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new things will be invented. it's a mistakes focused on the electric car because 90 percent of the world's population cannot afford an electric car. for countries don't have that and we need a solution for these countries. face been known for they take now nothing is happening, nothing more is coming. they no longer have any solutions. when a problem comes up, they span the looking at each other and don't know what to do. i've talked to leaders for years, auditions in the federal government telling them that these wars are wrong and that they are misinformed. people are not, but are often gonna stop still as badly off as they were 20 years ago under merkel . you were in danger of being kicked out of the christian democratic union party because you are against was mrs. mark like others has govern football too long? nothing has happened in the last 8 years from mrs. marco's point of view, there is nothing more to be achieved. she was never a real cd. you leader, the field. that it so far, we're talking more about w
new things will be invented. it's a mistakes focused on the electric car because 90 percent of the world's population cannot afford an electric car. for countries don't have that and we need a solution for these countries. face been known for they take now nothing is happening, nothing more is coming. they no longer have any solutions. when a problem comes up, they span the looking at each other and don't know what to do. i've talked to leaders for years, auditions in the federal government...
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Sep 10, 2021
09/21
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[laughter] >> i do think it's a fabulous thing not to do the same thing everyday and always learn abouthat is your going to do that day that you don't know. it keeps your brain exercise and it's a wonderful thing. >> i have had a wonderful year during the pandemic, a horrible your investigating your lives and stitching together the story of public radio set against the backdrop of 77 is in your life has been an honor and privilege and i'm >> good evening, everyone. i'm katy, the director of services for kansas city public library. thank you for joining us for a signature event, celebrating women's hit month, when women invented television with jennifer armstrong. i like my job at kcpl and i'm
[laughter] >> i do think it's a fabulous thing not to do the same thing everyday and always learn abouthat is your going to do that day that you don't know. it keeps your brain exercise and it's a wonderful thing. >> i have had a wonderful year during the pandemic, a horrible your investigating your lives and stitching together the story of public radio set against the backdrop of 77 is in your life has been an honor and privilege and i'm >> good evening, everyone. i'm katy,...
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yeah. 100 percent and that's the thing that i think is one of the hardest thing for people to get there around. because an a t 's are not about restricting, but that's actually a really good thing because the great thing about it being available to everybody think a bit more like a new deal that they are than anybody in the world can view for free. that's not the case with that monet. you have to go to a very specific museum. so it's very different, and that's the thing that i think would actually be a huge benefit or not wrapping with an ascii. but isn't it the whole point of paying so much money for an art piece is that, you know, you can choose who sees it or not, or like, know and say that more people who are more popular become valuable. so you really do not want to refer back to you want everybody to see it and everybody does it. the most popular image in the world, it will probably be most valuable. so i, let's say if a rembrandt got stolen from a museum or destroyed by vandals, it's gone, it can be lost forever. nothing can ever happen to a digital piece. that's not true. that's
yeah. 100 percent and that's the thing that i think is one of the hardest thing for people to get there around. because an a t 's are not about restricting, but that's actually a really good thing because the great thing about it being available to everybody think a bit more like a new deal that they are than anybody in the world can view for free. that's not the case with that monet. you have to go to a very specific museum. so it's very different, and that's the thing that i think would...
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but that's actually a really good thing because the great thing about it being available to everybody think a bit more like a public new or again, anybody in the world can view for free. that's not the case with that monet. you have to go. busy to a very specific museum. so it's very different, and that's the thing that i think would actually be a huge benefit or not recognize, with an ascii. but isn't it the whole point of paying so much money for an our piece is that, you know, you can choose who sees it or not, or like, know and say that the more people who are the more popular become more valuable. if you really do not want to refer back to you want everybody to see it and everybody does the most popular image in the world, it will probably in most valuable. so i, let's say if a rembrandt got stolen from a museum or destroyed by vandals, it's gone, it can be lost forever. nothing can ever happen to a digital piece. that's not true. and that's not where you could transfer this like into a wallet. and then you move control about all it. and that's happened with people a big point. t
but that's actually a really good thing because the great thing about it being available to everybody think a bit more like a public new or again, anybody in the world can view for free. that's not the case with that monet. you have to go. busy to a very specific museum. so it's very different, and that's the thing that i think would actually be a huge benefit or not recognize, with an ascii. but isn't it the whole point of paying so much money for an our piece is that, you know, you can choose...
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Sep 9, 2021
09/21
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>> we are seeing some things happening like the podcasts and all kinds of strange new things that i don't i am not doing any of that stuff but i am willing to admit it might be worth doing. they will be things that will open up for all people and young women will, if they've got the stuff, they will get into it and do it. i think it may be different from what we did. i depended upon all these things, all the books, it is a whole new world out there now in the area. i think they will have challenges that we can't imagine. >> i think it's wonderful, exciting and fun. it is hard work. i have a niece who won this year, the first radio bullets are and she started wondering about what to do for a living, it looks like so much fun when she was about eight years old so it is very hard work but if you can do it, you're going to have a ball. >> i agree, i can't think of a better way to understand and see the world and feel you are making a difference, making things clearer for other people who may not follow it as carefully. i have a story about my granddaughter who tomorrow turns 13. i didn't ask
>> we are seeing some things happening like the podcasts and all kinds of strange new things that i don't i am not doing any of that stuff but i am willing to admit it might be worth doing. they will be things that will open up for all people and young women will, if they've got the stuff, they will get into it and do it. i think it may be different from what we did. i depended upon all these things, all the books, it is a whole new world out there now in the area. i think they will have...
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Sep 10, 2021
09/21
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[laughter] >> i do think it is a fabulous thing not to do the same thing every day.hat's what i have learned about what you will do that day that you don't know. it keeps your brain exercise. >> i have had a wonderful year during the pandemic investigating your lives and sticking together the story of public radio of the backdrop and your lives it's been an honor and a privilege and am so grateful to the archives for hosting us and grateful for'l your time and graciousness to join me tonight and archives matter a lot. >> it wasn't comprehensive i hope there are more to come but i hope you read it and hopefully we will meet up at the archives sometime. thank you so much >> good evening, everyone. i'm katy, the director of services for kansas city public library. thank you for joining us for a signature event, celebrating women's hit month, when women invented television with jennifer armstrong. i like my job at kcpl
[laughter] >> i do think it is a fabulous thing not to do the same thing every day.hat's what i have learned about what you will do that day that you don't know. it keeps your brain exercise. >> i have had a wonderful year during the pandemic investigating your lives and sticking together the story of public radio of the backdrop and your lives it's been an honor and a privilege and am so grateful to the archives for hosting us and grateful for'l your time and graciousness to join...
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so people can bring things to give away and people can come and take things for free. and this is great for me because i'm always looking for a way to give things away. this was in the trash of a store because christmas was over. so it's a completely good item that became garbage tax laws, you know, definitely do benefit the wealthier people in our society. so that makes sense for them to throw it out and write it off rather than give it to somebody who could use it. because then that person is not going to buy it, of the core of the philosophy is reducing waste, whatever would otherwise become waste, stopping it from becoming waste. and instead using it in a way that transcends traditional capitalist markets. there is no exchange of money . so we're just looking to use things that other people no longer have any use for or have decided not to have a use for i'm just showing mark a gift that i'm bringing in. i found that st recently like this week. really. how that's a nice find. that's awesome. yeah. yeah. so yeah. besides the missing strings that has like this might
so people can bring things to give away and people can come and take things for free. and this is great for me because i'm always looking for a way to give things away. this was in the trash of a store because christmas was over. so it's a completely good item that became garbage tax laws, you know, definitely do benefit the wealthier people in our society. so that makes sense for them to throw it out and write it off rather than give it to somebody who could use it. because then that person is...
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we can think of those things and the ideas of those things. but then we use languages to describe it to someone else. if we're not using speech, potentially we don't need language. those things will change dramatically. i know philosophers, are we thinking language i, i honestly don't believe we do think specifically in some language construct. i think we both languages on it, but it's something that will change dramatically and i may be abilities. motor ability is the ability to play golf and song which again, i'm not particularly good. but if, if i can down load and i think that's got to be some short term possibility. download a number of movements into my body, which will cause me to play golf a little bit better. i probably still won't be as good as the professional gulf is are, but i can see why those particular type of movements in a, in a sort of robotic way, be done loaded into my brain. so i perform some set of actions, but my body is not a professional. gulf is body, so still probably wouldn't be as good, but it would be a lot bette
we can think of those things and the ideas of those things. but then we use languages to describe it to someone else. if we're not using speech, potentially we don't need language. those things will change dramatically. i know philosophers, are we thinking language i, i honestly don't believe we do think specifically in some language construct. i think we both languages on it, but it's something that will change dramatically and i may be abilities. motor ability is the ability to play golf and...
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Sep 5, 2021
09/21
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seeing both of these things together i think there is a far more complete understanding of this thing we call american democracy. certainly will have plenty of time to talk about that. that's the first point i would make the federal state constitution together. deriving from that, the chronological scope of the exhibit the time frame the exhibit tries to cover not comprehensively but in some way wheat range from documents of the charter, all the way through the early 20th century. even that end date is a bit arbitrary it reflects the fact the papers out an early 20th century. the whole point and the exhibit in some ways this experiment in constitutional democracy is not limited to one moment. it is ongoing and it's never going to stop. by having that long timeframe, i think we make an important point there. alongside that is geographical. the object of the exhibit expands all corners of the united states ultimately. were you really cool, very important will talk about it. that's not the only place constitutional making is going on and small towns and places all over the country this w
seeing both of these things together i think there is a far more complete understanding of this thing we call american democracy. certainly will have plenty of time to talk about that. that's the first point i would make the federal state constitution together. deriving from that, the chronological scope of the exhibit the time frame the exhibit tries to cover not comprehensively but in some way wheat range from documents of the charter, all the way through the early 20th century. even that end...
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Sep 19, 2021
09/21
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>> there absolutely is such a thing as cancel culture. you don't even need to ask me you can go onto facebook and see the amount of people that are constantly attacked or anything to do. that's not to say you can't disagree. this is the most liberal thing you can do, put your idea out there and let it be countered and let the best ideas when. let the sunlight be the best disinfectant. but we've decided if we don't like something and in the most pro verse way if we can cancel from the past to somehow remedy the present we've gotten rid of and jemima and nobody really knows why. we got rid of uncle ben and nobody really knows why so we are taking black people of products you see in stores so should we only see white people and products in stores and that would be that tolerant society we are building? that sounds like a white supremacist society if you willy saw white people on the product yet that is being brought to us by the supposedly tolerant progressives so we cancel things like that. one that i love to bring up is hulu canceled an ep
>> there absolutely is such a thing as cancel culture. you don't even need to ask me you can go onto facebook and see the amount of people that are constantly attacked or anything to do. that's not to say you can't disagree. this is the most liberal thing you can do, put your idea out there and let it be countered and let the best ideas when. let the sunlight be the best disinfectant. but we've decided if we don't like something and in the most pro verse way if we can cancel from the past...
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Sep 12, 2021
09/21
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very first thing.n i have been in these cars, when there is nobody in the driver's seat, it has been good and fine. david: do you wear a crash helmet when you are if those cars? reid: no. [laughter] david: ok. what about flying taxis, is that in our future? reid: there is. i helped bring joby public and it has moved the transport grid from 2d to 3d, redefined cities, make commutes much less onerous, getting to the airport on time, being able to live more remote and then coming to the cities. the jetsons is no longer science fiction, but on its way to being science fact. david: what about space? do you invest in outer space-related investments? reid: not as intensely as some of my friends like elon. i put some money into spacex. that is more of elon and his amazing transformation of the world. but it is obviously an important area. i have kind of ended up in it sometimes just by who i know. ♪ ♪ david: let's talk about how you became an investor and entrepreneur. you were going to be an academic, and the
very first thing.n i have been in these cars, when there is nobody in the driver's seat, it has been good and fine. david: do you wear a crash helmet when you are if those cars? reid: no. [laughter] david: ok. what about flying taxis, is that in our future? reid: there is. i helped bring joby public and it has moved the transport grid from 2d to 3d, redefined cities, make commutes much less onerous, getting to the airport on time, being able to live more remote and then coming to the cities....
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Sep 26, 2021
09/21
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if you can encourage them to do more things, church things, synagogue things. art things, read books. you have to read books mom and dad as a role model. i recommend in how to raise a conservative daughter, just a few books, some in history, some general, good books get your kids reading books and get them reading good books and you have to read good books. and these kind of things are so much better to fill their life than the emptiness and the phoniness of so much social media. i really believe it needs to be restricted more than most parents do. >> it's interesting, i love that you kind of challenge parents to be good models. because i know that a lot of parents out there, both kind of in their personal lives and also as parents spend an awful lot of time making sure they have really cute pictures of their kids doing x, y and z, that's fine but it doesn't replace actually doing the hard work of making sure you're spending enough quality time with your kid and putting your own phone at a model and always not staring at a screen yourself. >> it's hard. many mo
if you can encourage them to do more things, church things, synagogue things. art things, read books. you have to read books mom and dad as a role model. i recommend in how to raise a conservative daughter, just a few books, some in history, some general, good books get your kids reading books and get them reading good books and you have to read good books. and these kind of things are so much better to fill their life than the emptiness and the phoniness of so much social media. i really...
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we can think of those things and the ideas of those things. but then we use languages to describe it to someone else. if we're not using speech, potentially we don't need language. those things will change dramatically. i know philosophers are we thinking language? i don't believe we do think specifically in some language construct. i think we put language is on it, but it's something that will change dramatically and i may be abilities. motor ability is the ability to play golf and song which again, i'm not particularly good. but if, if i can down load and i think that's got to be some short term possibility, download a number of movements into my body, which will cause me to play golf a little bit better. i probably still won't be as good as the professional gulf is are, but i can't see why those particular movements in a sort of robotic way can be done loaded into my brain. so i perform some set of actions, but my body is not a professional. gulf is body, so still probably wouldn't be as good, but it would be a lot better than i was beforeh
we can think of those things and the ideas of those things. but then we use languages to describe it to someone else. if we're not using speech, potentially we don't need language. those things will change dramatically. i know philosophers are we thinking language? i don't believe we do think specifically in some language construct. i think we put language is on it, but it's something that will change dramatically and i may be abilities. motor ability is the ability to play golf and song which...
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Sep 5, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN2
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i think it can be a larger thing thing getting off of drugs. it is either recovery and abstinence or it is harm reduction. that is how it was framed out there. those of us in harm reduction were vilified. it was almost as if people were imagining we were snapping people in recovery shooting them up with heroin and then sending them off again. and then there were people in harm reduction, many of whom had been hurt in forms of the recovery community, not having anything to do without. they are a bunch of, i think the expression, if this offends anybody, i apologize. i am quoting and i am not endorsing it. you know, everybody was marching in line with the 12 stepping. so, i think that there was a polarization and i think that it is a false one. certainly, people who are very active had been part of the recovery community, i am looking at the chat and two of my favorite people on this planet. how can you not love him. i hope that he is blushing right now. and mary, my white daughter who runs an outreach for youth. they are both, they have been par
i think it can be a larger thing thing getting off of drugs. it is either recovery and abstinence or it is harm reduction. that is how it was framed out there. those of us in harm reduction were vilified. it was almost as if people were imagining we were snapping people in recovery shooting them up with heroin and then sending them off again. and then there were people in harm reduction, many of whom had been hurt in forms of the recovery community, not having anything to do without. they are a...
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Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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they called you this bad thing, you're still here. and, again, if you just keep going forward, keep doing what you believe is right and keep using logic and reason, hopefully, and being a decent human being and trying to connect with other decent human beings, you will suddenly realize that their cries of naziism are nothing but false words, and they only have power if you give them power. >> host: i want to bring in another person who played a role in your coming out as a conservative, and that was larry elder. >> guest: oh, i love larry elder. i'm here at freedom fest right now. i think larry's going to speak in a little bit. i actuallied had him on my show in los angeles this week. of course, he's running for governor of los angeles, and i think he actually really has a shot. larry has this very famous moment that has now been seen millions and millions of times and clicked into youtube where i was still a lefty, and i was sitting down with larry elder, of course, conservative radio host from los angeles, been in the fight for 30 s
they called you this bad thing, you're still here. and, again, if you just keep going forward, keep doing what you believe is right and keep using logic and reason, hopefully, and being a decent human being and trying to connect with other decent human beings, you will suddenly realize that their cries of naziism are nothing but false words, and they only have power if you give them power. >> host: i want to bring in another person who played a role in your coming out as a conservative,...
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Sep 26, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN3
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the next thing. i do not recall of those stories other people can tell you, unless someone jiggles my brain and reminds me. yes i remember that, had one of those about two days ago, ran into somebody who came up to me and said do you remember when you came to the store, we showed you around and i did. but it must have been 15 years ago. those things and something i had done that got his attention. it is that type of thing. that's when i say you never know when you'll have an effect on women. young women i used to love having young women be interested in my office. you could help and mentor them when they're trying to figure out what they wanted to do in life. it was always great to watch and then what happens. a lot of them became really successful. if you like to think maybe that little bit of whatever you did in their life made a difference. it is that type of thing in trying to help other people along. i think that is an important part of this job. >> you are in elected leadership position you are
the next thing. i do not recall of those stories other people can tell you, unless someone jiggles my brain and reminds me. yes i remember that, had one of those about two days ago, ran into somebody who came up to me and said do you remember when you came to the store, we showed you around and i did. but it must have been 15 years ago. those things and something i had done that got his attention. it is that type of thing. that's when i say you never know when you'll have an effect on women....
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Sep 10, 2021
09/21
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this sort of thing.hey were often set in boarding houses and women who weren't necessarily related interacting with each other, and then i think what happened is if you're doing a daytime -- a daily show, you start realize i have to snap this up and so they start to really escalate and something he did brings to the onreraise the idea of -- genre is having doctors and lawyers and in her own life and this is telling but she actually is a contributor to something like "grey's anatomy" in the sense she saw how if you had a doctor like on the guiding light she had a pastor, so what that allowed was people could come to the pastor with problems and that -- made more sense they were having constant dramatic problems because they were comping to him with problems and the same thing with something like a doctor. of course they see stuff because they're a doctor. so she kind of brought this idea of the professional as a conduit of drama. >> that is -- just make mess think about the favorite shows in a totally dif
this sort of thing.hey were often set in boarding houses and women who weren't necessarily related interacting with each other, and then i think what happened is if you're doing a daytime -- a daily show, you start realize i have to snap this up and so they start to really escalate and something he did brings to the onreraise the idea of -- genre is having doctors and lawyers and in her own life and this is telling but she actually is a contributor to something like "grey's anatomy"...
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Sep 7, 2021
09/21
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how things were in the north. kennedy went to the meeting thinking that he would get some advice or insights into how to deal with the problems in the urban wars. it wasn't you just pass a law. it was just entrenched segregation and all that came with that. so he goes to the meeting and he starts -- his intention is to let them know they kind of political challenges the kennedy administration faces, and they were real. sort of like today. when you have this congress. so people gather and sullivan had no agenda. yet people he you respect he thought should be there and they would just talk. one of the people who came to the meeting was strong smith, 23-year-old civil rights attorney for movies in the green in movement since the sit ins. yet been beaten and that just gone through horrible just what people met done there, this is 63 so is on the front lines and use in new york with a broken jaw. he sitting in this meeting and kenneth clark starts to get statistics ethics are rolling around and he's like wait a minute.
how things were in the north. kennedy went to the meeting thinking that he would get some advice or insights into how to deal with the problems in the urban wars. it wasn't you just pass a law. it was just entrenched segregation and all that came with that. so he goes to the meeting and he starts -- his intention is to let them know they kind of political challenges the kennedy administration faces, and they were real. sort of like today. when you have this congress. so people gather and...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 11, 2021
09/21
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but here's the thing. you know, we have a lot of our people who have been in jail for many, many years, and they've turned and they want to do the work, right? we have to introduce them back into the community in a way that allows the community to receive them in the way they need to be received. but if they're just in the community and they're suffering just like everyone else, there's more trauma compiled back on top of it. it reminds me when i saw my father come home from viet nam more. there was nothing there to help them, and many of these youth are our same youth who are dealing with ptsd. so if we're dealing with a gun ridden community, it's a war zone, and as a war zone, we have to treat many of our young men like soldiers, and that's how they placate themselves, to be like soldiers. we have to get them to be soldiers for themselves, soldiers for the community, and soldiers for the bayview. again, my name is malik, but our murals are the mirror of what we want for ourselves and our community. again
but here's the thing. you know, we have a lot of our people who have been in jail for many, many years, and they've turned and they want to do the work, right? we have to introduce them back into the community in a way that allows the community to receive them in the way they need to be received. but if they're just in the community and they're suffering just like everyone else, there's more trauma compiled back on top of it. it reminds me when i saw my father come home from viet nam more....
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you know, just the pivotal thing. well, let's talk about at the time to read them because one of the things that was really interesting that you come back to in your book is about the 2 tools that humanity has its disposal. and there's a really conversation and talking and violence being the other one. again, when you say you're not complete and you think about, well what, what do we have? our disposal is literally, we can communicate with each other or we can use brute force. and that's basically what we have either species and the ways in which we're encouraged to communicate at the moment. so if we look at social media as the main example, you know, that's how we really converse with most people in our lives. definitely with strangers. the ways in which social media are structured kind of lead us not to communicate, but actually the opposite. there's been a lot of research done in as soon as you take away the face and it's just text, we're much more likely to humanize others. and look at social media, you see that
you know, just the pivotal thing. well, let's talk about at the time to read them because one of the things that was really interesting that you come back to in your book is about the 2 tools that humanity has its disposal. and there's a really conversation and talking and violence being the other one. again, when you say you're not complete and you think about, well what, what do we have? our disposal is literally, we can communicate with each other or we can use brute force. and that's...
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Sep 25, 2021
09/21
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is that a good or bad thing? noubar: it is possible, i'm not sure it is a good thing. alone on a planet that is dying. we have to think about our existence not as individuals any more than our hepatocytes in our liver think of whether we are going to live. they think of whether your whole body is going to live. if we don't start thinking about whether our society is going to live in our planet is going to live, then it is a moot point whether we as individuals live to 110. there is a reckoning, we have to create an environment within which it is worth living. david: did your parents live to see your success? noubar: my parents -- i lost my parents in the late 1990's and early 2000's. they saw a far greater success than they would have ever imagined or wanted. they did not see the most recent few years, let alone the last 12 months, but i know they fell the -- felt that the decisions they made on behalf of their children, particularly moving us to north america, and giving us the opportunity this country gave us has been more than validated. david: what keeps you motiva
is that a good or bad thing? noubar: it is possible, i'm not sure it is a good thing. alone on a planet that is dying. we have to think about our existence not as individuals any more than our hepatocytes in our liver think of whether we are going to live. they think of whether your whole body is going to live. if we don't start thinking about whether our society is going to live in our planet is going to live, then it is a moot point whether we as individuals live to 110. there is a reckoning,...
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Sep 25, 2021
09/21
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some really difficult things. even worse than the two tornadoes so that's pretty amazing stuff. >> we talked a little bit about process and we have done some reading. i want to ask if there is anyone who has any questions on anything we have not covered. >> i'm really struck by how close honest and transparent the two of you are in the letters that you wrote back and forth to each other. my curiosity is about because you are two different people and because you do have two different backgrounds how did you deal with disagreements when you saw things differently whether it was religiously, personally? i mean that comes up in any human relationship. there are disagreements or even passionate disagreements and in your friendship and your exchange in the book how did you deal with that? >> byron do you want to start? >> i would love to start. we didn't have a ton of disagreements but i will tell you i know jennifer and i, we are becoming more similar and are political beliefs than we once were. when i first met jennif
some really difficult things. even worse than the two tornadoes so that's pretty amazing stuff. >> we talked a little bit about process and we have done some reading. i want to ask if there is anyone who has any questions on anything we have not covered. >> i'm really struck by how close honest and transparent the two of you are in the letters that you wrote back and forth to each other. my curiosity is about because you are two different people and because you do have two different...
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Sep 2, 2021
09/21
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but the third thing and most important thing and this goes directly into the questions about george floyd, was that the pandemic was a reminder that human solidarity really matters. i'm old enough that i, my political life has largely been spent in the shadow of ronald reagan who changed our politics in this country and his basic understanding was markets are all global. that government was a problem, not a solution. his famous last line in all his speeches was the nine scariest words in the english language are i'm from the government and i'm here to help. well, ha ha but it turns out that the scariest words in the english language are we run out of ventilators for the hillside behind your house has caught on fire. these are not problems that you call on market forces to solve. you call on that fire department and the health of the hospital to solve and those are reflections of our ability to work together as human beings out of some kind of heforming the effective bonds we call government that allow things to allow us to feel does. that sense i think was only heightened by watching what
but the third thing and most important thing and this goes directly into the questions about george floyd, was that the pandemic was a reminder that human solidarity really matters. i'm old enough that i, my political life has largely been spent in the shadow of ronald reagan who changed our politics in this country and his basic understanding was markets are all global. that government was a problem, not a solution. his famous last line in all his speeches was the nine scariest words in the...
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Sep 7, 2021
09/21
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so he's doing things on a microlevel. prince edward county, he was committed to what was happening to those children, the schools were closed for five years, 1700 roughly african-american children out of school, no public school and that was a cause that both he and the president were committed to and president kennedy said do whatever you can as long as it's-- legally possible, whatever, just do something and they created the free school as they're litigaing the case and create a free public school and it opens, ironically, opens in september of 1963, the day after the birmingham church is mobbed. so this is really explosive period, but if people have that opinion, you know, i think that people who say that haven't done the work of looking. it's sort of a-- the judge thing, and the -- and really the history is complex and rich, so -- and then, you know, i shouldn't say about the senate, but by the time he became a senator, he understood a lot and focused his attention on the urban, what's happening in cities. he was the
so he's doing things on a microlevel. prince edward county, he was committed to what was happening to those children, the schools were closed for five years, 1700 roughly african-american children out of school, no public school and that was a cause that both he and the president were committed to and president kennedy said do whatever you can as long as it's-- legally possible, whatever, just do something and they created the free school as they're litigaing the case and create a free public...
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Sep 26, 2021
09/21
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they said that quietly the other thing they understand is the other thing they are afraid of is, if it seems like latinos are swing voters if it is true latinos don't care if it's not an issue they prioritize why are we going to spend so much time and effort passing immigration overhaul? so democratic political analyst are really worried that if it seems like latinos are fractured and swing voters, they have long believed there is power in numbers. the way to get things done in washington on behalf of latinos is say if you pay attention to this growing voting block with enormous political power, you are going to be in trouble for it. but if it turns out the case that latinos don't all care about the things that democratic political strategist care about, that will make it harder for them to sell their positions. i think that is the conundrum that democrats feel themselves to be in. >> before i ask you one more question, i am going to ask the audience to have your questions. if you have them ready and you have a question for professor geraldo cadava and asked that. as you thing about yo
they said that quietly the other thing they understand is the other thing they are afraid of is, if it seems like latinos are swing voters if it is true latinos don't care if it's not an issue they prioritize why are we going to spend so much time and effort passing immigration overhaul? so democratic political analyst are really worried that if it seems like latinos are fractured and swing voters, they have long believed there is power in numbers. the way to get things done in washington on...
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Sep 3, 2021
09/21
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the most important thing to me about sports are two things -- there are certain things in life that happen and you miss an the one thing you can never get back is time. you can lose money and make money back. your health is important but there are things, but the when thing you can't get back his time. they are never 14 again. one thing that happens when you run for office, i met a lot of people who have made a lot of money and done great things and not a single one of them has told me i wish i had spent less time with my kids and were on my career. you don't get that back. i would not have understood that 15 years ago. that is first. and the value of sports, i think competition is important but the most important things in life are lessons i talked about. sports and other endeavors can help teach those lessons. if you show up on time and do what you have to do, the outcome isn't always going to be what you want but that process of showing up on time and meeting your responsibility is 90% of life. sports is a great teacher of it. that is why i wanted my kids to go into sports. [applause] j
the most important thing to me about sports are two things -- there are certain things in life that happen and you miss an the one thing you can never get back is time. you can lose money and make money back. your health is important but there are things, but the when thing you can't get back his time. they are never 14 again. one thing that happens when you run for office, i met a lot of people who have made a lot of money and done great things and not a single one of them has told me i wish i...
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Sep 6, 2021
09/21
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it's nice to just focus on a couple hard things and the thing you can get anywhere. anyone can tell you a hard coming out story whether it's a 13-year-old or someone older or someone trans, this doesn't exist as much. that's how that happened. i like this, that's what you expect. >> when you are pregnant with leo, you talk in the book about issues that came up because of publicity you've done but in your own life, did you encounter people either trans or other we are people who helped -- felt betrayed her people on the street who gave you strange look? how did this goo down? >> i know expect women to be mad at me because i'm the one who starved out of the lady party 20 years ago, slammed the door on their faces and swore i'd never do back. now i'm inching my way back then, i totally get that. for me, truly the biggest fear i have going into telling our story publicly, i was worried about the back lash within the trans community because i expect people to do other things. but this was my own way giving a gift to my community, both past, present and future. that was th
it's nice to just focus on a couple hard things and the thing you can get anywhere. anyone can tell you a hard coming out story whether it's a 13-year-old or someone older or someone trans, this doesn't exist as much. that's how that happened. i like this, that's what you expect. >> when you are pregnant with leo, you talk in the book about issues that came up because of publicity you've done but in your own life, did you encounter people either trans or other we are people who helped --...
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Sep 10, 2021
09/21
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it was that kindnd of thing.so for that reason it was the fourth network at the time offered her the chance to have her own variety show in prime so first it was just in new york city and she loved this because she could stay home with her son instead of traveling all over the country to perform. and it was so popular that it expanded to multiple nights a week in new york and then finally it expanded nationally and to have a primetime show that was national and this was 1950. so really the big deal. this was in an incredible time to be making thisre breakthrough and unfortunately it burns bright and fast because she ran intool the hollywood blacklist d was listed in this complication that claimed to tell you who might be a communist. they said these people might be. do what you want. and as you sort of eluded to, i think heroically they volunteered to go beyond the committeeou because she thought she could clear her name by doing this. but really what she was doing is standing up for what was right and gave thisr
it was that kindnd of thing.so for that reason it was the fourth network at the time offered her the chance to have her own variety show in prime so first it was just in new york city and she loved this because she could stay home with her son instead of traveling all over the country to perform. and it was so popular that it expanded to multiple nights a week in new york and then finally it expanded nationally and to have a primetime show that was national and this was 1950. so really the big...
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Sep 12, 2021
09/21
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that and often people have forgetting for certain things. so much to be neglectful or not that i'm not sure that's at the anonymous questionnaire was asking. >> not a question but a memory experience while trying to remember the name of a high school teacher i picture a clam when i finally remember the name i realized it was ronald donald i am associating the without well-known mcdonald's clown in my brain was showing me the way. >> that is spot on i don't know if anybody knows about memory magicians. and these memory athletes that can walk into a room and memorize all these names so they also tap into the hippocampus and the more you populate that stage with information and associations the more you can retrieve the memory that's a very interesting anecdote in the way i understand memory works. >> we have a question about sleep from anna. with those aspects of memory is there a difference between natural sleep and sleep with assistance or sleeping aids? >> there is a real debate because there is a distinct difference. i'm not asleep doctor
that and often people have forgetting for certain things. so much to be neglectful or not that i'm not sure that's at the anonymous questionnaire was asking. >> not a question but a memory experience while trying to remember the name of a high school teacher i picture a clam when i finally remember the name i realized it was ronald donald i am associating the without well-known mcdonald's clown in my brain was showing me the way. >> that is spot on i don't know if anybody knows...
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Sep 7, 2021
09/21
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i mean, i feel i've enjoyed the s&l like snl thing is like the main thing i think of of course and it'swho is perfect. um, and i really have enjoyed that depiction from the beginning. i feel like it's a little bit it gets it takes us back old school a little bit and snl impressions in terms of don't think they're trying to like very deeply comment on her if that makes sense. like i don't think they feel unnecess an urge to necessarily undercut earth. i'm glad you know, that's really good. i think they're like, let's just she's the main joke is sort of like she's very glamorous and in charge and i loved the joke they did once that was basically say she said something like, you know that she had been sort of for an nbc legal drama and she like looked at the camera and they had her hair blowing and i always think of that because that's so accurate, i always think of that because that's so accurate. it's a correctly gentle portrayal and i think that's really good. it's respectful. i think we've all heard incidents where the news coverage has gone less than well. but i think a lot of places
i mean, i feel i've enjoyed the s&l like snl thing is like the main thing i think of of course and it'swho is perfect. um, and i really have enjoyed that depiction from the beginning. i feel like it's a little bit it gets it takes us back old school a little bit and snl impressions in terms of don't think they're trying to like very deeply comment on her if that makes sense. like i don't think they feel unnecess an urge to necessarily undercut earth. i'm glad you know, that's really good. i...
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Sep 8, 2021
09/21
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they did not like the policing the police thing at all. so they ran to don mulford who was a california assemblyman and said we need help. mulford obliged with the mulford act. which was written with the help of the nra. at band open carry of weapons so it band, it made illegal what the panthers were doing that was legal in order to bring down police violence in the black community. and the panthers with their guns sent a shockwave through white america. and this was where you get this narrative. this bifurcated narrative that had martin luther king and as nonviolence but remember the violence that the state, remember because what they were doing was disrupting a power structure. that was seen as violent. but it was a way to try and pick these two against each other. king was doing it the right way and the panthers were doing it the wrong way . but when you think about the violence that the civil rights movement faced here in the south, it was seen as doing it the wrong way because they weren't being violent and accepting jim crow. >> i've
they did not like the policing the police thing at all. so they ran to don mulford who was a california assemblyman and said we need help. mulford obliged with the mulford act. which was written with the help of the nra. at band open carry of weapons so it band, it made illegal what the panthers were doing that was legal in order to bring down police violence in the black community. and the panthers with their guns sent a shockwave through white america. and this was where you get this...
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Sep 10, 2021
09/21
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CNNW
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back in march '39%, four in ten americans say things are going fairly well. 60% say things are badly. look at the jump. 7 in 10 americans. 69% say things are going pretty poorly. that is a political toll on a president in the middle of a public health crisis which is why yesterday he said i want to do more, but this is not really my problem. >> the unvaccinated overcrowd our hospitals. overrunning emergency rooms and intensive care units. my message to unvaccinated americans is this. what more is there to wait for? what more do you need to see? we've been patient but our patience is wearing thin. and your refusal has cost all of us. >> with me here in studio to share the reporting, dana bash, olivia knox at "the washington post," and others. you see plainly transparentally the president's frustration, exhaustion to a degree with we've been at this, made vaccines available and up goes the case count and a decent chunk of america is not listening. is that the gateway to getting the help when he knows a lot of the people he needs to get a shot didn't vote for him, don't necessarily like
back in march '39%, four in ten americans say things are going fairly well. 60% say things are badly. look at the jump. 7 in 10 americans. 69% say things are going pretty poorly. that is a political toll on a president in the middle of a public health crisis which is why yesterday he said i want to do more, but this is not really my problem. >> the unvaccinated overcrowd our hospitals. overrunning emergency rooms and intensive care units. my message to unvaccinated americans is this. what...
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ah, the dares thing. we dare to ask me. ah ah, ah hello and welcome to cross top where all things are considered. i'm peter lavelle, is the biden presidency in terminal decline. this administration's handling of the coven pandemic, the economy, and not least afghanistan, these, this president underwater, in the polls in a big way in the country today is just as divided as under trump. can this president turn things around the cross hockey in the binding presidency? i'm joined by my guess internet panama, in london. he is professor of international politics at city university of london, as well as visiting professor at the london school of economics in atlanta. we have robert patello. he is a civil rights attorney and radio host, and in bulgaria, we cross the julio rivera. he is the editorial director of reactionary times identifying crossfire girls and a fact that means he can jump in anytime you want. and i always appreciate it. let's go to our guest in london, interested sometimes when you have distance from a situation,
ah, the dares thing. we dare to ask me. ah ah, ah hello and welcome to cross top where all things are considered. i'm peter lavelle, is the biden presidency in terminal decline. this administration's handling of the coven pandemic, the economy, and not least afghanistan, these, this president underwater, in the polls in a big way in the country today is just as divided as under trump. can this president turn things around the cross hockey in the binding presidency? i'm joined by my guess...
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Sep 20, 2021
09/21
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i have talked to a lot of protest rallies and things in my life and things can turn on a dime. we sell that situation immediately when it was happening. some people are very angry. unfavorable police logo. we will leave it at that. immediately i was like, no, i think we need to shift this to no victim, no crime. as the arrest was happening, several activists in front of the police car. everyone sort of circled the situation. i found something that made it dramatic and slightly interesting. culturally, in new hampshire, people carry firearms. we do have constitutional carry. a lot of folks carry gun. they may open carry or conceal carry. when the police realize they were being surrounded, they, of course, called for backup. now people are angry. i remember, it is actually on a video on youtube, there is an officer goes, he's got a gun. somebody else yelled we've all got guns. what now. it was very interesting. the police stood down in terms of the level of violence. they were willing to embrace the situation. when we talk about gun rights, second amendment rights, that is part o
i have talked to a lot of protest rallies and things in my life and things can turn on a dime. we sell that situation immediately when it was happening. some people are very angry. unfavorable police logo. we will leave it at that. immediately i was like, no, i think we need to shift this to no victim, no crime. as the arrest was happening, several activists in front of the police car. everyone sort of circled the situation. i found something that made it dramatic and slightly interesting....
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Sep 5, 2021
09/21
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ALJAZ
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and i think helping people understand that not to put, you know, because that seems thing thing, isn't it that way. as other people impose our own way of saying things onto the person in your mind, they must die. and if anything gets in your way, like for it, what does that have to get past that anger and then actually do you have that just going? i'm glad i fail. one of the biggest fears of trying to take your life is that you're not going to complete it. and then you know, the faculty you're about to go back until again. and so, you know, waking up horrible because you think so certain at the time you're going to get it right. i find someone who's not going to sort of confused me because the that will, that we will carry around is that they can be so relieved that they wouldn't thing that moment of realization that all my gosh, of course i shouldn't be. they would have been not as if it was a really straightforward equations is how do you judge? like, how do you know what to do and practically what? cuz i think that's this is the problem. no one knows what to do to help. we don't und
and i think helping people understand that not to put, you know, because that seems thing thing, isn't it that way. as other people impose our own way of saying things onto the person in your mind, they must die. and if anything gets in your way, like for it, what does that have to get past that anger and then actually do you have that just going? i'm glad i fail. one of the biggest fears of trying to take your life is that you're not going to complete it. and then you know, the faculty you're...
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but then both of those things were blocked, those things never happened. and i sort of lost hope. and i think a lot of people with lost hope that really doesn't seem to be a middle ground. and one of the things that i've tried to establish in, in guns was that there should be a middle ground. yes. no, thank something simple, bass like, maybe something like this where it's just a simple out of the state. and then just get rid of the background color you just had, right. and that was it, right? the gun control movement needs to understand it takes a long time. it takes persistence. it takes patience, but it takes constant advocacy. mothers against drunk driving was started in 1980. it was one small change after one small change on one small change might occur in one state and then another state would adopt that tougher penalties for offenders. more prevention programs lowering the legal limit from drunk driving. i have seen a similarity between some of the tactics. i think the energy is using compared to some of the tactics that the alcohol and hospitality industry used in our fi, p
but then both of those things were blocked, those things never happened. and i sort of lost hope. and i think a lot of people with lost hope that really doesn't seem to be a middle ground. and one of the things that i've tried to establish in, in guns was that there should be a middle ground. yes. no, thank something simple, bass like, maybe something like this where it's just a simple out of the state. and then just get rid of the background color you just had, right. and that was it, right?...
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Sep 8, 2021
09/21
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CNBC
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thing.'t think that we're seeing glasses or some other new product here >> and the discussion continues with their engineering chief going to ford, some of your colleagues on the street arguing it might be the biggest setback for any hopes that they eventually developen an apple . are you as dower on that front >> i don't know. i feel like earlier it was that the apple car is coming in 2024. so every day i wake up, is there going to be an apple car today, tomorrow i don't know seems like apple is certainly investing in the automotive space. whether there are moves in the engineers and executives mean much, i don't know >> on a separate note you and your colleague vs have a remarkable piece about tiktok, essentially the journal set up a bunch of bots and then watched to see what kind of content tiktok gave those bots in return and it is not pretty >> it is not pretty but thank you for bringing this up we just published this story this morning we set up all of these automated accounts, around
thing.'t think that we're seeing glasses or some other new product here >> and the discussion continues with their engineering chief going to ford, some of your colleagues on the street arguing it might be the biggest setback for any hopes that they eventually developen an apple . are you as dower on that front >> i don't know. i feel like earlier it was that the apple car is coming in 2024. so every day i wake up, is there going to be an apple car today, tomorrow i don't know seems...
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Sep 22, 2021
09/21
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and that is a wonderful thing. but we also know they are -- that no -- low risk does not mean no risk. and so we do see kids who can have severe illness. we do see kids who can be hospitalized. and what we're seeing with delta is that it doesn't appear to likely be more severe in children. but it is more transmissible. and so what i say sometimes is that a small percentage of a lot of kids is a lot of kids. and so that's why it's also just so important to be doing the things that we know how to do to keep kids safe. and dr. walensky talked about this, for our kids who are too young to be immunized make sure the adults around them are immunized to create that cocoon for adolescents and adults who are old enough to be immunized and making sure that they are. using those common sense precautions like masks and hand washing and other things can really help kids safe. but i do think it's a good thing and parents should feel reassured that young children really do typically do very well with covid. we also know that ever
and that is a wonderful thing. but we also know they are -- that no -- low risk does not mean no risk. and so we do see kids who can have severe illness. we do see kids who can be hospitalized. and what we're seeing with delta is that it doesn't appear to likely be more severe in children. but it is more transmissible. and so what i say sometimes is that a small percentage of a lot of kids is a lot of kids. and so that's why it's also just so important to be doing the things that we know how to...
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Sep 2, 2021
09/21
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don't worry about how things are. focus on getting the job done. go do your thing. we're good here. you have to realize that they want you to write multiple letters a week. if you can write daily, that's best. imagine your soldier is going to get mail every day. if there's nothing there, how depressing that is. i have to go fight my war. nobody at home cares about me. that's the guilt. the pressure is to write every day, three days a week, four or five days a week at the minimum. you write that once. then what do you write? what else do you do? >> miss you. >> we miss you. please come home. right? you can't do too much of that. right? or it will make him too sad. >> a cheerful story but focus on the war. >> right, right. a fun story. a piece of advice that gorman puts in her book is, make yourself interesting so your letters are interesting. do interesting things so your letters are interesting. don't be too interesting, because he will think you are having fun while he is at war. you have to find that balance between being interesting and not being interesting. >> what if they don'
don't worry about how things are. focus on getting the job done. go do your thing. we're good here. you have to realize that they want you to write multiple letters a week. if you can write daily, that's best. imagine your soldier is going to get mail every day. if there's nothing there, how depressing that is. i have to go fight my war. nobody at home cares about me. that's the guilt. the pressure is to write every day, three days a week, four or five days a week at the minimum. you write that...
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you crave different things . and when you're a teenager, when you're, when your elderly, you know, getting older in life and even things like picture of food will change when you're a baby you use simply won't solid foods. and on the opposite end of the spectrum. and then when you're a teenager, let's say you love crunchy crispy correctly even into adulthood, but then as you get older, maybe again, softer foods become more comfortable and more enjoyable again. so there's, there's both that kind of physical requirements of food that will change as we kind of grow in an age. and then they'll be the nutritional requirements that we have. we can see this and you know, people who are say women who are pregnant have different extra tional requirements or people who live in different parts of the world. different jobs, they'll have different nutritional requirements. so it'll change very much from one individual to another. but what's for sure, is that our pallets and our what safety a class and what we enjoy definitely
you crave different things . and when you're a teenager, when you're, when your elderly, you know, getting older in life and even things like picture of food will change when you're a baby you use simply won't solid foods. and on the opposite end of the spectrum. and then when you're a teenager, let's say you love crunchy crispy correctly even into adulthood, but then as you get older, maybe again, softer foods become more comfortable and more enjoyable again. so there's, there's both that kind...