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Dec 28, 2020
12/20
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matthews brain. he brought matthew to this mr.i. facility at the university of california, san francisco, and put matthew in the scanner with a mini keyboardd his team recorded his brain's activity levels with the m.r.i. scanner. >> limb: what you're seeing on this computer screen is some brain data that we obtained from matthew. >> alfonsi: then dr. limb put matthew through a different series of auditory tests. he showed us the results. >> limb: so we started out not by looking at music, but by looking at somebody like this who would give a lecture that most people would consider to be a little bit boring. >> in an effort to alleviate the effect of the-- anyone? anyone? >> limb: this is what happened when he was listening to that. and then, interestingly, because he is blind we looked at his visual cortex. and we didn't see any significant activity there at all. >> alfonsi: so nothing's happening. >> limb: exactly. and then we switched the soundtrack for him, and we put on a band that he knows quite well, snarky puppy. ♪ ♪ this is what changes in his brain. >> alfonsi: jeez. lights up. look closely. this is his visual cortex listening to
matthews brain. he brought matthew to this mr.i. facility at the university of california, san francisco, and put matthew in the scanner with a mini keyboardd his team recorded his brain's activity levels with the m.r.i. scanner. >> limb: what you're seeing on this computer screen is some brain data that we obtained from matthew. >> alfonsi: then dr. limb put matthew through a different series of auditory tests. he showed us the results. >> limb: so we started out not by...
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Dec 31, 2020
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matthew! matthew! matthew!" [ door creaks ] [ wind howls ] [ thunder rumbles ]
matthew! matthew! matthew!" [ door creaks ] [ wind howls ] [ thunder rumbles ]
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Dec 9, 2020
12/20
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matthew -- matthew, when should we expect more notifications that vaccine research has been successful? what companies are you watching now? matthew: we are all watching toward the first quarter in terms of johnson & johnson, the astrazeneca u.s. study, and, potentially, i believe novavax has also suggested they could have data at that point. vonnie: is all of this priced in at this point? have they received the benefits of coming through with a vaccine, if you like, or is there more to be priced in? matthew: yeah, so the debate in the market now is not about vaccine revenues for the first, year potentially even the second year, it is about the durability of the revenue stream. it focuses on how many people need boosters. will they need annual boosters? and which companies are best positioned. that is the market debate and that will lead to the most upper in-- most up or down side the coming weeks and months. vonnie: one thing you are amazing at is updating us daily as to what cases are being experienced in the u.s., deaths and so on. where are we at in terms of the post thanksgiving surge? that we passed the critical stage? matth
matthew -- matthew, when should we expect more notifications that vaccine research has been successful? what companies are you watching now? matthew: we are all watching toward the first quarter in terms of johnson & johnson, the astrazeneca u.s. study, and, potentially, i believe novavax has also suggested they could have data at that point. vonnie: is all of this priced in at this point? have they received the benefits of coming through with a vaccine, if you like, or is there more to be...
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Dec 26, 2020
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matthew matthew this is going to be my last question in less than a minute if your daughter mind now this is the dry season when people would be moving from one area to another. towards sources of water how we are your concern of this particular juncture. i mean the last time i was in people was in october and it was still covered in water and then in december i traveled to other parts of or great people as well as to other parts jungle and whatever community respects here and these are communities that were the term used before were at each other's throats previously and i heard the same story their greatest fear is the moment their the land starts to dry that there will be more fighting and that fighting will happen not just the political reduced or not at because of political reasons but because of necessity they will need to find ways to. raise other capital to bring capital back because they lost so many cattle in the floods in the previous i'd say what we mustn't allow is the deprivation to kick off another round of fighting and to be manipulated into something more political and something greater thank you so it's are wrong to continue the relief act or ations that we've already been started and we've already been working throughout the whole period but to gear it up and raise our game because i mean food assistance people out but their future their future relies on east and the peace relies on this differently and the politically of communities to feed themselves look after themselves and meet their basic needs to know how to live with them matthew worth douglas chance and jeffrey i really appreciate your insight thank you and thank you for watching you can see the program again any time by visiting our website dot com for further discussion got our facebook page that's facebook dot com for was last a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter i'll handle his at a.j. it's a story from the hashemite of our own the entire team here in doha by phone or. discover kazakstan that as a new strategic location at the crossroads of europe and asia. develop and grow your business. in the leading logistics trade the business harbors in 1st in a country with a great business climate robust legal system a tax regime and advantageous investment incentives employ a well educated highly skilled and multi-lingual workforce. by investing in kazakstan you invest in the largest economy of the region where the growth and prosperity of your business will always be our key priority. invest in kazakstan seize the best opportunities in
matthew matthew this is going to be my last question in less than a minute if your daughter mind now this is the dry season when people would be moving from one area to another. towards sources of water how we are your concern of this particular juncture. i mean the last time i was in people was in october and it was still covered in water and then in december i traveled to other parts of or great people as well as to other parts jungle and whatever community respects here and these are...
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Dec 2, 2020
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let's bring back our panel, susan byron and matthew. matthew, he is laying the groundwork here.people suspect they will, what does it look like from now until whenever and two years? is he still the daily obsession for most of the media if he is out there in this kind of limbo place? >> a lot of that depends on the media, bret. the media is going to have to make some editorial decisions about how they covered this ex-president. it's going to be very hard for them to ignore donald trump. i went back in the archives, as late as december 1979, there are articles appearing in "the new york times" making the case for ex-president gerald ford to run in the 1980 republican primary. so i expect the shadow of the potential trump candidacy will loom over the g.o.p. for years to come. >> bret: in the meantime, there is this back-and-forth in the democrat party, mel. this is former president obama about defunding the police. >> if you believe, as i do, that we should be able to reform the criminal justice system so that it is nonbiased and treats everybody fairly, i guess you can use a snap
let's bring back our panel, susan byron and matthew. matthew, he is laying the groundwork here.people suspect they will, what does it look like from now until whenever and two years? is he still the daily obsession for most of the media if he is out there in this kind of limbo place? >> a lot of that depends on the media, bret. the media is going to have to make some editorial decisions about how they covered this ex-president. it's going to be very hard for them to ignore donald trump. i...
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Dec 16, 2020
12/20
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back to my family, and he did a video with matthew, with weapons and this explosive belt and things like this. for three days, matthew had to practice, mattheww had topr tice, because matthe thought we were going home. >> (speaking world language) it's ready to shoot. >> baker: there will be peopleri who feel you're an an who was with arguably thed' wos worst terrorist organization, you should go to prison. what would you say to that? >> um... if they could live a day in my shoes, they, they would understand... why i don't care if i go to prison or not. if they want to put me in prison, they can put me in a prison for a year, 50 years, it doesn't matter to me.as ong as i get to see my kids and i know my kids are good. >> baker: the interview ca to an end and sam was taken back tt the deteion camp. ♪ i still had so many questions about her story-- and i wasn't the only one. she told me that a few weeks earlier, the fbi had been here and questioned her about her links to isis. ♪ the fbi still wasn't talking to me, but back in the u.s., i continued trying to find out more about sam. she grew up in rural arkansas. her father, rick, was a truck d
back to my family, and he did a video with matthew, with weapons and this explosive belt and things like this. for three days, matthew had to practice, mattheww had topr tice, because matthe thought we were going home. >> (speaking world language) it's ready to shoot. >> baker: there will be peopleri who feel you're an an who was with arguably thed' wos worst terrorist organization, you should go to prison. what would you say to that? >> um... if they could live a day in my...
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Dec 31, 2020
12/20
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oz: my reunion with matthew mcconaughey.with matthew you went off to write your book. >> we have these moments where we are stripped down. dr. oz: the peptalk he wants to give america now. >> we need resilience right now. dr. oz: plus, the blood test that detects alzheimer's ♪ dr. oz: my next guest is considered one of the sexiest men alive. he's also one of the most humble man in hollywood. he's a deep thinker,
oz: my reunion with matthew mcconaughey.with matthew you went off to write your book. >> we have these moments where we are stripped down. dr. oz: the peptalk he wants to give america now. >> we need resilience right now. dr. oz: plus, the blood test that detects alzheimer's ♪ dr. oz: my next guest is considered one of the sexiest men alive. he's also one of the most humble man in hollywood. he's a deep thinker,
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Dec 29, 2020
12/20
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matt m: matthew, thanks for joining us. matthew horn back -- matthewoining us morgan stanley head of global macro strategy. carol: i think we just have expectations that we reopen come summer, but i wonder as we get these various new strains if that is one of the major risks to the global economy, as well as global markets next year. there's no exact understanding of when we can really put an end to all of this, especially when you've got new strains coming out. matt m: you guys -- carol: you guys, you guys. [laughter] matt m: i mean, and america, came to go to a restaurant or a bar? here come all of that is closed. gyms are closed, barbershops are closed. carol: new york has shut its restaurants here. it depends. i talked to somebody in austin, texas. the malls were open. i think it depends where you are . matt m: here it is all shut down. car dealerships are actually good. .nly repair shops you can go hang out in the garage, which is some thing i do a lot of my free time. carol: matt, you just don't change, which is a good thing. withg up, we will ta
matt m: matthew, thanks for joining us. matthew horn back -- matthewoining us morgan stanley head of global macro strategy. carol: i think we just have expectations that we reopen come summer, but i wonder as we get these various new strains if that is one of the major risks to the global economy, as well as global markets next year. there's no exact understanding of when we can really put an end to all of this, especially when you've got new strains coming out. matt m: you guys -- carol: you...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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matthews. >> superintendent matthews: thank you. i wanted to start by thanking commissioner norton and cook for the service on their board. commissioner cook just arrived, so president sanchez, do you want me to talk now or -- >> president sanchez: i was going to do it under accommodations. we can do it now. we can do it now. >> superintendent matthews: okay. i just wanted to start by personally thanking both commissioner norton who served for 12 years and commissioner cook who served for four, thank you for your service. i just want to tell you on behalf of staff, we just really appreciate you for your questions, your comments, for constantly pushing us. when we think about our core values, student-centered and you have always made sure that whatever you are pushing for is always first and foremost around students. i just wanted to start by thanking you and letting you know each of you will be receiving a -- a framed of our core values and we're definitely going to miss you. with that, i turn it back over to president sanchez. >> president sanchez: thank you dr. matthews. i wanted to quickly open it up to board members and student delegates. any comments about our departing commissioners? you can roast them too if you'd like. >> vice president lopez: i applaud the commit you have given the school district for over a decade. no one
matthews. >> superintendent matthews: thank you. i wanted to start by thanking commissioner norton and cook for the service on their board. commissioner cook just arrived, so president sanchez, do you want me to talk now or -- >> president sanchez: i was going to do it under accommodations. we can do it now. we can do it now. >> superintendent matthews: okay. i just wanted to start by personally thanking both commissioner norton who served for 12 years and commissioner cook...
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Dec 29, 2020
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matthew whitaker. matthew, always great to have you back on. first let's go at the stunning success of operation legend stopping violent crime, thousands of arrests in nine u.s. cities. will this go on? will it continue? it's a huge success? >> well it has to, liz, because as you know operation legend was named for a four-year-old in kansas city named legend taliferro. he was killed as he slept in his bed by a drive-by shooting. what prompted the federal government surging resources into kansas city, now eight other cities to address the violent crime up tick and it get the trigger pullers off the streets. the federal criminal system offers enhancements especially for returning violent criminals. so they are kept off the street for a long time. elizabeth: will biden justice department continue it? because we're seeing 90 percent of the illegal alien arrests, criminal illegal aliens, 104,000, had criminal records and charges for things like homicides, kidnapping, murder, sexual assault. i.c.e. is dealing with that, violent crime spiking in u.s. cities. are these efforts continuing under a biden administration? >> well if they don't you will see a such a surge in violent crime across our country that the american people will not put up with it. and they will have to respond. you know one of the things i saw when i was at the department of justice was in these cities that have you know, sort of unwilling to work with federal law enforcement on enforcing the criminal illegal alien statutes as they stand today, you know, we've seen those jurisdictions have an uptick in violent crime and again, if every city becomes a sanctuary city because of federal policy, i think that will not be good for the american people because everybody deserves to be able to sleep safely in their own bed, to be able to play in their front yard without fear of violence. elizabeth: there is also this disturbing story. hundreds of thousands of children missing in this country. u.s. marshals rescued in fiscal 2020 nearly 400 missing children in numerous states in virginia, ohio, idaho, georgia, indiana. will that effort continue? >> well, we have a obviously a human trafficking crisis. i know that your show often times highlights you know, these cases because they are, they're so tragic and they are preventable. i'm glad to see that the u.s. marshals, a lot of federal law enforcement focusing on human trafficking. you know, often times coming across the southern border but also inside of our country. so whenever the federal government can bring resources to work with the state and local law enforcement to rescue these kids out of these horrible situations that is just, that is good for everybody. elizabeth: let's take, let's go to the border. joe biden saying he will roll back certain border security victories under trump. we have record amounts of narcotics seized, drug cartel violence at the border spiraling out of control. how concerned are you about this? >> i am, liz, i'm significantly concerned as i know you are. what this president was able to accomplish at the border was really unprecedented and many said it couldn't be done. to get mexican law enforcement and military to help with our patrolling and our enforcement of the border has reduced you know, the traffic across the, illegal including drugs. seizures are up. if you think about cocaine from columbia, fentanyl from mexico and china, poisoning many of our cities and towns this president brought attention to the border i hope is not undone in the next administration. elizabeth: let me clarify this data from i.c.e. 90% of the nearly 104,000 illegal aliens arrested in fiscal 2020 had criminal convictions or pending criminal charges. in total those illegal aliens had more than 374,000. 374,000 convictions and charges combined. that is an average of four per person. we're talking homicide, kidnapping, sexual assault, section crimes and robbery. that is going on. drug cart tells are trying to break in with planes, boats. we saw seven vessels captured in the rio grande sector with $64 million worth of cocaine. >> the american people should not stand forecriminal illegal aliens looks in our cities and you know, we need to work together with local law enforcement on the federal side to get these folks off the streets. elizabeth: matthewu, come back soon. >> we will do that again, liz. thanks. elizabeth: sure. i'm elizabeth macdonald. you've been watching "the evening edit" on fox business. that does it for us. thank you so much for watching and we hope you have a good evening. join us again tomorrow night. ♪ watching. ♪ gregg: good evening, everyone, i'm gregg jarrett sitting in for the vacationing lou dobbs. president trump today demanding that members of the republican party get tough. the president insisting that weak-kneed rinos in the u.s. senate either comply with his demands or be replaced. president trump wants the senate to follow the house and provide clash 2,000 -- $2,000 china virus stimulus checks to american workers. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell today, however, rejecting unanimous passage of those $2,000 relief checks and didn't say when or even if the u.s. senate wil
matthew whitaker. matthew, always great to have you back on. first let's go at the stunning success of operation legend stopping violent crime, thousands of arrests in nine u.s. cities. will this go on? will it continue? it's a huge success? >> well it has to, liz, because as you know operation legend was named for a four-year-old in kansas city named legend taliferro. he was killed as he slept in his bed by a drive-by shooting. what prompted the federal government surging resources into...
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Dec 2, 2020
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matthews! >> reporter: t.j. matthews hosts a flag football game called the giving bowl every december.a fund-raiser for a charity he started, giving blankets to children who in some way are struggling. what's special about giving someone a blanket? >> because a blanket, it's warm. and it's comfortable. >> reporter: covid canceled this year's contest, but not the 13-year-old's mission. a drive-through donation event netted 150 blankets. cash donations will allow him to give away almost 1,000. >> he has a heart of gold. he always has. >> reporter: when he hands the blankets over, he said he hopes kids realize, even this year, kindness has not been canceled. >> it's going to feel really good to me because i'm helping another soul, another soul be happy in life. >> reporter: janet shamlian, cbs news, houston. >> o'donnell: that's the best ight back.ving. we'll be right back. yup, on it there too. you may think you're doing all you can to manage type 2 diabetes and heart disease... ...but could your medication do more to lower your heart risk? jardiance can reduce the risk of cardiovascular
matthews! >> reporter: t.j. matthews hosts a flag football game called the giving bowl every december.a fund-raiser for a charity he started, giving blankets to children who in some way are struggling. what's special about giving someone a blanket? >> because a blanket, it's warm. and it's comfortable. >> reporter: covid canceled this year's contest, but not the 13-year-old's mission. a drive-through donation event netted 150 blankets. cash donations will allow him to give...
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matthew more from d.w. business welcome matthew so was this decision expected well i think it was a surprise it will always come as a surprise i mean i think the speed of it is that in the copy pull off guard. look this is the moment we've all been waiting for this year and i think it suggests that is a bit of light at the end of the tunnel and ultimately this is about saying that as a vaccine which is 95 percent affects of against and inoculating against the coronavirus that works across all age groups it's also effective in the most vulnerable the over 60 five's so it's a huge moment as we've had and i think it's worth just to celebrate in a moment it's also the fastest ever vaccine that's been produced record time the closest they came to the vaccine the mumps vaccine that took 4 years so it's a kind of success for the combined efforts of government scientists private companies and regulators ok so if if the u.k. is talking about vaccinations starting next week this stuff has got to be out with those across the country pretty quickly there so this is being produced in partnership to pfizer i don't tech takes office the german companies we've had and they're producing the 2 sites in germany and there's a 3rd one a bit wanting to try to cope with the huge demand and so they are saying that they will be producing this this we can start shipping at this week to london u.k. . of him to start distributing the vaccine how they next week and they're not saying look let's party christmass back on the saying be vigilant because obviously this is a 2 dogs vaccine so it would actually provide protection until one month is given so it's not too john your that people can kind of maybe start to live my life normally again so it's a proven in the u.k. it's also bidding for approval in the u.s. and maybe this is going to be good news as far as pfizer is concerned yes it's good news is far as everyone's confirm specifies a. and what it does is obviously you case kind of setting the pace and the movement even before today's announcement of people in the you're opinion saying why is the you not making a decision on this why the european medicines agency not going to meet to discuss this alley or they're planning on meeting at the end of december and so this will probably increase pressure on european regulators to meet and maybe trying to reach a decision the u.s. is planning on meeting us regulates upon meeting next week to discuss the results and whether they'll give approval to the drug and so. be very. unsurprising i wouldn't be surprised if donald trump starts the pressure and even more pressure on the regulation is there to try to to reach a decision he will want nice to be part of his legacy he's trying to take credit he's taking credit for what speed operation watch people just kind of really put accelerators on reaching getting a vaccine ready and he obviously wants this to kind of maybe be something his final weeks in office. matthew move to the real business thank you. let's take a look at the latest developments in this pandemic will start in germany where the country's public health institute has reported a record $487.00 deaths over 24 hours officials say they've been expecting daily deaths or trend upward following a steep increase in new infections. prime minister an attorney acosta has said securing a vaccine for all european countries will be a top priority when portugal takes over the european union's rotating presidency in january and the media reports say japan's planning to allowed large numbers of overseas visitors to attend next year's tokyo olympics without mandatory vaccinations or quarantine that's provided they submit negative covered test results and download tracking apps. not to hong kong but a call to sentence leading pro-democracy activists to joshua wont to a total of 13 to the hof months in jail for charges relating to last year's mass anti-government protests but the wall in 2 other pro-d
matthew more from d.w. business welcome matthew so was this decision expected well i think it was a surprise it will always come as a surprise i mean i think the speed of it is that in the copy pull off guard. look this is the moment we've all been waiting for this year and i think it suggests that is a bit of light at the end of the tunnel and ultimately this is about saying that as a vaccine which is 95 percent affects of against and inoculating against the coronavirus that works across all...
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Dec 27, 2020
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ow about her vert matthews -- herbert matthews that, man who invented fidel and you used that power to give voice to a group of individuals and their extend families. so could you tell us a little bit about that decision and whether as you got to know the people who opened up about their lives, did they still seem ordinary to you? >> well, let me start by saying it's lovely to be here and especially to be here with you, ruth. ruth and i know each other for a number of years and she was one of the spirit pipe i contacted when i began the project to get into a community and we had discussed various options,; just yesterday i received an e-mail through my website from hob some read the book and liked it and he sad just one re great. he by-ed i had put the author's note at the beginning of the book instead of the end, where it is in the book, and he felt he would have understood better what i was trying to do, but i think he actually missed the message there, because what i was trying to do really was to keep myself in the background, to be an on server, and -- observer and to give a kind
ow about her vert matthews -- herbert matthews that, man who invented fidel and you used that power to give voice to a group of individuals and their extend families. so could you tell us a little bit about that decision and whether as you got to know the people who opened up about their lives, did they still seem ordinary to you? >> well, let me start by saying it's lovely to be here and especially to be here with you, ruth. ruth and i know each other for a number of years and she was...
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Dec 30, 2020
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matthew van meter. matthew is the author of this incredible book, "deep delta justice." he will talk that with you in just a moment i give a great presentation and we will have conversation afterwards. bravely want to just introduce matthew has worked for some of the most prestigious publications in the country including the atlantic, the new republic, long read as well as the owl. is a graduate of middlebury college and columbia university one of the best journalism schools out there. he reports on criminal justice, teaches at the college for creative studies and works as an assistant director for shakespeare in prison. we have a lot to talk about tonight including the foundations of this book which i think really is an untold story of the civil rights era that a lot of people should know about. matthew, i'm going to headed over to you, and thank you for being a part of this tonight. >> thanks so much, jeremy. quickly, i went to the school of the arts at columbia which no less prestigious but a little us journalistic. anyway, thank you so much for the introduction. that's really a pleasure. so tonight i want to situate us in a place. i would introduce you some people at a want to talk about why that place unless people
matthew van meter. matthew is the author of this incredible book, "deep delta justice." he will talk that with you in just a moment i give a great presentation and we will have conversation afterwards. bravely want to just introduce matthew has worked for some of the most prestigious publications in the country including the atlantic, the new republic, long read as well as the owl. is a graduate of middlebury college and columbia university one of the best journalism schools out...
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Dec 7, 2020
12/20
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matthew 25, matthew 25 christian that's what i yam. i was hungry and you fed me and i was thirsty and you gave me something to drink and i was sick and you visited me. love your neighbor and that doesn't mean you get rid of your neighbors healthcare particular in the middle the pandemic. russ: greg. kelly loeffler: may i respond? russ: go ahead. kelly loeffler: i'm not going to be lectured by some but he uses the bible to justify abortion, to attack our men and women in the military, what is happening here someone who will not own up to their own record of division, he has called on americans to repent for their warship of whiteness, that is divisive, that is hurtful, he celebrated jeremiah wright anti-semite, he called israel an apartheid state, that is wrong for america and i will continue to make sure georgians understand that is him in his own words. russ: reverent please respond to the abortion issue in particular. raphael warnock: listen i have a profound reverence for life and abiding respect for choice, the question is whose decision is it. i happen to think that a patient's room is too small of a place for a woman, her doctor in the u.s. government, i think that's too many people in the room. but those who are concerned about life and i certainly am on to be focused on the incredibly high rates of infant mortality and maternal mortality in our country when compared to other developed nations. that something the government can work on and i've been working on in my entire career. russ: greg. kelly loeffler.greg: president s attacked governor kemp, he said he was ashamed to support him and even invited one of your formal rivals to run against him in 2022, was the president wrong to say that about the governor and are you concerned his comments can alienate republicans in georgia ahead of the runoffs? kelly loeffler: the president has the right to pursue every legal recourse to make sure this is a free and fair election in georgia and we know these audits have turned up thousands of votes that were initially uncounted and i have called for his signature audit and the buck stops with the secretary of state, he has to run an election that georgians trust because everything is at state on january 5, the future of the country, we can take past of supporting the american dream of standing the economy back up and getting to this virus together or the path of socialism that little girl ro rafael warnock's wants to take from our country, the private insurance from your jobs, turning your doctor's office into the dmv, he would open our borders, bring amnesty, free healthcare to illegal immigrants, none of that would help the pandemic and get kids back in school. i am not going to stand by and be lectured by someone who has not done anything for americans during this pandemic. greg: was the president wrong when he called the governors those remarks. kelly loeffler: i appreciate the president support of me and i appreciate the governor support of me. they both understand what's at stake in the selection, that's why they're encouraging georgians to get out and vote for david perdue and myself because were fighting for georgians every single day, were using our private sector insurance to make sure georgians get back to work and school and church to while the democrats pay politics, hold up relief and try to keep our country locked down. that is wrong. lisa: senator loeffler on that last question, president trump criticized your governor, governor brian kemp, he appointed you to the senate, you've criticized the election process as well, tonight can you tell us where your loyalty lies as you represent the state of georgia, is it with the governor kemp or president trump? kelly loeffler: lisa, my loyalties are with georgia, i had a calling to public service to serve the people of georgia, i have lived the american dream, i want to make sure every georgian can do that from going to working on a farm to waitressing, being the first in my family to graduate from college, i know the free enterprise is the way to lift everyone up, not socialism, not high taxes, not big government, not open borders, not the chaos of defending the police that the left wants, not the lockdowns. i making sure georgians know what is at stake on january 5. our way of life in georgia will radically change as promised by chuck schumer, now we take georgia then we change america. that's my number one focus, making sure georgians know what is at stake. i have served georgians every single day, it's been my honor and i will continue to do that. russ: if everything is at stake on january 5, that would presume president trump has lost, is that what you are saying? kelly loeffler: what's at stake is the senate majority, this will determine who brings bills to the senate for an under the republican senate, we have been able to deliver $3 trillion of relief to hard-working americans hard-hit by this pandemic to the front-line workers, hospitals, schools. we have to continue to make sure we open up our economy, the democrats want to keep this lockdown, they want to radically change our country and their agent of change as radical liberal rafael warnock, someone who is said to imagine police whose number one goal is to defend the police. we know the direction the country would take and we will continue to make sure that georgians understand our very way of life here in georgia and across the country is under attack by the left. russ: not to belabor the point but all the things your warning about not be happening presumably with president trump as president. it almost something you're conceding that that part of it has been settled and now it's important for the republicans to keep the majority in the senate to have a divided government? kelly loeffler: i saw firsthand that the senate as a shock absorber in this country, i saw that firsthand when i got to washington and the impeachment trial started. i saw the russia hoax and how that distracted us from addressing this virus, the democrats have played nothing but politics since day one, they never accepted that president trump was president, they were distracted from serving americans, they were distracted during the pandemic and now they use the pandemic to fundamentally change this country and put the cost of the government on the back of hard-working georgians, that's why i'm fighting to make sure that the republican majority is retained in the senate because we are the shock absorber for commonsense policies that bring americans together that lift everyone up, that provide a great educational choices for kids that stops the radical agenda of the abortion on demand the democrats want. it attacks our second amendment right. they want to take away our guns, they want to tax guns and they want to fundamentally change america and radical liberal rafael warnock is their agent of change. russ: greg time for your question. greg: democrats to win control of the u.s. senate, they will be pressure to increase the size of the u.s. supreme court, would you support adding more justices to the supreme court to offset president trump's appointments and you think there needs to be term limits for justice on the bench? raphael warnock: i want to point out that kelly loeffler actually voted to defend the police. she voted against the cops program, one of only ten united states senators who did. i don't think we should defund the police but we certainly do need criminal justice reform. we need to make sure that we have an independent review process when civilians die at the hands of police, we need to make sure that police and officers and departments that have a pattern of misconduct are held accountable. we can do that and celebrate police at the same time. as i move all across the state, people are not asking me about the courts and whether we should expand the courts, i know that's an interesting question for people inside the beltway to discuss but they are wondering when in the world they will get covid-19 relief, they haven't got any from kelly loeffler in months. when she had a chance to stand up for ordinary people she thought $600 was too much, meanwhile she was busy dumping millions of dollars of stock profiting from the pandemic, who does that. russgreg: i'm wondering can you answer the question, do you support expanding the supreme court? raphael warnock: i'm really not focused on it. and i think too often the politics in washington has been about the politicians. i am a pastor and so when i think about these issues i think about the people that i've had to stand with in the critical care units while their loved one was dying between life and death and not only are they concerned about the sickness there wondering how in the world they will pay for. if kelly loeffler has her way 1.8 million georgians with pre-existing conditions on these people hypertension, diabetes, folks who had a stroke, cancer, people who are recovering from covid would not be able to get healthcare. i think that is morally wrong and i it's my faith that actualy informs that. she can't explain why she wants to take away people's healthcare. she knows the junk healthcare plan that she rolled out has a loophole in a big enough to drive a mack truck through. she cannot explain that so she's trying to misrepresent my record. but the people georgia understand the truth. greg: senator 30 seconds please. kelly loeffler: you just heard radical liberal rafael warnock lie about my record, i never voted to deepen the police. i voted to support more funding that the democrats of course blocked. but he also is distracting from the fact that he would pack the supreme court. that is outrageous. justice ginsburg herself said nine justices is the right number. he would pack the court with radical justices that would legislate from the bench to fundamentally override the constitution and other laws in this country and georgians need to know, that is wrong for georgia and our country. russ: would you like 30 seconds to respond? raphael warnock: i believe in the constitution. this is the greatest system on the planet. and our country is the only country where my story is even possible. i believe in our norms, i believe in the separation of powers and i believe in the nonviolent, on chaotic transition of power. kelly loeffler auto stand with the people of georgia, the four greatest words ever spoken out of democracy are the people have spoken on the presidential election in their waiting on their senator to be focused on them. not the person in the white house. russ: lisa. lisa: senator loeffler, given all the police violence we have seen against african-americans, consider this. courtney owens of atlanta is worried about her son, her father and husband all african-americans, she fears for the lives daily. you called the black lives matter movement fascist, you alienated members of your own basketball team by talking about the stands there taking rather. is that still your view tonight after seeing and hearing how it hits home with so many people personally and what conversation would you sit down and have with courtney owens? kelly loeffler: the life of every african-american is important and there is no place for racism in this country. but there are organizations whose number one goal is to defend the police and we know that hurts minority communities more than anyone and we have to stand with our men and women of law enforcement and i will always do that. that is a distraction from the fact that my opponent does not stand with police officers, he is endorsed by organizations whose number one goal is to defend the police. he's called police officer's gangsters, thugs, bullies, territory children, he's called for our prisons to be opened up and emptied out pretty called for the abolishment of the cash bail system. he does not care about safety and security in any community and i am fighting to make sure we have the resources to keep our community safe in our police department well-funded and well-trained. russ: senator, thank you, would you like to respond? about opening up the deal? raphael warnock: first of all the land of the free is the mass incarceration capital of the world. we would house 25% of the world prisoners. and people on both sides of the aisle know that our current criminal justice system needs reform. and we saw that this summer, multiracial coalition of conscious pouring out into american streets after the tragic deaths of george floyd and breonna taylor and ahmaud are bree and so many others. and what did kelly loeffler do she used her enormous privilege and power as a united states senator to pick a fight with the black women on her team who know what it's like to grow up in a community where you have to have talks with your children, one about the birds and the bees and the other about what happens if you're pulled over by a police officer. to acknowledge that is to not condemn police officers in general, i have worked with police across the years, i have been invited to speak at the memorial services when they have lost their lives in the line of duty and she says she is against racism and racism has no place but she welcome the support of a q and conspiracy theorist and she sat down with a white supremacist for interview. i don't think she can explain that. russ: let me give you a chance to respond and then we will have one more question before we get to closing statements. kelly loeffler: that is incredibly sad these comments that he has made. first of all, there is not a racist bone in my body, i worked to bring communities together my entire life. but this is really terrible coming from someone who has divided people continually, he's called on rick americans to repent for their worship of whiteness and he's called israel an apartheid state and said we should and military assistant and he compared israelis defending themselves against palestinians compared them to birds of prey and celebrated jeremiah wright and anti-american and time summit that is divisive. greg: should members of congress be barred from trading stock? kelly loeffler: what is at stake here in the selection is the american dream, that's what's under attack, when they attack me for a lie, a left-wing media lie conspired with the democra democrats, this is an attack on every single georgian who gives up every day to work hard to provide a better life for their family, who wants to live the american dream. it is a distraction from the real issues not the conspiracies in the selection. what is at stake is the future of our country, our freedom to live the american dream, to not be taxed into bankruptcy, to not have to go into government healthcare, government run healthcare, they want to take away the healthcare that 180 million americans rely on through their work, that's why introduce the healthcare plan to make it more affordable, not government run healthcare that would bankrupt those that rely on medicare and i will continue to fight to keep her country free and keep our borders secure and make sure that our communities are safe and secure. russ: reverend you have an opportunity to respond. raphael warnock: the senator cannot explain why the people of georgia should send her back to the senate. so she has continued to misrepresent my record she has lied not only on me but on jes jesus. everybody is clear about what that passage is about in matthewn't serve two masters and she should've listened to the lesson. maybe she wouldn't be so focused on herself, she would be think about the people she is supposed to represent. i intend to center the concerns of the ordinary people that i've been running into all across the state particular he enrolled georgia. russ.kelly loeffler: i would lio respond. russ: were out of time i apologize that you will have a time for closing statement pre-that's all the time we offer questions. the candidates have 60 seconds for closing statement. senator loeffler you get to go first. kelly loeffler: thank you everyone who turned into this important debate, you can see what that state, there's two divisions for our country, mind, the mayor can dream, my opponent socialism. this is what's on the ballot january 5, the american dream, i was born and raised on a farm and group working in the field i built my career and became a job creator right here in georgia and i have been blessed to live the mayor can dr
matthew 25, matthew 25 christian that's what i yam. i was hungry and you fed me and i was thirsty and you gave me something to drink and i was sick and you visited me. love your neighbor and that doesn't mean you get rid of your neighbors healthcare particular in the middle the pandemic. russ: greg. kelly loeffler: may i respond? russ: go ahead. kelly loeffler: i'm not going to be lectured by some but he uses the bible to justify abortion, to attack our men and women in the military, what is...
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matthew chance is live in london. matthew, good to see you. i cannot even -- i really can't fathom what new year's eve. it is new year's eve right now in britain, and what that's going to look like. and, you know, boris johnson illustrating the fact, cases have gone up 40%, in one week, alone. >> yes, that's right. it's a real dire situation that the united kingdom is experiencing, at the moment. it's not been business as usual when it comes to the holiday period. christmas was, you know, a very subdued affair. and the authorities are making it clear that they want to make sure that people conform to the very severe restrictions that have been imposed across -- across three-quarters of the entire country over the -- you know, recently. and to make sure that people don't have new year's parties. and see in the new year, in the way that they would -- would normally do. covid loves crowds, is one of the messages that's come out from the medical authorities here to try and encourage people to stay at home. not to circulate beyond their immediate, sort of, family, household, groups. which is a message, which i think, you know, everybody in the country hopes the majority of people will stick to. there are similar measures, of course, that have been imposed not just here in britain, but elsewhere in europe. france has tight restrictions that's imposed -- it's deployed tens of thousands of troops or will be deploying tens of thousands of police, rather, on the streets of the country to impose restrictions there, and a curfew. germany, italy, turkey, they're all imposing these restrictions. on the flip side, though, there is some positive news, which is this new vaccine from oxford university and astrazeneca. has finally been approved by britain and that's expected to be approved elsewhere, as well, paula. >> yeah. and to give someone -- people some hope, britain has been doing relatively well in getting those vaccines out. matthew chance, happy new year and good to see you. matthew chance there in london. >> same to you. >> frantically, busy day. really, one of the busiest in the uk. it, right now, the uk, closed with the passage of the post-brexit trade agreement. now, more than four years of debate and negotiation are, finally, ending. hallelujah. ended late, wednesday, when lawmakers approved the deal and the queen gave her ascent. salma abdelaziz, in london, has the details. you know, so much to take in in britain, today, salma. i'm really interested to hear from you, and how people in britain are reacting to this news. >> it was definitely a very -- news day here yesterday, as you just heard from my colleague, matthew chance. really, a chapter that has plagued this country for four and a half years finally closed. finally, moving on. brexit trade deal signed but it comes at a time when more uncertainty isn't needed. paula, prime minister boris johnson touting this as a victory, yesterday. saying this is so
matthew chance is live in london. matthew, good to see you. i cannot even -- i really can't fathom what new year's eve. it is new year's eve right now in britain, and what that's going to look like. and, you know, boris johnson illustrating the fact, cases have gone up 40%, in one week, alone. >> yes, that's right. it's a real dire situation that the united kingdom is experiencing, at the moment. it's not been business as usual when it comes to the holiday period. christmas was, you know,...
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matthew chance for us in london. thanks so much, matthew. let's get more on this. dr. peter drobak is an infectious disease and global health expert at the university of oxford here in london. good morning to you. great to see you once again. before we talk about the vaccine we just heard matthew chance talk about that's been approved i want to get your take first on the sobering covid numbers out of the uk. how worried are you about the surge of cases as well as deaths? particularly this new variant that seems to be running rampant. >> well, i'm extremely concerned. and the numbers as we've just heard are really alarming. we have more patients in hospital now in the uk than at any time during this pandemic, and we haven't yet seen the effects of any christmas household mixing that would have occurred last week. it's clear that this variant is becoming the dominant strain because it spreads more easily. so most of the new cases we're seeing are of this new variant. and while it's not more deadly, if one were to get infected with it, the fact that it is so much more infectious and spreading more quickly means that it's going to lead to many more hospitalizations and deaths. what's really important is if you look back over the last couple of months as this new variant has emerge
matthew chance for us in london. thanks so much, matthew. let's get more on this. dr. peter drobak is an infectious disease and global health expert at the university of oxford here in london. good morning to you. great to see you once again. before we talk about the vaccine we just heard matthew chance talk about that's been approved i want to get your take first on the sobering covid numbers out of the uk. how worried are you about the surge of cases as well as deaths? particularly this new...
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matthew hickman: it's one of the most critical pieces of information we can collect about the police in a-- stephen: dr. matthew hickman chairs the department of criminal justice at seattle university. matthew: we really do need systemic data collection to help establish the reality of police use of force. stephen: five years ago, dr. hickman teamed with a private company called police strategies, also based in seattle, to begin tracking data showing how, when, and where police use force. matthew: with these data, we can start to understand how use of force incidents evolve, and hopefully lead to better policies and training so that we can try to minimize injury. bob scales: so, you can't have an evidence-based policy or evidence-based training if you have no data to back it up. stephen: bob scales is a former prosecutor and assistant director for seattle's public safety department. he helped found police strategies. bob: without the data to back it up and see a before and after of the training, we don't know if the training has had any impact on how officers behave and how they use force. stephen: for example, separate research conducted by the use of force project shows that police depart
matthew hickman: it's one of the most critical pieces of information we can collect about the police in a-- stephen: dr. matthew hickman chairs the department of criminal justice at seattle university. matthew: we really do need systemic data collection to help establish the reality of police use of force. stephen: five years ago, dr. hickman teamed with a private company called police strategies, also based in seattle, to begin tracking data showing how, when, and where police use force....
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matthew in arkansas >> hey jim it is matthew calling from arrange arkansas, first of all time and long time i want to give you a six out out. you kpugss suggestions -- very d >> let's go to work. >> yes, i got a long outlook from the new numt from the ped have me excited. i think he's a real smart guys now he's going and don't forget. they anyway not be the capital of the guys. snoo let's go to sofia in florida >> i have my daughter, i want to ask you a question >> booyah! >> how do you g to work together >> i am sophia, i am from florida. i have two things, first, my grandmother thinks i am hot. >> never too late, let me tell you some >> should my dad buy mastemastec >> you tell your grandma i am spoken >> let's gos to matthewessee. >> jimmy in the house. >> i am thinking with all the infrastructure coming from governments around the world to get people back to work even though we have seen the stock nearly doubled, do you think caterpillar is a buy >> it is a few industrial. this one could go to 200 let's go to gary in ohio >> happy holiday, jim, go bucks! >> i love the bucks. >> what's up >> jim, i am calling about vdlr. it drops today, is it a buy? >> obviously there is so many in the same space >> i like that one let's get to one that really fell apart >> let's go to steve in california, please >> steve >> thanks for having me on the show >> of course >> calling from california, my question for you is about as stock that seems to be flying south. i am talking about tubberware. >> i have no idea why, things were okay. it was a play on empowerment i have decided that this is too hard to own. if i bought it to lower level, i would be thinking of, dave, from pennsylvania dave >> booyah, jim >> first time ca
matthew in arkansas >> hey jim it is matthew calling from arrange arkansas, first of all time and long time i want to give you a six out out. you kpugss suggestions -- very d >> let's go to work. >> yes, i got a long outlook from the new numt from the ped have me excited. i think he's a real smart guys now he's going and don't forget. they anyway not be the capital of the guys. snoo let's go to sofia in florida >> i have my daughter, i want to ask you a question >>...
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matthew springer, not having received seconds of the other nominations. is that correct? ok. so the following vote will be conducted by a show of hands. all those in favor of matthew springer please raise your hand and keep it raised until we have counted everyone. of hands to nominate matthew stringer as chair. that is correct, not having received a second nomination on the other nomination. all right. by a vote of 36-2, i now recognize the honorable chair, matthew stringer. if you would please come forward to conduct the remainder of the meeting. [applause] chair stringer: if you all would give me one moment. thank you so much. good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. let me first start by saying thank you. it is my distinguished honor to receive your support to serve as the presiding officer of this historic delegation. as chairman of the electoral college, the next order of business will be the election of the secretary of the meeting for the presidential electors. the floor is now open for nominations for secretary of the meeting. do i hear any nominations? >> chairman stringer, i am sean o'brien. naomi narvaiz be nominated as secretary of the meeting. chair stringer: is there a second? please come down to the podium. >> chairman stringer, i moved to second the nomination
matthew springer, not having received seconds of the other nominations. is that correct? ok. so the following vote will be conducted by a show of hands. all those in favor of matthew springer please raise your hand and keep it raised until we have counted everyone. of hands to nominate matthew stringer as chair. that is correct, not having received a second nomination on the other nomination. all right. by a vote of 36-2, i now recognize the honorable chair, matthew stringer. if you would...
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matthew chance joins us now with more. matthew, for some time i know there has been plenty of skepticism about the numbers coming out and what relates to covid. break it down for us. what's the reality on the ground? why is it taking so long to actually acknowledge these numbers? >> reporter: yeah, well, isa, we've known for a long time that the actual numbers of people who have been -- died with covid-19 are far greater than the official figures that have been put out on a daily basis from the monitoring centers in russia. that skepticism has been backed up by the social media video that we've seen coming out of russia, of overflowing morgues, bodies strewn everywhere simply through a lack of space. through the crammed hospital wards. across the vast country. simply don't have enough room to take patients in. you know, the testimony of front line medical workers who have spoken to us about how many people are dying and how that doesn't represent the reality of the -- doesn't represent the reality of what's going on. the deputy prime minister acknowledging that of the excess deaths over the past 11 months, the duration of the pandemic, in the region of 229,000 people, 81% of that figure, she says, is related to covid-19. that would make it, she said, the actual death toll in russia, not 56,000, which is bad enough, which is what the official figure is, but more like, you know, 156,000, which would make it the third highest death toll in the world. >> given these numbers, these shocking numbers, matthew, how is the government even reacting? what is their assessment or their handling of the pandemic? >> reporter: i think the russians would give themselves a very high rating in the fact that they were the first in the world to register a vaccine. the sputnik vaccine was approved for use in the general public, even before phase 3 human trials had come to an end. they've been i think relatively slow in rolling that out given that it's been out there since august. they've had some problems in their production facilities, but they have been vaccinating vulnerable groups like front line medical workers, teachers, starting mass vaccinations now amongst the general public. the russians would say they've done a relatively good job. when you add to that the lack of transparen transparency, i xi you has i th to take a different view. >> matthew chance for us in london. thank you. >>> we'll take you to the u.s. where so far over 2 million americans have received their first dose of the coronaviru
matthew chance joins us now with more. matthew, for some time i know there has been plenty of skepticism about the numbers coming out and what relates to covid. break it down for us. what's the reality on the ground? why is it taking so long to actually acknowledge these numbers? >> reporter: yeah, well, isa, we've known for a long time that the actual numbers of people who have been -- died with covid-19 are far greater than the official figures that have been put out on a daily basis...
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matthew 25. i am a matthew 25 christian. that is what i am. i was hungry and you fed me. i was thirsty and you gave me something to drink. i was sick and you visited me. love your neighbor. for me, that means you don't get rid of your neighbors health care in the middle of a pandemic. sen. loeffler: may i respond? look, i'm not going to be lectured by someone that uses the bible to justify abortion to attack our men and women in the military. you know, what is happening here is someone who will not own up to their own record of division. he has called on americans to repent for their worship of whiteness. that is divisive. that is hurtful. he celebrated jeremiah right, anti-semite. he called israel an apartheid state. that is wrong for america and i am going to continue to make sure georgians understand that that is him in his own words. russ: please respond to the abortion issue in particular. rev. warnock: listen, i have a profound reverence for life and an abiding respect for choice. the question is whose decision is it? i happen to think that a patient's room is too small a place for a woman, her doctor, and the u.s. government. it's too many people in the room. but those who are concerned about life, and i certainly am, ought to be focused on the incredibly high rates of infant mortality and maternal mature mortality inrnal our country compared to other nations. that is something the government should work on and i have been working on it my entire career. greg: president trump has attacked your closest political ally as hapless, said he was ashamed to support him, and invited a rival to run against him in 2022. are you concerned his comments could alienate some republicans in georgia ahead of the runoffs? sen. loeffler: the president has the right to pursue every legal recourse to make sure that this was a free and fair election in georgia and we know that these audits have turned out thousands of votes that were initially uncounted and i have called for a signature audit and the buck stops with the secretary of state. he has to run an election that georgians trust because everything is at stake on january 5. we can take the path of standing the economy back up and getting through this virus together or we can take the path of socialism that radical liberal rafael warnock wants to bring to our country, increasing our taxes, taking away the private insurance to get out your jobs, and replacing it with government run health care, turning your doctor's office into the dmv. would open our borders, grant amnesty, give we health care to illegal immigrants, and none of that will help us solve this pandemic and get the economy back on its feet and get kids back in school, but i will not stand by and be lectured by someone that has not done anything for americans during this pandemic. greg: was the president wrong when he called the governor those remarks? sen. loeffler: i appreciate the president's support of me and i appreciate the governor's support of me. they both understand what is at stake in this election. that is why they are encouraging georgians to get out and vote for david perdue and myself because we are fighting for georgians every single day, using our private sector experience to make sure georgians get back to work and school and church while the democrats play politics, holdup relief, and try to keep our country locked down. that is just wrong. on that lasting question, president trump ,riticized your governor governor brian kemp. he appointed you to the senate. you criticized the election process as well so tonight, can you tell us where your loyalty lies as you vie to represent the state of georgia. is it with governor kemp or president trump? sen. loeffler: my loyalties are with georgia. i had a calling to public service, to serve the people of georgia. i have lived the american dream. i want to make sure every georgian can do that, from going and working on a farm, from waitressing, being the first and my family to graduate from college, i know that, you know, free enterprise is the way to lift everyone out, not socialism, not high taxes, not big government, not open borders, not the chaos of defunding the police that the left wants, not the lockdowns. i am making sure that georgians know what is at stake on january 5. our way of life right here in georgia will radically change as promised by chuck schumer. now, we take georgia. then we change america. that is my number one focus, making sure that georgians know what is at stake. i have served georgians every single day. it has been my honor, and i will continue to do that. stake,f everything is at that would presume that president trump has lost. is that what you are saying? sen. loeffler: what is at stake is the senate majority. this will determine who brings bills to the senate floor. we have been able to deliver $3 trillion of relief to hard-working americans hard-hit by this pandemic, to front-line workers, to hospitals, to schools. have to continue to make sure we open up our economy. the democrats want to keep this locked down. they want to radically change our country and their agent of change is radical agent rafael warnock, someone who is said to reimagine police, endorsed by organizations whose number one goal is to defund the police. we know the direction the country would take and we will continue to make sure that georgians understand that our very way of life here in georgia and across the country is under attack by the left. greg: not to believe the -- belabor the point, but all of those things would not happen with president trump as president so it sounds as though you are conceding that that part of it has been that old, and now, it's important for the republicans to keep the majority in the senate, to have a divided government. sen. loeffler: i saw firsthand that the senate is the shock absorber in this country and i saw that firsthand when i got to washington and the impeachment trial started. i saw the russia hoax and how that distracted us from addressing this virus. the democrats have played nothing but politics since day one. they have never accepted that president trump was president. they were distracted from serving americans. they were distracted during the pandemic, and now, they used pandemic to fundamentally change this country and put the cost of big government on the back of hard-working georgians. that's why i am fighting to make sure that the republican majority is retained in the senate because we are the shock absorber for policies that bring americans together, that lift everyone up, that provides for great educational choices for kids, that stops the radical agenda of the abortion on demand that democrats want. that attacks our second amendment rights. they want to take away our guns. they want to tax guns. they want to fundamentally change america. and rafael warnock is their agent of change. if democratsrnock, to win control, they will be pressured to increase the size of the u.s. supreme court. would you support adding more justices to offset trump's recent appointments and do you think there needs to be term limits for justices on the bench? rev. warnock: i want to point out that kelly loeffler actually voted to defund the police. she voted against the comps program, one of only 10 united states senators who did. i don't think we should defund the police. but we certainly do need criminal justice reform. we need to make sure that we have an independent review process when civilians die at the hands of police. we need to make sure that police and officers and departments that have a pattern of misconduct are held accountable. we can do that and celebrate police at the same time. and as i move on across the state, people are not asking me about the courts and whether we should expand the courts. i know that is an interesting question for people inside the beltway to discuss, but they are wondering when in the world are they going to get some covid-19 relief? they have not gotten any from kelly loeffler in months and when she had a chance to stand up for ordinary people, she bought $600 -- she thought $600 was too much. meanwhile, she was busy dumping millions of dollars of stock, profiting from a pandemic. who does that? sen. loeffler: i would like to respond please. >> i'm wondering if you can answer the question, do you support expanding the supreme court? rev. warnock: i am really not focused on it. often, the that, too politics in washington has been about the politicians. i am a pastor, so when i think about these issues, i think about the people that i have had to stand with in the critical care units while their loved ones dying or between life and debt, and not only are they concerned about the sickness, they are wondering how in the world they are going to pay for it. if kelly loeffler has her way, 1.8 million georgians with pre-existing conditions, people with hypertension, diabetes, stroke, cancer, people who are recovering from covid, would not be able to get health care. i think that is morally wrong. that actuallyaith informs that. she cannot explain why she wants to take away people's health care. she knows that that junk health care plan she rolled out has a loophole in it big enough to drive a mack truck through. she cannot explain that so she is trying to misrepresent my record but the people of georgia understand -- they understand the truth. you justfler: look, heard radical liberal rafael warnock lie about my record. i have never voted to defund the police. in fact, i voted to support more funding that the democrats of course blocked. he also is distracting from the fact that he would pack the supreme court. that is outrageous. justice ginsburg herself said nine justices is the right number. he would pack the court with radical justices that would legislate from the bench to fundamentally override the constitution and our laws in this country and georgians need to know that is wrong for georgia and our country. >> would you like 30 seconds to respond? rev. warnock: i believe in the constitution. this is the greatest system on the planet. is the onlyry country where my story is even possible. i believe in our norms. i believe in the separation of powers. and i believe in the nonviolent, un-chaotic transition of power. kelly ought to stand with the people of georgia. the four greatest words are "the people have spoken." the people have spoken on the presidential election and they are waiting on their senator to be focused on them, not the person in the white house. senator leffler, given all the police violence we have seen against african-americans, consider this, courtney owens of atlanta is worried about her son, her father, and her husband. she fears for their lives daily. you have called the black lives matter movement "fascist." you alienated members of your own basketball team by talking about that stance or taking that stance. is that still your view tonight after seeing and hearing how it hits home with so many people personally, and what conversation would you sit down and have with courtney owens? everyoeffler: the life of african-american is important, and there is no place for racism in this country. but there are organizations whose number one goal is to defund the police, and we know that that hurts minority communities more than anyone, and we have to stand with our men and women of law enforcement, and i will always do that. you know, that is a distraction from the fact that my opponent does not stand with police officers. he is endorsed by organizations whose number one goal is to defund the police. he called police officers, thugs, bullies, a threat to our children. he called for our prisons to be opened up and emptied out. he has called for the abolishment of the cash bail system. he does not care about safety and security in any community, and i am fighting to make sure we have the resources to keep our communities safe and our police departments well-funded and well-trained. russ: senator, would you like to respond -- senator, thank you would you like to respond? -- senator, thank you. would you like to respond? rev. warnock: the land of the free is the mass incarceration capital in the world. we warehouse 25% of the world's prisoners, and people on both sides of the aisle know that our current criminal justice system needs reform. and we saw that this summer. a multiracial coalition of conscience pouring out into american streets after the tragic death of george floyd and breonna taylor. ahmaud arbery in so many others. what did kelly loeffler do? she used her norma's privilege and power as a united -- and rmous privilege and power as a united states senator to pick a fight with the black women on her team. you have to have two talks with their children as a black person, one about the birds and bees, and another about what happens when you are pulled over by police officers. to acknowledge that is not to condemn police officers in general. i have worked with police across the years. i have been invited to speak at their memorial services when they have lost their lives in the line of duty. and she says she is against racism and that racism has no place, but she welcomed the support of a qanon conspiracy theorist, and she sat down with a white supremacist for an interview. i don't think she can explain that. sen. loeffler: may i respond? >> let me give you a chance to respond and then we'll have one last question before we get the closing statements. please. sen. loeffler: that is incredibly sad, these comments he made. i mean, first of all, there is not a racist bone in my body. i have worked to bring communities together my entire life. but this is really terrible coming from someone who has divided people continually. he has called on americans to repent for their worship of whiteness. he has called israel an apartheid state and said we should end military assistance. he compared israelis defending themselves against palestinians, compared them to birds of prey. he celebrated jeremiah wright, an anti-american anti-semite. that is evasive. greg: senator -- that is divisive. greg: senator, should members of congress be barred from trading stocks? sen. loeffler: look, what is at stake here in this election is the american dream. that is what is under attack. when they attack me for a lie, a left-wing media lie, conspired with the democrats lie, this is an attack on every single torch and who gets up every single day to work hard and provide a better life for their family, who wants to live the american dream. it's a distraction from the real issues, not the conspiracies in this election. what is at stake is the future of our country. our freedoms to live the american dream, to not be taxed into bankruptcy, to have to go -- to not have to go into government run health care. they want to take away the health care that americans rely on through their work. that's why i introduced a health-care plan to make it more affordable, not government run health care that would bankrupt those that rely on medicare. i will continue to fight to keep our country free, to keep our borders secure, and make sure that our communities are safe and secure. russ: reverend, you have an opportunity to respond. rev. warnock: and so she has continued to misrepresent my record. ,he has lied about not only me but jesus. everybody is clear about what that passage is about. in matthewyou cannot serve two masters. she should have listened to the lesson. maybe she would not be so focused on herself. she would be thinking about the people she is supposed to represent. i intend to center the concerns of the ordinary people i have been running into all across this state, particularly in rural georgia. sen. loeffler: i would like to respond. russ: we are out of time. you will have a chance for a closing statement. candidates now have 60 seconds for a closing statement. senator leffler, you get to go first. sen. loeffler: thank you to everyone who tuned into this important debate. you can see what is at stake. there are two visions for our country. mind, the american dream. my opponent, socialism. this is what is on the ballot. january 5. the american dream. i grew up working in the fields. i built my career and became a job creator right here in georgia and i have been blessed to live the american dream. chuck schumer said it best. now, we take georgia, and then we chang
matthew 25. i am a matthew 25 christian. that is what i am. i was hungry and you fed me. i was thirsty and you gave me something to drink. i was sick and you visited me. love your neighbor. for me, that means you don't get rid of your neighbors health care in the middle of a pandemic. sen. loeffler: may i respond? look, i'm not going to be lectured by someone that uses the bible to justify abortion to attack our men and women in the military. you know, what is happening here is someone who will...
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Dec 15, 2020
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matthew stringer from congressional district 11 he nominated for the chair of the proceedings. is there a second nomination for matthew stringer? please come forward to the podium to provide your name and congressional district to second the motion if you are able to do so. >> from the 18th congressional district second the motion for matthewinger from congressional district 11 be nominated to be presiding chair. >> thank you. do i hear any further nominations for the position of chair? yes, come forward. >> i move that richard tex hall be nominated as chair for the proceedings. a second for the nomination of richard tex hall please come forward. are there any further nominations for the position of chair? yes? come forward. >> madam speaker, from congressional district 29 nominating randy orr, congressional district 29. >> thank you. is there a second? do i hear a second? anyone seconding the motion please come forward. are there any other nominations for chair? if so, please come forward or raise your hand if you're unable to walk to the podium. all right. one of three nominations which has been seconded. motion to close nominations for position of chair of this meeting? thank you. would you mind coming to the podium to close it? i want to make sure we get everything in the record. thank you. >> dave gephardt, congressio
matthew stringer from congressional district 11 he nominated for the chair of the proceedings. is there a second nomination for matthew stringer? please come forward to the podium to provide your name and congressional district to second the motion if you are able to do so. >> from the 18th congressional district second the motion for matthewinger from congressional district 11 be nominated to be presiding chair. >> thank you. do i hear any further nominations for the position of...
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Dec 30, 2020
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matthew chance in london. thank you very much, matthew. good to see you. >>> that wraps up this hour of "cnn newsroom." isa suarez. i'll be back with more breaking news out of the u.k. in just a few minutes. stay with us. robinhood believes now is the time to do money. without the commission fees. so, you can start investing today wherever you are - even hanging with your dog. so, what are you waiting foro? download now and get your first stock on us. robinhood. want to sell the best burger add an employee.ode? or ten... then easily and automatically pay your team and file payroll taxes. that means... world domination! or just the west side. run payroll in less than five minutes with intuit quickbooks. >>> a new ray of hope. the u.k. approves the oxford astrazeneca coronavirus vaccine. the country's health secretary predicts a path out of the pandemic by spring. >>> sounding the alarm. the u.s. president-elect joe biden says the president's vaccine plans are falling short. >>> and an historic vote. scenes of celebration and disappointment as argentina moves to legalize abortion. hello and a very warm w
matthew chance in london. thank you very much, matthew. good to see you. >>> that wraps up this hour of "cnn newsroom." isa suarez. i'll be back with more breaking news out of the u.k. in just a few minutes. stay with us. robinhood believes now is the time to do money. without the commission fees. so, you can start investing today wherever you are - even hanging with your dog. so, what are you waiting foro? download now and get your first stock on us. robinhood. want to sell...
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matthew, thanks so much. appreciate it. you harrison, morgan stanley had a biotech research -- matthew harrison, morgan stanley had a.iotech research we now know that president elect biden -- morgan stanley head of biotech research. we have some bricking news. we now know that president elect biden will be choosing the first woman to be the secretary of defense. femaleg news, his first se (announcer) do you want to reduce stress? shed pounds? do you want to flatten your stomach? do all that and more in just 10 minutes a day with aerotrainer, the total body fitness solution that uses its revolutionary ergonomic design to help you to maintain comfortable, correct form. that means better results in less time. you can do an uncomfortable, old-fashioned crunch or an aerotrainer super crunch. turn regular planks into turbo planks without getting down on the floor. and there are over 20 exercises to choose from. incredible for improving flexibility and perfect for enhancing yoga and pilates. and safe for all fitness levels. get gym results at home in just 10 minutes a day. no expensive machines, no expensive memberships. ge
matthew, thanks so much. appreciate it. you harrison, morgan stanley had a biotech research -- matthew harrison, morgan stanley had a.iotech research we now know that president elect biden -- morgan stanley head of biotech research. we have some bricking news. we now know that president elect biden will be choosing the first woman to be the secretary of defense. femaleg news, his first se (announcer) do you want to reduce stress? shed pounds? do you want to flatten your stomach? do all that and...
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matthew harris joins us now he's a clinical senior lecturer and public health at the imperial college london matthew so glad you can join us now you've written and the scientific journal nature about how the response occulted 19 has been distinguished by so-called frugal innovations what exactly does that mean well thank you through litigation really is the term that we give to the kind of innovation we see in the resource constrained sort of situations of extraordinary time pressure or situations where we don't have the kind of resources that we normally like to have when we where we develop health care innovations the work froogle often times is referred to as sort of cheap or good enough innovation that actually frugal innovation is health care to patients that's actually as effective as the kind of innovation you would normally see but just in a way that is far more for the ball far more sustainable maybe if you are sort of complexity or functionality but that gets the job and undercoat it of course we've seen around the world some extraordinary difficult situations at national level in terms of exposing the fragilities in our healthcare systems but also the real increase in healthcare demands and it really has necessitated a new type of innovating in innovating that pace rapidly using resources that we just find around us so kind of improvising if you are 'd. this is the kind of innovation that we call frugal innovation so it's about reacting quickly using what you have but do you have any examples of what a frugal innovation could be. well absolutely in the early days of the covert response we saw insincerity helping countries and really interesting examples of frugal innovations so for example where there was a lack of personal protective equipment we saw clinicians improvise the use of simple acetate sheets kind of such as to say she's used to overhead projectors in the old days and by simply putting some holes in either side of the essay sheeting threading some ribbon on either side those became very effective face vices to protect not only the clinician but also the patients in front of them when they were interfacing and this was of course extremely cheap and actually very very effective since then baseball is a vote and become more sophisticated but it was a very good example of a frugal innovation at the time another good example of innovating at a pace was the construction of hospitals and on the 10 days in china 'd that actually eventually also in the u.k. where i'm from we saw the construction or repurchasing at least of conference center has ensued into intensive care units and hospitals also in very very short amount of time as a sort of idea of repurchasing the resources you have but also very very quickly the characteristic of frugal innovation now that the crisis has focused minds and mobilize so much in terms of responses as he told us there is also kind of dying down side to this kind of concentration of response to the crisis. well i think the pope it obviously has recorded a deviation of resources from other health care to focus our attention on covert response and as a result some other areas have have if you like suffered in terms of research going into them and also the health care delivery the different clinical conditions i don't think there's a downside to frugal innovation and i think it's been a really revealing how we've been able to develop such effective health care responses in a short period of time. without spending on safety checks or effectiveness or clinical effectiveness or for the patients that we serve so i don't see a downside to truly innovation which tends to be for fordable the healthcare systems as long as the necessary checks and balances are in place to ensure the safety of those devices or technologies you've written that this kind of innovation could lead to a leveling in global health care equality what does that look like. what is the level in the sense that it has made us really reflect on the fragilities in the health systems even in the high income countries settings and it's made us pay much more attention to the kind of innovations that arise from the low income countries it's something we've been up the pace in for many years and what code is doing is making us pay more attention to settings that traditionally we haven't really noticed in terms of healthcare innovation thank you matthew harris there talking about putting human resource lowness at the center of our cove in 1000 response is a clinical senior lecturer and public health at imperial college london thank you for your insights. and now it's time for one of your ascent and questions about the corona virus our science correspondent derek williams is ready with an answer. taking into account to patients sex and age what do the statistics say about complications. one of the clearest pieces of information that's come out of the statistics is that from the age of about 40 on women in general are a lot less likely than men to have severe outcomes data from both the c.d.c. and the european center for disease prevention and control a reveal how stark the difference is this graphic for example emphasizes how much more likely men of a certain age are to end up in the hospital or the i.c.u. numbers of men are represented by the blue bar and a numbers of women by the red one in europe men between 40 and 80 make up aroun
matthew harris joins us now he's a clinical senior lecturer and public health at the imperial college london matthew so glad you can join us now you've written and the scientific journal nature about how the response occulted 19 has been distinguished by so-called frugal innovations what exactly does that mean well thank you through litigation really is the term that we give to the kind of innovation we see in the resource constrained sort of situations of extraordinary time pressure or...
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matthew morrison who's joining us now. matthew, good morning. >> good morning. broadway's own al roker. >> hardly, but thank you, matthew. bunch of stage shows but what was it like when you're being offered this iconic role from animation to the movies with jim carrey what was that feeling for you when you were offered the role >> terrifying. you know, it's such an iconic character. and this role is one of those roles that you can kind of anything goes and you can be as big and imaginative as possible. after not working for eight months, i was so excited and ready for the task and it was terrifying and thrilling and just liberating all at the same time i had so much fun getting into that green suit every day. >> i was going to say what was it like getting into makeup, into character and into that suit was it physically challenging? >> i lost a lot of weight honestly you know, it was so funny. it follows me everywhere, the grinch it's like whoa, whoa, hold on. excuse me. no, it was three and a half hours to get into the makeup, an hour to take it off and i only had to do that about five times in total because we rehearsed
matthew morrison who's joining us now. matthew, good morning. >> good morning. broadway's own al roker. >> hardly, but thank you, matthew. bunch of stage shows but what was it like when you're being offered this iconic role from animation to the movies with jim carrey what was that feeling for you when you were offered the role >> terrifying. you know, it's such an iconic character. and this role is one of those roles that you can kind of anything goes and you can be as big...
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matthew moore from the w. business is here to tell us more welcome matthew so let's start with the distribution when does that start how's it going to work well obviously there's a huge huge moment in there the lifetime of this the whole for this year really vaccinations will start for next week so by on tech of said that they will begin delivering vaccinations this week the u.k. government says that they will be distributed next week and obviously they're going to have you given to the most needy fossil care home residents health care workers and the extremely vulnerable to those in high risk groups in all the u.k. has ordered 40000000 doses that's for 20000000 people but this is an incredible achievement the fastest this is a fast and fast this vaccine ever produced the closest it comes to is the months vaccine which was i think 4 years and all in the planning so it's a huge moment historic moment but people just have to wait a few days longer but i think we can manage ok so approval in the u.k. only at this stage what does that mean as far as its bid for approval in the u.s. and the e.u. goes so the moment
matthew moore from the w. business is here to tell us more welcome matthew so let's start with the distribution when does that start how's it going to work well obviously there's a huge huge moment in there the lifetime of this the whole for this year really vaccinations will start for next week so by on tech of said that they will begin delivering vaccinations this week the u.k. government says that they will be distributed next week and obviously they're going to have you given to the most...
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Dec 3, 2020
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matthew chance is live for us in moscow. matthew, nice to see you this morning. now, the kremlin says more than 100,000 people have already been vaccinated. so what gives, why is putin wanting to ramp things up all of a sudden? >> reporter: well, i mean like other countries around the world, russia is desperate to end this pandemic as soon as it can. it's trying to cast itself as at the forefront of efforts to do that. and so for instance, it was the first country in the world to register for use its own vaccine sputnik v, that was registered for use back in august. the russian health officials that have been talking publicly in the past 24 hours saying now 100,000 people at least already have been vaccinated in this country, and that includes people who were taking part trials, but also includes front line health care workers, members of the military. there's a big program underway to inoculate people from the russian armed services. separately to that, vladimir putin, the russian president has ordered a large scale vaccination to take place. he says they produced 2 million doses of sputnik v, that covid-19 vaccine already. there are many millions of more doses that are on the production lines now, and are going to be rolling off in the weeks and months ahead, and that's going to start officially from next week, although we have just heard within the past few minutes from the moscow authorities that mass vaccination centers are going to be set up from december the 5th in this country, and so russia is really pushing forward as fast as it can to get people vaccinated with its vaccine, and to bring to a close this devastating pandemic. >> matthewdo you know anything about how this hundred thousand, how it went for them. obviously so many questions about moscow rolling this out quicker than everybody else. do we know anything about how that's gone for them? >> reporter: of course there's a lot of concern around the world about has russia moved too quickly. it was the first to register the vaccine, is it safe, is it effective. all we can say is that the scientific results that have been presented, you know, on big international kind of medical journals like the lancet and peer reviewed. they have been quite positive in the sense they say sputnik v so far provides a strong antibody response and has no serious adverse effects. the big concern is that the test group, the people involved in the trial has been a much smaller group than other pharmaceutical companies have embark embarked on. >> matthew, thank you so much for breaking that down for us. appreciate it. >>> quick programming note for you, tomorrow night with vaccines on t
matthew chance is live for us in moscow. matthew, nice to see you this morning. now, the kremlin says more than 100,000 people have already been vaccinated. so what gives, why is putin wanting to ramp things up all of a sudden? >> reporter: well, i mean like other countries around the world, russia is desperate to end this pandemic as soon as it can. it's trying to cast itself as at the forefront of efforts to do that. and so for instance, it was the first country in the world to register...
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matthew whitaker who trump installed, again, for like five minutes, the one with the company accused of fraud that marketed toilets for big men. matthew whitaker, he was attorney general for a minute. and then of course matthew whitaker's successor, william barr who is reportedly eyeing the exits, potentially considering quitting even before inauguration day next month. you think about the consequences of that, that presumably would give president trump the opportunity to name, like, his daughter tiffany to be the next attorney general before he finally leaves office. or maybe that lady who he has been having unleash the kraken in his lawsuits to contest him losing the election. maybe she'll be attorney general for a day if bill barr leaves before biden is sworn in. today william barr's disastrous legacy as attorney general was given another black mark when a federal judge in washington, d.c. formally acknowledged president trump's pardon of trump national security adviser mike flynn. you'll recall that mike flynn twice pled guilty to lying to investigators about his contacts with the russian government about sanctions. but trump has pardoned him. that makes that whole case and that whole -- that whole guilt
matthew whitaker who trump installed, again, for like five minutes, the one with the company accused of fraud that marketed toilets for big men. matthew whitaker, he was attorney general for a minute. and then of course matthew whitaker's successor, william barr who is reportedly eyeing the exits, potentially considering quitting even before inauguration day next month. you think about the consequences of that, that presumably would give president trump the opportunity to name, like, his...
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Dec 31, 2020
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. ♪ >> bret: finally tonight in massachusetts officer matthew lehman did something bret: finally tonight in massachusetts officer matthewshoplifting from a local grocery store. instead of arresting the two girls he paid for the groceries they attempted to steal saying it is time for a lesson in compassion. >> one of those items i noticed they were all grocery items. if i were in that situation i would be grateful if somebody could help me. >> thanks for inviting us and to your home. fair, balanced and still unafraid. >> nancy pelosi and leadership are trying to pull a fast one on the president of the american people. >> who is holding up that distribution to the american people? mitch mcconnell and senate republicans. >> trump is writing thing that's not enough, we need to go to $2,000. >> thursday december 3, '01, we are wrapping up this year with political turmoil. the stimulus showdown bringing together unlikely allies to get more cash in your pocket. we are live in washington with the hold up. >> limited time to evacuate this area, there's a large bomb in the vehicle.
. ♪ >> bret: finally tonight in massachusetts officer matthew lehman did something bret: finally tonight in massachusetts officer matthewshoplifting from a local grocery store. instead of arresting the two girls he paid for the groceries they attempted to steal saying it is time for a lesson in compassion. >> one of those items i noticed they were all grocery items. if i were in that situation i would be grateful if somebody could help me. >> thanks for inviting us and to...
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Dec 10, 2020
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matthew, is it that facebook will actually be broken up then? matthew: it is hard to say. it is clearly a real risk. my personal view is that it is unlikely to come to that, but i think definitely mark zuckerberg is going to be concerned about this kind of formal request. he will have to work very hard. i think the bar for kind of providing enough evidence to force a breakup could be too high, but we will have to see. more likely they will probably be a multibillion-dollar find, and that generates some kind of restraints on the way that they behave, in terms of mergers and acquisitions. much,ne: thank you so matthew bloxham, bloomberg intelligence analyst. coming up, another day, another delay come i high-level fish dinner in brussels, and we know all of the fish uns and -- puns and jokes, it fails to make change on two sides far apart. we give you all the details, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ francine: economics, finance, politics. this is "bloomberg surveillance." i am francine lacqua here in london. now, another day, another delay. johnson ander boris ecb president ursula von der leyen dined on scallops last night, but when it came to brexit, they were unable to reach an agreement. leaders agreed that talks would consider in the next day despite major differences remaining. joining us from brussels, maria tadeo. maria, what should we actually expect from the next meeting? francine, that briefing will be key. every official that i have spoken to this morning agrees on that, the perception coming from the head of the european commission, ursula von der leyen will be critical to where they go next.
matthew, is it that facebook will actually be broken up then? matthew: it is hard to say. it is clearly a real risk. my personal view is that it is unlikely to come to that, but i think definitely mark zuckerberg is going to be concerned about this kind of formal request. he will have to work very hard. i think the bar for kind of providing enough evidence to force a breakup could be too high, but we will have to see. more likely they will probably be a multibillion-dollar find, and that...
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Dec 12, 2020
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i'm literally going to need to see my therapist after watching matthew morrison put so much energy into the grinch. another wrote, mattheworrison is being in the grinch, it's a choice, a good one? no -- i agree, not a good one, horrible. >> laura: it makes me want to toss the roast beef in my stomach right now. >> it shows you, there is this adolescents in america were creative sink they need to take tales of innocence and inject their adult perspective and projected their neuroses. it's their sexuality and ideas. >> laura: it was pathetic, it was pathetic. it is one of the greatest ever cartoons of all time, my favorite of all time and they ruined it. this week in the winter governor andrew cuomo and at times guardian of the year anthony fauci consider the weighty problems of the day. >> put us together, we are the modern-day did nero and pacino, you can be which one ever, you can be robert de niro or al pacino -- who do you want to be? which one do you want to be? >> i love them both. if i pick one i don't want to hurt the feelings of the other. >> i thought we could help the good doctor. it turns out al pacino has alr
i'm literally going to need to see my therapist after watching matthew morrison put so much energy into the grinch. another wrote, mattheworrison is being in the grinch, it's a choice, a good one? no -- i agree, not a good one, horrible. >> laura: it makes me want to toss the roast beef in my stomach right now. >> it shows you, there is this adolescents in america were creative sink they need to take tales of innocence and inject their adult perspective and projected their neuroses....
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Dec 10, 2020
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anna: matthew, good to speak to you. matthew goodwin, university of kent professor of politics.e lawsuit against facebook mean for the rally? let's see what laura cooper things about this subject, tech and the regulatory maneuverings against big tech companies. it is something we have talked a lot about. we will continue to do that with laura cooper. ♪ welcome back to the european open. we are 54 minutes into the session, looking at slight gains on european equity indexes, with the ftse, cac, and i backs up about 0.33%. joining us is laura cooper. today on the blog, they are asking the question, what does the facebook suit mean to the risk rally? what kind of feedback are you getting, laura? laura: good morning. i don't think this news is flashing a sell signal across indexes. i think it is company-specific, but it does come at a time when the tech sector was already ripe for a rally lower. the nasdaq did have 10 consecutive days of gains. we overbought signals for the first time since september. this is up against frost evaluations. new york saying the index is up about 90% thi
anna: matthew, good to speak to you. matthew goodwin, university of kent professor of politics.e lawsuit against facebook mean for the rally? let's see what laura cooper things about this subject, tech and the regulatory maneuverings against big tech companies. it is something we have talked a lot about. we will continue to do that with laura cooper. ♪ welcome back to the european open. we are 54 minutes into the session, looking at slight gains on european equity indexes, with the ftse, cac,...
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matthew. you're going to keep. going to keep you like he saw me completely. i had matthew on april 26th. i called a month later to see how he was doing. to catch up to see if he wanted to see him. i start he calls me. he's like i still can't believe you decided to keep him you could have had a future now you're not going to have anything. and it's been built 3 years. and i haven't heard from what i've heard from people one of my teachers actually. when i wasn't there and everyone from the class told me she said if wendy was my daughter i would take the baby away from her razor myself for sure but now she's not going to amount to anything. and hearing it from my dad now. and saying you're not going to bounce anything you're not going to have a future anymore because i decided to keep my son. broke me. and we as a society have lied to you in this we've been dishonest with because what we have said. is that you can behave any way that you choose you can make any decision or choice that you want to make whatever you feel this this day you can make those kinds of decisions and we will do the best that we can to alleviate the cons. but the fact is we cannot alleviate the consequences it is true that you make your own decisions you can choose any of these paths that you want to choose but we are being dishonest to you when we say we can help you avoid consequences there are consequences for the choices that you know having sex outside of marriage is not going to fill the void that you're trying to fill it only creates more and more of a vast open. debate within you because you are opening yourself in the most mourner of all way to another human being who is in no way committed to and his whose actions are really out of selfish. yes unlikely and a desire to meet a need that day. the day i had started getting ready i started a campaign and then by the time i got there they told me it was too late for me to have it. i'm just bawling my eyes out i was like i don't know what to do i've never done this and whenever he got there. i was scared the 1st time i change just. like i care and change the diaper it looks and what do you mean you can't just type of like i can do this i am fix tina i can do this i cannot support him i cannot do school work and raise a child. bearing at this precious little boy mile at me and i'm thinking i can't do that at all the only thing going through my head it was i cannot do that. if you find yourself pregnant at 15 there is no easy option for you you can choose to have an abortion and that is not an easy option it leaves damage for the rest of your life for you and for your family. having a child at 15 made all kinds of issues because now you're not just a typical high school kid your response will for another human be you're going to have to find a way to bring in candy you're going to have to tend to a sick baby in the middle of the night when you have homework and you have to get up early and go to class yourself and then your other option would be to place your baby for adoption which is the most difficult decision i've ever seen a young person it is a wonderful choice and it is often the best choice for that child but it is heart wrenching and extremely difficult so once you find yourself in an unplanned pregnancy we can't take away those consequences and you now have very difficult decisions to me. so i have my little brother i have. about 3 if you want to. wake up at 6 in the morning around 5 am i will wake up my little brother and mother around 720 i will get matthew ready for my sisters at 730 take my little brother to 730 i get the school i'm on racing i'm running rushing to get there i get out of school i want 30 and i going to work at 2 i get up before i . play with 30 minutes but i have and then i go to work and whenever i get my 30 minute lunch break do the same thing go to my fish health and spend time with then go back and then i get off of work around 9 i. am. working on my homework at around 1030 and i usually call for a better one of. 6 guys or financial survival. when customers go by you or do sometimes. well reduce allow or. that's undercutting not what's good for market it's not good for the global economy . imagine picking up a future textbook on the early years of the 21st century what are the chapters cold gun violence school shootings homelessness 1st it was my job it was my field bill it was my savings i have nothing i have nothing that is not true i look for resources i look for jobs i look for everything i can to make this hou
matthew. you're going to keep. going to keep you like he saw me completely. i had matthew on april 26th. i called a month later to see how he was doing. to catch up to see if he wanted to see him. i start he calls me. he's like i still can't believe you decided to keep him you could have had a future now you're not going to have anything. and it's been built 3 years. and i haven't heard from what i've heard from people one of my teachers actually. when i wasn't there and everyone from the class...
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Dec 22, 2020
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matthew che, national retail federation president and ceo. matthew, good to have you back. that is what people do. you often times hear ahead of a tax refund they spend that ahead of time or plan to because they know they have the cushion coming in. what about with these stimulus checks? >> neil, i guess i would start by saying if past is prologue, we know what happened when the stimulus checks went out earlier this year and how quickly virtually all income levels one way or another either continued to spend or put those dollars to work right away in the economy. certainly there was also an elevated savings rate. it is not as high now as it was then. it is still high by historic standards. people are paying down debt. people are going out, consuming. if they're in a household that needs the money, has to put it to work right away, a lot of checks will go right back into the economy very quickly which we think is positive. it will help keep people employed, keep people out there working, hopefully keeping all the communities moving forward in a safe around healthy way. neil: in the latest quarter just reported here there was revised slightly upwards, that is the gdp growth to about 33.4% clip and consumer spending was a large chunk of that. how do you see consumers spending in the new year? >> well, you know, neil, consumers have been really keeping the economy afloat over the course of the last 10 months. we've all been out there doing certain kinds of consumption, although maybe in different segments of retail than traditionally. so there is much more emphasis on work from home. you go to school and educate from home. you entertain around dine more from home. you exercise at home that has implications t shifted things around. they were due in large part to the early relief that the congress and administration put out there in a bipartisan way. as we've seen again with this second largest in history stimulus package just announced and passed over the past couple of days. we think that as we get into the new year consumers will want to get back out there. there will be pent-up demand. we'll see some spending shift around in categories as the economy reopens. people will be out there dining, traveling, spending time in different ways than maybe the last 10 months. i think we're on a good path. we have a long way to go of course in the next six months or go to get everybody vaccinated but optimism i think ought to be the watchword over the long to medium term. neil: did anything measure improve fortunes or provide opportunities for retailers? i'm not sure as a group per se, even in the paycheck protection program, some of these others, smaller retailers, not big box guys, certainly not amazons what do you think? >> neil, our concern obviously some of the companies that you mentioned, there are many others have done very, very well. that has been a real conundrum, a real challenge here, some way as real tragedy that you have two realities in america right now. you have some businesses organizations, communities, families doing very, very well. you have others doing very, very poorly. in terms of businesses specifically there are many small, medium independent businesses that have not been getting relief and support they need. more money for the ppp. more unemployment insurance dollars, direct checks, that will help businesses directly or as people put money to work will help them indirectly. neil: are you confident that consumers are confident? confidence fell to the lowest point of the year, even lower than at the time of the pandemic? they seem to be going into the new year maybe not as robust as we thought? >> yeah. i think there are a lot of unanswered questions in the minds of some consumers and in the survey work we've done with our partners we're out there in the field every week asking questions of thousands of consumers. the interesting thing, neil, if you go back historically, whether years ago. you will remember the fiscal cliff. we know what it's been like when debt ceiling showdowns. we know what it is like on tax reforms and debates about tariffs. consumers do have the ability to hold two things in their mind at the same time. they can be aware of challenging circumstances and yet their behavior continues to support economic activity. so i think people are going to still be out there spending. they may be aware of the challenges of the next few months but i think as we look ahead, the light at the end of the tunnel is starting to become reality. we stay diligent, follow the medical guidance, stay safe, get ourselves into the spring and we ought to be in a much better place and the consumer, surely pent-up demand there will rebound. that ought to be a good thing as we get into the new year. neil: all right. from your mouth, matthew you have a good christmas. get a gauge on how retailers are doing. matthew che, national retail federation president and ceo. >>> when we come back. britain is feeling isolated. not only because of this new variant, this new strain of the virus but because so many countries now do not want the brits to come there. the fall out after this. ♪. did you know you can go to libertymutual.com to customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? really? i didn't-- aah! ok. i'm on vibrate. aaah! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ to listen, is to hear more than what's being said... and offer the answers that make someone feel truly heard. i understand, let's get started call a dell technologies advisor today. t-moat a record pace. its network i understand, let's get started we were the first to bring 5g nationwide. and now that sprint is a part of t-mobile we're turning up the speed. upgrading over a thousand towers a month with ultra capacity 5g
matthew che, national retail federation president and ceo. matthew, good to have you back. that is what people do. you often times hear ahead of a tax refund they spend that ahead of time or plan to because they know they have the cushion coming in. what about with these stimulus checks? >> neil, i guess i would start by saying if past is prologue, we know what happened when the stimulus checks went out earlier this year and how quickly virtually all income levels one way or another...
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matthew. you're going to keep going to keep you like he saw me completely. i had matthew on april 26th. i called a month later to see how he was doing to catch up to see if he wanted to see my son . he calls me. he's like, i still can't believe you decided to keep. you could've had a future. now you're not going to have anything. and it's been built 3 years and i haven't heard from one. i've heard it from people. one of my teachers actually when i wasn't there. and everyone from the class told me she said if wendy was my daughter, i would take the baby away from her and raise it myself. bush. sure. but now she's not going to amount to anything. and hearing it from my dad now and saying, you're not going to announce anything. you're not going to have a future anymore. because i decided to keep, my son broke me. and we as a society have lied to you in this. we've been dishonest with. because what we have said is that you can behave any way that you choose, you can make any decision or choice that you want to make, whatever you feel this this day, you can make those kinds of decisions. and we will do the best that we can to alleviate the concert. but the fact is we cannot alleviate the consequences. it is true that you make your own decisions. you can choose any of these paths that you want to choose. but we are being dishonest to you when we say we can help you avoid consequences. there are consequences for the choices that you make. having sex outside of marriage is not going to fill the void that you're trying to fill. it only creates more and more of a vast, open and deep within you because you are opening yourself in the most mourner of all way to another human being who is in no way committed to. and his whose actions are really out of selfishness and likely, and a desire to meet a need that day on the day i had them. i started getting ready. i started getting pain. and then by the time i got there, they told me it was too late. for me to have it. i'm just bawling my eyes out. i was like, i don't know what to do. i've never done this. and whenever he got there, i was scared. the 1st time i change just like i care to change the diaper, he will finish. but what do you mean you can't just type of like i can't do this, i am fix, tina i can do this. i cannot i cannot just call work and raise a child tearing at this precious little boy mile at me. and i'm thinking i can't do that at all. the only thing going through my head was i cannot do that. if you find yourself pregnant at 15, there is no easy option for you. you can choose to have an abortion, and that is not an easy option. it leaves damage for the rest of your life for you and for your family. having a child at 15 made all kinds of issues because now you're not just a typical high school kid. your response will, for another human be you're going to have to find a way to bring in candy. you're going to have to tend to a sick baby in the middle of the night when you have homework and you have to get up early and go to class yourself. and then your other option would be to place your baby for adoption, which is the most difficult decision i've ever seen. a young person, it is a wonderful choice, and it is often the best choice for that child, but it is heart wrenching and extremely difficult. so once you find yourself in an unplanned pregnancy, we can't take away those consequences and you now have very difficult decisions to me. so i have my little brother, your life. i have well, he's about to leave to a neighbor. i wake up at 6 in the morning at around 7, i will wake up my little brother and mother around 720. i will get back to ready. i'll drop them off at my sister's at 730. take my little brother discussed i'm 30. i get the score motor, racing, and run the rushing to get there. i get out of school at 130 and i was going to work out to get off the school. i had some of the cell. i play with matthew for the 30 minutes, but i have and then i go to work. and whenever i get my 30 minute lunch break, do the same thing. go to my sister's house and go back. and then i get off work around my. i don't want to put them both ways. after i put them both to sleep, i will start working on my homework of around $1030.00 and i usually fall asleep, but i was out. we wanted to is your media a reflection of reality in a world transformed what will make you feel safe from high salacious community? are you going the right way or are you being that direct? what is true? what is faith? in a world corrupted, you need to descend to join us in the depths, aura made in the shallows. always be polite, never engage with a negative, aided or confrontational. also. don't get into any conversation or start answering questions. just ask for an attorney. to survive and tear a geisha, they definitely don't want to be going to try out the jumpsuit on cups. you're more likely to walk free if you're rich and guilty
matthew. you're going to keep going to keep you like he saw me completely. i had matthew on april 26th. i called a month later to see how he was doing to catch up to see if he wanted to see my son . he calls me. he's like, i still can't believe you decided to keep. you could've had a future. now you're not going to have anything. and it's been built 3 years and i haven't heard from one. i've heard it from people. one of my teachers actually when i wasn't there. and everyone from the class told...