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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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wass go back to that toll i telling about, 233 people dying per million in sweden. if you look at denmark, that is only 75 people. dedenmark has been under lockdon sincnce the 11th o of march. 3838 is the figugure in norway d 36 in vineland.d. that is up to three to four times more peoeople dying per millllion in swedenn thanther scandidinavian c countries. on that numbmber you can say sweden's decision was not the right thing to do. one other thing which is very important to note is that the swedish are saying that there decisision will make p people -- decision will make people more e resilient to the .idisease and boost herd immuniy people w who have been infected with coronavavirus for put up a barrieier to prevent more infections from happening at the question is what will the final death toll be in sweden when they arrive at that? that is something we don't know the answer to. we will have to see. >> time will tell. we will see what happens. -- has died in the city of mumbai. the 52-year-old had been battling a rare cancer. he was one of india's best-known exp
wass go back to that toll i telling about, 233 people dying per million in sweden. if you look at denmark, that is only 75 people. dedenmark has been under lockdon sincnce the 11th o of march. 3838 is the figugure in norway d 36 in vineland.d. that is up to three to four times more peoeople dying per millllion in swedenn thanther scandidinavian c countries. on that numbmber you can say sweden's decision was not the right thing to do. one other thing which is very important to note is that the...
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Apr 1, 2020
04/20
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at dawawn in the parisian suburb of it wass really a hundreds of migrants are being evacuated bound for hotels and sports centers. in paris and the suburb of st st denis. they'll be sheltered in austin isolate all part of the region's fight against cove in nineteen. this is a point of this is what it as a senator the daisy the could. . defininiy make. in seven and two were about in some fat women she- but there are still several hundred perhaps even thousands of others on the streets so every evening members of the group utopia fifty six walk around this part of northeast paris. taking note of who's sleeping rough. we got some new new lizzy suffolk food veeva systems requested- the defense wants t to fifty for me the phoe would be from all sorts. of prison at the levels of destruction pat arrived in france i in november seeking political asylum. in normal times volunteers from utopia fifty six would house vulnerable people clearly that isn't possible at the moment so instead those sleeping rough of in house here. in the local parish church. not everybody in ms often the shell. civil are
at dawawn in the parisian suburb of it wass really a hundreds of migrants are being evacuated bound for hotels and sports centers. in paris and the suburb of st st denis. they'll be sheltered in austin isolate all part of the region's fight against cove in nineteen. this is a point of this is what it as a senator the daisy the could. . defininiy make. in seven and two were about in some fat women she- but there are still several hundred perhaps even thousands of others on the streets so every...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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so i wass given pills i was druggeded with six pills every night just to help me sleep to deal with my stress my heart palpitations. and many other things. but than that. i was able to time to so i it up let me ask it t was a breakthrough for me because i can get back to this notion of time. to understand w what time of day it was too numb when prayer is what happened because every time i would hear the cacall to prayer i was able toto keep track of time. to capture them popped off and it was so important for me to. go and then the cultural visits took place on the fourth of july. yeah it's good and that was impopoant for me b because-- ifi was able to let my family knknow where i wasas i haven't had a ay contact with them. talk to me on the twewenty ninth of august that i wasas a able to contact y mother by phone for the very first time he- a agent that in fact almost no onene on the crew on that concepept. of she come n several the month and then.n. i was only ablble to then start supporting requests i asked for books to be sent to me. and i had friends colleagues.. he said thanks. i
so i wass given pills i was druggeded with six pills every night just to help me sleep to deal with my stress my heart palpitations. and many other things. but than that. i was able to time to so i it up let me ask it t was a breakthrough for me because i can get back to this notion of time. to understand w what time of day it was too numb when prayer is what happened because every time i would hear the cacall to prayer i was able toto keep track of time. to capture them popped off and it was...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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wasse the irs because there an immediate system of channeling that money because of taxpayer id numbers. social security administration. there is a system of social security administration. getting that money out would be easier. the community development block grant money for towns across the country and state government. there was a pipeline to get money out. the best way to describe it was balanced. as checks aren starting at bank accounts from this phase we are talking about what is coming next. for viewers watching, what should we watch out for in the next iteration of the stimulus package or the one after that? rep. neal: we are looking at rebuilding a safety net once again. there will be an additional round of help. i also think there will have to be more money for the unappointed insurance system. not to miss the point that the people in the front lines -- it is remarkable. i live across the street from baystate medical center in springfield. it is the largest employer in western massachusetts. along with other community hospitals, they are on the front lines. mercy hospital, th
wasse the irs because there an immediate system of channeling that money because of taxpayer id numbers. social security administration. there is a system of social security administration. getting that money out would be easier. the community development block grant money for towns across the country and state government. there was a pipeline to get money out. the best way to describe it was balanced. as checks aren starting at bank accounts from this phase we are talking about what is coming...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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that even though the vote was split, once it wass enacted int law it becomes the policy of the united states of america and one of the things that it set in place was a template for a kind of paternalistic approach toward american indians. there was an interesting humanitarian argument that said this is good for american indians. they'll be much better off west of the mississippi. and they're going to be just fine and they are being compensated. so that humanitarian argument carried over in a sense of a century of policies following this that basically said the united states knew what was best for american indians. so this section of the americans exhibition is really about words and text and their meanings. it's startling to read the act, which visitors could do, because it's not very long, a few hundred words. it never directly references any particular indian tribe. it doesn't even reference the south in a particular way. it's a very -- almost is like a real estate, that look. let's come to a deal if you want, exchange lands and it does not directly suggest that if american indians
that even though the vote was split, once it wass enacted int law it becomes the policy of the united states of america and one of the things that it set in place was a template for a kind of paternalistic approach toward american indians. there was an interesting humanitarian argument that said this is good for american indians. they'll be much better off west of the mississippi. and they're going to be just fine and they are being compensated. so that humanitarian argument carried over in a...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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that, but as we have seen with andrew cuomo are setn newsom, they to go their own way was the time wass on making a decision to open up, whether schools open , whether mass transit runs, and under what conditions. oneswill ultimately be the who would be able to ignore essentially trump's directive regarding reopening the country. what details are we kidding about the potential reopening and what that could look like in california? is starting to set out some criteria that will be looking at for reopening things, including infection thes, hospitalizations, and continued spread. california was early on in the shutdown. san francisco was one of the first places to do so. they managed to keep infections at a lower rate by comparison to other states, particularly like new york and those on the east coast, so they will have more data they can look at to decide whether they want to open things up, but the big thing remains testing, whether or not there will be enough tests to reliably give governors the information we areed to open up, and also still waiting for some sort of test that can dete
that, but as we have seen with andrew cuomo are setn newsom, they to go their own way was the time wass on making a decision to open up, whether schools open , whether mass transit runs, and under what conditions. oneswill ultimately be the who would be able to ignore essentially trump's directive regarding reopening the country. what details are we kidding about the potential reopening and what that could look like in california? is starting to set out some criteria that will be looking at for...
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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was a major problem because i remember in late january you were telling people early february this wassingothing to be concerned for most americans and americans for most part were not at risk. >> it was in january at a time when the chinese were saying first that it was going from animal to a human. and then when there were human cases that looked like they were transmitted that it was very inefficiently transmitted it was at that time in, i believe, mid-january that we made the statement that if, in fact, that's true, that this is mostly animal to human and we're not in china and it is very inefficiently spread that, in fact, it may not be something that is of a major threat outside of china. when it became clear that not only is it transmit efficiently from human to human, but that it was very, very contagious in the sense of easily transmittible, and it also had a high degree of morbidity and mortality, at that point it became very clear that we were in for a problem. because we were getting travel cases from china. and even though we cut off the chinese pretty quickly, once it seated
was a major problem because i remember in late january you were telling people early february this wassingothing to be concerned for most americans and americans for most part were not at risk. >> it was in january at a time when the chinese were saying first that it was going from animal to a human. and then when there were human cases that looked like they were transmitted that it was very inefficiently transmitted it was at that time in, i believe, mid-january that we made the...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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>> well, he wass orphaned at 8. jesse died first, and hoover i believe i want to say he may have been 10. in any event he was put on a train with 10 cents sewn into his underclothes and homemade vittles and sent to organ to an uncle. and there he was in effect trained to business. hisal was a businessman, and burt as he was known went onto stanford. he was in the original class. in fact, stanford became probably the closest thing to a home away from home. he would be a trustee for over 50 years. he built his home there. today it's the university president's house. but in any event he loved stanford, and he ran a business, he ran a laundry business, or the businesses. so he had this entrepreneurial streak in him, studied engineering met lou henry also from iowa, a unique woman in many ways, the first at stanford to earn a geology degree. so they had this real special partnership from the beginning. they were intellectual equal and the besteds of that is they were married in 1899, and the government of china had invit
>> well, he wass orphaned at 8. jesse died first, and hoover i believe i want to say he may have been 10. in any event he was put on a train with 10 cents sewn into his underclothes and homemade vittles and sent to organ to an uncle. and there he was in effect trained to business. hisal was a businessman, and burt as he was known went onto stanford. he was in the original class. in fact, stanford became probably the closest thing to a home away from home. he would be a trustee for over 50...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 77
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he even tried to hire carl sandburg to be a consultant on his film but it turned out the sandburg wass i think he found someone else. nonetheless, griffiths lincoln has nothing of the sandburgrg lincoln about it. he is a bland and monotonous figure in the film. he is your standard issue person. as oas one reviewer explained, lincoln made ae notable attempt to be fair to the two has of our nation. like a lot of the abraham lincoln's who were betrayed inin this earlier. or before class and had been writing, lincoln was also a crude frontiersman. in one scene, the president flops down on the white house floor to take a nap. it was a very bland, neutral, who wasgued lincoln portrayed. i think that image of lincoln in this. reflected the reluctance on the part of many white americans to invest the 16th president with substantialbe power. precisely because lincoln in these years had to be safe.. he had to be moderate and someone who could heal the ones of sectional division. ins be this way, lincoln was beg part thatto play a he had been playing since the end of the 19th century when the sto
he even tried to hire carl sandburg to be a consultant on his film but it turned out the sandburg wass i think he found someone else. nonetheless, griffiths lincoln has nothing of the sandburgrg lincoln about it. he is a bland and monotonous figure in the film. he is your standard issue person. as oas one reviewer explained, lincoln made ae notable attempt to be fair to the two has of our nation. like a lot of the abraham lincoln's who were betrayed inin this earlier. or before class and had...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 51
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good pointake a very about how quickly things are changing. 500 wass ago, the s&p down more than 30%year. today, the s&p 500 is down only 15% on the year and high-yield in more thancome 300 basis points from their highs. how has that changed the risk reward calculations? lows,: i thought that the ,hich were reached on march 23 had the risk reward ratio become significantly in favor of reward. the lower prices go, the more the potential for a rebound and the less the potential for further decline. theought at that point that ratio had become very favorable. so.y, obviously less about half ofed, the 34% that the market have declined between february 19 and march 23 has been made up. by definition, half of the potential is gone, roughly. risk has returned. erik: is it possible the very best buying opportunities of this crisis are behind us? howard: it is possible. it would defy comparisons to the past. havehe most part, all we our comparisons to the past. we do not have knowledge of the future. knowledge of the future is the current working title for the memo i hope to get out today or
good pointake a very about how quickly things are changing. 500 wass ago, the s&p down more than 30%year. today, the s&p 500 is down only 15% on the year and high-yield in more thancome 300 basis points from their highs. how has that changed the risk reward calculations? lows,: i thought that the ,hich were reached on march 23 had the risk reward ratio become significantly in favor of reward. the lower prices go, the more the potential for a rebound and the less the potential for...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN
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eye 72
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had wass year what we probably these bats infected a small animal in a wet market. thatfected some humans and cause this current pandemic of covid-19. when you look at the genetic sequences in these animals, it's very close to what we find. this is a natural virus. mothertell people is nature is the worst bioterrorist, very creative. there is no evidence that this virus was made in the lab. host: dr. ali khan is the dean of the department of epidemiology. this is the president talking about china yesterday. >> would you be angry at china? the answer might be very resounding yes. was it a mistake that got out of control? was it done deliberately? they should have let us go in. we asked to go in very early. i think they were embarrassed. i think they were embarrassed. host: that's from the president yesterday. let's get back to your phone calls. good morning. caller: thank you for taking my question. reading an article from 2018. the basic take away from the article was there's a large difference in the delay from the detection of disease to the response. iny pointed
had wass year what we probably these bats infected a small animal in a wet market. thatfected some humans and cause this current pandemic of covid-19. when you look at the genetic sequences in these animals, it's very close to what we find. this is a natural virus. mothertell people is nature is the worst bioterrorist, very creative. there is no evidence that this virus was made in the lab. host: dr. ali khan is the dean of the department of epidemiology. this is the president talking about...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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i wass the beginning -- told yesterday by a former senior advisor to the senate foreign relations committee is a beginning in a dramatic shift in the way the united states engages with china, but it is not just the u.s. china relationship in a vacuum. the administration will likely have a way and how they engage with europe and that might mean a different approach on trade policies in order to get the europeans back on the side of the united states as they continue to weigh what europe's response will be with china. we on: at what point are the fourth round of stimulus or disaster eight? say sometime over the next two weeks. i think it is going to be a much more contentious fight with the democrats and republicans given they have all been in their districts for quite some time. executionld argue the of implementing the last round of stimulus has been rocky at best. i think there will be more criticism, but also more structure in the next round of stimulus based around conversations i have had about making sure the next round gets executed more effectively. i think the last round of stimulus
i wass the beginning -- told yesterday by a former senior advisor to the senate foreign relations committee is a beginning in a dramatic shift in the way the united states engages with china, but it is not just the u.s. china relationship in a vacuum. the administration will likely have a way and how they engage with europe and that might mean a different approach on trade policies in order to get the europeans back on the side of the united states as they continue to weigh what europe's...
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130
Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 130
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congressman gohmert, you might speak to the fact that when al gore was there and joe wass giving outome chop word salad you can almost see on al gore's face, what have i done? >> [laughs] it's very hard for me to read a blank face so i can't reallyy comment on what it looks like al gore was thinking from my perspective, but they all looked somewhat uncomfortable when they do that endorsement and to me, that included former president obama. c he could've done it a whole lot sooner. i don't know why it took so long. >> mike: congressman jordan, we've only got about 30 seconds i've got to get it in quickly but there are some pretty crony and things that have been done in states during the stay at home order. do you think those things are going to be looked at, investigated by the department of justice as to whether they were over-the-top or just flat too much? >> yeah, bill barr indicated as much and he gave a memo and awh briefing, a memo that said if you can go to the grocery store and maintain 6 feet of social distance you can certainly go to church and your car and maintain the appr
congressman gohmert, you might speak to the fact that when al gore was there and joe wass giving outome chop word salad you can almost see on al gore's face, what have i done? >> [laughs] it's very hard for me to read a blank face so i can't reallyy comment on what it looks like al gore was thinking from my perspective, but they all looked somewhat uncomfortable when they do that endorsement and to me, that included former president obama. c he could've done it a whole lot sooner. i don't...
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105
Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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LINKTV
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eye 105
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earlrlier this w week, new y yoy activistst reverand d billy wass tackckled and arrested by y pole after he p planted a r rainbow g near the samaritan purse field hospital tents in central park outside mount sinai hospital. at the vatican, pope francis is set to deliver good friday easter services by video stream from a nearly-empty st. peter's basilica. holy thursday services did not include a ritual washing of the feet in order to prevent community spread of the coronavirus. more thahan 18,000 itatalians he dieded of covid-19 i in less thn two months, though italian mayorsrs say the true toll is likely f far higher, with many f the dead still uncounted. in france, authorities have ordered nursing homes to report deaths of confirmed or suspected coronavirus patients. officially, more than 12,000 have died of covid-19 across franance, but that number is expected to jump by over 40% once deaths outside of hospitals are counted. in the united kingngdom, primeme minister boris johnson has reportedly been moved out of intensive care but remains hospitalized with h covid-19. nearly britons ha
earlrlier this w week, new y yoy activistst reverand d billy wass tackckled and arrested by y pole after he p planted a r rainbow g near the samaritan purse field hospital tents in central park outside mount sinai hospital. at the vatican, pope francis is set to deliver good friday easter services by video stream from a nearly-empty st. peter's basilica. holy thursday services did not include a ritual washing of the feet in order to prevent community spread of the coronavirus. more thahan...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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that wass ethe end of january. in february i interviewed dr. redfield and he confirmed that. by february 13th, we knew there was clearly asymptomatic transmission, which changed this. by february 26th, we knew it was circulating in the community. important points -- a level of concern -- this is nuanced. the level of concern wasn't the same every step of the way. it grew as we gained more information, but there was significant information by the end of january of asymptomatic spread. the entire scientific mu said, whoa. this is different. if it's that lethal and can spread asymptomatically, we have to do something about it. on march 16th, when we had the 15-day pause that was a month and a half after that significant information came out. >> thank you, maggy, kale lan, dana bash, and sanjay. thank you. >>> coming up, david axelrod and jul julia keim will join us. life isn't a straight line. and sometimes, you can find yourself heading in a new direction. but when you're with fidelity, a partner who makes sure every step is clear, there's nothing to stop you from moving forwar
that wass ethe end of january. in february i interviewed dr. redfield and he confirmed that. by february 13th, we knew there was clearly asymptomatic transmission, which changed this. by february 26th, we knew it was circulating in the community. important points -- a level of concern -- this is nuanced. the level of concern wasn't the same every step of the way. it grew as we gained more information, but there was significant information by the end of january of asymptomatic spread. the entire...
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50
Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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LINKTV
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eye 50
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action taken that picture with the her wrote poststure, it wass really outrageous, first of all, and vile. -- it was renamed dignity square. it is been a symbolic point. people have died there fighting because of police brutality. people have lost their sight because of things being shot at their eyes witith rubber bullet. so when you see him, when he takes advanantage of peopople bg in quarantine not allowed to go and lethe goes there -- amy: we have five seconds. >> it is just showing his lack of empathy to the whole social process. thankngela valenzuela, you for being with us climate , activist, 350.org organizer, and former coordinator with fridays for future chile. as we wrap up our 50th anniversary of earth day special in the midst of this raging pandemic. democracy now! is working with as few people onsite as possible.
action taken that picture with the her wrote poststure, it wass really outrageous, first of all, and vile. -- it was renamed dignity square. it is been a symbolic point. people have died there fighting because of police brutality. people have lost their sight because of things being shot at their eyes witith rubber bullet. so when you see him, when he takes advanantage of peopople bg in quarantine not allowed to go and lethe goes there -- amy: we have five seconds. >> it is just showing...
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103
Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 103
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the president wass focused on china.t he did january 30th 10 days after the first case of corona and america. but the travel ban in place while he was pushing his phony impeachment.co >> i don't think impeachment will be viewed by history as having saved any lives. i only wish my democratic colleagues would spend half as ngmuch time working with this president as they try to spend removing him from office. americans deserve to know who's fighting for what. democrats are fighting for illegal aliens, upgrades to the kennedy center and for bailouts for blue states. i don't understand why new york can't collect bail money from their own criminals, but they expect to be able to collect for noncoronavirus expenses for the people of florida. may be people out there in california, gavin newsom with think about not giving free health insurance to illegal aliens before asking the rest of theso country to color california's budget deficits that they had well before coronavirus. meantime, republicans are trying to leverage the stren
the president wass focused on china.t he did january 30th 10 days after the first case of corona and america. but the travel ban in place while he was pushing his phony impeachment.co >> i don't think impeachment will be viewed by history as having saved any lives. i only wish my democratic colleagues would spend half as ngmuch time working with this president as they try to spend removing him from office. americans deserve to know who's fighting for what. democrats are fighting for...
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347
Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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KGO
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eye 347
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that's just -- it's medically wrong and it's ethically wasse send his plan for what california needs to do to protect its nursing home population. among the ideas, split the populations to the covid-19 populations are either in completely separate facilities or separate wings of the same binge and the coronavirus patients must be served by completely different staff members. if he were able, he would bring a family home from most skilled nursing facilities because of covid-19. >> if she was in 95% of the nursing homes in theof hetb >> this i-team has obtained this letter from the campus for jewish living that contains a skilled nursing facility saying they will begin accepting covid-19 patients next week. they tell me they are able to keep them in a separate wing of the building and we take the health and safety of our patients and staff as first priority. dr. wasserman says for some facilities money will be a factor. under the ppdm, they will receive a premium to treat covid-19 patients. what's the difference in how much they can make for a covid-19 patient versus the normal medi-ca
that's just -- it's medically wrong and it's ethically wasse send his plan for what california needs to do to protect its nursing home population. among the ideas, split the populations to the covid-19 populations are either in completely separate facilities or separate wings of the same binge and the coronavirus patients must be served by completely different staff members. if he were able, he would bring a family home from most skilled nursing facilities because of covid-19. >> if she...
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Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 62
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upwhen you guys were loaded what wass time to go, that moment like for you when you knew that this is it, we are going in? clinton: i think we were so well-trained to expect it that like of course this is what is going to happen. i don't recall being particularly afraid. training.e that to if you have been trained, if you have crawled under real machine gun fire, which was part of the training, and if you stood up, you would have been hit by a bullet. you were aware this was a serious matter you were involved in. if you had spent a year anticipating going in, a year and a half actually, it seemed like the next step. it was not a shock. i don't recall being afraid. in retrospect i am afraid -- i am sure fear was not a part of the equation. the ratherit was not a stoic acceptance of the fact this is what i was called to do. it is why i'm in training. if we don't defeat kittler -- hitler, we might not have any country left in the u.s. many say we fight the war fighting --er was killing the jews. in liberating the concentration camp's, we learned why the war had to be fought. i have thoug
upwhen you guys were loaded what wass time to go, that moment like for you when you knew that this is it, we are going in? clinton: i think we were so well-trained to expect it that like of course this is what is going to happen. i don't recall being particularly afraid. training.e that to if you have been trained, if you have crawled under real machine gun fire, which was part of the training, and if you stood up, you would have been hit by a bullet. you were aware this was a serious matter...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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MSNBCW
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the governor has been perhaps more measured in his responses about this issue, but the mayor today wassed adamant t he feels that the federal government has failed new york city, the epicenter of this whole pandemic right now. the city has set up a number of testing centers, mostly tied to public hospitals and public clinics, again in lower-income neighborhoods, immigrant neighborhoods, minority neighborhoods, where the virus has struck disproportionately. so, again, tehe emphasis on testing, testing, testing to understand what's going on, before there's talk of reopening and any approach back towards anything that resembles a new normalcy. katy, brian? >> ron allen, thank you very much. and some countries are slowly beginning to reopen small parts of their respective economies. denmark is letting small children return to school. spain is putting construction and factory workers back on the job with strict social distancing rules. but two countries in asia are offering stark warnings or serving as such. in japan, the island of hokkaido lifted restrictions a few weeks ago. the government t
the governor has been perhaps more measured in his responses about this issue, but the mayor today wassed adamant t he feels that the federal government has failed new york city, the epicenter of this whole pandemic right now. the city has set up a number of testing centers, mostly tied to public hospitals and public clinics, again in lower-income neighborhoods, immigrant neighborhoods, minority neighborhoods, where the virus has struck disproportionately. so, again, tehe emphasis on testing,...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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eye 31
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as i said, there have been expected to be the case for some time but it is now being confirmed in wass will be nothing more than a formality and will be with those restrictions in the uk for quite some time. quite how long we don't know because the government has a said very little about the exit strategy from this is. also today during the briefing to him a bit of a discussion about facemask. still not clear what the uk being advised to do here. it is clear and that the government advices that not for people to wear a mask. 0bviously some do but that is purely a personal choice. but yes there were questions to the chief scientific adviser at that news conference. after the who envoy in the uk said that it may well soon become the norm for countries to be advising citizens to where facemask routinely and that is been the case elsewhere. as we have seen particularly in the united states, he suggested that the advice might change depending on the evidence presented to him he gave a little bit of insight into the current thinking saying they were more effective for stopping people transmi
as i said, there have been expected to be the case for some time but it is now being confirmed in wass will be nothing more than a formality and will be with those restrictions in the uk for quite some time. quite how long we don't know because the government has a said very little about the exit strategy from this is. also today during the briefing to him a bit of a discussion about facemask. still not clear what the uk being advised to do here. it is clear and that the government advices that...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 29, 2020
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i don't want to spend a lot of time defending what wassed decided before, because i don't know the information and second because i think we have a different mindset now and framework now. i think that is incorporating scientific information and also incorporating feedback from you all as a board, feedback from community, all of which is important and valid. >> supervisor ronen: two more questions. in congregate settings, where do people wait after they've been tested before they get their results? >> that's a good question. so we want people as they're being tested and awaiting results, we want them to be as much as possible in a safe setting. that's why in congregate settings, navigation center, we have moved people out to await the test result. and we prioritize getting their tests done in the fastest way possible. luckily, we've come a long way in waiting for commercial laboratories to get results back. it's generally not a long amount of time we have to have people wait, but you're correct, we'd like them to be in their own space while waiting. if we're worried enough to test, we should c
i don't want to spend a lot of time defending what wassed decided before, because i don't know the information and second because i think we have a different mindset now and framework now. i think that is incorporating scientific information and also incorporating feedback from you all as a board, feedback from community, all of which is important and valid. >> supervisor ronen: two more questions. in congregate settings, where do people wait after they've been tested before they get...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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had wass year what we probably these bats infected a small animal in a wet market.hatfected some humans and cause this current pandemic of covid-19. when you look at the genetic sequences in these animals, it's very close to what we find. mother nature is the worst bioterrorist, very creative. there is no evidence that this virus was made in the lab. host: dr. ali khan is the dean of the department of epidemiology. this is the president talking about china yesterday. >> would you be angry at china? the answer might be very resounding yes. was it a mistake that got out of control? was it done deliberately? they should have let us go in. we asked to go in very early. i think they were embarrassed. i think they were embarrassed. host: that's from the president yesterday. let's get back to your phone calls. good morning. caller: thank you for taking my question. reading an article from 2018. the basic take away from the article was there's a large difference in the delay from the detection of disease to the response. iny pointed the differences the delays. plan -- quest
had wass year what we probably these bats infected a small animal in a wet market.hatfected some humans and cause this current pandemic of covid-19. when you look at the genetic sequences in these animals, it's very close to what we find. mother nature is the worst bioterrorist, very creative. there is no evidence that this virus was made in the lab. host: dr. ali khan is the dean of the department of epidemiology. this is the president talking about china yesterday. >> would you be angry...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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reaother source worked with she wass, told complaining at the time that her former boss in washington, d.c. had sexually harassed her and had been fired after raising concerns. ciders at the been syswin -- the business insider. randolph in vermont, hello. caller: thank you for having me on. i would just like to say that everybody who is on your show has a valid point from their perspective. i live in a small state which we tend to take a little bit slow and prepare ourselves. what we are talking about today, big government and big business, this is the result of the preparedf not being warfare,air -- for which is what the president calls it, biologic airfare, on our own land. these are microbes and viruses and we are not prepared. unfortunately, our administration and the doctors are not working in this situation for the pandemic peered i really hope that the people in charge and the people with the brains behind all of this are really focusing -- pandemic. i hope that the people in charge and the people with the brains behind this are focusing on how we deal with this in the future.
reaother source worked with she wass, told complaining at the time that her former boss in washington, d.c. had sexually harassed her and had been fired after raising concerns. ciders at the been syswin -- the business insider. randolph in vermont, hello. caller: thank you for having me on. i would just like to say that everybody who is on your show has a valid point from their perspective. i live in a small state which we tend to take a little bit slow and prepare ourselves. what we are...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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i don't want to spend a lot of time defending what wassed decided before, because i don't know the information and second because i think we have a different mindset now and framework now. i think that is incorporating scientific information and also incorporating feedback from you all as a board, feedback from community, all of which is important and valid. >> supervisor ronen: two more questions. in congregate settings, where do people wait after they've been tested before they get their results? >> that's a good question. so we want people as they're being tested and awaiting results, we want them to be as much as possible in a safe setting. that's why in congregate settings, navigation center, we have moved people out to await the test result. and we prioritize getting their tests done in the fastest way possible. luckily, we've come a long way in waiting for commercial laboratories to get results back. it's generally not a long amount of time we have to have people wait, but you're correct, we'd like them to be in their own space while waiting. if we're worried enough to test, we should c
i don't want to spend a lot of time defending what wassed decided before, because i don't know the information and second because i think we have a different mindset now and framework now. i think that is incorporating scientific information and also incorporating feedback from you all as a board, feedback from community, all of which is important and valid. >> supervisor ronen: two more questions. in congregate settings, where do people wait after they've been tested before they get...