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Dec 22, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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that was wild, yeah. >> larry: do you ever think that too much too soon? maybe i'm having too much of this? i know you're a very composed guy and obviously mature, but do you think to yourself this is maybe a lot for us? you're 22. you're just a kid. >> i think i would have said yes last year, but now i've gotten used to it in a sense. last year right after i won the masters he was just berserk. i went on vacation down in mexico and couldn't have fun and left. then my first tournament back, which was the byron nelson, it was unbelievable. unbelievable. >> larry: do you lose all privacy? >> i've learned how to, i guess, get my privacy in different ways. >> larry: like? >> what i mean by that is when i go out in public, obviously i'm in public and can't have private time i like. i've learned how to manipulate things, manipulate my life so i can stay in places that are private and go to places with my friends in private so we can have fun that way. >> larry: for every plus there's a minus. you give up some part of your life, because guys your age like to hang
that was wild, yeah. >> larry: do you ever think that too much too soon? maybe i'm having too much of this? i know you're a very composed guy and obviously mature, but do you think to yourself this is maybe a lot for us? you're 22. you're just a kid. >> i think i would have said yes last year, but now i've gotten used to it in a sense. last year right after i won the masters he was just berserk. i went on vacation down in mexico and couldn't have fun and left. then my first...
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507
Dec 22, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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eye 507
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that was wild, yeah. >> larry: do you ever think that too much too soon? maybe i'm having too much of this? i know you're a very composed guy and very mature. do you think this is a lot for you. you're 22 and a kid. >> i think i would have said yes last year, but now i've gotten used to it in the last year. i went on vacation down in mexico and couldn't have fun, and then i left. then my first tournament back, which was the nelson, it was unbelievable. >> larry: following you around? >> unbelievable. >> larry: you lose all privacy, right? >> i've learned how to, i guess, get my he privacy in different ways. what i mean by that is, when i go out in public, obviously i'm in public and can't have the private time i like but i've learned how to manipulate things. so i stay in pliss that are private. i go to places with my friends that are private. >> larry: for every plus there's a minus. you give up some part of your life. dp guys your age like to kid around and have laughs in a shopping center. you can't do that. >> first of all, i don't like to shop. i hate
that was wild, yeah. >> larry: do you ever think that too much too soon? maybe i'm having too much of this? i know you're a very composed guy and very mature. do you think this is a lot for you. you're 22 and a kid. >> i think i would have said yes last year, but now i've gotten used to it in the last year. i went on vacation down in mexico and couldn't have fun, and then i left. then my first tournament back, which was the nelson, it was unbelievable. >> larry: following you...
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Dec 28, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN
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morgan, too. guest: you have a situation last year, september of 2008, they were on the edge of going out of business. there was a run on the banks, goldman and j.p. morgan. they went running to the fed and they said we need special permission to be treated as financial holding companies, which you will have the protection of the federal preserve board and fdic. government guarantees. that is fine, but then you have to act like a commercial bank. but they are not, they are acting like hedge funds. we have banks in effect hedge funds gambling with taxpayer dollars. guest: think about what you're hearing. liberal economists associated with liberal think time, generally speaking, business school economist conservative -- both saying the white house is behaving inappropriately to the financial sector -- codling banks. i call corruption but think about what you are hearing. we have gross mismanagement, whether from the right or left, when your show. think about this. one was the last time you could get
morgan, too. guest: you have a situation last year, september of 2008, they were on the edge of going out of business. there was a run on the banks, goldman and j.p. morgan. they went running to the fed and they said we need special permission to be treated as financial holding companies, which you will have the protection of the federal preserve board and fdic. government guarantees. that is fine, but then you have to act like a commercial bank. but they are not, they are acting like hedge...
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266
Dec 13, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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too strong. he has been terrific in this team. you look at francois beauchemin playing against the number one trio. >> joe: no trouble for toskala. he saw it all the way. and toskala trying to keep peace in front of his neck. and forced to retire earlier than anticipated after troubles with concussions. the puck was played with a high stick. the face off come in the neutral territory. talk about the line all game long. 3 goals, 3 assists f shots, ovechkin, backstrom and semin doing a ton of damage. the rest of forwards and assists and 8 shots from the rest of the team. the rest of the team a -6 compared to the top trio for the caps who are a top 6 combined. >> greg: keep your eye on the caps. leading in goals this month. and mr. garnet exelby. and the guys need a breather. snatching on to it. really had to stretch behind the net to pick that up. the leafs putting on good pressure from finger and company. >> joe: here is the shot. gets the guy in front. the second shot. and clear, leading to a couple of stories in that sequence. >>
too strong. he has been terrific in this team. you look at francois beauchemin playing against the number one trio. >> joe: no trouble for toskala. he saw it all the way. and toskala trying to keep peace in front of his neck. and forced to retire earlier than anticipated after troubles with concussions. the puck was played with a high stick. the face off come in the neutral territory. talk about the line all game long. 3 goals, 3 assists f shots, ovechkin, backstrom and semin doing a ton...
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Dec 4, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN
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eye 125
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we're too big and too important to allow this to happen here. i understand it's a political vote. go out and beat up on the fed. you're a mysterious event. you could be in a deann brown novel. we recognized as nation it was important to keep monetary policy separate from fiscal policy and monetary policy independent. that's the long explanation of support for your position. you are as you said, audited in every area in a very open and aggressive way. and we have the access to those audits. everyone does except on the issue of monetary policy. that's the way it should be. i want to get into the too big to fail issue. i haven't figured out how to ard this yet. there's a proposal out of the house banking committee that said healthy, well capitalized, institutions with no risk to them will be stoubt the potential breakup. that will be determined by an independent group of politically pointed people, or maybe even members of congress for all i know, arbitrarily. i mean, that, to me, is a european model of governance that is very threatening. their biggest, not necessarily bad, in my in
we're too big and too important to allow this to happen here. i understand it's a political vote. go out and beat up on the fed. you're a mysterious event. you could be in a deann brown novel. we recognized as nation it was important to keep monetary policy separate from fiscal policy and monetary policy independent. that's the long explanation of support for your position. you are as you said, audited in every area in a very open and aggressive way. and we have the access to those audits....
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Dec 7, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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>> you know, if he had any failings or flaws is that he gave too many people too many second chances. he knew that sears was not the guy who's going to run the '80 campaign. so he actually -- he and mrs. reagan sat down with bill clark and asked bill clark if he would run the campaign. of course, judge clark was chief justice of the california state supreme court. he had some important cases coming up and so he demurred but the three of them went through a list and they came up with this fellow bill casey who had worked on the nixon administration. and so they reached out to bill casey and he ended up replacing john. but it's really because reagan had been pushed, you know, hard enough that he had to -- he just had to get rid of john. and as a matter of fact, charlie black, i think, had one of the wisest takes on john sears ease role in the campaign. he said that ronald reagan never would have been president if he hadn't hired john sears in 1975 and fired him if 1980. -- fired him in 1980. [laughter] >> i don't know if either of you read craig's book or heard about it and it's getting
>> you know, if he had any failings or flaws is that he gave too many people too many second chances. he knew that sears was not the guy who's going to run the '80 campaign. so he actually -- he and mrs. reagan sat down with bill clark and asked bill clark if he would run the campaign. of course, judge clark was chief justice of the california state supreme court. he had some important cases coming up and so he demurred but the three of them went through a list and they came up with this...
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Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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you're not a fan of that because there are too many loopholes. but if it came down to it and get your commission set up, we do go along with it? >> it would not be smart of me to negotiate in public. >> come on. >> let me say what i have said privately and publicly. i am actually a supporter of statutory payment. but not if it has three trillion -- $3 trillion of exemptions. the middle tax -- the middle class tax cuts, that is entirely reasonable to make permanent. it is entirely reasonable to have doctors covered for two years for the alternative minimum tax or the estate tax. and then turn over those matters to this commission for final determination, a final plan that would come to congress for a vote. but, as i said, i do not favor statutory pay-go with $3 trillion exemptions. with the creation of a commission with the responsibility to come up with a strategic plan for this country's fiscal future and statutory pay-go without $3 trillion of exemptions, but nonetheless, certainly exam to the middle-class tax cut, we know we're going to do tha
you're not a fan of that because there are too many loopholes. but if it came down to it and get your commission set up, we do go along with it? >> it would not be smart of me to negotiate in public. >> come on. >> let me say what i have said privately and publicly. i am actually a supporter of statutory payment. but not if it has three trillion -- $3 trillion of exemptions. the middle tax -- the middle class tax cuts, that is entirely reasonable to make permanent. it is...
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102
Dec 14, 2009
12/09
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eye 102
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we have too many fatherless children. we have too much going on in our community that does not lead or encouraged achievement. one of the disappointing things to me, and this happened to me when i was an elementary school kid. it happened years before i got to elementary school and it continues on. i have no idea where this came from. on too many black school yards in america, kids that want to do well and are trying to do well are not. you are trying to be wiped, as if trying to be educated is trying to be why. >> where did that come from? >> if i knew, i could solve some of these problems. i do not know. it is frustrating and demeaning. it is unfortunate. it is also depressing to kids that are unsure of themselves and want to belong. we talk about the power of words. words can help the derail kids. >> you have a forum and we are recording missed before you did your speech at george mason. there are eight different speeches during the school year and you have to stand before an audience said talk about what? >> this is s
we have too many fatherless children. we have too much going on in our community that does not lead or encouraged achievement. one of the disappointing things to me, and this happened to me when i was an elementary school kid. it happened years before i got to elementary school and it continues on. i have no idea where this came from. on too many black school yards in america, kids that want to do well and are trying to do well are not. you are trying to be wiped, as if trying to be educated is...
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228
Dec 10, 2009
12/09
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eye 228
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i don't know if that means it was too much to read or too heavy to carry or short ones can't see over it when they are sitting down. i don't know what the problem is. this notion that the value of a piece of legislation is inversusly related to its size is rather odd, but let me tell you how they manage to slim down, which i would like to do now, but i have to start my diet next week. how do they slim it down? they don't do anything in their bill about executive compensation. we say that the kind of bonuses and large payments to take risks and not be penalized if they fail, we have language in there to stop that, they don't. we say let's ban the kind of subprime loans. we have a lot of language to ban subprime loans. they don't. save some more pages. we do regulation in other ways that they don't do. they don't have registration of hedge funds. they don't have requirements of private advisers. so it is true if you avoid subjects, you shrink the size of the bill. by the way, as to the size of the bill, this didn't -- sometimes it's not what is nt there is relevant and i appreciate that
i don't know if that means it was too much to read or too heavy to carry or short ones can't see over it when they are sitting down. i don't know what the problem is. this notion that the value of a piece of legislation is inversusly related to its size is rather odd, but let me tell you how they manage to slim down, which i would like to do now, but i have to start my diet next week. how do they slim it down? they don't do anything in their bill about executive compensation. we say that the...
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Dec 13, 2009
12/09
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and, in essence, we've saved too little and we've spent too much. we bought up a lot of chinese-made goods and that's create a lot of crucial factory jobs in china for chinese workers. china has kept this going, this co dependence because it worked for china. and they sent the goods back to us to finance our goods, buying up a stock of treasury bonds and other dollar denominated assets that are worth about $2 trillion. this money has been a crucial means of allowing americans to live far in excess of our incomes. chinese purchases of american debt have kept interest rates in this country much lower than they would have otherwise have been and it enabled all these funny money mortgages it drove prices high and allowed people to borrow against their home prices so they could go to the mall and buy more chinese-made goods, among other things. but the world has changed in crucial ways as a result of our crisis. and so has the american place in the world which means we've got to figure out a way to break this cycle of codependence and grow our way out of
and, in essence, we've saved too little and we've spent too much. we bought up a lot of chinese-made goods and that's create a lot of crucial factory jobs in china for chinese workers. china has kept this going, this co dependence because it worked for china. and they sent the goods back to us to finance our goods, buying up a stock of treasury bonds and other dollar denominated assets that are worth about $2 trillion. this money has been a crucial means of allowing americans to live far in...
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1.7K
Dec 22, 2009
12/09
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WMPT
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that raises a question: is michelle rhee trying to do too much, too fast? >> the time for dramatic change begins today. >> reporter: this man doesn't think so. washington's mayor, adrian fenty hired her. >> the person who says that they're going to come in, shake things up, change the system, challenge the status quo, that's exactly what i want, because i don't want to be mayor of the >> reporter: rhee wasted no time getting started. weeks before the first day of school, she discovered thousands of textbooks and supplies - not in classrooms where they belonged, but gathering dust in a warehouse. she got them delivered to schools in time for opening day, and then went after the cause of the problem, the district's central office, long criticized for its inefficiency. rhee asked the city council to pass a law giving her the power to fire central office employees at will. >> for children at the classroom level. >> reporter: but pushback against rhee's proposal was immediate. at city council hearings, five labor unions spoke against the plan. >> i come before y
that raises a question: is michelle rhee trying to do too much, too fast? >> the time for dramatic change begins today. >> reporter: this man doesn't think so. washington's mayor, adrian fenty hired her. >> the person who says that they're going to come in, shake things up, change the system, challenge the status quo, that's exactly what i want, because i don't want to be mayor of the >> reporter: rhee wasted no time getting started. weeks before the first day of school,...
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. >> larry: was it too late, howard? >> it was too late. it was the second statement. and i think there's a better way to do it than another statement. i think people wanted to hear tiger. people like tiger. they want to hear him. when you don't -- >> larry: he should have done what, radio? >> he should have called you literally on the air. called somebody he was comfortable. >> larry: he didn't have to be seen? >> he could have said, i'm home healing, my doctor doesn't want me to leave but i want people to know. >> larry: it would have helped a lot. >> absolutely. >> larry: david, what would you advise? this is your specialty, too. >> given what we know now, i agree with larry that it was a little too late. the statement that he released today should have been released immediately after the accident. but you have to recognize, and good people do bad things. tiger still is an extraordinary talent, and he is still a young man who is remarkably poised. and these are the things that he should embrace and build upon as he rebuilds his image and re-earns the trust of the pu
. >> larry: was it too late, howard? >> it was too late. it was the second statement. and i think there's a better way to do it than another statement. i think people wanted to hear tiger. people like tiger. they want to hear him. when you don't -- >> larry: he should have done what, radio? >> he should have called you literally on the air. called somebody he was comfortable. >> larry: he didn't have to be seen? >> he could have said, i'm home healing, my...
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448
Dec 22, 2009
12/09
by
CNN
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eye 448
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not too long ago. >> 1975 was the first time. >> larry: was that part of that win, too? did you feel it sort of. >> when i was walking up 18 a number of emotions came through me. number one was thank you guys. i was thanks them as i was walking up and i was looking down. there was a couple moments when i was thinking. >> larry: black golfers before you. charlie and lee and teddy rhodes and a number of others. >> larry: thanks. that's nice that you remember. >> it's because of them that i
not too long ago. >> 1975 was the first time. >> larry: was that part of that win, too? did you feel it sort of. >> when i was walking up 18 a number of emotions came through me. number one was thank you guys. i was thanks them as i was walking up and i was looking down. there was a couple moments when i was thinking. >> larry: black golfers before you. charlie and lee and teddy rhodes and a number of others. >> larry: thanks. that's nice that you remember....
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and joe, too, then spoke too soon? >> yes. >> larry: was there jealousy of michael?'s logical to think that. >> why? >> a lot of people say that, ask us all the time. when i see my brother doing that, it makes me so proud of him, being one of the biggest artists in the world. breaking all records, the record sales, i'm so proud of him for doing that. that's hard to do, larry. that's hard work. his last name is jackson, right? >> that's right. >> as jermaine stated earlier on the show, the jackson five was the foundation. we worked relentlessly to build this name, to brand this name internationally. and as michael branched off and continued to even take it to another level with the last name, it just continued to brand the name, jackson. so, no, it's like a machine, we're all working together and some pieces just excel beyond others. >> larry: even when he got jermaine so famous. i mean, he went beyond fame. >> larry, that's our brother. we're happy. he was going to go further. and we were going to be more proud. he was going to go further. absolutely. >> larry: anoth
and joe, too, then spoke too soon? >> yes. >> larry: was there jealousy of michael?'s logical to think that. >> why? >> a lot of people say that, ask us all the time. when i see my brother doing that, it makes me so proud of him, being one of the biggest artists in the world. breaking all records, the record sales, i'm so proud of him for doing that. that's hard to do, larry. that's hard work. his last name is jackson, right? >> that's right. >> as jermaine...
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Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 163
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it's too costly and too many cases where the insurance industry looks like cherry picks, takes advantage of people. it's not the right thing to do really. and also we have to figure out a different way to pay for doctors and hospitals who are reimbursing more on basic quality and not quantity. almost all doctors agree that we should move in that direction. a few minutes earlier, one senator got up and said that, well, gee, the c.b.o. made this huge, big error. it's a half a trillion dollar error. and on and on and on about this hfl a trillion dollar error -- half a trillion dollar error. to be honest, if we're going to deal in good faith here, we should mention the pluses and the minuses and let the senators and the public just kind of figure out where it nets out. the c.b.o. made many statements which most of whom i think the democratic side put the light on the c.b.o. made some other statements that the republican side relies on. it is not black and while as it shade of gray. in this case it is true that c.b.o. sent a letter, i think it was today, in fact, i have it with me. that they
it's too costly and too many cases where the insurance industry looks like cherry picks, takes advantage of people. it's not the right thing to do really. and also we have to figure out a different way to pay for doctors and hospitals who are reimbursing more on basic quality and not quantity. almost all doctors agree that we should move in that direction. a few minutes earlier, one senator got up and said that, well, gee, the c.b.o. made this huge, big error. it's a half a trillion dollar...
1,714
1.7K
Dec 23, 2009
12/09
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WETA
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but many felt thmeetings were too ltle too late. six weeks, especially when are the christmavacation, is not enough timfor a serious process of gting parental input. ( applause ) its not engh time for council members to deal with ts. i mean that's prty much a gut issue in the communi. >> reporter: michael ian education policy anast. >> my sense is they have be a littleit more careful in the future in terms getting by-i from some of the interests. elings are bruised, uh, in t community. i think there's growing,h, resistancen the city council. >> this is nonsense. >> reporter: the unions saw is as their opportunity. with the city council te on rhee's legislation to fi central office workersast approaching, a coalition od.c. labor unions spent $20,0 on a radio campgn linking that sue to the school closings controversy. >> the motion passed. >> reporter: the citcouncil gave re the power to fire ntral office employees at will. rhee and fentyere not surpsed. rhee and fenty were not surprised. >> obviously peoplsay, "you're movingoo fast.
but many felt thmeetings were too ltle too late. six weeks, especially when are the christmavacation, is not enough timfor a serious process of gting parental input. ( applause ) its not engh time for council members to deal with ts. i mean that's prty much a gut issue in the communi. >> reporter: michael ian education policy anast. >> my sense is they have be a littleit more careful in the future in terms getting by-i from some of the interests. elings are bruised, uh, in t...
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312
Dec 17, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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too little government, not too much. you had private citizens and we tried to get rules adopted to prevent that because we saw the negative consequences. the community reinvestment act was not involved. >> barney, i wanted to bring it up because i didn't want them to think we agreed on everything. >> larry: gentlemen. >> all right, go ahead. >> larry: all right, the republicans today had a freeze today for a few hours on the debate insisting that the amendment be read aloud. key question, barney and then ron, barney, are we going to get a bill? >> i believe we will. that's just an anachronistic rule. they used to read thins allowed in the parliament in england because they didn't have type writers or computers. but i think you are going to get a bill. >> larry: ron, are we going get a bill? >> no, i'm saying that we will not. we'll get something but not a real bill. there will be some incremental increase in government involved in medicine. but it won't solve our problems. in a sense, there will be a bill. it's going to
too little government, not too much. you had private citizens and we tried to get rules adopted to prevent that because we saw the negative consequences. the community reinvestment act was not involved. >> barney, i wanted to bring it up because i didn't want them to think we agreed on everything. >> larry: gentlemen. >> all right, go ahead. >> larry: all right, the republicans today had a freeze today for a few hours on the debate insisting that the amendment be read...
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387
Dec 14, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 387
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and then it's just too easy down at the other end. really no way for people to react. >> tim: these home head scratchers, this falls into that category. >> mike: you look back, tim, historically there's been one or two every year, vermont -- duquesne and then the consecutive losses to harvard here this this building. the coaching staff was wondering how they were going to come out of that loss. certainly their attention and radar should have been on fall, but rhode island has really -- we talked about it as a key at the beginning of the tempo, dictate tempo. >> tim: rhode island get a lot out of this if they are able to come away with a road victory, on many fronts. this gives them a lot of momentum before they get into conference play, too. >> mike: jim baron said beforehand, they weren't picked -- very high in the preseason, but they've come together very quickly. >> tim: trapani. 13 for joe trapani. >> mike: they've had a lot of success in slipping the screens and diving the guy to the lane. whether it's trapani or southern. >> tim
and then it's just too easy down at the other end. really no way for people to react. >> tim: these home head scratchers, this falls into that category. >> mike: you look back, tim, historically there's been one or two every year, vermont -- duquesne and then the consecutive losses to harvard here this this building. the coaching staff was wondering how they were going to come out of that loss. certainly their attention and radar should have been on fall, but rhode island has really...
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Dec 10, 2009
12/09
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the process is too slow.we are kicking this down the road by adding $3 billion from the federal troubled assets relief program to jobless americans. the measure would designate another $1 billion to states and local governments and use it for productive purposes, according to the members of the financial services committee that have worked with congresswoman maxine waters. we stand united on the idea that the financial sector has not worked for the jobless, poor and working americans. this bill helps to generate that kind of roadway. it is extremely important -- may i have an additional 30 seconds? the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. mr. perlmutter: i yield 30 seconds. ms. jackson lee: it is important to protect and consider our credit unions. i want to ensure if this bill has any language about the overdraft not being protected, that in essence we work through that process. i want to make sure that this bill is supported and i support the rule and the underlying bill and i yield back.
the process is too slow.we are kicking this down the road by adding $3 billion from the federal troubled assets relief program to jobless americans. the measure would designate another $1 billion to states and local governments and use it for productive purposes, according to the members of the financial services committee that have worked with congresswoman maxine waters. we stand united on the idea that the financial sector has not worked for the jobless, poor and working americans. this bill...
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187
Dec 28, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 187
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it's too hard, too painful. i can't go through this again. because it is torture for me. as pleasurable it is when it's working, it's torture, especially a first draft. so i thought i was quitting after my adult novel and took me three years and 20 something drafts, and i said i'm never doing this again. and i waited a few years, and i couldn't wait to get back into that little room alone with my characters. >> host: 20 drafts. self-edited or did you have an editor you were working with? >> guest: you know, some books are more difficult than others. that was a particularly difficult book and it went through many, many, many drafts before i ever showed it to an editor, and thanks to that editor, she encouraged me to get it right, and by talking with her about it, i knew suddenly what i had to do, and once i got there, you know, i couldn't stop writing. mean, it was over say. i -- over a summer. i was in my little cabin and i never wanted to come out. it was workings, working, and it grew and it came together. >> host: you use a computer? >> guest: well, you know, i started
it's too hard, too painful. i can't go through this again. because it is torture for me. as pleasurable it is when it's working, it's torture, especially a first draft. so i thought i was quitting after my adult novel and took me three years and 20 something drafts, and i said i'm never doing this again. and i waited a few years, and i couldn't wait to get back into that little room alone with my characters. >> host: 20 drafts. self-edited or did you have an editor you were working with?...
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Dec 9, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN
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identifying institutions that are too big to fail. we think that there should be a sliding scale of capital required from important institutions that take into account risk asset size, complexity, and we believe in the living will concept. every person should have a plan that if they do get into difficulties how they can respond. it should be filed and approved with the regulator. and if your plan is not filed or approved, then you have to downsize. . we have the same directional suggestion he talks about, which is to make sure the pain is spread. i would like to clarify a couple of things. i think there's a lot of confusion. we are talking about protecting creditors in full. the shareholders get wiped out. in some cases, management did not get wiped out. we recommend some people who are responsible for failure to lose their jobs, but the key thing is to make sure unsecured creditors take some hit in some form, said the bankruptcy process is one approach. you can follow the same cut in the administrative process, but they would be pay
identifying institutions that are too big to fail. we think that there should be a sliding scale of capital required from important institutions that take into account risk asset size, complexity, and we believe in the living will concept. every person should have a plan that if they do get into difficulties how they can respond. it should be filed and approved with the regulator. and if your plan is not filed or approved, then you have to downsize. . we have the same directional suggestion he...
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Dec 6, 2009
12/09
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it is too much and too many things. >> let me hear from tim and sheryl. >> you know. i used the word stagnant. the economic indicators are running flat. we are not seeing great decreases of rate increases. the dow is obviously tanked. there has been a slight recovery in the do you but we are not anywhere near where we are. unemployment will keep rising, i believe. every administration will have the same problems obama is having. it is endemic to be a world leader. but i wonder how much of what the administration is doing is -- he is aggressive. i like that. i want aggression but i also want focus, and i am not seeing it. i want focus and i am not seeing it. >> he is aggressive but you don't see the focus. >> own party with the health care, you know, i believe passed the senate by -- the house by two votes. that mean he couldn't get enough of the democrats to make it a landslide victory. >> sheryl, where are you coming from as you listen to all of this? >> i agree. you can't just sit and fix one problem at a time. i mean if you work on health care, then jobs suffer. if
it is too much and too many things. >> let me hear from tim and sheryl. >> you know. i used the word stagnant. the economic indicators are running flat. we are not seeing great decreases of rate increases. the dow is obviously tanked. there has been a slight recovery in the do you but we are not anywhere near where we are. unemployment will keep rising, i believe. every administration will have the same problems obama is having. it is endemic to be a world leader. but i wonder how...
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Dec 9, 2009
12/09
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host: when is it too much? when is the deficit too large?is it a sign that we need to move backwards? guest: there are a number of things that we have to do before we worry about the deficit. we have to pay for the health care bill, getting health care off the backs of the citizens. second, we need to put people to work again. we cannot borrow our way into an economy, we only earn our way in through jobs. once we get america working again we will have an economy that is working. after that we will begin to cut down on the deficit. i think that those things will do it. host: frank, republican line. guest: good morning. caller: the industry is sick because of health care. the cost of health care must be taken off of the back of the employer. there are other systems that pay for health care. until we do that, companies are leaving the united states. when whirlpool went to mexico their cost for 1000 employees is $3 million per year for health care. why would they not leave? new companies are not staying. i invested in countries -- companies that
host: when is it too much? when is the deficit too large?is it a sign that we need to move backwards? guest: there are a number of things that we have to do before we worry about the deficit. we have to pay for the health care bill, getting health care off the backs of the citizens. second, we need to put people to work again. we cannot borrow our way into an economy, we only earn our way in through jobs. once we get america working again we will have an economy that is working. after that we...
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Dec 4, 2009
12/09
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in my view, if an institution is too big to fail, it's too big to exist. we have to start breaking them up. not to allow them to get even larger. the fed has chosen not to do that. mr. president, we need transparency at the fed. i am the author of a g.a.o. audit of the fed which now has 30 co-sponsors, which i hope that we will pass. at the very least if the taxpayers of the country are putting at risk trillions of dollars being lent out to large financial institutions, we have a right to know which institutions are receiving that money and under what terms. let me conclude, mr. president, by just saying this, this country is in the midst of a horrendous economic crisis. millions of families all over this country are at their wits end. they are suffering. they're trying to figure out how they're going to keep warm this winter, how they're going to pay their bills. the time now is for a new fed -- for a new direction on wall street, for a wall street which is helping our productive economy create decent-paying jobs. not a wall street based on greed only for
in my view, if an institution is too big to fail, it's too big to exist. we have to start breaking them up. not to allow them to get even larger. the fed has chosen not to do that. mr. president, we need transparency at the fed. i am the author of a g.a.o. audit of the fed which now has 30 co-sponsors, which i hope that we will pass. at the very least if the taxpayers of the country are putting at risk trillions of dollars being lent out to large financial institutions, we have a right to know...
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Dec 21, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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my colleagues, it's not too late. >> mr. president -- >> that was senator mitch mcconnell from kentucky. he's the minority leader now. let's listen to the majority leader, senator harry reid from nevada. >> more and more americans have come down with the flu, or even developed diabetes, suffered a stroke more and more americans who have a skin condition are dying rather than being cared. and much more of our attention has consumed this health care debate and the national study than by harvard university found that 4500 times this year more than 120 times per day, an average of 10 every ten minutes, an american died as a result the numbers are numbing. they don't even include those that have had health insurance but died because they couldn't afford a plan that met their most basic needs. they are the only place that they are dying for lack of possible. to make matters worst, we are paying for that privilege. so do numbers that can't afford. medical bills are the leading cause of bankruptcy in america. we have before us the a
my colleagues, it's not too late. >> mr. president -- >> that was senator mitch mcconnell from kentucky. he's the minority leader now. let's listen to the majority leader, senator harry reid from nevada. >> more and more americans have come down with the flu, or even developed diabetes, suffered a stroke more and more americans who have a skin condition are dying rather than being cared. and much more of our attention has consumed this health care debate and the national study...
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Dec 8, 2009
12/09
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eye 440
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too timeout called by tony bennett.se it or lose it timeout here with 20 seconds left in the first half. >> daymeon: and coach tony bennett that time probably didn't like that shot by landesberg. even though he was wide open, probably wanted to take that clock down a little bit more to try to take the momentum into the half. >> matt: tune in mondays at 10:30 eastern for the ride on css. join former nfl players and coaches as they take eight under the radar high school quarterbacks through agility, technical training for a shot at being developed as an all american. join the ride mondays at 10:30 eastern only on css. auburn shooting 41% from the floor, daymeon, and 33% on the threes. 50% at the free-throw line. and right now, they trail by five. they have lost every game this season that they have trailed at the half. >> daymeon: well, and right now, when you look at all of the shots, very crucial. not for the statistics of the outcome of when they trailed at the half but to take some kind of momentum into the halftime.
too timeout called by tony bennett.se it or lose it timeout here with 20 seconds left in the first half. >> daymeon: and coach tony bennett that time probably didn't like that shot by landesberg. even though he was wide open, probably wanted to take that clock down a little bit more to try to take the momentum into the half. >> matt: tune in mondays at 10:30 eastern for the ride on css. join former nfl players and coaches as they take eight under the radar high school quarterbacks...
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337
Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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too many breakdowns. raymond the big star for vancouver. >> in its existence, washington is about break even against the guys, their neighbors for the north. >> just above .500. getting points and close to 60% of the games on the road. winning less than 40%. since those five, 11-16-6. >> goal tender, michal feuvirth looking to make his unite appearance in the league. >> goals against, way too high, above 4.5. >> it's been three years since you and i have been in this building. it's hard not to think back to the incredible teams that used to call it home. >> there's few teams that can use the word dynasty. this team it can. whether it was -- teams can. whether it was the great one, wayne gretzky or mark metski, one of the greatest leaders in hockey, they were just too much to handle in the mid-'80s through '90s. >> a top of championships continuing through memory lane, these are the caps who did best against edmonton. >> bonner, carpenter, ten or more. currently brendan morrison on the caps acerose we 15.
too many breakdowns. raymond the big star for vancouver. >> in its existence, washington is about break even against the guys, their neighbors for the north. >> just above .500. getting points and close to 60% of the games on the road. winning less than 40%. since those five, 11-16-6. >> goal tender, michal feuvirth looking to make his unite appearance in the league. >> goals against, way too high, above 4.5. >> it's been three years since you and i have been in...
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Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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you're not a big fan of that because you think there are too many loop holes.it came down to it and the only way to get your commission set up would be to have their version of pay go would you go along with? >> i don't think it would be smart with me to negotiate in public. >> oh, come on. >> let me say what i've said privately and publicly. look, i am actually a supporter of statutory pay go. but i'm not a supporter of statutory pay go that has $3 trillion of exemption. there are exemption that seem reasonable to me and that would be acceptable. for example, the middle-class tax cuts. i think it would be entirely reasonable to make those permanent. i think it's entirely reasonable to have the dock fix covered for two years and the alternative minimum tax and estate tax and then turn over those marts to this commission for a final determination, a final plan that would come to congress for a vote. but as i say, i don't favor statutory pay go with $3 trillion of exemptions. i can't possibly justify. i do think there is a place here where we could have a princip
you're not a big fan of that because you think there are too many loop holes.it came down to it and the only way to get your commission set up would be to have their version of pay go would you go along with? >> i don't think it would be smart with me to negotiate in public. >> oh, come on. >> let me say what i've said privately and publicly. look, i am actually a supporter of statutory pay go. but i'm not a supporter of statutory pay go that has $3 trillion of exemption....
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Dec 31, 2009
12/09
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large companies are being paid too much. everyone who has this greed turns ugly and gets to trouble. money is really the root of all evil here. people have to get down to basic and respect the dollar and penny is anymore. people look at pennies and throw them into the street. money has no valyu. it's about show and tell. we have to teach everyone that a penny is a penny and it means something. you got to work for things. everyone is forgetting that. host: thanks for your call. guest: i'm one of those believers that greed can be a force for good if you channel it nesketively. when we saw is what we let greed run a muck. we didn't have the structures in place to channel it to really work. we need to figure out how to put greed in the box, if you will caller: why smnch someone like steven hawking is not on that list. this guy is the greatest mind in physics. i thought it's amazing we are living in a time when he is a live his ideas are commendable. he didn't make the list for two reasons. as you mentioned, his greatest contribu
large companies are being paid too much. everyone who has this greed turns ugly and gets to trouble. money is really the root of all evil here. people have to get down to basic and respect the dollar and penny is anymore. people look at pennies and throw them into the street. money has no valyu. it's about show and tell. we have to teach everyone that a penny is a penny and it means something. you got to work for things. everyone is forgetting that. host: thanks for your call. guest: i'm one of...
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Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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the trick is to set the level at a proper level, not too high, not too low. i think this bill does that. in addition, there are all the delivery system reforms that this bill enacts with respect to medicare. so important to improving quality, reducing excess costs. we all know through history that when we reform medicare, make changes in medicare, the private sector follows. the private commercial market will follow whatever congress does with respect to medicare and makes good, positive changes. why? because medicare is such a large provider of care and they tend to have a real effect on what other providers do. what are some of those? well, basically, we start to change the way we pay doctors and hospitals. that is, start to pay on the basis of value rather than volume. that is, volume rather than quantity. the paradox of that, mr. president, when people stop to think about it. we are both going to cut down costs and increase value, at the same time, because we focus on quality. when you focus on quality, not just quantity, not the whole volume of services,
the trick is to set the level at a proper level, not too high, not too low. i think this bill does that. in addition, there are all the delivery system reforms that this bill enacts with respect to medicare. so important to improving quality, reducing excess costs. we all know through history that when we reform medicare, make changes in medicare, the private sector follows. the private commercial market will follow whatever congress does with respect to medicare and makes good, positive...
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Dec 20, 2009
12/09
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eye 443
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too far ahead. >> craig: ovechkin, one touch passing. they set it up.ere for ovechkin, and he should have shot it. >> joe: exactly. they moved the goalie side to side, which we were talking about, and he has to let that fly. >> craig: green and ovechkin playing catch. on the outside there, there's backstrom. laich setting the screen. green fires at the line, swept away by sneed. what a play there. ovechkin settles. off the goal line. ovechkin going wide by laich. and then laich and deslauriers get into it. >> craig: the caps have to get out there. they have a lot of time to work on the five on three. why get involved physically until the referees sort this off. they have a faceoff inside as they have plenty of time to get the lead in this game with the extra two men. >> joe: here's the last play. the shot goes there. it must completely go through the line. if not, it will be cleared out. good call by the official. nice job getting in there. >> craig: danny larue, the referee was skating off the line extended, and he gets this one away to keep it 2-2. gu
too far ahead. >> craig: ovechkin, one touch passing. they set it up.ere for ovechkin, and he should have shot it. >> joe: exactly. they moved the goalie side to side, which we were talking about, and he has to let that fly. >> craig: green and ovechkin playing catch. on the outside there, there's backstrom. laich setting the screen. green fires at the line, swept away by sneed. what a play there. ovechkin settles. off the goal line. ovechkin going wide by laich. and then...
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Dec 21, 2009
12/09
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eye 176
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this process has just gone too fast and gone too far off track. it reminds me of what rahm emanuel, the president's chief of staff said, when they jammed through the stimulus bill earlier this year. they said, a crisis is a terrible thing to waste. well, it's one thing if we were acting in response to a crisis in a responsible manner, but what this is going to do is to make it even worse, as the senator from wyoming pointed o out. well, i think people listening, the 56% and growing number of americans who are concerned about this deal, they're wondering, are -- are the politicians in washington more interested in jamming this through or getting it right? senator snowe, olympia snowe from maine, on the finance committee, the one republican to vote for the finance committee bill, said she won't vote for cloture on this bill at 1:00 this morning because this is simply an arbitrary deadline. oh, and guess what? most of the provisions don't kick in for four years. so why are we doing this literally in the dead of night on a phony timetable? well, we kn
this process has just gone too fast and gone too far off track. it reminds me of what rahm emanuel, the president's chief of staff said, when they jammed through the stimulus bill earlier this year. they said, a crisis is a terrible thing to waste. well, it's one thing if we were acting in response to a crisis in a responsible manner, but what this is going to do is to make it even worse, as the senator from wyoming pointed o out. well, i think people listening, the 56% and growing number of...
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375
Dec 16, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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watch. >> too late. too late.vanity overrule up with's appetite. ♪ would you pay the price >> who are the held are you? ♪ what would you do >> and how did you find out where i lived. ♪ keeping still means you manage until the end ♪ >> one more syllable. ♪ but imagine if you were me with my name, you will wear it out. >> try me. ♪ one pair of bums is like another i don't know why or who's to blame ♪ ♪ i'll go with you or with your brother ♪ ♪ it's all the same ♪ it's all the the same ♪ this i have learned that when the lights out no men will burn with special flame ♪ ♪ you proved to me before the night out you're all the same ♪ ♪ you're all the same ♪ you're all the same >> larry: sophia, tell us what is life like now? what are you doing? >> i just made a film on the life of my mother, which is a fiction for television that is going on for two nights and then i'm preparing something else to do in films in italy. >> larry: thank you so much, dear. give our love to everyone. we love you, sophia. >> thank you. merry c
watch. >> too late. too late.vanity overrule up with's appetite. ♪ would you pay the price >> who are the held are you? ♪ what would you do >> and how did you find out where i lived. ♪ keeping still means you manage until the end ♪ >> one more syllable. ♪ but imagine if you were me with my name, you will wear it out. >> try me. ♪ one pair of bums is like another i don't know why or who's to blame ♪ ♪ i'll go with you or with your brother ♪ ♪...
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Dec 21, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 145
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in my view, if an institution is too big to fail, it's too big to exist. we have to start breaking them up. not to allow them to get even larger. the fed has chosen not to do that. mr. president, we need transparency at the fed. i am the author of a g.a.o. audit of the fed which now has 30 co-sponsors, which i hope that we will pass. at the very least if the taxpayers of the country are putting at risk trillions of dollars being lent out to large financial institutions, we have a right to know which institutions are receiving that money and under what terms. let me conclude, mr. president, by just saying this, this country is in the midst of a horrendous economic crisis. millions of families all over this country are at their wits end. they are suffering. they're trying to figure out how they're going to keep warm this winter, how they're going to pay their bills. the time now is for a new fed -- for a new direction on wall street, for a wall street which is helping our productive economy create decent-paying jobs. not a wall street based on greed only for
in my view, if an institution is too big to fail, it's too big to exist. we have to start breaking them up. not to allow them to get even larger. the fed has chosen not to do that. mr. president, we need transparency at the fed. i am the author of a g.a.o. audit of the fed which now has 30 co-sponsors, which i hope that we will pass. at the very least if the taxpayers of the country are putting at risk trillions of dollars being lent out to large financial institutions, we have a right to know...
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240
Dec 6, 2009
12/09
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it's just not, it's not there. >> i think everybody's expected too much too soon too. >> i lot of people aren't realistic about things. everybody wants things tomorrow. everybody wants their degree yesterday. it's not going to happen. i think as the president that he's very realistic, he doesn't tease us in sing. you're going to get this. you're going to get that. he tells us, it's going to take some time. because nothing happens just like that. it took eight years for us to get here. what makes you think it's going to happen in 10 months? >> if he doesn't get a second term that realistically, this first term is pointless. it's not going to take four years to get out of this. i'm sorry. >> not. i agree. >> i don't think people -- >> five years for it to turn around. he'll be gone. >> people don't want miracles. they want a time frame says bernadette. >> too the society that we live in, we text, we tweet, we're the instant gratification nation. you can't snap your fingers and make these problems go away. and i think -- i think what tim said is the excitement is gone. but i don't think the
it's just not, it's not there. >> i think everybody's expected too much too soon too. >> i lot of people aren't realistic about things. everybody wants things tomorrow. everybody wants their degree yesterday. it's not going to happen. i think as the president that he's very realistic, he doesn't tease us in sing. you're going to get this. you're going to get that. he tells us, it's going to take some time. because nothing happens just like that. it took eight years for us to get...
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Dec 12, 2009
12/09
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CSPAN2
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that's going to be key, too. you have to go in and make lee work a little on defense >> derek: that's right. that's one way you neutralize the offensive player. you go at hem and make him play defense. kurt hustle hustle huelsman, we talked about the easy defense. >> mike: up top, ben finney, short. chris wright the rebound. here comes dayton, warren, down the lane, up high, miss, huelsman the rebound. he is in traffic. what happened? we have a foul. huelsman being helped up. the foul is on old dominion. take another look >> derek: london warren able to find a seam in the defense. just not able to come up with the lay-up and kurt huelsman could not make the put back. >> carter picks up the foul. >> mike: up top, carrying the ball on mickey perry. here comes frank hassell into the line-up >> derek: dayton applying a little bit of poke and pressure. this is what i call nuisance pressure. really not a great field, just to get you off the floor. dayton up 6-3 early. we played almost three minutes of basketball here a
that's going to be key, too. you have to go in and make lee work a little on defense >> derek: that's right. that's one way you neutralize the offensive player. you go at hem and make him play defense. kurt hustle hustle huelsman, we talked about the easy defense. >> mike: up top, ben finney, short. chris wright the rebound. here comes dayton, warren, down the lane, up high, miss, huelsman the rebound. he is in traffic. what happened? we have a foul. huelsman being helped up. the...
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Dec 4, 2009
12/09
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they are too young for section 8. too young for cda housing.i cannot bring them in my house because i cannot have extra people here. i just go around and do not know. they are like little babies. you know? i have 46-year-old babies again. they need me. host: are they looking for jobs? caller: they look all the time. all the time. host: barbara, thank you for the call this morning. front page of "the philadelphia inquirer" with that the article, "bailout for the unemployed." dale, how long have you been out of work? caller: one year, december 12. host: what did you do before you lost your job? caller: i was a construction worker. host: what has your job search been like? caller: terrible. my feelers are in the air. my old employer is hiring and i have been waiting for him to call me back. host: are you confident that you will find something? caller: i will not give up, life is too short, but like the other lady said, i feel sorry for my children. i think we should do something like what roosevelt did, getting the public back to work. bailing out
they are too young for section 8. too young for cda housing.i cannot bring them in my house because i cannot have extra people here. i just go around and do not know. they are like little babies. you know? i have 46-year-old babies again. they need me. host: are they looking for jobs? caller: they look all the time. all the time. host: barbara, thank you for the call this morning. front page of "the philadelphia inquirer" with that the article, "bailout for the unemployed."...
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Dec 16, 2009
12/09
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WETA
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ana ugandan farmer who has tried to feed a large faly as too little d then too much rnfalls. >> mostly 2007 that's wh we changed from nmore rain to drastic ra, from no more rain to fld, from no more sunshine to drought . there has been a lot of chges in climate . >> suarez: and speakg to a packed meeting rooat the copeagen conference, this woman told her audience at fairness demands that the wod's poor receive support from the industrialized wod to dl with a life-and-death challenge she did nothg to create. >> the reason why we nd this money because it is increasi day and night because the climate changes. and ofhich the climate changethey're the ones making us to suffer. e effects of climate change. >> suaz: former irish president mary robinn and retired south african archbishop desmo tutu were on hands to adtheir own calls for the wealy industrialized countrys to ke changes now, from self-interest er bit as much as from charity. >>f we don't get an reement here, we have posed an enorms threat to our one world. and i have four grandchildren who wille in their 40s in 2015. i not no an
ana ugandan farmer who has tried to feed a large faly as too little d then too much rnfalls. >> mostly 2007 that's wh we changed from nmore rain to drastic ra, from no more rain to fld, from no more sunshine to drought . there has been a lot of chges in climate . >> suarez: and speakg to a packed meeting rooat the copeagen conference, this woman told her audience at fairness demands that the wod's poor receive support from the industrialized wod to dl with a life-and-death challenge...
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362
Dec 17, 2009
12/09
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CNN
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the bad loans were made and too little government, not too much. you had private citizens and we tried to get rules adopted to prevent them. >> barney, i didn't want him to think we agreed on everything. no, go ahead. >> larry: all right, the republicans today had a freeze today for a few hours on the debate incests that the 767-page amendment be read allowalloweou. are we going get a bill? >> i believe we will. they used to read things allowed in the parliament in new england because they didn't have typewriters of computer. but i think you are going to get a bill. >> larry: ron, are we going get a bill? >> we are not. we will get something but not a real bill. there will be some increase in government involved in medicine. in a sense, there will be a bill. it's going to be very, very minimal. we have been doing it for 35 years, and we have corporatism, the corporations run it. they are being protected with this administration. >> banny frank is ron paul remain with us. ben bernanke is "time's" person of the year. should he be? that's next. "s" st
the bad loans were made and too little government, not too much. you had private citizens and we tried to get rules adopted to prevent them. >> barney, i didn't want him to think we agreed on everything. no, go ahead. >> larry: all right, the republicans today had a freeze today for a few hours on the debate incests that the 767-page amendment be read allowalloweou. are we going get a bill? >> i believe we will. they used to read things allowed in the parliament in new england...
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2.0K
Dec 15, 2009
12/09
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WMPT
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and a ugandan farmer who has tried to feed a large family as too little and then too much rainfalls. >> mostly 2007 that's when we changed from no more rain to drastic rain, from no more rain to flood, from no more sunshine to drought . there has been a lot of changes in climate . >> suarez: and speaking to a packed meeting room at the copenhagen conference, this woman told her audience that fairness demands that the world's poor receive support from the industrialized world to deal with a life-and-death challenge she did nothing to create. >> the reason why we need this money is because it is increasing day and night because of the climate changes. and of which the climate changes they're the ones making us to suffer. the effects of climate change. >> suarez: former irish president mary robinson and retired south african archbishop desmond tutu were on hands to add their own calls for the wealthy industrialized countrys to make changes now, from self-interest ever bit as much as from charity. >> if we don't get an agreement here, we have posed an enormous threat to our one world. an
and a ugandan farmer who has tried to feed a large family as too little and then too much rainfalls. >> mostly 2007 that's when we changed from no more rain to drastic rain, from no more rain to flood, from no more sunshine to drought . there has been a lot of changes in climate . >> suarez: and speaking to a packed meeting room at the copenhagen conference, this woman told her audience that fairness demands that the world's poor receive support from the industrialized world to deal...
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Dec 12, 2009
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whatever their good intentions, they have too many flaws to be defenseful. first and foremost, neither bends the health cost curve downward. the c.b.o. found the house bill fails to reduce the pace of health care spend growth. an audit of the bill by richard fost he, the chief -- by richard foster, the chief actuary of c.m.s., a division of health and human services, and this is the chief actuary, found that the pace of national health care spending will increase 2.1% over ten years or about $750 billion. senate majority leader harry reid's bill grows just as fast as the house version. and yesterday -- the day before yesterday we got a new actuarial report that actually addressed the reid bill, as opposed to the house bill, and we talked about that fairly extensively. i haven't seen any articles about it yet. but just one summary comment on it is that, according to this actuary of c.m.s., a part of the administration, said that the cost of health care under the reid bill will increase by .7%. that doesn't sound like much. but it is .7% more -- move -- than i
whatever their good intentions, they have too many flaws to be defenseful. first and foremost, neither bends the health cost curve downward. the c.b.o. found the house bill fails to reduce the pace of health care spend growth. an audit of the bill by richard fost he, the chief -- by richard foster, the chief actuary of c.m.s., a division of health and human services, and this is the chief actuary, found that the pace of national health care spending will increase 2.1% over ten years or about...
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Dec 28, 2009
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sometimes writing this book it was too confusing to write about all these numbers. i said, i've lost track of what is number 49 versus number 57. so i give them temporary names just for the purpose of the book. .. near washington, d.c., and best of all i went and visited operation migration, where joe ase teaching and his helpers are teaching cranes and migration. i got to go up in an ultralight, said it was totally fascinating. >> host: the wobegon crane is a bird that of course went completely extinct in the wild -- >> guest: no, no, no to the the the original flock was down 27 and they were summering in the nature preserve in texas and foot then they invested in more than canada but nobody knew where and all the time the flock was getting less and less and then one day some helicopter pilot was spraying i don't know what he was doing and he saw this white bird with golden colored and that is where they were. they were investing in buffalo part of canada but this little flock was down to 27, and, you know, 2000 model migration getting less and less. if the bird fl
sometimes writing this book it was too confusing to write about all these numbers. i said, i've lost track of what is number 49 versus number 57. so i give them temporary names just for the purpose of the book. .. near washington, d.c., and best of all i went and visited operation migration, where joe ase teaching and his helpers are teaching cranes and migration. i got to go up in an ultralight, said it was totally fascinating. >> host: the wobegon crane is a bird that of course went...
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Dec 2, 2009
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ill, who are too frightened, who are too old, who are too weak, who are too confused, who simply don't have the resources when they're burdened with a terrible diagnosis like that to fight on two fronts, and so they give up and the insurance company makes money. it is systematized. not once have i heard anybody on the other side of the aisle in this senate complain about it. it is a scandal across this country. it is the way they do business. i don't think there's a person on this floor who hasn't heard a story of a friend or a loved one or somebody they know and care about who has been through that process. it's not hypothetical. it is happening now. it is happening to all of us. but it's only when we come in and try to fight that that suddenly this concern is raised about, oh, my gosh, you're going to get bureaucrats. they just happen to have no profit motive, work for the government, be trying to do the right thing and be experts. and suddenly it's no good. ms. stabenow: as the senator from rhode island has said so eloquently, we have all had situations like this happen in our own f
ill, who are too frightened, who are too old, who are too weak, who are too confused, who simply don't have the resources when they're burdened with a terrible diagnosis like that to fight on two fronts, and so they give up and the insurance company makes money. it is systematized. not once have i heard anybody on the other side of the aisle in this senate complain about it. it is a scandal across this country. it is the way they do business. i don't think there's a person on this floor who...