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Jan 23, 2022
01/22
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caplan and his team had already started going door to caplan and his team had door and met don's nextstarted going door to door and met don's next door neighbor. >> she tells us she has two cameras on her house. >> so that's interesting? >> yes, there is one which has pence to catch a portion of don fluitt's garage. >> and she told them she'd been home the night before when -- >> she hears a graduate come up, she happens to look at her camera and see don flutes truck backing out and. leaving >> the time, 7:37 pm. caplan had the first data point for a timeline. he gathered more when he talked to don's ex-wife christine at her home. christine confirm he drop siena off with her at 7:45 pm. and she remembered something don told her that afternoon, he thought someone had been in his house while he had been away. >> and he said it, it's weird varies like cat here in my dryer. and they -- someone used a pan in my house. >> christine also told the detective that don sometimes suffered road rage. >> he's had really heated exchanges as a driver before. >> so, maybe an angry motorists followed g
caplan and his team had already started going door to caplan and his team had door and met don's nextstarted going door to door and met don's next door neighbor. >> she tells us she has two cameras on her house. >> so that's interesting? >> yes, there is one which has pence to catch a portion of don fluitt's garage. >> and she told them she'd been home the night before when -- >> she hears a graduate come up, she happens to look at her camera and see don flutes...
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Jan 26, 2022
01/22
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. >> joining us now is the director of medical act eubgs professor arthur caplan.you need to explain to people so they understand what the procedures are for who gets organ transplants. how does it work and what are the requirements? >> good morning, john. what we have is transplant centers make decisions about who to admit to the transplant programs. each transplant center has rules, has criteria for saying you can come in. we think you really are in need of a transplant. then once they're in a hospital, there is a national system that takes all the people that have been admitted to individual transplant centers and, if you will, ranks them, assigns them, they know what their blood type is, their antibody type is, whether they need a large heart or a small heart. and so the distribution then moves around the country, say, of hearts. no heart eligible from a donor is likely to go to waste. the argument is who to give it to, who has the best chance to survive with this scarce resource. >> there are a finite number of hearts and organs available. and who gets them de
. >> joining us now is the director of medical act eubgs professor arthur caplan.you need to explain to people so they understand what the procedures are for who gets organ transplants. how does it work and what are the requirements? >> good morning, john. what we have is transplant centers make decisions about who to admit to the transplant programs. each transplant center has rules, has criteria for saying you can come in. we think you really are in need of a transplant. then once...
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Jan 26, 2022
01/22
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arthur caplan says this is not about discrimination, but about your vaccination status predicting the likelihood of the transplant's success. >> a cold could kill you, covid could kill you. the organs are scarce. we're not going to distribute them to someone who has a very poor chance of living, when others who are vaccinated have a much better chance post-surgery of surviving. >> erielle back with us tonight. we know this mask debate is happening all over the country with omicron having peaked in some places. hopefully peaking in other places in the coming weeks. and that news tonight on that new york appeals court judge keeping the mask mandate in effect for schools and businesses for now. after another judge had ruled against the masks. so masks back for now in new york, but there's a hearing coming? >> reporter: that's right, david. it's up to the appellate court if the mandate can stand. previous judges sided with the state and governor hochul says she plans to lift the mask mandate if cases continue to drop next month. david? >> erielle reshef leading us off tonight. erielle, th
arthur caplan says this is not about discrimination, but about your vaccination status predicting the likelihood of the transplant's success. >> a cold could kill you, covid could kill you. the organs are scarce. we're not going to distribute them to someone who has a very poor chance of living, when others who are vaccinated have a much better chance post-surgery of surviving. >> erielle back with us tonight. we know this mask debate is happening all over the country with omicron...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 24, 2022
01/22
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. >> deputy city attorney, rob caplan. the item is for building inspection commission only at this time. and so i would put forward the names if someone nominates a commissioner for a position, that name goes on the list for consideration at the next regular b.i.c. meeting in february, so we don't need to for instance, president mccarthy is nominated. we do not need a second. if you would like to place other names, this would be the time to do that and february would be the vote. >> president: thank you for the clarification. okay. vice president jason tam. >> commissioner: thank you. i want to hear what my fellow commissioners think. i also just want to put it out there that i think, you know, everybody here is very capable. i'm happy to serve with any of you and i'm happy to serve with all of you. so thank you. >> president: thank you, commissioner tam. commissioner alexander-tut. >> commissioner: thank you. that's exactly what i was trying to get at in my earlier conversation is trying to do the same thing in both meeti
. >> deputy city attorney, rob caplan. the item is for building inspection commission only at this time. and so i would put forward the names if someone nominates a commissioner for a position, that name goes on the list for consideration at the next regular b.i.c. meeting in february, so we don't need to for instance, president mccarthy is nominated. we do not need a second. if you would like to place other names, this would be the time to do that and february would be the vote. >>...
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Jan 26, 2022
01/22
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caplan's chair powell: you asked about risk first. one is that inflation risks are still to the upside in the views of most participants and certainly in my view as well. there is a risk that the high inflation we are seeing will be prolonged. there is a risk it will move higher. we do not think that is the best case but you asked what the risks are. we have to be in a position with our monetary policy to address all plausible outcomes. that calls for us to be in a position. we have an expectation about the way the economy will be involved that we have to be in a position to address different outcomes including the one where inflation remains higher. of course, that is a risk to the expansion. you know, we have been saying that what we need here is another long expansion. that is a kind of thing we saw over the last record long expansion. we saw labor force were to summation rise. we saw wages -- labor force participation rise. we saw wages higher for people at the lower end. there was no imbalance under the economy that threatened th
caplan's chair powell: you asked about risk first. one is that inflation risks are still to the upside in the views of most participants and certainly in my view as well. there is a risk that the high inflation we are seeing will be prolonged. there is a risk it will move higher. we do not think that is the best case but you asked what the risks are. we have to be in a position with our monetary policy to address all plausible outcomes. that calls for us to be in a position. we have an...
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Jan 5, 2022
01/22
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professor caplan, always a pleasure to have you on.n. >>> some rioters have showed no remorse while others do have regrets. we will take at the lessons learned, or in some cases, not learned. >>> the fbi conducted more than 900 interviews, combed through 39,000 videos, and that was just for the d.c. pipe bomber. where that search stands now. >> such a good question. >> it really is. the livingng room slash yoga shanti slash regional office slash... and this is the basement slash panic room. maybe what your family needs is a vacation home slash vacation home. find yours on the vrbo app. it's my 4:05 the-show-must-go-on migraine medicine. it's ubrelvy. for anytime, anywhere migraine strikes, without worrying if it's too late, or where i am. one dose can quickly stop my migraine in its tracks within two hours. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks cgrp protein, believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. ask about ubrelvy. the a
professor caplan, always a pleasure to have you on.n. >>> some rioters have showed no remorse while others do have regrets. we will take at the lessons learned, or in some cases, not learned. >>> the fbi conducted more than 900 interviews, combed through 39,000 videos, and that was just for the d.c. pipe bomber. where that search stands now. >> such a good question. >> it really is. the livingng room slash yoga shanti slash regional office slash... and this is the...
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Jan 6, 2022
01/22
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i was watching you earlier, that guy, part of the greatest generation, you were talking to arthur caplan, and i thought it was a fascinating conversation about what is the line between personal responsibility and, you know, following the rules and helping the greater good as mr. brooks' generation did. that line is skewed now. >> yeah, we don't talk about citizenship a lot, and being a citizen and what that means and what responsibilities come with that, i think. i think it's something we should try to talk about more, yeah. >> i'll see you tomorrow from the capitol on on that very somber day that we'll be sadly marking. thank you, anderson, have a good evening. see you tomorrow. this is don lemon tonight. thank you so much for joining us. i was just talking to anderson about we're hours away. just a couple of hours away from the first anniversary of the attack on our nation's capitol. we're marking it not as a celebration. it was a terrible day, and i want you to think about what tonight was like just one year ago. do you remember what you were doing one year ago, we had no idea, right?
i was watching you earlier, that guy, part of the greatest generation, you were talking to arthur caplan, and i thought it was a fascinating conversation about what is the line between personal responsibility and, you know, following the rules and helping the greater good as mr. brooks' generation did. that line is skewed now. >> yeah, we don't talk about citizenship a lot, and being a citizen and what that means and what responsibilities come with that, i think. i think it's something we...
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Jan 28, 2022
01/22
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. >> seth: i'm very happy to have you here your talented wife, the actress lizzy caplan, has been here her >> when my name is mentioned, when she says that she's married to me, the type of applause that i get -- that she gets is more the sort of, "oh, well done. you've fostered an old stray dog. >> seth: yeah. >> but that -- she deserves that she's the best >> seth: yeah. [ laughs ] >> yeah. >> seth: yeah, it's right. there like, "that's so sweet of you, liz, to have done that. >> yeah, thank you >> seth: how are you guys doing? >> we're good. we just had a baby >> seth: you did >> yeah, yeah. [ applause ] >> seth: now, is this one of these -- is this one of these secret babies? >> yeah, i mean, we say -- yeah, i say we just had a baby it was -- it was about four and a half months ago. someone else said -- the other day they said, "is this -- did you do this? was this a secret pregnancy? and, i mean, not on purpose. >> seth: yeah. >> it's just we didn't -- we we didn't tell anyone it's not like we -- we snuck lizzy into the hospital under a blanket. and then two days later, we like eme
. >> seth: i'm very happy to have you here your talented wife, the actress lizzy caplan, has been here her >> when my name is mentioned, when she says that she's married to me, the type of applause that i get -- that she gets is more the sort of, "oh, well done. you've fostered an old stray dog. >> seth: yeah. >> but that -- she deserves that she's the best >> seth: yeah. [ laughs ] >> yeah. >> seth: yeah, it's right. there like, "that's so...
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Jan 6, 2022
01/22
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CNNW
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i was watching you earlier, that guy, part of the greatest generation, you were talking to arthur caplanr good as mr. brooks' generation did. that line is skewed now. >> yeah, we don't talk about citizenship a lot, and being a citizen and what that means and what responsibilities come with that, i think. i think it's something we should try to talk about more, yeah
i was watching you earlier, that guy, part of the greatest generation, you were talking to arthur caplanr good as mr. brooks' generation did. that line is skewed now. >> yeah, we don't talk about citizenship a lot, and being a citizen and what that means and what responsibilities come with that, i think. i think it's something we should try to talk about more, yeah
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 21, 2022
01/22
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this is debbie caplan acting director of m.o.d.bout how long it takes to close out requests you have for repairs on average? >> no. on average, it's i think it's very site specific and each instance is going to take on its own kind of life depending on the cooperation of the property owner or if they're a local versus a remote property owner. so i don't have a percentage or like an average of how long it takes. i think in general, the notices that we sent to the utility companies for like replacing their vaults or water boxes in the right of way are addressed more quickly than the notices that we send to like the private property owners. i think that's going to be a product of the fact that the utility company's already set up to respond to those notices and they've already operationalized it where an absentee property owner or somebody like that, if they get the notice, they may not be familiar with it, they may not read it at first. so it doesn't necessarily get the process started or register as quickly as it does when we issue
this is debbie caplan acting director of m.o.d.bout how long it takes to close out requests you have for repairs on average? >> no. on average, it's i think it's very site specific and each instance is going to take on its own kind of life depending on the cooperation of the property owner or if they're a local versus a remote property owner. so i don't have a percentage or like an average of how long it takes. i think in general, the notices that we sent to the utility companies for like...