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Oct 14, 2023
10/23
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toha!with a leather belt in his apartment, yesterday, at approximately 17:30, the apartment was in great disarray, perhaps they were looking for something, and what about prints, a print was found. fingers of two people, the gardener himself and, as one can assume, his son, one can assume, or since yesterday alexey sadovnik has not appeared at home, his whereabouts are unknown today, he is hiding somewhere with his comrades, the only question is, what should he hide, well why did i come home in the evening and see a dead person? father, inadequate reaction, state of passion, he was afraid that they would kill him too, they would kill him, for which we’ll find out why, we’ll solve the murder, okay, what’s the story with the crashed... your runner also appears in it, but i think it’s the case it was like this, lyokha sadovnik, under the guise of repairing gvozdyov’s motorcycle, ruined his brakes, he has a motive, gvozdyov took the girl away from him, but how could gvozdyov get from the worksh
toha!with a leather belt in his apartment, yesterday, at approximately 17:30, the apartment was in great disarray, perhaps they were looking for something, and what about prints, a print was found. fingers of two people, the gardener himself and, as one can assume, his son, one can assume, or since yesterday alexey sadovnik has not appeared at home, his whereabouts are unknown today, he is hiding somewhere with his comrades, the only question is, what should he hide, well why did i come home in...
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Oct 12, 2023
10/23
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mosab abu toha is a palestinian poet and author. columnist, teacher, and founder of the edward said library in gaza. his recent piece for "the washington post" is headlined "in gaza, no one can believe their eyes." he is the author of the award-winning book "things you may find hidden in my ear: poems from gaza." and we're joined by yousef hammash, advocacy officer in gaza for the norwegian refugee council. he lives in the gaza strip with his wife and two kids. he recently posted a video showing the destruction of gaza. >> this is where people in gaza used to sleep from the north and the eastern part, seeking safety. people used to consider it safety. this is just to prove there is no place safe in gaza. destruction is everywhere. where can the people go? where should we go? amy: that was yousef hammash, advocacy officer in gaza for the norwegian refugee council. describe the situation. what does a total siege of gaza mean right now? from the hospitals to the schoolyards where people are taking refuge, describe it for us. >> the sie
mosab abu toha is a palestinian poet and author. columnist, teacher, and founder of the edward said library in gaza. his recent piece for "the washington post" is headlined "in gaza, no one can believe their eyes." he is the author of the award-winning book "things you may find hidden in my ear: poems from gaza." and we're joined by yousef hammash, advocacy officer in gaza for the norwegian refugee council. he lives in the gaza strip with his wife and two kids. he...
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Oct 7, 2023
10/23
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activities or government functions we know from the army appropriio clause the answer is yes with respect toha particular gernment function. there's a durational limit and it's based on the nature of acvi because the framers were specifically concerned about having a standing army. the army appropriations claus itself demonstrates there are not otherwise constraint in the appropriations clause that would limit congress at how it decides to structure the funding. >> so beyond the initial almost skeletal requirements duratio and purpose, there is an, if i hear you're right there is no otondition? >> we don't think appropriations clause places of limits on congress itself when it enacts the funding statute. but i do want to emphasize that our aument also relies heavily on history. if you have in mind some kind of funding statute or arrangement that is never been done at all of this nion's history i think the court could take that into account in a future case. here that we have a specific type of appropriations, a cped lump-sum appropriation that is standing for a single agency. our historical ar
activities or government functions we know from the army appropriio clause the answer is yes with respect toha particular gernment function. there's a durational limit and it's based on the nature of acvi because the framers were specifically concerned about having a standing army. the army appropriations claus itself demonstrates there are not otherwise constraint in the appropriations clause that would limit congress at how it decides to structure the funding. >> so beyond the initial...
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destruction of the old world, the birth of a new civilization and a strong man, as you remember, scarly tohay important for alexei tolstoy, no matter what, my family is not will go hungry, but he always had a large family, he had children, he had one wife, then another wife, well, he really was a very good, very loyal family man, and the interests of the family were very important to him, so here he is first ends up in constantinople, then he ends up in marseilles, then in paris , and in fact alexei tolstoy is one of the first representatives of the first wave of russian emigration , and he essentially gives the first major work of this famous future literature of the russian emigration, and that’s what will bunin, aldanov, merishkovsky, agipius, nabokov, gazdanov, it all started with alexei tolstoy’s story nikita’s childhood , an absolutely wonderful story, which, by the way, describes his very peasant childhood on a trans-volga farm in sosnovka, why he wrote this story, because one day his... little son nikita, father, future father of the writer tatyana nikitishna tolstoy, but this is als
destruction of the old world, the birth of a new civilization and a strong man, as you remember, scarly tohay important for alexei tolstoy, no matter what, my family is not will go hungry, but he always had a large family, he had children, he had one wife, then another wife, well, he really was a very good, very loyal family man, and the interests of the family were very important to him, so here he is first ends up in constantinople, then he ends up in marseilles, then in paris , and in fact...
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Oct 20, 2023
10/23
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architecture that supports all of that but that doesn't create some of the harm especially when it comes toha consumer fraud and there's all thisis other stuff d what happens when this network business uses that to advantage the rest so i think thatat has some very real modern-day applicability. >> keeping it within the ecosystem and when you think about it amazon is doing the same thing and those areoi realy important areas thatth we need o be on guard and you are right in the 21st century that that's a new way to tie in commerce with your data. on the other hand the speed is a benefit and the delay is a harm and we have a system that is deeply delayed but i want to pick upan on a point you put ont the end about the mint and digital coins. america is unique in that the mint as a liability of the treasury and paper money is a liability of the federal reserve. i think it's kenya or argentina. they are the only countries that do this but also dollar coins in america. they said they'd make money on that. >> i see an interesting paper about the treasury in the mint when he talked about a digital
architecture that supports all of that but that doesn't create some of the harm especially when it comes toha consumer fraud and there's all thisis other stuff d what happens when this network business uses that to advantage the rest so i think thatat has some very real modern-day applicability. >> keeping it within the ecosystem and when you think about it amazon is doing the same thing and those areoi realy important areas thatth we need o be on guard and you are right in the 21st...
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Oct 9, 2023
10/23
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they were like the jury toha brg a verdict and this company for is that disturbing to policymakers. they affect the reason for this panel is no reason to believe climate change will not occur and no reason to believe changes will be negligible. when scientists went to wreaths lawmakers -- and this is how the city works, is also a weakness in a way out of lawmakers at scientists, when the change is going to occur at scientists and 79 cents give or take 40 years to policymakers that get back to us in 39 self market also makes me wonder, what are the conditions under which they are more likely to include major environmental change in their agenda? is a great question because of you have thehe number wilson, if you haven't come up with him of. brilliant herbert talked about the nature of the natural world, some people have a kat or dog or worldwide remember and they are not fully completed because others care about the two so you look at the residence, we have had little roosevelt we are going to put natural resource management section of america the beautiful. national priority and the
they were like the jury toha brg a verdict and this company for is that disturbing to policymakers. they affect the reason for this panel is no reason to believe climate change will not occur and no reason to believe changes will be negligible. when scientists went to wreaths lawmakers -- and this is how the city works, is also a weakness in a way out of lawmakers at scientists, when the change is going to occur at scientists and 79 cents give or take 40 years to policymakers that get back to...
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Oct 12, 2023
10/23
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oh, toha, how does he know how much?e me alone from oksana, where is her address, and what did i say to the cops, that is, excuse me, a policeman, a policeman , yes, that you are selling drugs, and there was another guy sitting there, well, i didn’t care then, i didn’t pay attention , you remember him, but what’s next, i’m telling you, he was drunk? although no, i remember, he had a scar on his right hand, what did i remember, he smoked all the time, well, he came out from behind the counter, well, he knocked me out, i didn’t even understand how, well, then he comes the next morning to me and says, you’re a fool, now you’re definitely dead, you need to get out, and in such a way that they don’t find you, because in the meantime, this will all be sorted out. well, he looked at me like that and i realized that he wasn’t joking, and he did the right thing by leaving, they were looking for you, they’ll come here soon , they should come as soon as they come here, and what should i do now, run away or something? ? why run? let
oh, toha, how does he know how much?e me alone from oksana, where is her address, and what did i say to the cops, that is, excuse me, a policeman, a policeman , yes, that you are selling drugs, and there was another guy sitting there, well, i didn’t care then, i didn’t pay attention , you remember him, but what’s next, i’m telling you, he was drunk? although no, i remember, he had a scar on his right hand, what did i remember, he smoked all the time, well, he came out from behind the...
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Oct 13, 2023
10/23
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we still toha this day have a hd time grappling with what happened, and what is happening in this country because it's not supposed to happen here. of a has been something failure of imagination about trumpism. i think the root of it does owe to the fact that there is obviously a profound polarization now that is happening at the same time of obviously demographic changes in the country, and because of that that is an audience for what he is offering. i would also say there's also an immense backlash to whatt he's offering with a lot of the country doesn't what it and we shouldn't should consider everything he's got some massive movement behind him. the fact is he's a minority leader. he's not one majority of the country. he narrowly won in 2016, and electoral college victory in part because a rant against a very weak upon the rent a bad campaign, all right? ever since that electing democrats have feasted on donald trump. they have been the victors of the trump phenomenon for the most part. you can go back to 2017 to the president.s i can in chapter verse election. he's been the gift that
we still toha this day have a hd time grappling with what happened, and what is happening in this country because it's not supposed to happen here. of a has been something failure of imagination about trumpism. i think the root of it does owe to the fact that there is obviously a profound polarization now that is happening at the same time of obviously demographic changes in the country, and because of that that is an audience for what he is offering. i would also say there's also an immense...