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Dec 11, 2016
12/16
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KNTV
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part of the challenge is how to you change the structure of academia to be able to incorporate or at least allow the system or the academic institution to embrace a kind of community that would support these students? but it doesn't end there. students don't only want to come to the institution so that they have a place to hang out and study. but they also were demanding courses that studied their cultures, and a lot of the students that were demanding this are students that are stateside born here in the united states. these are students who have rarely gone home or have not been born in the homeland in places like tonga or hawaii or guam or in fiji or in hawaii. so these students were interested in us creating courses that made sure they could help them create a community in the community college that they're attending. and i have to say, robert, that, you know, city colleges san francisco and college of san mateo are the only two community colleges in the state of california and outside of the state of hawaii that has official pacific studies programs. the bay area is leading the
part of the challenge is how to you change the structure of academia to be able to incorporate or at least allow the system or the academic institution to embrace a kind of community that would support these students? but it doesn't end there. students don't only want to come to the institution so that they have a place to hang out and study. but they also were demanding courses that studied their cultures, and a lot of the students that were demanding this are students that are stateside born...
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Dec 12, 2016
12/16
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KDTV
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una relaciÓn especial, una relaciÓn de extrema y mutua confianza, es entre el jefe de estado y las academiasiquiera haber tomado el poder, esto podrÍa tener serÍas consecuencias para trump >> tambiÉn estÁ atacando a uno de los estamentos mÁs importante de la uninstituto intencionalii [hablando en inglÉs] vado mi vladimir putÍn es un matÓn, dijo mccain. y aseguran que en el dado caso que rusia estuviera atrÁs de este con piloto, siempre se habrÁn asegurado de no dejar pistas. >> el que sabe de hackeos, saben que no tienen que estar en ese paÍs para entrar a un servidor en ese paÍs. >> no quiero a nadie hackeandonos, insistiÓ donald trump, a la vez que defendiÓ al candidato que tiene posibilidades de convertirse en su secretario de estado. para complicar aun mÁs el panorama tiene lazos de amistad con rusia. reportero: bueno, donald trump, tambiÉn dijo en esta entrevista que se niega a recibir actualizaciones de inteligencia darÍas, porque siempre le dicen lo mismo, y es suficientemente inteligente, y si hay un cambio radical volverÍa a reunirse con su equipo.. fÉlix: california muestra ser un
una relaciÓn especial, una relaciÓn de extrema y mutua confianza, es entre el jefe de estado y las academiasiquiera haber tomado el poder, esto podrÍa tener serÍas consecuencias para trump >> tambiÉn estÁ atacando a uno de los estamentos mÁs importante de la uninstituto intencionalii [hablando en inglÉs] vado mi vladimir putÍn es un matÓn, dijo mccain. y aseguran que en el dado caso que rusia estuviera atrÁs de este con piloto, siempre se habrÁn asegurado de no dejar pistas....
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Dec 15, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN
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>> accuracy in academia. the $50 billion drain. where does that number come from and what does it include? jessica: the $50 billion a year is the net drain on public coffers, the difference between what illegal aliens are estimated to have paid in taxes and fees and so on, minus what they are estimated to receive in welfare benefits, educational services, housing, health care , and all the other array of publicly funded services that are made available to them. so it is a net cost. that's the difference. william: i would point out that you get that net cost by putting the costs that are attributable to u.s. citizen children onto the foreign nationals. the revenues from the u.s. citizen children, as they grow and become taxpayers on the u.s. citizen side. so that math only works if you count the children as costs when they are children but as benefits when they grow up. >> another question? how does the lack of a definition of sanctuary cities affect the debates you have, especially with people who are not so well versed in immigrat
>> accuracy in academia. the $50 billion drain. where does that number come from and what does it include? jessica: the $50 billion a year is the net drain on public coffers, the difference between what illegal aliens are estimated to have paid in taxes and fees and so on, minus what they are estimated to receive in welfare benefits, educational services, housing, health care , and all the other array of publicly funded services that are made available to them. so it is a net cost. that's...
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273
Dec 26, 2016
12/16
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KDTV
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javier: todos pertenecen a la academia diplomÁtica, son personas supuestamente muy serias que pertenecennceaÑera mÁs famosa del mundo, la bella rubÍ. javier: han decenas de voluntarios trabajado para poder llevar este festejo y para que toda la cantidad de personas que va a llegar ahÍ, el caso de alemanes, franceses, japoneses. nosotros estamos ahÍ en vivo desde el lugar. carolina: aquÍ estÁ nuestra querida jessica zermeÑo en vivo con mÁs detalles de esta celebraciÓn. y estÁ acompaÑada, quiÉn te acompaÑa, jessica? jessica: hola amigos de ediciÓn digital estÁn muy bien acompaÑada porque quiero contarles que aquÍ estÁ alexis peÑa el coreÓgrafo de rubÍ. nos va a contar en exclusiva lo que esperamos aquÍ en el gran baile que no se va hacer en la jolla sino a unos kilÓmetros mÁs allÁ, en laguna seca. quÉ prepara la quinceaÑera? alexis: lo que nosotros tenemos preparado es un vals tradicional pero con toques diferentes es algo que no se ha visto en esta regiÓn. por la calidad que tomÓ el evento, es un evento muy grande queremos que sea de gusto para la gente de la regiÓn como para los que van
javier: todos pertenecen a la academia diplomÁtica, son personas supuestamente muy serias que pertenecennceaÑera mÁs famosa del mundo, la bella rubÍ. javier: han decenas de voluntarios trabajado para poder llevar este festejo y para que toda la cantidad de personas que va a llegar ahÍ, el caso de alemanes, franceses, japoneses. nosotros estamos ahÍ en vivo desde el lugar. carolina: aquÍ estÁ nuestra querida jessica zermeÑo en vivo con mÁs detalles de esta celebraciÓn. y estÁ...
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Dec 22, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN2
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this includes both the japanese government, japanese industry and academia. for those of you who are more expert in things japan than i come untold and academia there's still quite a string of pacifism that is resistant to shall we say the same sorts of research and development activities that many use institutions would undertake. and so in some ways japanese industry is losing out on the academic and the research-based kind of capability that the u.s. has. at some point it will be important if all that back in but being able to have security and protection of ip within those academic institutes will be important as well. classification levels. japan obviously needs the ability to do classification and your personal clearance. right now as i said it is being done, my understand on f-35 program on a person by person case-by-case basis. there's got to be something put in place, something like what the u.s. or any of the five companies have in terms of security clearance and personal reliability maintenance. aggressive cybersecurity and training is just a given
this includes both the japanese government, japanese industry and academia. for those of you who are more expert in things japan than i come untold and academia there's still quite a string of pacifism that is resistant to shall we say the same sorts of research and development activities that many use institutions would undertake. and so in some ways japanese industry is losing out on the academic and the research-based kind of capability that the u.s. has. at some point it will be important...
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Dec 29, 2016
12/16
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MSNBCW
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you actually have people who worked in industries who are not academia.o me was a failed theory. now you have people, they should pick a farmer, agriculture, secretary -- >> lacking diversity, is that an issue? he's met with some latino potential candidates for agriculture -- >> a little bit. but i don't think that's going to be the driving force. i think karine is right. he does talk about jobs. you know how many employees there are overseas today? zero. there are none. >> because he was double dipping. this was something we already heard. >> but the thing is, democrats don't want to get in the way. they should -- somebody is going to have to take fall for not getting the 6, 7% growth. basically, don't get in the way. don't interfere, let him dig his own hole. >> but all of america doesn't know what 6% feels like. they've got to be -- >> you'll get to see that in some tv ads coming up. >> the cabinet picks, if i can. is there anybody that's vulnerable among these cabinet choices right now? >> they're going to go after rex tillerson. but i think what peop
you actually have people who worked in industries who are not academia.o me was a failed theory. now you have people, they should pick a farmer, agriculture, secretary -- >> lacking diversity, is that an issue? he's met with some latino potential candidates for agriculture -- >> a little bit. but i don't think that's going to be the driving force. i think karine is right. he does talk about jobs. you know how many employees there are overseas today? zero. there are none. >>...
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Dec 28, 2016
12/16
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KSTS
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mcfarlane quien la describi con adjetivos como inteligente, graciosa y talentosa, y hasta la misma academiaue la extrarn. (nat star wars) track: pero aunque fisher ya no estar fisicamente, su legado quedar en la historia, y su talento en el cine, ya que el prximo aÑo la veremos nuevamente como la hermosa princesa leia en el episodio 8 de "st rs". qu descanse en paz! william vlez,t. lorena/topvo --la legalizacin de la marihuana con fines recreativ para adultos.....afecta la percepcin y el uso de esta droga entre los adolescentes?????... --investigadores en uc-davis encontraron resultados variados.....en el estado de washington el uso de esta droga entre jovenes de octavo y decimo grado increment de dos a 4 por ciento despus de que se hizo legal en 2012 y la percepcin de que es mala disminuy un 15 porcentual... pero en colorado no encontraron cambios...ese estado legaliz el uso tambin en 2012... --el mes pasado california legaliz la marihuana para uso recreativo... take vo / paola --- se desata la locura en varios centros comerciales del pas, tras varios reportes de violencia, qu es lo que es
mcfarlane quien la describi con adjetivos como inteligente, graciosa y talentosa, y hasta la misma academiaue la extrarn. (nat star wars) track: pero aunque fisher ya no estar fisicamente, su legado quedar en la historia, y su talento en el cine, ya que el prximo aÑo la veremos nuevamente como la hermosa princesa leia en el episodio 8 de "st rs". qu descanse en paz! william vlez,t. lorena/topvo --la legalizacin de la marihuana con fines recreativ para adultos.....afecta la percepcin...
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Dec 28, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN3
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we invited academia, industry, operators and we said come in, let's collaborate and talk about this. just to determine even with the aircraft that we're sustaining, how should we sustain those with architectures and how could that inform what we do for future vertical lift. >> all right. well we got to all the hands that i saw and we are at the end of our hour. i want to thank our audience coming and for asking great questions and being very attentive. keep your eyes peeled for future events on future vertical lift. we expect the series definitely continue into next year. and please join me in thanking our panel for a great prejudice. -- presentation. >>> while congress is on break this week we are showing american history tv programs normally seen only on the weekends. tonight a look at world war ii. it starts at 8:00 eastern followed by the fbi investigation into a nazi spy ring and world war ii veterans in the american resistance in paris and the start of what is now the cia. tonight here on c-span3. >>> sunday, in depth will feature a live discussion on the presidency of barack o
we invited academia, industry, operators and we said come in, let's collaborate and talk about this. just to determine even with the aircraft that we're sustaining, how should we sustain those with architectures and how could that inform what we do for future vertical lift. >> all right. well we got to all the hands that i saw and we are at the end of our hour. i want to thank our audience coming and for asking great questions and being very attentive. keep your eyes peeled for future...
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Dec 11, 2016
12/16
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BLOOMBERG
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. ♪ >> we asked some of the best minds in the world from business, government, the arts, and academiawhat are the most urgent problems facing humanity and how do we solve them? the result is "big problems/big thinkers." >> what is the number one major problem facing mankind? >> a lack of education. >> you are dealing with a balance. >> if we do not find a more sustainable way. >> everybody has the capability to make a difference. >> remember your humanity. forget the rest. >> this is "big problems/big thinkers" and i am terry blair. in this series, we confront the challenges facing the human race and try to identify an ethical framework to help us overcome them. in this episode, defining a successful life. as the world moves rapidly forward to ever move choices, and material advances, what are the contours for successful life, love, money, service to others, we will hear from an extraordinary group of men and women all successful in their own ways as they share their answers and together provide the roadmap for a life well lived. >> you have this body and mind, emotion. i want to ask
. ♪ >> we asked some of the best minds in the world from business, government, the arts, and academiawhat are the most urgent problems facing humanity and how do we solve them? the result is "big problems/big thinkers." >> what is the number one major problem facing mankind? >> a lack of education. >> you are dealing with a balance. >> if we do not find a more sustainable way. >> everybody has the capability to make a difference. >> remember...
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Dec 29, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN3
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the council in general and this panel is we have so many different backgrounds and industries and academia represented. mehmoud, from your perspective, what are you looking to accomplish on behalf of the council and the clarion call? >> you know, as i'm sure you have seen it in the clarion call, when we think about opportunity for growth, there is still a lot of exciting opportunity out there. let me just take a sort of technology perspective for a second. let's start with the productivity we have had, when you think about what everybody talks about as the moore's law where the computational power of microprocessors has gone to be doubling every two years or so, it's been an amazing few decades. that slowed down and one way of looking at it is growth has been done and yet, there's exciting technologies coming just around the corner that can jump-start again and give us another s curve. that's exciting because it's another wave of growth and it's not just exciting from an economic point of view but also it's important from a defense point of view. as many people in this room know, our milit
the council in general and this panel is we have so many different backgrounds and industries and academia represented. mehmoud, from your perspective, what are you looking to accomplish on behalf of the council and the clarion call? >> you know, as i'm sure you have seen it in the clarion call, when we think about opportunity for growth, there is still a lot of exciting opportunity out there. let me just take a sort of technology perspective for a second. let's start with the...
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Dec 18, 2016
12/16
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BLOOMBERG
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♪ terre: we asked some of the best minds in the world from business, government, the arts, academia,hat are the most urgent problems facing humanity, and how do we solve them? the result is "big problems, big thinkers." what is the number one major problem facing mankind? >> i think is the lack of education. thomas friedman: politics has been getting dumber and dumber. >> you're dealing with a balance of green spirit. thomas friedman: if we don't have a more sustainable way -- >> everybody has the capability of making a difference. >> remember your humanity. and forget the rest. terre: welcome to "big problems, big thinkers." i'm terre blair. in this series, we confront the most dangerous challenges facing our survival as a human race, climate change, economic dislocation, nuclear proliferation, social unrest, and we examine each issue by asking if there is an ethical framework that can help us face these problems and solve them. to do that, we'll hear from an extraordinary group of leaders as they search for answers and perhaps inspire us collectively to take action. in this first e
♪ terre: we asked some of the best minds in the world from business, government, the arts, academia,hat are the most urgent problems facing humanity, and how do we solve them? the result is "big problems, big thinkers." what is the number one major problem facing mankind? >> i think is the lack of education. thomas friedman: politics has been getting dumber and dumber. >> you're dealing with a balance of green spirit. thomas friedman: if we don't have a more sustainable...
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Dec 20, 2016
12/16
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FBC
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are tech companies similar to academia in that way? >> well, i think tech companies are similar to academia that way. these tech companies reputedly hire from, you know, the most prestigious universities, they tend to be left-leaning. i would suggest to their ceos if they asked me why don't you go to a place like hillsdale college which has got very high test scores these days, they've been rising, it's got a conservative curriculum. why don't you go recruit there and other places like that where you might get some diversity of ideas among your staff. trish: i've got to hand it, though, to tim cook, the ceo of apple, in that he takes a lot of meetings that you wouldn't think that he'd maybe take a meeting with. you think back to the investment that carl icahn made in apple, and tim cook went and had dinner with him, michael block, and carl was very inflynn usual in terms of getting them to buy back more stock. investors certainly liked it. and now he's there in trump tower meeting with the president-elect of the unite. in other words,
are tech companies similar to academia in that way? >> well, i think tech companies are similar to academia that way. these tech companies reputedly hire from, you know, the most prestigious universities, they tend to be left-leaning. i would suggest to their ceos if they asked me why don't you go to a place like hillsdale college which has got very high test scores these days, they've been rising, it's got a conservative curriculum. why don't you go recruit there and other places like...
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Dec 11, 2016
12/16
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FBC
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. >> the problem is -- the problem is the vast majority of academia is wildly left wing and liberal. >> i know. >> there's like four college campuses -- >> then we need to start putting as conservatives and common sense people we need to start sending our kids and demanding as alumni that our kids -- >> we've got to go. >> coming up some democratic lawmakers demanding donald trump pay now back to "cashin' in." >>> several new york democrat congressmen and women calling for our next president to pick up the tab for security at his new york residence. but they didn't complain about the cost for security at vice president joe biden's home in delaware. now, mercedes, this is a double standard? >> i didn't know vice president biden was a landlord. i didn't realize he was renting to the secret service. >> right. >> i have to tell you, it is the top priority to ensure the safety and security of the president. and so i think that for the democrats to push forward what i would consider to be a silly fight on the secret service cost or what donald trump should pay for it, probably because they
. >> the problem is -- the problem is the vast majority of academia is wildly left wing and liberal. >> i know. >> there's like four college campuses -- >> then we need to start putting as conservatives and common sense people we need to start sending our kids and demanding as alumni that our kids -- >> we've got to go. >> coming up some democratic lawmakers demanding donald trump pay now back to "cashin' in." >>> several new york democrat...
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Dec 10, 2016
12/16
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> the problem is -- the problem is the vast majority of academia is wildly left wing and liberal. >> i know. >> there's like four college campuses -- >> then we need to start putting as conservatives and common sense people we need to start sending our kids and demanding as alumni that our kids -- >> we've got to go. >> coming up some democratic lawmakers demanding donald trump pay for his own security at his new york residence. i wonder if they know how much we spent on security at joe biden's delaware home. >>> coming up, some democrats now insisting donald trump pay for his own security at his private residence in new york. we reveal why this is >>> live from america's news headquarters. hello, i'm greg jarret. a powerful winter blast is gripping most of the united states right now. forecasters say temperatures will range from 10 to 20 degrees below normal over the next few days. coupled with heavy snow in many areas, including michigan and upstate new york where lake-effect snow is causing major headaches for homeowners and drivers alike. the heaviest snow bands could bring up
. >> the problem is -- the problem is the vast majority of academia is wildly left wing and liberal. >> i know. >> there's like four college campuses -- >> then we need to start putting as conservatives and common sense people we need to start sending our kids and demanding as alumni that our kids -- >> we've got to go. >> coming up some democratic lawmakers demanding donald trump pay for his own security at his new york residence. i wonder if they know how...
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Dec 9, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN3
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the council in general and this panel is we have so many different backgrounds and industries and academia represented. mahmo mahmoud, from your perspective, what are you looking to accomplish on behalf of the council and clarion call? >> as i'm sure you've seen in the clarion call, when we think about opportunity for growth, there's still a lot of exciting opportunity out there. let me just take it from a technology perspective for a second. let's start with productivity we've had. we think about what everybody talks about, the confrontational power of microprocesses has gone to be doubling every two years or so. it's been an amazing few decades. that slowed down. one way of looking at it, the growth has been done. yet exciting technologies coming just around the corner that can jump-start again and give us another s curve. that's exciting because it's another wave of growth. it's not just exciting from an economic point of view but also it's important from a defense point of view. as many people in this room know, our military needs secure state-of-the-art microelectronics. in fact, the
the council in general and this panel is we have so many different backgrounds and industries and academia represented. mahmo mahmoud, from your perspective, what are you looking to accomplish on behalf of the council and clarion call? >> as i'm sure you've seen in the clarion call, when we think about opportunity for growth, there's still a lot of exciting opportunity out there. let me just take it from a technology perspective for a second. let's start with productivity we've had. we...
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Dec 20, 2016
12/16
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KSTS
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take vo --de acuerdo a la academia americana de pediatria..os productos con tabaco tienen exito.. --y mientras mas jovenes son cuando empiezan a fumar, mas fuerte es su adicin a la nicotina.. --el 90-por ciento de los fumadores adultos empez antes de cumplir 18 aÑos.. cesar somos la autoridad en el tiempo lorena yara lasanta nos tiene el pronostico adelante yara vo cesar -- algunos tardan dias o semanas en regresar un libro a la biblioteca, vo cesar -- algunos tardan dias o semanas en regresar un libro a la biblioteca, mujer es el claro ejemplo de que es mejor tarde que nunca... takevo -- barbara roston era adolescente cuando tom prestado el libro "lo que el viento se llev" de una biblioteca en brooklin nueva york, en 1959. contvo/cesar -- fue hasta que roston volvi a leer el ejemplar que vio el recibo de la biblioteca cuando decidi regresarlo, 57 aÑos despus ...le perdonaron la multa por entregar el libro muy tarde....aunque el ejemplar es tan delicado que est fuera de circulacin.. cu --asi llegamos al final de nuestro programa. bienvenidos a
take vo --de acuerdo a la academia americana de pediatria..os productos con tabaco tienen exito.. --y mientras mas jovenes son cuando empiezan a fumar, mas fuerte es su adicin a la nicotina.. --el 90-por ciento de los fumadores adultos empez antes de cumplir 18 aÑos.. cesar somos la autoridad en el tiempo lorena yara lasanta nos tiene el pronostico adelante yara vo cesar -- algunos tardan dias o semanas en regresar un libro a la biblioteca, vo cesar -- algunos tardan dias o semanas en regresar...
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Dec 13, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN3
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i think we as american entrepreneurs, american research, american academia should be investing a lot more. because this is a space which could make a difference for the united states and the world. and we've seen today perspectives coming from the top academics in research, as well as practitioners in and financial capital. thank you very much for listening and being a part of the future. i think the next time we meet, i think we may have intelligent agents that will guide us to this meeting, will guide us to lunch, will schedule things for us. wouldn't that be a very cool future for us? and i truly hope that it happens very, very soon. thank you, everybody. [ applause ] . >>> next, in a short series of presentations, leaders from industry and national labs will show exciting, potentially game-changing innovations. ladies and gentlemen, plead welcome the director of pacific northwest national laboratory, dr. steve ashby. >> good afternoon and congratulations on your 30th anniversary. very happy to be part of this. as we clear that so we hopefully don't have a tripping hazard. as we b
i think we as american entrepreneurs, american research, american academia should be investing a lot more. because this is a space which could make a difference for the united states and the world. and we've seen today perspectives coming from the top academics in research, as well as practitioners in and financial capital. thank you very much for listening and being a part of the future. i think the next time we meet, i think we may have intelligent agents that will guide us to this meeting,...
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Dec 12, 2016
12/16
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CSPAN3
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need a whole new type of innovation and really also i think new relationships between industry, academia, and also labor, very importantly, but a few other issues. john young last night in our video, i had the wonderful honor and pleasure to go out and interview him in august out in silicon valley. one of the things he said, we were sort of laughing. but i said, you know, we created the council on competitiveness. we thought it was just going to be around for a couple years, you know, and now it's 30 years and it's obviously sustainable, and contributing and what's going to be the next 30 years? is it this nexus of innovation, sustainability beyond moore's law? you're moving into 4d printing, genomics, there are lots of things we can do but at the end of the day you three leaders who contributed so much, craig, you've talked about the criticality of our k through 12 education. wayne, and then i want to ask bill and we'll wrap this up. >> oh -- >> now remember, you're king for a day here, so you can -- posit into the future. >> i found the discussion about the gdp to be fascinating. it's
need a whole new type of innovation and really also i think new relationships between industry, academia, and also labor, very importantly, but a few other issues. john young last night in our video, i had the wonderful honor and pleasure to go out and interview him in august out in silicon valley. one of the things he said, we were sort of laughing. but i said, you know, we created the council on competitiveness. we thought it was just going to be around for a couple years, you know, and now...
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Dec 19, 2016
12/16
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CNNW
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. >> after governments and industry and academia, of work and play is all right here. >> this is incrediblest time i have been an all out company town. >> full of light. >> you got kids playing at the courtyard of a tv factor and engineer and artists partying. >> exactly. >> do you think this could happen in destroy? >> this cannot happen, i believe that. but, what kind of people? that's the question pushing this nation to the brink. ♪ >>> did you know that tulips is not native to the netherlands. it was imported by muslims and nurtured from turkey. god made the world. the dutch made how? the question now, can it hold in the age of important terror and can they build protection against the ocean of dams and against hatred. we are hoping that these natural innovators will find a way and share it. here is to the dutch. long may they bloom.
. >> after governments and industry and academia, of work and play is all right here. >> this is incrediblest time i have been an all out company town. >> full of light. >> you got kids playing at the courtyard of a tv factor and engineer and artists partying. >> exactly. >> do you think this could happen in destroy? >> this cannot happen, i believe that. but, what kind of people? that's the question pushing this nation to the brink. ♪ >>>...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 15, 2016
12/16
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SFGTV
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out that will be able to tell us a story that data will be transparent and we'll be working with academia and heard about the heart we're going to set the perimeter how the academia uses this information airline bring them in shortly so also important to note this is a side stewart step issues with the report as mentioned in previous hearing we said the data challenges are there you have to understand one a miscommunication with the data of ordinance of report but additionally a manually collected report manually verified so there is no intent to delay the report it is the intent to make sure you have the the right information and that information is press 10 moving forward with the automated process we'll have it interesting to note we met with the california department of justice to demonstrate this smart phone flarngs impressed they said in a number of applications throughout the site this is the best they're looking to document it as a statewide tool or measure. >> when we look at bias in the police department a number of training we 1234u9d so note in the doj report on page 63 i'll q
out that will be able to tell us a story that data will be transparent and we'll be working with academia and heard about the heart we're going to set the perimeter how the academia uses this information airline bring them in shortly so also important to note this is a side stewart step issues with the report as mentioned in previous hearing we said the data challenges are there you have to understand one a miscommunication with the data of ordinance of report but additionally a manually...
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Dec 17, 2016
12/16
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know aubry thought i was going to be disappointed, but i knew from a very early age that school academiaas just not for aubry. >> once he realized that college wasn't the route i was going to go down, i sat down and laid down the plan. >> the plan was simple. take the money that was paying for college along with the rest of her savings and get started running a business. >> i thought about making my own business from scratch, but then that comes with a lot of risk, and i was relatively inexperienced at that point, and so i was very nervous about starting a business from scratch. >> her father suggested going with an established franchise concept might be less risky, and aubrey jumped on it. >> i was trying to find a concept that would not only accept me as a 20-year-old franchi franchisee, that was in my price range. >> hank also suggested she avoid taking on anything too complex. >> you needed something simple as sandwiches or pizza or -- you want to limit what your responsibilities are so that you can get good at that and then move on to something bigger. >> i was, like, i can do this.
know aubry thought i was going to be disappointed, but i knew from a very early age that school academiaas just not for aubry. >> once he realized that college wasn't the route i was going to go down, i sat down and laid down the plan. >> the plan was simple. take the money that was paying for college along with the rest of her savings and get started running a business. >> i thought about making my own business from scratch, but then that comes with a lot of risk, and i was...
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smith, academia group president, fox news contributor. good morning to you.erendum was going to be in now. we were going to be a big selloff. everyone a major prep mode whether we see going forward? >> i think a couple things, nicole. one is that the polls finally got this one right. they projected it would be about 60% now. they can mimic out 60% now. number two, the other part is this is not election. this is really coding for the status quo. this is voting for no chnge. in a reverse way, what the yes vote would have met with the more control of these high-level government officials, less democracy. that might've been good. that might've been bad. so i guess what it's really saying is changes to it. the people wanted some kind of change. they didn't want that kind of change the prime minister wanted. i see an overall good for italy, good for europe, especially good for united states. nicole: especially if they get their debt problems under control. you see this populist movement we saw that began over the summer in the u.k. with their vote to leave the e.u.
smith, academia group president, fox news contributor. good morning to you.erendum was going to be in now. we were going to be a big selloff. everyone a major prep mode whether we see going forward? >> i think a couple things, nicole. one is that the polls finally got this one right. they projected it would be about 60% now. they can mimic out 60% now. number two, the other part is this is not election. this is really coding for the status quo. this is voting for no chnge. in a reverse...
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Dec 14, 2016
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. >> accuracy in academia. $50 billion drain. where does that number come from and what does it include? jessica: the $50 billion a year is the net drain on public coffers, the difference between what illegal aliens are estimated to have paid in taxes and fees and so on, minus what they are estimated to receive in welfare benefits, educational services, housing, health care and all the other array of publicly funded services that are made available to them. so it is a net cost. william: i would point out that you get that net cost by putting the costs that are attributable to u.s. citizen children onto foreign nationals. the revenues from the u.s. citizen children, as they grow and become taxpayers on the u.s. citizen side. so there's cost when they are children, but as benefits when they grow up. does the lack of a definition of sanctuary cities [indiscernible] william: i think it is critical that we have some sort of understanding of what we are talking about when we label something centuries area there is no accepted legal def
. >> accuracy in academia. $50 billion drain. where does that number come from and what does it include? jessica: the $50 billion a year is the net drain on public coffers, the difference between what illegal aliens are estimated to have paid in taxes and fees and so on, minus what they are estimated to receive in welfare benefits, educational services, housing, health care and all the other array of publicly funded services that are made available to them. so it is a net cost. william: i...
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Dec 23, 2016
12/16
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know that you're a liberal, but you don't subscribe to this, what's amaze to go me is how many in academia and politics in general on the left think it's okay to shut out the other side and you can do that via intimidation. it doesn't matter if you go after a young woman and her kids. it's okay because she's ivanka trump. if it were the other way -- i agree. there's this hostility, there's this anger right now and they -- >> no question. >> there's a sense of entitlement, sense of entitlement because they feel like the election results were wrong they can go out and say and do whatever they want. we sometimes see on the other side too but at the end of the day, people need to grow up whether your safe spacers or otherwise, we are built on -- on civil discourse and that is incredibly important. we need to have productive respectful conversations about our differences. trish: evan, you are right. jetblue told us all they are willing to accommodate hostile passengers which would make us all think about traveling jetblue in the future. i'm going see you again in the future. united nations cond
know that you're a liberal, but you don't subscribe to this, what's amaze to go me is how many in academia and politics in general on the left think it's okay to shut out the other side and you can do that via intimidation. it doesn't matter if you go after a young woman and her kids. it's okay because she's ivanka trump. if it were the other way -- i agree. there's this hostility, there's this anger right now and they -- >> no question. >> there's a sense of entitlement, sense of...
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Dec 15, 2016
12/16
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happy that hopefully growth will be driven more by the private sector and not monetary policy and academia before we finish up, in a nutshell, how do you think the fed should proceed with regard to how the markets moved after the election and how it's moving after yesterday? >> well, unfortunately, the fed is in a no-win situation because if they continue to go gradually in raising interest rates, even if they raise three times, if that's not enough relative to where inflation and growth is going, the bond market will do it for them. if they get too aggressive in raising interest rates, which we need to get this over with anyway, then they risk putting us into recession and tweets from donald trump. >> peter, thank you as always. it's going to be one fascinating 2017. that trump elevator gives transparency a whole new meaning as to what's going on in the government. and i for one think it's a bit refreshing. sarah, back to you. >> all right. we will be glued to it. rick, thank you. the dew is um 125 points. we'll hit the markets when "squawk on the street" comes back. yeah, chevy was great
happy that hopefully growth will be driven more by the private sector and not monetary policy and academia before we finish up, in a nutshell, how do you think the fed should proceed with regard to how the markets moved after the election and how it's moving after yesterday? >> well, unfortunately, the fed is in a no-win situation because if they continue to go gradually in raising interest rates, even if they raise three times, if that's not enough relative to where inflation and growth...
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Dec 28, 2016
12/16
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and really also i think new relationships between industry, academia and labor, very importantly. but a few other issues. john young last night in our video, i had the wonderful honor and pleasure to go out and interview him in august in silicon valley. one of the things we said, i was sort of laughing, you know, we create the council on competitiveness. we thought it was just going to be around a couple years. now it's 30 years and obviously sustainable and contributing. what is the next 30 years? is it innovation, sustainability, beyond phaors law. you're moving into 4d printing, genomics. lots of things we could do. at the end of the day, you three leaders have contributed so much. craig, you have talked about our k-12 education. wayne and then i want to ask bill and we'll wrap this up. >> oh. >> now, remember you're king for a day here. positive future. >> i found the discussion about the gdp to be fascinating. it's also in line with an argument in a recent book that argues that, you know, the age of innovation was really basically the same period talked about this morning. ov
and really also i think new relationships between industry, academia and labor, very importantly. but a few other issues. john young last night in our video, i had the wonderful honor and pleasure to go out and interview him in august in silicon valley. one of the things we said, i was sort of laughing, you know, we create the council on competitiveness. we thought it was just going to be around a couple years. now it's 30 years and obviously sustainable and contributing. what is the next 30...
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Dec 24, 2016
12/16
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. >> my next bold move is to break into academia. so what works in this scene, and who is saffo?at a major university in the past, and today she's teaching a one-day writer's workshop. >> okay. and what's step two? i love everything about teaching. i like conveying wisdom, i love doing research. i love thinking about what would make a fun lecture. why is it so hard for the writers to write a good sex scene? forget the fancy words and just tell it straight. your characters want to get laid more than anything. and what happens when you want to get laid more than anything is sometimes you or your characters get rejected. it's earth-shattering insecurity. that's what i want to see in your characters. >> where are we going to see you in ten years? >> hopefully you'll see me as a traveling author and instructor. hopefully i'll be ridiculously happy and teaching. >> for now, though, stripping is still paying the bills. >> do you feel like a lot of dancers get trapped in the world? >> oh, absolutely. every stripper i know has gone into stripping with the idea i'm just going to do this fo
. >> my next bold move is to break into academia. so what works in this scene, and who is saffo?at a major university in the past, and today she's teaching a one-day writer's workshop. >> okay. and what's step two? i love everything about teaching. i like conveying wisdom, i love doing research. i love thinking about what would make a fun lecture. why is it so hard for the writers to write a good sex scene? forget the fancy words and just tell it straight. your characters want to...
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Dec 8, 2016
12/16
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they are in, out, so in touch with the world outside of academia, that it isn't that hard to explainn the page. [indiscernible] 42,ve what you say on page the exploding of lightbulbs. ifo that when i read the finance and economics part. explain the exploding of lightbulbs for someone in sports. theael: first, this is how ideas spread. the people outside of psychology said this affects my discipline, because it runs to the human mind. when you get in sports is moneyball, and understanding that the misfire ration of national athletes, which is baseball players by the marketplace, is a systematic judgment by experts. not be theould boston red sox judgment by more -- buying more? undervaluede are compared to others. it grows out of basic processes in the human minds these guys describe. tom: we witness it this week with the yankees. nothing has changed since moneyball. michael: it has. i do not know if chris say this is worth what they gave up, but it is possible he is. the bigger point is the counterweight to the misjudgments of the experts is tohave a statistics analyst actually grind
they are in, out, so in touch with the world outside of academia, that it isn't that hard to explainn the page. [indiscernible] 42,ve what you say on page the exploding of lightbulbs. ifo that when i read the finance and economics part. explain the exploding of lightbulbs for someone in sports. theael: first, this is how ideas spread. the people outside of psychology said this affects my discipline, because it runs to the human mind. when you get in sports is moneyball, and understanding that...
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Dec 19, 2016
12/16
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after governments and industry and academia banded together, about 700 entrepreneurs now live, work andcredible. it's the first time i've ever been to a hallowed out company town full of life. you've got kids playing in the courtyard of a tv factory and coders and engineers and artists partying over there. >> exactly. >> do you think this could happen in detroit? >> where people are, this can happen, i believe that. >> but what kind of people? that's the question. pushing this nation to the brink. did you know that the tulip is not native to the netherlands? no. holland's national flower was imported by muslim merchants from turkey. god made the world, the saying goes, but the dutch made holland. the question now can it hold in the age of imported terror? can they build protection against an ocean of fear, dams against hatred? here's hoping these natural innovators will find a way and share it. here's to the dutch. long may they bloom. >>> that is the word from the trump team as leading senators from both sides of the u.s. political divide ask for an independent probe into alleged russi
after governments and industry and academia banded together, about 700 entrepreneurs now live, work andcredible. it's the first time i've ever been to a hallowed out company town full of life. you've got kids playing in the courtyard of a tv factory and coders and engineers and artists partying over there. >> exactly. >> do you think this could happen in detroit? >> where people are, this can happen, i believe that. >> but what kind of people? that's the question....
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Dec 15, 2016
12/16
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it goes to the media you are talking about it finally trickle down into culture and then lastly academias out there. >> that's a great idea. >> put them in the classroom. >> don't have them videotape. >> last time we sent geraldo to a college amherst, the next day. the flag back up. >> get the media on board and you may get some change. >> next on the rundown, far left press growing even more hysterical as donald trump puts together his cabinet. later, miller has some thoughts on kanye west, my favorite meeting with president-elect trump. up ahead. family road trip! fun! check engine. not fun! but, you've got hum. that's like driving with this guy. all you do is press this, and in plain english, "coolant", you'll know what's wrong. if you do need a mechanic, just press this. "thank you for calling hum." and if you really need help, help can find you, automatically, 24/7. because you put this, in here. hum by verizon. the technology designed to make your car smarter, safer and more connected. put some smarts in your car. the market.redict but through good times and bad... ...at t. rowe pr
it goes to the media you are talking about it finally trickle down into culture and then lastly academias out there. >> that's a great idea. >> put them in the classroom. >> don't have them videotape. >> last time we sent geraldo to a college amherst, the next day. the flag back up. >> get the media on board and you may get some change. >> next on the rundown, far left press growing even more hysterical as donald trump puts together his cabinet. later, miller...
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Dec 12, 2016
12/16
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it compliments and is fed by academia's more curiosity driven approach and can help to bridge a potential, in fact, often realized gap between basic research and commercializable innovation. as you, i think, have noted, national labs being government owned contractor operated entities also bring public sector explicitly into the mix and open the door to i think a much richer set of public/private partnerships than are possible otherwise. the capabilities that are offered by laboratories are publicly financed, publicly funded to serve enduring national science technology needs. my laboratory lawrence livermore has as it's primary mission to provide the technical basis for ensuring the nation's nuclear stockpile remains safe, secure and reliable in the absence of nuclear testing. however, the facilities and not to mention the know how that's required to do that, which includes the most important lasers in the world, as you know, debra, the most powerful computers in the world are available for a range of national needs and national missions. explicitly among them is the mission of transitio
it compliments and is fed by academia's more curiosity driven approach and can help to bridge a potential, in fact, often realized gap between basic research and commercializable innovation. as you, i think, have noted, national labs being government owned contractor operated entities also bring public sector explicitly into the mix and open the door to i think a much richer set of public/private partnerships than are possible otherwise. the capabilities that are offered by laboratories are...
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Dec 1, 2016
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dense fog of liberal academia looming over american university here in washington.s reform went there and asked students a pretty simple question. do you have a more favorable opinion of fidel castro or of donald trump? here's some of their responses. >> like at this very moment i have a better opinion of fidel castro. >> i feel that he really changed cuba in so many ways that really made possibilities for the counsel ban people that are nearly endless. >> right now i don't think donald trump is very god. i know that fidel castro. i think he has proven himself at least in the long term to be more favorable in my opinion than donald trump. >> man, i live about five blocks from that camera shot and it makes me shutter to think those are my neighbors. twitter agreed by the way. jennifer fellow wrote this the hope for our country's future hopelessly stupid and exft in their stupidity. that is the hallmark confidence in their stupidity. mojo elliott wrote this their parents have been thrilled paying tuition bill. i mope they all have careers at wal-mart. brain warning wo
dense fog of liberal academia looming over american university here in washington.s reform went there and asked students a pretty simple question. do you have a more favorable opinion of fidel castro or of donald trump? here's some of their responses. >> like at this very moment i have a better opinion of fidel castro. >> i feel that he really changed cuba in so many ways that really made possibilities for the counsel ban people that are nearly endless. >> right now i don't...
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Dec 29, 2016
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american research, american academia should be invest iing more. we've seen today perspectives coming from the top academics in research and financial capital. thank you very much for listening and being part of the future. the next time we meet we will -- i think we may have intelligent agents that will guide us to this meeting, to lunch, will schedule things for us it wouldn't be a cool future for us and i hope it happens very soon. thank you everybody. [ applause [ applause ] >>> next, in a series of short presentations, leaders from industry and national labs will showcase exciting and game changing innovations. ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the director of pacific northwest national laboratory dr. steve ashby. [ applause ] >> good afternoon, congratulations on your 30th anniversary. if we could clear that so we don't have a tripping hazard, bring up the first slide, please. we talked earlier about the grid, about machine intelligence and about bringing those together. i would like to talk about energy. it illuminates our night sky, warn
american research, american academia should be invest iing more. we've seen today perspectives coming from the top academics in research and financial capital. thank you very much for listening and being part of the future. the next time we meet we will -- i think we may have intelligent agents that will guide us to this meeting, to lunch, will schedule things for us it wouldn't be a cool future for us and i hope it happens very soon. thank you everybody. [ applause [ applause ] >>>...
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Dec 4, 2016
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but there is, especially in academia and the social sciences, that is a line of thought that says we should declare gun violence a national health crisis, and a sign that cdc $100 million, go study it, come back with a real tangible data and real tangible and actionable items. i have listened to you talk about the confluence of the characteristics, right? that lead to organ result in, and then thinking maybe that's an academic. isn't that how it would happen? >> guest: one stage, gary in chicago has a map of where they gun deaths are taking place and that they're concentrated in the south and west turkey send it to a decent is exactly the same kind of map you have for cholera or -- he was an epidemiologist. and cunning, cdc used to do research into, because it's the biggest killer of black men, the biggest killer of black youth under the age of 19, kerry did. and it's the second biggest killer of all kids under the age of 19 after traffic. >> host: and it is 32000 deaths a year which is unimaginable. it's a city. it's like a city disappearing every time. >> guest: yet. and so then th
but there is, especially in academia and the social sciences, that is a line of thought that says we should declare gun violence a national health crisis, and a sign that cdc $100 million, go study it, come back with a real tangible data and real tangible and actionable items. i have listened to you talk about the confluence of the characteristics, right? that lead to organ result in, and then thinking maybe that's an academic. isn't that how it would happen? >> guest: one stage, gary in...
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Dec 26, 2016
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. >> i think that's part of the problem is we in the press corps and a lot of academia, we talk to each other too much maybe and not enough to actual voters who would be giving us other information about this election. and maybe too slavish as well to pollsters. we look at the polls and say, well, they can't possibly be wrong. yet, when you look at what has happened across the west, whether it be brexit, whether it be the israeli election, whether it be a couple of british elections, the polls have not always been right. >> well, that's correct. i always call polling the science of abc, almost being certain. and the most important word there is "almost." they are right most of the time. but every now and then, you have an election that, as i suggest, violates the rules. what's interesting about this year other than trump himself is that we learned that maybe increasingly the electoral college and the popular vote are going to be separate, at least in close elections. normally when a candidate like clinton wins by nearly 3 million votes, it carries the electoral college with it. it moves
. >> i think that's part of the problem is we in the press corps and a lot of academia, we talk to each other too much maybe and not enough to actual voters who would be giving us other information about this election. and maybe too slavish as well to pollsters. we look at the polls and say, well, they can't possibly be wrong. yet, when you look at what has happened across the west, whether it be brexit, whether it be the israeli election, whether it be a couple of british elections, the...
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Dec 10, 2016
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they're tired of having politicians and folks from academia to go out there and be put in positions basedr philosophy. mr. trump is going to appoint people to get things done. he's made a commitment to this country and the people of this country and he's not even president yet and already making waves. >>> adam, before the break you pushed back on dow chemical chairman. the man said he's going to create some jobs here in america because of president-elect donald trump. >> yeah, that was kind of a head fake. dow check call is the number one toxic polluter in the nation. they've hurt millions of people, including republican air, republican water, democratic air, democratic water. this is not a model corporate actor. i do think katrina -- interesting point about philosophy. a lot of people we've seen get elected do have a philosophy but their philosophy is to get rich by hurting american families. >> adam -- >> i don't think you can -- >> katrina? >> yi don't think you can reall assume what someone else's philosophy is. the philosophy is to make money? that's what mr. trump did. he put someo
they're tired of having politicians and folks from academia to go out there and be put in positions basedr philosophy. mr. trump is going to appoint people to get things done. he's made a commitment to this country and the people of this country and he's not even president yet and already making waves. >>> adam, before the break you pushed back on dow chemical chairman. the man said he's going to create some jobs here in america because of president-elect donald trump. >> yeah,...
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Dec 30, 2016
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nino and i stayed in constant touch when he returned to academia at the university of chicago law school, and i went into the private sector. in 1980, as chairman, i recruited him to join a committee of lawyers and law professors, supporting ronald reagan. as i recall our committee included everybody who ultimately became a judge. after the election, i recommended nino for various posts, including the one he accepted a seat on the d.c. circuit. ideally fitted for an administrative law expert. we often turned to each other for career advice. when he was subsequently offered the solicitor general post, i advised him strongly to turn it down. i contended that his chance of a supreme court nomination would be reduced if he took that post because of the hot button social issues with which the solicitor general would have to contend. he agreed. then a year later he returned the favor by talking me into joining him on the d.c. circuit. in 1986, i was thrilled when he came to my office to tell me privately that he was to be the supreme court nominee. he asked me to represent him, which i immedia
nino and i stayed in constant touch when he returned to academia at the university of chicago law school, and i went into the private sector. in 1980, as chairman, i recruited him to join a committee of lawyers and law professors, supporting ronald reagan. as i recall our committee included everybody who ultimately became a judge. after the election, i recommended nino for various posts, including the one he accepted a seat on the d.c. circuit. ideally fitted for an administrative law expert....
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Dec 15, 2016
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we want more access to foreign workers and that type of academia. can you help us?posedly he back tracked. >> for us to sit around the table and we talk about retraining and jobs program and what have you, very easy for us to talk about it, but very hard for someone to swallow. it is. hillary clinton talked about that, as well. but not as satisfying a message. >> thank you. >>> president-elect donald trump vowing to repeal obama care. big part of his candidacy. is it going to happen right away? if so, what about the million of people racing to sign up before the deadline? could they change anything right away? we'll talk to health secretary sylvia mathews birwell. answers ahead. healthy, free, the world before me, the long brown path before me leading wherever i choose. the east and the west are mine. the north and the south are mine. all seems beautiful to me. isjust wanna see ifa again? my score changed... you wanna check yours? scores don't change that much. i haven't changed. oh, really? ♪ it's girls' night they said business casual. i love summer weddings! oh n
we want more access to foreign workers and that type of academia. can you help us?posedly he back tracked. >> for us to sit around the table and we talk about retraining and jobs program and what have you, very easy for us to talk about it, but very hard for someone to swallow. it is. hillary clinton talked about that, as well. but not as satisfying a message. >> thank you. >>> president-elect donald trump vowing to repeal obama care. big part of his candidacy. is it going...
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Dec 28, 2016
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>> i don't know about you, judge, but this makes me realize indeed i spent far too much time in academiayou and i aren't as brain washed as some of the folks that come out of that. you know, the good thing is at least this one particular academic was being honest about the level of radicalism that is prevalent in our universities today. so i kind of hope he keeps tweeting. i think it exposes what the left is really all about these days. >> all right. reverend darrell scott, what do you make of this? >> i think maybe first of all the guy had too much egg nog to drink over the holidays and got in front of the computer, and his hands didn't sync with his brain, and then he realized the enormity of what he said and he tried to dial it back. but he needs to be fired, that's what needs to happen. >> what about the first amendment. >> because these are things that the generation -- >> let's talk about that, reverend. a lot of people agree with you, but what about the first amendment? >> well, he has a responsibility. you know, sometimes when you take certain public positions you abrogate your f
>> i don't know about you, judge, but this makes me realize indeed i spent far too much time in academiayou and i aren't as brain washed as some of the folks that come out of that. you know, the good thing is at least this one particular academic was being honest about the level of radicalism that is prevalent in our universities today. so i kind of hope he keeps tweeting. i think it exposes what the left is really all about these days. >> all right. reverend darrell scott, what do...
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Dec 7, 2016
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. >> i wonder how long he'll survive if he elects to quit and take a position in academia he has to rev up for six months but consensus is they won't be sad to see the back of him. >> let's take a poll. >> no. >> the numbers are that he gets to a point immediately. if he names one of them as the vice chair of supervision then he gets probably re-signed. sorry getting over a cold and then he'll have a chair and a vice chair. he'll have five of seven in the next year and a half. >> year and a half. >> i agree with all of that. i got the e-mails after some of the names are floated as head of supervision and all of them are like if this happens i would be surprised if he stays a week. so that's the conventional wisdom. i haven't spoken to dan so i don't know if that's true or not so it's been conventional wisdom for awhile. does he stick around to try to stop somebody from undoing what he's trying to to on capital levels and all of that? i doubt it. he probably does head for the door and a lot of the game will be played at the fed in terms of regular withdrew lags -- regulation. they're goi
. >> i wonder how long he'll survive if he elects to quit and take a position in academia he has to rev up for six months but consensus is they won't be sad to see the back of him. >> let's take a poll. >> no. >> the numbers are that he gets to a point immediately. if he names one of them as the vice chair of supervision then he gets probably re-signed. sorry getting over a cold and then he'll have a chair and a vice chair. he'll have five of seven in the next year and a...