22
22
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
afternoon the school kids coming and going and then at a different time in the afternoon watching a factory workers walk to work many people just walked out here in america now everybody drives people drive to the end of their driveway to pick up their mail. but then there's a different kind of community. it is a great neighborhood really. most of the people who live here work for general motors and buick factories just just a few bars box their way so it was a working class neighborhood it was in a poor neighborhood. most of the people who work in the automobile factories did really well. nobody realized how fragile their economy was because it was always there general motors was actually born here and flint grew up here and people people who worked in the factories especially after the one nine hundred forty s. made very good wages. more than a college graduate would make. you look at. this house like thousands of others. was abandoned and when people leave they don't take their houses with them and they also don't pay taxes anymore on the property and so my office. is responsible for tax
afternoon the school kids coming and going and then at a different time in the afternoon watching a factory workers walk to work many people just walked out here in america now everybody drives people drive to the end of their driveway to pick up their mail. but then there's a different kind of community. it is a great neighborhood really. most of the people who live here work for general motors and buick factories just just a few bars box their way so it was a working class neighborhood it was...
185
185
Sep 3, 2011
09/11
by
KRCB
tv
eye 185
favorite 0
quote 0
now, even if you open an auto parts factory or a semiconductor factory, you might need 500 to 1,000 highly to man a highly roboticized factory floor which changes constantly, so your skill level needs to be pretty high for that. there's no thousands of jobs needed for manufacturing. >> reporter: and indeed, at marlin steel in baltimore, engineers design the baskets the company makes, but robots do most of the heavy lifting. owner drew greenblatt. >> the only way my employees can exceed the productivity of a chinese worker, a vietnamese worker is if they have... if they're harnessing a tremendous asset like a robot, which makes them much more productive. so they're 40 and 50 and 60 time more productive than a chinese worker. that's the only way it's going to work. >> reporter: so, in the past year, greenblatt splurged on new robots, made in plants where robots are also replacing people, meaning a few more hard- skilled robot designers; a lot fewer heavy lifters. still, robots can't yet do it all. and this brings us to a second aspect of the structural unemployment argument-- that for the fa
now, even if you open an auto parts factory or a semiconductor factory, you might need 500 to 1,000 highly to man a highly roboticized factory floor which changes constantly, so your skill level needs to be pretty high for that. there's no thousands of jobs needed for manufacturing. >> reporter: and indeed, at marlin steel in baltimore, engineers design the baskets the company makes, but robots do most of the heavy lifting. owner drew greenblatt. >> the only way my employees can...
29
29
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
a great neighborhood really. most of the people who live here work for general motors the buick factories just just a few bars box that way so it was a working class neighborhood it was in a poor neighborhood. most of the people who work in the autumn of the factories did really well. nobody realized how fragile their economy was because it was always their general motors was actually born here in flint grew up here. people worked in the factories especially in the after the one nine hundred forty s. made very good wages. more than a college graduate would make. you look at. this house like thousands of others. was abandoned and when people leave they don't take their houses with them and they also don't pay taxes anymore on the property and so my office. is responsible for tax collection and when people abandon their property and stop paying taxes we take that to court we get a judgment and take ownership of the property so this house now is owned by the land bank we get those properties and we try to make a decision about what to do with them with with all these thousands of abandoned houses. that brings back a
a great neighborhood really. most of the people who live here work for general motors the buick factories just just a few bars box that way so it was a working class neighborhood it was in a poor neighborhood. most of the people who work in the autumn of the factories did really well. nobody realized how fragile their economy was because it was always their general motors was actually born here in flint grew up here. people worked in the factories especially in the after the one nine hundred...
45
45
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
someone to protect against this because of the work to press to disappear now what if you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea god bless keep a big hunk of it but part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay forward for the next time. she nailed it she got right through the poll tested b.s. about job creators and class war warfare got right to the heart of what's going on in america our social contract has been broken by greed and little one is dying the millionaires and billionaires the corporate c.e.o.'s the oil oligarchy those who become wildly successful and now have more money than they can spend over five lifetimes are not job creators as republicans. they're not producers as i and rand called them and they are not worth keeping this nation going they are not who we should be depending on they are success stories success stories that are only possible because the rest of us made them possible without all of us you me everything everybody we know without us for millionaires and billionaires wouldn't be billionaires and bil
someone to protect against this because of the work to press to disappear now what if you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea god bless keep a big hunk of it but part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay forward for the next time. she nailed it she got right through the poll tested b.s. about job creators and class war warfare got right to the heart of what's going on in america our social contract has been broken by greed and...
240
240
Sep 23, 2011
09/11
by
KCSMMHZ
tv
eye 240
favorite 0
quote 0
saturday, a mud slide buried a factory and office building, killing 27 people. a river rose and flooded its banks leaving houses submerged and farmland inundated. weather officials say torrential rain is expected to gradually ease, but the resulting cool weather and lack of sunshine now threaten the autumn harvest. >>> chinese prime minister wen jiabao government officials are speaking out about what they're calling a mistake by the united states. they strongly oppose a u.s. decision to help taiwan upgrade its aging fleet of f-16 fighter jets. the warning the deal could damage china/u.s. cooperation. >>> u.s. assistant secretary of state announced wednesday they wouldn't sell the new model f-16s to taiwan. that's what china wanted. they are now going to sell radar systems, missiles and other equipment. hardware will help the taiwanese upgrade their fleet of 145 fighters. china is against any armed sales to taiwan. it considers that interference in its internal affairs. >> translator: the united states made a mistake. it is inevitable that the decision will damage
saturday, a mud slide buried a factory and office building, killing 27 people. a river rose and flooded its banks leaving houses submerged and farmland inundated. weather officials say torrential rain is expected to gradually ease, but the resulting cool weather and lack of sunshine now threaten the autumn harvest. >>> chinese prime minister wen jiabao government officials are speaking out about what they're calling a mistake by the united states. they strongly oppose a u.s. decision...
191
191
Sep 19, 2011
09/11
by
CNNW
tv
eye 191
favorite 0
quote 0
you can't outsource a hotel and you can't put a hotel in a low wage factory somewhere else. ill stay in america. >> van paasschen says that with hard work, anyone in the industry has a legitimate shot at achieving the american dream. >> the hotel industry is famous for taking people in and promoting from within. so we've had so many people that have come in and housekeepers, behind a desk somewhere, who've moved up into more and more senior executive positions. >> there is a big problem. foreign tourists who want to visit america face a barrier that makes it difficult. the hassle of getting a visa. after 9/11 america tightened its visa policies to address security reasons. partly as a result, our share of the international travel market plummeted by over one-third over the last ten years. according to the industry, that's an estimated 78 million visitors lost to other countries. >> today, five times as many people go to europe from china as come to the u.s. >> if america had maintained its share of the market, the industry estimates that almost half a million more jobs would
you can't outsource a hotel and you can't put a hotel in a low wage factory somewhere else. ill stay in america. >> van paasschen says that with hard work, anyone in the industry has a legitimate shot at achieving the american dream. >> the hotel industry is famous for taking people in and promoting from within. so we've had so many people that have come in and housekeepers, behind a desk somewhere, who've moved up into more and more senior executive positions. >> there is a...
300
300
Sep 9, 2011
09/11
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 300
favorite 0
quote 0
if i invest in a business and buy a factory, that's a good business. but if i put a neon sign, that's a different use of the money. some of the stimulus we have seen, like jobless benefits or putting teachers back to work, that's not a real investment in the economy. it might get you over an awful gap and that's an argument in the negative that we don't know. but i have trouble with the idea that the $2 trillion is want being put into the marketplace. facebook is a company that uses no new technology, costs you productivity and efficiency and will go public for $100 billion. >> wait a second -- >> because of barack obama. >> no, no, no. the president -- >> let me finish. >> the president moved to reform three big sectors -- health, financial and energy. businesses are saying, if you haven't read the bills, why should we move to hire. >> you ask facebook why they should get $100 billion, they will say there is no other good investment place. that's the problem. we don't have the next things yet. >> greg: there is no innovation. >> none. >> greg: very li
if i invest in a business and buy a factory, that's a good business. but if i put a neon sign, that's a different use of the money. some of the stimulus we have seen, like jobless benefits or putting teachers back to work, that's not a real investment in the economy. it might get you over an awful gap and that's an argument in the negative that we don't know. but i have trouble with the idea that the $2 trillion is want being put into the marketplace. facebook is a company that uses no new...
452
452
Sep 20, 2011
09/11
by
KNTV
tv
eye 452
favorite 0
quote 0
a visit to china to confront suppliers. >> this is unacceptable. we can't have that. you know, they know how to get it out. >> reporter: the factory boss complains he can't get enough workers. >> i don't want to hear -- >> reporter: even with wages rising by 40% a year. the supply of young migrants, the backbone of the factories, is drying up because of more job opportunities at home. so green decides he'll ship the final assembly of cabinets back to his mobile alabama factory. then to another tense meeting. >> needs to go down. >> reporter: this time at a factory making lamps where the boss demands bigger orders and larger down payments. >> if i issue a purchase order with prices on it i don't expect them to change when it's time to pay for the order. >> reporter: green will divide the work now between india and the u.s. until three or four years ago it was hard to imagine american business people going anywhere else but china for choice and price. but the calculations are now fast-changing. >> it is more stable in the united states to manufacture. you know what the costs are going to be pretty much. used to be you came over here
a visit to china to confront suppliers. >> this is unacceptable. we can't have that. you know, they know how to get it out. >> reporter: the factory boss complains he can't get enough workers. >> i don't want to hear -- >> reporter: even with wages rising by 40% a year. the supply of young migrants, the backbone of the factories, is drying up because of more job opportunities at home. so green decides he'll ship the final assembly of cabinets back to his mobile alabama...
44
44
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
the old truck a factory. if you want an example of modern day moscow the former red brick confectionery complex is it's one of the main centers of contemporary culture in the capital the area is bustling the bars restaurants and my clubs of course also has developments doesn't stop them every year you hotels open up in the recent so says it's the lower price bracket that needs attention in a city full of luxurious accommodation with russian and foreign entrepreneurs seeing a drop in the market wants a budget accommodation has opened the past decade. our first location is come because it is stylish designed for you know jeans are popular with travelers in the ladies and nationalities. claims it's not just a whole still but an space with content because. it does seem to feature of this last style many heard sounds they call it is. high ceilings take should rules in the clay of your lights and color this is no old fashioned falling house. the full story is situated on the full fuel of the form a sweet factory. o
the old truck a factory. if you want an example of modern day moscow the former red brick confectionery complex is it's one of the main centers of contemporary culture in the capital the area is bustling the bars restaurants and my clubs of course also has developments doesn't stop them every year you hotels open up in the recent so says it's the lower price bracket that needs attention in a city full of luxurious accommodation with russian and foreign entrepreneurs seeing a drop in the market...
45
45
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
the full story is situated on the fourth floor perform a suite factory. offered free wi-fi launch facilities tea and coffee even free talking to those you come by to talk. how super bathrooms and schools for men and women and you can purchase food hygiene products and designs. reception. area rooms and affordable prices. case itself to move the creative industries they also various cultural events submissions. they have fourteen rooms inside here ranging from six beds almost to king size private accommodation prices range from seven hundred fifty rubles to three thousand four hundred amazing prices for the high standard proximity and city center. moving to our next location we can ride stop the hostile nation features delays as well as trying to read but the quick and furnishings the prices for ben one of the film starts are just some that's from twenty five dollars and went to the hostel is popular with travelers from all over the world. has a wide variety of. accommodations just a year ago i was very popular with questions. such as the grounds with a be
the full story is situated on the fourth floor perform a suite factory. offered free wi-fi launch facilities tea and coffee even free talking to those you come by to talk. how super bathrooms and schools for men and women and you can purchase food hygiene products and designs. reception. area rooms and affordable prices. case itself to move the creative industries they also various cultural events submissions. they have fourteen rooms inside here ranging from six beds almost to king size...
213
213
Sep 21, 2011
09/11
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 213
favorite 0
quote 0
boeing makes planes in seattle, they have trouble with labor, they want to open a factory in south carolina >> greta: a second one not in lieu of this is extra. >> a second one. and the national labor relations board says they can't do it. you are the head of boeing, what are you going to do? you can't go to , you don't want to stay in seattle. you go overseas. it is crazy. -- i have never in my career, heard of such a move by an unelected bureaucracy that tells a corporation, one of the worldest largest corporations they can't go to a state to establish a factory and hire people to work there. it is crazy. >> greta: what do you think president obama is saying to the nrlb? if there's -- if you are certain of what you are saying, of course president obama won't talk to me. i would love to interview him, but he won't. what would he said in response? >> i don't know what he possibly could say about this nlrb decision. i never imagined such a decision would be made by an unelected bureaucracy. certainly, a law could never have been passed to mandate such a thing. the president is one, inexperie
boeing makes planes in seattle, they have trouble with labor, they want to open a factory in south carolina >> greta: a second one not in lieu of this is extra. >> a second one. and the national labor relations board says they can't do it. you are the head of boeing, what are you going to do? you can't go to , you don't want to stay in seattle. you go overseas. it is crazy. -- i have never in my career, heard of such a move by an unelected bureaucracy that tells a corporation, one...
219
219
Sep 24, 2011
09/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 219
favorite 0
quote 0
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear.t of us paid for. you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. you were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that marauding bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against this because of the work the rest of us did. now, look, you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea, god bless. keep a big hunk of it. but part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay forward for the next kid who comes along. >> okay. so the marauding bands thing might have been a little too much, but the president and his speechwriters were listening. and then they rewrote his position on class warfare. >> you can make millions. you can make billions of dollars in america. this is the land of opportunity. that's great. all i'm saying is, if you've done well, i've done well, then you should do a little something to give something back
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear.t of us paid for. you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. you were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that marauding bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against this because of the work the rest of us did. now, look, you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea,...
125
125
Sep 30, 2011
09/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 125
favorite 0
quote 0
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear. you moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. you hired workers, the rest of us paid to educate. you all were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against us because of the work the rest of us did. now, look, you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea. god bless. keep a big hunk of it. but part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay forward for the next kid who comes along. >> you have seen that video of massachusetts democratic senate candidate elizabeth warren on this show before. undoubtedly you've seen it a bunch of times on the internet before as well. i just today had a friend's mom send it to me in this tiny, tiny, tiny, inspirational form. elizabeth warren is one of the nation's most effective communicators on economic issues and
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear. you moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. you hired workers, the rest of us paid to educate. you all were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against us because of the work the rest of us did. now, look, you built a factory and it...
133
133
Sep 23, 2011
09/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear. you moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. you were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that marauding bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against this because of the work the rest of us did. now, look. you built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea, god bless. keep a big hunk of it. but part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay it forward for the next kid who comes along. >> the right wing is circulating that video today as if it is something that looks bad. i think they are believing their own rhetoric about what people think about ideas like that. i think the more that gets circulated the better people like elizabeth warren and other people with that message are going to do with a broad swath of americans left, right, and ce
you built a factory out there. good for you. but i want to be clear. you moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. you were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. you didn't have to worry that marauding bands would come and seize everything at your factory and hire someone to protect against this because of the work the rest of us did. now, look. you built a factory and...
32
32
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
done something and you can have a factory for example but you want to start with something else new means elevated or yellow. when you see it's young or innovative no you can have any idea of a new business resample you want to make something which can be replicated in all regions of russia and you want to make your medium business try to grow up you want to be to become a very big large company and you come to agency and. agency with different problems and they can be problems over attractive financing find investors they can beef problems of some administrative barriers commercial barriers and all these things we. help you to cope with or what's the criteria according to which you are going to evaluate the the success of the projects. the criteria is. we'll. be divided by two main groups one group. are quality of creating great serious. it's the projects should be innovative the project should be. social the project should can be a project that can be replicated in different regions and the most important criteria is the project should have a leader. that is the big difference between o
done something and you can have a factory for example but you want to start with something else new means elevated or yellow. when you see it's young or innovative no you can have any idea of a new business resample you want to make something which can be replicated in all regions of russia and you want to make your medium business try to grow up you want to be to become a very big large company and you come to agency and. agency with different problems and they can be problems over attractive...
38
38
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
oil refineries resulting in a mile long oil slicks that extended down the danube through remaining into the black sea. we. had true chemical plants and fertilizer factories spreading mercury. other carcinogens on the landscape and into a canal that lead into the danube river it will take the eco systems decades to recover. forests are among the ecosystems that are most often damaged or destroyed in combat itself the main reason for that is because they are very useful for guerrillas trying to find concealment from forces with superior firepower forty years ago when united states was trying to prevail in vietnam and its enemies the vietcong were using the force for concealment the american forces tried through fire and chemical defoliants to clear large parts of the forests of vietnam. not in build up what. they think of themselves as wrong on the basis of how. they fly seven days in the week fifty two weeks and. most days the planes spew out a total of nearly eighteen thousand gallons of people here. from one hundred sixty to one thousand nine hundred seventy one u.s. military conducted a large scale defoliation drive code named operation ranch hand plan
oil refineries resulting in a mile long oil slicks that extended down the danube through remaining into the black sea. we. had true chemical plants and fertilizer factories spreading mercury. other carcinogens on the landscape and into a canal that lead into the danube river it will take the eco systems decades to recover. forests are among the ecosystems that are most often damaged or destroyed in combat itself the main reason for that is because they are very useful for guerrillas trying to...
224
224
Sep 17, 2011
09/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 224
favorite 0
quote 0
president roosevelt declared if i went to work in a factory the first thing i would do would be to join any president had gone so far to endorse the rights of labor to organize but even with that kind of backing the reality for the radical migrants attempting to organize in the california fields were crushed time and time again because the true crop growers hated unions. they hated unions formed by working people. they were happy to form their own unions. what is the chamber of commerce the union? what is a manufacturer's association but a union? crop growers had a union. they call themselves the associated farmers who declared name was to stamp out all un-american activities among farm labour because if you were a worker forming a union, you were an american. here are three of the associated farmers in california engaged in the un-american activities of their choice which is book burning. burning a copy of john steinbeck's the grapes of wrath as soon as it is published in 1939. they don't come out so good in that book. that is kind of extreme literary criticism. when they were not book
president roosevelt declared if i went to work in a factory the first thing i would do would be to join any president had gone so far to endorse the rights of labor to organize but even with that kind of backing the reality for the radical migrants attempting to organize in the california fields were crushed time and time again because the true crop growers hated unions. they hated unions formed by working people. they were happy to form their own unions. what is the chamber of commerce the...
36
36
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
amount of damage gone viral bombs by napalm boy you come from saddam's whether it's hard sonic booms a factory moring mammals or it's the burning oil field syria and iraq or it's stroy coral reefs in the pacific for ramming purposes the list just goes on and on the geneva convention says nineteen forty nine states that care shall be saved in war to protect one's life against widespread long term and severe damage to the united states although it is accepted almost all of the provisions protocol one has. taken exception to that. too much bryson move on sloan from phones to pressure in some. stunts on t.v. don't comb. welcome back you're watching our t.v. live from moscow these are the top stories amnesty international calls on all sides in the libyan civil war to prevent human rights violations but short lived jubilation after the fall of gadhafi some even say they're now being abused by those who fought for their freedom. at a time when the u.s. is tightening its fiscal belt floors in private jails and seek more revenue from cash cow prisoners the arts use of lobbying to expand the american ju
amount of damage gone viral bombs by napalm boy you come from saddam's whether it's hard sonic booms a factory moring mammals or it's the burning oil field syria and iraq or it's stroy coral reefs in the pacific for ramming purposes the list just goes on and on the geneva convention says nineteen forty nine states that care shall be saved in war to protect one's life against widespread long term and severe damage to the united states although it is accepted almost all of the provisions protocol...
29
29
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
the students who lead a factory sit in and they demanded two things firstly that they be given the threeto six thousand dollars back that they paid but secondly and more importantly the local pennsylvania residents get these jobs outside of the factory on the day of the strike local unemployed pennsylvania workers labor leaders. people from the community participated in civil disobedience on behalf of the students the appeal was that a corporate actor like hershey which alex itself as a good bread as a responsible brand should act from its moral center and respond to the jobs crisis i want to get his conversation going for just one minute because i hear what you're saying and that's very optimistic my question is i know that sixty thousand some people and merrick ends has signed a petition agreeing with the skin workers and four. agencies are investigating but say that ok hershey's has to end the program and so there's a victory there what if you keep them from for example sending jobs overseas to cut costs is there a bigger solution needs to be had here is my question. there's absolutel
the students who lead a factory sit in and they demanded two things firstly that they be given the threeto six thousand dollars back that they paid but secondly and more importantly the local pennsylvania residents get these jobs outside of the factory on the day of the strike local unemployed pennsylvania workers labor leaders. people from the community participated in civil disobedience on behalf of the students the appeal was that a corporate actor like hershey which alex itself as a good...
257
257
Sep 16, 2011
09/11
by
KPIX
tv
eye 257
favorite 0
quote 0
calisolar is building a $600 million factory there. it will employ about a thousand people who will make an average of $45,000 a year. calisolar's president and co-founder had little to say to us. is it cheaper to do business in mississippi? >> it's not -- you know -- i'm not going to comment about anything, ok? thank you. >> san jose-based solar company styon is also taking advantage of mississippi incentives and plans to move its manufacturing plant there by next year. >>> a sign of how bad things are. a 3-year-old and mother are the latest victim of gold thieves, this from oakland. two suspects grabbed a gold chain from the woman's neck as she pushed a stroller on bancroft avenue yesterday morning. then they took gold rings from the little girl's fingers. one of the robbers appeared to be only 11 years old. police say they have made some arrests for similar robberies recently. >> 11 years old, goodness. >> to a 3-year-old! >>> 5:06. let's move on to something a little brighter now. i guess we're warming up. >> we are going to warm up
calisolar is building a $600 million factory there. it will employ about a thousand people who will make an average of $45,000 a year. calisolar's president and co-founder had little to say to us. is it cheaper to do business in mississippi? >> it's not -- you know -- i'm not going to comment about anything, ok? thank you. >> san jose-based solar company styon is also taking advantage of mississippi incentives and plans to move its manufacturing plant there by next year....
35
35
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
a factory or in mammals or it's the burning oil fields in iraq or it's destroyed its search for purpose is to list just goes on and on the geneva conventions of nineteen forty nine states that they are shall be taken in the war to protect them involved against widespread long term and severe damage the united states although it is accepted almost all of the provisions of protocol one has taken exception to that. i can watch the special report in less than ten minutes time here in our team before that we'll take a look what's happening in business with yulia. hello and a very warm welcome time to delve into the world of business fear as the mounting the world is heading rapidly for a second dip of the recession economist nouriel roubini who once predicted both the collapse of the u.s. housing market and the worldwide recession which started in two thousand and eight warns of a perfect storm of high debts wising inflation and political indecision russia is reasonable place to ride out the turmoil whether it's healthy budget but troika stresses as chris with a says that will offer only lim
a factory or in mammals or it's the burning oil fields in iraq or it's destroyed its search for purpose is to list just goes on and on the geneva conventions of nineteen forty nine states that they are shall be taken in the war to protect them involved against widespread long term and severe damage the united states although it is accepted almost all of the provisions of protocol one has taken exception to that. i can watch the special report in less than ten minutes time here in our team...
153
153
Sep 18, 2011
09/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 153
favorite 0
quote 0
but, i never realized that carl marks and never dark into the red door of a factory. >> that led is shocking that he was entirely cut off literally. the one job he was also the world's biggest slacker because the one job he held in england which is constantly being described is he was a columnist supposedly and until the civil war, it turns out there is a ghost writer for every single one. now, the other thing that blew me away is that marx's and come which came largely from inheritance this and a guardian angel put him in the top 5% of british households. these are all revelations and i am sure in fact, i know that some scholars have discovered the facts but they never and the science and then made enough in to explain to alleviate tapestry through the 20th century but one thing i found fascinating is hijack in is often tragic life of the catch the big pension being torn apart. >> guest: i was very, very absorbed by hijack because he was a mad generation, young men who had grown up 101 world then just as they were getting ready to leave, in a war that's then the economy in which made it mor
but, i never realized that carl marks and never dark into the red door of a factory. >> that led is shocking that he was entirely cut off literally. the one job he was also the world's biggest slacker because the one job he held in england which is constantly being described is he was a columnist supposedly and until the civil war, it turns out there is a ghost writer for every single one. now, the other thing that blew me away is that marx's and come which came largely from inheritance...
203
203
Sep 22, 2011
09/11
by
KQED
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
quote 0
the focus to the human told on one particular family, a husband and wife working for years in a sewing factory from their increasingly estranged children. the filmmaker lixin fan was a familiar raman for chinese tv before beginning to work on documentaries. last train home is his first as a director. welcome to you. >> thank you, jeff, thanks for having me. >> brown: now at the beginning of this film you refer to this as the largest migration in the world. so tell me what drew you to the story and what were you trying to say. >> in fact, it is the largest annual human migration in the world so it means it happens every year before the chinese new year. when i was working for cctv, the chinese state broadcaster, i had a lot of chance to travel to remote areas in china . -- china. and i see for myself the poverty that are still existing all over the country. and whenever i travel back to beijing, sort of back to my little comfortable life, i really feel the disparity between the rich and the poor, that are just heartbreaking for me. so i decided that i wanted to make a film about the chinese mig
the focus to the human told on one particular family, a husband and wife working for years in a sewing factory from their increasingly estranged children. the filmmaker lixin fan was a familiar raman for chinese tv before beginning to work on documentaries. last train home is his first as a director. welcome to you. >> thank you, jeff, thanks for having me. >> brown: now at the beginning of this film you refer to this as the largest migration in the world. so tell me what drew you...