickson's journey into north america and the settlements in in nova scotia. the area and the fact that they've found viking age remnants and foundations in that part of north america clear indications that the settlements there and the early as the thousand and then again i think that's that's where the story ends i mean the ruins in minnesota and other things kind leave that to the academic to argue about but again the story about the nordics arriving in north america 500 years prior t
how do you address the leif ericson story? you know, it's always interesting, especially when i when have a wonderful opportunity to talk to two colleagues about ericson and and everybody wants to all my norwegian friends, him as norwegian and all my icelandic friends claim him as icelandic. but you know, the greenland ticks also claim him as theirs too. so again, i think it's clear that leif ericson, his father, erik, the red legend theory at that period and certainly erik, the red settlement...
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Jan 22, 2011
01/11
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the children know who leaf ericson is. thank you very much. >> thank you. [applause] >> good afternoon. i'm a very, very huge fan of all of your works. the first book was given to me by my mother, professor and the madman and i red it -- read it literally in two days. what my question is, do you agree historical text and what have you and you just find interesting stories that have not been fully explored or do youju just say, oh, this might interesting to write about? o do you have a little file cabinet and say, oh, i'm going to --he this is what i'm going write my next book about? w >> i mean, to give you an example. one from the past and one from the future. the professor and the madman was a well-known story and i came across it when i was reading book by a man called jonathan green called chasing the sun dictionaries and the man who made it and there was a tiny footnote lexographers would be familiar with the story of w.c. miner who was a murderer who was a prolific writer in the led and he was reading it in the bath and i sat up and said, i just don't
the children know who leaf ericson is. thank you very much. >> thank you. [applause] >> good afternoon. i'm a very, very huge fan of all of your works. the first book was given to me by my mother, professor and the madman and i red it -- read it literally in two days. what my question is, do you agree historical text and what have you and you just find interesting stories that have not been fully explored or do youju just say, oh, this might interesting to write about? o do you have...
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Dec 4, 2011
12/11
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and there both ericson and reesman were enormously helpful but also by someone i call a secret mentor, a mentor from a distance, albert kamo because in his great book, "the rebel," it's about a brilliant expose on totalism and he pretty much calls it that. and at the same time an insistence that we remain rebels. that we remain critical of the status quo. and that combination, that again tielectronic, call it what you will is very important to me and not always easy to sustain. further influence of mentors was just i would say briefly with ericson, i felt he brought -- he showed how one could bring psychoanalysis into history. it didn't have to be just in the clinic or the office or on the couch. and that was an inspiration to me. >> when you knew him, he was doing his studies of martin luther and others? >> absolutely. and my first encounter -- my first meeting with him, he talked for hours comparing 16th century athelectric training with chinese thought reform as he was about to write his book on luther and i was about to write my book on thought reform. and david reesman was an ext
and there both ericson and reesman were enormously helpful but also by someone i call a secret mentor, a mentor from a distance, albert kamo because in his great book, "the rebel," it's about a brilliant expose on totalism and he pretty much calls it that. and at the same time an insistence that we remain rebels. that we remain critical of the status quo. and that combination, that again tielectronic, call it what you will is very important to me and not always easy to sustain....
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Feb 2, 2016
02/16
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debra fish is on the platform committee, casey ericson is on the platform
debra fish is on the platform committee, casey ericson is on the platform
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Oct 18, 2016
10/16
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ericson: i represent the united states marijuana party.states of america is we're suffering from a lack of democracy and the system is american and just to give you an example because i did go to school that our lavender eighth graders to watch this program they are concerned about bullying. but senator leahy has been a bully and he has then a police in the political playground the way children are believed in the schoolyard. and i mean i ran is a democratic candidate this past summer and the senator refused to have even one debate or one for of with be. he is a political playground bully and ps sexist and a totalitarian that is undemocratic and un-american and he should be ashamed of himself. >> if you can have an opportunity to respond. >>. leahy: as a person who wrote the violence against women act i don't see there is any group of women in this country that calls me sexist . and referring to senator sanders i admired him. he and his wife are close friends. i am pleased that he is holding a rally this week to endorse me and the rest of
ericson: i represent the united states marijuana party.states of america is we're suffering from a lack of democracy and the system is american and just to give you an example because i did go to school that our lavender eighth graders to watch this program they are concerned about bullying. but senator leahy has been a bully and he has then a police in the political playground the way children are believed in the schoolyard. and i mean i ran is a democratic candidate this past summer and the...
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Feb 2, 2016
02/16
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all in favor of the slate of drew and casey ericson, say a's. >> a's. >> all opposes say nay. congratulations. >> you'll represent us well. >> yes. >> are you a delegate? >> that was my copy. >> do any for the sheriff. >> c-span would help us to put the chairs back appropriately. i'm not sure how that gets done. >> i have no idea what it looked like. anybody take a picture what it looks like? >> round. >> ruble? >> cindy, eventually the browns come out here. >> do you want to be on either the platform committee or committee on committees. >> yes. >> the names of the individuals that spoke on behalf of the campaign. >> elizabeth buck on behalf of clinton, and i don't have the second name -- >> cindy peterson. >> sanders, it was carol beatty, baty. >> who what for martin o'malley? >> that was rick miller. >> thank you. >> what's your last him in? >> gents eh. [inaudible conversations] >> help direct them how to reset this, please. [inaudible conversations] >> we just have one more vote. >> we another vote? [inaudible conversations] >> i filled mine out on the wrong side. >> the
all in favor of the slate of drew and casey ericson, say a's. >> a's. >> all opposes say nay. congratulations. >> you'll represent us well. >> yes. >> are you a delegate? >> that was my copy. >> do any for the sheriff. >> c-span would help us to put the chairs back appropriately. i'm not sure how that gets done. >> i have no idea what it looked like. anybody take a picture what it looks like? >> round. >> ruble? >> cindy,...
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Nov 20, 2011
11/11
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the question was, could i put it together in book form and conversations i had with both ericson and reesman began to convince me that maybe i could and reesman performed the unbelievably generous task of writing page after page of letters. we were walking frequently and seeing each other regularly going on these long walks, fresh pond park in cambridge. but he would still write letters like a 19th century correspondence -- correspondent, and wrote in response to each of my chapters with enthusiasm and with openings where they took him and his associations. and so i could come to the sense and yes, i could write this book and it could even have something to say. these are the days when we were all smoking. this was in the -- late '60s. and i found -- i was never a heavy smoker but i found myself smoking more and more trying to finish this damn book until i finished it and i could stop smoking all together. [laughter] >> with the surgeon general's report right at that time. so we have our physical involvements in these studies. >> let me ask you a question about the hiroshima book and
the question was, could i put it together in book form and conversations i had with both ericson and reesman began to convince me that maybe i could and reesman performed the unbelievably generous task of writing page after page of letters. we were walking frequently and seeing each other regularly going on these long walks, fresh pond park in cambridge. but he would still write letters like a 19th century correspondence -- correspondent, and wrote in response to each of my chapters with...
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Apr 4, 2010
04/10
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forgotten at this point the effort of the hurricanes starting pitcher eric ericson who went five innings and gave up just one earned run striking out five and walking one. this one will be determined by the bullpen. >> let's see what the hurricanes do here offensively with rob, the base runner at first being held on by a guy a who just discovered a first base club ryan semianick. . >> you can imagine when you are done to the first first base in a week's time that he hasn't really used that glove much. >> not a very big read by broad. right in front of him to right field. rounds second and send to third. here comes the throw and it's just late. and taking the second base is frankie ratcliff who put together a nice night at the plate reaching base all four times. the hurricanes threatening here in the #r8th. and a lot of business runners run into that and would have call him out. he stops and gets to the continues this and of course, frankie ratcliff was blown over the cut off and goes into second base. that was him at second base and you have runners at second and third and the double pla
forgotten at this point the effort of the hurricanes starting pitcher eric ericson who went five innings and gave up just one earned run striking out five and walking one. this one will be determined by the bullpen. >> let's see what the hurricanes do here offensively with rob, the base runner at first being held on by a guy a who just discovered a first base club ryan semianick. . >> you can imagine when you are done to the first first base in a week's time that he hasn't really...
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Aug 23, 2024
08/24
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the first is my office, our bureau we a heck of lot of time wearing a ericson had a nokia teacher because many network operators are risk-averse and tight margins on so we associate the fine products that ericson a nokia offer with the trust supply so there's no commercial value for the united states in that regard and i can legitimately say my engagement we believe the citizens of country x deserve the same protection allowed to citizens of the united states in your network security. and that curry some favor although there is a price in many markets. that is very real and it's an extraordinary challenge andn that's what is important to development ex-im and japan be part of this conversation in the second part of that is we know from conversations with some of the best engineers and industry that the beyond 5g conversation and development that is 6g and beyond will be based on architecture so what we are offering too many other third country partners is the opportunity to be the first movers in the innovation vietnam is an example in india as an example but there arele many others indon
the first is my office, our bureau we a heck of lot of time wearing a ericson had a nokia teacher because many network operators are risk-averse and tight margins on so we associate the fine products that ericson a nokia offer with the trust supply so there's no commercial value for the united states in that regard and i can legitimately say my engagement we believe the citizens of country x deserve the same protection allowed to citizens of the united states in your network security. and that...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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ericson? ericson: my grandfather was born in the him perform and it used to be legal and if we legalize it again we could pay for liheap. legalizing and taxing marijuana and hemp won't pay for everything but if it comes between vermont freezing to death in their home and legalizing tax marijuana and pay for the fuel assistance with that. >> moderator: you are watching a live debate at the studio of the vermont public television. the candidates of the united states senate. why don't we move next to health care. we will start with you -- [inaudible] >> moderator: we are going to move to the next topic here. i want to discuss health care and whether or not you support the affordable care act otherwise known as obamacare and we start with you. i support socialize medicine and one of the problems we can't get it because we are tied up in the single-payer issue which is administered in fact and sure we should have it and would take 20 some odd percent of the bill but we will still end up with a rott
ericson? ericson: my grandfather was born in the him perform and it used to be legal and if we legalize it again we could pay for liheap. legalizing and taxing marijuana and hemp won't pay for everything but if it comes between vermont freezing to death in their home and legalizing tax marijuana and pay for the fuel assistance with that. >> moderator: you are watching a live debate at the studio of the vermont public television. the candidates of the united states senate. why don't we...
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Oct 19, 2016
10/16
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chris, next. >> my name is chris ericson. marijuana were legal then. please go visit the united states marijuana party. we believe that marijuana should be legalized under federal law, thank you. .. in case of illegal drugs the price has to be no higher than cost. that is, you ca you can't add ts because as soon shoot at anything in it builds the place -- >> thank you. nature last 30-second pitch. >> i believe in vermont. i am a vermonter. thousands of people asked me to run but it's more than just that. it's because i know i can help them. i was talking with a world war ii veteran, a member of the greatest generation. he said i am so glad you are running again, because i have upheld the values that he fought for. i was humbled by that. i'm humbled by the trust vermonters have put in me. i will use every single second to fulfill the trust. >> thank you. thanks everybody. thanks russ to the audience. three weeks from today hopefully will shock america by changing the united states senate seat in vermont, passing our system is running a campaign with all
chris, next. >> my name is chris ericson. marijuana were legal then. please go visit the united states marijuana party. we believe that marijuana should be legalized under federal law, thank you. .. in case of illegal drugs the price has to be no higher than cost. that is, you ca you can't add ts because as soon shoot at anything in it builds the place -- >> thank you. nature last 30-second pitch. >> i believe in vermont. i am a vermonter. thousands of people asked me to run...
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Jun 9, 2015
06/15
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it's held at the follow-up to the foundry which is an at&t ericson innovation center. what i like about futurecast is it shows my commitment to innovation. i'm not a a reactionary. we bring in small -- more people to talk about the way technology is changing the world. we have an invitation only list of people who come to these events and it's a really fun way to think about the challenges of the future. we have for example the ceo of utah city who was the guy who invented google glass and self driving cars. we have politicians and investors. we have the guy behind -- so in its attempt to seriously think about these issues and is in terms of this book an attempt to turn kids of silicon valley to grub to make them more responsible for the impact on technology which is changing the world in every sense. >> host: has tom perkins ever spoken at futurecast? >> guest: i would like to have him as if he's watching his more than welcome. tom perkins -- >> host: who. >> guest: tom perkins was the original venture capitalist of silicon valley. a very brilliant man who made a fort
it's held at the follow-up to the foundry which is an at&t ericson innovation center. what i like about futurecast is it shows my commitment to innovation. i'm not a a reactionary. we bring in small -- more people to talk about the way technology is changing the world. we have an invitation only list of people who come to these events and it's a really fun way to think about the challenges of the future. we have for example the ceo of utah city who was the guy who invented google glass and...
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Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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ericson? ericson: the f-35s are designed to carry targeted, smart nuclear bombs.he issue isn't six minutes of noise a day, the issue is nuclear proliferation. now, when i was a child in the early 1960s, vermont was the garden of eden. since bernie sanders came in, vermont's gone to hell. and we've got to stop this hell that he's putting us through. we've got to stop the f-35. we've got to stop nuclear proliferation. sure, they can have it down in south carolina, but we can at least just say no to it here in vermont. now, there are other serious problems with the f-35. we have a problem with solar flares. nasa says the solar flares are going to continue for another year. they disrupt communication, and because solar flares disrupt communication, we can end up with one of these nuclear bombs detonating in the burlington, vermont. .. the military machine would be called into question by, we, the people, saying this is what i want to get done or not get done, and i think that that protection boy the u.s. constitution is our biggest chance of being able to decide for o
ericson? ericson: the f-35s are designed to carry targeted, smart nuclear bombs.he issue isn't six minutes of noise a day, the issue is nuclear proliferation. now, when i was a child in the early 1960s, vermont was the garden of eden. since bernie sanders came in, vermont's gone to hell. and we've got to stop this hell that he's putting us through. we've got to stop the f-35. we've got to stop nuclear proliferation. sure, they can have it down in south carolina, but we can at least just say no...
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May 15, 2010
05/10
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charlie ericson with hispanic link news service here in washington. question primarily for mayor gordon. what you've reflected on here is the same rhetoric that everybody has been talking about wanting to have things changed. but all seem to let the president off the hook on this. and i think you've done it here with this group here. here's the guy who can really make change, who made a promise to the people, to the 12 million people who are really suffering because we don't have any law at this point or any amnesty if you'll permit the dirty word. when you came to washington, did you ask for a meeting with the president? do you feel you could have any impact if you talked to the president about this? do you feel that he is being let off the hook by the -- by the people who are saying they're for immigration? >> i can answer that directly. number one i've been to washington, d.c. three weeks in a row. 198,000 in the last two years. every trip is to work with the white house and congress and justice and homeland security. i met with the vice president
charlie ericson with hispanic link news service here in washington. question primarily for mayor gordon. what you've reflected on here is the same rhetoric that everybody has been talking about wanting to have things changed. but all seem to let the president off the hook on this. and i think you've done it here with this group here. here's the guy who can really make change, who made a promise to the people, to the 12 million people who are really suffering because we don't have any law at...
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Dec 7, 2009
12/09
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joining us are mark hamm ericson and scott cleland with net competition.org, ann veigle of communications daily is also joining in the questioning. gentlemen, if you would, just start -- give us a basic 101 on your organization, why it was formed and who are the members of it? mr. erickson? >> guest: sure. well, i'm a washington lawyer who has been asked to assemble a coalition of leading technology companies, internet companies like amazon, google, other stakeholders of consumer groups, civil rights organizations, people that use the internet, small businesses to help advocate before the federal communications commission and other policymakers policies that preserve an open internet. >> guest: yes. and net competition.org was formed about three and a half years ago. it is a pro-competition, more free market-oriented approach, and it is, it represents broadband interests, literally the entire broadband sector, so that would include all the large broadband companies that people know, the two cable associations, the two wireless associations and the telecom association. so that's where we c
joining us are mark hamm ericson and scott cleland with net competition.org, ann veigle of communications daily is also joining in the questioning. gentlemen, if you would, just start -- give us a basic 101 on your organization, why it was formed and who are the members of it? mr. erickson? >> guest: sure. well, i'm a washington lawyer who has been asked to assemble a coalition of leading technology companies, internet companies like amazon, google, other stakeholders of consumer groups,...
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Apr 12, 2010
04/10
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. >> host: finally, a perspective from mark an am ericson. when you put out the statement on the comcast decision, you called this a dangerous situation. why use those words? >> guest: well, you know, it's a dangerous situation in that currently there's under the existing legal theories that the commission has cobbled together there is no recourse if an internet access provider blocks lawful content or refuses to let you go to a web site that you want to go to or interferes with your communications over the internet. so, you know, that is a situation that i think most policymakers think is not tenable, certainly not what congress intended in the '96 telecommunications act. >> host: and then later on in the statement you said that the decision invited the commission to proceed against broadband providers under title ii. how did you goat to that? >> guest: right. in many ways, i think this is a very good decision for us, for the internet community and consumers -- >> host: which you represent. >> guest: which i represent. it's a clear repudiati
. >> host: finally, a perspective from mark an am ericson. when you put out the statement on the comcast decision, you called this a dangerous situation. why use those words? >> guest: well, you know, it's a dangerous situation in that currently there's under the existing legal theories that the commission has cobbled together there is no recourse if an internet access provider blocks lawful content or refuses to let you go to a web site that you want to go to or interferes with...
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Oct 14, 2014
10/14
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ericson: prexy i'm ericson: threats made by rhonda gives 44 million a year to the university of vermont and that's an outrage. the university of vermont is a private for-profit college and they just raise the tuition every year because they get greedy or in a greedy or. the state of vermont shouldn't be given 1 penny to a private for-profit college. all the money should go to the state colleges. and for that $44 million a year we could have free online college courses. >> moderator: mr. shumlin? shumlin: this is one of the greatest challenges we are facing which is the affordability of college. one of the challenges is that with all the money we spend on education we haven't moved the needle one bits moving first generation students beyond high school and we know that in this work for you can't succeed if you don't move beyond high school. so, i've done two things come in three things that are important and i'm proud of and at the first is early college enrollment which allows any high school student in vermont now to get one year of free college in the state while they are in high scho
ericson: prexy i'm ericson: threats made by rhonda gives 44 million a year to the university of vermont and that's an outrage. the university of vermont is a private for-profit college and they just raise the tuition every year because they get greedy or in a greedy or. the state of vermont shouldn't be given 1 penny to a private for-profit college. all the money should go to the state colleges. and for that $44 million a year we could have free online college courses. >> moderator: mr....
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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ericson? ericson: we have a national deficit.f we were in the black, the national budget had a lot of money, then there wouldn't be any argument. would be okay. stand hear, spend their. but the thing is what we've got to do to get in the black is to have a flat answer on national tax and also on social security. so, regardless of how much money someone makes, they should pay the same percentage of their income into social security as a low-income person with no cap at $250,000 or anything like that. so all persons and corporations since corporations are being treated like persons should pay a flat and fair tax the same as if we charged anybody 2% across-the-board we would be in the black. spec many of you know the military is discussing the idea of putting the f35 fighter jet to replace the f-16. that is the next question. we have another question from south burlington. if you were elected to be the senator and f 35 at the national guard but what to do to protect my family and the children that it tend south burlington from the f
ericson? ericson: we have a national deficit.f we were in the black, the national budget had a lot of money, then there wouldn't be any argument. would be okay. stand hear, spend their. but the thing is what we've got to do to get in the black is to have a flat answer on national tax and also on social security. so, regardless of how much money someone makes, they should pay the same percentage of their income into social security as a low-income person with no cap at $250,000 or anything like...
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Mar 13, 2016
03/16
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and i quote eric ericson where he said the republican party created donald trump because they made a lot of promises they didn't keep. ever since berry goldwater, republicans promised to create a small government, which no republican president could do whether it was nixon, reagan or either president bush. they promised to roll back the cultural changes in the 1960's but most of the country didn't want to roll back those cultural changes and their efforts failed. mow recently, a lot of republicans, including trump, said they would try to change the epic make-up of the country back to where it used to be thus trump's call for deporting 11 million people. that is one way in which the rise of trump is ec explained. the other is the white vote relies on the working class voters and as cited in the book, there republican party has the working class votes and done nothing materially for white working class voters. when you look at the vote, it is a vote of people in lower middle class and working class who are angry and tired of -- one of my favorite quotes is from jun kennedy who said in
and i quote eric ericson where he said the republican party created donald trump because they made a lot of promises they didn't keep. ever since berry goldwater, republicans promised to create a small government, which no republican president could do whether it was nixon, reagan or either president bush. they promised to roll back the cultural changes in the 1960's but most of the country didn't want to roll back those cultural changes and their efforts failed. mow recently, a lot of...
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Apr 25, 2021
04/21
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it was supported by the legal society and sam ericson a great man along with other leaders perhaps her parents were involved in that effort to get legislative relief so that if the a school district receives federal financial assistance, then it must do exactly that. you have other extracurricular clubs to meeting you can't discriminate against the religious club so not only was the constitutional law but a federal liberal -- civil right. still there were objections and i argued this case in 1992 along with jacek gielow. the one school district in omaha and nebraska a wealthy school district the council said equal access act is unconstitutional and a violation of the establishment clause. it was really rejected 9-0. 8-1 with john paul stevens in the senate but it was very idiosyncratic. they said i don't think congress intended to intrude into the federalism values for the power of the school boards to make their own decisions and so forth. no one else on the court agreed so that's why. >> you are making excuses for the bad guys. >> i did say was idiosyncratic. you keep me honest for t
it was supported by the legal society and sam ericson a great man along with other leaders perhaps her parents were involved in that effort to get legislative relief so that if the a school district receives federal financial assistance, then it must do exactly that. you have other extracurricular clubs to meeting you can't discriminate against the religious club so not only was the constitutional law but a federal liberal -- civil right. still there were objections and i argued this case in...
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Jul 15, 2013
07/13
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well how is it known that kinases were even involved with cancer, and i spoke with a man named ray ericson, who was the first scientist to uncover the connection, to find the involvement of kinase in cancer, and i said, how did you get there? why were you researching kinases? he said oh, ways researching a gene called sarc, and i with a looking for the protein products of a gene called sa -- src. i said why are you researching src? he said that was a gene involved in chicken cancer. why were you researching chicken cancer? he used to get made fun of researching chick than cancer in the 1970s and the story went like this. src was a gene involved in a virus that caused cancer in chickens, and when he went to find out, well, how did it cause cancer in chickens was when he uncovered the role of kinases. and where that gene had first been found went all the way back to 19 10, and this is just to give you an example of the twists and turns, how we just never know where science will lead to or where it has come from for that matter, so this is a true story. in 1910 there was a scientist named pey
well how is it known that kinases were even involved with cancer, and i spoke with a man named ray ericson, who was the first scientist to uncover the connection, to find the involvement of kinase in cancer, and i said, how did you get there? why were you researching kinases? he said oh, ways researching a gene called sarc, and i with a looking for the protein products of a gene called sa -- src. i said why are you researching src? he said that was a gene involved in chicken cancer. why were...
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Oct 12, 2015
10/15
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but really quickly, frederick ericson from brussels. seles from the afl-cio, majorie from the chamber of commerce, susan from george washington university. frederick, what do you consider the most important issues to a successful outcome for the ttip and what do you consider to the be the most difficult to solve. >> i think it's the same issue and sean brought the attention to it and that's the united states could become the 29th 29th member of the european union. that's a benefit that it is going to come out from this. if you want to show your increasing europeanness you should take longer holidays, which following the european model, and please, don't take away the illusion our environmental cause is more environmental thon yours. that's the kind of ambition we'll have for what we're going to do with ttip. let me just say a couple of words on that issue from the viewpoint of thinking through the economics and political economy of it all. i'm not sort of desperately happy with the obsession that lot of people have about estimating the
but really quickly, frederick ericson from brussels. seles from the afl-cio, majorie from the chamber of commerce, susan from george washington university. frederick, what do you consider the most important issues to a successful outcome for the ttip and what do you consider to the be the most difficult to solve. >> i think it's the same issue and sean brought the attention to it and that's the united states could become the 29th 29th member of the european union. that's a benefit that it...
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Oct 21, 2016
10/16
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meanwhile, -- >> thank you. >> my name is chris ericson.grandfather was born on a hemp farm in shelbyville kentucky. his name was george robert erikson and hemp and marijuana were legal than. please go visit the united states marijuana party ucmj party.com or national party and we believe that marijuana and hemp should be legalized as a federal law. thank you. >> and i believe that old drugs -- all drugs, legal, illegal, prescription and nonprescription should be the business of the population at large, and that industry also needs to go on and be controlled by the population. we need to be able to say what we decide what the prices will be. in case of illegal drugs, the price has to be no higher than cost. that is, you can't add taxes in because as soon as you at anything in it builds a place for salespeople to come in. >> thank you. your last 30-second pitch. >> i believe in vermont. i am a vermonter. thousands of people have asked me to run but it's more than just that. it's because i know that i can help them. i was talking with a world
meanwhile, -- >> thank you. >> my name is chris ericson.grandfather was born on a hemp farm in shelbyville kentucky. his name was george robert erikson and hemp and marijuana were legal than. please go visit the united states marijuana party ucmj party.com or national party and we believe that marijuana and hemp should be legalized as a federal law. thank you. >> and i believe that old drugs -- all drugs, legal, illegal, prescription and nonprescription should be the business...
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Mar 27, 2021
03/21
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sadie ericson was a model of the duality expected of stewardesses. she had social skills and self-determination, glamor and grit, the petite blond looked, quote, like a captivating french doll and was, quote, almost magnetic include entoday by looks, temperment and education to be outstanding in a profession that required, quote, poise and fearless capacity for action and grim courage. the next two decade consolidated the view of the job as women's work. during the second world war women took cabin positions across airlines as men served never military. passengers began to favor air travel over ocean or whale in the post 1950s due to technological advantages such as the jet plane which sliced the flight to down to six or ten hours, and airlines compete for passengers by touting technical innovation and only so many customizations to the new jet plane existed. prices' stabilizes by the government at $400 or $500 to cross the atlantic to flying was too expensive to be a regular undertaking for anyone but the rich. each airline tried to convince ump ker
sadie ericson was a model of the duality expected of stewardesses. she had social skills and self-determination, glamor and grit, the petite blond looked, quote, like a captivating french doll and was, quote, almost magnetic include entoday by looks, temperment and education to be outstanding in a profession that required, quote, poise and fearless capacity for action and grim courage. the next two decade consolidated the view of the job as women's work. during the second world war women took...
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Nov 21, 2023
11/23
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american ambassador in an e-mail chain that just happened to learn -- land of your inbox of this man sam ericson. i will leaveve it there. i guess the spoiler is that we are privileged to have her with us tonight. but how they got here and what they have been through, i will let you read it for yourselves. thank you so much for sharing. i hope please left a little for you. if you have any questions to address to us i would be more than happy -- yes sir. i think we are supposed to wait. >> mitch could you tell us a little bit about how you got on to the story and i'm guessing he wrote the book without going to afghanistan? so tell us a little bit about that. >> a great reporter charlie stein. thank you charlie. it's also serendipity i did not go to afghanistan because by the time i got involved all of my subjects were here in so i would have been open to it had it been necessary if i could have done it safely. i got a call shortly after these events from the woman i mentioned marley who's this literary agent which happens to be a close friend of my former editor. they recognized what happened her
american ambassador in an e-mail chain that just happened to learn -- land of your inbox of this man sam ericson. i will leaveve it there. i guess the spoiler is that we are privileged to have her with us tonight. but how they got here and what they have been through, i will let you read it for yourselves. thank you so much for sharing. i hope please left a little for you. if you have any questions to address to us i would be more than happy -- yes sir. i think we are supposed to wait. >>...
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May 15, 2021
05/21
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so brent'spredecessor, sam ericson, a great man, was along the other leaders, some of whom perhaps your parents were involved in that effort, to get legislative relief so if a school district receives federal financial assistance then its must do what -- do what umkc -- extra crick already club colorado meet you can't discriminate against a religious club so payment would principle of constitutional law and became a federal civil right. still there were objections and i argued this case in 1992, along with jay sekulow. the west side school district of omaha, nebraska, wealthy school district, advise counsel said the equal access act is unconstitutional, violation over the establishment clause. a rather extreme position and rejected 9-0, we won the eye quality after principle won. 8-1 with john paul stephens in dissent but a very itsow sin thattic decision and the said i don't think congress intended to intrude so deep laly into federallallism values and no one else on the course agreed. >> you're making excuses for the bad guys but that's all right. >> was that an excuse? >> it was. >>
so brent'spredecessor, sam ericson, a great man, was along the other leaders, some of whom perhaps your parents were involved in that effort, to get legislative relief so if a school district receives federal financial assistance then its must do what -- do what umkc -- extra crick already club colorado meet you can't discriminate against a religious club so payment would principle of constitutional law and became a federal civil right. still there were objections and i argued this case in...
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Oct 19, 2016
10/16
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ericson? >> we have a secret ballot and it should stay that way.pume what do you think about the tone of the presidential debate speak with i'm disgusted, shot, horrified. it turns my stomach. i'm just totally complete shock. the main thing is people over and over again have been voting for the candidates who have the biggest campaign funds, the most money and that's in president treki got to go back to reading the holy bible that says you should worship man. you shouldn't worship money. because when you're worshiping money you in the up with the worst candidates, not the best candidates. >> peter, who are you going to vote for for president? >> gloria. and it's really interesting how the so-called alternative candidates within the capitalist system think that they should be allowed into the debate, but they have made the effort to get the socialists into the debate. and if you're looking for high quality candidates, that's where you will find them. there are three of them. the socialist party candidate is a guy named -- and the workers world candi
ericson? >> we have a secret ballot and it should stay that way.pume what do you think about the tone of the presidential debate speak with i'm disgusted, shot, horrified. it turns my stomach. i'm just totally complete shock. the main thing is people over and over again have been voting for the candidates who have the biggest campaign funds, the most money and that's in president treki got to go back to reading the holy bible that says you should worship man. you shouldn't worship money....
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Apr 30, 2011
04/11
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resorts and then all the military bases, it's, you know -- there's a writer i really like named steve ericson who once wrote that the two great contributions of the american civilization are annihilation and fun. [laughter] >> and he was writing that about las vegas and a piece about, you know, all the old nuclear tests that were done in the nevada desert but that -- i think that metric applies to hawaii as well. i mean, but then on the other hand, you know, it is -- it is still so much so often the sovereign independent country it once was. you know, the language, even, you know, english speakers, people who would say they don't speak hawaiian, hawaiian words are peppered into normal talk. if you were going to ask directions from someone, they would tell you to go maka, towards the mountains or towards the ocean. and there's -- i mean, it is such a singular place and it still has so many vestiges of its singular culture that it is kind of lost in a way, you know? that's maybe why "lost" was filmed there. [laughter] >> i have a friend -- he's a teacher and i was speaking to him and some of hi
resorts and then all the military bases, it's, you know -- there's a writer i really like named steve ericson who once wrote that the two great contributions of the american civilization are annihilation and fun. [laughter] >> and he was writing that about las vegas and a piece about, you know, all the old nuclear tests that were done in the nevada desert but that -- i think that metric applies to hawaii as well. i mean, but then on the other hand, you know, it is -- it is still so much...
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Oct 19, 2016
10/16
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ericson. >> i represent the united states marijuana party. the biggest issue in the united states of america as we are suffering from a lack of democracy and the whole election system is un-american and to give you an example because i asked party -- barber at the woodstock school and allowing her eighth-graders to watch this program and eighth-graders are concerned about things like rolling. senator leahy has been a bully. he has been a bully in the political playground away children are bullies in the schoolyard playground. iran as the democratic candidate is united states and this past summer and senator leahy refused to have even one debate or one form with me. he is a holy come he is a political playground bully. he is totalitarian, and democratic and un-american and he should be ashamed of himself. >> it's kind of hard to respond as a person who wrote i don't think there's any group of women in this country that is called a sexist. when you referred to senator sanders, i admire senator sanders. i've served with him and he and his wife a
ericson. >> i represent the united states marijuana party. the biggest issue in the united states of america as we are suffering from a lack of democracy and the whole election system is un-american and to give you an example because i asked party -- barber at the woodstock school and allowing her eighth-graders to watch this program and eighth-graders are concerned about things like rolling. senator leahy has been a bully. he has been a bully in the political playground away children are...
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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here we have carl ericson with one of his more beautiful light touches for one of the models that he and i always get it wrong but you know who i mean. he did some of the more fanciful covers. now the other thing that happened with the photography in vogue in particular was he never doubted what any picture was trying to sell you. here we have sandals. we also have marlena dietrich who is modeling a hat. more hats. if you want to buy any kind of cosmetics you of course have to have the cool compact in the jewelry to go with it, don't you? and the covers. it was not unusual to see black people on the covers of vogue in the 1930s. you always knew what every issue is going to sell you. then there came a fresh face to vogue. carmel white as she was at the time, carmel snow as she became when she married one of the 400. she arrived and she was a complete breath of fresh air, completely untrained just like edna had been in the beginning. her only claim to fame was that her brother worked for william randolph hurst. little did conde know that would actually mean something in several years.
here we have carl ericson with one of his more beautiful light touches for one of the models that he and i always get it wrong but you know who i mean. he did some of the more fanciful covers. now the other thing that happened with the photography in vogue in particular was he never doubted what any picture was trying to sell you. here we have sandals. we also have marlena dietrich who is modeling a hat. more hats. if you want to buy any kind of cosmetics you of course have to have the cool...
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Jun 30, 2013
06/13
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so i wondered how was it known that knase were even involved with cancer, and i spoke with ray ericson, the first scientist to find the involvement of kinase in cancer. i said, why were you researching that? he says if was researching actually a gene call sarc and looking for the protein products of the gene called src. and i'm, let's src? he said that was a gene involved in chicken cancer. why were you researching chicken cancer? used to get made fun of for doing that in the 1970s, and the story went like this. src was a gene involved in a virus that caused cancer in chickens, and when they went to fine out, how did it cause cancer in chickens, is when he uncovered the role of kinases, and where that gene had first been found was when -- went all the way back to 1910, and this is just to give you an example of the twists and turns, how we just never know where science will lead to or where it has come from for that matter. this is a true story in 1910 there was a scientist peyton rose who was researching at rockefeller institute, now rockefeller university in manhattan, and he had got
so i wondered how was it known that knase were even involved with cancer, and i spoke with ray ericson, the first scientist to find the involvement of kinase in cancer. i said, why were you researching that? he says if was researching actually a gene call sarc and looking for the protein products of the gene called src. and i'm, let's src? he said that was a gene involved in chicken cancer. why were you researching chicken cancer? used to get made fun of for doing that in the 1970s, and the...
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Feb 7, 2016
02/16
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i've had people like eric ericson tweet positive things about the book. he is a talk radio host himself and a conservative blogger and now author. i've had people -- the weekly standard wrote a great review, henry olsen wrote a fabulous review in the weekly standard about this book. i just spoke at the leadership institutes are wednesday weakup break fast. a conservative organization where i used to work. i'm telling you, so many people dish feel like trump. many, many people have come up to me. many say i'm glad you wrote this book, i was expecting pushback and when i first started writing these kole loments i got a ton of pushback. if i dared say anything about bat christine o'donnell i was a rino. when ann coulter tweets out something where -- i'm paraphrasing but said i don't care if donald trump performs abortions in the white house as long as he has this hard-core antiimmigration policy. i think people are finally waking up and even a lot of conservatives who were hesitant to engage in introspection or criticism of the conservative cause are finally
i've had people like eric ericson tweet positive things about the book. he is a talk radio host himself and a conservative blogger and now author. i've had people -- the weekly standard wrote a great review, henry olsen wrote a fabulous review in the weekly standard about this book. i just spoke at the leadership institutes are wednesday weakup break fast. a conservative organization where i used to work. i'm telling you, so many people dish feel like trump. many, many people have come up to...
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Apr 14, 2014
04/14
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. >> guest: i talk about ben carson johnny ericson, had an accident when she was 17 years old, wading, and paraplegic, and struggled with despair and the meaning of life. taught herself to paint by sticking a pain brush in her teeth and has created a lot of wonderful things. works with handicapped people. was wind -- pushed strongly the americans with disables hack and it's been an inprecision to millions including people who do not have physical challenges. a couple of african people who grow up in horrible circumstances you couldn't even imagine if you were writing a work of fiction, and yet they managed to overcome and come to america where they sought tub. the point of thesters -- paul harvey idea to do them. you would say, okay, if you think you had a hard life and difficulty. let me tell you about somebody else and who they overcame. we're not just going to sing the song. we're going to tell you. and i go become and tell the story of the leslie stall did this piece in a harlem housing project in new york. all minorities, hard-core unemployed people who never had a job or only ha
. >> guest: i talk about ben carson johnny ericson, had an accident when she was 17 years old, wading, and paraplegic, and struggled with despair and the meaning of life. taught herself to paint by sticking a pain brush in her teeth and has created a lot of wonderful things. works with handicapped people. was wind -- pushed strongly the americans with disables hack and it's been an inprecision to millions including people who do not have physical challenges. a couple of african people who...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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ericson graduated from university of minnesota and obtained a ph.d.n geography from the university of washington. innative of wisconsin, he's the 17th president of penn state and planning to step down in 2014. no doubt, much of his time in the next two years will be dealing with the fallout from the scandal and restorying penn state's reputation. please join me in welcoming rodney ericson to the national press club. [applause] >> well, good afternoon, thank you president warner, if the for the flexibility given the weather challenges of the week. i'm honored to be here, your appreciation for the penn state and higher education. we need your continued engagement. again, thank you for joining us. thank you for bringing along the penn state cookies. [laughter] according to google news, there's over 45,000 stories about penn state and sandusky. you've written them. you've read them. i imagine that most of you have formed an opinion about penn state and our actions over the last year. beyond the headlines, there's another reality, one that exists for penn
ericson graduated from university of minnesota and obtained a ph.d.n geography from the university of washington. innative of wisconsin, he's the 17th president of penn state and planning to step down in 2014. no doubt, much of his time in the next two years will be dealing with the fallout from the scandal and restorying penn state's reputation. please join me in welcoming rodney ericson to the national press club. [applause] >> well, good afternoon, thank you president warner, if the...
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Aug 21, 2012
08/12
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ericson. get closer to the microphone. they are having trouble hearing you. >> [inaudible] i've been asked from other delegates from minnesota when you'll have the final printing. do you know about when that will be able to be distributed to the delegates coming in from the home state? >> question is when will you get a final draft. the document will be delivered to the tampa bay forum monday morning at 6 a.m., and the freeman folks who run the inside of the stadium will put it on every delegate seat, on their seat as they walk into the stadium for the delegates. we are printing an extra number in washington to put across the country, but every delegate receives it when they sit down in the house. >> all right. we're going to the current failure. there are actually several amendments. was that in -- hang on here. the amendments i have, i have fp11 and fp101. those both relate to page 2, line 2, and that would be in the current failure. beep, do you have something -- ben, do you have something different than that? reporters
ericson. get closer to the microphone. they are having trouble hearing you. >> [inaudible] i've been asked from other delegates from minnesota when you'll have the final printing. do you know about when that will be able to be distributed to the delegates coming in from the home state? >> question is when will you get a final draft. the document will be delivered to the tampa bay forum monday morning at 6 a.m., and the freeman folks who run the inside of the stadium will put it on...
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Mar 12, 2011
03/11
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spencer hold houldni, brokers of america and ericson insurance services. sandra parrillo, the chair of the national association of mutual insurance companies and president and ceo of mutual fire insurance company from rhode island, and vice president flood operations r harleysville pennsylvania, and barry rutenberg first vice chairman of national association of home builders from washington, d.c.. if you could limit your comments to fivemens, and then we'll have question and answer. >> thank you. good morning, chairwoman biggert and members of the subcommittee, i'm part of a national nonpartisan budget watchdog. thank you for inviting me here to testify, and i'd like to recognize the people effected by the tsunami and how it shows the importance of the fema and flood insurance program. they long advocated for flood insurance in the program, and with $3 billion justify -- offsetting the $18 billion debt, it must be reformed, and the question is how. any reauthorization in the program must make significant changes to put it on sounder footing with more sound
spencer hold houldni, brokers of america and ericson insurance services. sandra parrillo, the chair of the national association of mutual insurance companies and president and ceo of mutual fire insurance company from rhode island, and vice president flood operations r harleysville pennsylvania, and barry rutenberg first vice chairman of national association of home builders from washington, d.c.. if you could limit your comments to fivemens, and then we'll have question and answer. >>...
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Apr 18, 2022
04/22
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they had a phillips oil ahead of sun oil that mccann ericson.uh ad agency etc because they weren't able to because they never even tried to actually like create a paper trail showing the extent to which these guys were even aware of these things had happened it just it didn't it didn't sink in it seems that to the extent that we can say that they're probably was a business plot that the very least. butler was approached to lead a coup butler blowing the whistle on it seems to have been enough to keep it from happening. um, and and one did not happen franklin d roosevelt sort of took as a lesson from this and it was a lesson that he was already starting to to imbibe in lots of different ways franklin d roosevelt himself in imperialist to new butler and hung out with him during the us occupation of haiti etc. oh, you know was a as eric rauschway has written, you know fdr like kind of took from this a a moral to double down on using the power of the federal government to show people that liberal democracy could still work for them and that and and
they had a phillips oil ahead of sun oil that mccann ericson.uh ad agency etc because they weren't able to because they never even tried to actually like create a paper trail showing the extent to which these guys were even aware of these things had happened it just it didn't it didn't sink in it seems that to the extent that we can say that they're probably was a business plot that the very least. butler was approached to lead a coup butler blowing the whistle on it seems to have been enough...
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Sep 12, 2011
09/11
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. >> charlie ericson. >> yeah.little more upbeat is the role that hispanics can play in the global economy and, particularly hispanics and people, the language that is so necessary or the, multiple languages that need to be spoken. what is being done in your knowledge to take advantage of the bilingual child who is hispanic? and in the public education system. that is question. >> for those who don't know charlie ericson, head of hispanic link news agency, member of the national association of hispanic journalists hall of fame and a great gift to our community. why don't you take that one, jose? >> that is a great question, charlie. >> [inaudible]. >> good to see you by the way. >> thank you. >> it's a great question. the unfortunate thing i think that is not a valued skill in this country yet. everywhere else, except the united states, the skill of bilingual education and bilingual system very valuable except in this country. there are fears about, as in some countries, there is fear associated with creating a bil
. >> charlie ericson. >> yeah.little more upbeat is the role that hispanics can play in the global economy and, particularly hispanics and people, the language that is so necessary or the, multiple languages that need to be spoken. what is being done in your knowledge to take advantage of the bilingual child who is hispanic? and in the public education system. that is question. >> for those who don't know charlie ericson, head of hispanic link news agency, member of the...
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1.0K
Sep 12, 2017
09/17
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robert elson >> albert alfy william elmarry >> doris suk-yuen eng >> christopher epps >> ulf ramm ericsonsarah speenineteen >> william john irwin >> josÉ speenineteen >> project esposito >> billy esposito >> michael esposito >> francis esposito >> sadie ette >> eric brian evans >> meredith emily june the ewart >> robert evans >> and my grandfather william. i know you are watching over me and my sisters and i hope i am making you proud every day. please watch over my little cousins and i want you to know i am doing everything i can to make you proud and i love you. >> catherine fagan and my beloved brother. thank you for your laughter. we miss you terribly. we will honor you every day. >> patricia mary fagan >> ivan fairben >> saundra fajardo smith for >> charles. >> jamie fallon >> william f. fallon >> william lawrence fallon junior >> anthony fallone >> delores brigitte fanelli >> kathleen faragher >> thomas serena >> nancy carol farley >> page marie farley's >> elizabeth antara >> douglas farnum >> john gerard ferrell >> john w. ferrell >> terence patrick ferrell >> joseph farrelly >> c
robert elson >> albert alfy william elmarry >> doris suk-yuen eng >> christopher epps >> ulf ramm ericsonsarah speenineteen >> william john irwin >> josÉ speenineteen >> project esposito >> billy esposito >> michael esposito >> francis esposito >> sadie ette >> eric brian evans >> meredith emily june the ewart >> robert evans >> and my grandfather william. i know you are watching over me and my sisters...