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Nov 22, 2023
11/23
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thks to. bert patton is not a stranger. the stag ar
thks to. bert patton is not a stranger. the stag ar
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Nov 26, 2023
11/23
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and i thk that's the piece when we're talking about whado history teachers do? there's there's a tendency to think that we just talk about great men in history and that is the c of all of history. if you really love history, if you really love social studies, if you love econ, if you love poly sci, you start to ask really difficult questions like what about not the great person? but if we're talking about, for example, george washington, what about the soldierwho had to fight under grge washington what was it like f them? what was it like thinking abt their families? and i think what twain offers is really a huge glimpse of this antebellum piod. this this period of time where we what does every intersection. and i think that's the brilliance of the wk is that it's not justbout huck, it's not just about jim, but it's this interaction of the so of motley crew of different individus that represent the snapshot in time. and that's really the difficult aspect of teaching history. and teaching the great man is easy. teaching the everyman an literally every man. that's
and i thk that's the piece when we're talking about whado history teachers do? there's there's a tendency to think that we just talk about great men in history and that is the c of all of history. if you really love history, if you really love social studies, if you love econ, if you love poly sci, you start to ask really difficult questions like what about not the great person? but if we're talking about, for example, george washington, what about the soldierwho had to fight under grge...
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Nov 28, 2023
11/23
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so i don't thk, it's not somethinwe're going to be leveraging the short term, just to giveyou a direct answer. and again, for us, faster payments is important. but actually, we think, beuse we serve people who live ycheck to paycheck, we should be talking a little more, maybe more about foster pay,other than just foster payments. because we think that's actually a much bigger problem today in the american financial services system. >> yeah, so does that, you know, when you think about our wage access and things like that, is something like the payments rails facilitating faster payments? is that meaningful in terms of helping people who live paycheck to paycheck? >> itis. it's not sufficient. so it is, you know, ifyou just think abouthe payroll system today, st companies are doing this evy two weeks, and there's a tification that comes by e fed, and even once that notification is there, it still takes 2+ days, and on a holiday weend like this, it could take the or four to get into someone's account. it's ridiculous. like, and the irony is, you know, we sit here talking about seconds an
so i don't thk, it's not somethinwe're going to be leveraging the short term, just to giveyou a direct answer. and again, for us, faster payments is important. but actually, we think, beuse we serve people who live ycheck to paycheck, we should be talking a little more, maybe more about foster pay,other than just foster payments. because we think that's actually a much bigger problem today in the american financial services system. >> yeah, so does that, you know, when you think about our...
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Nov 23, 2023
11/23
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Nov 24, 2023
11/23
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and i thk it's telng right. just down the street is the federal jail, which was built in sponse to conditions at cook county jail. cook county jail was just too dangerous to house federal but whenevepeople talk about like, oh, you write about the jail in chicago, the one the one in the loop that we're triane shaped, e, it's like no. and so there'this sense of kind of out of sight of mind, i think, becomes really important to how we think about again, ke, yeah, just how accessible politically these spaces are. beuse they can kind of just operate on the mgins. sheriff tom dart has been talked about as a reformer from what you're saying, the conditions at cook county jail are large, the same as they have been. do you see a an irovement in recent years, especially under sheriff dart? you knowo as a historian, i'm always going to be really really reticent about a progress narrative. right. and how do you measure reform how do you measure progress? and so, you know, one of the things i will often say is that a major c
and i thk it's telng right. just down the street is the federal jail, which was built in sponse to conditions at cook county jail. cook county jail was just too dangerous to house federal but whenevepeople talk about like, oh, you write about the jail in chicago, the one the one in the loop that we're triane shaped, e, it's like no. and so there'this sense of kind of out of sight of mind, i think, becomes really important to how we think about again, ke, yeah, just how accessible politically...
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Nov 21, 2023
11/23
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what is certainly true is that georgetown and the jesui have been, you know, right in the thk of what is now a growing movement among institutions and municipalities around the country to acknowledge and try to grapple with this history. w'realking about places like evanston and, you ow, the state of california. so this is all hpening here. you know, i never thoughi would see. and the question you're asking is, unow, how do we make them do more? i think part of that is what what you guys have done is descendas, which was when my first story ran only the georgetown memory project. richard schilling, these independentonprofit, had identified a hdful of descendants. u know there are now known least 6000 descendants and and when people found out this history and you can imagine kind what it might be like to find out this kind of history that your ancestors were sold to save thisnstitution. people i like to say people wept, people raged, and then they organiz. and i think that organation and that pressure has, you know, had an impact. let me ask you this, though, because we'vee've had two
what is certainly true is that georgetown and the jesui have been, you know, right in the thk of what is now a growing movement among institutions and municipalities around the country to acknowledge and try to grapple with this history. w'realking about places like evanston and, you ow, the state of california. so this is all hpening here. you know, i never thoughi would see. and the question you're asking is, unow, how do we make them do more? i think part of that is what what you guys have...
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Nov 27, 2023
11/23
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but i thk part of it there's has to be a level of ansparency when any individual encounters the art. i ink that's the first piece. the other piece of it is that the honesty with which you approach this particular text, it's obviously married to the issue of race. and i think that any educator who tries to tackle this text, you have to unpack. you have to unpack, not just race as an abstract concept. and i think that's part othe mistake that many of us make, is that, you know, as a as an educator of color, i deal with race in a real way in a tangible thing. for me, it's a it's a i wake up and i understand what it means to be a black man who teaches in schools. i understand what that means. i think it's also it's amazing because huck has this experience where he has this one man, man of color, this one enslaved invidual who really is this rson who allows for him to have a real tangible experience and to really ckle many ofis own preconceived notions, many of his beliefs. when wtackle art, that's part of theission is are you actually tackling not just the piece? are you tackling who you
but i thk part of it there's has to be a level of ansparency when any individual encounters the art. i ink that's the first piece. the other piece of it is that the honesty with which you approach this particular text, it's obviously married to the issue of race. and i think that any educator who tries to tackle this text, you have to unpack. you have to unpack, not just race as an abstract concept. and i think that's part othe mistake that many of us make, is that, you know, as a as an...
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Nov 28, 2023
11/23
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. >> thk you. >>> learn how you can donate food and money, use the qr code on your screen or head to our website, www.kpix.com. for every dollar raised, a bay area family will receive two meals except for today , they will receive up to four. >>> remembering four -- former first lady rosalynn carter. the special tribute now underway and today's guest list is a who's who of impressive american figures. >>> a group of scouts showing upper a good cause. the campaign to help families in need. start your morning with spectacular holiday gift ideas. watch 12 days of gifting on cbs mornings. unbelievable deals for the whole family. cbs mornings, we got you. >>> a private tribute service honoring the life and legacy of former first lady rosalynn carter now taking place in atlanta. among the invited guests, president biden, vice president harris and their spouses, the clintons, three former first ladies, bush, obama, and trump. that service got underway about one hour ago. former president jimmy carter, who is 99 years old and receiving hospice at home, is there. private funeral will be held
. >> thk you. >>> learn how you can donate food and money, use the qr code on your screen or head to our website, www.kpix.com. for every dollar raised, a bay area family will receive two meals except for today , they will receive up to four. >>> remembering four -- former first lady rosalynn carter. the special tribute now underway and today's guest list is a who's who of impressive american figures. >>> a group of scouts showing upper a good cause. the...
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Nov 21, 2023
11/23
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i thk part of that is what what you guys have done is descendas, which was when my first story ran only the georgetown memory project. richard schilling, these independentonprofit, had identified a hdful of descendants. you know there are now known least 6000 descendants and and when people found out this history and you can imagine kind of what it might be like to find out this kind of history that your ancesrs were sold to save thisnstitution. people i like to sayeople wept, people raged, and then they organiz. and i think that organization and that pressure has, you know, had an impact. let me ask you this, thoh, because we've we've had two questions now about. thk you for about, you know, history, teaching of history and what role that history should play in our current moment. you know, your bk arrives at a moment of backlash abouthe even teach ing history that this kindf history in institutions, not st, you know, colleges and in pple being, you know, fired. that'right. you know, showing classic works i think you talked about the fact you started this work. you know, ur book, your
i thk part of that is what what you guys have done is descendas, which was when my first story ran only the georgetown memory project. richard schilling, these independentonprofit, had identified a hdful of descendants. you know there are now known least 6000 descendants and and when people found out this history and you can imagine kind of what it might be like to find out this kind of history that your ancesrs were sold to save thisnstitution. people i like to sayeople wept, people raged, and...
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Nov 21, 2023
11/23
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but i thk in terms of a a like an exhibit, i think the most impoant thing for you guys since you all come from different backgrounds is that like what i nt over up there, it's so varied there's so much if you're a business person, we have so much of the business. if in, you know, more artsy we've so much like how are drawinthe furniture and how they arearketing it. you know, if you're in an environmental person, we have the environmental impacts of all this stuff i think the most important thing guys need to do is follow what you and what your personal background is. because no matter what, like what yo're passionate about is, going to become the st product. don't chase something that you're n passionate about when it comes to this we have something for all you up here. if we all contribute something that you're really into and that yoabsolutely love the exhibit be awesome so good good very od advice and also follow the follow the questions you have you know why did they dthat? what happened u know why did they go into the business why did they sell it to a different company? you kno
but i thk in terms of a a like an exhibit, i think the most impoant thing for you guys since you all come from different backgrounds is that like what i nt over up there, it's so varied there's so much if you're a business person, we have so much of the business. if in, you know, more artsy we've so much like how are drawinthe furniture and how they arearketing it. you know, if you're in an environmental person, we have the environmental impacts of all this stuff i think the most important...
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Nov 24, 2023
11/23
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if you to thk about it that way. that's how so people refer them they are the things that nature makes that are left behind that then we can look at today and infer what the past was like. so the best example would be tree rings. each rg represent one year of owth, so you can count back and get in one year of information on a number of different variables. most commonly, the precipitation d so you can figure out like what year was dry, which year was more acid, it all on the tree and where you are. so there's a lot more detl involved, a general sense you could reconstructt. precipitation, history, using tree ring records. similarly if you get some sediment cores like from a bag, a lake, even the ean drilled down, it was notrilling. makes it sound dmatic. you just get a tube of of muc you could figure out what pollen grains or bits of plants and other things like dioms are, like single celled organisms. that can tell you how salty the water was, what the temperature of it was, what vegetation was growing inn area and
if you to thk about it that way. that's how so people refer them they are the things that nature makes that are left behind that then we can look at today and infer what the past was like. so the best example would be tree rings. each rg represent one year of owth, so you can count back and get in one year of information on a number of different variables. most commonly, the precipitation d so you can figure out like what year was dry, which year was more acid, it all on the tree and where you...
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Nov 11, 2023
11/23
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and so i think when joe biden says all these comments about, "superpowers don't bluff," i thk they believe it. i think in this particular case, they believe that joe biden is not gonna let them screw around with israel. and you have these ships in the mediterranean. i think the president of the united states made a very clear message to the regional players, "stay out of this." for the time being, it's worked. we'll see how it all plays out. - the biden administration this week deployed a guided missile submarine to the middle east, which joins, as you mentioned, two carrier strike groups and thousands of service members that are in the region. how would yograde our deterrence at the moment? - very strong. even i am surprised at how aggressive the administration has been. and i mean, i knew that in my heart. but you know what happens. you know, people are like, "well, do you really need this?" and listen, the president, not only does he know a lot about the region, he's been through the fights in the region, he's had the relationships in the region. it matters. i mean, as you know, the mid
and so i think when joe biden says all these comments about, "superpowers don't bluff," i thk they believe it. i think in this particular case, they believe that joe biden is not gonna let them screw around with israel. and you have these ships in the mediterranean. i think the president of the united states made a very clear message to the regional players, "stay out of this." for the time being, it's worked. we'll see how it all plays out. - the biden administration this...
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Nov 23, 2023
11/23
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and i think it becomes quite symbol, i thk because of poling. who's this? he's a very prominent baptist minister and it's a major church periodical. so this story is important, not forgotten. the service of these four chaplains because of dan poling. but it also mean, you know, it is they very much reflect three faith tradition and this d this religious pluralism. there's a there's a pope, for example by the by early after the war ends are supposed to stand issue two commemorating the service. their loved ones are they're given posthumous awards both immediately during the war and then before eisenhower leaves the presidency there are a number of memorials dedicated them though it is interting about this sort of symbol of religious faith. dan poling decides, he is going to build a memorial chapel at temple at the baptist at what is calledhe baptist temple. and he wants this to an ecumenical he wants to recreate basically a chapel. he wants to create a nondenominational chapel. and basically it would be rotating altar. so the altar would you could rotated to
and i think it becomes quite symbol, i thk because of poling. who's this? he's a very prominent baptist minister and it's a major church periodical. so this story is important, not forgotten. the service of these four chaplains because of dan poling. but it also mean, you know, it is they very much reflect three faith tradition and this d this religious pluralism. there's a there's a pope, for example by the by early after the war ends are supposed to stand issue two commemorating the service....
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Nov 4, 2023
11/23
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what time we have left her with yourow view on how we should thk about changing tax policy in the country? what should our priorities be? twe know it's republicans stand for we know it donald trump stood for. happening out the trump administration that is a $2 trillion tax cut that was mostly swallowed up by millionaires, billionaires and giant corporations program they're going to fight to try to do that again and i want to make clear it's the twin parts of this. it's rich people who do not want to pay taxes believe me, big motivator but it is also rich people who do not want government to work they are not interested in paving roads in somebody else's neighborhood. they are not interested in other people's children being able to get higher ed and not getting crushed by s student loan debt they are not interested in investing in healthcare for other people because they can pay for things they felt they could live in gated communities they are happy. they would also like a g government that i does not have much in a way of resources it will be lesses able to regulate their businesses. if
what time we have left her with yourow view on how we should thk about changing tax policy in the country? what should our priorities be? twe know it's republicans stand for we know it donald trump stood for. happening out the trump administration that is a $2 trillion tax cut that was mostly swallowed up by millionaires, billionaires and giant corporations program they're going to fight to try to do that again and i want to make clear it's the twin parts of this. it's rich people who do not...
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Nov 8, 2023
11/23
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thk the text of the consti says no as far as congress doing it. the historical traditions all say no. in terms of the leveof abstraction, how does this present that? >> thank you. >> thank you, cosel. rebuttal, general? >> thank you, mr. chief justice. my friend began his argument in regards to a question that he does require the government to come forwd with a precise historical analoguetojustify the modern day firearms regulation. that is an incorrect reading. it is a profound misreading that many lower courts have beenadting. it is important for the court tounderstand that the coeqnces of this reading in the lower courts. the word validated 922, g1 on its face. as applied to the most violent and horrific crimes imaginable that the government did not have prise historical analogue to justify the peanent ban on violence. several district shorts with armed career crins that have multiple convictions for drug trafficking, violent crimes because n't have historical analogue for those crimes at thfoding. the court has also invalidated on its face the
thk the text of the consti says no as far as congress doing it. the historical traditions all say no. in terms of the leveof abstraction, how does this present that? >> thank you. >> thank you, cosel. rebuttal, general? >> thank you, mr. chief justice. my friend began his argument in regards to a question that he does require the government to come forwd with a precise historical analoguetojustify the modern day firearms regulation. that is an incorrect reading. it is a...
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Nov 21, 2023
11/23
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if ts sounds to y a little bit like john locke, then i thk you're on to something. the government's protection of natural rights, including the right to property, is why it is right for us to pay taxes. and wrong for us to exercise as vigilante juste. les argues the state protects us less because it is unwilling to protect us against crimina at home and manifestly grs less and less able to protect us against a foreign enemies. at the same time, it demands from us more and more. we seldom had fewer rights and liberties, nor more burdens, and weet less security ineturn, while our obligation increase. their moral grnd is taken away. lewis drew the same concluon from this state of affairs that locke did. when the state can not or will t prote, lewis warns nature. is come again. and the right oself-protection reverts to the individual. i share this reflection of lewis's not only as an excuse to tell that story about joyewis and her shotgun, but because it illustrates well the liberrian leaning. leave me alone. literall get off my lawn. side of lew's personality in mo of
if ts sounds to y a little bit like john locke, then i thk you're on to something. the government's protection of natural rights, including the right to property, is why it is right for us to pay taxes. and wrong for us to exercise as vigilante juste. les argues the state protects us less because it is unwilling to protect us against crimina at home and manifestly grs less and less able to protect us against a foreign enemies. at the same time, it demands from us more and more. we seldom had...
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Nov 25, 2023
11/23
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and for an underfunded plan, at's over 300, you know, and that's we just don't thk these and it takes so long to fix. i mean social security the last fix was 86, 82, 82. yeah. so, kelly darnell knows this. when we're in a meeting with our good friend bill hoagland, we always how long it will take before he brings government spending. but one of the issuethat he has brought up continuously is who the deficit hawks on capitol? who are the people trying to rein spending today? who are they? well, i'm not an expert. politics today, even in those days, it was hard to find a decit hawk. but today it you know it's you know you hear some on the right wing the republican party but they don't seem to have realistic proposals out there. you know, got to touch both revenues. and taxes. you got to cut spending. raise taxes. yeah. and have to. sounds like a recipe for success in politics. that's why i'm not a politician politician. but can we get there? well, you know, part of my book is of trying to help people think about how we can do better on that. yes, we we need to look at a lot of these gov
and for an underfunded plan, at's over 300, you know, and that's we just don't thk these and it takes so long to fix. i mean social security the last fix was 86, 82, 82. yeah. so, kelly darnell knows this. when we're in a meeting with our good friend bill hoagland, we always how long it will take before he brings government spending. but one of the issuethat he has brought up continuously is who the deficit hawks on capitol? who are the people trying to rein spending today? who are they? well,...
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Nov 27, 2023
11/23
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kennedy i don't thk you'd see i don't i can't sa for. but i know you would. i think you would see anything thatas as it as mrs. kennedy had restored it. ihink are elements of what she did ialmost every room. but ther's have certainly been changes over the years. so i don't think you'd see an exact replica of one of the rooms as she redesigned or rerbished them a no, but definitely elementin every single there's jacqueline kennedy fingerprint. i think is is the fantastic. john from harrisburg asks where any photos ten when and her children returned to the nixon white house in 1971. so that's the only time that she er went back and it was for the unveiling of the official portraits of psident mrs. kennedy. if so, does the kennedy library have them or are they available to the public? oroes the kennedy library have anything in its collections on that visit to the white house? no, know. i mean, i that is the only visit she made back to the white house after december of 1963, with her children to see the official white house portraits as the guest of the nixons. a
kennedy i don't thk you'd see i don't i can't sa for. but i know you would. i think you would see anything thatas as it as mrs. kennedy had restored it. ihink are elements of what she did ialmost every room. but ther's have certainly been changes over the years. so i don't think you'd see an exact replica of one of the rooms as she redesigned or rerbished them a no, but definitely elementin every single there's jacqueline kennedy fingerprint. i think is is the fantastic. john from harrisburg...
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Nov 28, 2023
11/23
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so, i thk there is certainly a lot that has happened in the past few years especially around rewards. so, rewards, we might think of that in the past as some sort of specific gift card type of arrangement. but if you look at the broad range of activities happening in points and rewards, especiallyonline gaming. there's lots of sectors we see this, we do get a lot of questions about how does this interact? that is a part of what i mentioned in my remarks, we may need to provide some additional -- >> the banking industry seems to be makingthe argument that your ward points directly come from late es, overdraft fees, merchant fees, so seems to me they armaking the linkage en more clear. tim, you raised yourhand for a question. we willget there. i'm glad to hear, because this is what real people are talking about. >> and there's a lot of concerns about misrepresentation, out how those points could be used, and we are thinking about the bait and switch happening. sorry, go ahead. >> thank yo thank you for your comments. you mentioned that it should consider excising its title 830 twviews s
so, i thk there is certainly a lot that has happened in the past few years especially around rewards. so, rewards, we might think of that in the past as some sort of specific gift card type of arrangement. but if you look at the broad range of activities happening in points and rewards, especiallyonline gaming. there's lots of sectors we see this, we do get a lot of questions about how does this interact? that is a part of what i mentioned in my remarks, we may need to provide some additional...
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Nov 29, 2023
11/23
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information, too, becse i know you're in the business -- you're in the market for a lawn mower, and i thk that is sort of where the lines i think have to be drawn. we will be proposing some rules that will accelerate open banking and i think part of that is going to be some use restrictions on the data that ie permissioning to financial firms. mr. klein: that's very excing to look forward to. join me in thanking the director for his times and thoughts. if we could stay seated for one second. i know youave to get out of re. please take -- you c head out. they stay seated while you get out because i know you have to make a run. and realize, i appreciate the privacy was a genuine for lawyers and paper companies, paper was the only one fighting to get the things in the mail when congress got rid of them. hippa is insane. i had to pick up a c.d.rom of my shoulder, because they couldn't email the picture between doctors. and when i brought the.d. rom, i don't he a c.d. rom reer, wh is this, 2006? so build a better system, man. thank you very much. [applause] mr. klein: dwe go straight to the se
information, too, becse i know you're in the business -- you're in the market for a lawn mower, and i thk that is sort of where the lines i think have to be drawn. we will be proposing some rules that will accelerate open banking and i think part of that is going to be some use restrictions on the data that ie permissioning to financial firms. mr. klein: that's very excing to look forward to. join me in thanking the director for his times and thoughts. if we could stay seated for one second. i...
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Nov 27, 2023
11/23
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and then all had dumped him when he was at duke law school for various reasons and it's interesting i thk all -- like all had dramatic scenes that she made and -- had a horror of scenes pat also a horror of scenesnd loud fights and all of that. so i think maybe there's some evidence that all that and --, their relationship was very tempestuous was and i think he was seeking to not have that in the next relationship. i'm just extrapolating fm letters i've seen, but yes, he did have a serious girlfriend before pat and pat dated, lots of people, of course, remember -- was taking her to her dates with otheren. so like, you know, she pat dated a lot of people and when she made that choice to marry --, she knew he was the one. well, thank you for very insightful and both of their relationship lives. next up here, i a queion from nancy along the lines of relationships between them as well. so what were mrs. nixon and richard nixon's relationship like while he was in the white house? and did their love letters continue? he was traveling in and out. and as was serving as first lady. right. well kn
and then all had dumped him when he was at duke law school for various reasons and it's interesting i thk all -- like all had dramatic scenes that she made and -- had a horror of scenes pat also a horror of scenesnd loud fights and all of that. so i think maybe there's some evidence that all that and --, their relationship was very tempestuous was and i think he was seeking to not have that in the next relationship. i'm just extrapolating fm letters i've seen, but yes, he did have a serious...
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Nov 19, 2023
11/23
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matters, why this is a big story for people outside of los angeles, this will, authorities say, make the thk drive so much easier for people coming into california over the thanksgiving holiday and throughout the week because of the chain reaction of this freeway, what it did to the civic fabric, and also the human dimension coming integrator focus of not just a couple, but hundreds of carpenters, engineers, electricians, pile drivers working on overdrive to make this hapt. we heard from the president of the united states and the governor talking about all those things. here is what they said. >> you know, we can give the fancy speeches all day long, but we're able to stand here and do this because they did this work on the ground. in many cases working as many as 14 hours a day. >> eight days to get this thing open and operational, and that means, if you're doing the math, that this thing opens tonight. it will be fully operational tomorrow. >> reporter: so where do we go from here? this is not joust crime against concrete. there's a criminal investigation that is still happening to try to
matters, why this is a big story for people outside of los angeles, this will, authorities say, make the thk drive so much easier for people coming into california over the thanksgiving holiday and throughout the week because of the chain reaction of this freeway, what it did to the civic fabric, and also the human dimension coming integrator focus of not just a couple, but hundreds of carpenters, engineers, electricians, pile drivers working on overdrive to make this hapt. we heard from the...
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Nov 16, 2023
11/23
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>>thk you. speaker -- >> i think one thing about this case is a lot of fort to the district court's findings. are also looking at coming a lot of the legal -- of talkg about factual, not the guments,but we are viewing it in thght of the fact that e plaintiffs exceedingly heavy burden disentangle race and politics but that would give the legislature presumption of good faith but we are asking that the district court make ear error in the fact that that it s edging -- chief justice has outlined kind of the sum in a pretty concise waof the evidence -- i think ers a reason why the court keeps mi up. it's because it's best that the expert reports that actually ditrto disentangle race and polics is what is e key question here. -- so did the respondent. they didn't plan out an alterniv map, but they had expert evidence that was just as go, because they have made similar points but this is my question abouthe evidence. did it control for factors like contagiousness? respondent pointed t to address thes
>>thk you. speaker -- >> i think one thing about this case is a lot of fort to the district court's findings. are also looking at coming a lot of the legal -- of talkg about factual, not the guments,but we are viewing it in thght of the fact that e plaintiffs exceedingly heavy burden disentangle race and politics but that would give the legislature presumption of good faith but we are asking that the district court make ear error in the fact that that it s edging -- chief justice...
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Nov 26, 2023
11/23
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but i thk it's important to note that at the time this was far from an obvious move to try to build such a huge dataset of manually by hand and and it seemed like you obviously faced actually probably overwhelming skepticism, even from my colleagues who were active researchers at the time. d i'm wondering if there were any particular high end or low points that you would highlht without spoiling too much and look, yeah. jeremy so as the book actually spent some tim detailing that journey and the goal of that detailinis really about sharing the mang of science is i guess the making of science i just like making of sausage. it's very messy and, and a and it's very normal to, to, to find skepticism in in science. and it's nothing ill intentioned this is, after all, the whole profession of doing science is exploring the unknown. and when you explore the unknown, nobody knows the answer. and you've got meaning. smart people having their own hypotheses. and we aays debate and disagree. we probably always disagree more than we agree. and so it because of that in a way, it it felt natural to me.
but i thk it's important to note that at the time this was far from an obvious move to try to build such a huge dataset of manually by hand and and it seemed like you obviously faced actually probably overwhelming skepticism, even from my colleagues who were active researchers at the time. d i'm wondering if there were any particular high end or low points that you would highlht without spoiling too much and look, yeah. jeremy so as the book actually spent some tim detailing that journey and...
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Nov 28, 2023
11/23
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about evolving these tools tonform the eimated- inform -- what you do aut these challenges --how do you thk about making these results more transpare and available to the public or a policymaker where we can get a betr understanding of what these models and what these scenarios can teach us. i would love to hear ur open thoughts on how we keep innovating to make sure we are meeting information standards. guest: that is a huge question how much time do we have? [laughter] so a few thoughts. the energy system is in a period of rapid change. and that creates the challenge as energy modelers. we need to make sure our models stay up-to-date with what we see happening. veryuickly, i would say with the modeling exercises that we do, we try to be as ansparent as possible. i want to say that upfront. if you want to dig into what we've done you can read the narrative. you can read all the documentation for all the modules. you can request the source code and we are planning to make the source code available under a op source license. there is logistics to work through but we are trying to be as trans
about evolving these tools tonform the eimated- inform -- what you do aut these challenges --how do you thk about making these results more transpare and available to the public or a policymaker where we can get a betr understanding of what these models and what these scenarios can teach us. i would love to hear ur open thoughts on how we keep innovating to make sure we are meeting information standards. guest: that is a huge question how much time do we have? [laughter] so a few thoughts. the...
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Nov 23, 2023
11/23
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to do in theummer, this will stuart and the union mind set one of th great psons they have to fear i thk is richard was saying the south didn't ad the newspapers. weead northern newspapers all the time northern genals are always trying to get correspondence kicked of the army because they're giving away all their plans and telling everybody what they were. so the south had idea how things were being perceived in the north. this is the key to everything i'm going to tell you about the second time. don't walk into the fact in your mind, as i see a lot of people go, oh, this could never have this would never have had this perception versus rail. it's what the federals believe stuart could do, which allowed them to believe stuart would do it. everything i'm going to show you almost exclusively is from federal viewpoint. there is no official documentation from jefferson davis, robert e lee, anybody in the south that this was ever planned. i want to be clear that front doesn't mean it wasn't when we know most of southern records were destroyed at the end of the war either accidentally by the f
to do in theummer, this will stuart and the union mind set one of th great psons they have to fear i thk is richard was saying the south didn't ad the newspapers. weead northern newspapers all the time northern genals are always trying to get correspondence kicked of the army because they're giving away all their plans and telling everybody what they were. so the south had idea how things were being perceived in the north. this is the key to everything i'm going to tell you about the second...
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Nov 25, 2023
11/23
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most graduate student didn't thk that is a very important project. and and i had my early career in academia on e, you know, on the test becae if i didn't get this project done it my severely impa, my professional advancement and in in academia there's a very important moment called tenure wheryou you have to be kind of assessed as say, okay, you're good enough to be a professor for for a long time. and, and i kind of put my career on the spot with this image and that project. but in the meantime, i got incredible student who believed in thi i in the book i talk about my graduate student, jordan,nd who was brilliant and we collaborated on this. i've got my collaborator, professor khalifa, in princeton. so i also had a very small b i had a community of fellow travelers. mm yeah. and at that oup seems like it as you do down to by, you know there's that was this select band of people who believed in supporting your vision early on which seem to make a big difference. yes, we're still very close friends. maybe because of that, right. the trial by fire. y
most graduate student didn't thk that is a very important project. and and i had my early career in academia on e, you know, on the test becae if i didn't get this project done it my severely impa, my professional advancement and in in academia there's a very important moment called tenure wheryou you have to be kind of assessed as say, okay, you're good enough to be a professor for for a long time. and, and i kind of put my career on the spot with this image and that project. but in the...
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Nov 16, 2023
11/23
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>> thk expert evidence is a big part it. with think the were credibility findings that may ve come out differently with a different three-judge panel. it is hard to tell. we were not there. you can often describe oddities in distri nes to mean politics for race. given that, we recognize th the district court'shave a tough job to lookat the entirety of the evidence and figure out whether or not they carry their burden. >> just to pick upon the question, and a big theme of the otdes briefing is, why would we do this wh we have the political ta th is all over the briefs on their side. i ink the main sponse is, the political data is not good enough toachieve the end they wanted to achieve of a greater republican tilt. do you agree with that? you might guess, we agree there is evidence in the record of the district court to find that. what if we disagree on that? , about the strength ofthe political data. an earlier question, justice mentioned or asked about the reliability of the data and how probativthdata is. suppose we think
>> thk expert evidence is a big part it. with think the were credibility findings that may ve come out differently with a different three-judge panel. it is hard to tell. we were not there. you can often describe oddities in distri nes to mean politics for race. given that, we recognize th the district court'shave a tough job to lookat the entirety of the evidence and figure out whether or not they carry their burden. >> just to pick upon the question, and a big theme of the otdes...
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Nov 26, 2023
11/23
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in fact, the british reaped a windll of transport vessels thks to the fall of france, greece and norwayll of tho merchant marine vessels that were on the world's oceans became essentially allied operty after after the fall of those countries. germans merchant marine is germany's merchant marines, quite sml and most of what was there was was the baltic trying to get steel from swedish mines into, northern germany. there were some essentially blockade runners that trying to get to japan and elsewhere, but these were quite few in. did italian navy play any role significant role ithe battle of the atlantic? yes. so the italians wted to contribute ia serious way. they had a large submarine fleet of their own. this was actually much of it was transferred to essentially two ports along the coast of france alongside the germans. but doenitz very little respect for e italian mariners. he believed their ships were not seaworthy either. captains were incompetent and they rlly were just using up resources. so the germans really try to limit their role to obrvation and reporting things. radio, thoug
in fact, the british reaped a windll of transport vessels thks to the fall of france, greece and norwayll of tho merchant marine vessels that were on the world's oceans became essentially allied operty after after the fall of those countries. germans merchant marine is germany's merchant marines, quite sml and most of what was there was was the baltic trying to get steel from swedish mines into, northern germany. there were some essentially blockade runners that trying to get to japan and...
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Nov 30, 2023
11/23
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CNBC
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but the bottom line, if yo thk we'rgoing have soft landing, iyou believe inflation is coming down, if you believe intere rates have peaked, th you need to be a little more optimistic about life in stocks, or at least stocks. the russell 1000 list with a growth stock bias that can produce some real winners and the ones i just highlighted have separated themselves from, i don't know, how about the other 990 stocks in that esteemed coiled spring of an index! to mix metaphors with racing and trains. charles in arizona. charles! >> caller: boo-yah, eagle boy jim. how are you doing today? >> go birds, chief. what's happening? >> caller: yeah, hey, i want to -- first of all i want to put a hats off to charlie munger, man. what a great -- or sorryloss that is for -- >> and i can't wait to see becky's special. becky knows -- knew charlie and knows warren like no other journalist. it's going to be fantastic. what's going on? >> jim, we appreciate your insights for us stay at home traders. in 2019 on the options action i took tony zang's trade on morgan stanley. i got in at 53.60. it's hit 106 a
but the bottom line, if yo thk we'rgoing have soft landing, iyou believe inflation is coming down, if you believe intere rates have peaked, th you need to be a little more optimistic about life in stocks, or at least stocks. the russell 1000 list with a growth stock bias that can produce some real winners and the ones i just highlighted have separated themselves from, i don't know, how about the other 990 stocks in that esteemed coiled spring of an index! to mix metaphors with racing and...
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41
Nov 30, 2023
11/23
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CNBC
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i thk is raises the question, what is the future of twitter? they are ad supported. this he are trying to build the even before this latest controversy and concerabout anti-semitism in the past couple of weeks, ad revenue in 2023 had already dropped an estimated 54% from the prior year. so, this is a company that needs advertisg, but the challenge here now, de is that elon musk says he doest need advertisers. how does that all play out? i think we have that clip, right? let's listen to it. >> don't advertise. >> you don't want them to advertise? >> no. >> what do you mean? >> if somebody's going to try to blackmail with advertising, blackmail me with money, gf yourself. go [ bleep ] yourself. is that clear? i hope it is. hey, bob, if you're in the audience. >> so, certainly puts -- >> no matter how many times i see that i'm uncomfortable. >> she's in the crowd. >> julia, go ahead. >> deirdre, i was just going to say linda yaccarino called the interview wide-ranging and candid. the question is how much damage does this do with her relationship with advertisers? when e
i thk is raises the question, what is the future of twitter? they are ad supported. this he are trying to build the even before this latest controversy and concerabout anti-semitism in the past couple of weeks, ad revenue in 2023 had already dropped an estimated 54% from the prior year. so, this is a company that needs advertisg, but the challenge here now, de is that elon musk says he doest need advertisers. how does that all play out? i think we have that clip, right? let's listen to it....
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Nov 24, 2023
11/23
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CSPAN3
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he wants he forces them to do an autonomous vehicle that will drive on its own because he thks that's going to be the next big thing. let's talk a little bit about his unusual personalities. is is a book that is replete with tales of recklessness, personal rklessness, professional recklessness. where does that come from, in your view? you use the phrase his personalities, which is good because it's plural and like his father, who was a jekyll and hyde character, we'd go into dark mode and almost not remember when he came back to being, you know, a sweet dr. jekyll or musk goes to quick personality, changes and it's he even talked about multiple personalities. you can call it a disorder, but it iwho he is. and there'll be times when he's just laughing like crazy and showing monty python sketch of silly walks and then figuring out how to translate those silly walks into optimus a robot so that it, you know, it's engineered the right way and then he'll be very inspirational that if we don't work all night, humanity won't get to mars. but then he goes to mr. hyde and the darkness hits, ri
he wants he forces them to do an autonomous vehicle that will drive on its own because he thks that's going to be the next big thing. let's talk a little bit about his unusual personalities. is is a book that is replete with tales of recklessness, personal rklessness, professional recklessness. where does that come from, in your view? you use the phrase his personalities, which is good because it's plural and like his father, who was a jekyll and hyde character, we'd go into dark mode and...
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Nov 25, 2023
11/23
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i thk the personal stories are as important as the facts, the statistics the charts and so rth, and they can be compelling and pple have written books, survivors about experience, but also i remember reading the name escapes me now lady who a who wrote a book at she purchased a gun for the first time and wro about her experience and got rid of after a few months because she found it terrifying what had happened that, you know, oh my god, i left a gun sitting on the table and my four or five year old was aying there and so forth d realized all the perils involved in gun ownership and all the responsibility. and she no longer wanted a part of it. so we ne those personal stories from survivors, fr people like that reporter as ll as the data. that's what we're trying to achiev here is a little bit of everything, but again, i encourage you take a look what we've tried to do to kind of lay the groundwk for how we tackle this information in this area. we certainly need partnerships. we need partners with socl media companies. you know, we need partnerships with i.t prossionals because there's n
i thk the personal stories are as important as the facts, the statistics the charts and so rth, and they can be compelling and pple have written books, survivors about experience, but also i remember reading the name escapes me now lady who a who wrote a book at she purchased a gun for the first time and wro about her experience and got rid of after a few months because she found it terrifying what had happened that, you know, oh my god, i left a gun sitting on the table and my four or five...
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Nov 27, 2023
11/23
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. >> thk you very much. i will now recognizeranking mber cherfilus-mccormick. my question is for mr. delbene. what is your plan to ensure the i.t. system used by blind and low vision va employees are accessible to support them while they are doing their jobs. that is a follow-up question for section 508. >> tonic for the question. there is multiple classes of content, so to speak, that blind and visually impaired lks need to access. the webpages, pdfs and then there is the applications themselves. the applications are fairly thorny because of the complexity involved. it is not as objective and how you measure them. you have to take scarios through it. we are identifying the p most important applications that people need to use. we are then grading them based on a scale from a to f. how good they are in the present. we are sending criteria with must fix issues before the application can get approved. we were doing discuss the hrm that were working on. we will tackle that across the entire fleet of applications to a point. we actually recently delayed the launch
. >> thk you very much. i will now recognizeranking mber cherfilus-mccormick. my question is for mr. delbene. what is your plan to ensure the i.t. system used by blind and low vision va employees are accessible to support them while they are doing their jobs. that is a follow-up question for section 508. >> tonic for the question. there is multiple classes of content, so to speak, that blind and visually impaired lks need to access. the webpages, pdfs and then there is the...
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upwone big thing we wouldn't thk about is i'm a chartist.ve to plot the high, low every day and now these computers produce charts that are just absolutely unbelievable so that's a big thing, charles. i think another big thing is just the globalization, number of markets that we have to trade today are absolutely amazing. when i traded that year, i listed eight markets maybe with chicago board of trade where now there's so many futures contracts and another derivatives. that's a big change. then of course, you know, instead of pit trading, we have computer trading. now everybody is on a laptop or a desktop computer and everybody trades and that's of course i think rel real convenient and is also brought in the world of high frequency trading operations, which are stealing money out of our pockets and so there's good changes that have taken plus, but there's also places that have not been, i think, quite as favorable at least for private speculators. charles: i don't go back as far as you, but i remember getting -- i had a subscription to the
upwone big thing we wouldn't thk about is i'm a chartist.ve to plot the high, low every day and now these computers produce charts that are just absolutely unbelievable so that's a big thing, charles. i think another big thing is just the globalization, number of markets that we have to trade today are absolutely amazing. when i traded that year, i listed eight markets maybe with chicago board of trade where now there's so many futures contracts and another derivatives. that's a big change....
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Nov 26, 2023
11/23
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but yeah, i thk you got to clean house from top to bottom. thank you, senator paul. everything that you've been doing, i've been a bit concerned that for the most part, a lot of people have started to see that there was a cover up, but ey said they're feeling like they didn't getting duped and they just want this to go away and i am very concerned about the public support for holding accountable. do you think that there's hope that we're actually going to get any momentum in trying to actually hold people accountable? or is this everyone just want to go back to sleep? i think it is hard and i think people also then have sympathy. look, anthony fauci is 81 years old and you know, he needs to go to the smithsonian, see his mask. he's got himask in the smithsonian needs to do now. so i think there won't be an actually i don't know it'not my motivating force to him in jail. should he ha gone to jail? yes would i still put him in jail? yes. is he to go to jail? probably no. but me, it's more imptant we try not to have another pandemic like this one. if wget another pandem
but yeah, i thk you got to clean house from top to bottom. thank you, senator paul. everything that you've been doing, i've been a bit concerned that for the most part, a lot of people have started to see that there was a cover up, but ey said they're feeling like they didn't getting duped and they just want this to go away and i am very concerned about the public support for holding accountable. do you think that there's hope that we're actually going to get any momentum in trying to actually...
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Nov 28, 2023
11/23
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that is another thing to thk about when the money creation is focused by heavily in the banking sector, that at least looking at swedish history has been liable to collapse on a number of occasions. there is that trade-off. on the inclusion side of it, one has to think about some of the trade-offs that are emergency in favor of folks that are unbanked, that have no access to any kind of private infrastructure. the ability to go ahead and get some amount of access to the formal system. in that context, the bermuda sand dollar, for example, has been getting like $500 worth of account that is not going to destabilize the banking system, but allowing folks into the formal economy. more widely than that, there is this ability harness the private sector in cbdc isance. in other words, this is money backed by the state. distribution can occur through private banks that are then able to offer add-on services that can enable those wi no financial access orlimited financial access who are just wanting services attached to eight state claim. i think there are number of different trade-offs, and e
that is another thing to thk about when the money creation is focused by heavily in the banking sector, that at least looking at swedish history has been liable to collapse on a number of occasions. there is that trade-off. on the inclusion side of it, one has to think about some of the trade-offs that are emergency in favor of folks that are unbanked, that have no access to any kind of private infrastructure. the ability to go ahead and get some amount of access to the formal system. in that...
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Nov 23, 2023
11/23
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i love footnotes in books and i thk that they just sprawl all over the place and give you little bits of informationhat aren't necessarily germane to the story. you know, diesel disappears. that's really what we're on about inhis book. on the other hand, there's one wonderful footnote about alfred nobel who invented dynamite and whose brother ludg died, and they mistake and let the newspaper ran an obit of alfred. they assumed it was alfred who had died and ran a scathing obituary, talking about him as someone who has destroyed more lives than any other man. and his legacy wilbe awful. and as he's reading this and y can imaginthe waves, if this were a cartoon coming out of his head, he decides to sort of a jimmy stewart movie. he decides to correct his life and heets up in his will the nobel foundation, so that he wi be known as the patronf peace and scientific progress. but up until then, if headn't seen his own obit, nody knows what would have happened in oslo. but isn't that a fun footnote? i mean, i didn't kn it. maybe you did, but it was new to me. i thought it was great. yeah. i
i love footnotes in books and i thk that they just sprawl all over the place and give you little bits of informationhat aren't necessarily germane to the story. you know, diesel disappears. that's really what we're on about inhis book. on the other hand, there's one wonderful footnote about alfred nobel who invented dynamite and whose brother ludg died, and they mistake and let the newspaper ran an obit of alfred. they assumed it was alfred who had died and ran a scathing obituary, talking...
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Nov 24, 2023
11/23
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and also, i thk it's where the origin of the modern self-help movement comes in. and we now have life coaches, all of this, right. you you you buy a certain set of ids. you read them in a book, or you hear it on a podcast. i'm a huge fan of podcasts, but there are far too many that want to tell you how to live your life. and if you just do these ten simple steps, you will indeed rich, successf, sexually attractive and everything will work out for you. where did we get this idea that you could follow steps and get there? and if you just stick with the steps, your success is guaranteed. not only your success in life financially, but also that you'll be happier and more spiritually fulfilled. where how i trace back to the 19th century as i talk about in the book and if you're interested in this at all, i think you might might find it kind of intriguing a man named samuel smiles had tried a lot of different things in his life. it's the middle of the 19th century. it's and income is first tting its hooks into the culture because. before that, if you were rich, you were
and also, i thk it's where the origin of the modern self-help movement comes in. and we now have life coaches, all of this, right. you you you buy a certain set of ids. you read them in a book, or you hear it on a podcast. i'm a huge fan of podcasts, but there are far too many that want to tell you how to live your life. and if you just do these ten simple steps, you will indeed rich, successf, sexually attractive and everything will work out for you. where did we get this idea that you could...
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Nov 25, 2023
11/23
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well, thk you very much. what an nor this is and what treat we're in for it to be here with marty baron. marty, thank you. yeah, great to here. thanks to everybody for coming. so i actually this was an amazing book. i actually felt a little sad when it ended because i so it. by the way, you want to listen and read the live shriver as your huge win just extraordinary you yeah very nicely you came to the party to launch the book and he and i were talking and we concluded that we are t same person and for. who may have forgotten of course it was liv who played marty in spotlight, the academy award winning film. so let's start with in writing book marty. there's of course, a very illustrious history of washington post leaders writing bookabout their time, you know, a good by brian bradley in 1995, personal history by katharine graham in 1998. now you with collision of power. what were your primary motivations in writing this book and what were some of the things that you really sought to share with readers in doi
well, thk you very much. what an nor this is and what treat we're in for it to be here with marty baron. marty, thank you. yeah, great to here. thanks to everybody for coming. so i actually this was an amazing book. i actually felt a little sad when it ended because i so it. by the way, you want to listen and read the live shriver as your huge win just extraordinary you yeah very nicely you came to the party to launch the book and he and i were talking and we concluded that we are t same person...
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78
Nov 8, 2023
11/23
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FOXNEWSW
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lawmakerlls on both sides of thk aisle, they are preparing to formally rebukeer radical reb congresswoman to leave after radiedemingly called for israel be wiped off the map. also tonight, more disturbing examples the of anti-semitism all across the globe. the former prime minister of israel, bennett, will be with us tonight. and weister of to watch resultsd the country on this election night as whee continue everythiy i do this for my health is a dna i do this for my health is a dna accomplishmenty.. >> concerns of getting screened faded away. and it my , doc gave mewo a script.d it my , doc gave mewo i got it done without a dela sc. i got it done without a dela sc. >> i screens would cal minute my way. provi >> color guard is a one of a kind way to screen for colon cancer that is effective colon cancer that is effective and noninvasivde people 45 plus at average risk, not high risk. false, positive and negative results occur. >> ask your provider for cologuard. i did it. my way. >> pilots are bright all around. they're laser focused and determined to perform without excuses. not everyon
lawmakerlls on both sides of thk aisle, they are preparing to formally rebukeer radical reb congresswoman to leave after radiedemingly called for israel be wiped off the map. also tonight, more disturbing examples the of anti-semitism all across the globe. the former prime minister of israel, bennett, will be with us tonight. and weister of to watch resultsd the country on this election night as whee continue everythiy i do this for my health is a dna i do this for my health is a dna...
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Nov 27, 2023
11/23
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CSPAN
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thk both of the lower courts lo at to some extent height 24 through 26 of the petition appendix has a lot of the key facts are. t here there is no use of government time. there is no use of government and mr. freed used requests about third-party aspect of this? kw facebooktsf is opatg in the space and controlling access to that kind of things that matter tour private analysis? at makes it more private that fabook had the authority to take on this account. we don't think it matters on the factan exercise the authority the authority being exercised with his abilityolock. >> this might be following up a lile bit on jtice jackson's point. i was a very surprised tee the emphasis on private property. usll we are told social media or whatever cases it's not question of the protons or whatever they are and they pop up on his page andop up in symbiosis page. we have the old concept applied to what we always say is se new phenomenon whether the propertyshysical or virtual and accessohe channel and the combined federal campaign and cornelius and the question here is a denial of access and exerc
thk both of the lower courts lo at to some extent height 24 through 26 of the petition appendix has a lot of the key facts are. t here there is no use of government time. there is no use of government and mr. freed used requests about third-party aspect of this? kw facebooktsf is opatg in the space and controlling access to that kind of things that matter tour private analysis? at makes it more private that fabook had the authority to take on this account. we don't think it matters on the...