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Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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it's less about how we're designed and more about how we work. that's been the critical part about setting up the working groups where we've leaned on public diplomacy officers, folks within public affairs and ip legacy to come up with the best ways to get gpa at the center of the conversation when policy conversations are happening. so we shape it from the front end along the way then continue to fine tune it so we are a partner in how that gets done versus just communicating on our own. >> go for it. >> microphone. >> thank you. >> i want to discuss a little bit about values because this was brought up several times in the presentation and the concept we are promoting of values while at the same time, there's an enormous disagreement on both sides of the al about what those values are and how you practice them. i want to sort of settle on the idea of a free press and the idea of a free press needing to be adversary yal and how the executive branch handles that. when we talk about free press around the world, the value of organizations like voic
it's less about how we're designed and more about how we work. that's been the critical part about setting up the working groups where we've leaned on public diplomacy officers, folks within public affairs and ip legacy to come up with the best ways to get gpa at the center of the conversation when policy conversations are happening. so we shape it from the front end along the way then continue to fine tune it so we are a partner in how that gets done versus just communicating on our own....
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Sep 9, 2019
09/19
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how did we get here? how can we navigate away back? trumpther it is president or issues in political history, how hard is it for you as a teacher to keep your views in check and listen to what they have to say? >> the most important thing i see my role as is teaching them how to think independently and that starts with research. how can you conduct research to verify things you find online? we like to think as adults that young people are geniuses with technology. they know exactly what they are doing. they know the shortcuts and the lingo, but they don't have any reasoning skills about what they see online. the teachers, the adults, the parents don't think we could teach our kids technology skills, but we have to. they don't know, innately, to verify if something is true that see online. they see conspiracy theories on youtube and they take it as gospel truth. at the core of teaching them how to identify what is true and what is not, we can apply those to politics, as well. it is the same thing when a politician says something. is it
how did we get here? how can we navigate away back? trumpther it is president or issues in political history, how hard is it for you as a teacher to keep your views in check and listen to what they have to say? >> the most important thing i see my role as is teaching them how to think independently and that starts with research. how can you conduct research to verify things you find online? we like to think as adults that young people are geniuses with technology. they know exactly what...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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how are you? >> my daughter just graduated. she did a paper on you. >> tell her thank you. i appreciate that. >> thank you for your service. we appreciate it. >> thank you for coming. >> how are you? >> great. as a former project manager, i love what you have to say about respect, and then problem- solving. >> it's very often being followed, right? >> yes because people have their own agenda. >> reactionary and all this other stuff. thank you so much. how are you? >> i strongly ed meier your integrity, your military service, and also your performance with kamala harris. >> thank you very much. good morning. how are you? >> good. thank you so much. >> thank you for your service. >> thank you. my honor. >> i am being so careful. >> thank you. >> the debate, when that happened, that was one of my big issues. >> thank you. it should be for all of us. thank you. thank you so much. >> thank you, nice to meet you. >> i am so glad you had the time to come. what are you majoring in? >> politics. >> natural
how are you? >> my daughter just graduated. she did a paper on you. >> tell her thank you. i appreciate that. >> thank you for your service. we appreciate it. >> thank you for coming. >> how are you? >> great. as a former project manager, i love what you have to say about respect, and then problem- solving. >> it's very often being followed, right? >> yes because people have their own agenda. >> reactionary and all this other stuff. thank...
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Sep 14, 2019
09/19
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BLOOMBERG
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how concerned are they about his health? how long will he be away? certainly cloud, cloud, cloud. that is something it always comes back to. and as we pointed out, as people move more and more to the cloud, that is something that affects spending on hardware which has not been a real strength business for them. taylor: number one talking point from the call you want to hear? anurag: i want to see what is a -- the transition, the take for the new database product. that is a very important thing for us. that is what dictates how soon people will adopt into the cloud. any new applications business, bookings numbers, those would be the areas we will be looking at. taylor: that was a bloomberg's anurag rana and tom giles. i also discussed it with the former cisco ceo john chambers, he weighed in shortly after the announcement. >> the reaction first and most importantly is, as larry ellison, a speedy recovery for mark. he is in my thoughts and prayers. if you really think about the team of oracle, they work more effectively than anyone envisioned a three s
how concerned are they about his health? how long will he be away? certainly cloud, cloud, cloud. that is something it always comes back to. and as we pointed out, as people move more and more to the cloud, that is something that affects spending on hardware which has not been a real strength business for them. taylor: number one talking point from the call you want to hear? anurag: i want to see what is a -- the transition, the take for the new database product. that is a very important thing...
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how do we deal with our perceived nature. visitors are not allowed to touch or enter the forest only look at. that man wanted to create a warning monument about the climate crisis it took him 6 years to realize the 4 forest project. he worked together with the swiss landscape architect and so in the. ny times. these are the difference bases here. those there are the black pines you know. they've been replanted 16 tiles and. 299 trees were planted between the goal posts creating a mixed forest which has become the bike rare in europe these days the trees were located in various german french and italian nurseries some of them were 50 years old all the trees had been transplanted several times so they could cope before being transported the roots were pruned and bound together into a ball then they were fixed into the ground thus the trees will survive without damage to the roots. of fiends and so she was very difficult for me to find the proportion to the stadium because at 1st i couldn't imagine how it would be. coming on so
how do we deal with our perceived nature. visitors are not allowed to touch or enter the forest only look at. that man wanted to create a warning monument about the climate crisis it took him 6 years to realize the 4 forest project. he worked together with the swiss landscape architect and so in the. ny times. these are the difference bases here. those there are the black pines you know. they've been replanted 16 tiles and. 299 trees were planted between the goal posts creating a mixed forest...
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Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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FBC
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how much of a threat is that, and how much have we neutralized that threat?f the threat is home grown. there are people being arrested, seems like every two weeks there's an arrest on the part of the fbi. in essence, new york -- not new york, but u.s. citizens. yeah, it is important part of the threat right now, a lone wolf, local people inspired by jihadty messages on the internet. gerry: have we got good intelligence about these kids who are being radicalize in this way? >> no. gerry: do you think we've done enough in. >> no. i'm not sure how we get that, because there are privacy issues, as you said. i mean, obviously, you can pay a lot of attention to the internet, certain web sites. and investigative agencies do that. there are ways now, there are chat rooms, one on one chat rooms, that sort of thing, that are very difficult to get into. so, no, there's an awful lot that we don't know. gerri: and this is connected, obviously, to some of these terrible gun incidents we've seen across the country. there's a big debate in washington about whether we need mo
how much of a threat is that, and how much have we neutralized that threat?f the threat is home grown. there are people being arrested, seems like every two weeks there's an arrest on the part of the fbi. in essence, new york -- not new york, but u.s. citizens. yeah, it is important part of the threat right now, a lone wolf, local people inspired by jihadty messages on the internet. gerry: have we got good intelligence about these kids who are being radicalize in this way? >> no. gerry:...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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it's yet another layer as we look at how we do foundational work and how the enemy will fight, we have to be able to build for the war 500. >> i hope you know it possible to send questions electronically to me and we have several that i will turn to. the attention of our european allies that focus so intensely in recent weeks and months on exit, we have two questions from the audience and i might turn over to general actually to get started. you can hand them off to anyone you want. first, russia is clearly interested in undermining european unity. the intelligence communities believe they influenced the box it bought. if so, how did the russians operate and what impacted it? they did fabulous work. how would you answer that? >> important to consider in which our adversaries operate today. ability to deal with property and ability to steal your personal information and attempt to interfere in that. i would offer whether or not it's the environment in which you are operating below armed conflict. we have response to that, or we have to be able to do is how will we share intelligence, im
it's yet another layer as we look at how we do foundational work and how the enemy will fight, we have to be able to build for the war 500. >> i hope you know it possible to send questions electronically to me and we have several that i will turn to. the attention of our european allies that focus so intensely in recent weeks and months on exit, we have two questions from the audience and i might turn over to general actually to get started. you can hand them off to anyone you want....
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Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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so tell us a little bit about how that works and a little bit about how it has got to speed up. it is still a pretty manual process. >> before i answer that question let me plug your book. before i read david's book if you would asked me what is the book i would want you to read i would have said skifrd stole's cuckoo's egg book? still read that book. after i read david's book, it's david's book, "perfect weapon" we know most of the things he talks about this there but we don't understand it until you read his back. the takeaway i have from it is we have been in a continuous low level cyber conflict since 2010 and we are just now starting to get our hands around it. >> i did not pay rick for any of this. >> i didn't know we were supposed to suck up to the moderator. >> i also want to plug him. >> i will give you a cut of the check. from the commercial perspective, david is right. the thing that the commercial world has realized is that the adversaries have automated their attacks and most of us in the commercial space and the government space we are trying to deal with that manu
so tell us a little bit about how that works and a little bit about how it has got to speed up. it is still a pretty manual process. >> before i answer that question let me plug your book. before i read david's book if you would asked me what is the book i would want you to read i would have said skifrd stole's cuckoo's egg book? still read that book. after i read david's book, it's david's book, "perfect weapon" we know most of the things he talks about this there but we don't...
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Sep 3, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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an enormously political person who had a real sensibility how to approach the political system. at the foundation of it were strongly held moral convictions and blumenthal told the story about lincoln telling people i was a slave and he talks about how his father rented him out as an indentured servant to do work on other people's farms, the backwoods country of kentucky and the money was taken away from him and his father pocketed it and he had an instinctive hatred of slavery and what that meant to pilfer someone else's labor from them and steal their labor from them. unlike a lot of other white politicians, whether they were anti-slavery abolitionists or equal locating in the middle he talked about slavery from the standpoint of the slaves and what it meant to have their time taken from them, to have their money taken from them, to have the family lives disrupted. that is one of the things i found powerful. lincoln was a political actor but there was this moral core to everything he did. he was not formally educated. he was completely an autodidact and found his way pretty qu
an enormously political person who had a real sensibility how to approach the political system. at the foundation of it were strongly held moral convictions and blumenthal told the story about lincoln telling people i was a slave and he talks about how his father rented him out as an indentured servant to do work on other people's farms, the backwoods country of kentucky and the money was taken away from him and his father pocketed it and he had an instinctive hatred of slavery and what that...
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Sep 13, 2019
09/19
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 64
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edges of how big a pie, how big this commercial market space can be, many investors see it as a fady have children or grandchildren that game. a light bulb goes off. they realize gaming is not something you grow out of anymore. they realize they are spending as much time watching other people game as they are playing themselves and this is something becoming increasingly multigenerational. with that, i will say we are very uniquely positioned as the rare, pure e-sports play listed on nasdaq. most of the sports activities you are seeing are really private investments. they do have high valuations, so it's all of those things when it is an early-stage space. often, people think and worry about a bubble. what i would tell you is this -- right now, projections for e-sports is that it will be a 3 billion-dollar global market in 2023. i used to run a 3 billion-dollar business for bp 10 years ago, and i would not get out of bed if that was just what this was worth. i think it goes back to gaming is how people want to spend their time now is a primary interest and we are just gearing -- jus
edges of how big a pie, how big this commercial market space can be, many investors see it as a fady have children or grandchildren that game. a light bulb goes off. they realize gaming is not something you grow out of anymore. they realize they are spending as much time watching other people game as they are playing themselves and this is something becoming increasingly multigenerational. with that, i will say we are very uniquely positioned as the rare, pure e-sports play listed on nasdaq....
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Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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how you're developing this and a plan for how you're approaching that. as you mention eed i think we requested so com with a goup of people who were very good at this and having a plan for the key things that we were focused on that were important to the soft team out this. so you know having that strategy that identifies the development, investments is a really important aspect of this. i think the other key on the soft side and from my experience was keeping the users close to the developers in this. to me, that was essential. some of you had probably had the opportunity to visit soft works in tampa. stood up by so com a few years ago. this was really focused on trying to provide a, an entrance. a doorway for people to kind of come in. present their capabilities and look at how they can integrate then to have users there who could provide almost immediate feedback and leveraging concepts like rapid prototyping. so not only are you testing the viability of it, but you're also looking at ways you can speed up the introduction of this to our fight eers on
how you're developing this and a plan for how you're approaching that. as you mention eed i think we requested so com with a goup of people who were very good at this and having a plan for the key things that we were focused on that were important to the soft team out this. so you know having that strategy that identifies the development, investments is a really important aspect of this. i think the other key on the soft side and from my experience was keeping the users close to the developers...
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Sep 9, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 30
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we get to write things about how to vote and to get to research and so we get to see not just how the government functions but how we participate in the function of that government. >> you talked talk about one oe challenges kind of that exists, your teaching mainly first-generation american kids. what are some of the other challenges in getting concept of the constitution, government and washington across to high school students? >> in general histories hard to convince people that is not just the thing that happened before but it's a thing that is actually happening now. history feels like something in the distant past and we don't get a second. but help to make those connections for my students take these are issues were still reckon with. so who cares john adams try to limit free speech? it's important to our conversation today about what is hate speech and what should be allowed in part of the discussion online. it takes making those connections for them that they may not make themselves. >> what current political issues or figures are the most sort of talked about among your stu
we get to write things about how to vote and to get to research and so we get to see not just how the government functions but how we participate in the function of that government. >> you talked talk about one oe challenges kind of that exists, your teaching mainly first-generation american kids. what are some of the other challenges in getting concept of the constitution, government and washington across to high school students? >> in general histories hard to convince people that...
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4.8K
Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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CNNW
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how did you find that?that. >> do you think kids are seeking that kind of stuff out? >> i think it has a lot to do more so than curiosity. some people are looking at a based topic and it shows more. other oh, what is this? if you scroll down like on your twitter or facebook or any social media -- it might have a caption saying funny and then you open the video and it's like, oh, my god, it's porn. >> how many of your friends have been affected by it? have has it affected their relationships? >> once you get addicted it's hard to fully engage in sex with your partner because you already have this fantasy about porn. >> if you see porn, it's like you're taught that there's almost like no feelings behind sex. and when you feel emotions like you like someone, that's a little confusing because i only wanted like sex. >> before y'all took this class, had anyone spoken to you or talked to you about porn? >> no. >> yeah. >> when i was your age, i didn't have any sex education in school at all. in fact, you know, my
how did you find that?that. >> do you think kids are seeking that kind of stuff out? >> i think it has a lot to do more so than curiosity. some people are looking at a based topic and it shows more. other oh, what is this? if you scroll down like on your twitter or facebook or any social media -- it might have a caption saying funny and then you open the video and it's like, oh, my god, it's porn. >> how many of your friends have been affected by it? have has it affected their...
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how important is ai for google. is so important to us that 2 years ago we rebranded our entire research division to google ai this cat ai drives a significant part of our product development. ai above all it drives a significant part of our efforts to improve the quality of our products. take machine translation through the use of machine algorithms that we've seen faster progress over the last 2 years than we did over the entire previous decade. society will undoubtedly be propelled forward by the implementation of these services and the use of ai in the years to come from. what's key is that it's done responsibly under the principles of transparency we need to explain health things work why they are needed or people's data goes how they can control it how they can delete it if they want to delete it or forward it to the user must have a control. but what about technologies like google home the smart microphone sitting in people's living room. google whom you have google home isn't used dropping there's a small chi
how important is ai for google. is so important to us that 2 years ago we rebranded our entire research division to google ai this cat ai drives a significant part of our product development. ai above all it drives a significant part of our efforts to improve the quality of our products. take machine translation through the use of machine algorithms that we've seen faster progress over the last 2 years than we did over the entire previous decade. society will undoubtedly be propelled forward by...
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Sep 12, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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eye 24
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how can we define that out. api models within that framework would extend our capabilities and allow us to know where we have our shared fwgaps. i don't need digital forensics in my sock ever really. i'm happy to push that off to somebody else, but there are things i do need that are unique to me that a shared service model doesn't always permit. there's got to be a good balance is my view. >> and i would just offer part of our experience as we look at it, using the defense industrial base as an example, you've got the big guys that are pretty well situated. they understand how to operate a sock on down the line in terms of cyber security capabilities, but then you also have very small suppliers that are in and of themselves not going to be equipped to be able to handle the kind of nation state type attacks that are likely going to be directed their way depending on what they're supplying to us. so the way that i look at it is that the most effective impact of a ha shared services mode el, if we can target the g
how can we define that out. api models within that framework would extend our capabilities and allow us to know where we have our shared fwgaps. i don't need digital forensics in my sock ever really. i'm happy to push that off to somebody else, but there are things i do need that are unique to me that a shared service model doesn't always permit. there's got to be a good balance is my view. >> and i would just offer part of our experience as we look at it, using the defense industrial...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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how are we doing it? we look at how we look at the dib and supply chain and how we get the right controls that equal real requirements and make it -- i don't want to use the wordage agile, but being at the realtime threat. are we thinking in the future? that's one of the i think we're at the tipping point with that. and i think there's a lot of work to be done with that. on the weapons systems side, i think what we're really doing in creating real -- the three ps. you know, we've got to make sure that we have the processes in place at the right time at the right security level to make sure that the control that we're creating actually works. and we're working through that. >> very good. so none of these panels is really complete unless we talk about the demands for cyber work force. i've been either sitting on or moderating panels for most of my career in cyber, and it's been a challenge we've continuously faced. i'm wondering if you could talk about some of the new things you're doing or how you view it
how are we doing it? we look at how we look at the dib and supply chain and how we get the right controls that equal real requirements and make it -- i don't want to use the wordage agile, but being at the realtime threat. are we thinking in the future? that's one of the i think we're at the tipping point with that. and i think there's a lot of work to be done with that. on the weapons systems side, i think what we're really doing in creating real -- the three ps. you know, we've got to make...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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ALJAZ
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eye 115
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more important how to use one of the shelf got enough to jump and how much of. our lives are going to this. time come. to mind again out of. your money going to see this monarch she got on your knee and working with you it was so strange allows me out of there i didn't see it she met a lot of women out of. a month or 2 not at the castle yet it big this is what i should do does i'm ok shipboard. janish it's not the job of the up on the other the only one that i've got is all of them or i didn't miss a sound hostile that i didn't you get in the. other they demis there's little that i didn't create that it is i'm not a young mr shawn the temple doesn't mean i'm just in your name you did your little i was hostile the didn't sit in quite that much trouble i don't i've been in cuba. i know that benefit and some tough on that can finish his her book the fallen in love not be. just a fine ship parts a financial problem but you know you and i'm one of those brothers from my own mother which will be far more. than this valley in the whole of the job market and have a so i
more important how to use one of the shelf got enough to jump and how much of. our lives are going to this. time come. to mind again out of. your money going to see this monarch she got on your knee and working with you it was so strange allows me out of there i didn't see it she met a lot of women out of. a month or 2 not at the castle yet it big this is what i should do does i'm ok shipboard. janish it's not the job of the up on the other the only one that i've got is all of them or i didn't...
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37
Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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eye 37
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how are you? >> good. so nice to meet you. sen. sanders: hello. how are you doing? thank you. >> together. sen. sanders: thank you. >> thank you! sen. sanders: interesting how when we start talking about health care. >> we could go on and on. sen. sanders: thank you. >> thank you so much for everything. sen. sanders: thank you. my favorite t-shirt. >> thank you. appreciate it. thank you very much. sen. sanders: what is the problem? ok. ok. thank you very much. how are you? thank you. [indiscernible] >> thanks, bernie. sen. sanders: good. how is it going? do you want me to sign it? >> look right here. sen. sanders: good luck. [indiscernible] sen. sanders: thank you! >> today, presidential democrat elizabeth warren attends a house party and hampton falls, new hampshire. watch our live coverage. >> tonight, on the about theors, a talk black cat cyber security in las vegas on the vulnerabilities associated. system, aa control power system, and electromagnetic in one way or the other. that is how it generates momentum. an electric wire across a magnetic field. any and al
how are you? >> good. so nice to meet you. sen. sanders: hello. how are you doing? thank you. >> together. sen. sanders: thank you. >> thank you! sen. sanders: interesting how when we start talking about health care. >> we could go on and on. sen. sanders: thank you. >> thank you so much for everything. sen. sanders: thank you. my favorite t-shirt. >> thank you. appreciate it. thank you very much. sen. sanders: what is the problem? ok. ok. thank you very...
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Sep 8, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 37
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how did you do oral arguments? how did you take your exams? i had to figure a lot of it out, and it actually started way back in elementary school e when i had to learn to advocate for my needs and to navigate the school system. one of my early chapters in my book is an experience where a teacher told me i was failing a chat. and this was in -- a class. and this was in middle school. and i was extremely surprised because i did all my assignments. how could i be failing a a class when i'm doing all the assignments? and we investigated what was going on. my -- the teacher -- [inaudible] this was hart middle school in oakland, california, a mainstream public school. i was attending classes with non-disabled students. a non-specialized school. and after the teacher for the blind talked to the mainstream teacher, they realized the teacher was writing assignments on the board, and i wasn't seeing them. so i was missing homework because i didn't see that it was assigned. and sometimes the instructor would read the assignment from the back of the room
how did you do oral arguments? how did you take your exams? i had to figure a lot of it out, and it actually started way back in elementary school e when i had to learn to advocate for my needs and to navigate the school system. one of my early chapters in my book is an experience where a teacher told me i was failing a chat. and this was in -- a class. and this was in middle school. and i was extremely surprised because i did all my assignments. how could i be failing a a class when i'm doing...
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60
Sep 4, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 60
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how is that for a small question? >> sure. >> your store all the data that everyone wants access to. what's the biggest threat there, dorian? let me first say about for a couple really important things i want to emphasize that both kristin and dev mentioned, and that is part of our jobs and our success is built on embedding our teams with the development organization. so that as these issues come up, whether their technical issues, legal issues or they are policy issues, or even ethical issues, we've got people that are right there having a discussion with the developers. i think that's critically important. and then the dialogue with regulators. i've been doing this for a long time, speaking with regulators, and i don't care what anybody says. they are not always at the forefront of technology. a lot of our job is to educate them on these technologies, and that is been true for a very, very long time it was true when ray was the general counsel at oracle, and that is an ongoing effort to do that in a really, really h
how is that for a small question? >> sure. >> your store all the data that everyone wants access to. what's the biggest threat there, dorian? let me first say about for a couple really important things i want to emphasize that both kristin and dev mentioned, and that is part of our jobs and our success is built on embedding our teams with the development organization. so that as these issues come up, whether their technical issues, legal issues or they are policy issues, or even...
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so how's things you know. shud post up to a week proposal from the commission looks like things will get even worse except for those few fancy headlines that. will poisoning managed to convince his colleagues will be returning to the debate in brussels later. to to. cologne back at our editorial offices we want to investigate who is pulling the strings behind closed doors our industry lobby groups determining agricultural policy and if so how. we come across a revealing document from 2015 by the scientific advisory board of the german ministry of agriculture the paper concluded that policy was strongly influenced by interest groups because of the powerful and effective farming and agribusiness lobby. how does this impact farmers and what has changed in the past 4 years. we head out to do some research on the ground one environmental issue is ground water pollution it's been known for years that the excessive use of liquid manure in fields leads to nitrate groundwater contamination in june 2800 germany was cond
so how's things you know. shud post up to a week proposal from the commission looks like things will get even worse except for those few fancy headlines that. will poisoning managed to convince his colleagues will be returning to the debate in brussels later. to to. cologne back at our editorial offices we want to investigate who is pulling the strings behind closed doors our industry lobby groups determining agricultural policy and if so how. we come across a revealing document from 2015 by...
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89
Sep 4, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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eye 89
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and how many are teslas? two-thirds of the electric vehicles sold since 2015 were tesla models a good chunk in the last year and year and a half. but this is, in my opinion, the first electric vehicle that truly is a threat to tesla in terms of performance, in terms of styling this is not the chevy bolt, this is not the nissan leaf this is a vehicle that the wealthy are going to look at and say, i like it i am going to take an interest in it. we'll see how much of a threat it is to tesla in terms of that really upper end of the vehicle market >> that acceleration, phil, looks like you really felt something. >> oh, my photographer bob pollack almost got sick in the back seat. >> wow >> poor bob. >> phil, thanks very much. phil lebeau at niagara falls. >>> the ceo of planet fitness discuss why things are working out well for the stock right now. and whether he thinks the consumer is still strong ow lchwi brit back - [spokesman] if you've tried college but never finished, (group cheering) snhu lets you transfer
and how many are teslas? two-thirds of the electric vehicles sold since 2015 were tesla models a good chunk in the last year and year and a half. but this is, in my opinion, the first electric vehicle that truly is a threat to tesla in terms of performance, in terms of styling this is not the chevy bolt, this is not the nissan leaf this is a vehicle that the wealthy are going to look at and say, i like it i am going to take an interest in it. we'll see how much of a threat it is to tesla in...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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how often they have paid in full in the last six months and how often they expect to do it in the next six months. what we have seen is basically all those numbers are at the lowest they have been in the year that we have been doing this. the really troubling aspect of it is that there is a gender gap the size of the grand canyon, where women are three times more likely to say that they have never paid their bill in full in the past 6 -- in the past six months and to say that they are not confident in being able to pay their bills in full. that is tough. host: to go through the numbers. 40% saying very confident in their ability to pay. 30% said they always pay the monthly statement balance in full. 21% say they never once paid monthly statement balance in full during the last six months. let's start with those three. you are saying that collectively, this showing of concerns could be a possible bubble situation? guest: i don't know if it will be a bubble, but i think it is going to be an interesting transition over the next -- there is so much recession talk. i personally believe that
how often they have paid in full in the last six months and how often they expect to do it in the next six months. what we have seen is basically all those numbers are at the lowest they have been in the year that we have been doing this. the really troubling aspect of it is that there is a gender gap the size of the grand canyon, where women are three times more likely to say that they have never paid their bill in full in the past 6 -- in the past six months and to say that they are not...
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Sep 23, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 44
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believe barack obama this is how they learn how to do this. here is the way that it works. you are a 501 c-3 which is a nonprofit if you make a donation you get a tax write-off and then there are 501(c)4 which are allowed to engage in more politics that have a different tax treatment on how you can write off your taxes and talk to your tax accountant if you have questions over which one is which, okay? but these 501(c)3 organizations come as a not-for-profit, this gentle man here to go and make a 10 million-dollar donation. going to get a tax benefit for doing so. but, that nonprofit organization is hiring a for-profit organization, and grassroots campaign that will do fund-raising. they will put on t-shirts. the aclu, poverty law center, planned parenthood and then start knocking on doors. they will say we are raising money, $50 for planned parenthood. you with us or against us? i was planned parenthood. i will give you $100. what does this tell you? because the for-profit entity has now gather all this information, then they go and work for the dnc in swing states and the
believe barack obama this is how they learn how to do this. here is the way that it works. you are a 501 c-3 which is a nonprofit if you make a donation you get a tax write-off and then there are 501(c)4 which are allowed to engage in more politics that have a different tax treatment on how you can write off your taxes and talk to your tax accountant if you have questions over which one is which, okay? but these 501(c)3 organizations come as a not-for-profit, this gentle man here to go and make...
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Sep 22, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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how did the leaders of this communicate? >> person who kept the dialies, jackson, once they would set camp for the night. e would write a telegram reporting. so he was the one responsible for staying in touch and it's nose submissions that make up a key part of his daily log. >> in terms to have timeline, did they have a certain schedule that they were determined to meet? did they want to be in san francisco by early september? >> they had an open-ended commitment. they wanted to get there as quickly as possible. part of the goal, objective of the trip was to see how difficult it would be since nobody had tried something like this before and the military wanted to see how quickly could we get troops trained and trucks out to the west coast if we ever needed to get them there. >> have any of these trucks been preserved? >> these particular trucks, i don't believe so once they got to san francisco they were cleaned up and refurbished and sent off to different military bases all over the western part of the u.s. so they were se
how did the leaders of this communicate? >> person who kept the dialies, jackson, once they would set camp for the night. e would write a telegram reporting. so he was the one responsible for staying in touch and it's nose submissions that make up a key part of his daily log. >> in terms to have timeline, did they have a certain schedule that they were determined to meet? did they want to be in san francisco by early september? >> they had an open-ended commitment. they wanted...
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Sep 9, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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balance in full this month and how often they've paid in full in the last six months and how often they expect to do it in the next six months. what we have seen is basically all of those numbers are at the lowest base been in the year we been doing this. the really troubling aspect of it is there is a gender gap beside the grand canyon here where women are three times more likely to say that they've never paid their bill in full in the past six monthss, a single time and to say that they are not at all confident in being able to pay their bills and pull in that stuff. >> just to go to the numbers we show the audience being 40% and very competent to pay monthly statements and 30% city pay the monthly statement balance in full in the past six months 21% to said they never once paid monthly statements balance involved in the last six months but let's start with those three. usaid collectively this shows concerns and could it be a possible bubble situation as it applies to the situation conne connect. >> i don't know it will be a bubble but i think it will be an interesting transition of t
balance in full this month and how often they've paid in full in the last six months and how often they expect to do it in the next six months. what we have seen is basically all of those numbers are at the lowest base been in the year we been doing this. the really troubling aspect of it is there is a gender gap beside the grand canyon here where women are three times more likely to say that they've never paid their bill in full in the past six monthss, a single time and to say that they are...
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warn against but to do it in what appears to be such a sham balik fashion how is how why is this happened in this way. i guess essentially the problem all along has been that the government has been completely split. on what sort of breaks it wanted how think government wanted a relatively soft bret's it where we stayed pretty much aligned to a lot of european regulation but the other half wanted a hard break sit where we could go off and do what we like and say to hell with the european union we're on our own those are the ones who really want to know deal bret's it so the government entities negotiations really not knowing what they wanted it's been impossible. for the negotiations to make progress and it's remarkable they go to they did now boris johnson took and said but i need to do it by threatening to go out without a deal thereby throwing in his cards or with the hardline brick such as in his party the right wing of the party as a result he's actually split the party right down the middle he's lost 20 members of parliament and 2 ministers from a government including his brother pr
warn against but to do it in what appears to be such a sham balik fashion how is how why is this happened in this way. i guess essentially the problem all along has been that the government has been completely split. on what sort of breaks it wanted how think government wanted a relatively soft bret's it where we stayed pretty much aligned to a lot of european regulation but the other half wanted a hard break sit where we could go off and do what we like and say to hell with the european union...
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Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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but that's not how the world works.hen david luther, karl rove, they would sit down and build a campaign strategy around something. and i think it would have to be, where are the most people? and then you do polling, and i participated in polling like this, where it's not necessarily what people believe, but how easy is it to change their mind? you build a profile of how easy it is to change certain people's minds, and then you compare that to population density. so if the suburbs are houston are where you think you can swing 500,000 votes, right? if something happens in houston, you're going to be in houston. the something happens in pensacola and you look at the polling, those people are pretty set in their ways. you're still going to have politics and politics. that's the problem with this. i don't like corporal spending. i'm more concerned with the way congress works than the executive these days, or the way it doesn't work. people,lways appeal to go to the wargaming process. if you were a political campaign or, how
but that's not how the world works.hen david luther, karl rove, they would sit down and build a campaign strategy around something. and i think it would have to be, where are the most people? and then you do polling, and i participated in polling like this, where it's not necessarily what people believe, but how easy is it to change their mind? you build a profile of how easy it is to change certain people's minds, and then you compare that to population density. so if the suburbs are houston...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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how did the woman succeed. access to the network, had privileges to get to that, understood the architecture. then you come back to the point i made earlier. identity management. if identity management was done properly, she wouldn't have had credentials. systems that talk to each other and understand the hr system terminated the employee, active director needs to terminate the employee. guess what, zero trust boundary side says you don't exist. even if you had the right tool loaded on your machine, it is not going to acknowledge you because you don't exist. that integration is really important. identity management. that does not succeed if zero trust is integrated appropriately. >> sounds like a case for robotic process automation, when somebody is -- >> apis. >> there's an orchestration of elimination of their existence cyber wise. >> capital one, technical piece to it, another classic case for zero trust, the virtual server has to communicate with hyper adviser in the network. the fire wall, they allowed som
how did the woman succeed. access to the network, had privileges to get to that, understood the architecture. then you come back to the point i made earlier. identity management. if identity management was done properly, she wouldn't have had credentials. systems that talk to each other and understand the hr system terminated the employee, active director needs to terminate the employee. guess what, zero trust boundary side says you don't exist. even if you had the right tool loaded on your...
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Sep 8, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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isso what -- how do we move, how do evangelicals, again, our time's running out here, how do evangelicals of move? what's their next step? what is the state of evangelicalism in terms of relationship to politics? do you hear cries, you know, a lot of evangelicals kind of abandoning the term, abandoning the movement, you know? it has been so co-opted by politics, gop politics usually, right? the that it's, it has no power to shape the culture anymore. even the churches are weakening, the gospel is being damaged. what's your, where do you come down on that? i mean, you still use the term evangelical to describe yourself? >> guest: i do. >> host: why and, you know, what is the state of this movement that you have adhered to? and i identify as evangelical myself, that i adhere to, right? but you're the one being interviewed, so -- [laughter] >> guest: well, okay. so, first, why do i keep the name evangelical. i love the idea of evangelizing. i think that it's important, and it should be -- it should sound like a good thing. >> host: yeah. >> guest: when you're talking about evangelizing, you
isso what -- how do we move, how do evangelicals, again, our time's running out here, how do evangelicals of move? what's their next step? what is the state of evangelicalism in terms of relationship to politics? do you hear cries, you know, a lot of evangelicals kind of abandoning the term, abandoning the movement, you know? it has been so co-opted by politics, gop politics usually, right? the that it's, it has no power to shape the culture anymore. even the churches are weakening, the gospel...
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Sep 11, 2019
09/19
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ALJAZ
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harmful this is how it's hurting us and how do we know that car i'm just wondering how do we get to a stage now where we've got some gold guidelines from the well to health organization it's not even from a country or from a government but from the well health organizations and if you know one or under it shouldn't be looking at a screen. so i think we know what's important developmentally especially for infants and children especially at the age of one or infancy below it age one we know that social development communication is really really important and when you're staring at a screen you're not learning in a traditional manner so infants usually learn by communicating and have risk having reciprocal conversations with others reading other people's facial expressions that's how we learn how to navigate the world and if they're just passively looking at something they're not learning those skills get i wanted to show you something that there are so many fascinating videos of youngsters looking at screens and being sucked into the screens and of course all of the studies that we ca
harmful this is how it's hurting us and how do we know that car i'm just wondering how do we get to a stage now where we've got some gold guidelines from the well to health organization it's not even from a country or from a government but from the well health organizations and if you know one or under it shouldn't be looking at a screen. so i think we know what's important developmentally especially for infants and children especially at the age of one or infancy below it age one we know that...
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Sep 20, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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how planned was the visit and when exactly was it cancelled? >> they said they were going to be in the area next week, tuesday and wednesday. they like to see some montana agriculture and i responded and we have seen some of our folks who said we would be happy to help and ask for more information. the next correspondents we had was this morning when they responded and said they were cutting their trip short and returning to china they will not be visiting in montana after all. >> did you get a reason as to why they were cancelling >> no, no explanation. i really have no insight there >> i don't mean to put words into your mouth, nicole, but it sounds like this visit, the first call you got was yesterday morning on thursday. it sounds like this was a few bucks shy of being in the whole and a lot down visit by a delegation am i wrong about that? >> it was all very sudden. we do have trade groups come through montana occasionally from all over the country and being major agricultural state it's not all that surprising but you're right, it was goi
how planned was the visit and when exactly was it cancelled? >> they said they were going to be in the area next week, tuesday and wednesday. they like to see some montana agriculture and i responded and we have seen some of our folks who said we would be happy to help and ask for more information. the next correspondents we had was this morning when they responded and said they were cutting their trip short and returning to china they will not be visiting in montana after all. >>...
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Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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then i think hannah's point was a really sound one, how can we better understand how to help people who are struggling with their own mental health because those of us in elected office or standing for office will often find that there are individuals who need that support and how do we do it ourselves? and i've been to so many lib dems training events and we like to be superhuman, almost, and what we expect of our candidates, of our agents, of our organisers, of our teams. one of the phrases that sticks in my head is if you want to win, you have to be unreasonable about what you expect. i can feel torn because in one sense, i know thatis torn because in one sense, i know that is partly how i got elected, i set myself a goal and i went for it and in some ways it was asking the unreasonable in terms of the number of leaflets that we would deliver, the number of letters we would stuff, the number of doors we would knock on and i think there is a great thing about ambition and motivating people but too often we let too much fall on the shoulders of too few people when we could work smarter
then i think hannah's point was a really sound one, how can we better understand how to help people who are struggling with their own mental health because those of us in elected office or standing for office will often find that there are individuals who need that support and how do we do it ourselves? and i've been to so many lib dems training events and we like to be superhuman, almost, and what we expect of our candidates, of our agents, of our organisers, of our teams. one of the phrases...
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Sep 17, 2019
09/19
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ALJAZ
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and one thing that i always say to people when they ask about how do we deal with this pain how do we deal with the suffering is it's. it's actually a privilege an honor to grieve something because we only grieve what we love and we only grieve what we lose that's important to us so if we are grieving it means it's a privilege and an honor that we have to respond to you and that's the same with teaching our children how to grieve it's teaching them how to not hide from it or become debilitated by it it's starting those positive productive conversations that are focused on that global solidarity and also the local and regional solidarity so we have the support network for ourselves for youth for all generations to see and i and said that you have to be diplomatic because you need to get everybody on board tape you can't afford to point fingers but i'm wondering. elisa well it is and as communities are grieving but the politicians are not. well i think even that is changing and into that question i would put politicians and seals of large corporations or of financial institutions and al
and one thing that i always say to people when they ask about how do we deal with this pain how do we deal with the suffering is it's. it's actually a privilege an honor to grieve something because we only grieve what we love and we only grieve what we lose that's important to us so if we are grieving it means it's a privilege and an honor that we have to respond to you and that's the same with teaching our children how to grieve it's teaching them how to not hide from it or become debilitated...
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Sep 1, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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you talk about how springs have gotten weather -- wetter over all and how that will tie into climate change. >> what i have discovered covering this for about 25 years is there is the scientific method, and scientists do not talk like the rest of us. they are constrained by little things like peer-review and evidence and all that stuff. what it does, at times, as they have historically been extremely reluctant to connect all the tornado ory this hurricane has a climate link. it has been very hard to get out of a lot of scientists. is that changing? >> we were affected by the flood in 2019 also. iowa had the second wettest year on with -- record. 1993 being the wettest. we were three inches shy of breaking that record. into theat goes large-scale circumstances that lead to historic flooding. had 2008, 2011, 2019, these three floods in 10 years. >> pretty soon, you have a stack of evidence that is hard to counter. would you go along with that? are scientists a little bit unencumbered by some of the constraints in the past to make these links? >> yeah. attribution science which is seein
you talk about how springs have gotten weather -- wetter over all and how that will tie into climate change. >> what i have discovered covering this for about 25 years is there is the scientific method, and scientists do not talk like the rest of us. they are constrained by little things like peer-review and evidence and all that stuff. what it does, at times, as they have historically been extremely reluctant to connect all the tornado ory this hurricane has a climate link. it has been...
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trump on his tariffs it also has to do with china's policy within the eastern nation region i mean how is to do with developments in saudi you know to states. the basis of this whole development in my view is 1st and foremost the fact that the world is moving from having been off to the end of the cold war predominantly unicode meaning dominated by you know the states and towards a much more multi-polar system in which china is an increasingly important country but one among many powers that are going to have great influence so it's stuck change that is at the bottom of what's now happening in the u.s. china relationship now i think it also has something to do with a new generation of thinkers who gained a lot of influence in and around the white house and given president trump's own antics i think it's very easy to dismiss him as a charlatan but i also tend to think that he's policy visit china is pretty elaborate i'm not saying it's good but all i'm saying that there is a lot of thought behind it by people like michael pillsbury of the it's an institute steve bannon etc is there anyt
trump on his tariffs it also has to do with china's policy within the eastern nation region i mean how is to do with developments in saudi you know to states. the basis of this whole development in my view is 1st and foremost the fact that the world is moving from having been off to the end of the cold war predominantly unicode meaning dominated by you know the states and towards a much more multi-polar system in which china is an increasingly important country but one among many powers that...
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Sep 12, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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so how fast we detect, how early stage we detect the how early detect the disease. fast can we remove it and how strong are we to keep on our feet at the end that is the resilience. and lasts but not least is national defense. it's people against people. we need to treat them as alike. in this case the last example a couple months ago after hamas launched missiles and try to use cyber techniques against israel they went to the cyber squad in gaza you can see how accurate and how surgical it is , only the two floors above it are intact. no one was harmed because there was lots of warning before and that's how we still act in gaza. the hackers ran away , but not far enough. enough to seize their computers and blasted into 1000 pieces. this is something that works. i strongly recommend not being afraid of using whatever is needed against attackers. this is something that we do not do directly. we have other forces but we are involved in prioritizing and pointing out the targets and etc. time is running out. we have some national solutions i will give one or two short e
so how fast we detect, how early stage we detect the how early detect the disease. fast can we remove it and how strong are we to keep on our feet at the end that is the resilience. and lasts but not least is national defense. it's people against people. we need to treat them as alike. in this case the last example a couple months ago after hamas launched missiles and try to use cyber techniques against israel they went to the cyber squad in gaza you can see how accurate and how surgical it is...
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Sep 18, 2019
09/19
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ALJAZ
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my feet but how know how i like a theatre napoleoni are near. to strengthen the good you have to show do good all the more with still fight against corruption. new chiro heroes like new who are a barber who refused to $15000000.00 brian the achievement of heroes like him to showcase by the international ace award it shines a light on these heroes because the best way to fight a dark used to shine away let's make the world a better place nominate your anti corruption your own now. throughout history. first. developed nation state. within reach of those seeking. toxic substances. visible. on al-jazeera. with a look at the headlines here in al-jazeera now. repeat election show the 2 main parties are heading for deadlock a prime minister needs 61 seats to command a majority in parliament whether prime minister binyamin netanyahu or his main challenger benny gantz will have the 1st opportunity to form a coalition government. term in office. now what is significant here is 1st of all the large palestinian israeli the arab bloc vote turned out they are
my feet but how know how i like a theatre napoleoni are near. to strengthen the good you have to show do good all the more with still fight against corruption. new chiro heroes like new who are a barber who refused to $15000000.00 brian the achievement of heroes like him to showcase by the international ace award it shines a light on these heroes because the best way to fight a dark used to shine away let's make the world a better place nominate your anti corruption your own now. throughout...
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Sep 3, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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how real is that? it depends, you will have the ones that are known on twitter that are embracing this and people -- people who extend the tank. these are the fullness. and then there's those who have annoyed you. i made this point, when castro died, he died on his birthday, and he said what you want for your birthday, i think it is wonderful that we live out of the soviet union in a nation where people can be so privileged that they have annoyed you what living in cuba means or the soviet union. it is the fault of the right wing where we have told constantly incorrectly about slavery, jim crow and the holocaust that there is not any discussion or very little about what life is like under communism. this needs to be a montrose in the white ring. you cannot expect the left to talk about, the new york times still as of this morning's praising the soviet union although they covered up in the 30s, why is the right wing not talking about what commonest means is unprofitable to. >> one thing about b cannon a
how real is that? it depends, you will have the ones that are known on twitter that are embracing this and people -- people who extend the tank. these are the fullness. and then there's those who have annoyed you. i made this point, when castro died, he died on his birthday, and he said what you want for your birthday, i think it is wonderful that we live out of the soviet union in a nation where people can be so privileged that they have annoyed you what living in cuba means or the soviet...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 24, 2019
09/19
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SFGTV
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and understanding how much fuel we have in the city and how quickly we'll need to get additional fuel into the city to support backup generation. we also explored the impact to electronic and financial transactions, because we appreciate that the systems we rely on, if they're not powered, how are we going to continue to exchange information and conduct daily business? and we also explored what some of the communications breakdowns that may take place and how we will continue to reach out to different populations. in our second workshop, which was our private sector, we also underscored how important business continuity is for the businesses we rely on. and one of the issues that we also talked about is the unknown of how long a business may be without power. communications with staff as what we have in the city, that may also be a complicating factor for private sector partners reaching out to their clients. are they prepared to reach out and give messages how long the power may be out, how they can still receive services and what additional needs they may have. we also discussed the
and understanding how much fuel we have in the city and how quickly we'll need to get additional fuel into the city to support backup generation. we also explored the impact to electronic and financial transactions, because we appreciate that the systems we rely on, if they're not powered, how are we going to continue to exchange information and conduct daily business? and we also explored what some of the communications breakdowns that may take place and how we will continue to reach out to...
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112
Sep 18, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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how are you? >> thank you very much >> okay, now, martin -- >> tgreat job with the weather you control everything. >> behind me is something that people are thinking about. before we get started what the heck is this >> this is a combine harvester and this basically is a little factory on wheels. it's cutting, it's cleaning, it's thrashing, it's doing the whole job. at the end you have a pure corn. the purest in the industry, no dirt, no stones, no nothing. >> the reason why this is emblematic, what i see you've been doing is reinventing the company. some of these analysts have been saying this is just a combination of brands. this is like no other machine, right? >> yes, we had the opportunity -- messy ferguson up vented it centuries ago and so we decided to do something completely new and to reinvent the combine because we want to different enslate ourselves and that is how you can gain share in difficult markets like the sdmrus how much does this cost >> about $850,000. if you bought it now you
how are you? >> thank you very much >> okay, now, martin -- >> tgreat job with the weather you control everything. >> behind me is something that people are thinking about. before we get started what the heck is this >> this is a combine harvester and this basically is a little factory on wheels. it's cutting, it's cleaning, it's thrashing, it's doing the whole job. at the end you have a pure corn. the purest in the industry, no dirt, no stones, no nothing....
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Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 39
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and to offer folks a peek in my life of how a judge thinks to see how different it is. politicians are elected to do your will judges are not electe elected. it's right there in the federalist papers number 78. that's it i wanted to talk about. [applause] and when i dug into it further i came to learn we don't have a problem 30 percent of americans can name the three branches of government. about one third can name one of them in 10 percent think judge judy serves on the supreme court. [laughter] i respect judge judy. i like judge judy. [laughter] that she is not one of my colleagues. [laughter] i wanted to talk about these things and i was joyfully able to do it with two of my wonderful law clerks and david is here but let me brag on them for about ten seconds. this young man comes for a family of mexican immigrants and holocaust survivors. he saved up his pennies as an undergrad to achieve his dream to attend harvard law school which he did and graduated first in his class. [applause] and janie is every bit as special her family escaped communism in czechoslovakia. sh
and to offer folks a peek in my life of how a judge thinks to see how different it is. politicians are elected to do your will judges are not electe elected. it's right there in the federalist papers number 78. that's it i wanted to talk about. [applause] and when i dug into it further i came to learn we don't have a problem 30 percent of americans can name the three branches of government. about one third can name one of them in 10 percent think judge judy serves on the supreme court....
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was ok lionel jump in how has he brought how has he broken the law how is he committed high crimes misdemeanors of perjury treason how has he done something so egregious that the that under the article one of the constitution they have to remove him a base of the subvert the franchise something that cannot wait until i year from now for reelection what is he done ok you know they're asking the foreign government to come in and act in his interest not in the country's impulse come on the rob the other guy have to read that last happened i have to read that you know how many governments have influence peddling in washington d.c. ok you know how many and they're never fly a joke a i mean every other person you bump into washington should be. a foreign agent because they act on the behalf of others and not the american people so going after the individuals and why didn't what is right in giuliani doing with all this ok and that's exactly where i want to go thank you rob let me go to chris let me go to chris now chris chris now we have giuliani talking to the air and i don't know this is interesting
was ok lionel jump in how has he brought how has he broken the law how is he committed high crimes misdemeanors of perjury treason how has he done something so egregious that the that under the article one of the constitution they have to remove him a base of the subvert the franchise something that cannot wait until i year from now for reelection what is he done ok you know they're asking the foreign government to come in and act in his interest not in the country's impulse come on the rob the...
40
40
Sep 8, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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you are suggesting in the entire book, how do we do that. how to think about how to do that. space for transformation to work through the moment the feeling and defensive and under attack. that's precisely the process. that is essential. i also think it's really important because you provide in that chapter example of the combination that at the endeavor. the extraordinary scholars in the work of community. so often for us who are academics, it sets off apart from our interpersonal interactions. but they are talking about bringing those pieces together and similarly you talk about the personal encounters. rather difficult ones. you had illness, and i wonder if we can talk about that because part of it you said at you provide an accounting of all of the effects of racism. including the difficult ones. it's respect to health and then you talk about or write about both for you and your wife encounters it's serious illness. ibram: rhonda the things that happened when i started speaking about it and people started reading it, people would say to me this book was so difficult for m
you are suggesting in the entire book, how do we do that. how to think about how to do that. space for transformation to work through the moment the feeling and defensive and under attack. that's precisely the process. that is essential. i also think it's really important because you provide in that chapter example of the combination that at the endeavor. the extraordinary scholars in the work of community. so often for us who are academics, it sets off apart from our interpersonal...
131
131
Sep 29, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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slavery caused this war because of how people acted, how they behaved, the way they spoke and thought about themselves and others, about what was right and wrong, about what they got to do to other people and what other people got to do to them. most americans did not want war. but is an obvious point, one we sometimes forget. nevertheless, their words and actions all combining together is what created the war nonetheless. and this is something that i'm so impressed by by the exhibit. it makes it clear how important people were to the outbreak of this work. this is just a design image. it does not exist yet. but it soon will. and, you can see it as soon as you walk into the gallery. you are surrounded by people of the 1860's, the people who lived, fought, and endured the civil war, people who caused the war to begin with and the people cause it to continue. the exhibit as a whole is called the people's context. it is a reference, we have heard this already to lincoln and the democratic government. but it is also a sign of how important people are going to be in this exhibit. the exhib
slavery caused this war because of how people acted, how they behaved, the way they spoke and thought about themselves and others, about what was right and wrong, about what they got to do to other people and what other people got to do to them. most americans did not want war. but is an obvious point, one we sometimes forget. nevertheless, their words and actions all combining together is what created the war nonetheless. and this is something that i'm so impressed by by the exhibit. it makes...
99
99
Sep 23, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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how much money do they need?> softmu softmoney, we'll see i think everyone is interested in getting this thing back on track and sort of recover from the disastrous s-1. >> kara, this feels different to me from uber but i can't figure out why. it's these two ceos who have this maverick streak who are on this growth at all costs, sort of tear. so why does it feel to me like if newman were to step away, the whole reason for believing in the company's growth wouk be at issue here. >> you mean without him it's nothing? i don't think that's true of any company >> i'm not saying that, no but so much of the mythology around the company is his take over the world thing is that really any different from travis or no. >> they're a different personality. travis is so pugnacious andso aggressive this guy is aggressive but he has a surfer dude vibe i don't know if it's true or not, but that's what he puts out. maybe in a very few small cases, but, you know, they've got an interesting good real estate business and somebody goo
how much money do they need?> softmu softmoney, we'll see i think everyone is interested in getting this thing back on track and sort of recover from the disastrous s-1. >> kara, this feels different to me from uber but i can't figure out why. it's these two ceos who have this maverick streak who are on this growth at all costs, sort of tear. so why does it feel to me like if newman were to step away, the whole reason for believing in the company's growth wouk be at issue here....
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109
Sep 5, 2019
09/19
by
MSNBCW
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how many of them are there? this is how they broke town the electorate.s very interesting. first of all, are you definitely going to vote for donald trump? will you definitely vote to reelect trump in 2020? 29% in this survey. 29% say they are definitely voting for trump. we would not call those swing voters. now who might potentially be a swing voter? folks who say i'll probably vote for trump, but it's not sure. it's not definite. my mind could be changed. some say they might be willing to vote for a democrat. some say they might vote for a third party. some say they might not vote. 9% say they'll probably vote for trump but they're not sure. how about the democrats? definitely vote for the democratic candidate against donald trump. there is 34% who say they're definitely going to vote for the democrats. all right you see based on this poll, a little more built-in support for the democrat than there is for trump. how about that, the probably vote for. not sure they're going to do it. they're inclined to do it. but you don't put them down as definites. t
how many of them are there? this is how they broke town the electorate.s very interesting. first of all, are you definitely going to vote for donald trump? will you definitely vote to reelect trump in 2020? 29% in this survey. 29% say they are definitely voting for trump. we would not call those swing voters. now who might potentially be a swing voter? folks who say i'll probably vote for trump, but it's not sure. it's not definite. my mind could be changed. some say they might be willing to...