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Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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KPIX
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i wonder if that resonates with you about this topic? >> because i think there is a deep connection. when we read stories like this, or a number of stories, and there is many great writers out there, and when we read oral histories and stories, we learn about others lives. part of it is so we have more empathy and compassion, if we are motivated to help people like refugees in much better ways than we are helping them now. but, also it connects deep with inside of us. what is the refugee experience at its heart? it is lost. loss of home, loss of country, most of language, loss of familiarity, everything. >> i want to ask you something. i am sure some of our viewers are wondering about this as well, hope is very precarious in many ways. i think there are sope who , they to ch r ligo. i think part of the way hope functions as you discover a place of hope that you did not know existed. so, i wonder how you think about the human struggle where people really come to a point of no hope, i don't have choice about whatever it is. >> and, there ar
i wonder if that resonates with you about this topic? >> because i think there is a deep connection. when we read stories like this, or a number of stories, and there is many great writers out there, and when we read oral histories and stories, we learn about others lives. part of it is so we have more empathy and compassion, if we are motivated to help people like refugees in much better ways than we are helping them now. but, also it connects deep with inside of us. what is the refugee...
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Sep 8, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder if he had a similar moment with fiction writers, i wonder what your feelings are about what you can do in terms of your own journalism? >> the idea was the worst possible thing, i'd be so terrible at it. but writing about people who make fiction themselves is fascinating. it's a reason why i did it. and, yes there's ways in which they can about, he went to spain and have these experiences in flighty simple find view of what was going on in spain, he was quickly disenchanted of that and he came back and really concerned about what he saw about the soviet kantianism. and he tried to tell it try mystically. it's more realist, he's incredibly rigorous and discipline in the way he tried to tell the story and all the complex detail and nobody read it. and it didn't even select in the first run like 700 books. he has two go back and think, how will i get the story are crossed and of course it was a parable, a child's fairytale and that's how he basically told his story about it by going back and think about maybe even the simplest most effective way to tell a story in a child's fai
i wonder if he had a similar moment with fiction writers, i wonder what your feelings are about what you can do in terms of your own journalism? >> the idea was the worst possible thing, i'd be so terrible at it. but writing about people who make fiction themselves is fascinating. it's a reason why i did it. and, yes there's ways in which they can about, he went to spain and have these experiences in flighty simple find view of what was going on in spain, he was quickly disenchanted of...
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Sep 3, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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. >> host: i wondered i wonder ifn answer one other question for me before we talk about the nuts and bolts of the book and that is i know you have several purposes in writing the book part of it was healing, reconciliation, john lewis and the introduction talking about how we are all in the same fight, but then by necessity there ends up being finger-pointing. it's not the charlottesville police didn't do a good job, and i think some of the blowback that you are hearing in the last couple of days is like don't place blame the i think you are trying to do two things that are intentional. one is bring us together but also to reckon with what went wrong and i wonder how you thought that for you when you were writing. >> host: the main purpose of the book is to deal with racism. as horrible as the charlottesville was, the one benefit that came out of it as it ripped the scab off of racism i think for far too long in our country people thought we dealt with racism and it didn't exist anymore. it is a hard topic. people don't like to sit around and talk about racism. they sit around in thi
. >> host: i wondered i wonder ifn answer one other question for me before we talk about the nuts and bolts of the book and that is i know you have several purposes in writing the book part of it was healing, reconciliation, john lewis and the introduction talking about how we are all in the same fight, but then by necessity there ends up being finger-pointing. it's not the charlottesville police didn't do a good job, and i think some of the blowback that you are hearing in the last...
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder, have you read it? supposed to identify actual historical contemporary figures, more than what we have which was i think his english mistresses translation of his writing. back the publication of his book was kind of a mess because he was running from the vichy police and he left them and escaped lying on on the best way they took everything else that left that at one stage. all that he was left with was dorothy hardy's ankle is asian of his work and what they found i think was the german original writing. it would be fascinating to see what changes there. >> i don't know if researchers are allowed to look at it yet but i know they are publishing in a dated edition which would be fascinating. the french edition of that look with sitesmack and its impact treated sold-out in every store around the block and it really challenged a lot of people into how they were thinking about the soviet union. all of that was based on this kind of british version that was written in these chaotic circumstances so it woul
i wonder, have you read it? supposed to identify actual historical contemporary figures, more than what we have which was i think his english mistresses translation of his writing. back the publication of his book was kind of a mess because he was running from the vichy police and he left them and escaped lying on on the best way they took everything else that left that at one stage. all that he was left with was dorothy hardy's ankle is asian of his work and what they found i think was the...
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Sep 20, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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i wonder, neil, part of this is biotech. there's a lot of biotech startups coming to market. fitable. how big an issue is this really? >> so i think that biotech is a different business than most tech companies you're right, jon. many biotech companies come to market, and it is a financing event. often with later stage private financing, tech companies come to market, there's almost been an ipo before the public markets. once you reach public, it is liquidity for early investors in those businesses, so with biotech and tech, it is hard to compare the two. you're right biotech tends to lose more at my previous firm, we were lucky, are lucky to invest in airbnb, and what brian and team built is remarkable. two sided marketplace, did it capital efficiently. over time raised capital later in the cycle after they built a hugely sustainable business, 150 million listings, 5 million houses for rent. it is a very special business. and it has been profitable for multiple years doing a billion dollars a quarter in revenue when you see companies like that come public in 2020, it's someth
i wonder, neil, part of this is biotech. there's a lot of biotech startups coming to market. fitable. how big an issue is this really? >> so i think that biotech is a different business than most tech companies you're right, jon. many biotech companies come to market, and it is a financing event. often with later stage private financing, tech companies come to market, there's almost been an ipo before the public markets. once you reach public, it is liquidity for early investors in those...
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Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder if we might take questions from the audience? >> i think we have a couple there. >> -- published in a set a publication in the western what was his alternative what other choice could he have had? >> that's an excellent point. no, he personally couldn't -- this is got to my point about in this capability of the way this was set up. like, the writing of transixteen is thus sitting, but the kind of a lot of the review come early review was pretty bewildered by some of his work because he's deeply embedded in the russian tradition. he's writing in this style, and the reason why he gets projected in the way that he did was because of the cold war, because he was seen, there was value seen in his dissent. it wasn't really fully understood. now, to hold them personally accountable for that would be, i don't agree with that at all. but the idea the work of dissidents was kind of elevated out of cold war politics, i disagree with that. i think that work could not be implicated in to these dynamics. does answer your question? thank you. >>
i wonder if we might take questions from the audience? >> i think we have a couple there. >> -- published in a set a publication in the western what was his alternative what other choice could he have had? >> that's an excellent point. no, he personally couldn't -- this is got to my point about in this capability of the way this was set up. like, the writing of transixteen is thus sitting, but the kind of a lot of the review come early review was pretty bewildered by some of...
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Sep 7, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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one of the ways to go about having peace in the containment argument was, you need a good allies, i wonder if you can assess the state of the united states allies in each of the three areas? >> that is a very important question, i should say that i have an article in the march april foreign affairs on a new container which goes in to precisely the point you race in some depth. but let me give you a brief overview of the three regions. first of all has to be said that an alliance is in some way a contradiction term because their interest in common and also different interest in leading an alliance of the united states have to do in the three regions and no one else can do it, it really is an exercise in herding cats. it is frustrating and circumstances. in europe there is a solid framework for an alliance in the north atlantic treaty organization. the problem there, the familiar problem of free riding, the fact that europeans don't pay their fair share. the husband a problem since the beginning of nato. every president since harry truman has complained that the europeans are not paying enou
one of the ways to go about having peace in the containment argument was, you need a good allies, i wonder if you can assess the state of the united states allies in each of the three areas? >> that is a very important question, i should say that i have an article in the march april foreign affairs on a new container which goes in to precisely the point you race in some depth. but let me give you a brief overview of the three regions. first of all has to be said that an alliance is in...
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Sep 20, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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i wonder if that is a view thatis street.onder if that is a view that is shared by the dup and arlene foster. that is the crucial nub of all of this. ultimately the numbers are the crucial nub and the numbers have changed, not least because the parliamentary majority has changed. borisjohnson was dependent parliamentary majority has changed. boris johnson was dependent for parliamentary majority has changed. borisjohnson was dependent for his parliamentary majority but now he doesn't have one anyway. there is no difference. arlene foster is talking to the irish prime minister and there are signs that they may have softened their stance to crucially it is numbers generally because the reason we are in this pickle and we have been going on about this for so long is that parliament is lit one third one third one third, effectively. a group in the middle wa nt to effectively. a group in the middle want to compromise, a group want to revoke and a group that wants no deal. the key has been to get people on the two extremes to move
i wonder if that is a view thatis street.onder if that is a view that is shared by the dup and arlene foster. that is the crucial nub of all of this. ultimately the numbers are the crucial nub and the numbers have changed, not least because the parliamentary majority has changed. borisjohnson was dependent parliamentary majority has changed. boris johnson was dependent for parliamentary majority has changed. borisjohnson was dependent for his parliamentary majority but now he doesn't have one...
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Sep 18, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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i wonder, when borisjohnson kind of pressure. i...orisjohnson is being accused of proroguing parliament for five weeks. on that first week it was three days because they sat on the monday and then on the friday. then for three weeks, the liberals, the tories, the labour would not be sitting anyway. it is hypocritical to say... that argument, which i do not necessarily agree with, was they we re not necessarily agree with, was they were going to insist parliament was recalled... even if they wouldn't. i have been to more party conferences thani have been to more party conferences than i cared to remember. the money spent both by the party but also taking the money from all the sponsors, they would lose all that money when they are about to fight an election. i agree. money when they are about to fight an election. iagree. in money when they are about to fight an election. i agree. in this article, i would love the people watching tonight to give me an answer. . . watching tonight to give me an answer... isn't that yourjob! john humphre
i wonder, when borisjohnson kind of pressure. i...orisjohnson is being accused of proroguing parliament for five weeks. on that first week it was three days because they sat on the monday and then on the friday. then for three weeks, the liberals, the tories, the labour would not be sitting anyway. it is hypocritical to say... that argument, which i do not necessarily agree with, was they we re not necessarily agree with, was they were going to insist parliament was recalled... even if they...
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Sep 23, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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amazon has gone negative for the year i wonder if you think investors are right to start to worry howh this is going to cost them when you're going up against purses like apple's. >> look. i understand the concern i think that it's short-term you look at a leading investment firm like dan loeb they increased their position in the second quarter yes, the heat has come off the netflix share rise, but i think you're going to see that ratio start to come down over the next 6 to 12 months into 2021 when it will start to look more like adon't want to say value stock, but it's not going to be what we see today. >> michael, we can talk about all the original content everybody is developing right now. you see the prices for "the big bang theory," "seinfeld," as a couple, are we in a classic arms race >> we are. whenever there's a content race. the companies really win and the content they have is going to make a big difference. it's why kevin maher of disney made what he did at the same time these companies are going to continue to produce and they're going to -- there's going to be a lot of c
amazon has gone negative for the year i wonder if you think investors are right to start to worry howh this is going to cost them when you're going up against purses like apple's. >> look. i understand the concern i think that it's short-term you look at a leading investment firm like dan loeb they increased their position in the second quarter yes, the heat has come off the netflix share rise, but i think you're going to see that ratio start to come down over the next 6 to 12 months into...
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Sep 28, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i look forward to your questions. [applause] >> thank you so much for this wonderful presentation and the wonderful booklets i had the pleasure of reading in the last couple of weeks. i was thinking 5 years ago or 6 years ago of discretion, a time of obama and many of us who are immigrants rights advocates in the room were already displeased with the way that enforcement was happening, the fact that it was targeting people who should not be targeted and just the fact that there's this sort of underlying theme of criminalization of immigrants that have been the case and have been sort of put into sharp focus in the trump administration and i think that kind of got me to thinking about the way that your book sort of lays out not just howdies cession is being exercised but actually how it's being exercised to harm, i think in one of your chapters you say discretion can either be used to protect immigrants or it can be used to harm them and in this context it seems like every sort of method that can possibly be thought of is being used to harm and one really great example of that is during the zero tolerance sort of enfo
i look forward to your questions. [applause] >> thank you so much for this wonderful presentation and the wonderful booklets i had the pleasure of reading in the last couple of weeks. i was thinking 5 years ago or 6 years ago of discretion, a time of obama and many of us who are immigrants rights advocates in the room were already displeased with the way that enforcement was happening, the fact that it was targeting people who should not be targeted and just the fact that there's this...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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>> guest: i wonder. the chairman of the house appropriations committee that was involved in budgeting was albert thomas and in his district is a place t called houston. so they got that at the lion's share of all fairness, they tried to spread out the goodies over the country in different states they got different parts of the program. of of course it was the spacecraft center. >> host: in california is in there at the jet propulsion lab and a couple of other places? >> guest: cleveland ohio has several places and langley virginia that was the origin of the first headquarters. >> host: and you could pretty clearly draw a political map to those locations is that fair to say?oule >> guest: to a certain extent, yes you are right. the reason houston was chosen, one of the reasons because i always wondered also why as soon as the spacecraft cleared everything shift over to houston, why don't they did it all in cape canaveral but one reason was that there might be signals mixed up from all the other programs a
>> guest: i wonder. the chairman of the house appropriations committee that was involved in budgeting was albert thomas and in his district is a place t called houston. so they got that at the lion's share of all fairness, they tried to spread out the goodies over the country in different states they got different parts of the program. of of course it was the spacecraft center. >> host: in california is in there at the jet propulsion lab and a couple of other places? >> guest:...
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Sep 25, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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. >> i wonder what you think is going on here with some stocks that had been hot, including some recentpos i mean lyft is off 12% for the week it hadn't been performing that well to begin with roku is off 19% for the week look at shopify, stitch fix, a lot of stocks pretty close to if it were a broader index close to what would be called correction territory. is there revaluing around growth going on and what's the impact then on investing in startups in silicon valley >> i think there's been a lot of money that's been sloshing around silicon valley and private market valuations for several years now. i think there's a little clash as some of these assets have come public. i think there's a little bit of an underestimating of the rigor and frankly the intelligence of public market investors that's taking place by a private market investors are seeing that clash come together and seeing a resetting of expectations. but i look at it on a case-by-case basis there's a lot of excellent companies that have come public, a lot of excellent companies that are coming public but the scrutiny and r
. >> i wonder what you think is going on here with some stocks that had been hot, including some recentpos i mean lyft is off 12% for the week it hadn't been performing that well to begin with roku is off 19% for the week look at shopify, stitch fix, a lot of stocks pretty close to if it were a broader index close to what would be called correction territory. is there revaluing around growth going on and what's the impact then on investing in startups in silicon valley >> i think...
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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so i wonder how your book will go down in singapore?” what the actual reception is like, from people who have read the book, from officials, if they care at all.” know you have a young child now, but are you ready to write again? do you have something you want to say?” are you ready to write again? do you have something you want to say? i am dying to write again! but it is difficult when an eight—month—old baby. you are needed so much. and it is... being a mother is so wonderful and so enriching, but it is also so difficult. jing-jing lee. applause hello. friday brought a lot of sunshine to a lot of places across the british isles and i don't think we're going to see a radical change for many areas on saturday. simply because the overall pattern is still pretty similar. high pressure in the continent, low pressure in the atlantic, therefore, we are still tapping into this run of south—easterly airs and quite strong winds at times, up from the mediterranean, through the near continent and into the heart of the british isles. that is dry a
so i wonder how your book will go down in singapore?” what the actual reception is like, from people who have read the book, from officials, if they care at all.” know you have a young child now, but are you ready to write again? do you have something you want to say?” are you ready to write again? do you have something you want to say? i am dying to write again! but it is difficult when an eight—month—old baby. you are needed so much. and it is... being a mother is so wonderful and...
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orange box 120 old artful photos in 2 rolls of film i thought these must belong to grandpa and i wondered what secrets they might hold. i decided to talk to my mother ana she's always his daughter she's a doctor like everyone in our family. just did you see all his photos from the war or just the ones with him. yes not just the ones with him but was the group photos with other soldiers standing next to cars and maybe a tank and there was a photo of a field hospital it was not a. terrorist attack i want to find out what grandpa did during the war what do you think about that one of this completely misses. and you know i don't know maybe some people need to do something like that but i certainly don't i'm i didn't pester my parents with questions about the past 2 years i meant on his middle just well my mother maybe but not my father he hated that but then you don't. live in those and. that's not unusual my mother belongs to the generation that was raised to not ask questions about the war. at all was not how we should look at home and she didn't talk about it much and when i did it was usu
orange box 120 old artful photos in 2 rolls of film i thought these must belong to grandpa and i wondered what secrets they might hold. i decided to talk to my mother ana she's always his daughter she's a doctor like everyone in our family. just did you see all his photos from the war or just the ones with him. yes not just the ones with him but was the group photos with other soldiers standing next to cars and maybe a tank and there was a photo of a field hospital it was not a. terrorist...
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Sep 24, 2019
09/19
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BLOOMBERG
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i wonder, when we measure current demand, how elastic are customers? u very easily switch or do you see demand holding in there? mark: well, i think it is very easy to switch, but i think habits are hard to break. you think about how roku is being used today in the household, it is an aggregation device. it is whether you are watching apple tv, netflix, hulu, what have you -- you are watching all of your tv programming from one device. i think roku does that very well. you are not paying for it on a monthly basis. i don't know that switching costs necessarily are relevant if you will in roku's marketplace today. if you think about comcast, they own the broadband pipe, but they are late to the game. roku has roughly 35% penetration. we estimate amazon fire has 25% penetration of homes. it is a big hill to climb. you are fighting against the brand that is a household name in training. taylor: you started off the conversation talking about the last few weeks. i wonder how much of this was really the multiple and the price and the sentiment getting ahead of
i wonder, when we measure current demand, how elastic are customers? u very easily switch or do you see demand holding in there? mark: well, i think it is very easy to switch, but i think habits are hard to break. you think about how roku is being used today in the household, it is an aggregation device. it is whether you are watching apple tv, netflix, hulu, what have you -- you are watching all of your tv programming from one device. i think roku does that very well. you are not paying for it...
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Sep 12, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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whether the ecb will be able to deliver, i wonder. there is resista nce to deliver, i wonder.re is resistance from france and germany and the netherlands, saying there is no need. but also the question is, to what extent will it help? exactly. we have seen a lot of money being spent as a purchase programme, both by the ecb and the bank of japan and the us and all it has done is fuel asset prices. the little has grown into real economy and growth. when you think about that process, if they were to announce quantitative easing, what will be the consequences around the world? that is the real question. the biggest risk to the global growth outlet as well as the euro area is that the ecb's action triggers another round of competitive devaluation by non— dollar area central bankers and we get a rerun of 2014- 2015 in central bankers and we get a rerun of 2014— 2015 in which global trade goes into a deeper downturn and global profits go into a downturn and we get a slowdown everywhere.” am hearing that traders, finances and economist are really worried about this cycle kicking in. d
whether the ecb will be able to deliver, i wonder. there is resista nce to deliver, i wonder.re is resistance from france and germany and the netherlands, saying there is no need. but also the question is, to what extent will it help? exactly. we have seen a lot of money being spent as a purchase programme, both by the ecb and the bank of japan and the us and all it has done is fuel asset prices. the little has grown into real economy and growth. when you think about that process, if they were...
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Sep 28, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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i wonder your thoughts on the turning point and who should get credit for moving the democratic caucus towards supporting the impeachment inquiry. rep. pocan: i do not know if i need assign credit anywhere but when the president admits he asked a foreign government to get dirt on a political appointment and he hands you the notes that confirm what he admitted, that smoking gun is donald trump. that had a tremendous impact for people saying, you know, the process we have been going through in the mueller report is completely separate then someone providing a confession. >> from the way you are describing it, we have clear evidence and from reading the transcript and the whistleblower complaint, it looks like a clear-cut case. once this gets out to the american public, it will be filtered through different sources of information and it might not be received the same way. how do you make the message to the american people that this is what you have to do to protect the constitution? this is the best thing for the country right now. rep. pocan: you are seeing it and pulling. -- you are alr
i wonder your thoughts on the turning point and who should get credit for moving the democratic caucus towards supporting the impeachment inquiry. rep. pocan: i do not know if i need assign credit anywhere but when the president admits he asked a foreign government to get dirt on a political appointment and he hands you the notes that confirm what he admitted, that smoking gun is donald trump. that had a tremendous impact for people saying, you know, the process we have been going through in...
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Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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your work on the house we sawiations committee, congress work to pass this resolution.tinuing res i wonder if you think there's going to be enough time when you that to come up with all the funding bills a governmentve off shutdown come november 21. >> i would hope so, although i one of the things i'm most disappointed about, since i came inabilityess, was our to do the 101 of government which is the appropriations in a normal way. not passing continuous omnibus bills. it doesn't really get full input from members. the right thing on the house side. the 12 we passed 10 of appropriation bills. but the senate didn't do squat really in september and that's been our biggest problem once again. remaining, that's hopefully they'll get all their stuff done. a place able to get to that we can get this done. i really am looking forward to back to then we get way it's supposed to work, how a becomes a law saturday cartoon, where everybody can put onndments up, have a vote them. we did that in the house this time. having these short-term resolutions, omnibus bills where all kinds of things get thrown
your work on the house we sawiations committee, congress work to pass this resolution.tinuing res i wonder if you think there's going to be enough time when you that to come up with all the funding bills a governmentve off shutdown come november 21. >> i would hope so, although i one of the things i'm most disappointed about, since i came inabilityess, was our to do the 101 of government which is the appropriations in a normal way. not passing continuous omnibus bills. it doesn't really...
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Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder if you experienced similar feelings of guilt about your career. you get touched on it a little bit, i feel also you were acute of the privileges you have that you wanted to help others in a way that maybe people who did not have that awareness wouldn't have. i was wondering if you experienced that in various ways over the years. >> guilt? absolutely. every time, you know. six weeks on, two weeks on. when six weeks up, i can't wait until i'm in jordan, i can swim and read, you know? and then i would wave goodbye and i would see my iraqis colleagues all liked up, goodbye. i i get to go and they don't. that was absolutely, it was shattering. so much so in fact, si counselor for a while for. there was a time when i would never say that because of the stigma. women and war, they can't hack it. you get the stereotypes. it's very important to seek care and attention. and those who don't, often because it isn't there and it is culturally not available for some reason. and i remember you had to think of it you were there as a visitor, and you don't have the
i wonder if you experienced similar feelings of guilt about your career. you get touched on it a little bit, i feel also you were acute of the privileges you have that you wanted to help others in a way that maybe people who did not have that awareness wouldn't have. i was wondering if you experienced that in various ways over the years. >> guilt? absolutely. every time, you know. six weeks on, two weeks on. when six weeks up, i can't wait until i'm in jordan, i can swim and read, you...
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Sep 27, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder your thoughts on being able to come up with a bill that can pass the senate and get signed by the president to continue to fund the government for fiscal 2020? >> guest: i do support their short-term cr, continuing resolution, to have the government funded. i do believe when we come back we do have to focus on making sure we have a longer-term funding strategy because it makes it hard for agencies, , fr our military and for other stakeholders to play when we only have these short-term crs. >> host: can congress focus on that that the will be a lot of focus on an impeachment inquiry? >> guest: yes. with multiple committees going on or appropriations committee,, a budget committee and with committees focusing on their missions. right now house intel will take the lead on the green issue but all this other work in terms of making sure that we reduce healthcare costs or the american people, that we increase wages, put them into good jobs, that will all continue. >> host: five minutes before the house comes in. until then your phone call for congressman ted lieu of california. robe
i wonder your thoughts on being able to come up with a bill that can pass the senate and get signed by the president to continue to fund the government for fiscal 2020? >> guest: i do support their short-term cr, continuing resolution, to have the government funded. i do believe when we come back we do have to focus on making sure we have a longer-term funding strategy because it makes it hard for agencies, , fr our military and for other stakeholders to play when we only have these...
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Sep 6, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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i wonder about your views of these efforts to in essence come up with new common-law through different paths as we negotiate this new landscape. >> you have written about this. shouldy book i argue we -- a company should engage in technological due process. they should be transparent and accountable for their content moderation and practices. that could be as a matter of law but they should. the different speech, the line is blurry. the difference between content and conduct -- yes, we should be more careful. some speech is tantamount to conduct in the harassment and sexual harassment. we can say that is truly like a bludgeon of an instrument rather than a message or viewpoint. it is really hard. spiritlike i have a free -- my speech friends with me here. conduct and speech are one of conduct, like a lot of is expressive and vice versa. >> i don't want to talk about that. >> you talk about what you want to talk about. >> the national internet court. it sounds like a thing you will get if you just wait around for a couple of years and older judges move out and younger judges move in. th
i wonder about your views of these efforts to in essence come up with new common-law through different paths as we negotiate this new landscape. >> you have written about this. shouldy book i argue we -- a company should engage in technological due process. they should be transparent and accountable for their content moderation and practices. that could be as a matter of law but they should. the different speech, the line is blurry. the difference between content and conduct -- yes, we...
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Sep 22, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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eye 63
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i wonder if saudi arabia may have been hoping that the us response would have been 5tronger and more i am not sure exactly what they were hoping for because if there is a ratcheting up of tensions, the saudis will take much more of a hit than the americans. what we have seen with the saudis being reluctant to this directly to iran, i think is an effort to not only build a little time but also to get more of the world on board. one of the interesting things over the next several weeks is whether china, a big buyer of oilfrom saudi arabia and a big investor in saudi arabia, whether china can move to be a little more critical of iran and have more of a solution to the problem of iran and its proxies posing what its neighbours perceived to bea posing what its neighbours perceived to be a threat. what about the new gulf peace initiative that mr rouhani has been talking about? saying that would be presented at the united nations in coming days? donald trump reiterating he would like to meet president rouhani on the sidelines of the general assembly but that will not happen?” don't think it
i wonder if saudi arabia may have been hoping that the us response would have been 5tronger and more i am not sure exactly what they were hoping for because if there is a ratcheting up of tensions, the saudis will take much more of a hit than the americans. what we have seen with the saudis being reluctant to this directly to iran, i think is an effort to not only build a little time but also to get more of the world on board. one of the interesting things over the next several weeks is...
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40
Sep 25, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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eye 40
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i wonder, does he -- does he in his heart even want to be prime minister anymore? he says -- he says the -- he says that i should go to brussels on 17th of october and negotiate another pointless delay, but he doesn't want to go himself and even if he did, his colleagues wouldn't let him. quite frankly they recoil, they recoil at the idea of him negotiating on the people's behalf representing this country with the likes of vladimir putin or is it perhaps that he wants a conservative government. it would be a curious state of affairs indeed if her majesty's loyal opposition had every faith in the government of the day. if in fact the party opposite does not have confidence in the government, they will have a chance to prove it. they have until the house rises -- listen, listen, listen. i think they should listen to this, mr. speaker. they have until the house rises today to table a motion of no confidence in the government -- come on, come on! come on then! and we can have that vote tomorrow or if any other parties fancy a go, they can table that motion and we'll gi
i wonder, does he -- does he in his heart even want to be prime minister anymore? he says -- he says the -- he says that i should go to brussels on 17th of october and negotiate another pointless delay, but he doesn't want to go himself and even if he did, his colleagues wouldn't let him. quite frankly they recoil, they recoil at the idea of him negotiating on the people's behalf representing this country with the likes of vladimir putin or is it perhaps that he wants a conservative government....
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242
Sep 17, 2019
09/19
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 242
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one thing i would like to ask is i wonder why the mainstream media haven't looked further into his accuser. why are they not concerned that leland keyser doubts christine ford's story. the eyewitness, someone who is supposed to be one of her best friends that told the fbi she was being pressured by christine ford's friend to change her story. reported that christine ford's dad congratulated brett kavanaugh's dad on confirmation. if you don't have your own dad behind you, that certainly raises questions. >> tucker: it does raise some questions. lisa, good to see you tonight. >> i could go on. >> tucker: me too. good to see you. richard goodstein joins us tonight. good to see you tonight. lisa raises an important question. the story comes out over the weekend and the media jump on it. the candidates jump on it. it comes to this conclusion that we need to impeach brett kavanaugh and then the newspaper itself admits in effect that the story is a crock, actually. that the supposed victim doesn't remember it. says she is not a victim. isn't it time then to say oh, wow, now i have new information
one thing i would like to ask is i wonder why the mainstream media haven't looked further into his accuser. why are they not concerned that leland keyser doubts christine ford's story. the eyewitness, someone who is supposed to be one of her best friends that told the fbi she was being pressured by christine ford's friend to change her story. reported that christine ford's dad congratulated brett kavanaugh's dad on confirmation. if you don't have your own dad behind you, that certainly raises...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 71
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>> guest: i wonder? the chairman of the house appropriations committee that was involved in budgeting for nasa was albert thomas and in his district was a place called houston. so they got the lion share. all fairness, they tried to spread out the goodies all over the country in different states got different parts of the program. but of course the choice was nasa. the man's spacecraft center. >> host: here in california, isn't the lab and a couple other places? >> guest: exactly. cleveland, ohio, and of course langley, virginia was the origin of nasa's first headquarters. >> host: you to pretty clearly draw a political example to those locations? [laughter] >> host: is not fair to say? >> guest: to a fair extent yeah, you're right. the extensible reason that houston was chosen was one of the reasons was -- i always wondered also, why, as soon as the spacecraft clears entry everything shifts over to houston, why don't they just do it all in cape canaveral, one reason was there might be signals mixed up f
>> guest: i wonder? the chairman of the house appropriations committee that was involved in budgeting for nasa was albert thomas and in his district was a place called houston. so they got the lion share. all fairness, they tried to spread out the goodies all over the country in different states got different parts of the program. but of course the choice was nasa. the man's spacecraft center. >> host: here in california, isn't the lab and a couple other places? >> guest:...
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120
Sep 23, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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from the rio grande and the laredo sector, you have been to the border and new mexico, california, i wonder if your perspective is the same as mine. it's often brought out this charge but there is a racist tinge to be leaving in border security, and i have two thoughts on that and i want to get your feeling on it. one, look at the brave men and women in border patrol but are overwhelmed right now but as one agent told me if i'm a perpetual instant of border patrol because they are so overwhelmed and others said that they are in the sector have three on the line trying to protect the stretch. a two-mile stretch of 70 miles where you can drive a car alongside the river but you can't see the river through. they are asking them to do the impossible. here's my point. the majority of the patrol officers i've engaged with and i believe that it is a truth are hispanic and they are hispanic americans who along the border believe that the border is part of our sovereignty, the rule of law matters and that is why people seek to come here and then thspend a second point with respect to the racist charg
from the rio grande and the laredo sector, you have been to the border and new mexico, california, i wonder if your perspective is the same as mine. it's often brought out this charge but there is a racist tinge to be leaving in border security, and i have two thoughts on that and i want to get your feeling on it. one, look at the brave men and women in border patrol but are overwhelmed right now but as one agent told me if i'm a perpetual instant of border patrol because they are so...
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223
Sep 19, 2019
09/19
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WTTG
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a ut>> w i wonder how long iakes las bhre ioom the ls ont theeeut, anything? >> looks nice om the air. >> it's really pretty.ea >> okay. >>> another reason to take a trip, mean g iuyt's pretty e ek.gt layshern oer ad js der thg.ug ] byric o used aapit s,iveeran wthra ogonfl omdalasys.ishe nobody else get . c g illinoisan netsm a dgr californo was on tau the gorou nice couple of days e. alsox5 row e. alsox5 row 'sss t pl ay in by 2ic u frie the nd ouclotrrsnsrek.m, o a isweoomiunngdaeitentlds >>> lison you want to know why yo otgr aturrlumbe.. csarlyexteek th baning toiolgo ss ghthwsote t stbablndynd i bermudane stretne rtlial ph syimloioatnesin od qtink >>eud ires t havou wis letlilost od qtink >>eud ires t havou wis letlilost at ied$2 o'ng tto erinst t the 50s. f lowta 60s mniec tir i'see l? g by'eeavectorcobaonnis tion. >> s g blt cthou withevesut ohe cforch i>> mbs lelatert. towayodrlel re cod ibaer youeigler. rd day, girls. u mike crow chipped and vaccinate! bodora able. hecause -- ishat's great.e thav little partner out thereey. >> best frienreat e rni..
a ut>> w i wonder how long iakes las bhre ioom the ls ont theeeut, anything? >> looks nice om the air. >> it's really pretty.ea >> okay. >>> another reason to take a trip, mean g iuyt's pretty e ek.gt layshern oer ad js der thg.ug ] byric o used aapit s,iveeran wthra ogonfl omdalasys.ishe nobody else get . c g illinoisan netsm a dgr californo was on tau the gorou nice couple of days e. alsox5 row e. alsox5 row 'sss t pl ay in by 2ic u frie the nd...
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42
Sep 26, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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eye 42
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i wonder if that is the case.ut boris johnson, but we have not seen it since he stepped across into number ten. and i wonder if during a general election this irritable, vindictive, nasty man can actually win the votes he thinks he can. let's turn to the telegraph in your byline is on the story and you have a picture of another band was accused by some, or credited by some depending of what their position is, with driving a lot of the agenda and the tone of the current boris johnson regime or government. dominic cummings, who is one of the two chiefs of staff a lot of people credits as being one of the most powerful people in government shaping the policy and direction and strategy, he very rarely makes public appearances and yet tonight he was at an event for stuart wheeler's book launch in the older vote leave gang back together and he said some things that, you know, or in the context of today a very interesting because we had a day where even boris johnson interesting because we had a day where even borisjohns
i wonder if that is the case.ut boris johnson, but we have not seen it since he stepped across into number ten. and i wonder if during a general election this irritable, vindictive, nasty man can actually win the votes he thinks he can. let's turn to the telegraph in your byline is on the story and you have a picture of another band was accused by some, or credited by some depending of what their position is, with driving a lot of the agenda and the tone of the current boris johnson regime or...
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48
Sep 29, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 48
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i wonder if you have thoughts on those points. >> on the first point i absolutely agree with you andi cut my teeth this paper journalism in los angeles in the early 1990s. not only did i report on the perspective of american citizens and law-abiding immigrants who were early warning about immigration chaos in that state and trying to take control of it back then, but of course had started building up many forces both in the border patrol and i.c.e. then i moved up to the seattle times and was able to see the perspective of border patrol agents and deportation and removal officers who worked on the northern part of the border. we spent so much time justly talking about the southern border but the neglect at the northern border especially when you have canadian governments in power who see themselves as doormats for the world and in large part harboring islamic extremist groups that then can just traipse across the northern border because all that stopping them our orange rubber cones. it's alarming and they been under siege for a long time. congress in washington swamp always pay lip
i wonder if you have thoughts on those points. >> on the first point i absolutely agree with you andi cut my teeth this paper journalism in los angeles in the early 1990s. not only did i report on the perspective of american citizens and law-abiding immigrants who were early warning about immigration chaos in that state and trying to take control of it back then, but of course had started building up many forces both in the border patrol and i.c.e. then i moved up to the seattle times and...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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but i wonder what your focus is? on consumer harm from these companies or is it more on suppression of innovation because it seems like those are different standards, consumer harm perhaps having to do more with pricing action and how much people have to pay suppression of competition having more to do with whether they're using their monopoly to unfairly gain advantage over other service providers. >> and they're not mutually exclusive. and consumer harm could be more than just the prices you pay although if google were manipulating the advertising power to raise the prices that consumers pay, then there is consumer harm and in regard to prices but we also in terms of the services that are available to us and the quality of those services, do these companies that have such market dominant positions adequately value our privacy? are they safeguarding our information to the same extent they would if there were real competitors in the market against them so there are other ways to evaluate consumer harm and it related
but i wonder what your focus is? on consumer harm from these companies or is it more on suppression of innovation because it seems like those are different standards, consumer harm perhaps having to do more with pricing action and how much people have to pay suppression of competition having more to do with whether they're using their monopoly to unfairly gain advantage over other service providers. >> and they're not mutually exclusive. and consumer harm could be more than just the...
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87
Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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FOXNEWSW
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i wonder how many have gone the their kickbacks and paddy waks. who was giving them all. ook at the news. the news. the fake news. i keep hearing the word impeach. >> impeach. >> but the reason why they want to impeach him was they know they can't defeat him. these people have pushed all kinds of things. first it was resist. racism. recession. i have something we need to push. re-elect. re-elect this president. but you know what? while they continue to push the race card, we are going to continue to push the trump card so we can win, win, and win, baby. jesse: oh, wow. what stars. i take all the credit. just kidding. these ladies are great. thanks for tonight. be sure to follow me on facebook will be instagram and twitter. "justice with judge jeanine" is next. remember i'm watters and this is my world. judge jeanine: hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. thanks for being with us tonight. the beat goes on. a huge thanks to all of you for keeping our streak alive and make our last week's show number one all weekend long. we are ready to kill it again with
i wonder how many have gone the their kickbacks and paddy waks. who was giving them all. ook at the news. the news. the fake news. i keep hearing the word impeach. >> impeach. >> but the reason why they want to impeach him was they know they can't defeat him. these people have pushed all kinds of things. first it was resist. racism. recession. i have something we need to push. re-elect. re-elect this president. but you know what? while they continue to push the race card, we are...
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70
Sep 24, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 70
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beating men in wisconsin and i wonder is that going to affecti the race and w that works. rr guest: i don't believe that that occurred here. milwaukee is a city that has some difficulties and opportunities and is having a moment right now. a very good moment and obviously people will report on some of the negative things and some of the positive things here. that is to be expected. the immigration issue is very uaimportant for farmers in terms of their workforce. it's important to them and the public at large. there is nothing special about milwaukee and wisconsin -- it will reflect the country. >> host: reporter at the milwaukee journal sentinel. if you want to see some of his work joining us on board the bus this morning we appreciate your time. >>> the complaint stems from a phone conversation the president had earlier this year with the leaders of ukraine that included the talk about former vice president joe biden and his son. over the weekend details emerged about president
beating men in wisconsin and i wonder is that going to affecti the race and w that works. rr guest: i don't believe that that occurred here. milwaukee is a city that has some difficulties and opportunities and is having a moment right now. a very good moment and obviously people will report on some of the negative things and some of the positive things here. that is to be expected. the immigration issue is very uaimportant for farmers in terms of their workforce. it's important to them and the...
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45
Sep 25, 2019
09/19
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ALJAZ
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eye 45
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hall style i wonder is maybe the word pull to describe the reception awaiting boris johnson. certainly there was a hostile beginning to the day i suspect that the prime minister will not find a welcome mat in front of the dispatch box when he returns there hello i have to say that opposition m.p.'s are taking great relish in holding the government ministers who'd been standing at that dispatch box in the lower house holding on to account over the past 5 to 6 hours of parliamentary business now that they've been able to get back into the chamber after the on lawful croatian the prime minister told about 2 and a half weeks ago and it started off very bombastic indeed from the attorney general geoffrey talks who said that this parliament was a disk writes he said the employees had no rights to be sitting in the green benches and that there should be a general election is strictly a special day but that simply provoked the opposition m.p.'s into an absolute fury and i think courage that we look up barrie shipman's intervention so furious was barry sherman that it actually went vir
hall style i wonder is maybe the word pull to describe the reception awaiting boris johnson. certainly there was a hostile beginning to the day i suspect that the prime minister will not find a welcome mat in front of the dispatch box when he returns there hello i have to say that opposition m.p.'s are taking great relish in holding the government ministers who'd been standing at that dispatch box in the lower house holding on to account over the past 5 to 6 hours of parliamentary business now...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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59
Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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SFGTV
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i formed a different conclusion than the literature, and i wonder if you knowing more than i can comment on those two elements. >> sure, commissioner green. i think it's clear from the literature that low quality programs don't have the outcomes that we do. when you look at -- when you look at the regulatory bodies, a lot of them don't speak to organizations except leapfrog, and when you look at leapfrog, they're not able to maintain the individual competencies of the team to not able to care for those patients. regarding the p.c.i. question, i think it is the standard of care to operate freestanding cardiac cath labs. i've operated a number of them in other states and including here in san francisco and that was at zuckerberg general hospital. the answer is because they are so precise, there are seldom complications, and when there are, you have some time ahead of you to transfer those patients to locations where you have cardiac teams standing by. back in the day when i was a surgeon, stand by is different than it is today. the team is prepped and ready to go in case you had a complica
i formed a different conclusion than the literature, and i wonder if you knowing more than i can comment on those two elements. >> sure, commissioner green. i think it's clear from the literature that low quality programs don't have the outcomes that we do. when you look at -- when you look at the regulatory bodies, a lot of them don't speak to organizations except leapfrog, and when you look at leapfrog, they're not able to maintain the individual competencies of the team to not able to...
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41
Sep 4, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 41
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i know. i'm not a writer. tell me how to make it better. that is a wonderfulplace because i had no personal thoughts at all i did not think it was a writer. so it was a great place. >>. >> when did you start journaling? >> i had a couple at eight years old but then i got serious at ten and then i was very faithful. >> a lot of them were given to me by my grandmother and had pictures of jesus on them actually perk almost all of them. >> so for you sometimes it don't understand something until i write it down. >> i do think there was a bit of loneliness sometimes i detect i didn't have any friends actually there was another family in town that was like my family so occasionally i would see this one other girl but everyone else i never went to any of their houses and i was never invited as i was pretty isolated perk i had my siblings but so i could tell somebody all my stuff and that's one reason why other than that i don't know why stomach about your thankful now after having written the book. >> they were really helpful. yes. >> you still journal now? >> i do.
i know. i'm not a writer. tell me how to make it better. that is a wonderfulplace because i had no personal thoughts at all i did not think it was a writer. so it was a great place. >>. >> when did you start journaling? >> i had a couple at eight years old but then i got serious at ten and then i was very faithful. >> a lot of them were given to me by my grandmother and had pictures of jesus on them actually perk almost all of them. >> so for you sometimes it don't...
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77
Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i wonder if you could talk a little bit deeper. i heard two things here.americans support the traditional view of being robust international engagement, but at the same time it's clear that americans are tired of these wars. so which one is it, do they support afghanistan or not? i know it's not that simple, so tell me why that is. >> in the military intervention, the polling numbers and in others it's distinctly unpopular and i would put in a different category from the other forms of engagement in the world. if you define engagement as trading relations into diplomatic relations and alliances and all the other things they ask about, those numbers are high. military intervention is a cost associated with those over the past two decades and with the perceived lack of results the past two decades has been distinctly unpopular. now, that said, again it gets to what is the intensity of the opposition and does that translate for an exampl examplea president saying the american people don't want to be in afghanistan anymore. i have to sort of pull out completel
i wonder if you could talk a little bit deeper. i heard two things here.americans support the traditional view of being robust international engagement, but at the same time it's clear that americans are tired of these wars. so which one is it, do they support afghanistan or not? i know it's not that simple, so tell me why that is. >> in the military intervention, the polling numbers and in others it's distinctly unpopular and i would put in a different category from the other forms of...
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31
Sep 8, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 31
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in 2015 i did a profile for the new yorker magazine and got to spend a lot of time in her office and with her wonderful crew, and i have to say that she does work on some grim and frightening cases and brings a vibrance that's fun and the people that work with her are so committed and it's actually it ended up being a fun story. one of the things i learned that was new to me when i started the story, i mean a lot of things, it opened my eyes. revenge porn is a nonconsensual term, because although one motivation for distributing intimate photos that we have been shared in the context of a relationship is revenge and that is a common scenario and there are also people that do this kind of thing for profit and there are a variety of motivations unfortunately. the other thing that was a shock to me is the extent of the sort of vicious extent and persistence with which some of the campaigns of pronouncement by trolls and others are carried out online. so i just wonder if you can tell a story from one of your clients to give a little more detail and kind of more context of what we are talking about. >> first
in 2015 i did a profile for the new yorker magazine and got to spend a lot of time in her office and with her wonderful crew, and i have to say that she does work on some grim and frightening cases and brings a vibrance that's fun and the people that work with her are so committed and it's actually it ended up being a fun story. one of the things i learned that was new to me when i started the story, i mean a lot of things, it opened my eyes. revenge porn is a nonconsensual term, because...
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101
Sep 15, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 101
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it feels like i am cheating when i go to the digitized newspapers. wonderful forhey subjects like the klan. i have been focusing mostly on indiana. it's based in indianapolis, but the fiery cross, leading klan newspaper in the north, publishes widely stories from across the midwest and will be useful to anyone. it's completely digitized and searchable. let me make some key generalizations to spark your interest. these are the words of elmer davis, a distinguished reporter from new york who came out to indiana, his native birthplace, to study the klan in 1924. this is what he concluded. these were marginal people. they were the great unteachables. now, i want to say after 40 years in the classroom, i want to hope that no one is unteachable. i had a few students who were close to that maybe. [laughter] >> but we're all teachable. i don't agree with davis on that point, this word, but more importantly, most of the midwesterners who joined the klan were not marginal. they were main line, mainstream midwesterners. they were not abnormal. maybe not even wicked. we n
it feels like i am cheating when i go to the digitized newspapers. wonderful forhey subjects like the klan. i have been focusing mostly on indiana. it's based in indianapolis, but the fiery cross, leading klan newspaper in the north, publishes widely stories from across the midwest and will be useful to anyone. it's completely digitized and searchable. let me make some key generalizations to spark your interest. these are the words of elmer davis, a distinguished reporter from new york who came...
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51
Sep 11, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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eye 51
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i wonder for oui’ welcome to both of you. i wonder for our younger welcome to both of you.e to both of you. i wonder for our younger viewers and there are many of them, if you could tell them what it was like in the late 805, mid to late 805 when you were a player in terms of raci5t abu5e? mid to late 805 when you were a player in terms of racist abuse? to be honest, at a young age back then, you wanted to be a professional footballer. women's football is the fa5te5t footballer. women's football is the fastest growing 5port footballer. women's football is the fastest growing sport and the girls are doing fantastically well. when i was eight, i wrote to chelsea and i got a letter back saying u nfortu nately you got a letter back saying unfortunately you cannot have a trial. i saw the logo and i thought wow! but as a young footballer, he wa nted wow! but as a young footballer, he wanted a trial for chelsea or any other club you like. being brought up other club you like. being brought up in the west end, it was one of my dreams. i had ray wilkin5 and pele, my football dad. i
i wonder for oui’ welcome to both of you. i wonder for our younger welcome to both of you.e to both of you. i wonder for our younger viewers and there are many of them, if you could tell them what it was like in the late 805, mid to late 805 when you were a player in terms of raci5t abu5e? mid to late 805 when you were a player in terms of racist abuse? to be honest, at a young age back then, you wanted to be a professional footballer. women's football is the fa5te5t footballer. women's...
78
78
Sep 14, 2019
09/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 78
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when i was reporting the piece it was in 2015, and it was before the election, and i know that -- i wonder how much of your work has taken on somewhat more political cast? i know you have done some work with people who are being sort of harassed by white nationalis and others, and i wonder how much -- if you're seeing caseys those sort of forms of harassment may be more interpersonal and more political or emerging a little bit or if it's just changed in general what you -- what kinds of trolls you deal with, what kinds of issues you're facing. >> i guess i think like having, like, rapist harasser troll as a president does -- that's totally empower other rapists and -- >> -- to be bad. i think that the leader of the land is harassing and saying horrible things to people on twitter than everybody else thinks that's okay, and so -- but i think -- it's no -- it's very true that the internet is causing more radicalization, and we have seen that with some of the mass shootings, where mass shootings are live-streamed or the manifestoes being posted and on the internet and being disseminated there
when i was reporting the piece it was in 2015, and it was before the election, and i know that -- i wonder how much of your work has taken on somewhat more political cast? i know you have done some work with people who are being sort of harassed by white nationalis and others, and i wonder how much -- if you're seeing caseys those sort of forms of harassment may be more interpersonal and more political or emerging a little bit or if it's just changed in general what you -- what kinds of trolls...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 25, 2019
09/19
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SFGTV
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i am wondering, i know the main focus was how we restructure enrollment, but currently, we have, you know, lack of information really that families get around art programming. i found out there is a dance program at washington you can take dance for multiple years. parents are now thinking about that. middle school is where we see the dip in enrollment. people don't know we have amazing programs in the middle schools. i wonder where that would take place. not within your committee, where can we talk about what we are doing currently or in the next few years to do more outreach and more of the work we feel like, you know, you are a parent. we could do better to market the schools and sharing good work. >> we are always happy to take that topic to the committee, and i can talk about it. i would say it is like another educational issue. if you want a presentation from staff how we are marketing schools today, it might be a good october item h or whatever. >> we could do that. i spoke to ms. o'keefe and asked her to meet with mr. carpenter who had the other high schools to have a group d
i am wondering, i know the main focus was how we restructure enrollment, but currently, we have, you know, lack of information really that families get around art programming. i found out there is a dance program at washington you can take dance for multiple years. parents are now thinking about that. middle school is where we see the dip in enrollment. people don't know we have amazing programs in the middle schools. i wonder where that would take place. not within your committee, where can we...
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i don't tough. tough. enough for most. the wonderful quality of the d.c. the contingent police are used to pull the ripples from the way. places for. the loss of the present. i. breaks out in paris the styles of riot police confront crowds of anti-government protesters and scenes of looting and the founder of the. faces of america's longest banker charged with price manipulation.
i don't tough. tough. enough for most. the wonderful quality of the d.c. the contingent police are used to pull the ripples from the way. places for. the loss of the present. i. breaks out in paris the styles of riot police confront crowds of anti-government protesters and scenes of looting and the founder of the. faces of america's longest banker charged with price manipulation.
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Sep 27, 2019
09/19
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BLOOMBERG
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i look at our yields, 10 year treasury at 1.70, and sometimes i wonder why it does not have a zero handleen you look at the yields and the rest of the world, sometimes you have to look at it twice, it is still in the one's. it feels like global flows will continue to weigh in on the back end of our marketing. jonathan: we are going to do the quickest rapidfire round we have ever done. luke hickmore will not be with us, so it's just the two of you. the impeachment inquiry in the u.s. people trying to work at what this means for policy elsewhere. did the president -- or back off? does the president hardin or softened his stance with china going into trade talks next month? michael: soften. george: soften. pimco put it,, as the window to u.s. recession or recovery? george: recovery. michael: recovery. jonathan: let's finish with a question on credit. have we seen the tights for high-yield spreads. yes or no? michael: no. george: no. jonathan: thank you very much to michael, george, and luke hickmore as well. we will see you next friday, same time, same place. ."is was bloomberg "real yield t
i look at our yields, 10 year treasury at 1.70, and sometimes i wonder why it does not have a zero handleen you look at the yields and the rest of the world, sometimes you have to look at it twice, it is still in the one's. it feels like global flows will continue to weigh in on the back end of our marketing. jonathan: we are going to do the quickest rapidfire round we have ever done. luke hickmore will not be with us, so it's just the two of you. the impeachment inquiry in the u.s. people...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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>> guest: i wonder. the chairman of the house appropriations committee was involved in budgeting for nasa and his district was a place called houston. so they got the lions share but in all fairness they tried to spread out cities all over the country in different states got different parts of the program and the choice was nasa, the manned spacecraft center. >> host: and here at california, the jet propulsion laboratory and other places. >> guest: cleveland, ohio in several places and langley in virginia was the origin of nasa's first headquarters. >> host: you can clearly draw a political map to those locations. is that fair to say? >> guest: to a certain extent, yes. the ostensible reason houston was chosen, one of the reasons i always wondered, as soon as the spacecraft clears the gantry everything shifts over to houston, why don't they do it all at cape canaveral? one reason was there might be signals mixed up from all the other programs in communications. >> host: bill in indianapolis, thanks for h
>> guest: i wonder. the chairman of the house appropriations committee was involved in budgeting for nasa and his district was a place called houston. so they got the lions share but in all fairness they tried to spread out cities all over the country in different states got different parts of the program and the choice was nasa, the manned spacecraft center. >> host: and here at california, the jet propulsion laboratory and other places. >> guest: cleveland, ohio in several...