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May 4, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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washington in this society in new york.ut the most prophetic was spoken in baltimore. the inspiring words of the illustrious lines don't give up the ship, be the eventual internal motto of america. in fact, kerry certainly is dependent on his chest longship on the waters of lake erie. the ship was the uss lawrence named after the late captain lawrence and the instance have been somewhat lawrence's famous phrase, were subsequently became the motto of the uss navy, don't give up the ship. ironically, the horrific loss with both an american hero and a rallying cry for american forces. now, i don't have any video of quarters from the war of 1812. church eastman and thomas edison couldn't figure out how to do that for many decades to come, but in my minds eye i can envision a movie trailer, one of those that hollywood does to sell us an up coming movie. and the highlights would have to include the dialogue also more, the crucial conflict with the citizens of the city resisting both the land and sea force. the bombardment of the
washington in this society in new york.ut the most prophetic was spoken in baltimore. the inspiring words of the illustrious lines don't give up the ship, be the eventual internal motto of america. in fact, kerry certainly is dependent on his chest longship on the waters of lake erie. the ship was the uss lawrence named after the late captain lawrence and the instance have been somewhat lawrence's famous phrase, were subsequently became the motto of the uss navy, don't give up the ship....
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this country in canniness there involved in the occupy movement both here in new york as well as around the country. may first is the day of working class solidarity so one of the conditions of the working class in today's america doesn't need someone of solidarity in our. though of course it does. actually the world is an economic crisis. triggered by developments in the economy here. but the world is suffering an economic crisis europe for example is in a very difficult situation economically here in this country unemployment is officially around eight or nine percent in probably it's double lead on officially you know the estimate of the labor movement is that the number of unemployed count about twenty five million in this country that's unemployed underemployed in part time workers. so the u.s. workers definitely need solidarity from their brothers and sisters from around the world. so why do i live went to school and then is in this area cuny and they taught us about the the class consciousness you know what class consciousness is so tell me that if socialism is still the best sol
this country in canniness there involved in the occupy movement both here in new york as well as around the country. may first is the day of working class solidarity so one of the conditions of the working class in today's america doesn't need someone of solidarity in our. though of course it does. actually the world is an economic crisis. triggered by developments in the economy here. but the world is suffering an economic crisis europe for example is in a very difficult situation economically...
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May 14, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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and in new jersey, they can be in a quaker state. so when i got home and saw the whippings come the beatings commence next to the window, he thought this was appalling, shameful. he was contemplating leaving virginia, which there is a saying among historians, dukes don't emigrate. the fact that he was leaving at the county was far-fetched. he was appalled because he had seen the contrary possibility in action in new jersey. >> thank you very much. use the word enough for me several times. but his historical etymology of that as far as to the context of founding fathers and diversity of thought and what was written as far as how important diversity is because not inadequately look at that as the corresponding solution that diversity of an equation actually will provide a vast solution versus equation. >> well, the word uniformity -- thank you, should've explained what he meant by that. i didn't realize they've managed to do that. there is an active uniformity detected by parliament at 16th century queen elizabeth decided she was not g
and in new jersey, they can be in a quaker state. so when i got home and saw the whippings come the beatings commence next to the window, he thought this was appalling, shameful. he was contemplating leaving virginia, which there is a saying among historians, dukes don't emigrate. the fact that he was leaving at the county was far-fetched. he was appalled because he had seen the contrary possibility in action in new jersey. >> thank you very much. use the word enough for me several times....
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May 27, 2012
05/12
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KPIX
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in june itself and also in jerusalem. the more muted. are gonna take a quick break and come back in just a moment please join us. >>> welcome back. year and a wonderful conversation with the executive director of the israelis and with the jewish committee federation and the council general here in the san francisco bay area for the state of israel. who have been conversation about the diversity and the cultural of israel and some ways contrary to the diversity of california. but there's a much more in terms of the issue of diversity so was to highlight? >>> israel is not all jewish of a large ethnic minority of arabs 22% minority is the arab christiansen of course important these are equal citizens of israel. house of the orthodox component the tendency to think of the israelites but israel is not quite almost half of his relate to choose our children of committees who is cited for hundreds of thousands of years and never blends and of course more than a dozen jews from ethiopia. so it's very colorful and interesting and
in june itself and also in jerusalem. the more muted. are gonna take a quick break and come back in just a moment please join us. >>> welcome back. year and a wonderful conversation with the executive director of the israelis and with the jewish committee federation and the council general here in the san francisco bay area for the state of israel. who have been conversation about the diversity and the cultural of israel and some ways contrary to the diversity of california. but...
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May 20, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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they didn't do it in elementary schools. they did it in places in saloons and places like that. this is in the sixth ward. there are a lot of details that clue you in as to the environment that's being created. it is a saloon. you have a dog running around, a kid who is i think begging, asking for money, and you have -- if you look at a lot of art from the magazines of the middle of the 19th century the clothing you see is very much working class style. the guys with the dark top hats on the right are sporting men, men usually involved in gambling and other kinds of vice and so forth. if you want to vote, you can see the doorway all the way in the back. you had to go in there to vote. anyone who wanted to vote had to make their way through the saloon itself to get into the back. if you see the two posters on either side of the door, i don't know how well you can make it out from back there, but on the left is a campaign poster for john clancy and on the right is a campaign poster for john kelly. clancy and kelly, this is an irish environment. this was an irish neighborhood. what
they didn't do it in elementary schools. they did it in places in saloons and places like that. this is in the sixth ward. there are a lot of details that clue you in as to the environment that's being created. it is a saloon. you have a dog running around, a kid who is i think begging, asking for money, and you have -- if you look at a lot of art from the magazines of the middle of the 19th century the clothing you see is very much working class style. the guys with the dark top hats on the...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 380
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passed across my consciousness and i was in, i wouldn't say i was in a state of terror but i was in some anxiety. this is something i didn't want to get out. i was starting my career as political reporter. i didn't want people to think i was a nixon person or kennedy person or johnson person. i went back to nbc after the pitch had been made and said you got to get me out of this. julian good man, head of nbc, was soming down from the might house. he went to bob haldeman quietly. privately. it was haldeman's idea. we have big plans for tom and it went away. you want to hear the follow-up? there are two pretty intriguing. no one knew about it. and many years later after watergate, after the resignation of the president, i was doing a retrospective nixon years and watergate and i was standing backstage and waiting to go on embraced from behind in a big bear hug. this familiar voice, how many times i. it was bob haldeman. i said, bob, never comes up again. when i turned 50 they went around with a camera crew to get the reactions of a lot of people. the camera crew came back in my office
passed across my consciousness and i was in, i wouldn't say i was in a state of terror but i was in some anxiety. this is something i didn't want to get out. i was starting my career as political reporter. i didn't want people to think i was a nixon person or kennedy person or johnson person. i went back to nbc after the pitch had been made and said you got to get me out of this. julian good man, head of nbc, was soming down from the might house. he went to bob haldeman quietly. privately. it...
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May 6, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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and in iraq but especially in afghanistan. i was with the 10th mountain division and with special forces and we would go into these villages after these guys in really remote bases spent night fighting bad guys, going off on long range patrols and coming back. now they go into the villages and villages are understandably worried because come in humvees and kevlar vests and goggles and helmets and lock and loaded weapons. they have to shake down the village before they can do the patrol. make sure all they go through all the vehicles to make sure we they don't have contraband weapons and they go to the village he willers and say we're here to help. the village elders don't quite see it that way. this is country invaded so many times over 2,000 years. they're skeptical of anyone from the outside. one of the villages when i was north of kandahar with the special forces i asked him what he thought. he said i don't think we need anymore men with guns telling me what to do. i thought how could we change that equation? i began to thi
and in iraq but especially in afghanistan. i was with the 10th mountain division and with special forces and we would go into these villages after these guys in really remote bases spent night fighting bad guys, going off on long range patrols and coming back. now they go into the villages and villages are understandably worried because come in humvees and kevlar vests and goggles and helmets and lock and loaded weapons. they have to shake down the village before they can do the patrol. make...
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May 13, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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and collier would almost immediately, april 1862, establish is school in south -- in north -- there in newburn. also in newburn was aunt charlotte. aunt charlotte made the newspapers. aunt charlotte becomes what i am going to call the prototype cook for the sanitary commissions. so in newburn, she becomes, this is early on so this would be duplicated early on. i'm going to call them the chef. and a bit of a nurse. soldiers from massachusetts, new york, new jersey, they would -- they appreciated a great deal her cooking when they were sick. and they would say it helped heal them, relieve their suffering. so she becomes the prototype cook. you would see numbers of cooks like aunt charlotte throughout the union army for the rest of the war. also a major event in newburn. we are going to compare this to what happened in virginia. fishermen are organized by abraham galloway. and they put the union army on boats in april of 1862. and in the early morning of april 23rd, 1862, those boats are union soldiers would go right back fort macon with small arms fire. the next morning, the citizens of
and collier would almost immediately, april 1862, establish is school in south -- in north -- there in newburn. also in newburn was aunt charlotte. aunt charlotte made the newspapers. aunt charlotte becomes what i am going to call the prototype cook for the sanitary commissions. so in newburn, she becomes, this is early on so this would be duplicated early on. i'm going to call them the chef. and a bit of a nurse. soldiers from massachusetts, new york, new jersey, they would -- they appreciated...
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May 27, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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the first daily paper in the country is founded in 1783. and once the cities get to be a certain density, there's enough commerce, enough population, then in the early part of the 19th century they get going, and they really take off in the 1830s. >> so that's when it's fair to say for the first time that journalism is a business? >> oh, yes. it's clear by then, yes. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. >> up next on booktv, peter popham talks about his biography of burma's aung san suu kyi is a longtime opposition leader and nobel peace prize recipient was elected to the lower house of the burmese parliament on april 1, 2012. in researching the book, he took over trips to burma and interviewed aung san suu kyi. >> and welcome. i'm michael robert, executive director of other programs here at asia society, and i want to welcome you all. it's a great pleasure to present an important and authoritative new biography, one of the most compelling figures of the last 25 years. it's the current embryonic transition in me an
the first daily paper in the country is founded in 1783. and once the cities get to be a certain density, there's enough commerce, enough population, then in the early part of the 19th century they get going, and they really take off in the 1830s. >> so that's when it's fair to say for the first time that journalism is a business? >> oh, yes. it's clear by then, yes. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. >> up next on booktv, peter popham talks...
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May 19, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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were they greater in the east than in the west because in the west the fighting was contained in that very narrow strip of france and belgium. that is absolutely true. in france and belgium there were some civilian casualties but they were not enormous in numbers. by far the largest number of civilian casualties were in russia and eastern europe because there, fighting covered a vast kerri and unlike in the west the front moved back and forth hundreds of miles at a time and when it moved, each army left scorched-earth behind them. they blew up all the building leaders the cut down trees, poisoned the wells so there would be nothing left of use to the other side and each of those moves set millions of people in flight. there were something like six million russian refugees alone who were in flight over the course of the war. nothing like this had happened before for a long time in europe. the other reason the casualties were enormous, occupied eastern europe and germany and austria and hungary was this was the first war between large constellations of nations. large power blocks where
were they greater in the east than in the west because in the west the fighting was contained in that very narrow strip of france and belgium. that is absolutely true. in france and belgium there were some civilian casualties but they were not enormous in numbers. by far the largest number of civilian casualties were in russia and eastern europe because there, fighting covered a vast kerri and unlike in the west the front moved back and forth hundreds of miles at a time and when it moved, each...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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WETA
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the key suspect in the 2002 nightclub bombings in bali apologized today in a courtroom in indonesia. umar patek is a leading member of jemaah islamiyah, a network linked to al-qaeda. he told the victims' families he'd been against the bombings from the start. patek allegedly built the bombs that killed more than 200 people at bali. he was arrested last year in pakistan. amid the political upheavals in europe, vladimir putin was sworn in as president of russia today. he has been in power since 2000, first as president and then as prime minister. putin took the oath of office in a brief and lavish ceremony at the kremlin in moscow. he swore to uphold democracy. >> we want to live and we will live in a democratic country where everyone has the freedom and opportunity to apply one's talent, labor and efforts. we want to and we will live in a successful russia that is respected in the world in a reliable, open, honest and predictable partner. i believe in the force of our common goals and ideals. >> holman: but outside, in the streets of moscow, thousands of opposition protesters lined th
the key suspect in the 2002 nightclub bombings in bali apologized today in a courtroom in indonesia. umar patek is a leading member of jemaah islamiyah, a network linked to al-qaeda. he told the victims' families he'd been against the bombings from the start. patek allegedly built the bombs that killed more than 200 people at bali. he was arrested last year in pakistan. amid the political upheavals in europe, vladimir putin was sworn in as president of russia today. he has been in power since...
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May 22, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 163
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i was in several in north carolina just this past week. usda were fully committed to providing all the assistance we can to help the 101,000 american schools, public and private, that participate in the national school lunch program. we're committed to provide that kind of assistance to help them to get from where they are today to where they all need to be. well, the changes in the school, in the standards for the school breakfast program, there are 12 million children that have breakfast at school each day and that number is on the rise, those changes will be phased in over three years to make it easier for schools to comply. but the act also strengthened local wellness policies. as i travel the country i try to meet with state health directors, typically physicians or people trained in public health, to emphasize for them the opportunity they have as public health authorities or health directors to reinforce and to support the effort in schools to promote healthness. just a week or so ago, we published what many schools across the count
i was in several in north carolina just this past week. usda were fully committed to providing all the assistance we can to help the 101,000 american schools, public and private, that participate in the national school lunch program. we're committed to provide that kind of assistance to help them to get from where they are today to where they all need to be. well, the changes in the school, in the standards for the school breakfast program, there are 12 million children that have breakfast at...
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the price you see in the eyes of many in the. western governments and also in western media baccarat enough already is have a rest of the country's most prominent right human rights activist and harsh critic of the state's ruling family now be over job was detained just days before his appearance on julian assange show here on our treat and the program which airs on tuesday the whistleblower gets an insight from him and a fellow egyptian activist into the uprising and the arab states parties are about reports. well the author a teaser said is that now bill rajab is being suspected of committing a number of crimes punishable by law and that he's now being held on charges of in some lighting and taking part in a legal demonstrations and should be remembered though that now be all right jobs position has landed him in a number of made in the target even of the bahraini authorities before because he is a highly prominent activist there and also one of the most vocal outspoken critics of the country's ruling family and that's really w
the price you see in the eyes of many in the. western governments and also in western media baccarat enough already is have a rest of the country's most prominent right human rights activist and harsh critic of the state's ruling family now be over job was detained just days before his appearance on julian assange show here on our treat and the program which airs on tuesday the whistleblower gets an insight from him and a fellow egyptian activist into the uprising and the arab states parties...
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May 12, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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so it's in some ways the reverse argument happening in the 18 tos. which during the crisis they started to look for bigger forces, and that process kind of leads to changes in economic thought. >> there was sort of an idea that came out of the depression, because we all had parents or grandparents who went through the depression, although those memories are fading off as our parents and grandparents die off. i'm not talking about the economic question. the idea of frugality, and building savings. are there certainly lessons that we're learning from the 2008 crisis for example? >> i think that is another story in many ways it's historical revision ichl. we are still fignding out what the lessons are -- >> of the great depression. >> what what the great depression was. so you see this happening before our very eyes. one lesson in the great depression. versus a -- says, no actually, it starrted as kind of a contrat crunch, the great contraction as milton freedman put it, and then through a variety of the stakings, on the one hand on the part of the fede
so it's in some ways the reverse argument happening in the 18 tos. which during the crisis they started to look for bigger forces, and that process kind of leads to changes in economic thought. >> there was sort of an idea that came out of the depression, because we all had parents or grandparents who went through the depression, although those memories are fading off as our parents and grandparents die off. i'm not talking about the economic question. the idea of frugality, and building...
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May 12, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 147
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in the u.s. brought lots of cases. we have done lots with exchanges to improve listing standards in that regard so it's a collaborative effort. we took the enforcement division which is in many ways how people know the sec and it's a big division. at our largest but it's certainly not everything we do. we restructured it and organized it and took out a layer of management. not something you see happening in government very often and we put lots of people who were managers back on the front lines doing the investigation. we created specialized units like our asset management unit that could become highly expert in a discrete area of securities so that people weren't doing insider trading this month and market manipulation that month and accounting from the next month. highly inefficient. so we could get to deep expertise in you know the municipal securities market, the asset management area, market abuse area, foreign practices that. we reorganized our examination program and the results of that a
in the u.s. brought lots of cases. we have done lots with exchanges to improve listing standards in that regard so it's a collaborative effort. we took the enforcement division which is in many ways how people know the sec and it's a big division. at our largest but it's certainly not everything we do. we restructured it and organized it and took out a layer of management. not something you see happening in government very often and we put lots of people who were managers back on the front...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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WJLA
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some breaks in the clouds today. 57 degrees in rockville, 51 in bowie, 54 in columbia. bristow and burke, 57 if. in the mid to upper 50's for the most part. 71 this afternoon. close to average for this time of year. slight chance of a sprinkle especially northwest of washington? later on today. few and far between. better chance of rain tomorrow and wednesday. more on that coming up. >> 6:00 hour now. breaking news from northeast d.c. a young girl hospitalized after being shot overnight. correct the girl was shot in the leg in a 100 block of 42nd street. john gonzalez is live with the latest details this morning. >> here is what we know. around 4:00 this morning a white pickup truck showed at the police headquarters of benning road in northeast d.c. with a group of young people inside and a girl suffering from a gunshot wound. minutes after that, police put out on twitter that a female juvenile was shot in the leg and that there's no suspects. even though police spent time investigating the scene and interviewing some of the witnesses, it appears that the victim, believ
some breaks in the clouds today. 57 degrees in rockville, 51 in bowie, 54 in columbia. bristow and burke, 57 if. in the mid to upper 50's for the most part. 71 this afternoon. close to average for this time of year. slight chance of a sprinkle especially northwest of washington? later on today. few and far between. better chance of rain tomorrow and wednesday. more on that coming up. >> 6:00 hour now. breaking news from northeast d.c. a young girl hospitalized after being shot overnight....
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May 17, 2012
05/12
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KQED
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in the obama administration he played a pivotal role in shaping u.s. policy in afghanistan. he was a key player in the decision to send additional forces into the country. he was at the center of the debate on the raid to kill osama bin laden last may. gates stepped down as defense secretary in june, 2011. here is what president obama said at gates' farewell ceremony. >> what you see is a man that i've come to know and respect. a humble american patriot. a man of common sense and decency. quite simply one of our nation's finest public servants. >> reporter: i talked with bob gates in williamsburg virginia at the college of william & mary where he accepted the post of chancellor, a post held by gorge washington, margaret thatcher, sandra day o'connor and many others. here's a conversation with bob gates. it's a pleasure to be at william & mary. it's coming home for you. >> absolutely. >> rose: 1965 a young bob gates graduates from william & mary. >> i was 17 years old when i came here from kansas. i think i got in because they didn't have anybody from kansas. >> rose: (laughs
in the obama administration he played a pivotal role in shaping u.s. policy in afghanistan. he was a key player in the decision to send additional forces into the country. he was at the center of the debate on the raid to kill osama bin laden last may. gates stepped down as defense secretary in june, 2011. here is what president obama said at gates' farewell ceremony. >> what you see is a man that i've come to know and respect. a humble american patriot. a man of common sense and decency....
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here in r.t. we've been airing his series of interview programs in the next hour he meets members of the group behind some of the biggest protests in the world right now the occupy movement here's how they describe their relations with the law. occupy sort of simmer for a while for the first week or ten days or something until there was violence. well yes i mean one police violence but nonetheless we did not provoke like a silence we took a radical you can record police speak we took a nonviolent direct action we went and we occupied a square so we could have a general assembly and starts talk about the world that we wanted to live in which we saw is completely antithetical to the world we're currently living in and the structures that governed it so yeah i mean i guess by being there by exercising directly democratic process we're posing a threat and so the police had to respond when there's nothing that terrifies the american government so much as the threat of democracy breaking out in america
here in r.t. we've been airing his series of interview programs in the next hour he meets members of the group behind some of the biggest protests in the world right now the occupy movement here's how they describe their relations with the law. occupy sort of simmer for a while for the first week or ten days or something until there was violence. well yes i mean one police violence but nonetheless we did not provoke like a silence we took a radical you can record police speak we took a...
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i will see the wall in this. and i will i would like to see for all in this wall in this and. especially when francis economic quagmire is already a tough one to muddle through unemployment is at a twelve year high of almost ten percent debt is doing ninety percent of g.d.p. growth has all but ground to a halt in a series of measures are likely to continue to get both candidates are in favor of euro bonds more intervention from the european central bank and to varying degrees both have put on a confrontational tone towards brussels and germany but there's doubt that there will be much room for maneuver at all but. whoever the elected president is sarkozy or he will subject himself very quickly and very visibly to the power of the european union it will always require more sacrifices for workers for the obvious interests of the large banking globalists. then they work very small things that are out there if you recall that ok we're going to vote for him in local elections. you know what we're going to lead and what actual couples adopt children those are important measures but
i will see the wall in this. and i will i would like to see for all in this wall in this and. especially when francis economic quagmire is already a tough one to muddle through unemployment is at a twelve year high of almost ten percent debt is doing ninety percent of g.d.p. growth has all but ground to a halt in a series of measures are likely to continue to get both candidates are in favor of euro bonds more intervention from the european central bank and to varying degrees both have put on a...
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May 10, 2012
05/12
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KCSMMHZ
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in 2011, the state collected 248 billion euros in taxes.iscal experts believe tax income for the current yield -- year will rise slightly, reaching 252 billion. by 2016, the forecast tax income should reach 290 billion euros. >> the tax forecast shows that we have got the right mixture of budgetary consolidation, reducing the deficit, and growth stimulus measures in our financial policy. >> the government wants annual tax cuts of up to 6.1 billion euros. the bundestag, the second chamber of the german parliament on the debates that on friday. the opposition says the extra cash would be better spent on paying off the national debt. >> staying here in berlin, as expected the german parliament has voted to extend the mandate of its troops serving with the international naval force in somalia. the military will now be able to detect pirate bases on land as well. that is the distance of up to two kilometers from the sea. >> the bundeswehr says the name and it is essential if it is expected to combat piracy effectively, but germany's opposition s
in 2011, the state collected 248 billion euros in taxes.iscal experts believe tax income for the current yield -- year will rise slightly, reaching 252 billion. by 2016, the forecast tax income should reach 290 billion euros. >> the tax forecast shows that we have got the right mixture of budgetary consolidation, reducing the deficit, and growth stimulus measures in our financial policy. >> the government wants annual tax cuts of up to 6.1 billion euros. the bundestag, the second...
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russia so far then put in arrived he went in walked in the sand george of the thousand odd guests be guests who get it they're greeted with a lot of loud of a shot and certainly the people who were there were really happy to see no human being reinstated as russia's present for the third term now. then he calmly and collectedly where it went into the main hall where the whole integration was to take place took the oath a very short oath only thirty three words. as i fulfill the duties of the president of the russian federation i swear to protect and guarantee the rights and freedoms of our citizens to observe and protect the constitution of the russian federation to protect the sovereignty independence and territorial integrity of all state to serve its people faithfully ascii was leaving in fact it's in georgia hall she shook hands with most of the crowd who was standing up on the first line loud of ation again people very happy for him then we heard from the open windows of the of the old to reshow it's just meters away from the kremlin which is clear symbol that the presidential t
russia so far then put in arrived he went in walked in the sand george of the thousand odd guests be guests who get it they're greeted with a lot of loud of a shot and certainly the people who were there were really happy to see no human being reinstated as russia's present for the third term now. then he calmly and collectedly where it went into the main hall where the whole integration was to take place took the oath a very short oath only thirty three words. as i fulfill the duties of the...
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May 2, 2012
05/12
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KRCB
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eye 168
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in their faces we see what is best in ourselves, in our country. our soldiers, our sailors, our airmen, marines, coast guardsmen and civilians in afghanistan have done their duty. now we must summon that same sense of common purpose. we must give oureterans and military families the support they deserve and the opportunities they have earned. and we must redouble our efforts to build a nation worthy of their sacrifice. as we emerge from a decade of conflict abroad and economic crisis at home, it's time to renew america. an america where our children live free from fear and have the skills to claim their dreams. a united america. of grit and resilience. where sunlight glistens off soaring new towers inowntown maattan a we build our future as one people, as one nation. here in afghanistan, americans answered the call to defend their fellow citizens and uphold human dignity. today we were called to follow and those who suffered wounds both seen and unseen. but through dark days we have drawn strength from their example and the ideals that have guided
in their faces we see what is best in ourselves, in our country. our soldiers, our sailors, our airmen, marines, coast guardsmen and civilians in afghanistan have done their duty. now we must summon that same sense of common purpose. we must give oureterans and military families the support they deserve and the opportunities they have earned. and we must redouble our efforts to build a nation worthy of their sacrifice. as we emerge from a decade of conflict abroad and economic crisis at home,...
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May 3, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN
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in pakistan and in our tiny and -- in mayra taneytown, -- in pakistan. and in mauritania another was arrested last year. u.s. stronghold in much of the tribal areas have -- has degraded the ability of the group. al qaeda is losing badly, and bin laden knew it. in documents he talked of disaster after disaster. he even urged tribal leaders to go to places away from air photography and bombardment. and in addition to the significant -- leadership losses, they also found themselves having difficulty with getting money, training of recruits and attacks in the region. i think we ought to acknowledge the al qaeda core remains a threat and we recognize that at any given time it could carry out strikes at u.s. interests at home and abroad. but al qaeda is on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse. of course, its core is not the only story. despite the blows in pakistan that i have described, as well as elsewhere, the global network of al qaeda remains an enduring and serious threat to the u.s. much of al qaeda's activity has devolved into its affili
in pakistan and in our tiny and -- in mayra taneytown, -- in pakistan. and in mauritania another was arrested last year. u.s. stronghold in much of the tribal areas have -- has degraded the ability of the group. al qaeda is losing badly, and bin laden knew it. in documents he talked of disaster after disaster. he even urged tribal leaders to go to places away from air photography and bombardment. and in addition to the significant -- leadership losses, they also found themselves having...
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May 15, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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get in your car and in yukon database and somebody in uniform jobs out of a bush and fires at you, is that an act of war? is that a legitimate act of were? it doesn't matter where is the injury combat and come to a combatant. and one of the rules of war as you're allowed to kill people. fair is the. if you were to gather a bunch of law professors, three people to yes, that's allowed entry people to know it's a. there's no debate. no understanding as to what this means what it is where supposed begin. so for all intents and purposes, the u.s. is running a fascinating program. no debate and no oversight. the biggest challenges are going to be on the civil liberties front. it's interesting for your because europe does and there does this differ problems. if you're together each country they would have a different version as to what the threat looks like. if we were to pull those resources and how we would employ them, but as you could see from the uk or other countries, if you do have that intensity a door you can only walk through once. you don't come back again. long after the ira disa
get in your car and in yukon database and somebody in uniform jobs out of a bush and fires at you, is that an act of war? is that a legitimate act of were? it doesn't matter where is the injury combat and come to a combatant. and one of the rules of war as you're allowed to kill people. fair is the. if you were to gather a bunch of law professors, three people to yes, that's allowed entry people to know it's a. there's no debate. no understanding as to what this means what it is where supposed...
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May 22, 2012
05/12
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and they're operating in 150 places or in 12 places or in 24 places. it would take so little to double that number. marginal difference in the cost would enable those models to be generalized and disseminated more broadly in the country. thank you. >> thank you. i want to thank you so much for your responses and, of course, your statements. it will be helpful to this subcommittee. we look upon you as those who have been with this problem that we -- we're facing and together. we can use our information to try to improve it for our country. because we're a diverse country. we have the languages here. we just have to use it well and be sure we train our people well to serve in that capacity. so thank you very much. we appreciate your presence. >> thank you. >>> i want to welcome the third panel. i want to welcome shawna kaplan. shawna, a fifth grade student at providence elementary school in fairfax county, virginia. ms. paula patrick, the coordinator of world languages for fairfax county public schools. michelle dresdner, the 2010
and they're operating in 150 places or in 12 places or in 24 places. it would take so little to double that number. marginal difference in the cost would enable those models to be generalized and disseminated more broadly in the country. thank you. >> thank you. i want to thank you so much for your responses and, of course, your statements. it will be helpful to this subcommittee. we look upon you as those who have been with this problem that we -- we're facing and together. we can use...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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May 29, 2012
05/12
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in a human, but we could do this in a rat. and over two or three or four weeksa four rat in the prime of life -- four weeks, the brain of the rat looks like the brain at the end of life. we see an interesting thing when we look at the detail. we open up the characteristics of the brain near the end of life if we carried this do it far enough extent so that the brain looks very much like the brain of a child, of a baby that has had literally no experience. if you think of these processes is being reversible, of course that is true. we come out of the noise, you can say, and we refine our processes and get more confident in processing information and more accuracy, and we reach a peak, and then we slowly decline back into the direction with which we came. and the culprit, what is causing this, is the growth of noise in our brain. where does the noise come from? it comes from, in part, because in the early part of our life, where continuously learning and refining. then we reach a point where we are largely operating automaticall
in a human, but we could do this in a rat. and over two or three or four weeksa four rat in the prime of life -- four weeks, the brain of the rat looks like the brain at the end of life. we see an interesting thing when we look at the detail. we open up the characteristics of the brain near the end of life if we carried this do it far enough extent so that the brain looks very much like the brain of a child, of a baby that has had literally no experience. if you think of these processes is...
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russia in the first time in the russian history. and here he is today. just to fight corruption was created. first time and again. to fight corruption and to start to using just a just solution more and more people are punished and more people are put in prison because of the corruption they're guilty and more and more seems being done to create a genuine negative. and on top of. the corruption. and the important to fight corruption accorded their courts thank you very much for saying that we are to. oh and thanks for joining our team with me karen tara got a quick recap of your headlines what they were porton as foreign on precedented six year term becoming the first russian president to be sworn in for a third time and after the inauguration he signed on to force some of his promised reforms to make government apparatus more transparent. francois hollande wins the french presidency as he promises growth instead of austerity while nicole last off proceed falls under the weight of france's mounting debt and of course it's trying to
russia in the first time in the russian history. and here he is today. just to fight corruption was created. first time and again. to fight corruption and to start to using just a just solution more and more people are punished and more people are put in prison because of the corruption they're guilty and more and more seems being done to create a genuine negative. and on top of. the corruption. and the important to fight corruption accorded their courts thank you very much for saying that we...
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done in myanmar and was. on this was the first commercial airplane built in russia after the soviet union in two thousand and seven there have been around one hundred seventy orders placed for this airplane around the world this was a multibillion dollar project that had many countries involved time will tell. business this will have on the selling of this airplane many people many pilots that we've spoken to have said that perhaps this was human error obviously the visibility was not that great yesterday there was fog and there was raining we're actually heading to the airport right now we flew. speaks to a russian flogger who was supposed to be on the airplane yesterday and did not start on the hike in several flights on the russians to place your child in the other locations during this era shout on he's been easy logger and he's been tweeting pictures from the crash site and also other information regarding the russian. one hundred so i'll continue to bring you the latest information. and of course you ca
done in myanmar and was. on this was the first commercial airplane built in russia after the soviet union in two thousand and seven there have been around one hundred seventy orders placed for this airplane around the world this was a multibillion dollar project that had many countries involved time will tell. business this will have on the selling of this airplane many people many pilots that we've spoken to have said that perhaps this was human error obviously the visibility was not that...
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May 3, 2012
05/12
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it would be 83rd in the world in terms of infant mortality. and if you look internally at what's going on in mississippi, what explains that problem, you end up very quickly realizing that the issue is in racial disparity. these are mississippi's own numbers. these are infant mortality for white mothers in mississippi. that's if infant mortality rate in mississippi over time. and this is the infant mortality rate, that red line there, for african-american mothers in mississippi. so white mothers in mississippi, they have roughly the same rate as the rest of the country. but the reason mississippi is the worst in the country, the reason mississippi has worst than botswana's infant mortality rate, is because african-american women have more than doubled the infant mortality rate of white women there. and it makes the state the worst in the country. this is a real problem. this is a life-and-death problem and it has been bad in mississippi for a long time. now, to mississippi's credit, they have decided to make this a priority. they are working o
it would be 83rd in the world in terms of infant mortality. and if you look internally at what's going on in mississippi, what explains that problem, you end up very quickly realizing that the issue is in racial disparity. these are mississippi's own numbers. these are infant mortality for white mothers in mississippi. that's if infant mortality rate in mississippi over time. and this is the infant mortality rate, that red line there, for african-american mothers in mississippi. so white...
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May 26, 2012
05/12
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CNN
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i was in hama in '82 after it was hit.yrians were terrified, terrified of the regime, the secret police. they wouldn't say anything. they're not terrified anymore. >> what changed? >> it's a new generation. some of the things we've heard people say in egypt, in libya, and i think in syria to a degree, as well, is it's a shame my generation, the older generation, is what they say, you know, the parents of these young people who are risking their lives or losing their lives, they're saying it's a shame we weren't strong enough to rise up and do this. >> we saw the young generation in egypt being the ones who really came forward in the early days of the revolution. even in syria, it was children being arrested after graffitiing on the streets of dara in the protests that began. >> and syria has one of the youngest populations in the middle east. it's not surprising. they're also incredibly savvy. when you look at the entire region as a whole and what has happened historically, the entire region was this massive festering caul
i was in hama in '82 after it was hit.yrians were terrified, terrified of the regime, the secret police. they wouldn't say anything. they're not terrified anymore. >> what changed? >> it's a new generation. some of the things we've heard people say in egypt, in libya, and i think in syria to a degree, as well, is it's a shame my generation, the older generation, is what they say, you know, the parents of these young people who are risking their lives or losing their lives, they're...
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the in the in the george and george hall the very beautiful aerial shots of the motorcade traveling from the government building from the white house to the kremlin certainly something unprecedented and novelty for the way this integration has been televised in russia so far then put on arrived he went in walked past us in the you sent george boss two thousand odd guests b.a.p. guests who gave it they're greeted with a lot of loud evasion and certainly the people who were there they were really happy to see no human being reinstated as russia's present for the third term now. then he calmly and collectedly where it went into the main hall where the whole integration was to take place took the old very short author only thirty three words. as i fulfill the duties of the president of the russian federation i swear to protect and guarantee the rights and freedoms of both citizens to protect the constitution of the russian federation to protect the sovereignty independence and territorial integrity of all state of its people faithfully as he was leaving in fact that sent george's whole
the in the in the george and george hall the very beautiful aerial shots of the motorcade traveling from the government building from the white house to the kremlin certainly something unprecedented and novelty for the way this integration has been televised in russia so far then put on arrived he went in walked past us in the you sent george boss two thousand odd guests b.a.p. guests who gave it they're greeted with a lot of loud evasion and certainly the people who were there they were really...
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May 29, 2012
05/12
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in uniform in 1890. but throughout the 19th century the government was reluctant to let indians be in military units except in all indian groups like scouts. as one officer said and wrote this, he said, indians would in uniform with our soldiers would ruin the moral fiber of our army. the indians don't have the patriotic instincts that an american must have. and so racism really kept indians behind. in fact, o.o. howard who founded howard university was in charge of an indian contingent and in one time in his career, and later told one of his fellow officers, he said, it was racism that kept indians behind because of the fear of white soldiers having to take orders from an indian. and of course, now we see how silly all that was. the breakthrough for indians came in world war i as jason said, world war i broke out and thousands and thousands of indians enlisted. several tribes themselves declared war on the germans. and they just enlisted in droves of the smallest tribe in north america of maine, 500 of
in uniform in 1890. but throughout the 19th century the government was reluctant to let indians be in military units except in all indian groups like scouts. as one officer said and wrote this, he said, indians would in uniform with our soldiers would ruin the moral fiber of our army. the indians don't have the patriotic instincts that an american must have. and so racism really kept indians behind. in fact, o.o. howard who founded howard university was in charge of an indian contingent and in...
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in . the people of the states and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an hour long regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder his regime is an actor program to acquire and develop nuclear weapons and let there be no doubt about we know for a fact there are there. this we're just being carried out under the direction of dr david kay respected scientist and former u.n. inspector was leading the weapons search in iraq we are determined to take this apart we have a tremendous a group of dedicated american men and women involved in this with the best assets of the intelligence community can provide. data cheney is not going to be done with this for quite some time david kay wants more time and he says it could take another six to nine months to make a definitive finding ministration is asking congress for hundreds of millions more six hundred million dollars to fund a continuing search we have not yet shiny pointy things that i would call a weapon before we can
in . the people of the states and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an hour long regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder his regime is an actor program to acquire and develop nuclear weapons and let there be no doubt about we know for a fact there are there. this we're just being carried out under the direction of dr david kay respected scientist and former u.n. inspector was leading the weapons search in iraq we are determined to take this apart we have a...
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May 8, 2012
05/12
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KNTV
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in 2009.emember the underwear bomb in detroit, well, that one did not get through security. this one may have. because it had no metal parts. a much more sophisticated design the u.s. says. the white house is emphasizing that the public was never in danger here. key lawmakers just being read in on this on capitol hill. the president and other insiders knew about this weeks ago. analysts say it shows that al qaeda still wants to attack the united states. but they don't have the operational capability to do so. laura? >> thanks for the update, tracie. >> appreciate it. it's 6:26 right now. time to check back in with christina loren. working hard on her weather. >> you know when the mouse doesn't work, you bang it against the desk. good morning to you. little frustrated here in the weather department this morning. we have some interesting microclimates out there. temperatures are running pretty uniform. we are in the 50s just about everywhere. however, you've got a full deck of clouds overhead in
in 2009.emember the underwear bomb in detroit, well, that one did not get through security. this one may have. because it had no metal parts. a much more sophisticated design the u.s. says. the white house is emphasizing that the public was never in danger here. key lawmakers just being read in on this on capitol hill. the president and other insiders knew about this weeks ago. analysts say it shows that al qaeda still wants to attack the united states. but they don't have the operational...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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WUSA
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carry guns in most state parks in virginia. people who are 18 can legally own a gun and can now have them in state parks in the open without a permit a year ago governor bob mcdonald told park police to stop enforcing gun laws restricting carrying firearms in the open. >>> jessica doyle has a special your money report, focused on your comfort this summer. >> the cost of keeping your air conditioning run asking about to skyrocket. >> their. >> reporter: a common story. a heat wave strikes, you turn on the air conditioner, it can't keep up with the temperature outside. you call the repair company. this year prepare for sticker shock. when the heat goes up this summer your blood pressure could, too. the slowing costs of the refrigerant known as freon means some ac repair bills could be off the charts. steve powell charges half as much as other companies to replace freon r 22 in a leaky ac unit. >> still. >> hard for some people to afford it. shock. you can't believe the price has gone up so much. >> reporter: the epa is phasing ou
carry guns in most state parks in virginia. people who are 18 can legally own a gun and can now have them in state parks in the open without a permit a year ago governor bob mcdonald told park police to stop enforcing gun laws restricting carrying firearms in the open. >>> jessica doyle has a special your money report, focused on your comfort this summer. >> the cost of keeping your air conditioning run asking about to skyrocket. >> their. >> reporter: a common story....
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May 31, 2012
05/12
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CNN
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in a civil war. we're very much on a tightrope here and it's tough. >> remember, the lebanese civil war, which in some ways looks like this, lasted for ten years, 150,000 to 250,000 people died. one million people displaced. this could turn in a high stakes game. >> a terrible thing to compare it to. thank you gentlemen, appreciate it. >>> want to know what you think we're on facebook and at twitter. >> coming up next, a rising young star in the republican party talks about what it will take to win over the latino vote. the question tonight, will making him mitt romney's running mate make a difference? that is raw politics. >>> raw politics now part of the special in-depth reporting this week on the power of the latino vote. tonight, how republicans are trying to close the more than 2 to 1 advantage president obama had in the last election. the obama campaign is trying to maintain its advantage rolling out a new set of spanish language ads today. according to the national journal outspending the romn
in a civil war. we're very much on a tightrope here and it's tough. >> remember, the lebanese civil war, which in some ways looks like this, lasted for ten years, 150,000 to 250,000 people died. one million people displaced. this could turn in a high stakes game. >> a terrible thing to compare it to. thank you gentlemen, appreciate it. >>> want to know what you think we're on facebook and at twitter. >> coming up next, a rising young star in the republican party talks...
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May 20, 2012
05/12
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KPIX
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the best case city in the world and has gave pride festival in june itself and also in jerusalem butore muted. bert going to take a quick break and come back in a moment please join us. >>> welcome back pay at home and a wonderful conversation about the modern state of israel with me executive director of the israel center and the council general here in the san francisco bay area for the state of israel. we were having a conversation about the diversity and cultural of israel and some was comparing it to the diversity of northern california talking about the communities but there's a much more in terms of the issues greta israel's not all jewish we have a large ethnic minority and israeli arabs to the 22% to maturity of whom are muslims minority is. christiansen of court if of course the matter minority as well equal citizens of israel. and also have an orthodox component and a tendency to think of israel as white the israel is not quite almost half of the israeli jews are children of community is who resided for hundreds of thousands of years and arab lands before the establishment
the best case city in the world and has gave pride festival in june itself and also in jerusalem butore muted. bert going to take a quick break and come back in a moment please join us. >>> welcome back pay at home and a wonderful conversation about the modern state of israel with me executive director of the israel center and the council general here in the san francisco bay area for the state of israel. we were having a conversation about the diversity and cultural of israel and some...
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May 31, 2012
05/12
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equity driven boom in finance in equality. but for many of the world because of the debt crisis because the stress of high resource costs and well commodity prices for those who were exporters, things went backwards. if the model is correct, you would expect inequal toy rise there as well. that's what the evidence shows. show you have -- so you have a -- too simple but still an explanation for rising inequality under the conditions in the entire world. the second point that the curb is not necessarily stable, it does in fact shift at the shift and is a -- has a common pattern in the world economy. and we extract that pattern from the data set from the information we have in a very simple way. that is, if you look, this is from something called a two many of way fix effect model panel data set using the time effects as a time series to show the common pattern of the movement of ino'quality in the world economy over the period from the early '60s to early '00. what you can see there is initially a fairly stable period comes to a
equity driven boom in finance in equality. but for many of the world because of the debt crisis because the stress of high resource costs and well commodity prices for those who were exporters, things went backwards. if the model is correct, you would expect inequal toy rise there as well. that's what the evidence shows. show you have -- so you have a -- too simple but still an explanation for rising inequality under the conditions in the entire world. the second point that the curb is not...
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in moscow. led mission and free accreditation free transport charges free arrangement free risk free still charged for instance. the old free blog just plug in video for your media projects a free media oh god r.t. dot com. it is easy to. see. the money. lead . to. the millennium .
in moscow. led mission and free accreditation free transport charges free arrangement free risk free still charged for instance. the old free blog just plug in video for your media projects a free media oh god r.t. dot com. it is easy to. see. the money. lead . to. the millennium .
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May 31, 2012
05/12
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stays with the waves and in fact insists the swimming pools they're in to train in be integrated so they can have the same training that their white counterparts are. so it's complicated. >> let's go to another complicated issue, which is japanese interment. probably the case in history where the federal government actually imprisons people based on race and ethnicity. >> i wouldn't say it's the first time. but i would say it's one of the major times. there's no doubt in my mind that fdr considered the emergency of wartime overrode civil liberties protections. there's just no doubt in my mind about this. he looked at a lot of precedents. he knew immediately. it was a decision that was greatly opposed within the administration. eleanor, for one, strongly opposed it. as did the attorney general of the united states, bittel, as did the military command in hawaii. as did justice douglas, who really violated legal protocol when he met with eleanor to advise her on arguments to present to the president. but fdr -- i think the best book on this is a shoutout to my friend greg robinson whose boo
stays with the waves and in fact insists the swimming pools they're in to train in be integrated so they can have the same training that their white counterparts are. so it's complicated. >> let's go to another complicated issue, which is japanese interment. probably the case in history where the federal government actually imprisons people based on race and ethnicity. >> i wouldn't say it's the first time. but i would say it's one of the major times. there's no doubt in my mind...
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was able to lead a military intervention in kosovo the same is true here in syria the situation at the united states doesn't seem to be able to control and so it looks like the who what massacre may be the pretext that they would like to use in order to launch a military intervention in order to instigate regime change which has been the goal all along and you're drawing that parallel with what happened serbia where there wasn't a u.n. security resolution you saying that when it trashing could take place bypassing the un it's entirely possible we've seen the precedent set recently in libya and in particular going around using the united nations but using nato as the military arm to actually carry out interventions we could see something happening in syria using nato instead of the united nations some would say the nato intervention in libya was a success would you agree with that and if if if so if it was a success why isn't it being applied to syria. well i mean if you if you want to call it a success i think you'd probably be not talking to the fifty to one hundred thousand dead liby
was able to lead a military intervention in kosovo the same is true here in syria the situation at the united states doesn't seem to be able to control and so it looks like the who what massacre may be the pretext that they would like to use in order to launch a military intervention in order to instigate regime change which has been the goal all along and you're drawing that parallel with what happened serbia where there wasn't a u.n. security resolution you saying that when it trashing could...
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May 14, 2012
05/12
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KTVU
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he led all players in regular and style points in the ones they keep in the box score. wade add 29. that time it was mario with the assist. he does his thing. the heat take command and go on for the 95-86 win. game two tuesday. >>> and high drama in the english premiere soccer league. they need towrope their first league title but then queens park got the great pass in the header, the fans looked like they would be disappointed but their spirit was lifted stop age time. that header to make it 2-2 and then just two minutes later the fans get the moment they have waited 44 years for. sergio puts one in the back of the net. they win 3-2. they can call themselves english premiere league regular season champions. and that's it for this early sunday night sports wrap. see you tonight at ten. >> like the chicago cub fans of -- soccer in england. >> lots of drama a. >> thank you. >> sure. >> coming up tonight at ten, a major little league accident. a young player in the north bay seriously hurt by a line drive after it hits him in the head. we are talking to his family about what happened.
he led all players in regular and style points in the ones they keep in the box score. wade add 29. that time it was mario with the assist. he does his thing. the heat take command and go on for the 95-86 win. game two tuesday. >>> and high drama in the english premiere soccer league. they need towrope their first league title but then queens park got the great pass in the header, the fans looked like they would be disappointed but their spirit was lifted stop age time. that header to...
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May 5, 2012
05/12
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but in new york in a lot of places on the east coast in boston where sister ocker was in charge, when erik huggers is up in connecticut and new york, with sister fannie, we didn't have that. you know, the sisters struggle, the sister with call you on it and make the brothers on without we were too busy running around, i've got an assignment for you. hold the baby, change the diaper. everywhere it was, sisters struggled against and introduce this conversation into the black community that we didn't have before about sexism and male chauvinism. but usually when their sisters in the room i like them to identify the question, but i like to say very clearly and i'm proud to say it again tonight. commends the black antiparty time we had a fight clearly, but it was the women of the black panther party who taught me how to be a man. clap back >> question in the back. >> asked how one question to ask you. did the panthers have any spiritual means of knowing traders in the right -- and firmness in the right, did you have any spiritual means to know someone with an informant, like you to check a
but in new york in a lot of places on the east coast in boston where sister ocker was in charge, when erik huggers is up in connecticut and new york, with sister fannie, we didn't have that. you know, the sisters struggle, the sister with call you on it and make the brothers on without we were too busy running around, i've got an assignment for you. hold the baby, change the diaper. everywhere it was, sisters struggled against and introduce this conversation into the black community that we...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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KQED
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and it involves them in politics in a variety of countries in a very interesting way. and then there is a second factor. their access to oil & gas is much more constrained now than it was just a generation ago. of course in the 1960s and '70s they owned large chunks of a ramco and saudi arabia, they owned part of the iranian oil company and the iraqi oil company. and they never really worried about finding enough oil & gas to pump out and sell. well, resource nationalism, nationalization drives in the middle east in the 1970s, the the idea began there and spread all around the world that countries that are capable of owning their own oil ought to do so and ought not to allow companies likes exxon mob toil have a piece of it so the result of this is that they've been driven into weaker states, into higher risk environments. so about a quarter of their liquides production over the last ten years, oil & gas liquides is from west africa. they're in places that they wouldn't otherwise want to be like chad or eck qa torial new guinea. >> rose: and they're in the oceans. >> t
and it involves them in politics in a variety of countries in a very interesting way. and then there is a second factor. their access to oil & gas is much more constrained now than it was just a generation ago. of course in the 1960s and '70s they owned large chunks of a ramco and saudi arabia, they owned part of the iranian oil company and the iraqi oil company. and they never really worried about finding enough oil & gas to pump out and sell. well, resource nationalism,...
90
90
May 31, 2012
05/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 90
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in iraq, 13 people have died in a series of bombings. the deadliest attack occurred when a car exploded outside of a crowded restaurant. new figures show civilian deaths in afghanistan are showing at least a temporary decline for the first time in five years. killings of civilians dropped 21% in the first four months of the year. last year was the deadliest in month on record. reports have re-emerged as a pakistani doctor sentenced to 33 years in prison after helping to track down osama bin laden was charged of colluding with a war load. review war lord. u.s. officials decided to reduce aid to pakistan because of this. -- warlord. a pakistani court reportedly declined to examine afridi's tis, instead focusing on his connections to the war lord battling the pakistani army. hundreds of tibetans have been detained opposing the chinese rule. two people set themselves on fire in protest of china earlier this week. it was the first major protest against chinese control in four years. florida governor rick scott is moving forward with a plan to
in iraq, 13 people have died in a series of bombings. the deadliest attack occurred when a car exploded outside of a crowded restaurant. new figures show civilian deaths in afghanistan are showing at least a temporary decline for the first time in five years. killings of civilians dropped 21% in the first four months of the year. last year was the deadliest in month on record. reports have re-emerged as a pakistani doctor sentenced to 33 years in prison after helping to track down osama bin...
249
249
May 11, 2012
05/12
by
KGO
tv
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in albany. they have a fence to try to keep them out. >> an oakley man was victim aboard a plane in russia when it went in earlier in week in indonesia. >> a price of a gallon of gas is on the way up. a combination of demand and refineries in the state going off line is causing the spike. >> that california for you. thanks for joining us, i'm eric thomas. >> kristen: i'm kristen sze. taking look at weather forecast and temperatures are on the way up too. >>> warming trend. good morning. let's get you out the door. it's hazy but not foggy this morning. all airports are running on time. let's talk about those temperatures. we're running mainly low to mid-50s. slightly cooler and had half moon bay. santa rosa in the mid 40s. antioch about 53 degrees. so maybe you need this coat this morning. we'll show you some 90s in the forecast for the mother's day weekend. >>> mass transit this morning, apparently a train hit a parked pickup truck in berkeley. this is on page and third street. it's south of gil
in albany. they have a fence to try to keep them out. >> an oakley man was victim aboard a plane in russia when it went in earlier in week in indonesia. >> a price of a gallon of gas is on the way up. a combination of demand and refineries in the state going off line is causing the spike. >> that california for you. thanks for joining us, i'm eric thomas. >> kristen: i'm kristen sze. taking look at weather forecast and temperatures are on the way up too. >>>...