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that will require a lot of support their support needs to come from global institutions such as gary gary has done very well in many of the poor poor nations in trying to introduce dressings and i think if gabby to abroad in would be a show that one might be able to see there. of course it has to be supportive financially because that will bring in the development finance is situations such as the world bank the african development and asian development bank south all of those and of course partners our partners added by the latter countries that have the resources the european union and the speeches before been a very strong partner to countries respective financing concerns so we know that the old be able to come and come. who wanted needed and collective global system fair to all countries in out of the president and madam president doesn't look likely that that will happen soon because they're facing their own supply issues at the moment but i want to turn our focus now because i have a limited time the world is facing such an enormous crisis could this global pandemic have been avoid
that will require a lot of support their support needs to come from global institutions such as gary gary has done very well in many of the poor poor nations in trying to introduce dressings and i think if gabby to abroad in would be a show that one might be able to see there. of course it has to be supportive financially because that will bring in the development finance is situations such as the world bank the african development and asian development bank south all of those and of course...
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Jan 1, 2021
01/21
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gary: gary lewis. nice to meet you. lemonis: what would this place look like on a friday night? gary: game day it's mobbed.rought the team to the atlanta braves stadium where we're opening up a new sweet pete's and farrell's concept. ball games, concerts, public events, friday nights, saturday nights, bars, restaurants, the expectations i have on this location are $8 million to $10 million a year. allison: that's going to be the stairwell. it's a grand staircase. lemonis: i wanted to revive this brand in a way that had staying power for the future. travis, allison, pete, and we're in control of our destiny, but have the right people, the right product, and the right process. ♪ a maker of upscale cleaning products faces a crisis." so, last year, the company lost $477,000. but its owner refuses to face reality. max: marcus, some tea. lemonis: feels like you guys are, like, a little delusional about what's happening. her fancy branding is way off the mark. taylor: it looks like the queen of england would have it. and i don't think it should 'cause we make toilet cleaner. lemonis: her extravagant price point i
gary: gary lewis. nice to meet you. lemonis: what would this place look like on a friday night? gary: game day it's mobbed.rought the team to the atlanta braves stadium where we're opening up a new sweet pete's and farrell's concept. ball games, concerts, public events, friday nights, saturday nights, bars, restaurants, the expectations i have on this location are $8 million to $10 million a year. allison: that's going to be the stairwell. it's a grand staircase. lemonis: i wanted to revive...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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florida versus gary michael hilton, we the jury find as follows as to count one of the indictment, the defendant gary hilton is guilty of first-degree murder. count two of the indictment -- >> garywas found guilty of the first-degree murder of cheryl dunlap. guilty on all counts except car theft. the same jurors would soon reconvene to decide if hilton would die by lethal injection. he had dodged death in georgia and now it was time to see if he could do it again. you might think that capital punishment on florida's active death row would have been a given for gary hilton. but not so says tallahassee democrat senior writer jennifer portman. >> in leon county we had not even sent anyone to death row in 20 years. >> so it's not a foregone conclusion that this is going to be a hang 'em jury. >> absolutely not. we've had our share of horrendous crimes, don't get me wrong. but the jurors here are just very uneasy about sending people to death row. >> this man, mr. hilton -- >> assistant state's attorney georgia capelman had gotten the initial conviction. >> what are the words you use to describe this guy? >> he's a psychopath. and there's crazy sick and crazy mean. he's just crazy me
florida versus gary michael hilton, we the jury find as follows as to count one of the indictment, the defendant gary hilton is guilty of first-degree murder. count two of the indictment -- >> garywas found guilty of the first-degree murder of cheryl dunlap. guilty on all counts except car theft. the same jurors would soon reconvene to decide if hilton would die by lethal injection. he had dodged death in georgia and now it was time to see if he could do it again. you might think that...
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gary. >> i'm not gary, silly. i'm the chanucorn. the magical hanukkah unicorn. i wish i could be with you in person, but i don't want to catch ch-ch-coronavirus. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: this is one of our writers, gary greenberg. for the past seven hanukkahs he's run into the studio and interrupted the monologue with this ridiculous character he came up with. not tonight, gary, we have safety precautions in place this year. i'm sorry we don't have time -- >> but i was born in a manger in the kitchen of the carnegie deli! >> jimmy: okay, gary, good-bye. thank you, gary. once again, "the most dangerous toys of 2020." [ cheers and applause ] >> guillermo: okay, jimmy. some of the toys you are about to see might disturb you. viewer discretion is advised. the first dangerous toy is -- my first -- machete! >> jimmy: oh, no. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ >> these toys are dangerous. shalom, shalom, everybody! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jimmy: shalom. >> happy hanukkah! >> jimmy: we shalomed already. what is going on here? why are you back? >> i'm back with exciting news, jimala. i have definitive proof that the chanucorn is real! >> jimmy: you say that every year, but you never really have proof. >> have y
gary. >> i'm not gary, silly. i'm the chanucorn. the magical hanukkah unicorn. i wish i could be with you in person, but i don't want to catch ch-ch-coronavirus. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: this is one of our writers, gary greenberg. for the past seven hanukkahs he's run into the studio and interrupted the monologue with this ridiculous character he came up with. not tonight, gary, we have safety precautions in place this year. i'm sorry we don't have time -- >> but i was born in a...
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Jan 16, 2021
01/21
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consumer technology association, and i caught up with its president gary shapiro. with its president gary shanna-— with its president garyusted in just about t shapiro. we have ad'usted in just about every _ shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way - shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way you - shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way you can | just about every way you can adjust at this point. it has not been easy, i am not going to lie! we had concerns about the speed and the pace and the offering. to the speed and the pace and the offerint. ., , ., , .,, offering. to be honest, i was exnecting — offering. to be honest, i was exnecting ces _ offering. to be honest, i was expecting ces online - offering. to be honest, i was expecting ces online to - offering. to be honest, i was expecting ces online to be i offering. to be honest, i was i expecting ces online to be this sd expecting ces online to be this 3d world of virtual conference tools but it's not. it's a directory of exhibitors. the larger of which will have their own flashy micro sites. but the smaller start—ups who usually only have
consumer technology association, and i caught up with its president gary shapiro. with its president gary shanna-— with its president garyusted in just about t shapiro. we have ad'usted in just about every _ shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way - shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way you - shapiro. we have adjusted in just about every way you can | just about every way you can adjust at this point. it has not been easy, i am not going to lie! we had concerns about the...
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gary shapiro. gary, for the last 13 years you and i have been together. this is a very different year, and yet you're still pretty much sold out. tell us about what's happening ahead of monday's big kickoff. >> well, thanks, liz. and this interview shows that ces is going on because it's a tradition. the opening keynote, gm's mary barra, is really showing the future of driving electric vehicles, she's really kicking it off great. and the show is going digital because that's who we are. we've had the biggest digital transformation this past year of our lives, and we've progressed. but we said the show must go on. our companies wanted us to do it, and we found we could reinvent ces, we could do it in all sorts of different ways. we could connect people, we could extend the show dates for 30 days so people can listen and visit the over 1800 exhibiters we have. and the trends of not only mobility in driving, self-driving cars, but streaming, telehealth and digital sickness, cloud computing and so many others, 5g with amd's lisa sue speaking about it. so many things are happening because of ces, and innovation is going on. we'll be not in vegas, but we'll be global now. we'll reach the whole world. liz: yeah. it is a definite silver lining here. you guys have been able to put this together, but the bandwidth, i'm sure, is just insane because, you know, you can only have so many people jumping in on this thing regardless. would you have expected, because last year you got, what, about 120,000 people walking through those doors? you know, you have to be registered, but you've got the old names and then the new names, at&t, bmw, sony, panasonic, we've covered all these people, but some of the newer names as it pertains to, i guess, tech in the home and what we have seen with home fitness technology during the pandemic. >> absolutely. you know, during the pandemic the use of home technology for exercise is up 30-35% and 11% of people are using online fitness, according to our research, and 12% are considering it. we're seeing companies out there, we have a few hundred health and fitness companies, digital health companies showing their wares, and we also is have people, as you say, from around the world that are coming. now, what we've done is we've allowed -- it's still open only to the trade, it's not for consumers, you have to qualify, and we have several thousand -- liz: right. >> and almost half the people that sign up are from outside the united states. so we've opened it up a lot further. and these are the trends we're seeing. everything in the home, whether it's the home office, telehealth, telework, tele-education, this is technology that has made a difference, and technology -- and we're seeing that in the growth. and even the companies themselves, they are taking advantage of the pandemic to say what can we do better to serve our customers, and they're coming up with a lot of things, and they want to show them at ces. liz: mary barra, the ceo of general motors, we already showed the low duo but not to -- logo, but not to mention the fact it's the message she wants to project as we look at what is new in car technology. they would like to see by 2025 about, as i understand it, 30 battery-powered vehicles. and she talks about it as being an inflection point. how important is electric vehicle technology this year compared to previous years? >> well, it's definitely been a major shift in the last year. obviously, some car companies approved the concept and now people want it. it's the new administration, it's the green shift, it's consistent with that. but that's what the world is going to. and we want a cleaner environment for our kids, and we'll probably be back in the paris accord and electrification of vehicles is just part of that. people want them, they're buying them, and i think gm's making a very smart move by shifting quickly to electric. also there's self-driving, and there's a whole new reason for self-driving because of the pandemic. but the pandemic has changed how we do smart cities, how we do resilience, the need for broadband deployment around the country if not the world with, we'll have microsoft's president speaking about that. speaking of microsoft, bandwidth and our production and even the platforms we're using and the partnership to pull this digital event off is really with microsoft, a longtime ces participant given several years of bill gates keynoting every year. now we have the president of microsoft speaking about broadband globally and other policy things that have to happen for us to move into this great new world of innovation 5g and digital. liz: garyas, that's all i have to say. you and i have kind of grown a little older together over all these years, so we need to be together next year at ces, and let's hope that everybody stays safe and healthy, and good luck with the virtual conference. i will be right there on my laptop watching. thank you so much. gary shapiro. >> thank you, liz. liz: anytime. the peach state giving the big apple some renewed bites in the bond market. charlie's about to break that next. >>> and you may know fox news correspondent jackie-in rick from her coverage -- jacqui heinrich, but what about her personal climb as a journalist? jacqui started off as an intern for cbs evening news' knorr ya o'donnell. -- norah o'donnell. she had to wake up at the crack of dawn every day, we both got up at 3 a.m. to deliver stories and newspapers to reporters. but in 2018jacqui's always happy -- that's not exactly her sentiment. she joined fox as a national news correspondent reporting on the 2020 election and all things j
gary shapiro. gary, for the last 13 years you and i have been together. this is a very different year, and yet you're still pretty much sold out. tell us about what's happening ahead of monday's big kickoff. >> well, thanks, liz. and this interview shows that ces is going on because it's a tradition. the opening keynote, gm's mary barra, is really showing the future of driving electric vehicles, she's really kicking it off great. and the show is going digital because that's who we are....
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Jan 25, 2021
01/21
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gary o'donghue is in washington. so, gary, what happens now? well, this article of— so, gary, what happens now? es in the senate and that triggers the whole process of a senate trial, remember that as a political process. the senators themselves sit in judgment as to whether donald trump is guilty or not of inciting insurrection. that trial will begin insurrection. that trial will begin in two weeks' time. we don't know the exact format of it, whether it will be witnesses, live witnesses, who will make the president �*s case in detail but at the point of a vote, when they come to it, it would need two thirds of senators, 67 of them to vote to convict the president of high crimes and misdemeanours. that means 17 republicans breaking rank. now, mitch mcconnell, the leader of republicans in the senate has already said he believes the president provoked that january the 6th attack on congress which sparked the impeachment process. we don't know which way he is going to vote and he could take a lot of faults with him but it's still a big ask,, simon, if they get to that point a conviction, then donal
gary o'donghue is in washington. so, gary, what happens now? well, this article of— so, gary, what happens now? es in the senate and that triggers the whole process of a senate trial, remember that as a political process. the senators themselves sit in judgment as to whether donald trump is guilty or not of inciting insurrection. that trial will begin insurrection. that trial will begin in two weeks' time. we don't know the exact format of it, whether it will be witnesses, live witnesses, who...
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Jan 9, 2021
01/21
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gary grumbach. gary, welcome to you. how many people, first of all, have already been arrested? >> reporter: hey there, alex. i want to show you the scene here real quick outside the capitol four days after the siege on the capitol. we've got 7 foot nonscale fencing here and jersey barriers that have been set up to add some extra layer of protection. we've also got members of the national guard here. hundreds of them surrounding the capitol complex but there have been a number of arrests since this all started here on wednesday. it turns out if you go into the capitol and you do something illegal that is a federal crime or is a state crime, and photograph it and put it on video, the fbi and doj will start looking for you. adam johnson, the 36-year-old from florida. he was the one photographed holding the lectern of nancy pelosi through the capitol rotunda. that was found safe. adam johnson was found and arrested. there was the gentleman whose feet were up on speaker nancy pi lows si's desk. he was from arkansas and he was arrested. 16 folks have been federally charged with crimes from what happened here on wednesday. about 40 folks charged with lesser crimes that were charged in d.c. superior court. those are the arrests. there's also a number of investigations underway here. i'm talking about what happened with the capitol police. there's a number of questions, was it under staffed, were they under manned, were they given the wrong information? what happened there, there's a number of investigations being called for and also underway by the fbi and the united states department of justice. alex? >> okay. so interesting, gary. you know, i mean, to think these folks think they could get away with doing this. they put themselves out there publicly. got to wonder if the bragging rights they have will be worth it when they're hiring lawyers, spending time in court and potentially behind bars. it is what it is, gary. thank you for that. >>> meantime, conservatives are flocking to a new app after president trump's twitter app was suspended. parlor is being advertised as the free speech social network but it has already been banned from the google app store until it steps up its moderation policies. let's go to ali velshi. welcome to you. how does this app, parlor, differ from the other social media platforms? >> reporter: so the difference is that parlor, alex, has no moderation whatsoever. there's been criticism on facebook and twitter that they don't moderate. if someone sends a tweet that you think is abusive, racist, you can press a button and submit it to twitter for their investigation. the criticisms are
gary grumbach. gary, welcome to you. how many people, first of all, have already been arrested? >> reporter: hey there, alex. i want to show you the scene here real quick outside the capitol four days after the siege on the capitol. we've got 7 foot nonscale fencing here and jersey barriers that have been set up to add some extra layer of protection. we've also got members of the national guard here. hundreds of them surrounding the capitol complex but there have been a number of arrests...
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Jan 5, 2021
01/21
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gary tuchman. gary, what's the situation? >> alisyn, good morning to you. the sun is not yet up in georgia but the lights are on and the polls are open this morning, all throughout the state of georgia. more than 2,600 precincts including this one at the ornate cathedral in st. phillip. the doors opened three minutes ago and you can see, there are already people waiting in line to vote. probably 40 or 50 people, it's a nice day to wait outside, even though the sun is not up. it's about 45 degrees, which is pretty comfortable weather for this part of the united states, where it's usually colder in january. but you can see, people are getting ready to vote. this woman right here. a quick question for you, what made you decide to come so early to cast your vote in this election? >> i've got to get to work. >> can i ask you a very personal question? >> absolutely. >> thank you for saying that. do you know if you're going to vote for the democrats, republicans, or split the senate seats? >> definitely the democrats. >> how come? >> i think it's time for a change. >> reporter: okay. she brings up an interesting point -- thank you for talking to me, by the way. this state has not elected a democrat as a u.s. senator in the 21st century. but we do want to tell you, there is no such thing as apathy during this runoff election. usually, alisyn, there's a lot of apathy during runoff elections in the state of georgia or anywhere else. very few states have runoff elections and runoff elections happen when candidates don't get 50% of the vote in the general election. but there's no apathy whatsoever in the state of georgia right now, more than 3 million people voted early. and to put that into context, the record for a u.s. senate election in a runoff was 2.1 million people. and that was for the whole election. already, it's a record and every single person who votes today will add to that record. john, back to you. >> gary tuchman on the scene, asking deeply personal questions and getting answers. thank you so much for being there for us, my friend. just a reminder, the democrats need to win both of these races to control the u.s. senate. traditionally, it's republicans who do better in runoffs. the fact that the can democrats have a fighting chance here, it is telling. joining us now, cnn political analyst, maggie haberman. she's a white house correspondent for "the new york times." and on that point, maggie, we saw the president in georgia last night. how much does the president and does this white house realize that this would be a pretty huge rebuke of him and have a political impact, i think, serious ripple effects, if the republicans were to lose these races. >> john, it depend on who you're talking to. happy new year to you guys. it depend on who you're talking to. there are people in the white house who certainly recognize if the republicans lose these seats or frankly even one of these seats, i
gary tuchman. gary, what's the situation? >> alisyn, good morning to you. the sun is not yet up in georgia but the lights are on and the polls are open this morning, all throughout the state of georgia. more than 2,600 precincts including this one at the ornate cathedral in st. phillip. the doors opened three minutes ago and you can see, there are already people waiting in line to vote. probably 40 or 50 people, it's a nice day to wait outside, even though the sun is not up. it's about 45...
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Jan 19, 2021
01/21
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gary thank yon — is a really big challenge. gary thank you. stay _ is a really big challenge. gary thank you. nge. gary thank you. stay with us - is a really big challenge. gary thank you. stay with us once more. because of concerns about security and coronavirus, wednesday's inauguration will be different to all others before it. 25 thousand national guard troops will be at the capitol, manning dozens of road blocks and checkpoints. two of them have been removed from duty following vetting by the fbi. washington is a locked down city. the whole area around the white house and capitol building, wherejoe biden will be sworn in, will be off—limits. that means no mass of supporters stretching before him. only 1,000 people will be there. you might remember this image from four years ago. donald trump's press secretary falsely claimed it was "the largest audience to ever see an inauguration." this time the space has been filled by 200 thousand flags to represent everyone unable to attend. the president—elect�*s cabinet picks are being vetted by the us senate. former federal reserve chair and his no
gary thank yon — is a really big challenge. gary thank you. stay _ is a really big challenge. gary thank you. nge. gary thank you. stay with us - is a really big challenge. gary thank you. stay with us once more. because of concerns about security and coronavirus, wednesday's inauguration will be different to all others before it. 25 thousand national guard troops will be at the capitol, manning dozens of road blocks and checkpoints. two of them have been removed from duty following vetting...
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Jan 20, 2021
01/21
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gary, as you are talking, we were watching _ other. gary, as you are talking, we were watching pictures _ other. garyas you are talking, we were watching pictures of- other. gary, as you are talking, we were watching pictures of the - other. gary, as you are talking, we| were watching pictures of the flags. it has been beautifully done to replace all those crowds we are so familiar with, as the shock changes and we head back to the white house lawn. we are going to bejuggling some live events and pictures in the coming minutes, because the president is due to depart. we are also due to dcjoe biden leave blair house and had to church, and that is somewhat of a tradition on inauguration day, to actually had to church for a service before the inauguration proper.— church for a service before the inauguration proper. yes, it is one of those curious _ inauguration proper. yes, it is one of those curious aspects _ inauguration proper. yes, it is one of those curious aspects of - inauguration proper. yes, it is one i of those curious aspects of american political life that while there is this constitutional
gary, as you are talking, we were watching _ other. gary, as you are talking, we were watching pictures _ other. garyas you are talking, we were watching pictures of- other. gary, as you are talking, we were watching pictures of the - other. gary, as you are talking, we| were watching pictures of the flags. it has been beautifully done to replace all those crowds we are so familiar with, as the shock changes and we head back to the white house lawn. we are going to bejuggling some live events...
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Jan 9, 2021
01/21
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gary pete -- senator gary peters. let me ask you this. the president's acting attorney general said this week that those rioters would, quote, face the full consequences of their actions under the law. now, under the executive order the president passed last summer, ironically enough to protect confederate monuments in part, the maximum consequences would be up to ten years in prison for violating federal property. as the incoming head of the senate homeland security committee, what are you calling for as far as punishment? how should these rioters be handled by the criminal justice system? >> well, there's no question, reverend sharpton, that they need to be charged and convicted, and the full weight of the law needs to be put against them. this is simply unacceptable what we saw. it's unconscionable that we have this violent attack on the very citadel of our democracy and i think i speak for most americans that were glued to the television set to see what was happening and all of the people who i've talked to since then have told me they saw an attack on america itself with this action. this was not just an attack on the men and women who work in the capitol, but folks across the country felt it was a personal attack on them, individuals that engaged in this violence need to be charged. they need to be convicted. they need to be sentenced. one thing as i launch an investigation, we're going to do a comprehensive investigation through the homeland security department to find out how this security breach occurred, what do we need to do to make sure it never happens again and must never happen again. but one thing that i think is particularly striking is the low number of arrests. here you have videos of folks engaged in criminal behavior, and the number of arrests is very small. that's unacceptable. you need to let folks know if they engage in this type of behavior, they will be caught and charged, and they will pay a price. >> now, in your capacity as incoming chair of homeland security committee, will you also find out what the homeland security department did leading up to this? because later in the show i'm going to go into the extensive things we have to do having nonviolent marches in washington, including last year, that we had to go through with homeland security before we could even get a permit. was there the same kind of real stringent analysis, layouts, and premarch, prerally, pre-gathering that this group had to go through because there are also reports that an arm of the republican attorney general's association sent out robocalls encouraging people to march on the u.s. capitol the day before the riot. how stunning is that? and should these people also be looked into and properly disbarred? >> well, i think we have to do a comprehensive investigation. you mentioned about the permits. that has to be part of it. the capitol police and their activities will be looked at. and i think it safe to say there was a massive failure on the part of the leadership of the capitol police. the men and women who were out there trying to defend folks in the capitol, the rank and file, certainly were working hard, did their job. unfortunately one of them died as a result of that and certainly our prayers and thoughts go to that family. but leadership failed miserably. why were they not prepared? the lack of intelligence to understand what is happening here, when the internet traffic was so clear that there was going to be a large number of folks, a mob gathering at the capitol, and the types of discussions that were occurring online were that there was going to be violence. the capitol police should've been prepared and they should've worked more closely with the department of homeland security to make sure you had surge forces, the federal protective service, the secret service, cvp officers. >> they were on the internet saying bring your guns, bring weapons, on the internet. you don't need a n undercover operation here. they said it on the internet. did you know it was going to be a mob? the president announced he was going. the president announced the rally. this was no surprise gathering. >> no, absolutely. that's what makes it even more outrageous is that you didn't have to have any sophisticated intelligence. it was so widely out there. as you mentioned, we had the president of the united states himself tweeting saying come to the capitol. it's going to be wild. it was clear that something big was going to happen. and the fact you didn't have enough man power for the capitol police, you showed an image earlier of folks who were in riot gear. we didn't see folks in riot gear. they weren't even quipped to push back against this kind of insurgence against the capitol. there are lots of questions. we are going to demand answers because, again, this is simply unacceptable in this country. this must never happen again. and we have to send a strong signal to those folks who were engaged in this action, that they will be sought out, they will be punished, and anyone else who tries to do this in the future is going to certainly face a very different result than what we saw this last week. >> now, looking forward, nbc is reporting a right-wing extremists are vowing to return to washington for joe biden's inauguration. one of their leaders say, quote, we will come in numbers that no standing army or police agency can match. your reaction to that? >> well, my reaction is we have to take that very seriously. we cannot make any mistakes coming up for this inauguration. we have to have the peaceful, smooth transition of power, which is a cornerstone of our democracy and it needs to go forward safely. and we need to make sure we have adequate preparations. i can tell you we're going to be asking an awful lot of questions from the security folks prior to that election demanding an answer. my entire caucus, the democratic caucus is fully engaged in this to make sure that we get those answers because we need to make sure that everyone is protected and that this fundamental aspect of our country where we pass power peacefully to the incoming president, incoming president biden and vice president kamala harris, this should be a celebration of this democracy and we've got to make sure it goes forward smoothly and we are prepared for whatever may come at us. >> all right. thank you, senator gary peters. joining me now is congressman hank johnson, democrat of georgia and member of the house judiciary committee. congressman, before i go to the judiciary committee and the president's incitement of a riot on wednesday, it overshadowed the incredible wins in your home state of georgia on tuesday. what does it say about georgia, that it will send its first black senator and first jewish senator to washington? when i think in the south blacks and jews marched together and died together for the right to vote, it comes to mind the martyrs, and now we see a black and a jew going to washington from georgia. what does it says about your home state? >> yeah. it says that the nation has made a lot of progress. it shows that georgia and the south have made progress. but the announced victories coming on wednesday, the 6th, the same day we had an attempted coup in this country shows us just how far we have to go in this country to achieve the kind of values and vision that the framers of the
gary pete -- senator gary peters. let me ask you this. the president's acting attorney general said this week that those rioters would, quote, face the full consequences of their actions under the law. now, under the executive order the president passed last summer, ironically enough to protect confederate monuments in part, the maximum consequences would be up to ten years in prison for violating federal property. as the incoming head of the senate homeland security committee, what are you...
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Jan 22, 2021
01/21
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deregulations will be more dependent on the sec and president biden's pick for sec chairman is gary gensler, and gary be a crypto expert so that decision was hailed by crypto investors as great news for the space. ash? ashley: interesting stuff, thank you very much, christina. appreciate that. well, with that in mind, coin shares is a digital asset investment firm with a $2.9 billion under management, and the chief strategy officer,m elton demires helps them navigate the digital asset echosystem and we're lucky enough she's joining us this afternoon. thank you so much for being here let's pick up on what kristina was just saying about regulation. okay janet yellen may be more skeptical about bitcoin, but it is the sec who will perhaps lead the way when it comes to regulation. does that concern you that something that investors like, because it's not as regulated, could indeed, become just that? >> sure, let's first delve into where bitcoins are in terms of regulation and market structure and 2.9 billion in assets under management, in the form of regulated publicly-listed exchange-traded products that
deregulations will be more dependent on the sec and president biden's pick for sec chairman is gary gensler, and gary be a crypto expert so that decision was hailed by crypto investors as great news for the space. ash? ashley: interesting stuff, thank you very much, christina. appreciate that. well, with that in mind, coin shares is a digital asset investment firm with a $2.9 billion under management, and the chief strategy officer,m elton demires helps them navigate the digital asset...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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gary hoffman. hi gary. sue at kennedy's always great to see you in these unprecedented times. kennedy: it is crazy. every person you talk to how much crazier can it get? it looks like i could get a little nuts in california. what you think the chances are of another successful recall effort in the golden state? that just by the odds of it they are not great spirit however there's not been more momentum. remember great davis was recalled in 2003. all he had to deal with was skyrocketing electricity prices and things like that. gavin newsom has a deal for a pandemic. gavin newsom have to deal the fact that his tax the pants off some of the richest people in the state of california prompting them to move, i'm looking at you elon musk. in telling people that it is okay that the rich people are making more money because the stock market is booming. while everyone else is losing their absolute pants because he will not allow businesses to reopen. jaisol a republican strategist say the likelihood that rico actually makes it to the ballot is about 80 -- 85%. >> they arty have a million signatures. so that got about 300,000 in the last three weeks. they have almost two months more to get the required 1.5 million. it looks like this thing, this effort is growing. the way ice at the president paid the political price for the pandemic by losing the election. i think without the pandemic this president probably would have been reelected. it was very close in several states. i think it's fair that gavin newsom has completely fumbled the reaction and the lockdown. and now the vaccine or rollouts. so why shouldn't he pay in kind? >> why shouldn't he pay? i don't know if i can defend just about anything this guy has done. >> how would you describe them? >> from the rollout of the vaccines, to the amount of gel this guy uses in his hair, to the french laundry fiasco, to chronic homelessness up-and-down the state of california, to a set of rules for schools to reopen that make it virtually impossible for schools to reopen while hid kid gets go to private school. none of this makes sense. this guy for here's the other issue, this guy's been governor for some time. he's been a governor in a state dealing with a pandemic for ten months. and it still feels like he isn't reactive. all of his decisions have been reactions to these developments and this pandemic as opposed to being proactive. stopped on the state of california at what we can't do. tell so pecan do. there are millions of people ready to help. >> there are millions of people ready and willing to take responsibility for their actions. do what it takes to dine out responsibly. picture kids are going to school with masks, and every other regulation that could move them into positive territory. it is tough. california actually has a budget surplus right now. >> that was a big announcement from friday they were expecting its 50 billion plus dollars shortfall because of the pandemic. and his announcement that tax revenues were better than expected because the rich people are doing just fine. the incredible tone deafness of a statement like that, the people they can eat at the french laundry, yes they are doing fine. there are millions of small businesses that will never recover from this. >> it's going to be all of gardens in chapultepec i could only eat at the latter but i do love it. garyase come back and see me to it pray >> absently less unprinted and chant unprecedented time periods before maybe a poop show for a while bring an umbrella. [laughter] soon xo for only 20% of all first vaccine doses distributed in the u.s. have actually made it into people's arms print several states he vaccine rollout has been so slow doses have gone bad and need to be tossed straight some of the struggling states like california and new york are now trying to turn things around by turning stadiums into giant fox nation centers. so how do you get yourself a shot? and how similar basile to get one? jointly tie infectious disease specialist at johns hopkins for health security senior scholar it is dr. amesh adalja p is back welcome back surprised direct thinking for having me. >> what is the biggest hurdle to getting people vaccinated in places like california and new york they have not even gone through a third of the vaccine that they've got. >> it's a lot harder than getting a flu sho
gary hoffman. hi gary. sue at kennedy's always great to see you in these unprecedented times. kennedy: it is crazy. every person you talk to how much crazier can it get? it looks like i could get a little nuts in california. what you think the chances are of another successful recall effort in the golden state? that just by the odds of it they are not great spirit however there's not been more momentum. remember great davis was recalled in 2003. all he had to deal with was skyrocketing...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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got an appointment last week gary and brook stood in line for three hours, but it was worth with gary finally got his shot. lesson, persistence, and patience pay off call your local health department and know it could take hours to get through. you can also call 211 or 311 they're free and available in many u.s. cities a live person will answer. >> if you haven't found success, you're not alone millions of others are still trying. >> it's been entirely too complicated. >> due to overwhelming demand, we are currently booked and are unable to make additional appointments at this time. >> in north georgia, julie stobbe still can't get through to book an appointment for her husband, herself, or her 95-year-old mom who they care for. >> i tried probably in the course of a week close to a thousand times >> you called a thousand times >> between my desk phone and cell phone at the same time sometimes. i did get through once, and it rang for 2 1/2 hours, and then it cut me off. >> how can you increase your chances of getting a vaccine appointment, call your primary care doctor, ask to get on
got an appointment last week gary and brook stood in line for three hours, but it was worth with gary finally got his shot. lesson, persistence, and patience pay off call your local health department and know it could take hours to get through. you can also call 211 or 311 they're free and available in many u.s. cities a live person will answer. >> if you haven't found success, you're not alone millions of others are still trying. >> it's been entirely too complicated. >> due...
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Jan 20, 2021
01/21
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gary o'donoghue _ it's incredibly important. ok, gary o'donoghue on — it's incredibly important. ok, garyional i it's incredibly important. ok, gary o'donoghue on the national mall, j it's incredibly important. ok, gary- o'donoghue on the national mall, and i think we can see in florida live pictures from west palm beach, where donald trump has just arrived. perhaps as important today as the inauguration ofjoe biden and significant to america and american politics is the fact that donald trump is leaving, and that donald trump is leaving, and that donald trump has, i think the way to put it, he has slung out of town as a defeated president who did not win a second term in office, and that is also highly significant for this country. there are a lot of people in the country, and i have spoken to supporters of president trump, who have also said they are exhausted, that this has been a dramatic, chaotic, unprecedented presidency with an enormous amount of news, an enormous amount of turmoil during the course of the last four years, on top of the coronavirus pandemic, and there is a sense th
gary o'donoghue _ it's incredibly important. ok, gary o'donoghue on — it's incredibly important. ok, garyional i it's incredibly important. ok, gary o'donoghue on the national mall, j it's incredibly important. ok, gary- o'donoghue on the national mall, and i think we can see in florida live pictures from west palm beach, where donald trump has just arrived. perhaps as important today as the inauguration ofjoe biden and significant to america and american politics is the fact that donald...
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Jan 5, 2021
01/21
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gary. >> thanks, gary. want to bring in georgia's republican lieutenant governor jeff duncan. good to talk to you again. we talked a lot of times. now here we are, actual voting in person day. are you confident given all of the boo-ha the president put out there, all of which you and the elections team debunked, are you confident today's election will be secure? >> certainly i am glad it is election day. if you're a georgian, you haven't missed the fact that today is election day with mail, tv, radio, everything else coming out. yes, i am. i know the secretary of state's office and all of the 159 counties put a great deal of effort. certainly a great deal of attention and focus. our job is to make sure we put on a fair, legal election, i am confident that will happen once again today. >> you use the word today. do you think we will know who wins tonight? >> i think it is going to take us a little bit of time, certainly unless there's some run away in early results which doesn't seem to be the case, seems like this will be razor thin margins on either side of all three of the races, and that's one of the things that's so concerning to me. i have been so loud about trying to get folks, republicans, to focus on this race and not any sort of sideshows or distractions that some of the other folks started to talk about because this will be a razor thin election and we need every vote we can get that counts. >> i know you've spoken about the call, garykman raised it with the voters about the call to the secretary of state, raffensperger. and the president claimed in that call which we all listened 16 times that he won the state of georgia. of course, he did not win the state of georgia, along with that made untrue claims which again you gave sterling, secretary of state raffensperger have gone to great pains to say that's not true, there were two dead people, shredding of ballots didn't happen. you made it clear you would never make a call like that, inappropriate, you were disappointed by it. do you believe given the facts out there, given how clear you all have been about them that the president of the united states actually believes all of the stuff he was saying on the call? >> well, i tried to find the nicest, most direct word to use, disappointed in the call. no reason for the call. i can't imagine anybody on his staff thought it was a good idea before, during, or after. i don't know if the president believes it or not. i hope
gary. >> thanks, gary. want to bring in georgia's republican lieutenant governor jeff duncan. good to talk to you again. we talked a lot of times. now here we are, actual voting in person day. are you confident given all of the boo-ha the president put out there, all of which you and the elections team debunked, are you confident today's election will be secure? >> certainly i am glad it is election day. if you're a georgian, you haven't missed the fact that today is election day...
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Jan 20, 2021
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gary, thanks for the latest from washington, _ there. gary, thanks for the latest from washington, we _ there. garyrrivals continuing there and of course very limited numbers on capitol hill and we saw their work gary o'donoghue, normally huge amounts of crowds gathering but they are not there both because of the security situation and the pandemic and all those flags there in their place, it has been made to look incredibly beautiful in the run—up to the capital but it is a very different inauguration, only a couple of hours ago we saw the sitting president part for florida, a finalfew words sitting president part for florida, a final few words from him and it was interesting because it was rather muted, gary o'donoghue making the point, muted in terms of what the point, muted in terms of what the president had to say, steered well clear of any talk about the election that has happened and the result, sticking very much to the rather bland statements about the four years it has been and then listing what he thought the achievements were so that was the president as he departed and as we continue t
gary, thanks for the latest from washington, _ there. gary, thanks for the latest from washington, we _ there. garyrrivals continuing there and of course very limited numbers on capitol hill and we saw their work gary o'donoghue, normally huge amounts of crowds gathering but they are not there both because of the security situation and the pandemic and all those flags there in their place, it has been made to look incredibly beautiful in the run—up to the capital but it is a very different...
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Jan 19, 2021
01/21
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for the latest, let's speak to our washington correspondent gary 0'donoghue. garyople. -- worrying. it is inevitable _ people. -- worrying. it is inevitable when - people. -- worrying. it is inevitable when you - people. -- worrying. it isi inevitable when you think people. -- worrying. it is- inevitable when you think about 25,000 individuals and some of them will be donald trump supporters but i think in this case, which seems to be happening is these individuals have some sort of connection to organisations that are on the far right, so notjust their political legacies but their organisation leisure sees in those terms. we are told and we had the national specific reason or threat coming from these individuals, but presumably out of an excess of caution they are doing it and it comes in the background of the attack on the capitol where we are starting to see reports of former police officers and some former members of the military having been involved in that which is make everybody very jumpy about who will guard the guards as aware. teiiii everybody very jumpy
for the latest, let's speak to our washington correspondent gary 0'donoghue. garyople. -- worrying. it is inevitable _ people. -- worrying. it is inevitable when - people. -- worrying. it is inevitable when you - people. -- worrying. it isi inevitable when you think people. -- worrying. it is- inevitable when you think about 25,000 individuals and some of them will be donald trump supporters but i think in this case, which seems to be happening is these individuals have some sort of connection...
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Jan 27, 2021
01/21
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gary from chester. as great as the vaccine roll-out _ to gary from chester. as great as the vaccine roll-out has - to gary. as great as i the vaccine roll-out has been in the the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how— the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how will— the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how will we know that the vaccines— uk, how will we know that the vaccines created by other countries are just _ vaccines created by other countries are just as— vaccines created by other countries are just as effective to be able to resume _ are just as effective to be able to resume travel again? china, are just as effective to be able to resume travelagain? china, for instance. — resume travelagain? china, for instance, has their own vaccine, and if it hasht— instance, has their own vaccine, and if it hasn't been tested or approved, what measures will be put in place _ approved, what measures will be put in place to— approved, what measures will be put in place to approve a free and open travel_ in place to approve a free and open travel even — in place to approve a free and open travel even aft
gary from chester. as great as the vaccine roll-out _ to gary from chester. as great as the vaccine roll-out has - to gary. as great as i the vaccine roll-out has been in the the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how— the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how will— the vaccine roll—out has been in the uk, how will we know that the vaccines— uk, how will we know that the vaccines created by other countries are just _ vaccines created by other countries are just as— vaccines...
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Jan 14, 2021
01/21
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gary o'donoghue. — iraq and afghanistan combined. gary 0'donoghue, thank you. it is 19 minutes past one.aiting to start routine hospital treatment in england, with the number of those waiting more than a year being 100 times higher than at the start of the pandemic. the numbers of patients in a kind of hidden waiting list are probably building up in addition to all this, so it's likely that the figure is even bigger. dom bess takes five wickets as england bowl out sri lanka for 135, and they are just eight runs behind in reply after day one the first test match. a team of experts from the world health organisation has arrived in the chinese city of wuhan for a long—delayed investigation into the origin of the coronavirus, first detected more than a year ago. the group will spend two weeks in quarantine in a hotel before visiting different sites under chinese supervision. let's speak to our china correspondent robin brant, who's in the city. a difficult mission, robin? yes, it has been a _ a difficult mission, robin? yes, it has been a long _ a difficult mission, robin? yes, it has been a
gary o'donoghue. — iraq and afghanistan combined. gary 0'donoghue, thank you. it is 19 minutes past one.aiting to start routine hospital treatment in england, with the number of those waiting more than a year being 100 times higher than at the start of the pandemic. the numbers of patients in a kind of hidden waiting list are probably building up in addition to all this, so it's likely that the figure is even bigger. dom bess takes five wickets as england bowl out sri lanka for 135, and they...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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central to foreign policy as well for w heard therejohn well for w heard there john gary well for w heard therejohn garyto be trying to convince other nations to release set more ambitious targets improve on the target from the paris climate deal. —— john kerry. they also set the executive orders did outline things around conservation and water and conservation land in the us setting a target of 30% for those. also targets for wind as wealth was up really quite ambitious targets. but it's worth bearing in mind that everything that was signed in the executive order, these are steps that they can take without congress. the difficult period, the real progress that job i wants to make, he is going to have to get through congress was to he will face opposition from both republicans and people in his own party that represent coal, energy producing states. find energy producing states. and when it comes _ energy producing states. and when it comes to _ energy producing states. and when it comes to the difference between this administration and the previous in menstruation, my goodness, it's on comparable.- my g
central to foreign policy as well for w heard therejohn well for w heard there john gary well for w heard therejohn garyto be trying to convince other nations to release set more ambitious targets improve on the target from the paris climate deal. —— john kerry. they also set the executive orders did outline things around conservation and water and conservation land in the us setting a target of 30% for those. also targets for wind as wealth was up really quite ambitious targets. but it's...
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Jan 9, 2021
01/21
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gary and! building and lives close by. it was garyorning i was like, maybe i should just stay inside all day. i really had that thought, of may be myjust going to be attacked for going in and paying bills. that is a scary thought to wa ke bills. that is a scary thought to wake up the morning. but many of those who have been involved in the arrests can be found sightseeing in their capital city. yesterday had to happen. here, there were no regrets 01’ remorse. happen. here, there were no regrets or remorse. how do you feel about it or? i feel very or remorse. how do you feel about it or? i feelvery privileged or remorse. how do you feel about it or? i feel very privileged that i was a part of yesterday. i fight for freedom and democracy. even with everything that happened. freedom and democracy. even with everything that happenede freedom and democracy. even with everything that happened. ? yes, even without things happen. we have the greatest president in a lifetime doing everything he could do, sacrificing his golden years to make th
gary and! building and lives close by. it was garyorning i was like, maybe i should just stay inside all day. i really had that thought, of may be myjust going to be attacked for going in and paying bills. that is a scary thought to wa ke bills. that is a scary thought to wake up the morning. but many of those who have been involved in the arrests can be found sightseeing in their capital city. yesterday had to happen. here, there were no regrets 01’ remorse. happen. here, there were no...
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Jan 27, 2021
01/21
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do. >> look, as our friend gary kaltbaum said, if you were to say right now the fed was going to taper by $1000, same thing as billion, the market was have a heart attack. garyright. for me, what is most interesting, charles, is to listen to the first reporter out of the gate basically query powell about margin requirements we look of back in 1996, had greenspan increased margin requirements there wouldn't be so many small mom-and-pop investors being harmed, for him to say he is exploring the issue with other federal agencies get back to us in a year's time, how out of touch could you possibly be? you should have said we'll be back to you within a matter of days or weeks, if they want to make it seem if the fed is addressing matter at hand as opposed to saying we'll keep pouring $120 billion of fuel on this fire and hope to god all the financial instability in our face doesn't blow up and hurt anybody. seriously. charles: it is ironic too, 120 billion ain't making market too happy, phil. what do you make of that? that still within all of this wall street wanting more? i'm not sure what more he could have done although i will note that we did hear from the ba
do. >> look, as our friend gary kaltbaum said, if you were to say right now the fed was going to taper by $1000, same thing as billion, the market was have a heart attack. garyright. for me, what is most interesting, charles, is to listen to the first reporter out of the gate basically query powell about margin requirements we look of back in 1996, had greenspan increased margin requirements there wouldn't be so many small mom-and-pop investors being harmed, for him to say he is exploring...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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op-ed, welcome in gary cohn for "vanity fair" and cnbc contributor, and bill, it is a pleasure to have you on, and if we are using gary cohn, and he signed and not insulting to ibm or garyohn, but it is a bizarre deal, and it is not a big deal, and what do you make of that, and is that a one-off by big blue? >> well, gary, he is obviously the former number two at goldman sachs, and in the milieu of important corporate clients in america and around the world. so, you know, the thing that has me scratching my head is that he had just agreed to do this spac and raised $100 million for the spac late last year, and now all of the sudden, he is the chairman of ibm and on wall street when you are vice chairman of something, that is a signal that the career is over, and the chairman of ibm is signalling that gary is going to have a real job. it surprised me, because big blue and big tech is not really gary's thing. it sounds good on the old resume, brian. >> well, it certainly does, and you have ibm there, and of course, scaramucci, you mentioned and i love how you coined that andy is a friend of mine, and calling it a mooch is the term for the 11-period day, and that is fortni
op-ed, welcome in gary cohn for "vanity fair" and cnbc contributor, and bill, it is a pleasure to have you on, and if we are using gary cohn, and he signed and not insulting to ibm or garyohn, but it is a bizarre deal, and it is not a big deal, and what do you make of that, and is that a one-off by big blue? >> well, gary, he is obviously the former number two at goldman sachs, and in the milieu of important corporate clients in america and around the world. so, you know, the...
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Jan 15, 2021
01/21
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gary abernathy, republican party in some trouble in the months and years ahead because of this? gary abernathy: yes, but i do think it's important to remember this. the things that donald trump, the things that brought him his support, those aren't going away. i don't think trump will be the messenger for the party four years from now, but i think a lot of the things he stood for will be, and it will just be someone else carrying that mantle. judy: garynhee chen, thank you both very much. good to see you. gary abernathy: thank you, judy. lanhee chen: thank you. ♪ judy: as the days dwindle in the trump administration, they are still issuing rules and regulations, sanctions and designations that could have impact both abroad and at home beyond the end of the administration. here now, william brangham. william brangham: thanks, judy. it is somewhat customary for a president at the end of their term to issue a slew of orders and mr. trump is no different, but from iran to yemen, from china to cuba, and on the environment, this administration is issuing orders that could have deep, long-lasting impacts. our nick schifrin is here to help me unpack some of these. nick, before we get into the specifics, when you look at the overall sweep of what the trump administration is doing, is this just normal diplomatic business that happens at thend of every administration, or is this different? nick schifrin: longtime diplomats call the slew, as you
gary abernathy, republican party in some trouble in the months and years ahead because of this? gary abernathy: yes, but i do think it's important to remember this. the things that donald trump, the things that brought him his support, those aren't going away. i don't think trump will be the messenger for the party four years from now, but i think a lot of the things he stood for will be, and it will just be someone else carrying that mantle. judy: garynhee chen, thank you both very much. good...
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Jan 25, 2021
01/21
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gary b. smith. gary, great the see you, thank you very much. there is a lot of good news with the vaccines and the therapeutics and, hopefully, we will see an end to this pandemic in 2021, but 2020 took such a toll. we just got this news from new york state labor department, a million jobs lost. by the way, as early as july they were saying we'd end up with 500,000 jobs lost for the year which is bad enough, but it's double that. one million jobs lost. no industry has been decimated, i think in manhattan anyway, more than the restaurant business. and no industry is more sensitive to a raise, particularly a doubling in many cases of minimum wage than the restaurant business. is this really the right time to be talking about nationally doubling the minimum wage? >> well, david, first of all, nice to see you. david: nice to see you. >> the question is, is it ever the right time to raise the minimum wage. minimum wage is fantastic if you're a politician the because it makes you feel good, and people never see or don't account for the unintended side effects. look, let's just say that $15 right off the top is not the same as it is in new york city where you might say, well, the cost of living's so high as it is in des moines, iowa. so, first of all, the whole idea of a national minimum wage is kind of silly because it never takes into effect the cost of living. but, you know, the politicians will say, look, all these low paid workers are suddenly enriched. they're making more. you always hear the argument now they're above the poverty level. and in many cases, that's true. what the politicians never tell you is something the economists realize, all those workers are making more, but the restaurant owner is making less. and people say, well, that's okay, he can afford it, he's the millionaire whatever. but the fact is that restaurant then, a, it can't expand and, b, because it can't expand or maybe open a new restaurant, he or she can't hire more workers. so that's always the trade-off. do you want fewer people making more, or do you want more jobs out there? most people would vote for more jobs that reflects what the market is willing to pay. david: and you mentioned what the folks inside the beltway don't understand. frankly, that's a huge category, what they don't understand. [laughter] but one thing that particularly democrats have troubles with is the idea of incentives, that you can -- you need to provide incentives for growth, and you need to take away disincentives. doubling the minimum wage is a disincentive to growth, and there are incentives, for example, the trump administration had this plan that was derided as being the three martini lunch plan to allow to go back to the days when you could have 100% deduction for business lunches. they were saying, well, that's just a boon to the rich. but you're going to need some kind of incentives to get customers back to restaurants, and at least that was an attempt at that. i haven't heard any attempts at providing incentives for businesses from the biden administration. not yet anyway. >> look, the biggest incentive, david, we know is always going to be to lower costs whether that's to lower marginal tax rates -- not a stimulus, but marginal tax rates -- or the cost of doing business. when you increase the minimum wage, you might as well tell the restauranteur, look, we're going to charge you double for all the chicken you buy because that's going to help out the chicken industry. but again, it's going to raise the cost of them doing business. they have to either shut down, hire less people or raise the menu prices. what happens when they raise the menu prices? people say, you know what? i'm not going to eat that that restaurant anymore. tafd david yeah. the number one rule of economics is so simple. two words, incentives matter. i wish -- >> exactly. tawf david -- i could a tattoo that on a lot of these politicians' arms. good to see you, garys making anyone on the right sound like liars. things got very testy on "meet the press" yesterday. you'll want to hear this. ♪ the things you say, you're unbelievable ♪♪ - i sent your new prescription to the pharmacy. - any idea how much it will cost? - [doctor] i recommend goodrx. you get free coupons to save on your prescriptions. - goodrx, smart. - [announcer] stop paying too much for your prescriptions. - thanks. - download the free app today. your grooming business is booming. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base. claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/groomer hi, i'm dorothy hamill. if you're turning 65 soon, like me, you might be thinking about medicare. i know i want coverage that connects all the different parts of my health care to keep me aging actively. that's the aetna medicare advantage. >> i won't be cowed by peopl
gary b. smith. gary, great the see you, thank you very much. there is a lot of good news with the vaccines and the therapeutics and, hopefully, we will see an end to this pandemic in 2021, but 2020 took such a toll. we just got this news from new york state labor department, a million jobs lost. by the way, as early as july they were saying we'd end up with 500,000 jobs lost for the year which is bad enough, but it's double that. one million jobs lost. no industry has been decimated, i think in...
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Jan 5, 2021
01/21
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CNBC
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think that gary can be used to say, for christian to be able to say, i want to do this, gary, will it changethings they need someone outside, sure, definitely a curious act, unless you know gary and you know arvind i think it is a nice marriage for both of them >> yeah. that's something tech has had to balance, jim, that mix of finance, knowledge and engineering knowledge. we have seen some companies from the street's perspective and opinion that have maybe had a bit of an imbalance and it cost them >> yeah. look, is ibm light one look at the chart says no. does ibm deserve more respect? when they did the spin-off, which they said is 18 months, and that's been the managed services it was not correctly articulated, i believe articulated on mad money i think arvind christian is right in the direction but the articulation to the street and you can say that chanos is right, financial engineering, wasn't as clean as it could have been is fwgary going to be dressing p a pig? absolutely not i think it is the opposite i think ibm is a gem, iconic company. that's in the coming across. is that arvind christian's fault? arvind is a hand oz s on operat. look, he's vice chairman he can sa
think that gary can be used to say, for christian to be able to say, i want to do this, gary, will it changethings they need someone outside, sure, definitely a curious act, unless you know gary and you know arvind i think it is a nice marriage for both of them >> yeah. that's something tech has had to balance, jim, that mix of finance, knowledge and engineering knowledge. we have seen some companies from the street's perspective and opinion that have maybe had a bit of an imbalance and...
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Jan 8, 2021
01/21
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BLOOMBERG
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gary shapiro the consumer technology association ceo. gary, i bet you never thought we would be doing and all virtual show. are you excited, open-minded? open-minded, but now i am excited. there has been so much support and over 1800 exhibitors. it gave us an opportunity to reevaluate what this has for industry and connectivity. we were able to change the show dates and extended by 30 days so that people can react and follow conferences that they want to see and talk to exhibitors and still and look at what they are offering. it has allowed us to connect with people. we had over 70,000 people register and opt in to be connected with each other. the connectivity is there any personalization as they are, and we are using keyword searches, and exhibitors have become very creative and what they are offering. we will have a lots of live sessions and demonstrations of the products. we will have an anchor desk and amazing speakers. we have been free from the physical world, and once we realize that, we announce this in july, and the response has been strong. emily: do you think that it will ever come back in person? garyabsolutely. we have already signed up several hundred exhibitors for exhibits.22 for live doctors who have already gotten the vaccine have already agreed to meet. got the vaccination and she is already agreed to a live meeting. we are there, we decide to recognize that this is an unusual year and take advantage of the digital opportunities that are there. so much as happened, and the world has transitioned visually. the changes and telehealth, tele-education, and so me different aspects of what we do, including mobility are leadoff keynote figure is of gm, and announcing a whole new look, electrification. we have great companies like sony and some some -- and a samsung focusing on 5g. artificiallso intelligence. we have changed how we work, how we work, how we play and how we get around, and what we are looking at. health technology is big, digital health is a big focus. want to get together and communicate and meet. we have provided the opportunity, and we have teamed up with microsof
gary shapiro the consumer technology association ceo. gary, i bet you never thought we would be doing and all virtual show. are you excited, open-minded? open-minded, but now i am excited. there has been so much support and over 1800 exhibitors. it gave us an opportunity to reevaluate what this has for industry and connectivity. we were able to change the show dates and extended by 30 days so that people can react and follow conferences that they want to see and talk to exhibitors and still and...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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ALJAZ
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gary stephenson now an economist specializing in inequality gary stopped by explaining to us why so much money was piled into game stop in the 1st place. you not. for the background concepts need to understand what's happening in us if so they've got us a coat crisis that everyone else who lost their jobs at the last incomes and they're sitting on not be able to make much money at the same time u.s. stock markets explode it's nearly double since march. some stocks are test about 6 times and wasn't doubled so people are sitting on it might want to work not of next month and seeing the super rich get even super rich up as the stock price is going to. understand straight or i'm not thinking we want to give all this is what we want to find a way to make some income so it was in a similar circumstance in the government to try and lessen the stock market so we've gone google it and search around and on which the problem as you call it. bets where people talk about up the stock market and this are really not do you. respond specific stock game stock game stock which is massively short you. he's had a chance in wall street and it said if we can stop push the glass up will become impossible please and toss them in 10 shorts we can push the price up and it has been about the. process and we've met most of pockets and it's been phenomenal really works in rights and just to be short selling it's a way of making money by betting that the company's share price is going to decline that it's going to fall so how i mean what was the what was the psychology behind this you got some people that believed in the company and then others pile in because they think there's going to be a profit to be made and then it's just i mean it's just the cycle i mean i think it's going to says there's a greater transparency probably which is it issued some people are that a stock which was volatile there are a lot of them but the betting was going to go down if there was enough but it could get pushed up but i guess it was a look there right now work is not working for them and they're looking for ways to make what. they're one of those messages or what to start and you know it's a similar dynamic to seeing things like clinical test that sit people are out there not making money and it shut and find a way to make things work and not only that there's going to choose about money this is the last example the us that actually get that money spilling out of the system and people are trying to find ways to make money in system where you can't really make money to work so increased as you go to people that are missing our friends making money and more and more people. how is this going to end up people end up losing a lot of money even though there's already been this nears the robinhood in our they're. trying to well free trading firms have announced that they're going to stop it in a stop trades on a game stop. i'm going to ask you that because i think it's really who wants to get you know us not i'm not going to see what's happening it doesn't see what's happened because see what's going to test are you going to be think you are missing out money. when this. is some local charlotte schools are across that school is out really really fast really quickly it is inevitable across the collapse at some point and my concern is that the people who started this probably up confession investors who knew what they were doing they're only getting out now and other people are seen as the news that you can't even. i'm worried that we're going to keep all our struggling to get by to select shots my partner is going and at some point to be smart that you want to eat in the stock up since it could be ordinary working people that aren't in the stock and lose the money that goes up gary thank you very much for helping guide us through this maze appreciate it gary stevenson. still ahead. we'll. let you take. some of the australian open tennis players have started to be released from their 14 day lockdown gemma will have that story in the sports. for. sam is here this fall thank you maria take care of them pick organizes say them main potus have raised no doubts or objections about hosting the games in july that includes the international olympic committee and the sporting federations involved in the games the i.o.c. said on wednesday that whole of the games would not be irresponsible and that it's a question of how not if the price that expect to release a playbook seen to explain how they plan to get thousands of athletes to compete safely. so she was a no show up after talking with everyone and asking them about their thoughts the i.o.c. president thomas back told us that no one from anywhere raised questions or objections and everyone wants to make you take your ga
gary stephenson now an economist specializing in inequality gary stopped by explaining to us why so much money was piled into game stop in the 1st place. you not. for the background concepts need to understand what's happening in us if so they've got us a coat crisis that everyone else who lost their jobs at the last incomes and they're sitting on not be able to make much money at the same time u.s. stock markets explode it's nearly double since march. some stocks are test about 6 times and...
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Jan 22, 2021
01/21
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BLOOMBERG
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i think will be very interesting to see what the new head of the fcc, gary gensler, does about it. i think garyvery good choice. i know him a little bit, and we will see if he addresses it, but until somebody addresses it, it is going to go on. tom: this is where i wanted to go. mr. gensler widely presumed to come in and take a tougher tone. did these occur because of the laissez-faire structure of the trump administration? steve: no. maybe to a degree. the head of the fcc under trump took a very laissez-faire attitude. that is part of it. more importantly it is a function of the free money out there and the license the fed has given people to speculate at will. tom: steve eisman, generous of your time. greatly appreciated. i do want to say we had bloomberg have an entire process of how we deal with shorting, cash shorting comments on air. we will reach out to credit acceptance for them to comment on mr. iceman --eiseman's shorting of the stock. with first word news, here is karina mitchell. karina: coronavirus cases are declining and 46 states. 42 of those the average has fallen more than 6%.
i think will be very interesting to see what the new head of the fcc, gary gensler, does about it. i think garyvery good choice. i know him a little bit, and we will see if he addresses it, but until somebody addresses it, it is going to go on. tom: this is where i wanted to go. mr. gensler widely presumed to come in and take a tougher tone. did these occur because of the laissez-faire structure of the trump administration? steve: no. maybe to a degree. the head of the fcc under trump took a...
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Jan 30, 2021
01/21
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BBCNEWS
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gary speaking. no-one has _ so happy i did. it is gary speaking. no-one has made _ so happy i did. it is gary speaking. lonely and so i think for anybody listening, if you have got family, friends, neighbours that you know of who are living on their own, give them a call and put a smile on their faces. and these are not one of connections. for mark and carlo there is a dinner date when it is allowed. i there is a dinner date when it is allowed. ., , ., , allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want _ allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want to _ allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want to cook _ allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want to cook for - allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want to cook for him, i allowed. i invited him to my house. because i want to cook for him, a l because i want to cook for him, a good plate of pasta. i don't know if i'm better as a chef or as a manager. we can talk about tactics. absolutely! i will bring a bottle of wine! _ absolutely! i will bring a bottle of wine! . that is really a genuine friendship between a manager and
gary speaking. no-one has _ so happy i did. it is gary speaking. no-one has made _ so happy i did. it is gary speaking. lonely and so i think for anybody listening, if you have got family, friends, neighbours that you know of who are living on their own, give them a call and put a smile on their faces. and these are not one of connections. for mark and carlo there is a dinner date when it is allowed. i there is a dinner date when it is allowed. ., , ., , allowed. i invited him to my house....
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Jan 14, 2021
01/21
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FBC
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gary kaltbaum, i think, is good with us now. he just had to plug in a couple of things, and he's back with us. glad to see you, gary. liz peek back with us as well. garyeople say, oh, congress can't do things quickly, i don't know. they moved quickly on this. i think they're capable of doing it. >> oh, they're very good at driving to the hoop when need be. and, neil, they had a deal for, like, $1.8 trillion back in september, october, but there was something call an election coming up, and guess what happened? i give kudos to lesley stahl and her interview with nancy pelosi asking her about being an obstructionist. and nancy pelosi turned into ralph kramden -- [laughter] it's a shame it comes down to politics, but i will tell you, you now have pretty much unfettered power now going forward. and i suspect a lot of spending is going to be done quite quickly as we move forward. i don'tthey'll do what they cale budget reconciliation, and we're going to spend our way into oblivion. and some is necessary, but i'm worried about some of the non-necessities. neil: but, you know, they did prove -- and on this impeachment effort, liz, even though it was just ten
gary kaltbaum, i think, is good with us now. he just had to plug in a couple of things, and he's back with us. glad to see you, gary. liz peek back with us as well. garyeople say, oh, congress can't do things quickly, i don't know. they moved quickly on this. i think they're capable of doing it. >> oh, they're very good at driving to the hoop when need be. and, neil, they had a deal for, like, $1.8 trillion back in september, october, but there was something call an election coming up,...
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Jan 18, 2021
01/21
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CSPAN3
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gary, then to michael. then we will open it up to questions and conversation with you. thank you. >>> thank you very much for coming. for those that have never seen me before, i'm gary young. for these have seen me before, i'm gary young in a suit. because this is not particularly familiar site unless i'm at a wedding or a funeral. this is about king's famous speech on washington and it is left there as an idea that you have a great man and a great talk. but king could not do that on his own. the peach came from somewhere. and i want to start by giving some context to that text. in the about section of that, there would have been no march and there would have been no feature. so i start with some of the people whose names we don't know but who paid for that speech in a range of ways. i start with mccain who was a 17-year-old in north carolina. when i interviewed franklin, he said that up until that time, he knelt that his life was worthless and that his parents lied to him and the lie he told them was a great american lie that you can be anything you want to be. and he said as he grew through adolescence, he knew that wasn't true. and just as a symbol of how untrue that was i interviewed a guy called buford. he
gary, then to michael. then we will open it up to questions and conversation with you. thank you. >>> thank you very much for coming. for those that have never seen me before, i'm gary young. for these have seen me before, i'm gary young in a suit. because this is not particularly familiar site unless i'm at a wedding or a funeral. this is about king's famous speech on washington and it is left there as an idea that you have a great man and a great talk. but king could not do that on...
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Jan 19, 2021
01/21
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BBCNEWS
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gary, good to talk to many _ some time to come. gary, good to talk to many thanks _ some time to come. garyr - that figure today. the numbers of deaths have been rising for a - that figure today. the numbers of. deaths have been rising for a number of weeks. we know that during december, the infection levels rose sharply. around christmas time, we were seeing about 500 deaths a day on average. this is no increased to over 1000 a day. the figures reported today, 1610, are inflated by delays reporting over the weekend, but certainly, sadly, the number of deaths are going up. however, there is some good news in the figures. 0r however, there is some good news in the figures. or at least some positive signs. the numbers of infections, new infections that have been confirmed, has dropped again. just over 33 thousand cases. we have now had three days where it has been below 40,000. we were seeing an average of 60,000 new cases a day and that cases are falling means that any couple of weeks we will see hospital cases falling and then the number of deaths, but it does take a number of deaths, but i
gary, good to talk to many _ some time to come. gary, good to talk to many thanks _ some time to come. garyr - that figure today. the numbers of deaths have been rising for a - that figure today. the numbers of. deaths have been rising for a number of weeks. we know that during december, the infection levels rose sharply. around christmas time, we were seeing about 500 deaths a day on average. this is no increased to over 1000 a day. the figures reported today, 1610, are inflated by delays...
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Jan 21, 2021
01/21
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FBC
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gary kaltbaum on that. gary what do you make of that, what technology is doing in the early hours, days of the biden administration? >> technology has been on a romp for a while and yesterday they woke up some of the megacap names that have been sitting pretty much dormant the last six months like google, amazon, apple and the like. so i don't make too much of it that biden is in. the big stuff is yet to come from president biden. that is tax policy and spending policy. so these executives orders i don't think are real market movers. my big worry remains the same, the debt and deficits that keep going. i have to say it again between the european central bank and jay powell they're printing $250 billion a month. that is helping markets and asset prices continue higher. i think the endgame is not going to be good news but so far so good. neil: it might be that central bank action, liz peek, that is prompting this enormous runup since election day for joe biden, of the strongest performance of a president from his election to his inauguration that we've ever seen, 2% uptick in the averages during that time. is it because of the stimulus that is coming, because as garye federal reserve plans to do to backstop him, what? >> well i think it is all of the above. we have an unprecedented five trillion dollar increase in government spending over the past two years in the u.s. clearly as the virus has now hooked down in terms of number of cases, the economy begins to open up, that flood of spending is going to spur very good growth and gary is totally right. not just in the u.s. we also have a 10 trillion-dollar expansion of balance sheets in terms of a bank of, our own central bank and also the oecd banks. so you have huge stimulus around the world. the world's awash in money. and let's face it, neil, who backed the biden presidency? big business and big tech. so, they're clearly banking on some payback. they're also banking on congress being a restraint on more extreme measures joe biden might want to push through in terms of taxation. so right now, with fed chair powell behind us, and janet yellen calling for no increase in rates, my gosh, what could i
gary kaltbaum on that. gary what do you make of that, what technology is doing in the early hours, days of the biden administration? >> technology has been on a romp for a while and yesterday they woke up some of the megacap names that have been sitting pretty much dormant the last six months like google, amazon, apple and the like. so i don't make too much of it that biden is in. the big stuff is yet to come from president biden. that is tax policy and spending policy. so these...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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BBCNEWS
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bipartisan elements to its, which of course, there wasn't enough last time around. 0k, gary, thank you so much indeed. garyet in washington, dc. let's be clear. only three presidents have been impeached — and donald trump is already one of them. the us constitution allows congress to remove presidents if enough lawmakers vote to say they committed "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors." but there are other options. the 25th amendment allows the vice president and cabinet to remove the president. democratic house leader nancy pelosi has already asked for this to be invoked, that's what's being debated today. but vice president pence has signalled he will not do it — which leaves, impeachment, where charges are brought to the house and can be passed in a simple majority vote. the case is then passed to the senate for a trial, where a two—thirds vote is necessary for a president's removal. last time, in 2019, the democratic—led house impeached donald trump — then the republican majority senate acquitted him. let's be clear there is the 14th amendment, which bars a president from office if h
bipartisan elements to its, which of course, there wasn't enough last time around. 0k, gary, thank you so much indeed. garyet in washington, dc. let's be clear. only three presidents have been impeached — and donald trump is already one of them. the us constitution allows congress to remove presidents if enough lawmakers vote to say they committed "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors." but there are other options. the 25th amendment allows the vice president and...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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MSNBCW
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gary carters of the world, or gary harts of the world were moving to the center and to the right on economics. but only on economics. but on economics to the point where certainly by the '80s and certainly by the '90s there was no difference economically between the democrats and the republicans. the differences were on cultural issues and social issues and the rest. so no, it's not all the work of -- i don't -- i really try in this book not to call it a conspiracy but it was a concerted orchestrated coordinated effort by this confederacy of the rich and the libertari libertarian zealots of big business and they did it. >> by the way, no problem as well as being a fan of garyets. >> let's get virginia heffernen into the conversation. >> thanks, mika. i love hearing gordon gecko's speech again, we always leave out he says for lack of a better word. he means something like smart. that's why i have a question for you, kurt. we just heard that some of trump's banks, including deutsche bank, they're after pinterest and elaine chao, but finally they've decided that donald trump might not be a great bet. so greed is not exactly being intelligent there, this is not exactly genius work on behalf of deutsche bank in finally making a decision that the the chronically bankrupt donald trump, i wouldn't be able to get a loan, the rest of us are stopped in our tracks by capitalism. because if we default on a loan we can't get another loan, our credit score falls but for some reason the bank d't expect them to be good, right, but we might expect them to be smart. why do they keep from the '80s, your period to now, keep plowing money into this loser? that's my question, ab
gary carters of the world, or gary harts of the world were moving to the center and to the right on economics. but only on economics. but on economics to the point where certainly by the '80s and certainly by the '90s there was no difference economically between the democrats and the republicans. the differences were on cultural issues and social issues and the rest. so no, it's not all the work of -- i don't -- i really try in this book not to call it a conspiracy but it was a concerted...
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Jan 14, 2021
01/21
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BBCNEWS
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let's speak to our washington correspondent gary o'donoghue. garythe house of representatives. there could be some movement around timing and of course with the democrats getting those two extra senators from georgia next week they will have much more control over the timing of things but the senate will have to do it, the trial will have to go ahead in some form of another. the question is, how long will they give to it, how big a process will it be in terms of witnesses, had subpoenaed documents, all that kind of thing, or will they try and get it over as quickly as possible? lgale or will they try and get it over as quickly as possible?— or will they try and get it over as quickly as possible? we have heard about the fears _ quickly as possible? we have heard about the fears of _ quickly as possible? we have heard about the fears of what _ quickly as possible? we have heard about the fears of what may - quickly as possible? we have heard| about the fears of what may happen next week in the lead up tojoe biden's inauguration. what is the atmospher
let's speak to our washington correspondent gary o'donoghue. garythe house of representatives. there could be some movement around timing and of course with the democrats getting those two extra senators from georgia next week they will have much more control over the timing of things but the senate will have to do it, the trial will have to go ahead in some form of another. the question is, how long will they give to it, how big a process will it be in terms of witnesses, had subpoenaed...
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Jan 20, 2021
01/21
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FBC
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gary steele from the state of michigan. gary was sound bite good read on manufacturing. shannon, let me start offer with you, who knew georgia when we were there in late august knew it would be as important state as it turned out to be. we've been a couple times since then with the senate race, what have you. as we heard a minute ago, you were excited actually surprised how well reopening was going. what are you thinking about now? are you still excited? a new president has been sworn in. how do you feel about business? >> well, that is blessed to be able to say that business as -- during these difficult times. since we have talked business has definitely grown a lot. we were able to actually relocate to a better location as well during this. so definitely a blessing to be able to say that because so many individuals have lost their businesses during these times and i can only imagine that it has been very difficult for them. then one of those things being able to take the pieces up, put pieces back together and start over i know can be a hardship but hopefully those who have lost their businesses buy encouraging them and motivation and strength to be able to take back -- and start all over again. connell: let's talk a little bit about what small business, medium-sized businesses might want, need or get from this new administration. i suppose, it kind of makes sense to go to you, garys we had a clip describing how you guys worked your way through the pandemic. i recall that you were in favor, correct me if i'm wrong, of many former administration efforts and trump's policies. you liked a lot. we talked for example, i think about writing off purchases of new equipment, things like that. what are you thinking now? because it is still a tough time for many people economically and maybe this pandemic lasts a lot longer than people thought? are you optimistic, are you concerned, what are you thinking about now? >> i think we always have a spirit of optimism, con them. we are still down quite a few employees. we're at least 70 to where we were a year ago. as far as the policies are concerned, we would obviously like to see continuation of the favorable tax treatment for any capital investments, particularly for industries like us that is very much invested in new equipment in order to stay current. one thing that we were concerned about, had concerns about was our 70 emp
gary steele from the state of michigan. gary was sound bite good read on manufacturing. shannon, let me start offer with you, who knew georgia when we were there in late august knew it would be as important state as it turned out to be. we've been a couple times since then with the senate race, what have you. as we heard a minute ago, you were excited actually surprised how well reopening was going. what are you thinking about now? are you still excited? a new president has been sworn in. how...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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gary kaltbaum, michael lee of michael lee strategy. gary, tell viewers what they need know getting caught in this firing range between at-home day traders giving an historic pounding to the big guns on wall street, taking out their bearish bets? >> my best advice, just understand when everything is all said and done, and everybody is yelling and screaming at each other and people are suing each other, eventually all these stocks will go back to where they came from and do not be the last one in. the swings have been wild, gamestop, was 500 bucks in the premarket this morning. and hit a low of $110 today. and that is why i think you have like robin hood stopped trading because i think a lot of people were on margin and losing every dime they had. i think they made a big mistake. they should have taken away the margin. that is what god everybody angry. but just realize, gamestop that came from 20 and went to 500. it will be back to 20. and some of these other names that don't even have any sales, it will be a death drop when the music stops so be very, very careful. elizabeth: michael, your reaction to what garywhat is your take what is going on? it is pure mania, one of the financial manias in history. gamestop, amc, tootsie roll, koss, bed, bath & beyond, national beverage, american airlines who is next? what is your take on this increasingly bizarre episode? >> you know, liz, it is not that bizarre. it has been going on tesla for a few years. it happens all the time. on much smaller scales on a daily basis. what you had is, some guys sitting at home in reddit chat boards figuring out how to gam a squeeze one much the largest hedge funds in the world. the reason the stock went from 20 to 500, because the hedge funds were way overleveraged or too speculative to run gamestop out of business. common man, plebes, unwashed masses figured out how to gamma squeeze these guys to the tune of 23 doll lals of losses in short selling. now as a result, the big guys are not allowed to lose money. that is why robinhood, td ameritrade, schwab, everyone else shut down trading in the stocks so the pros could
gary kaltbaum, michael lee of michael lee strategy. gary, tell viewers what they need know getting caught in this firing range between at-home day traders giving an historic pounding to the big guns on wall street, taking out their bearish bets? >> my best advice, just understand when everything is all said and done, and everybody is yelling and screaming at each other and people are suing each other, eventually all these stocks will go back to where they came from and do not be the last...
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Jan 10, 2021
01/21
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gary andar tennessee on the republican line. hello, gary. got a couple of points. this summer we saw a thug punk cop basically execute a man in handcuffs. evennever heard one person tried to defend this cop. he's in jail. the democrats fanned the flames, looting. all the walmarts cleaned out and all these liberal states, burning buildings. they tried to burn down everything. this was the democrats. now we come to a few crazies that stormed the capitol building and you're going to blaine trump for that? most of those people did not storm that building. that heefferson said cannot imagine us keeping a republic without an armed revolution every few years and that is what you are going to get. you have got millions of millions of firearms and weapons, ammunition. you've lost the police officers in this country. you threw them under the bus this summer. wait until they are impeached. wait until the democrats get impeached when angry people storm the house armed. it's going to get ugly. they had better leave it alone and they had better move on. host: that was garyrom tennessee. springfield, illinois, we have a text. "dictators around the world are using the trump attempt at insurrection to show that american democracy does not work . impeachment and conviction will show that it does." jay, walmart, mississippi, good morning to you, j. caller: good morning, c-span. i would like to make a comment now. congress can go ahead and start , butchment on donald trump it don't make any difference. it won't kill the make america again if they do sons because he has got that were ruined and these people that tried, these republicans that are so-called never trump's, they trying to stab him in the back. they just don't know it, yet, but they will pay a price for this. host: what's your overall take on what happened on wednesday? caller: basically, you had a few agitators that basically just took that on their own and done that. you know? if you have a large crowd like people,u got some democrat republican or what you are, there's going to be some people tha
gary andar tennessee on the republican line. hello, gary. got a couple of points. this summer we saw a thug punk cop basically execute a man in handcuffs. evennever heard one person tried to defend this cop. he's in jail. the democrats fanned the flames, looting. all the walmarts cleaned out and all these liberal states, burning buildings. they tried to burn down everything. this was the democrats. now we come to a few crazies that stormed the capitol building and you're going to blaine trump...
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Jan 26, 2021
01/21
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gary kaltbaum away from his xbox to come in to comment on this. what did you think of microsoft, gary? >> look, gargantuan numbers. they beat the heck out of estimates. i have to tell you mr. far della, if not in the top five of the greatest ceos in the world i don't know what it is. the azure cloud business was up 50%. you said xbox, you know the business where your kids ignore you most of the time, up 40%. linked in, up 40% year-over-year. they're doing everything right. just a great job as the stocks proves it out and the stock gaps up to new all-time highs. connell: we're wondering about, we talked about it through the week, i don't know necessarily whether microsoft fits in this category but whether tech stocks can be leaders continuing in the market or whether some are getting stretched or getting to the point where they can't keep going like this from a stock market perspective. what do you think ? >> there is a bunch that are stretched and to be clear technology is a percentage of the market far and away higher than it ever has by miles. because of all the leverage put in ton much these names on margin. there will be comeuppance and normalization next couple years i just don't know when. microsoft will be at an all time high as we open tomorrow. amount son, i saw was up 50 or 60 bucks in the after-market because of sympathy with the cloud computing also. so the expectation is that amazon will come up with a bank-up number also next week i believe. connell: yeah. many of them have been amazing stories. amazon, facebook, down on the list, tesla, apple. apple does have its numbers tomorrow night. so i guess what is interesting about this apple quarter be iphone 12 related results, right from apple? >> i'm hearing business is pretty darn good and i do my own little small channel checks, i visit a lot of stores and man, they just, they just do a heck of a lot of business. i suspect they're pretty good at beating the number, whether or not that equates to the stock going higher from here. that is really around all-time highs also. that will be another story and again we'll get that tomorrow. these are category killers. i was looking at microsoft, 150 billion in sales yearly. to be able to grow those sales in the teens is remarkable. same goes for apple, not as strong on the sales front because they do much more in sales but just amazing what these businesses have become. behemoths. that is the best way to say it. connell: really. behemoths. comeuppance may be coming but not quite yet is the headline from garyu. let you get back to the xbox, gary, thank you. >>> now we have severe weather has been pummeling many parts of the country throughout the day. a winter storm dumping a foot of snow as a matter of fact across the middle of the country, closing some covid testing sites in the process, closing schools, disrupting travel. that is the second day in a row we've seen that as it moves into the northeast. this comes as the search-and-rescue efforts continue in the state of alabama. a tornado ripped through part of that state, killing one, leaving a dozen injured. look at those pictures. we'll be right back (vo) businesses are always making choices. here's a choice you don't have to make: the largest 5g network... award-winning customer satisfaction... or insanely great value. now, with t-mobile for business, there's no compromise. network. support. value. choose. all. three. t-mobile for business. ready when you are. nicorette knows, quitting smoking is freaking hard. you get advice like: tr
gary kaltbaum away from his xbox to come in to comment on this. what did you think of microsoft, gary? >> look, gargantuan numbers. they beat the heck out of estimates. i have to tell you mr. far della, if not in the top five of the greatest ceos in the world i don't know what it is. the azure cloud business was up 50%. you said xbox, you know the business where your kids ignore you most of the time, up 40%. linked in, up 40% year-over-year. they're doing everything right. just a great...
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Jan 16, 2021
01/21
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gary else moves joining us live from ghana gary tell us how important is it that the tournaments is going ahead spike the pandemic. well for many reasons to signal the facts that the show must go on just like we saw in many countries in europe and the rest of the world this is a signal that despite the pandemic things can be managed and it is essential for african football to be seen to be trying to you know money just as intuition rather than give up old together. and it seems to be a lot of excitement building around the tournaments in cameroon and for what you're hearing how good of a job are the organizers doing in protecting the players. well considering the facts that come out of being on able to host the african cup of nations in $2900.00 . due to security conversations that let's. turn them into going to egypt and then be really you want an opportunity in this one to prove that he can do it even about this is what i meant itself that dry run for the african cup of nations prop up which is scheduled to be held next year so for them they have to prove to everybody and put all the stops and so far that bring in the game get the guns and everything to come bust up with this gentleman hands and is there a big demand from fans in africa for the tournaments. you should let me know and the reason is simple as you know this tournament is ball players who play via trade in the individual countries that is to say that if you are played with american ringback national team it means then that you have to be played in morocco so if you have played in france and the american you come plea the immediate effect of this is that some of the continent's biggest players who play in the trade even elsewhere across the continent cannot be seen and as you know when you want to market a tournament usually want to put up you know this b.s. but for that shun you usually don't get the country's best players out there so it's what dad had african football fans for the players and mostly for the players as well it's just that it is a shop window to. a city where impressed cults or national team under so that he can get moved to europe and other parts of the world but equally know the simple as i sponsor you know you do call into the john as much as you look for the real africa cup of nations ok great great to get your thoughts thanks so much gary al smith thank you for joining us thank you for. and italy a lot see a scored a surprise when in the round darby on friday they ran out 3 no winners over who didn't help themselves with some terrible defense and wonder. how the result is a blow to rome assyria title challenge they could have gone level on points with 2nd place inter with a red. an n.b.a. player who lost his mother and 6 other family members to cope with 1000 has tested positive himself minnesota timberwolves senator carl anthony towns released a statement on social media saying he prays every day that this nightmare of a virus well and the timberwolves is a game against memphis was postponed marking the 13th league game that has been affected by the virus this season the ball's in my group. right now and you can do the right or wrong or. maybe sure we. all protocol but spiders. are when it's created. or we're not the only one you don't witness. an n.b.a. world so the real world we live in. now one game that did go ahe
gary else moves joining us live from ghana gary tell us how important is it that the tournaments is going ahead spike the pandemic. well for many reasons to signal the facts that the show must go on just like we saw in many countries in europe and the rest of the world this is a signal that despite the pandemic things can be managed and it is essential for african football to be seen to be trying to you know money just as intuition rather than give up old together. and it seems to be a lot of...
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Jan 5, 2021
01/21
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CNNW
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gary tuchman. what's the situation like there now, gary? >> reporter: when we talked to you an hour ago when the polls opened it was like the gates opening at a racetrack, people raced in to vote. now the morning rush is over, there are only a few voters inside but, alas, don't think that's because there's going to be a light turnout in this election because we are already at record numbers. you just alluded to it, alisyn. here in fulton county, georgia, which is the largest county in state population 1 million, here in atlanta the biggest city in the state, here in this cathedral, saipt phillip polling place in the bucket section of atlanta there have been huge numbers of people who have already voted. we are talking in fulton county right now of at least 390,000 people who have early voted. to put that into context, in november in the presidential election here in fulton county 524,000 people voted. now, i don't want to sound like an accountant, but i love math so let me explain this to you. even before the polls opened today almost 75% o
gary tuchman. what's the situation like there now, gary? >> reporter: when we talked to you an hour ago when the polls opened it was like the gates opening at a racetrack, people raced in to vote. now the morning rush is over, there are only a few voters inside but, alas, don't think that's because there's going to be a light turnout in this election because we are already at record numbers. you just alluded to it, alisyn. here in fulton county, georgia, which is the largest county in...
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Jan 10, 2021
01/21
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gary grum back and nbc news digital deputy washington editor ginger gibson. gary, where do we stand with arrests? how many people and what kind of charges are we talking about? >> reporter: it turns out, washington, if you walk in the capitol and commit a crime on camera, the fbi is going to want to find you and talk to you. all across downtown d.c. there's fbi wanted signs and looking for more information on some of these folks. there have been 16 people charged with federal crimes and about 40 people charged with crimes that are of lesser value in d.c. superior court. i'll take you through some of the ones charged recently. first, as you mentioned, that adam johnson, 36-year-old from florida. he was found and spotted walking through the capitol rotunda with speaker pelosi's lectern. also here, jacob chansley wearing horns and the bear suit, walking through the capitol as well. they're all being charged with violent entry, disorderly conduct, among other charges. there's also a number of investigations going on here in terms of the capitol police. what happened there with the capitol police? were they simply understaffed, undermanned? what exactly happened? certainly a lot of questions to be answered and a lot more arrests to be made in the coming days. josh. >> gary, you were at the capitol earlier. what was it like today compared to what happened on wednesday? >> actually got a chance to walk inside the capitol this morning before my morning tv hits. it was filled of shattered glass from the windows that hadn't been cleaned up. you may have seen that photo of the axe body spray bottle. but for the most part it was cleaned up, boarded up windows with wood. outside is really where the security was much hef yesh than we saw earlier this week. there were seven-foot-tall non-scaleable fences supported by the cement barriers across the entire complex. there was hundreds of national guards brought in from virginia, from maryland, from new jersey. all to support the metropolitan police department and the capitol police department. a lot of chatter about what nbc news was calling a possible round two that could happen in the coming days. should that happen, they're certainly going to be met with a lot more force than they were last time. joshua? >> ginge
gary grum back and nbc news digital deputy washington editor ginger gibson. gary, where do we stand with arrests? how many people and what kind of charges are we talking about? >> reporter: it turns out, washington, if you walk in the capitol and commit a crime on camera, the fbi is going to want to find you and talk to you. all across downtown d.c. there's fbi wanted signs and looking for more information on some of these folks. there have been 16 people charged with federal crimes and...
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Jan 15, 2021
01/21
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FBC
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stuart: gary, we will watch for the correction. gary kaltbaum, thank you for joining us.s we open very very soon. we are looking for maybe 200-point loss for the dow industrials when trading begins. it's begun. down 183, down above a half of a percentage point loss. that's the dow industrials. down 190 as we speak. s&p 500, losses fractional. getting between a third and a half of percentage point. nasdaq composite is only down a fraction. that means maybe the big techs are coming back a little from yesterday's selloff. lets look at the big banks. they have open for business and yes they are down to the biggest loss is wells fargo which is down 4% and his city is down 4% as well. zoom, you know that stock has almost become a verb as it's been named the 2021 top stock pick by leading investor firm on wall street. lauren, guess they expect more zoom at meetings this year? lauren: maybe once or you don't have to look at yourself in the camera and say i need botox. what am i talking about? bernstein is bullish on the part of the zoom meeting called the zoom phone, the phone ca
stuart: gary, we will watch for the correction. gary kaltbaum, thank you for joining us.s we open very very soon. we are looking for maybe 200-point loss for the dow industrials when trading begins. it's begun. down 183, down above a half of a percentage point loss. that's the dow industrials. down 190 as we speak. s&p 500, losses fractional. getting between a third and a half of percentage point. nasdaq composite is only down a fraction. that means maybe the big techs are coming back a...