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19
Jan 29, 2024
01/24
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you know, if i knew that, i'd be i don't know. i mean. well, i don't know.tom frieden, the former head of the cdc, was very right when he said, you know, you can surge a lot of things, but trust is the one thing that can't be served. it has to exist beforehand and, you know, we have a long history of no trust in this country in the medical system. i mean, obviously, for black americans, black american men, tuskegee was the classic example of the government doing an unbelievably untrustworthy, horrible thing that is letting hundreds of black american men can men linger and die of syphilis so that it could study how syphilis killed you and that that created great hesitancy to take the vaccine back in the early days, you know, among black men, when when it was created, you know, but in many country, you know, the average american doesn't the health care system in one way in this country, the drugs are ridiculously expensive and they're ridiculously expensive because the pharma companies have congress in their pockets and, you know, nobody can find a way to forc
you know, if i knew that, i'd be i don't know. i mean. well, i don't know.tom frieden, the former head of the cdc, was very right when he said, you know, you can surge a lot of things, but trust is the one thing that can't be served. it has to exist beforehand and, you know, we have a long history of no trust in this country in the medical system. i mean, obviously, for black americans, black american men, tuskegee was the classic example of the government doing an unbelievably untrustworthy,...
9
9.0
Jan 7, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 9
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different, you know, you know, uber's like in, you know, like this cars and people in a way that, you know, social media. it's it seems like the ether. it feels like it's has less of a geography or urban geography. and so i think that there's probably a role and maybe this is something i could have explored more in book, which is, you know, different types of government, strong mayors versus, you know, weak systems that all plays in how functional or how how plausible regulation might and could be. and so those the types of questions i'd ask about about dc what, what is it about dc that both made it a place that uber found attractive to turn, to or what about dc it vulnerable to uber and what, what is it about dc also might make it a place you could see real and genuine pushback. but yeah, it's tough to think about that. yeah, i think the one other shout out i'd say before we end also which we didn't get into right is the way in which the u.s. has governed these is not the only way these companies have existed in the world. and there are plenty of places that either require these comp
different, you know, you know, uber's like in, you know, like this cars and people in a way that, you know, social media. it's it seems like the ether. it feels like it's has less of a geography or urban geography. and so i think that there's probably a role and maybe this is something i could have explored more in book, which is, you know, different types of government, strong mayors versus, you know, weak systems that all plays in how functional or how how plausible regulation might and could...
14
14
Jan 6, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 14
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but when i was thinking about, you know, what goes right, you know, we all know we we know that so much about the health care system is broken. but what goes right and the things that that i were these encounters with nurses that were really these moments of clarity for me because i felt seen and heard and i felt that these were helping us even when that help didn't involve a cure even when there was no fix still they were nursing us and. that meant really everything. sometimes. and so that's where i started and and also the knowledge that, you know, we don't see the nurses expertise and practice discourse and analyzed in the news or in cultural reporting as much as we should and so i thought, you know there was this hugepportunity to bring stories forward. and so that's really where i started and was a learning experience for me. and so i just also want to sort of like establish for everyone who doesn't know that nursing is an independent scientific discipline so it doesn't exist relation to medicine and physicians and it is its own discipline with, its own sort of set of both its own
but when i was thinking about, you know, what goes right, you know, we all know we we know that so much about the health care system is broken. but what goes right and the things that that i were these encounters with nurses that were really these moments of clarity for me because i felt seen and heard and i felt that these were helping us even when that help didn't involve a cure even when there was no fix still they were nursing us and. that meant really everything. sometimes. and so that's...
82
82
Jan 11, 2024
01/24
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KGO
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eye 82
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you know, it has, you know, not performed well as a business. google is saying, though, that you know, the lion's share of cuts in that hardware division involved augmented reality d and that it remains committed to the pixel. >> okay, so let's talk about ai. of course, it is all the buzz nationally. and of course here in silicon valley there is pretty much an all out race now to try and catch up with open ai . and it seems as though while google is cutting in a number of divisions, they might be shifting some resources to their ai division. is that what you're hearing inside? >> so, you know, google one thing that was not cut at all this time around and also was not cut last year, was the company's focus on generative ai . so it actually has been hiring in that regard. and the company openly says that if there's talent, whether it's from openai ai or companies like anthropic that are strong competitors in ai, they will gladly hire them and they are paying, you know, massive compensation packages for engineers said to be in the seven figures for
you know, it has, you know, not performed well as a business. google is saying, though, that you know, the lion's share of cuts in that hardware division involved augmented reality d and that it remains committed to the pixel. >> okay, so let's talk about ai. of course, it is all the buzz nationally. and of course here in silicon valley there is pretty much an all out race now to try and catch up with open ai . and it seems as though while google is cutting in a number of divisions, they...
23
23
Jan 21, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 23
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you know, it was crazy.nservative president would have had the veto pen out and had it in red ink ready to veto. andrump urged it on. in fact, a couple of days after he said, we're shutting down the economy, but don't worry, th wa. help is on the way. we're going to just, you know, flood you with relief well, you know, that's that's part of the whole mess that we're dealing with. and then the fed made it all possible. so they congressmen who passed this bill on a bipartisan basis, should have gotten a pretty bad feedback from the bond market, saying, hey, if you're goi at te stage of the business cycle, at this kind of rate, interest rates are going to go up and go up. substantial sharply. and so the fed stepped in and basically monetize most of the new debt that was being created overnight by by this first bill. and then, of course, the cares act was just a warm up and december they put another 2 trillion on and shortly thereafter, biden added his 2 trillion, most of which was just a continuation of like th
you know, it was crazy.nservative president would have had the veto pen out and had it in red ink ready to veto. andrump urged it on. in fact, a couple of days after he said, we're shutting down the economy, but don't worry, th wa. help is on the way. we're going to just, you know, flood you with relief well, you know, that's that's part of the whole mess that we're dealing with. and then the fed made it all possible. so they congressmen who passed this bill on a bipartisan basis, should have...
20
20
Jan 6, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 20
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so, you know, gen z moment we're starting to see, you know, we saw the super bowl year had, you know, dr. dre and eminem and all these gen x hip hop stars and know we're all again, we realize we're old because. all of a sudden it was our turn to finally have our artists be at super bowl. but that's, you know, we're going to have our moment and it's going to pass quickly and so be yeah, it's it's pretty when you turn on an oldies station and you hear music that you actually grew up a volunteer. exactly. yeah. that's that's tough. if you could fast forward 30 years, 40 years into the future, i think the year that you that you cite is 20, 60. yeah. what does what does america look like in that moment and are there sort of working backwards from that just important milestones or moments that that will be important as a country for us to sort of unite around in terms of making sort of a productive 60. yeah. i mean, i'll caveat it by using the example i use in the book, which is that in november 19, you could not possibly have what november 2020 would look like right now span 12 months. so,
so, you know, gen z moment we're starting to see, you know, we saw the super bowl year had, you know, dr. dre and eminem and all these gen x hip hop stars and know we're all again, we realize we're old because. all of a sudden it was our turn to finally have our artists be at super bowl. but that's, you know, we're going to have our moment and it's going to pass quickly and so be yeah, it's it's pretty when you turn on an oldies station and you hear music that you actually grew up a volunteer....
38
38
Jan 8, 2024
01/24
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eye 38
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sarah ferguson was considered, you know, i don't know, the bad princess as it were. and and, you know, they're on the cover of people magazine. you know, every other week. and and so we tried that. you know, we had a press conference when we announced the book at paramount, which is a parent company now. and, you know, there were 60 reporters in the room. and, you know, that that doesn't happen with books. so it was it was it was interesting. it was it was taxing. but we made it up as we went along. and at the end we did a pretty good job at it. i think she would say we did a good job. i stayed friends with her for for quite a while and she would say we did a good job for what makes a children's book successful. how did you know at first sight that chicken chicka boom boom was going to be a success and and that budgie the helicopter would sell out? it's impossible to tell. and i made i made several really bad really bad calls. rainbow fish. i passed on you know it hard to tell a chicken chick a boom boom was the best children's books work on two levels they worked fo
sarah ferguson was considered, you know, i don't know, the bad princess as it were. and and, you know, they're on the cover of people magazine. you know, every other week. and and so we tried that. you know, we had a press conference when we announced the book at paramount, which is a parent company now. and, you know, there were 60 reporters in the room. and, you know, that that doesn't happen with books. so it was it was it was interesting. it was it was taxing. but we made it up as we went...
27
27
Jan 25, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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but, you know, subsequently learned that, in fact, know, it wasn't much of a race, you know, and in fact, you know, the germans knew that the united states trying to develop atomic weapons, so did japan, you know, and obviously so did the soviet union. but there's a long history, you know, of how countries in some cases choose not to engage in races. right. so there's this idea this kind of determinism. you know as to whether, you know, you think something is going to be a game changer or silver bullet or what have you and then we have to rush headlong whatever risks may be. we've been wrong before and caused real harm. right. so i absolutely agree. we need to pause and consider this history before we plunge ahead. i think it's also to think about what we could learn in a positive direction from looking at other countries. i have a grad student who's looking at the use of ai in the chinese legal system example, which is not anything do with competing with us or, destroying us. it's simply to get more efficiencies in their legal system. and, you know, some of that is things that other cou
but, you know, subsequently learned that, in fact, know, it wasn't much of a race, you know, and in fact, you know, the germans knew that the united states trying to develop atomic weapons, so did japan, you know, and obviously so did the soviet union. but there's a long history, you know, of how countries in some cases choose not to engage in races. right. so there's this idea this kind of determinism. you know as to whether, you know, you think something is going to be a game changer or...
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Jan 22, 2024
01/24
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i know. but put it in perspective and ask the question, how long did it take us to get the first 8 trillion of the public same number he generate during his term? the answer is 216 years. theesidents through to oh five created 8 trillion a debt. he did it in four years. the deficit averaged 9% of gdp. during his four years compared to an average of two and a half percent during among all president ends since, say, 1950. it was even dramatically bigger than obama, who, of course, the republican can spend eight years criticized for being a big spender and running up the national debt. but the reason i think he's is status is that, you know, when it comes to foreign trade, he basically decided i'm going to levy tariff on imports coming in from china. it averages, you know, about 20% on 360 billion worth of imports. that's 75 billion or so a year actually a lot worse than that because in the categories that bear the trump tariff, you know, there's about. 1.2 trillion of imports. china accounts fo
i know. but put it in perspective and ask the question, how long did it take us to get the first 8 trillion of the public same number he generate during his term? the answer is 216 years. theesidents through to oh five created 8 trillion a debt. he did it in four years. the deficit averaged 9% of gdp. during his four years compared to an average of two and a half percent during among all president ends since, say, 1950. it was even dramatically bigger than obama, who, of course, the republican...
22
22
Jan 15, 2024
01/24
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i know that every social in america knows that people don't have ideas they may not know is 26 million, but they know every home they shop. right? like everyone who works, the people who don't have them. and i think that's i am when it comes to you know we're seeing all over the country this huge increase in homelessness and we get a lot of people who are well-educated, you know, hothouses, whatever. but we're all one medical disaster away from being unhoused. i'm, you know, just something has to happen, you know, in l.a., if you're not in a rent controlled building, which you are one day, your rent is 1000, the next it's 5000. you're out on the street right? i am. and so you see two different things. sometimes you see people have a lot more empathy for folks who are on the street because they understand what it looks like. i sometimes people the clarence thomas route. i am, but it sort of depends but i think that that, you know, there are two groups, you know one of the things that happen and one of the sort of only articles you read i am in 2016 about voter id were seniors you know h
i know that every social in america knows that people don't have ideas they may not know is 26 million, but they know every home they shop. right? like everyone who works, the people who don't have them. and i think that's i am when it comes to you know we're seeing all over the country this huge increase in homelessness and we get a lot of people who are well-educated, you know, hothouses, whatever. but we're all one medical disaster away from being unhoused. i'm, you know, just something has...
21
21
Jan 25, 2024
01/24
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eye 21
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did he know? when did he know it and did it matter? secondly, what took him so long to wake up to eleanor roosevelt, ask him only him, about race? i mean, why was he sold beloved by blacks when the military, his grandmother, his accomplishments were segregated? i mean, why did blacks love him so? yeah, there's a lot several very good questions there. first of all, about eleanor, i mean, and she's a huge part of my book. and because in a lot of ways, her transformation in these years is even more dramatic than than her husband. franklin's. so in the years before polio was sort of, you know, defeated after the lucy mercer affair, humiliated and she's lacking a sense of purpose when he runs for vice president in 1920, a reporter comes to eleanor and asks her what she thinks about women's suffrage. and she which is, you know, a big issue in 1920 was the first year that women had the right to vote nationally. and eleanor's response is, i don't have a strong feeling either way. personally, i'm content with my husband and my children. eleanor
did he know? when did he know it and did it matter? secondly, what took him so long to wake up to eleanor roosevelt, ask him only him, about race? i mean, why was he sold beloved by blacks when the military, his grandmother, his accomplishments were segregated? i mean, why did blacks love him so? yeah, there's a lot several very good questions there. first of all, about eleanor, i mean, and she's a huge part of my book. and because in a lot of ways, her transformation in these years is even...
26
26
Jan 12, 2024
01/24
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GBN
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they lost, you know, things. you know, know, so many things.nd marriages and homes and pensions , money, homes and pensions, money, reputations, bankruptcy and stigma and shame and that no matter because to me, 600,000 sounds like that's a lot of compensation per person. >> but you'll never get those years back. you'll never get the things that some of them lost. >> do you what do you >> so what do you what do you think needs happen now for think needs to happen now for for the the victims? think needs to happen now for for well,|e victims? think needs to happen now for for well, |e mean, s? think needs to happen now for for well,|e mean, yes , mass >> well, i mean, yes, mass exoneration is a start . exoneration i think is a start. although, you know, then it calls into question were some of them maybe . but yeah, them maybe. but yeah, i think, i think a mass of overturn of think a mass kind of overturn of that convictions is that wrongful convictions is a start. can you put a can you put a figure on the amount of compensation? i don't know, sh
they lost, you know, things. you know, know, so many things.nd marriages and homes and pensions , money, homes and pensions, money, reputations, bankruptcy and stigma and shame and that no matter because to me, 600,000 sounds like that's a lot of compensation per person. >> but you'll never get those years back. you'll never get the things that some of them lost. >> do you what do you >> so what do you what do you think needs happen now for think needs to happen now for for...
22
22
Jan 14, 2024
01/24
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BELARUSTV
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human, that’s all, she just has a set of all sorts of things that we don’t know yet, you know, but lifeinstallation, if i already... how many four three changed professions , who knew, that’s how i could know, you know, that i would be a composer, first a classicist, write ballets, symphonies, then songs, no one can program this at all, that ’s the thing, without education you can become a composer, well how as a rule, songwriters in most cases, in many cases without education, songwriters, for which they were persecuted like sidorov, the best example is yuri antonov, and antonov was saved only by the fact that he... worked in an ensemble, it was very difficult for him, and he could not to happen at all, because they said who he was, and what he was, and what he graduated from, you know, that’s why, so to speak, when i graduated from the conservatory and went into song, it was easy for me, i not only graduated from the conservatory, but was also a member of the composers’ union ussr, that’s it, it was normal, you see, if i, let’s say, composed one composition, it means that i am a compo
human, that’s all, she just has a set of all sorts of things that we don’t know yet, you know, but lifeinstallation, if i already... how many four three changed professions , who knew, that’s how i could know, you know, that i would be a composer, first a classicist, write ballets, symphonies, then songs, no one can program this at all, that ’s the thing, without education you can become a composer, well how as a rule, songwriters in most cases, in many cases without education,...
25
25
Jan 28, 2024
01/24
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BELARUSTV
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don't you know either?n, who wrote such , such a song: snow, and the wind and the stars fly at night, you, my heart is calling to the anxious distance, this is my very... maybe pakhmutova alexandra nikolaevna pakhmatova people's artist bravo young man, you really wanted a hand i wish i could shake it, but unfortunately you don’t see me, this is how we see our profession, everything slips away, slips away, slips away. it’s really difficult for you today, there were no such questions, because i boasted everything i wanted to brag about, and that’s all the main thing, you know, is how the children surprised you, how they surprised you, on the contrary, i liked them because, firstly, they know their modern songs, and secondly, what you see, they showed once again that our profession is temporary emotions, already barely, they guessed pakhmuta, barely tukhmanov. we all saw the honesty in his eyes , the calm answers, i think that this is a confirmation of the sincerity of our guest, i believe that he was complete
don't you know either?n, who wrote such , such a song: snow, and the wind and the stars fly at night, you, my heart is calling to the anxious distance, this is my very... maybe pakhmutova alexandra nikolaevna pakhmatova people's artist bravo young man, you really wanted a hand i wish i could shake it, but unfortunately you don’t see me, this is how we see our profession, everything slips away, slips away, slips away. it’s really difficult for you today, there were no such questions, because...
13
13
Jan 25, 2024
01/24
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GBN
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eye 13
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know, tradityou know, more hing thing, which is i don't know, tradityou know, more than that. less, than that. you don't to. you don't need to. >> four inches about that, chris. >> it is nodding along there. >> it is nodding along there. >> hahaha. >> hahaha. >> what what? i mean, what is it about the zombie knives are like they're designed to look fearsome. are they fearsome. um, but are they actually any more fearsome than actually any more fearsome than a machete buy a regular machete you can buy in a garden centre? >> wouldn't want to take my >> i wouldn't want to take my chances with either. no, and i think important point here chances with either. no, and i ththat. important point here chances with either. no, and i ththat. so �*nportant point here chances with either. no, and i th that. so they're|t point here chances with either. no, and i th that. so they're movinghere chances with either. no, and i th that. so they're moving toe is that. so they're moving to tighten all this, and they're saying whether not saying that whether or not it's got graphics and words on got these
know, tradityou know, more hing thing, which is i don't know, tradityou know, more than that. less, than that. you don't to. you don't need to. >> four inches about that, chris. >> it is nodding along there. >> it is nodding along there. >> hahaha. >> hahaha. >> what what? i mean, what is it about the zombie knives are like they're designed to look fearsome. are they fearsome. um, but are they actually any more fearsome than actually any more fearsome than a...
23
23
Jan 24, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 23
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yeah, lily, i know, i know. i see. i see you there. you know, i am concerned because i don't know that there's a good model, have good models of popular culture presidents. there you can go online and google best fictional presidents and they'll give you a list. and jed bartlet usually wanted to selina meyer never makes it very high. moreover, all of the women who are depicted as presidents in popular culture do not typically rank very high. and in i think that's because of the way they're narratively constructed. so women commander in chief is a great example. she's not a partizan. they are depoliticized. bartlet you always knew he was a democrat, he was a proud democrat. he wore his liberalism on sleeve. that was great. even if you were a republican, presumably you could empathize or at least appreciate the character, right? but when you create these sort of vacuous, non partizan characters and then put them into partizan situations and then subject them all of these sexist bromides, right? and all of these sexist donald sutherland,
yeah, lily, i know, i know. i see. i see you there. you know, i am concerned because i don't know that there's a good model, have good models of popular culture presidents. there you can go online and google best fictional presidents and they'll give you a list. and jed bartlet usually wanted to selina meyer never makes it very high. moreover, all of the women who are depicted as presidents in popular culture do not typically rank very high. and in i think that's because of the way they're...
16
16
Jan 28, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 16
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but as the you know great essays in this show, you know, people are, you know, some of the essays thatne of them talks a lot about how people a certain class, people of lower class are shamed for the choices they make in a way that very different from someone who's upper class, you know, just show how difficult it actually is to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, to have that, you know, upward mobility that we're supposed to be striving for. and the other thing i mentioned just fleetingly is the fact that, you know, today now that classes back on the agenda class has become kitsch, right? so we have right wingers talking about the working class as though they actually give a -- about folks. what also blasting labor unions and saying, you know, in, you know, telling working people that the source of all their woes are, you know, woke people and in college professors and immigrants, instead of the capitalist class that actually explaining them. so, you know, i crammed as much in there as i could in that short bit, but really i just want to recommend that people read the book because it
but as the you know great essays in this show, you know, people are, you know, some of the essays thatne of them talks a lot about how people a certain class, people of lower class are shamed for the choices they make in a way that very different from someone who's upper class, you know, just show how difficult it actually is to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, to have that, you know, upward mobility that we're supposed to be striving for. and the other thing i mentioned just fleetingly is...
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know, kind of incoming, you know, ok. so don't know given and if they get in get out of getting cut out. yeah. not my you yet, then if i media any the spot and then the find out any sooner, the better see golf brought us here. so $58.00, that is in process it is going to take it. so how do you know the subordinate people? most of you on both one thing whose are some feedback and idea, but if i mean i need anybody to go there with you, i will have it. i put in the the, let's give you some videos for the west coast time without a voice. when we were in spanish and english, have you ever forget how much more, how to have a sense of data? the sort of getting a sam quit isn't citizen, but they've been in the they the less of sentiment say have them i guess for a minute a minute it's, i'm setting up a minute a little bit on the headset, how much is the city? and so what's the point of the exchange that montana it's given me in the conflict? so when i get a pulling up, a simple simpler than what they will see their low think of
know, kind of incoming, you know, ok. so don't know given and if they get in get out of getting cut out. yeah. not my you yet, then if i media any the spot and then the find out any sooner, the better see golf brought us here. so $58.00, that is in process it is going to take it. so how do you know the subordinate people? most of you on both one thing whose are some feedback and idea, but if i mean i need anybody to go there with you, i will have it. i put in the the, let's give you some videos...
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i mean, you know, a hezbollah, you know, sponsored by around the who these folks, you know, that again is martin, puts it up. i mean they, they, they have moral support, all kinds of support, maybe diplomatic support. but i mean that's kind of support that been around can afford, has the law and, and the who these is not comparable with the united states. that is with israel. but it's a way, i mean, getting it over for a minute. for western public school thing is, well, you know, what do you use? well, what are you talking about? read? oh, i read that always extra, but they want to push george. yes, exactly. and i know without a question, there are many, many people in washington who are itching to have a war with iran. levy say they, you know, they, lately, they haven't quite got bad war with russia off the ground. you know, they were busy with that for the past couple of years, or maybe we can get one of the grown up with a wrong year. we have obviously the, hey, they isn't far from saying that lindsey graham is a brothers and the assumption the underlying motiv. this is of course th
i mean, you know, a hezbollah, you know, sponsored by around the who these folks, you know, that again is martin, puts it up. i mean they, they, they have moral support, all kinds of support, maybe diplomatic support. but i mean that's kind of support that been around can afford, has the law and, and the who these is not comparable with the united states. that is with israel. but it's a way, i mean, getting it over for a minute. for western public school thing is, well, you know, what do you...
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you know, we're not supposed to see what we, i don't know. they go to the tables headlight, auto body to see plenty of fun. yeah. no, i'm not so new the, this one was the another problem i do want to tell you, so with, you know, the money, i get the notice i have that. if i'm going to be in the order, is it going to be the am i got an idea? when can we just, in case decided that you bought southern middle something very helpful by the they laughed loudly like you and said that you get prosy. some info is anybody on the bus the only less or not can i will see us just kind of the find out but to see on the find out but assume that i would on but i don't know. oh yeah, that's where to come and see. i live in if you see an eye on the side of the hill, but need people get it to be like lucy pony. i don't know. it is. i use it for the find you online and it was, i don't see it in the the old and the other thing was one of the one that i think i think is why. and if i'm a little bit of money, i get every got on. i see, i want to see if you have thos
you know, we're not supposed to see what we, i don't know. they go to the tables headlight, auto body to see plenty of fun. yeah. no, i'm not so new the, this one was the another problem i do want to tell you, so with, you know, the money, i get the notice i have that. if i'm going to be in the order, is it going to be the am i got an idea? when can we just, in case decided that you bought southern middle something very helpful by the they laughed loudly like you and said that you get prosy....
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well, who knows? who knows ? who knows? who knows? >> i mean, what if.of february comes and you've had to work and you forgot? >> for me, that's a little bit late. i feel like, yeah, february might little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. might little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but ht little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do let little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do let li1knowt too late. but do let us know what you make of that. it is 12th or yesterday was 12th 12th night or yesterday was 12th night. the night. you should have taken the down now, is. down by now, that is. >> it's couple of days >> no, it's a couple of days between friends. >> mhm. let us know what >> mhm, mhm. let us know what you think. now isjanuary. you think. now it is january. we're talking about new year new us.the we're talking about new year new us. the excitement from pre—christmas and that feeling that year has faded. well that the year has faded. well we're with january aren't we.
well, who knows? who knows ? who knows? who knows? >> i mean, what if.of february comes and you've had to work and you forgot? >> for me, that's a little bit late. i feel like, yeah, february might little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. might little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but ht little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do let little bit late. i feel like, yeah, feb late. but do let li1knowt too...
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Jan 14, 2024
01/24
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and, you know, some people credit with the rise of indigenous you know cloths you know in in rwanda i you know, it's it's very interesting to see this coming full circle has this book writing this book changed the way you shop? do you do you wear different clothes? now, i have to say this is i'm wearing taylor j. it took me a year or two after writing my booko that. oakland had a whole bunch of american made american design clothing. it's not. but if you if you only want to have a few really well-made things that's it's you know you can find great stuff so this is taylor j that i'm wearing right now do you do you shop differently now? oh, good to know. i didn't know about taylor. i look them up. i have always obsessed with this. it comes from my parents. my dad always bought american. he made a really, really big deal about buying american and also buying union. and so that i just internalized and so forever in a day i have always tried buy american when i can and i can name a whole bunch of companies that i rely on. there's a lot of bait and switch. you know, when you look up america
and, you know, some people credit with the rise of indigenous you know cloths you know in in rwanda i you know, it's it's very interesting to see this coming full circle has this book writing this book changed the way you shop? do you do you wear different clothes? now, i have to say this is i'm wearing taylor j. it took me a year or two after writing my booko that. oakland had a whole bunch of american made american design clothing. it's not. but if you if you only want to have a few really...
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Jan 28, 2024
01/24
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so whenever you write a book, you know, i know myself, i change, i learn things. did your perspective on the past change at all by writing this book or about washington himself? it did. i mean, i learned a lot more contextual history about him. the man, you know, in school hear about i did not tell a lie which arguably is a lie. you know it's just a story to make him sound pretty in the big picture but nobody can point back to that moment when he in school and he says that and i think that there was this there is this need and want to make him like a god you know but he was he faults and he had issues and he had problems just like like everybody else. and that i think is something that i think i learned from all of these leaders is they go through their own crucible of their life in one way or another, either they grow up. poor reagan, an alcoholic father. fdr obviously fought polio. and they get through that, that khrushchev battle to realize something themselves. and washington had that, too. you know, he lost his father at age 11. he lost brother to illness. an
so whenever you write a book, you know, i know myself, i change, i learn things. did your perspective on the past change at all by writing this book or about washington himself? it did. i mean, i learned a lot more contextual history about him. the man, you know, in school hear about i did not tell a lie which arguably is a lie. you know it's just a story to make him sound pretty in the big picture but nobody can point back to that moment when he in school and he says that and i think that...
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Jan 21, 2024
01/24
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, i know what we know.tion is, how do i marry this sense of openness and inclusion in community not a gatekeeper of the mission, but a person who holds space for it not being deluded or diffuse in a way that doesn't honor the intent. so we say community organizing is the key, but wondering like what guidance or■5 organizer? i've been blessed by this conversation. i feel poured into. i know minister too. and so i'm wondg ■ylike what advice he may have. yeah, that's a that's a great question. you know, the community organizers that i have been privileged work with, privileged to know, prepareto break bread with, i think the few the things that i know that they do is that they're always clear and transparent about why they're i think they, also are very clear about there is going be conflict what systems and structures you have in place to deal with conflict. we don't we get into community organizing space and we act like we're not going to conflict with people. we got people. there's going to be how you have
, i know what we know.tion is, how do i marry this sense of openness and inclusion in community not a gatekeeper of the mission, but a person who holds space for it not being deluded or diffuse in a way that doesn't honor the intent. so we say community organizing is the key, but wondering like what guidance or■5 organizer? i've been blessed by this conversation. i feel poured into. i know minister too. and so i'm wondg ■ylike what advice he may have. yeah, that's a that's a great question....
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do you still here in our actual list and okay. luce, okay. luce know? who knows? for sure. most. most of a good shot. most lewis, good deal. cash voice v. okay. okay. new fine. v. okay. and the best option will you be high to your facility? okay. cuz that's where i'm from. i'm from somebody else. ashtray, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from? i come from westport, connecticut. but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral. early days. yes, miss hill. my name is steve rose. give postuma me i e born a, get a yes, but i know you may have today. he will. she will be worried that there was a place what's the exquisite for beach there and most likely. so shoot which the law it was order, but now i will lose 50 and is that i leave? yeah, yeah. i know you originally which they have been. i don't us the those in the will . it, so with bit i'm with the city of you must think all lives kim city and you're gonna have to put a supply at the cost of celia without disabilities. and so the good for you to really most in the yeah, that's good. we didn't get
do you still here in our actual list and okay. luce, okay. luce know? who knows? for sure. most. most of a good shot. most lewis, good deal. cash voice v. okay. okay. new fine. v. okay. and the best option will you be high to your facility? okay. cuz that's where i'm from. i'm from somebody else. ashtray, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from? i come from westport, connecticut. but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral. early days. yes, miss hill. my...
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yeah, you know, right. i leave, i guess really, prime minister said the, you know, on october 7th, israel experience multiple 9 eleven's been okay. fine, that's no big is why it was time like maybe that's one of your interpretations, but i would retort in any journalist worth their salt would say. so how many? 911. how does the people of god that experience since that day? see, they expect this, this posting to answer enough people. it's not a place, it's just a problem. it's not on, you know, and if it is like someone else solve, it will, but we'll pay for it. there's so much power this when it comes to that, you know, it all to my life and it was already mentioned, you know, you didn't have to tip toe around, know, speak truth, this truth will give you justice, right? i think that there are bright lights here, and that is the fact that they use in this country. they all have these. i phone, see, iphones are the latest technology and they can cause revolutions. ok. they care about the telegraph, where you
yeah, you know, right. i leave, i guess really, prime minister said the, you know, on october 7th, israel experience multiple 9 eleven's been okay. fine, that's no big is why it was time like maybe that's one of your interpretations, but i would retort in any journalist worth their salt would say. so how many? 911. how does the people of god that experience since that day? see, they expect this, this posting to answer enough people. it's not a place, it's just a problem. it's not on, you know,...
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Jan 21, 2024
01/24
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they're you know going to undercut us you know, just provide unfair competition.der what you'd say to that i mean, this goes back to the basic questions that we talked about earlier. you know, how do we decide we cn this industry? and you could devise a system in that case, you know, in the australian case, where there regulated rates, you could do that if you wanted to. you can also not do that and have more competition on prices. and i think the question all really about the design and, you could imagine having quite profitable airlines in that context, private ones and them competing with the public airline. if youad, you know, shared prices. but they would compete on service quality, for example. are there other places, america, where you've ever used a public idea? well, i mean, the thing that's about public options actually have them everywhere in america. we just don't think of them that way. i mean, we think of health care as a place. there is a debate over public options, but, you know, there are public schools and there are private schools and there are
they're you know going to undercut us you know, just provide unfair competition.der what you'd say to that i mean, this goes back to the basic questions that we talked about earlier. you know, how do we decide we cn this industry? and you could devise a system in that case, you know, in the australian case, where there regulated rates, you could do that if you wanted to. you can also not do that and have more competition on prices. and i think the question all really about the design and, you...
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know get us kind of, you know, i started, i mean, biased. who made it kind of funny, but i d no, no, get a status. but i guess some of this ideas is, has been data sort of some you, hopefully the fund, if any of those will get an invalid and my, that i the, i guess the, excuse me because he had different ones that we got met. one with the amazon man. so be you a movie, this come all get somebody to get us to buy the didn't get it is to put it a little difficult for us for get the we've seen a couple of the woodson you're looking for that one bit now. so the thing out is that i'm where, yeah, in that the letters from them. yeah. them us, it also says for the like i said and got them. the list though means that if, if they what they think that looking for you to understand a degree that it's all kind of present to meet, i'm thinking, you know, the best one i can know. so i'm the village of bicycles. i guess i sort of though it's a little bit out of the field by a step, one of the ceiling. you'll get into that. he's talking to somebody at the o
know get us kind of, you know, i started, i mean, biased. who made it kind of funny, but i d no, no, get a status. but i guess some of this ideas is, has been data sort of some you, hopefully the fund, if any of those will get an invalid and my, that i the, i guess the, excuse me because he had different ones that we got met. one with the amazon man. so be you a movie, this come all get somebody to get us to buy the didn't get it is to put it a little difficult for us for get the we've seen a...
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Jan 16, 2024
01/24
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BBCNEWS
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eye 17
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i don't know, i really don't know. on a i know, i really don't know.i have looked back on the evidence i— 2019, i have looked back on the evidence i have seen and ijust don't _ evidence i have seen and ijust don't know. what i do know is the inquiry— don't know. what i do know is the inquiry is — don't know. what i do know is the inquiry is look at this point of who knew— inquiry is look at this point of who knew what— inquiry is look at this point of who knew what and when and what action they did _ knew what and when and what action they did or— knew what and when and what action they did or did not take to draw attention— they did or did not take to draw attention to concerns. ijust don't know _ in i think it was 2015 the post office executive, paula vennells, told a committee that she believe that the prosecutions were sound. they think the post office attempt to to mislead parliament and the public to cover up his own failings? i can't specifically comment on that _ ican't specifically comment on that i— i can't specifically comment on that i thin
i don't know, i really don't know. on a i know, i really don't know.i have looked back on the evidence i— 2019, i have looked back on the evidence i have seen and ijust don't _ evidence i have seen and ijust don't know. what i do know is the inquiry— don't know. what i do know is the inquiry is — don't know. what i do know is the inquiry is look at this point of who knew— inquiry is look at this point of who knew what— inquiry is look at this point of who knew what and when and what...
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Jan 21, 2024
01/24
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you know you. thanks so not pandemic because i was giving a talk and a community was actually here in new york. and this is what in 2019. i gave an early morning on loneliness at a senior center in manhattan. every seat in the hall was filled, though i suspect that the offer of a free hot breakfast might have been a bigger draw than i was during the q&a session that followed my talk. an older woman named mary raised her hand. you know, she said, i come to these lecture events. people tell me it's a good way to get and meet people. but you just gave this whole talk about loneliness and it did good. i'm still lonely. mary choked up on the lonely and then started crying. the people seated nearby rushed to comfort her. some wrote out their numbers and asked her to call them. it was a touching moment that the power vulnerability. mary divulged something personal and painful about herself and the total strangers around her with empathy and, concern. a simple statement of need. uncomfortable. it may have
you know you. thanks so not pandemic because i was giving a talk and a community was actually here in new york. and this is what in 2019. i gave an early morning on loneliness at a senior center in manhattan. every seat in the hall was filled, though i suspect that the offer of a free hot breakfast might have been a bigger draw than i was during the q&a session that followed my talk. an older woman named mary raised her hand. you know, she said, i come to these lecture events. people tell...
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okay. luce know who knows foursquare. most coke wish stuff. a good shot loose. good deal. gosh voice. the ok. okay. new fine view. you're welcome here. that you know option. will you please have your picture of him because that's where i'm from. i am from somebody else. ashtray, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from i come from westport, connecticut, but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral early. dave, with whom i missed you please give postuma me. i. e born a day yesterday you me a today you will. she will see why that there was a place. what's the exquisite for beach there when you listen to this issue, which the law, it was order blue. a blue 50. and is that i leave? yeah. and yeah, i know you originally looks they are, but yeah, i don't us the, those in the will. it so with, but i'm going to the video. you must think our lives can sit in, you mean have to put a slide at the most of celia without disabilities. and so the good for you to really most so in the let's go to we didn't skip i do i do i do it for this is just the she
okay. luce know who knows foursquare. most coke wish stuff. a good shot loose. good deal. gosh voice. the ok. okay. new fine view. you're welcome here. that you know option. will you please have your picture of him because that's where i'm from. i am from somebody else. ashtray, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from i come from westport, connecticut, but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral early. dave, with whom i missed you please give postuma me. i....
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these are, you know, we know the font, the form of life. so the why is it such a surprise, you know, they're, they're reaping mill, you know, millions of dollars just on every transition person. because you think about the amount of money that's spent between all the different drugs, but between the, the surgeries, right. and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course, you know, they're going to say, yeah, it's reversible. you know, if you, these, if you, if you lose your peanuts and you know, replace it with a vagina, you can always come back later and live. i mean, it's just like the cell you or this, this kind of stuff. and it's, and you look at the track record of, of the lives of big farm and how much they have done to harm people with their drugs, with their, you know, with everything with their vaccines. it's like, it's just if, if you can't recognize that they are deceptive, you know why. and then you're miss
these are, you know, we know the font, the form of life. so the why is it such a surprise, you know, they're, they're reaping mill, you know, millions of dollars just on every transition person. because you think about the amount of money that's spent between all the different drugs, but between the, the surgeries, right. and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course,...
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4.0
Jan 5, 2024
01/24
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PRESSTV
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well that know it well and the enemy knows it well too, they know that today's iran is a strong iran is is hero, our well-trained, well equipped armed forces, they have created power for us and more importantly the leader of the islamic revolution and this prudent nation, iranian people, actually they are the most important. iran is and has experienced iran's power. in the recent events, as for the recent events, i give you assurances that the analysis put forward by general salami, the enemy is always seeing the power of iran and the whole world is feeling iran's power and capabilities, rest assured that the initiative is in the hands of our strong. because it's near the friday prayers time and friday prayer sermons should start any time soon by the representative of the leader. i want take you more of your time and while praising our marders in kermon and your families, the the families of marders and respected people of kermon province, i have come here to express my condolences to you and at the same time express congratulations to you on your resistance and on the victories secu
well that know it well and the enemy knows it well too, they know that today's iran is a strong iran is is hero, our well-trained, well equipped armed forces, they have created power for us and more importantly the leader of the islamic revolution and this prudent nation, iranian people, actually they are the most important. iran is and has experienced iran's power. in the recent events, as for the recent events, i give you assurances that the analysis put forward by general salami, the enemy...
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okay. luce know who knows foursquare most. most of for scott, chef less lewis, good deal. cash. voice v. okay. okay. new fine. v. okay. and the best option. will you please have your, your picture rooms cuz that's where i'm from. i am from about us. could i say, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from i come from westport, connecticut, but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral. really do you have the most give postuma me i . e. born a day yesterday, you may have to say you will. she will see why of the place, what's the exquisite for a breach there? plenty of most of the pacific, which the law, it was order below you lose 50 and as of idea. yeah, yeah. i know you originally looks they are, but i don't us the those in the will it so with but i'm with the city of new most nicolai's, kim, cd and we have to put a slide at the dose of celia without disabilities. and so the grid for you to really most in the us go to we didn't get the if you, if you get the do it for the it's just i see i wish
okay. luce know who knows foursquare most. most of for scott, chef less lewis, good deal. cash. voice v. okay. okay. new fine. v. okay. and the best option. will you please have your, your picture rooms cuz that's where i'm from. i am from about us. could i say, what is your name? bonnie alpert, when you from i come from westport, connecticut, but now we live on bainbridge island, washington. we have for the funeral. really do you have the most give postuma me i . e. born a day yesterday, you...
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you know, in the us, you know, is that so tragic line will because they would, you know, we've been doing human guess of both and been on this guess i'm guessing on this program for many, many years. so let me, how many friends it'd be loose during the rush or gate, how many friends did we lose during cove and how many friends that they lose during locked out? how many friends are being lose out over ukraine? and now you lose a friend because you call out a genocide. what kind of world are we living in vinyl? natalie, natalie, dad, i'm not going to mention names. what if i mentioned one name to you? you're joe or drop. i basically was told i'm throw with you because there is a red line regarding israel and i said, what that, how does that mean? what do i said, one more thing to show you the, the lunacy of this. and that may have given you a hint. john settlement this set of or in pennsylvania is now well now he is in, he is literally and then people use that word literally incorrectly. but he is literally wrapping himself and he is really flag, which is fine. but he is now saying they bla
you know, in the us, you know, is that so tragic line will because they would, you know, we've been doing human guess of both and been on this guess i'm guessing on this program for many, many years. so let me, how many friends it'd be loose during the rush or gate, how many friends did we lose during cove and how many friends that they lose during locked out? how many friends are being lose out over ukraine? and now you lose a friend because you call out a genocide. what kind of world are we...
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uh, you know, that aggression, we have been able to grow and the last year that and you know, which is something that nobody would bring, will was able to predict. uh, you know, and just a couple years earlier because they thought that everything would collapse. and we have shown that, you know, we're capable of, of, of achieving a different, uh, different outcome. so i think the, minnesota people know that, you know, they, they have to keep advancing in their democratic process in the deepening a revolutionary process. and i think those leads the outcome regardless of whatever intervention it takes place the venezuela is, is an emergency. and you know, we will have elections and different forces with metro themselves. but i think the sort of people know where the horizon is thinking about different forces, one voice mail from the west at that time, the recognized as the interim presence of from the cell that is barely seen or mentioned anymore. how do use is that? how do you assess his political fortunes? well, i think it was, uh well, she left the countries not even a political figur
uh, you know, that aggression, we have been able to grow and the last year that and you know, which is something that nobody would bring, will was able to predict. uh, you know, and just a couple years earlier because they thought that everything would collapse. and we have shown that, you know, we're capable of, of, of achieving a different, uh, different outcome. so i think the, minnesota people know that, you know, they, they have to keep advancing in their democratic process in the...
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Jan 22, 2024
01/24
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yes you know, they they give us a place to work they give us, you know, you know, a place to make a living for many workplaces, there's a sense of alienation in to the work itself, to the mission and purpose of what's being created and done to other people. we are working with and to ourselves. so in a way, this is a big opportunity for the employers because then if they can adjust that to a kind of connection. you get higher productivity, you get retention of engage enthusiastic workers and the other bigcould offer a lot on cn is higher education colleges and universities. i think they've become very lonely places increasingly and, the pandemic hasn't helped that. and so you're seeing a lot of that kind of struggle. i think there's a recognition of that loneliness. now, part of it is, as far as we measure it, the loneliest demographic is 18 to 24, and they're the ones going through that most of higher ed. right, which seems sort of counterintuitive. here's the place where you are joining with your peers from all over, and yet it can be quite loly. we want to have time for a q&a. so think
yes you know, they they give us a place to work they give us, you know, you know, a place to make a living for many workplaces, there's a sense of alienation in to the work itself, to the mission and purpose of what's being created and done to other people. we are working with and to ourselves. so in a way, this is a big opportunity for the employers because then if they can adjust that to a kind of connection. you get higher productivity, you get retention of engage enthusiastic workers and...
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Jan 22, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 88
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so why don't we get right into it you know what you know lot about a lot of things you talked about a lot of topics inspired you to write this book. so i'm someone who flies a lot and, i think like anybody who flies a lot i've had my share of frustrations and miseries with the airline industry. but like tim, you know, i'm also a law professor and. i write a lot about economic policy and regulation and so i was working on a textbook with some colleagues and was writing the airline regulation chapter. and as i dug into the history of airline policy and law what i realized was that all things just about that make flying miserable, frustrating, irritating, problematic are a function public policy choices. and the biggest public policy choice in this aa was the decision to deregulate the airlines in 1978. and so when i was doing work, it just struck me that this is a story think people don't really kn how we got to where we are today, what really happened. and that's what tried to uncover in the book. why don't you tell us a little bit of that story? so if people haven't the book yet, you
so why don't we get right into it you know what you know lot about a lot of things you talked about a lot of topics inspired you to write this book. so i'm someone who flies a lot and, i think like anybody who flies a lot i've had my share of frustrations and miseries with the airline industry. but like tim, you know, i'm also a law professor and. i write a lot about economic policy and regulation and so i was working on a textbook with some colleagues and was writing the airline regulation...
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you know, i get home tonight. um i initially i think did you know the idea free bound good after the atrocities off it was telling me no no fell back on uh much better for anything that had initially been it was caught by surprise. but i think later it's um, it would've been very difficult post on possible sir, is also mounted. the effort that we've seen and gone on without the, you know, the close, the assistance of united states, we've seen over 200 plains of munitions coming to restock cars, really arsenals. we're seeing the support united states has provided the security council to push back against resolutions of what's called an immediate cease fire. so i think um, you know, it's pretty clear right now that's uh, you know, there right now the united states and there's also see a line to list as far as the campaign is concerned. and then the goal of defeating sauce, which across the united states and much of europe, which has defined us awesome terrace organization. and obviously that is on a shared interest
you know, i get home tonight. um i initially i think did you know the idea free bound good after the atrocities off it was telling me no no fell back on uh much better for anything that had initially been it was caught by surprise. but i think later it's um, it would've been very difficult post on possible sir, is also mounted. the effort that we've seen and gone on without the, you know, the close, the assistance of united states, we've seen over 200 plains of munitions coming to restock cars,...
29
29
Jan 15, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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you know questions. yes i was wondering so with flipper he had the he didn't really obviously didn't share lot of the point of views with other african-americans. so i was wondering was like his viewpoint maybe common or like held by middle class bourgeois african-americans the time because like one of the slides was talking about how like the class black community really helps w do what dubois i'm sorry i'm blanking. yeah, i hope that's do voice a lot and like the he drew a lot of support from them but clearly had a very, very different position from flipper. so like was flipper like a total outlier here in this or were there others kind of like him in that time period? so he's not a total outlier. however, black conservatism, of course, is that has, you know, has existed. but the kind of conservatism that he promoting was a bit unusual like i was telling the group earlier he wrote how was completely opposed to the anti-lynching but he was a he would be the best example i could think was he would fall i
you know questions. yes i was wondering so with flipper he had the he didn't really obviously didn't share lot of the point of views with other african-americans. so i was wondering was like his viewpoint maybe common or like held by middle class bourgeois african-americans the time because like one of the slides was talking about how like the class black community really helps w do what dubois i'm sorry i'm blanking. yeah, i hope that's do voice a lot and like the he drew a lot of support from...
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you know, even bon pulse, set it on television and was attacked for, you know, 1215 years ago. it's long been known, but somehow you're not allowed to talk about it. well, we're talking about it now and things are changing. line, i'll go ahead and give you the last 35 seconds. go ahead as well. you know, right now the key to this is going to be uh, shows like this gentleman like you. and also again, this reset this, this, this reaffirmation of the truth. and the good news is that it will be streaming, it will be citizen, civilian and alternative media. you're going to see, you know, media. i just came out recently with a list of the top 75 people in quote news media. so joe rogan came in number 24. look that's over with. that's over with your going to see a new wake up call for the world. not, not even lovely, but the world. so get ready and this might have done more to act as a catalyst. and then kind of like an ends of magic, a push to change how being a little bit better, a free speech will prevail. exactly. thank you, gentlemen. and as we approach the holiday of christmas,
you know, even bon pulse, set it on television and was attacked for, you know, 1215 years ago. it's long been known, but somehow you're not allowed to talk about it. well, we're talking about it now and things are changing. line, i'll go ahead and give you the last 35 seconds. go ahead as well. you know, right now the key to this is going to be uh, shows like this gentleman like you. and also again, this reset this, this, this reaffirmation of the truth. and the good news is that it will be...
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you know, look to see what we, i don't know. the go to think goes a little below the to see kind of fine. yeah, no, i'm not from you the, this one was here. another probably my, i don't necessarily with you know that on monday, the other side of that if i'm going to be in the older, is it going to be the my again area? when can we just in case decided that you bought southern middle somebody buddy, hold go by the the, you own and say that the guy, personally, some info is anybody on the bus. the only less or not. again, i will see it was, was kind of the need to find out, but assume out a little bit i find out by the, by the coming to see i live and beneficial. so when i say they got my, my hill, police people get it. oh is there like, can you see hold on. yeah, i don't know is i use it for the other thing online and is i don't see it and i think i have the older and the other thing is more about the one that i think i was using. what if i'm a little bit of money? i definitely got let's see, i want to see and somebody that lives
you know, look to see what we, i don't know. the go to think goes a little below the to see kind of fine. yeah, no, i'm not from you the, this one was here. another probably my, i don't necessarily with you know that on monday, the other side of that if i'm going to be in the older, is it going to be the my again area? when can we just in case decided that you bought southern middle somebody buddy, hold go by the the, you own and say that the guy, personally, some info is anybody on the bus....
11
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but you don't know if you no longer have the money and you know, people are, you know, they put them. i didn't think it was, i don't know how to practice policy. it could look at this and ministrations jack sullivan, if you remember, i just, i think about a week before that's cover and i think it was exactly 5 days, but keep going. yeah, that's the reason it's in the most stable period at all. so i think that says a lot about the here were 6 battista, what this region. i went back to the people who have genuine knowledge about the middle east of being marginalized. yep. but people who support, you know, the general approach of blindly following israel. i'm pretty, with the middle t r i is ation. go ahead, right? edge of it. go ahead. yeah. you know, i, i, peter, i think i cut off all the last time so i don't want it this time. i apologize. but i want to say a couple of things. one is your right, excuse me, we race to the bottom. we have the worst liars, they're not even good liars, they're not even good at the job, but not sophisticated. i mean, they're just as you point out there, th
but you don't know if you no longer have the money and you know, people are, you know, they put them. i didn't think it was, i don't know how to practice policy. it could look at this and ministrations jack sullivan, if you remember, i just, i think about a week before that's cover and i think it was exactly 5 days, but keep going. yeah, that's the reason it's in the most stable period at all. so i think that says a lot about the here were 6 battista, what this region. i went back to the people...
50
50
Jan 1, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
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eye 50
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i didn't know. i didn't know an end to everything in physics would be the absolute worst kind of fate, because it would mean there was nothing else to know and that the universe was horribly. and i don't believe in that kind of universe. i don't believe in a universe where i can't go back my favorite painting or my favorite book and not read new things when i read it the second time. or look at it the second time. so the people who, you know, are looking for a grand unified theory in some way. they're an older generation of physics. i don't find physicists talking about that so much anymore because it comes out of sort the tail end of 19th century science has got it all solved. what used to be called whig ism and the more science you learn, the more you realize it doesn't have it all solved. science isn't a religion substitute any more than religion is a science substitute, though doing different things. and you've got to let each of them do the thing they do best because, both of them allow us huma
i didn't know. i didn't know an end to everything in physics would be the absolute worst kind of fate, because it would mean there was nothing else to know and that the universe was horribly. and i don't believe in that kind of universe. i don't believe in a universe where i can't go back my favorite painting or my favorite book and not read new things when i read it the second time. or look at it the second time. so the people who, you know, are looking for a grand unified theory in some way....
11
11
Jan 5, 2024
01/24
by
ALJAZ
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eye 11
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you know, because i mean the, you know, and then you know, you have to look at that. you're very so really you have to look at at, you know, you have to consider past experience, but those are times we have never known for sure it would have been the perfect trace. has there been multiple, a circle, entire subtracts in around, over the last few years, many of which, you know, have been blamed on divers, many of which have been blamed on all of the other usual suspects, but also some of which turns out to be, you know, have the hands of the or one state as well. so i think i well yeah, well the other guess the, because i can see that both of them have something to say about this document and i will come to you in just a moment. but if i can get to mr. alton, meaning i know that you have said it's as unlikely that the wrong carried out this attack as israel. so what's your response to what you're hearing that i yes, i do buying the idea that it was in the rainy in the inside. don't they mean just the timing of it and the number of people were killed and so it discrimina
you know, because i mean the, you know, and then you know, you have to look at that. you're very so really you have to look at at, you know, you have to consider past experience, but those are times we have never known for sure it would have been the perfect trace. has there been multiple, a circle, entire subtracts in around, over the last few years, many of which, you know, have been blamed on divers, many of which have been blamed on all of the other usual suspects, but also some of which...