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Sep 25, 2017
09/17
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[laughter] so i don't know. do th what school helped there is a story in the book the first big writing assignment that i had the law school professor handed it back and circled a big section saidfe this is an abomination and it is a sentence masquerading as a paragraph.ueri [laughter]ld say n so the first book is successful normally publishers you are ernest hemingway the sooner you get it out the better. rethinking of anyone righttt now?. >> my view is is not something i am trying to undertake to moral. >> but eventually there will be a paperback edition?. >> i think i will go read it the same way i would like to add a chapter to contextualized some of the political feelings people have contributed to the book when i started in 2013 i had no idea it would be attached to the election in this bizarre way so i would write a little bit about that so the rest of the book will stay the same. >> after the paperback ron howard is producing a movie? >> i don't know. somebody who is good looking but not disappointed whe
[laughter] so i don't know. do th what school helped there is a story in the book the first big writing assignment that i had the law school professor handed it back and circled a big section saidfe this is an abomination and it is a sentence masquerading as a paragraph.ueri [laughter]ld say n so the first book is successful normally publishers you are ernest hemingway the sooner you get it out the better. rethinking of anyone righttt now?. >> my view is is not something i am trying to...
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Sep 1, 2017
09/17
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so there's not. all the theater teachers disappd joe had said there were lots and lots of papers which all of a sudden disappeared about 1982 but nobody knows why or how, but they are gone. >> what you're saying is your books grew from the biographer himself and recognized the gaps in his own books and wanted them filled by another historian and biographer. that is a really inspirational force. >> at the centennial she gave a speech that said eleanor is infinite and there has been a lot of criticism about how the apple blog shows the life to the legacy and i don't deal with the friendships. so eleanor roosevelt is infinite and i think there will be lots of people doing lots of things. >> they have a lot of instructions from you. the last years in biography and there was another person i meant to remember. let me go back because the last visit i had in martha's vineyard i said what is up with nobody giving you credit for the operation because she's never even mentioned when the operation is discussed
so there's not. all the theater teachers disappd joe had said there were lots and lots of papers which all of a sudden disappeared about 1982 but nobody knows why or how, but they are gone. >> what you're saying is your books grew from the biographer himself and recognized the gaps in his own books and wanted them filled by another historian and biographer. that is a really inspirational force. >> at the centennial she gave a speech that said eleanor is infinite and there has been a...
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Sep 2, 2017
09/17
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KQED
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so that's good so now i'm teaching myself how to walk. how do i learn to do that better so that now i can walk. right. that's the kind of thing that's the magic of what we're seek with these algorithms and modern artificial intelligence. >> rose: when you take all these kinds of things and is there anything about this that worries you. >> broadly like many of my folks in silicon valley i'm a utopian. i think technology leads to progress. there can be a lot of pain sorting it you out. anything that's going to happen technologically is good is not the case. that's foolish those. our notion of privacy changes. if someone described to you facebook before it existed you would have thought that's like an awful invasion of privacy and yet billion of people every day uses this sharing pictures. what i think is key is to surface issues to pay attention to them and try to navigate the technology to get most of the benefit. it's like you know, people have always been worried and industrial revolution, manufacturing revolution, information relying. t
so that's good so now i'm teaching myself how to walk. how do i learn to do that better so that now i can walk. right. that's the kind of thing that's the magic of what we're seek with these algorithms and modern artificial intelligence. >> rose: when you take all these kinds of things and is there anything about this that worries you. >> broadly like many of my folks in silicon valley i'm a utopian. i think technology leads to progress. there can be a lot of pain sorting it you...
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i could fill it is so warm up yourself fantastic so glorious so sunny so mountain like and you know i got to thinking of the people i really hate in this world and none more so than jamie diamond who keeps putting his foot and mouth it caved walking into walls he keeps pulling him bumbling in proving himself to be a it's a bomb but without the civil want. stacy speak speaking of savant he did that when he did that max you know we use of a campaign called crash j.p. morgan by so over the attempt he had a massive short is that his bank had a massive short position on silver and of course it did drive silver from twenty dollars or sixteen dollars up to about fifty dollars now you're starting a campaign crash j.p. morgan by bitcoin because of chorus and the past few days jamie dimon has called big queen a fraud and we're here at a crypto conference and. ninety nine percent of people i asked says say that he's a jerk well yeah i mean the cross j.p. morgan by silver you know in life masters it was at j.p. morgan at the time she left to join a crypto company in london and they had this huge
i could fill it is so warm up yourself fantastic so glorious so sunny so mountain like and you know i got to thinking of the people i really hate in this world and none more so than jamie diamond who keeps putting his foot and mouth it caved walking into walls he keeps pulling him bumbling in proving himself to be a it's a bomb but without the civil want. stacy speak speaking of savant he did that when he did that max you know we use of a campaign called crash j.p. morgan by so over the attempt...
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Sep 1, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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so mr.ts a panicked look on his face and says, doc, let's not do it, it is a trap. that only becomes a cliche later. and he tries to get him to not do it, but dr. research is very calm. so let's watch a clip where this goes down. >> that's a good question. but before i can go into that i'll have to tell you something about blood itself. >> just a moment, brother scientist. so far your chatter on plumbing has been misery but harmless. now that you have come to me i refuse to listen further unless you first describe to me in just two words. >> i can. >> never mind. professor, mention the two key words and i'll know you understand the poetry, the mystery and the true meaning of blood. otherwise, back to your bombing. >> hey, doc, do you know what the two words are? he's trapping us. oh, you do? >> the two words that best describe you and connect you with the mystical origins and traditions of life are sea water. >> sea water? >> brother research, my apologies. >> you mean he's right? >> listen
so mr.ts a panicked look on his face and says, doc, let's not do it, it is a trap. that only becomes a cliche later. and he tries to get him to not do it, but dr. research is very calm. so let's watch a clip where this goes down. >> that's a good question. but before i can go into that i'll have to tell you something about blood itself. >> just a moment, brother scientist. so far your chatter on plumbing has been misery but harmless. now that you have come to me i refuse to listen...
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Sep 11, 2017
09/17
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[applause] so again you don't see this so how does that happen? they have universal health care for over three decades. go to scandinavia or every major country on earth it is regarded as a right the system is different and to provide health care to all people so tell me why the united states of america cannot do the same. [applause] so it isn't the only universal care. with the health care system far in the way the most expensive health care system in the world. what are we spending twice as much as canada? wiry spending today over $10,000 per person on health care? the answer is it is not designed to provide quality care to all people in a cost-effective way. it should be health care for all or quality care the function of the american health care system to guarantee enormous profits in the insurance companies. [applause] two years ago the five major drug companies in america made a $50 billion in profit because we're the only country on earth that does not negotiate with the pharmaceutical industry in terms of the prices they charge per ago tod
[applause] so again you don't see this so how does that happen? they have universal health care for over three decades. go to scandinavia or every major country on earth it is regarded as a right the system is different and to provide health care to all people so tell me why the united states of america cannot do the same. [applause] so it isn't the only universal care. with the health care system far in the way the most expensive health care system in the world. what are we spending twice as...
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Sep 18, 2017
09/17
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WTXF
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so what's on this? has a crab and cucumber in the roll, then we put blue fin tuna on top, garnish with gold flakes, and caviar. >> oh, there is where the 50 bucks come in. >> real gold flakes? >> so you get eight -- >> real gold flakes. >> eight pieces, right? >> yup. >> that's going to cost me 50 bucks. >> yup. that is. that's only 50. >> that would impress people on a date, tell you, get the real bling right there, solid gold. >> just don't order two of them. >> a hundred bucks, oh, i will ' take three. >> get four apiece. can you do one for us? >> absolutely. >> where do you get your tuna? >> so this tuna is from mexico this time. >> what? >> these are blue fin tuna from mexico. >> gorgeous get it from spain but this time of the year it is really good from mexico, so i use that. >> you have got your see weed. >> see weed. then -- >> sticky rice. >> rison top. >> can we eat gold? i didn't know it was edible. >> you know what? so eating a gold flake in our culture is come on, very luxurious thing, then
so what's on this? has a crab and cucumber in the roll, then we put blue fin tuna on top, garnish with gold flakes, and caviar. >> oh, there is where the 50 bucks come in. >> real gold flakes? >> so you get eight -- >> real gold flakes. >> eight pieces, right? >> yup. >> that's going to cost me 50 bucks. >> yup. that is. that's only 50. >> that would impress people on a date, tell you, get the real bling right there, solid gold. >>...
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Sep 26, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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and so forth. and one lady stood up and said, where can we find the minorities? so don't feel bad if somebody doesn't notice arabs and muslims. thanks. >> well, a comment i would like to make about especially members of our community who live in predominantly conservative or republican districts who you may not think are going to be supportive. and they probably aren't, but what i would suggest, find some things in our community that resonate with some of the issues in the conservative and republican community. for example, and they may look at it and say that doesn't apply, that's different, but you look at some of the things like in texas, i come from nevada, so i mean, the nra is huge in nevada. so gun ownership and second amendment rights, whatever, okay. so if they don't want to hear about whatever issue is the most important to you, again, whether it's domestic or foreign policy issue, put it in terms they may be able to relate to with respect to their most important issue. like for example,
and so forth. and one lady stood up and said, where can we find the minorities? so don't feel bad if somebody doesn't notice arabs and muslims. thanks. >> well, a comment i would like to make about especially members of our community who live in predominantly conservative or republican districts who you may not think are going to be supportive. and they probably aren't, but what i would suggest, find some things in our community that resonate with some of the issues in the conservative...
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Sep 5, 2017
09/17
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so, we're seeing it happen. the thing is, is that if we want to see 15 in a union become a law, we're going to have to take power to do it. in the cities where this happened, it's happened because we had enough folks on the county board or the city council to do it. if we want to see, you know, medicare for all to be the law of the land, we're going to have to defend what we have and we're going to have to get the folks in office who are willing to vote that policy into office. so, the bottom line is that we are in a brand-new space, and it is fraught with peril in some ways, but it's also full of opportunity, and we have the ability to make and reshape this whole country if we are willing to seize the moment and go to the grassroots in a whole new way. now, i want to tell you that i'm really excited to introduce sarah johnson to you. thank you for giving her a nice clap a moment ago. you can give her another one now. come on, now. [ applause ] sarah is co-director of local progress. local progress is a national
so, we're seeing it happen. the thing is, is that if we want to see 15 in a union become a law, we're going to have to take power to do it. in the cities where this happened, it's happened because we had enough folks on the county board or the city council to do it. if we want to see, you know, medicare for all to be the law of the land, we're going to have to defend what we have and we're going to have to get the folks in office who are willing to vote that policy into office. so, the bottom...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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so tell us about. kudos to your branding here and you're so on brand here and letting everyone know about your talents and where he came from. well the short answer to that is two thousand and thirteen i've been thinking about this process project for a while i didn't come up with a name yet but i just knew that i wanted to create us i frickin superhero story right and you know all the material is there you know the thinking was there and motivation definitely was there but not the direction really it was only after i asked my younger cousin c.p.a. shout out to him he's into his big at the moment and he was in the trick at the time that is the twelfth grade. and i asked him like this generally what would you do if you had superpowers and you know his answer was absolutely amazing into that to get it straight you know what and get as many followers on twitter and get some girls now i think i've become more popular. you know doesn't it's all about swag it was all about being the cool guy it was all self-
so tell us about. kudos to your branding here and you're so on brand here and letting everyone know about your talents and where he came from. well the short answer to that is two thousand and thirteen i've been thinking about this process project for a while i didn't come up with a name yet but i just knew that i wanted to create us i frickin superhero story right and you know all the material is there you know the thinking was there and motivation definitely was there but not the direction...
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like so. i just got a day job and just started work and so i spent the next four and a half five years just working and like. always wanting to be so how did you get the break in the business. i was working a job my boss called me i was only person she hired and she was like i just got like oh you're probably going to get like oh i'm just giving you a heads up so you can you know go look for another job call or occurred in the front of the job and all i could think about was all i ever wanted to do is act i moved to l.a. to i wanted to do it as a kid but was too afraid to do it because i was a basketball player and that those worlds didn't cross and and so i just decided that i was going to sacrifice and do whatever it took so i gave myself like two to three years to like have some for a lot of them move deep into the valley i lied to my parents for two years and sort of i was going to work every single day i got an acting class nonstop booked a couple commercials i got an agent i booked a cos
like so. i just got a day job and just started work and so i spent the next four and a half five years just working and like. always wanting to be so how did you get the break in the business. i was working a job my boss called me i was only person she hired and she was like i just got like oh you're probably going to get like oh i'm just giving you a heads up so you can you know go look for another job call or occurred in the front of the job and all i could think about was all i ever wanted...
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Sep 30, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN2
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so on so many different levels so with the black panther party it was a place on the one hand where oakland was called the powder keg where political plight of -- political violence because of the issues that were there like the war on poverty we're not addressing. so to have social movements challenging the educational system with a lot of grassroots organizations. coming together as college students there were part of a growing movement that was determined to change not just those conditions that made it possible but they were determined to change the world. having a new vision for the world and one of the ideals so with gender and power in a very real way to be influenced by malcolm x and many activists at the time purvey talk about the black struggle and one that looks like and they talked in general terms and then to keep black men out of the military. for black women heard the of message is that message resonated. and those that joined the black panther party and to become politically active. they found those gender roles with a particular idea how black men and women should relate to
so on so many different levels so with the black panther party it was a place on the one hand where oakland was called the powder keg where political plight of -- political violence because of the issues that were there like the war on poverty we're not addressing. so to have social movements challenging the educational system with a lot of grassroots organizations. coming together as college students there were part of a growing movement that was determined to change not just those conditions...
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Sep 28, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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so counterterrorism separately. >> so security versus security. talk to us at the outset facebook's mission to make a world more open and connected and protect freedom of expression and privacy. how do you address or look at those issues? >> sometimes those issues are intention as i'm sure has been discussed today and sometimes they're not intention. we certainly see -- facebook was created to connect people and our ceo, mark zuckerberg, has talked about the value in bringing people together and trying to establish communities. part of that means we have to make sure we're protecting speech and the ability for people to express themselves how they want to and connect very freely with one another. some of that will only happen if you have privacy. at the same time we know people won't come to facebook if they don't feel safe. so for us to achieve the mission of bringing people to a place where they're going to speak openly with one another, you have to have both and privacy, means, the ability to control who sees your content and when. it also mean
so counterterrorism separately. >> so security versus security. talk to us at the outset facebook's mission to make a world more open and connected and protect freedom of expression and privacy. how do you address or look at those issues? >> sometimes those issues are intention as i'm sure has been discussed today and sometimes they're not intention. we certainly see -- facebook was created to connect people and our ceo, mark zuckerberg, has talked about the value in bringing people...
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certain that they are so right and so good and therefore because they're so good and they don't do evil that they should basically censor and control what everybody else thinks and says well their own actions suggest that they are just as racist as the those they are pointing their fingers at and i want to show some charts because you mention financialization i believe intellectual property is part of the whole financialization system it's a wrong sort of system and here we have a few charts to show you just how race this has become since the likes of oh bill clinton really got into this not only financialization all the legislation allowing for financialization but also part of that he expanded the whole private prison system and locked up two million african-americans essential so just these charts show you again we're just showing you that action the actual truth about these people who claim that they are very egalitarian despite the fact that. we all know the top one percent has taken off completely with all the money under democratic administrations under republican administrations
certain that they are so right and so good and therefore because they're so good and they don't do evil that they should basically censor and control what everybody else thinks and says well their own actions suggest that they are just as racist as the those they are pointing their fingers at and i want to show some charts because you mention financialization i believe intellectual property is part of the whole financialization system it's a wrong sort of system and here we have a few charts to...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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that second sentence is long and so he put a period there. so two were circulating. i began to realize this is the reason the national archives one had gotten a period in it. that towne period was the original source of that period on the website. why did this all matter? it mattered because that second sentence about the self-evident truths is this incredible statement about a theory of revolution. part of the history of political thought. but also the basis of consent to the government, securing rights, and the right of the people to make judgments of the government and adopt it and adapt it if necessary. and the whole sentence goes from that statement, that claim about our individual rights to a statement about our collectively working through the tool of government to secure our safety and happiness together. that is a hugely important of political thought and philosophy. and i wanted to understand the ideas in that sentence and i wanted to understand why it was that some americans don't see the whole sentence, only see half of it. just a part of the individual r
that second sentence is long and so he put a period there. so two were circulating. i began to realize this is the reason the national archives one had gotten a period in it. that towne period was the original source of that period on the website. why did this all matter? it mattered because that second sentence about the self-evident truths is this incredible statement about a theory of revolution. part of the history of political thought. but also the basis of consent to the government,...
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was so much worse by the looks of it so much more damage could have been done. you're absolutely right primarily you know we could be thankful that this is a failed device and i say that only from the limited information so far but certainly you know with my experience and expertise the information was just the plain old high explosive device. it doesn't mean that that's exclusively the only benefits when a device fails it's basically a forensic gold mine we can identify the. d.n.a. the biometrics you identify the type of device a certain groups using you can cross references with other devices that we use in other pieces of operation and potentially even tie downs with certain groups or bomb maker in addition to that we can also information see our colleagues around the world in intelligence military law enforcement so that their bombs and missiles and police officers on the ground and the members of the public will be aware of that type of device to be used by particular terrorist groups. so that it can lead us to other elements of the network the recruiters t
was so much worse by the looks of it so much more damage could have been done. you're absolutely right primarily you know we could be thankful that this is a failed device and i say that only from the limited information so far but certainly you know with my experience and expertise the information was just the plain old high explosive device. it doesn't mean that that's exclusively the only benefits when a device fails it's basically a forensic gold mine we can identify the. d.n.a. the...
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what makes it so delicious but is it ok so prison. is this canadian sort of specialty that on paper sounds repulsive it is french fries cheese curds and gravy and the unit with a fork at french fries cheese curds and groovy sounds like a pretty heart attack. pretty daring in the midst of yeah but is it ever delicious for whatever reason where you buy it is it stores in canada oh it's like something you go to a greasy spoon for and it'll it'll cure what ails you do you can you make it at home yeah i don't probably but especially if i'm making a can you give to you so focusing more on directing in the future i i i will make movies as long as someone wants me that's all i've ever wanted i want to direct a play oh i would love to i would love to that would be the most fun do you ever have a dream project oh yes yes yes indeed. there's a sort of there's a there's a bunch of stories that i'm very very interested in not the least of which is the sort of one nine hundred forty one invasion of hong kong which is a sort of ill reported because
what makes it so delicious but is it ok so prison. is this canadian sort of specialty that on paper sounds repulsive it is french fries cheese curds and gravy and the unit with a fork at french fries cheese curds and groovy sounds like a pretty heart attack. pretty daring in the midst of yeah but is it ever delicious for whatever reason where you buy it is it stores in canada oh it's like something you go to a greasy spoon for and it'll it'll cure what ails you do you can you make it at home...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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so thank you all. be safe going home and sue, again, thank you so much. washington journal continues. the c-span bus tour, the 50 state capitals continues. >>> and the c-span bus tour 50 state capitols continues. today we're in historic trenton, new jersey. first we want to talk to former governor jim mcgreavy who served from 2002 until he resigned in 2004. he joins us from the c-span bus and governor, you recently formed a nonprofit corporation called the new jersey reentry corporation. what's its focus? >> the focus is to understand that for numerous individuals coming back from prison or county jail, that they need to be assisted to reclaim their lives and what we do is work with ex-offenders, whether in providing for training and employment, housing, addiction treatment, also legal services to help clean up, if you will the legal wreckage of their past lives, addressing child support and most importantly, linking people to a federally qualified health center so they have the necessary health health care. we assist people, literally in making their liv
so thank you all. be safe going home and sue, again, thank you so much. washington journal continues. the c-span bus tour, the 50 state capitals continues. >>> and the c-span bus tour 50 state capitols continues. today we're in historic trenton, new jersey. first we want to talk to former governor jim mcgreavy who served from 2002 until he resigned in 2004. he joins us from the c-span bus and governor, you recently formed a nonprofit corporation called the new jersey reentry...
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Sep 27, 2017
09/17
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WRC
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> i don't think so.ety. >> seth: okay. [ laughter ] >> and if you really want to draw it out on me, okay, i'm pretty damn good. >> seth: all right, good. thank you. [ laughter ] thank you for your honesty. [ cheers and applause ] >> how does that make you feel? >> seth: i feel -- >> how are you? >> seth: i'm happy. i'm happy on your behalf. >> are you happy? >> seth: i am! >> i don't think so. [ light laughter ] i think you're a little jealous. >> seth:ll am a little jealous. >> i do. i feel you're a little jealous. >> seth: you know, i have to say this. you've not been here before, but you've been discussed on this show before. you have come up. other guests have mentioned you. >> mmm. yes, yes, i -- >> seth: do you know who i'm referring to? >> well, i have seen one of those guests. >> seth: mm-hmm. >> in the person of jennifer lawrence. >> seth: yeah. >> and -- [ light cheering ] she sat right here. and she said she had a crush on you. >> seth: uh-huh. >> and she said she also had a crush on me. >> se
> i don't think so.ety. >> seth: okay. [ laughter ] >> and if you really want to draw it out on me, okay, i'm pretty damn good. >> seth: all right, good. thank you. [ laughter ] thank you for your honesty. [ cheers and applause ] >> how does that make you feel? >> seth: i feel -- >> how are you? >> seth: i'm happy. i'm happy on your behalf. >> are you happy? >> seth: i am! >> i don't think so. [ light laughter ] i think you're a...
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Sep 11, 2017
09/17
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i pursued my mobility in a way that wasn't too dangerous and so forth so he's ended up in prison for 11 years. >> and when he started going through this process, you explained it in such the date of such vivid detail the conclusion was almost like it had been baked in. what was it like for you watching that happen to your family? >> guest: it's different living through it and looking back on it. you know where it comes out, so you can see the trajectory and moving in a direction other than the predictable ones. the major hope is that you have to completely imagine an alternative trajectory. that is a part of the challenges you cannot actually proceed without hope, yet hope by definition pushes against this view you might have in reality. you have to sort of separate from that. it's a har hard saying in that contrast what you need in order to move forward, and the sort of dynamics of predictability and so forth that you are trying to overcome and then you don't overcome. >> for the people that are going to watch this but haven't yet had a chance to pick up and read a book, can you tal
i pursued my mobility in a way that wasn't too dangerous and so forth so he's ended up in prison for 11 years. >> and when he started going through this process, you explained it in such the date of such vivid detail the conclusion was almost like it had been baked in. what was it like for you watching that happen to your family? >> guest: it's different living through it and looking back on it. you know where it comes out, so you can see the trajectory and moving in a direction...
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so this happened in two thousand and thirteen so it's not exactly a new phenomenon but it's not something that sounds good you know we don't want to hear that our debt to g.d.p. ratio has got out of control but it's definitely a circumstantial thing in every single country there are a lot of factors you need to question before figuring out whether this is sustainable or not so are the buyers of our debt domestic in here or are they in china which is something a lot of fiscal hawks like to point out. growing or has our growth been slow and does the government have a plan to cut debt so when you look through those three main things then you can kind of figure out whether you know you're on a bad route or not for example greece we know couldn't get a plan together on how they're going to cut their debt so the press around their debt crisis was terrible and it made it look like they were just about to explode but then in japan who had actually a higher debt to g.d.p. ratio it was a little more sustainable because most of their debt buyers were domestic so the press for them was much different
so this happened in two thousand and thirteen so it's not exactly a new phenomenon but it's not something that sounds good you know we don't want to hear that our debt to g.d.p. ratio has got out of control but it's definitely a circumstantial thing in every single country there are a lot of factors you need to question before figuring out whether this is sustainable or not so are the buyers of our debt domestic in here or are they in china which is something a lot of fiscal hawks like to point...
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Sep 12, 2017
09/17
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so greater. so either i'm really, really hold or we are seeing changes and trends that we need to make sure that we do take into account because that is the fiscally responsible thing to do to prepare for the future, not just the past. >> is that some of push bag that the previous caller talked about. >> i'm not sure where he was coming from, but there is a resistance in many cases to talk with federal spending and federal investment in infrastructure projects and others. and i think in many cases, there are awful examples of federal dollars that have been spent on infrastructure projects. but if you use the right criteria, and i remember when the legislature had given us $200 million which sounds like an extraordinary amount of money, and it is, but we had a problem that was probably about 60 bmd. billion. so we developed a prioritization tool or information tool using all these different models to inform us where we get best bang for the buck to where we're making principaled investments and ge
so greater. so either i'm really, really hold or we are seeing changes and trends that we need to make sure that we do take into account because that is the fiscally responsible thing to do to prepare for the future, not just the past. >> is that some of push bag that the previous caller talked about. >> i'm not sure where he was coming from, but there is a resistance in many cases to talk with federal spending and federal investment in infrastructure projects and others. and i...
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and on top of that wallace so yeah i mean the numbers are so astronomically different between men and women not to say it doesn't happen but i was going to say that you know slavery affects the world of course but it does disproportionately affect right and that's one of the things that we've always talked about over the years this is the idea that when you know when we say hey we're going to go someplace we're going to do that women are almost always more more disproportionately affected than men especially in lower income areas or developing nations in this report what it showed was that the disproportion is pretty basic so you have almost twenty nine million. or or seventy one percent of the overall total so what you're saying is you have this thing of women accounted for ninety nine point four percent of forced sexual oil exploitation compare that to males who only sell point zero six percent and eighty four point two per side if you see that the graphic forced marriages are forced upon a women as compared to just fifteen point eight percent of men so you've got forced labor you'v
and on top of that wallace so yeah i mean the numbers are so astronomically different between men and women not to say it doesn't happen but i was going to say that you know slavery affects the world of course but it does disproportionately affect right and that's one of the things that we've always talked about over the years this is the idea that when you know when we say hey we're going to go someplace we're going to do that women are almost always more more disproportionately affected than...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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thank you so much. i want to thank the new york historical society for inviting me tonight and to congratulate you on the fantastic world war i beyond the trenches. thank you for attending tonight. of my seven books that are all tied into new york city in some way, this is if first one to challenged me explore all five boroug boroughs. i visited many neighborhoods for the first time and that was fun to do. how many people have been to lynn noel yumville. the book is in two parts. part one is locations and military training, recruiting, fund-raising or other places the war touched from 1914 to 1919. in the city, long island and new jersey. because one in ten, that's 10% dough boys of the bodoughboys tt went to france were from new york. and part two is notable to monuments in the five boroughs. there's close to 500. let's try out my clicker here. my book was connection to the city and world war i. and we're in one right now. this building that we're in right now. and for the upper west ciders, they creat
thank you so much. i want to thank the new york historical society for inviting me tonight and to congratulate you on the fantastic world war i beyond the trenches. thank you for attending tonight. of my seven books that are all tied into new york city in some way, this is if first one to challenged me explore all five boroug boroughs. i visited many neighborhoods for the first time and that was fun to do. how many people have been to lynn noel yumville. the book is in two parts. part one is...
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are actually international commerce going to be stopped so what we are going to seize another failure big failure from the british of the united states until they really realize that and it was sheesh and he's the only option but western media and western politicians would say that north korea doesn't want to negotiate and just wants to explode hydrogen bombs. are all we have been demanding final peace treaty that would soon end to the korean war that the united states started it in ninety three so we always a to all the presidents of the united states we have been offering to possibility of signing a final peace treaty i mean even developing relations i didn't know about the level that had been we we are in jefferson clinton in the ninety's so we have demonstrated continuously that we want to live in peace but what we are not going to do is to be invaded like the united states made libya going to stand or our. of course trump hasn't mentioned any negotiations final statement goshi asians or north korea but he did say as a candidate you've got to give kim jong un credit how many young
are actually international commerce going to be stopped so what we are going to seize another failure big failure from the british of the united states until they really realize that and it was sheesh and he's the only option but western media and western politicians would say that north korea doesn't want to negotiate and just wants to explode hydrogen bombs. are all we have been demanding final peace treaty that would soon end to the korean war that the united states started it in ninety...
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Sep 23, 2017
09/17
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so it was a long time. a lot of dealing with myself in it, a lot of going to school to learn how to write, to get the craft down although i have a master's in broadcast journalism. there was a difference in the languaging. and so this took a lot of my energy and a lot of my time. c-span: where did you write it? >> guest: in san francisco. c-span: right here. >> guest: right here. c-span: in your home? >> guest: in my home. ultimately, the final draft was written in just a downstairs room of my home in sausalito. c-span: and finally, how did this particular publisher, pocketbooks? >> guest: pocketbooks. c-span: decide to do this? >> guest: i was having difficulty with my first publisher, great difficulty, and i wanted out. originally there had been a bid for the manuscript. it was a big thing in my life. it was now this thing is written, it's wonderful. my agent, sandra dykstra, had put pit up for bid, and several major or publishers bid on it. one publisher got it and then -- it was the southern gentleman i
so it was a long time. a lot of dealing with myself in it, a lot of going to school to learn how to write, to get the craft down although i have a master's in broadcast journalism. there was a difference in the languaging. and so this took a lot of my energy and a lot of my time. c-span: where did you write it? >> guest: in san francisco. c-span: right here. >> guest: right here. c-span: in your home? >> guest: in my home. ultimately, the final draft was written in just a...
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Sep 15, 2017
09/17
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WTXF
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so, i use a hand cycle so i can go out and ride with my fellow teammates. >> that is great. >> so anybody that may be wounded or hurt an opportunity to jump in with the fellow bikers what is best web site we can get a hold off. >> project hero.org. we have a big event in doyletown up at central park, honor ride philadelphia their of the riders will be recovering veterans and public can come out and help support them. >> well, thank you all to have your service. thanks very much. >> thank you. >> mike and alex, back to you guys. >> okay. >> very cool. >> that is great. >> okay, let me just say something real quickly here, don't move, we will go to commercial, then come back and meet a very special family. that is all i will say. >> that is all you need to say really. >> really don't move. >> we have a little timeless, maybe we saved the best for last. you know our purple to perfect contest here on fox 29, so we chose someone deserving. >> a veteran. >> to get a bathroom make over. we chose that man, right there, he's a veteran of worlds war it, his name is frank martin. we will take you in
so, i use a hand cycle so i can go out and ride with my fellow teammates. >> that is great. >> so anybody that may be wounded or hurt an opportunity to jump in with the fellow bikers what is best web site we can get a hold off. >> project hero.org. we have a big event in doyletown up at central park, honor ride philadelphia their of the riders will be recovering veterans and public can come out and help support them. >> well, thank you all to have your service. thanks...
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so do.oh in prices equal to rising standards of living but you have various players or players that don't like your guy. they housing industry comes along and says we need affordable housing that's really the last thing they want is affordable housing we've had hundreds of affordable housing prices and programs and all they have done is get prices to go up so their solution is we made more affordable rise. out of the program it doesn't work every where the government interferes prices go up i mean look at obamacare classic example look at the cost of education when i graduated from university when i maxed nine hundred seventy six the great and civil engineering ok it cost two hundred and fifty dollars a semester i tell people that and they their eyes glaze over you know you're pregnant you don't know you can look it up and say wasn't aware she was back then so you know what benefit is there to anyone to have the cost of education be forty thousand dollars a year now for an end to end enginee
so do.oh in prices equal to rising standards of living but you have various players or players that don't like your guy. they housing industry comes along and says we need affordable housing that's really the last thing they want is affordable housing we've had hundreds of affordable housing prices and programs and all they have done is get prices to go up so their solution is we made more affordable rise. out of the program it doesn't work every where the government interferes prices go up i...
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this is so cool. they're bred for a single purpose. they have a super power. they start training very young. eight months of intensive schooling. their routes. and they save lives. syria paradoxical the. compact is in was a situation like israel and palestine is not a country where i meet a lot of people without hope although everybody agrees this humanitarian situation in syria is a very serious situation people have been much more affected than in any other active conflicts to date. credit as one of the basic instruments to drive an economy but it can also lead to tragedy and i did i took the whole gist i came bigger and met that the death star game and in the spiral now control on. many lives have been broken by excessive debt in the banks got you into trouble on all the big bankers got big. government the banks but i just didn't think of the ordinary men who washed morning through the back under don't buy creditors people see no future bad friends who have become ill you due to job your relationsh
this is so cool. they're bred for a single purpose. they have a super power. they start training very young. eight months of intensive schooling. their routes. and they save lives. syria paradoxical the. compact is in was a situation like israel and palestine is not a country where i meet a lot of people without hope although everybody agrees this humanitarian situation in syria is a very serious situation people have been much more affected than in any other active conflicts to date. credit as...
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this honesty so. years ago i traveled across the united states exploring america's deadly love affair with a gun if a bad guy tried to get to one of my family member is he would have better a lot better and i think they are inheriting whatever my my baby is since my book was published in the year two thousand more than hoff a million americans have been killed in the us and we had a thought to him yes we did yes this is a middle school we go through drills and we put ourselves some real scenarios it was interesting to see who actually got hit. and i just saw i did to return to the subject to track down each gun owner who i'd met and photographed those years of god i don't know this but we are not. a top north korean official accuses america of hindering efforts to end the simmering hostilities on the korean peninsula. in a rare interview at a regional economic forum in russia. dozens are injured in clashes with police in south korea in protest against the us missile launches. and the syrian government
this honesty so. years ago i traveled across the united states exploring america's deadly love affair with a gun if a bad guy tried to get to one of my family member is he would have better a lot better and i think they are inheriting whatever my my baby is since my book was published in the year two thousand more than hoff a million americans have been killed in the us and we had a thought to him yes we did yes this is a middle school we go through drills and we put ourselves some real...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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that wasn't so good, alendronate fast, that definitely wasn't good so she came up with contessa and i look isa. >> all both your parents moved out of birmingham back to denver. and you ultimately went to school at university of denver where you graduated phi beta kappa. and then you went to notre dame. >> and then no cheering or anything, you are a graduate student. >> i love football, are you kidding? of course i went tonotre dame, everybody does. >> you went back to university of denver . and then you were recruited to stanford, is that right? and your specialty was opiate and russian. >> why did you happen to pick? it wasn't the normal thing you might say i was a failed music major. i started in college as a piano major. >> i studied piano from the age of three, my grandmother taught piano so i learned young and about the end of my sophomore year in college, i went to the aspen music festival school and i'm 12-year-olds who were teaching me to learn and i thought i was about to end up with a piano bar someplace playing for a huge and so i wandered back with no major and i took th
that wasn't so good, alendronate fast, that definitely wasn't good so she came up with contessa and i look isa. >> all both your parents moved out of birmingham back to denver. and you ultimately went to school at university of denver where you graduated phi beta kappa. and then you went to notre dame. >> and then no cheering or anything, you are a graduate student. >> i love football, are you kidding? of course i went tonotre dame, everybody does. >> you went back to...
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Sep 26, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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so while in the midst of it, so to speak, in the fog of war, one of the reflections, this is clearly some destination that has been reached, but it's more a process of continuous renewal. >> one of the challenges that you talk about in the book is privacy versus security. we've just had the ceo of equifax resign in the wake of that huge data breach. 143 million accounts compromised. maybe not on paper the worst privacy breach ever, but i would argue it is the worst in terms of the impacts on consumers. is microsoft paying enough attention to technologies potential darkside even as you look ahead to artificial intelligence and some of these other technologies to prevent the equivalent of an equifax happening ten years down the line in the a.i. era >> it's a very important question there's no doubt that as every part of our life and every part of our economy increasingly is driven by software and is becoming digital, cybersecurity is top of mind in fact, if i look back, with any new technology there's alwaysgoing to be the dark side after all, with the telegraph there was wire fraud we
so while in the midst of it, so to speak, in the fog of war, one of the reflections, this is clearly some destination that has been reached, but it's more a process of continuous renewal. >> one of the challenges that you talk about in the book is privacy versus security. we've just had the ceo of equifax resign in the wake of that huge data breach. 143 million accounts compromised. maybe not on paper the worst privacy breach ever, but i would argue it is the worst in terms of the impacts...
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Sep 30, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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so he did not want to disrupt that. so he did a flyover. symbolically, it did look like there was a disconnect there. and then a a few days later, he had the opportunity to actually land on the ground and see it firsthand and meet people and connect with the real people that were affected. so yeah, two different situations. reporter: i think there was a quote -- we talked about using it, but it did not end up in the exhibit where he said something , about regretting letting that camera in the helicopter. mr. draper: yeah. it is that image that, unfortunately -- it was definitely unfortunate, the timing of it. that probably should not have been the first image that we would connect the president with in that disaster. looking out a window. reporter: another one of the photos that we have of yours is a great picture of him in a cowboy hat and in a truck in the ranch. talk a little bit about the importance of his time at the ranch and your access to his downtime, if you will. mr. draper: i love the ranch. the ranch was a great place to unwind
so he did not want to disrupt that. so he did a flyover. symbolically, it did look like there was a disconnect there. and then a a few days later, he had the opportunity to actually land on the ground and see it firsthand and meet people and connect with the real people that were affected. so yeah, two different situations. reporter: i think there was a quote -- we talked about using it, but it did not end up in the exhibit where he said something , about regretting letting that camera in the...
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Sep 5, 2017
09/17
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i don't think so. first of all, if somebody got killed and shoved down a suer, there would be a missing person report. i think that sounds about right. you were closer to it than i was. >> there's since 1967, there's been rumors that more people were killed. i don't think so. there were a lot of people shot. i don't think so. and if we can find the bodies. usually if there's someone missing, there's a report on that. that wasn't the case. i feel for this lady, though. >> this is jean, hi. >> caller: just wanted to say chief i used to work with your sister. always a sweetheart. i was nine years old at the time of the riot. we lived on 12th street and again. across from the street a gas station. i remember the national guard coming down the street in the tanks. positioned in front of our home. we had so sleep in the bathroom because of the gunfire and everything. and i remember them coming into hourous asking us for receipts for food at the time. my mother had a friend that would bring us food who he wor
i don't think so. first of all, if somebody got killed and shoved down a suer, there would be a missing person report. i think that sounds about right. you were closer to it than i was. >> there's since 1967, there's been rumors that more people were killed. i don't think so. there were a lot of people shot. i don't think so. and if we can find the bodies. usually if there's someone missing, there's a report on that. that wasn't the case. i feel for this lady, though. >> this is...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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KNTV
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>> i think so.with the library of congress. and i told this story about how when i was in second grade, i made this conscious decision that i loved reading, right? i was like, "all of my classmates hate reading. but i love this. i love reading." and so i told that story during the interview. and then later that day she said, "mommy, do you like to read?" and i said, "yep, i love to read." and she said, "i love to read, too, mommy." so, yeah -- >> seth: that's great. [ audience aws ] she's off to a fantastic start. [ applause ] this is such a -- a beautiful book. it's a haunting book. at times a difficult book. you tell it through the eyes of three narrators. a mother, her 13-year-old son and then there's sort of the supernatural element of a spirit of a 13-year-old from times past. did you -- was that something -- when you set out to write a book like that do you know in your head, oh, i want to tell this three different ways from three different points of view or do sort of find that when you set o
>> i think so.with the library of congress. and i told this story about how when i was in second grade, i made this conscious decision that i loved reading, right? i was like, "all of my classmates hate reading. but i love this. i love reading." and so i told that story during the interview. and then later that day she said, "mommy, do you like to read?" and i said, "yep, i love to read." and she said, "i love to read, too, mommy." so, yeah --...
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so, this is a big deal.ose things that, when i look at it, i'm like, okay, this is kind of what i came out to hollywood to do. it's sort of a new kind of thing. it's been billed as kind of a a hard comedy. it's actually really not that. it's kind of -- it's an hour long sci-fi comedic drama, that science fiction seriously, and kind of casualizes at the same time. and adds some -- adds some laughs. >> jimmy: are you a sci-fi -- you're a sci-fi -- >> i was, yeah. i was a big sci-fi fan in high school and college. >> jimmy: like, what? "star trek"? >> "star trek", "twilight zone." you know -- i think i even watched "seaquest" once or twice. that's how deep into it i was. >> jimmy: yeah, you are -- i've heard different comparisons of this show, being almost like "guardians of the galaxy." where it's, like, it's funny, but it's also, there's actually story into it as well. >> yeah, i mean that's -- i mean, that was a model of, who we looked to. you know, what's the tv version of that? where, if you look at that m
so, this is a big deal.ose things that, when i look at it, i'm like, okay, this is kind of what i came out to hollywood to do. it's sort of a new kind of thing. it's been billed as kind of a a hard comedy. it's actually really not that. it's kind of -- it's an hour long sci-fi comedic drama, that science fiction seriously, and kind of casualizes at the same time. and adds some -- adds some laughs. >> jimmy: are you a sci-fi -- you're a sci-fi -- >> i was, yeah. i was a big sci-fi...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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MSNBCW
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, so much.nd before we go quick for those of us watching, if they want to help, what should they do? >> well, they can call 202-800-3134. that is a number we have in washington that will channel all of the help. we have united for puerto rico if you want to make donations. and as i stated, we need all the help we can get here in puerto rico. but certainly thank you for your solidarity, for your prayers, for all of the help. we still need more help, but we know we have a nation behind the proud u.s. citizens of puerto rico. >> thank you so much. appreciate you joining us and good luck. >>> all right. we'll take a break. next, president trump touting his tax plan as a miracle for the middle class. but his own chief economic adviser can't actually guarantee that the plan will lower taxes for the middle class and the president continues to say that it's not going help him. which is a lie. how do we say that this fall, our guests can earn a free night when they book at choicehotels.com and stay with
, so much.nd before we go quick for those of us watching, if they want to help, what should they do? >> well, they can call 202-800-3134. that is a number we have in washington that will channel all of the help. we have united for puerto rico if you want to make donations. and as i stated, we need all the help we can get here in puerto rico. but certainly thank you for your solidarity, for your prayers, for all of the help. we still need more help, but we know we have a nation behind the...
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dot com slash on contact so you next week. we're going. to meet. you guys i meet a professional is power point. show you how artsy america fits into the greater media landscape is not all laughter all right but we are a solid alternative to the bullshit that we don't skew liberal or conservative and as you can see from his bar graph we don't skew the facts either the talking head lefties talking head righties oh there you go above it all don't look at world r.t. america is in the spotlight now every lead might have no idea how to classify as when it actually took me way more time than i care to admit. to. to. play. the mission of newsworthy it is to go to the people tell their side of the story our stories are well sourced we don't hide anything from the public and i don't think the mainstream media in this country can say you know i think the average viewer knows that r.t. america has a different perspective so that we're not hearing one echo chamber that mainstream media is constantly spewing. we're not beholden to any corporate sponsor no one te
dot com slash on contact so you next week. we're going. to meet. you guys i meet a professional is power point. show you how artsy america fits into the greater media landscape is not all laughter all right but we are a solid alternative to the bullshit that we don't skew liberal or conservative and as you can see from his bar graph we don't skew the facts either the talking head lefties talking head righties oh there you go above it all don't look at world r.t. america is in the spotlight now...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN2
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so he was well read. it was a struggle for him to get hold of these books because his father privileged only one book, and i was the bible. only the new testament. so we had to work out a deal with his dad, and this was, this led to his education. the deal was that if he got up early enough in the morning, nonfarm time come he could read to his hearts delight, knowing all well after full day of labor a teenager would not want to read anyway. so what he did is he created an invention with two large wisconsin boulders tied with you during 2:00 so at 2:00 in the morning the boulders would fall down and raise is better than you get up out of bed and you'd go about his inventing or his reading. can you imagine that any household? suddenly clank, clank. father would have heard it for sure. his father was in it of his work and allowed him to continue in that reading. the invention acts of the game his ticket to the university of wisconsin because a neighbor suggested he show these inventions at the wisconsin sta
so he was well read. it was a struggle for him to get hold of these books because his father privileged only one book, and i was the bible. only the new testament. so we had to work out a deal with his dad, and this was, this led to his education. the deal was that if he got up early enough in the morning, nonfarm time come he could read to his hearts delight, knowing all well after full day of labor a teenager would not want to read anyway. so what he did is he created an invention with two...
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Sep 30, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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trying to appear tough for their own voters so that's populism. internally behind the scene they think this is very damaging very bad so the best way forward has been is what the kurds are emphasizing is that the time for negotiation is never over this referendum was just an opinion poll let's talk about how we can design the future so the turks have realized that they they were tough they spoke. but actually they did not take any serious measures to make life more difficult for themselves or the kurds the iranians are exactly the same they're speaking tough they think this was a mistake might made by the kurds but they are not closing the border they're not doing anything i know how to measure that would make it difficult for them to amend to mend fences in the future iraq needs to do the same i can also predict that now we are into our shura i sure is not one day it will take a whole week and politics will actually take a week break and after that people will have to then see what can be done and use the language of of debate of dialogue and it'
trying to appear tough for their own voters so that's populism. internally behind the scene they think this is very damaging very bad so the best way forward has been is what the kurds are emphasizing is that the time for negotiation is never over this referendum was just an opinion poll let's talk about how we can design the future so the turks have realized that they they were tough they spoke. but actually they did not take any serious measures to make life more difficult for themselves or...
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Sep 13, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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so you see four k.'s centrally and that stands for knights of the ku klux klan makes sometimes the klan members wives make them there was a mennonite woman couple hours from here who was making them for the clan they have a rope making division up and i was shelton connecticut. that why do you have so much memorabilia in your house for the k.k.k. i don't keep it all in my house to keep most of it locked up on a site far away from my house but i have the. paraphernalia and memorabilia regalia because one day i'm going to open up a museum it's part of american history you know in any country and america is no exception we have the good the bad and the shameful and it's all part of our history no history should be destroyed preserved so people can learn from it you have to look at it so we get the sense you know people are watching this and some good and says this sounds so idealistic it won't work be friending them would imply approving their ideology bad strategy and of course let me mention the documenta
so you see four k.'s centrally and that stands for knights of the ku klux klan makes sometimes the klan members wives make them there was a mennonite woman couple hours from here who was making them for the clan they have a rope making division up and i was shelton connecticut. that why do you have so much memorabilia in your house for the k.k.k. i don't keep it all in my house to keep most of it locked up on a site far away from my house but i have the. paraphernalia and memorabilia regalia...
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north korea join so. you mentioned about the chasm the industrial complex but more i think new york project might be i think trilateral prozac between rush. or i saw that project is the goal of this joint economic development to slowly encourage the north to transition to a more capitalist system although our i don't want to i think designated pin down by defining that comes i think you have the countries average so side as the old one for lots of these are parts but one goal really is to let the people i think be call mall prosperous or let them people have or a good believe being has to know their north korean leaving condition is very harsh and so you in that sense our glories through this project lead north korean people or make more i think the sense to leave being i think that is to call on wednesday officials in seoul met to discuss how exactly to implement these sanctions against the north however it's clear sanctions against the north aren't always so simple there is a wider regional repercussion
north korea join so. you mentioned about the chasm the industrial complex but more i think new york project might be i think trilateral prozac between rush. or i saw that project is the goal of this joint economic development to slowly encourage the north to transition to a more capitalist system although our i don't want to i think designated pin down by defining that comes i think you have the countries average so side as the old one for lots of these are parts but one goal really is to let...
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Sep 14, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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feet would be would be a mistake and would be so under so the uprising blocks of their time that have a lot to do with mismanaged financial and governmental mismanagement also had a lot to do. that there seems to be a misconception that the apartheid regime was a well run regime it was not there was a lot of fiscal spending and so that had a lot to do with it as well all of these factors going to play and you know there has been a sort of or is it revisionist movement here in south africa looking at how effective sanctions actually what about capital flight sara i mean how does that work when sanctions have been imposed on a country and that money is taken out of the country. effectively the people the common man woman will they not then bear the brunt of the sanctions because the money that should be going to them towards the education possibly is going to the regime in the government's hands instead yes i think you mentioned a very important aspect of the sanctions debate that's been going on for decades actually at this point and iraq as you mentioned and momentous and was one exam
feet would be would be a mistake and would be so under so the uprising blocks of their time that have a lot to do with mismanaged financial and governmental mismanagement also had a lot to do. that there seems to be a misconception that the apartheid regime was a well run regime it was not there was a lot of fiscal spending and so that had a lot to do with it as well all of these factors going to play and you know there has been a sort of or is it revisionist movement here in south africa...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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and so forth. while i was in college, i had the good fortune to cross paths with thorton wilder, the great playwright and novelist. and he was asked at one point why do you write the plays you do, the subjects you choose, why do you write the novels you do and the subjects you choose. he said i imagine a story that i'd like to be able to read, and if i find nobody's written it so i can see it on stage or read it in a book, i write it myself is i can read it in a book or see it performed on stage. [laughter] and i thought, why don't you try and write the book you wish you could read about the johnstown flood. and as soon as i started work on that book -- here at the library of congress primarily -- i knew this was what i wanted to do for the rest of my life. >> so did you quit your job at usia? >> i did not. when kennedy was killed, i was a asked to come back to new york to work at american heritage, the wonderful american history magazine, which was then published with hard covers and no advertisin
and so forth. while i was in college, i had the good fortune to cross paths with thorton wilder, the great playwright and novelist. and he was asked at one point why do you write the plays you do, the subjects you choose, why do you write the novels you do and the subjects you choose. he said i imagine a story that i'd like to be able to read, and if i find nobody's written it so i can see it on stage or read it in a book, i write it myself is i can read it in a book or see it performed on...
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Sep 17, 2017
09/17
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so again, her husband charlie died. so all of them will end up dying at the massacre.ey are, when they go into the tent cellar, when the national guard set fire to the tents, all of the smoke will actually go into the cellar and they will end up suffocating. this is a grave marker for all of the family, down in trinidad. 4, -- andve lucy, baby tony, who had died before the massacre. , bernard who died in february 1914. mary goes into the cellar because she believes it is the only way to protect her children from the gunfire. she is the only one to come out. the story is, when she comes out, the next day she wanders to wherever the people are and she tells them, i do not know where my children are. i do not know what happened to them. so people go back to the seller and this is where they find all the women and children who have been killed. , the story is she is the one of the monument was modeled after. she will travel all throughout the u.s. talking about what happened to her children. one thing she tells people is i do not want what happened to my children to happen
so again, her husband charlie died. so all of them will end up dying at the massacre.ey are, when they go into the tent cellar, when the national guard set fire to the tents, all of the smoke will actually go into the cellar and they will end up suffocating. this is a grave marker for all of the family, down in trinidad. 4, -- andve lucy, baby tony, who had died before the massacre. , bernard who died in february 1914. mary goes into the cellar because she believes it is the only way to protect...
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Sep 24, 2017
09/17
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i mean, so instructive and later on his involvement with st. matthew's church and with the educational process. .. [inaudible conversations] >> i want to get a few points across please put your cell phone on silent. if you would like to share on social bdm ago to a book festival. thank you. welcome to the session on southern history and we also want to thank our sponsor for this session. i would like to introduce you to robert who will be our moderator for today. he is a member of the board of directors for the mississippi book festival as well as a director for the center at jackson state university whereja hhe's also a professor. he is also an author. thank you and welcome. >> glad to see everyone here this afternoon. i'm going to go down and introduce our panelists today. first, we have to my immediate left adrienne is the author of water tossing boulders help of chinese immigrants led the first sitedevice to desegregate schoon the south. she currently serves as managing editor of the daily paper in williamsburg virginia and at the school of
i mean, so instructive and later on his involvement with st. matthew's church and with the educational process. .. [inaudible conversations] >> i want to get a few points across please put your cell phone on silent. if you would like to share on social bdm ago to a book festival. thank you. welcome to the session on southern history and we also want to thank our sponsor for this session. i would like to introduce you to robert who will be our moderator for today. he is a member of the...
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corp so this is all that's pretty damn great salute. small business tax twenty five percent then the individual tax with regards to compressing that simplifying it right bit bigger standard deductions any dollar you can put in our work for it on that friday paycheck going to be you do you think does not have a high chance of making it through committee. that's a great question there's so much that needs to be done in the details of course that's got nine pages here that's right that's not a latte and they've got to be able to give strike a balance between this framework and these concepts as well as the financial sustainability of the system they've got to do some dynamic scoring so there's going to be some give and take it's going to be tough work they've got we're just at the beginning yet but there's a lot of commitment here to get this done what do you think of donald trump backing away from his rhetoric candidate trump certainly not a lot of this public private partnership especially as regards that infrastructure bill do you think
corp so this is all that's pretty damn great salute. small business tax twenty five percent then the individual tax with regards to compressing that simplifying it right bit bigger standard deductions any dollar you can put in our work for it on that friday paycheck going to be you do you think does not have a high chance of making it through committee. that's a great question there's so much that needs to be done in the details of course that's got nine pages here that's right that's not a...
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Sep 1, 2017
09/17
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so vox was very concerned about not having the house stick out so much. even though it was large, so you'll notice that the front of the house has these gables that make the house appear very tall but in the rear, those gables are not there, but instead, there's a kind of hipped roof to de-emphasize the verticality. and there was also a lot of ornamentation and the idea was that these houses could express the emotions of the owners, there are these window hoods on the first floor windows. elaborate trim along the gables, as a way to stand out, as a way to have these ornamental flourishes was going to be part of this suburban style architecture. which was very much intended for wealthier folks who could escape the suburbs. this is just kind of interesting to see what the house looks like today. this was a couple years ago. nice looking house. it was on the market for $285,000. pretty cheap. but it remains a kind of signal of this earlier impressive era. so while some people like vox were building these suburban cottage style houses, others were thinking ab
so vox was very concerned about not having the house stick out so much. even though it was large, so you'll notice that the front of the house has these gables that make the house appear very tall but in the rear, those gables are not there, but instead, there's a kind of hipped roof to de-emphasize the verticality. and there was also a lot of ornamentation and the idea was that these houses could express the emotions of the owners, there are these window hoods on the first floor windows....
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Sep 18, 2017
09/17
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so so it's also, i feel there are so many contradictions in these policies and the rhetoric and everythingt's being said on the part of the administration. >> yes. i make masha's point in not saying immigrants are only good because they work hard and contribute to the economy and so on, but what should the criterion be? and if you say there should be no criterion and we just let everybody in, okay, that's one answer. but if we're a little bit more practical about it, what should the criterion be for letting people -- for deciding who can come into the country -- >> -- founded on principles of pragmatism. there's a kind of ideal, utopian city on the hill ambition implicit in the constitution that the best interpretation of law adds to it. i think sort of it goes to the heart of people who consider citizenship a right and people who consider it a privilege, and that sort of divides left and right at the moment. for black people, it's very strange because in the early days of abolition the aim was repatriation to africa until a number of black people said, by the way, we built this country, s
so so it's also, i feel there are so many contradictions in these policies and the rhetoric and everythingt's being said on the part of the administration. >> yes. i make masha's point in not saying immigrants are only good because they work hard and contribute to the economy and so on, but what should the criterion be? and if you say there should be no criterion and we just let everybody in, okay, that's one answer. but if we're a little bit more practical about it, what should the...