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May 16, 2016
05/16
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anand mahindra: there is no simple bullet.you say i will mandate a kind of affirmative action, you raise also other issues about their talk mercy, the feelings. eric: but this is what makes it so complicated, which it is. anand mahindra: we founded a place where we succeeded the most in the group is the real estate division. woman.leader is a and we find a lot of the top management are suddenly women. there is a phenomenon there. ceo,you don't have a woman you get an answer that they are looking and they cannot find anyone who is adequately competent. the case,f that is can we count on mahindra and mahindra to put in more women? anand mahindra: yes. you are seeing leadership of many with women. you don't get it by affirmative action and mandating it. eric: thank you so very much. anandt, alix that is mahindra. scarlet: thank you so much. eric with this chairman of mahindra and mahindra. alix: today's stock has lost altitude this year but it is flying higher things to some delayed rivals. ♪ scarlet: breaking news from the treas
anand mahindra: there is no simple bullet.you say i will mandate a kind of affirmative action, you raise also other issues about their talk mercy, the feelings. eric: but this is what makes it so complicated, which it is. anand mahindra: we founded a place where we succeeded the most in the group is the real estate division. woman.leader is a and we find a lot of the top management are suddenly women. there is a phenomenon there. ceo,you don't have a woman you get an answer that they are...
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May 24, 2016
05/16
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the supply anand demand got such that we could reoeopen these facilities, build this mill, and we'reoing to bring that to reality so that you can reap benefits s from that alalong with t the companyny. [applause] >> uranium has been a huge economic boom to this whole area. these small communities never had it as good as when there was uranium mining. and i do know that when you're struggling to put your kids through college, put food on the table, some of these arenas look vever, very appppealing. and i cannot say y that if i i s in t that boat t that i wouldn'e rightht there swimming the same stream. is it wortrth it to o open more m mines and m more mills?s? to m me, it is. it's an issue we all face, not just me or the miners. it's an issue that wewe all fac, because e we do not give up our consumption of fossil fuels, and... soso, where it's goingng to lea? i'm just a cocowgirl. i don't know. >> after spending some time in this commununity, i really empatathized with their position. first of all, they have a very strong sensse of commumunity and of place, and i feel, if you are fr
the supply anand demand got such that we could reoeopen these facilities, build this mill, and we'reoing to bring that to reality so that you can reap benefits s from that alalong with t the companyny. [applause] >> uranium has been a huge economic boom to this whole area. these small communities never had it as good as when there was uranium mining. and i do know that when you're struggling to put your kids through college, put food on the table, some of these arenas look vever, very...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
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theyey areotot being a assistedy unhcr anand its partrtnerswe o y assistt the most, mostst vulnere people. so, mostf f the urbann refugees woworktatake care ofof themselves,s, and are not dependent on the----on any aid. [indistinct chatter] child: mom! man: mom! child: mommy! man: nobody respects us a rerefugee guyuy. if you go to t, you are afraid of the police. even the people, they look at you differently. it feels terrible. we are just human beings--like you guysys. hmm? we deserve the life you livive, not lessss than thatat. the way that people treat us, being different--they saw us likeke we don't--we e don't bebg to ththis world. . but god crcrd us----whato wewe do? i wisish pe treated us s like a human being- respect us as a human being, live as a human being. that's what i wish. this is our kitchen. come on in. this is our bedrdroom. this i is where i sleep. come on in. this is our sitting room. this is a refugee house. this is where a refugee lives. [[indistinctct chatter] farhan: i will show you some papers that prove that something terrible happenened to my wife, which i don't
theyey areotot being a assistedy unhcr anand its partrtnerswe o y assistt the most, mostst vulnere people. so, mostf f the urbann refugees woworktatake care ofof themselves,s, and are not dependent on the----on any aid. [indistinct chatter] child: mom! man: mom! child: mommy! man: nobody respects us a rerefugee guyuy. if you go to t, you are afraid of the police. even the people, they look at you differently. it feels terrible. we are just human beings--like you guysys. hmm? we deserve the life...
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May 30, 2016
05/16
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LINKTV
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with the help of daniel ellsberg anand other experts, we were able to understand that this was not a hiroshima-type bomb, it was something totally differerent. it was opening a new chapter inin this chchamber of horror. so we decided we would go in there in september of 1970. and we did. amy: september of 1980? >> 1980. excuse me. amy: what does that mean, "you did"? >> well, we didn't know exactly where in that huge factory ththese weapapons were conceal, but we had to trust in providence that he would come upon the weaponry, which we did in short order. we went in with the workers at the changing of the shift and found there was really no security worth talking about. very easy enentrance. in about thrhree minututes, we were e looking g at doomsm. the weapon was b before usus. it was an unarmed warhead about to be shipped to amarillo, texas, for its payload. soso it was a harmless w weapn as of that moment. and we cracked the weapon. it was very fragile. it was made to withstand heat of re-entry into the atmosphere of outer space, so it was like eggshells, really. we had taken a as
with the help of daniel ellsberg anand other experts, we were able to understand that this was not a hiroshima-type bomb, it was something totally differerent. it was opening a new chapter inin this chchamber of horror. so we decided we would go in there in september of 1970. and we did. amy: september of 1980? >> 1980. excuse me. amy: what does that mean, "you did"? >> well, we didn't know exactly where in that huge factory ththese weapapons were conceal, but we had to...
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May 27, 2016
05/16
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anand thatat was the tipping po. soso the bomomb was redundant ad ultimately, unnecessary.nd by using it, though, we legitimized the use of nuclear weapons. and by legitimizing nuclear weapons, we made ourselves, for the last 50 years, 70 years, extremely vulnerable. and we are very lucky that these weapons have not been used on a third occasion in anger. and people forget that the father of the atomic bomb, j sayrt oppenheimer, would things like, if we continue to go down this road and rely on nuclear weapons and they are used again someday in war, people will curse the namames of hiroshimaa and nagasaki. we are still living with that threat. amy: and the issue of this dropping of the second atomic bomb three days later, after 140,000 people were killed in hiroshima, 100,000 wounded and augugu night foror 45, dropping the second bomb. kai bird? a norm iss controversy over that, too, why the second bomb. and so quickly after hirososhim. well, one of the answers is very truman, the president at the time, did not even know a second bomb was going to be used so quickly. acquie
anand thatat was the tipping po. soso the bomomb was redundant ad ultimately, unnecessary.nd by using it, though, we legitimized the use of nuclear weapons. and by legitimizing nuclear weapons, we made ourselves, for the last 50 years, 70 years, extremely vulnerable. and we are very lucky that these weapons have not been used on a third occasion in anger. and people forget that the father of the atomic bomb, j sayrt oppenheimer, would things like, if we continue to go down this road and rely on...
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May 29, 2016
05/16
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it is our hope that you u will learn n about poverty, homelessness, anand hunger..d decide to make a change in your school, c city, country, ad world. together we can make our world a better place to live. walter: so 3 years after seeing that event in her life at age 8, hannah did found the ladybug foundation. the non-profit raises awareness and funds to support the needs of the homeless and near homeless. since then, well over $3 million has been raised directly and indirectly by the foundation to fund projects providing food, shelter, and safe haven for the homeless across canada. in addition, she's published--she's a published author and a jury member of the world's children's prize for the rights of the child, fostering her passion for human rights around the globe. she's also grown up now, and she's joining us from winnipeg, canada to share her inspiring story. we wanna welcome you to "full frame," hannah. take us back in time... hannah: thanks so much, mike. walter: ...when you were 5 years old, and this life-changing event. what were your thoughts? what went
it is our hope that you u will learn n about poverty, homelessness, anand hunger..d decide to make a change in your school, c city, country, ad world. together we can make our world a better place to live. walter: so 3 years after seeing that event in her life at age 8, hannah did found the ladybug foundation. the non-profit raises awareness and funds to support the needs of the homeless and near homeless. since then, well over $3 million has been raised directly and indirectly by the...
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May 31, 2016
05/16
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it is our hope that you u will learn n about poverty, homelessness, anand hunger..decide to make a change in your school, c city, country, ad world. together we can make our world a better place to live. walter: so 3 years after seeing that event in her life at age 8, hannah did found the ladybug foundation. the non-profit raises awareness and funds to support the needs of the homeless and near homeless. since then, well over $3 million has been raised directly and indirectly by the foundation to fund projects providing food, shelter, and safe haven for the homeless across canada. in addition, she's published--she's a published author and a jury member of the world's children's prize for the rights of the child, fostering her passion for human rights around the globe. she's also grown up now, and she's joining us from winnipeg, canada to share her inspiring story. we wanna welcome you to "full frame," hannah. take us back in time... hannah: thanks so much, mike. walter: ...when you were 5 years old, and this life-changing event. what were your thoughts? what went th
it is our hope that you u will learn n about poverty, homelessness, anand hunger..decide to make a change in your school, c city, country, ad world. together we can make our world a better place to live. walter: so 3 years after seeing that event in her life at age 8, hannah did found the ladybug foundation. the non-profit raises awareness and funds to support the needs of the homeless and near homeless. since then, well over $3 million has been raised directly and indirectly by the foundation...
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May 11, 2016
05/16
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BLOOMBERG
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anand: it is hard to extrapolate good if you are early in the cycle and this is the intelligence youing back rather than looking forward. just because something is we can -- week into the quarter, the features on a relative bases are of her -- are underwhelming. what is the new thing that apple can do that can dramatically expand the scope of the first time iphone buyer? the android switcher? wer switching to the high-end? the first time apple buyer has to have a $650 money in the wallet to be able to for that. and then the android to iphone dramatichas to be feature differences. usually people are locked in. there will be modest shifts from one to the other. newtell me what propels the iphone switch? scarlet: thank you very much. alix:alix: coming up in the next hour, to conversations you don't want to miss. will be talking about his latest short position. plus the chief executive of expedia will be joining us on the latest earnings report. ♪ scarlet: welcome to bloomberg markets. ♪ scarlet: from bloomberg world headquarters in new york, welcome. u.s. stocks lower right now. the s&p
anand: it is hard to extrapolate good if you are early in the cycle and this is the intelligence youing back rather than looking forward. just because something is we can -- week into the quarter, the features on a relative bases are of her -- are underwhelming. what is the new thing that apple can do that can dramatically expand the scope of the first time iphone buyer? the android switcher? wer switching to the high-end? the first time apple buyer has to have a $650 money in the wallet to be...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
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anand. with usaa is awesome.pent 20 years active duty they still refer to me as "gunnery sergeant" when i call being a usaa member because of my service in the military to pass that on to my kids something that makes me happy my name is roger zapata and i'm a usaa member for life. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >>> there's nothing like new jersey. there's nothing. there's nothing like new jersey. oh, wise guy. so many wise guys. i'll tell you what. you can make it in new jersey. you can do just about anything you want in life. >> if you make it there, you can make it anywhere. >> so earlier we talked to donald trump. and he had said he would have never gone into libya. the clinton campaign has fired out a response to that and i'm going to have you report that. i will say, here's from 2011. i can't believe what our country is doing, trump said. according to a buzzfeed transcript. gadhafi and libya is killing thousands of people. an
anand. with usaa is awesome.pent 20 years active duty they still refer to me as "gunnery sergeant" when i call being a usaa member because of my service in the military to pass that on to my kids something that makes me happy my name is roger zapata and i'm a usaa member for life. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >>> there's nothing like new jersey. there's nothing. there's nothing like new...
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May 23, 2016
05/16
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ifif you can't supppport us, wee going to bee marching for w wees anand a few days. if y you see as,, i it would bed fofor you to s support us byby g withth us. maybe a couple of hours, o one hourur or a day if you can. that would be good. amy: and those are some of the headlines. this is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. today democracy now! broadcast , a exclusive a former senior , pentagon official speaks out for the first time about how his superiors broke the law to punish a key national security agency whistleblower. i now everyone knows how edward snowden revealed the government spying on hundreds of millions of people around the world. but if you want to know why snowden did it in the way he did it, needed to know the story of john crane, who worked 25 years for the department of defense inspector general's office, whicich helps federal employees expose abuse and corruption. he now says whistleblowers have little choice but to go outside the system. crane is coming for to speak about what happened to thomas drake who
ifif you can't supppport us, wee going to bee marching for w wees anand a few days. if y you see as,, i it would bed fofor you to s support us byby g withth us. maybe a couple of hours, o one hourur or a day if you can. that would be good. amy: and those are some of the headlines. this is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. today democracy now! broadcast , a exclusive a former senior , pentagon official speaks out for the first time about how his...
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May 31, 2016
05/16
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anand after nearly seven w weekn strike, tens of thousands of verizon workers have declared victory. it was one of the biggest u.s. strikes in years, as workers fought verizon's efforts to cap pensions, cut benefits and outsource work to mexico, the philippines and the dominican , republic. under a deal announced monday, workers will receive a nearly 11% raise over four years. the deal also decreases verizon's ability to outsource work. last week, verizon worker pamela galpern spoke with democracy now! about the strike. >> for a company as profitable as verizon, i think it was clear that that wasn't right to month that it is not right that they want to take so much from the workers who have helped make this company so profitable. this strike is about keeping good jobs here, and it is abouot our families. 39,000 workers on strike. the families of all of those workers. amy: and those are some of t the headadlines. ththis is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. in a historic ruling, the former dictator of chad hissene habre has been convicted of c
anand after nearly seven w weekn strike, tens of thousands of verizon workers have declared victory. it was one of the biggest u.s. strikes in years, as workers fought verizon's efforts to cap pensions, cut benefits and outsource work to mexico, the philippines and the dominican , republic. under a deal announced monday, workers will receive a nearly 11% raise over four years. the deal also decreases verizon's ability to outsource work. last week, verizon worker pamela galpern spoke with...
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May 24, 2016
05/16
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i just w want justice to be held anand not to be in looked at asa career c criminal or a thug. child.on is n not an evivil he is not someone that just t gs round and hurts people.. theas realllly upset about popoliceman walking free. you gave my son $500,000 they'll for breaking a police window and you gave these cops nothing for mumurder? that is crazy. ththat is not fair. >> that is not justice. amy: gray family attorney billy murphy, your response? >> i think the have a legitimate grievance. and i think there is disparity in the system for bail. i think judges are more afraid than ever not to give these ridiculously high bails, which is totally unjustifiable. neither the officer nor this kid deserved a bail anywhere near that, and indeed, you can make an argument that both should have been released on their own recognizance without having their families burdened by the bail system where they no longer have the resources left to hire a lawyer after they get the person out on bail. this is been a problem for a long time. we fought hard against it. many of us got together to he
i just w want justice to be held anand not to be in looked at asa career c criminal or a thug. child.on is n not an evivil he is not someone that just t gs round and hurts people.. theas realllly upset about popoliceman walking free. you gave my son $500,000 they'll for breaking a police window and you gave these cops nothing for mumurder? that is crazy. ththat is not fair. >> that is not justice. amy: gray family attorney billy murphy, your response? >> i think the have a...
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May 19, 2016
05/16
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they will analyze all the data coming in and are looking at when maintenance checks were carried out, anandf therere we any incidents in the past. one has arrived and a few more will be arriving to more morning to be >> the plane that crashed 320.n airbus a it does have a good safety record, doesn't it? >> that is right. while we have been speaking, about five have landed or taken off. arere 6000 in operation around the world, so one takes off every three seconds, airbuss tells me. so you can imagine the safety record is pretty good. -- they have a pretty good safety record. safety checksre carried ouout on these p planes? any outlined based outside the european unionon has to folw guidelines and regulations and egypt air had to respect those. they are pretty stringent. all airlines flying in europe have to go through, just like a new car has to go through a service check out 30 thousand kilometers. there are checks and balances and a certain amount of flight hours. plane would have to go through that or it simply would not be allowed to land in european airspace. eu authorities check up on
they will analyze all the data coming in and are looking at when maintenance checks were carried out, anandf therere we any incidents in the past. one has arrived and a few more will be arriving to more morning to be >> the plane that crashed 320.n airbus a it does have a good safety record, doesn't it? >> that is right. while we have been speaking, about five have landed or taken off. arere 6000 in operation around the world, so one takes off every three seconds, airbuss tells me....
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May 5, 2016
05/16
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egypt if we're talking about these transnational global networks maybe not listening to the state anand by the supporting civil society, for instance, directly. as we know right now civil society is sort of criminalize the works with foreign entities. how do we think about these transnational global networks, i guess, while laws are still state-based? >> excellent way of framing the problem actually. because i don't think, you know, over the course of your lifetime probably, you will see legal reform in order to accommodate the mobility of everything. ideas, people, money, although things that everyone talks about. right now we are not there. we are not there in very simple terms, in commercial terms. now much less these are the kinds of ideas. you are right, we are caught at a moment where we know that there has to be some kind of legal regime for access to information, globally. there's going to have to be. you can't do that state by state. it doesn't make any sense. at the same time there is no such machine. and what efforts to our at this point are certainly not well integrated and
egypt if we're talking about these transnational global networks maybe not listening to the state anand by the supporting civil society, for instance, directly. as we know right now civil society is sort of criminalize the works with foreign entities. how do we think about these transnational global networks, i guess, while laws are still state-based? >> excellent way of framing the problem actually. because i don't think, you know, over the course of your lifetime probably, you will see...
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May 31, 2016
05/16
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>> povertys part of f the problem anand that is true. but quite often, whatat is hiddn is the m more fundamental truth. it is the fact t that those subject to prejudices are exexcluded from access s to ris. it is migrants i in western eure or children or women anywhere in the world. daniel: thank you very much. turning to business news, in april, u.s. consumer spending recorded it biggest increase since 2009. the commerce department reported a 1% gain, well above expectations. however, the data is slightly softer with spending likely to remain with strong gains in house prices and a strengthening labor market pushing up wages. we've been following this story from new york. it seems that consumer spending is up data is coming in showing consumer confidence is low. what are we to make of this? reporter: on one side, we have reported increased in spending in several years because the previous model was flat. for the last six months, consumer spending has then little and it seems spring has become the perfect time for the consumer. on the co
>> povertys part of f the problem anand that is true. but quite often, whatat is hiddn is the m more fundamental truth. it is the fact t that those subject to prejudices are exexcluded from access s to ris. it is migrants i in western eure or children or women anywhere in the world. daniel: thank you very much. turning to business news, in april, u.s. consumer spending recorded it biggest increase since 2009. the commerce department reported a 1% gain, well above expectations. however,...
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May 24, 2016
05/16
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it was often raining here for days and people had to sleep in what beds anand tents. the water came insnside and the conditions were awful to put it simply. there were hardly any showers, not enough food, people were cooking on their own fireplaces and the air was filled with smoke. the conditions were very poor. we've heard these stories many times but people stayed voluntarily because they hoped the borders would reopen at some point and that is why many people tried to stay as closeseo ththe macecedonia border ass possible. brent:t: our correspondent covering t the storyry of the shshutdown of thatat refugee ca. thank you very much. tonight, the major strongholds of so-called islamic state are under attack. for two years, they have ruled over a self acclaimed caliphate in syria and iraq, but kurdish forces are targeting a province and the iraqi army is advancing on falluja. they are reportedly closer than ever to retaking the city. reporter: the shooting continuns as government forces backed by shia militias inch closer to falluja. the city has been controlled by t
it was often raining here for days and people had to sleep in what beds anand tents. the water came insnside and the conditions were awful to put it simply. there were hardly any showers, not enough food, people were cooking on their own fireplaces and the air was filled with smoke. the conditions were very poor. we've heard these stories many times but people stayed voluntarily because they hoped the borders would reopen at some point and that is why many people tried to stay as closeseo ththe...
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May 26, 2016
05/16
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anand later, my miserable e tral experiencece.come to "the laura flanders show," or the people who say cannot be done take a backseat to the people doing it. ♪
anand later, my miserable e tral experiencece.come to "the laura flanders show," or the people who say cannot be done take a backseat to the people doing it. ♪
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May 24, 2016
05/16
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considering selling its 40% stake in auto parts maker to fund research and development of electctric vehics anand other technology. the news sent shares of calsonic tanking. this week investors will watch revised gdp and the speech by janet yellen on friday. >>> thanks very much for that. many investors throughout the region traded cautiously following the comments from some u.s.-fed officials. seoul's kospi index pell by .9%, closing at its lowest in nearly three months. singapore also declining by .6%. in china the shanghai composite declined by .8%, 2821, snapping two days of gains. lower commodity prices hit resource related stocks. the hang seng gained by a fraction, 19,830 as the closing number. shares of casino operators jumped as tourists from mainland china increased in april. shipments of home appliances in jean continue to rise in april. they have been climbing for 12 months. analysts say the shipments amounted to $1.4 billion an increase of 10% from yen terms. the analysts say consumers bought bigger refrigerators, larging washing machines and air-conditioners. health officials have c
considering selling its 40% stake in auto parts maker to fund research and development of electctric vehics anand other technology. the news sent shares of calsonic tanking. this week investors will watch revised gdp and the speech by janet yellen on friday. >>> thanks very much for that. many investors throughout the region traded cautiously following the comments from some u.s.-fed officials. seoul's kospi index pell by .9%, closing at its lowest in nearly three months. singapore...
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May 31, 2016
05/16
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onon saturday 46 people were injured by lightningng strikes germany anand france,, and f fl affected many places across southern portions of germany over the weekend and also hail stones have damaged bears this france. for the next couple days we're looking more more severe weather to happen because a couple low pressure systems are still lingering. the systems are out off from the jet stream. we're looking at conditions persisting the next couple of days. we're talking about heavy rainfall, strong gusts,s, large hail and morore tornadoes. one funnenel cloud was reportedn austria. towards the north there is a sunshine area over the scandinavian peninsula but across the south much of france you see more rainfall. that is affecting the french open. on monday all games or matches were canceled because of heavy rainfall. as you can see, for the next several days more rain is anticipated. tempereratures will stay on tht cool side on tuesday. going into friday things will warm up. 22 degrees expected on your friday. sesevere weather affected centr portions during the weekend. structural da
onon saturday 46 people were injured by lightningng strikes germany anand france,, and f fl affected many places across southern portions of germany over the weekend and also hail stones have damaged bears this france. for the next couple days we're looking more more severe weather to happen because a couple low pressure systems are still lingering. the systems are out off from the jet stream. we're looking at conditions persisting the next couple of days. we're talking about heavy rainfall,...
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May 16, 2016
05/16
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. >> let's bring in anand gear dartis, former new england republican congressman ann hayward and msnbcical analyst joan walsh. sorry if i got the name wrong. i'm terrible with these things. what do you make of the interview? mike murphy saying, not too late to get a third-party candidate, but he's conceding, the candidate would be there to spoil it for trump and allow republicans who don't like trump another option. >> the authoritative history of the stop trump movement should be called profiles in timidity. they waited so long. 90% of republicans had yet to make an endorsement at all levels. if present trends continue, they'll field a third-party candidate during the trump inauguration. at some point, we saw rationalizations, we saw, you know, empty protests. but they haven't really -- they didn't fight him on the merits when they could. they sat on the sidelines and now they are talking about other reality tv stars. >> i saw you listening to mike murphy there, shaking your head a little bit. >> this is the year of the third-party candidate. let's face it. between bernie sanders and
. >> let's bring in anand gear dartis, former new england republican congressman ann hayward and msnbcical analyst joan walsh. sorry if i got the name wrong. i'm terrible with these things. what do you make of the interview? mike murphy saying, not too late to get a third-party candidate, but he's conceding, the candidate would be there to spoil it for trump and allow republicans who don't like trump another option. >> the authoritative history of the stop trump movement should be...
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May 4, 2016
05/16
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anand i give you my word with tt i will continue this fight with all of my strength and all of my ability. [ cheers and applause ] >> you are extraordinary and we will continue to fight next week and next month and next year and together we will continue as long as god grants us the strength to fight on. [ applause ] >> for one thing remains as true today as it was 40 years ago in kansas city. in this fight for the long-term future of america, there is no substitute for victory. there is no substitute for the america that each and every one of us the loves with all of our heart, that we believe in with all of our hearts and that together we will restore as a shining city on the hill for every generation to come. thank you to each of you, and god bless you. >> ted cruz, his wife, a live picture as he wraps up his campaign for the republican presidential nomination. this now leaves donald trump and governor john kasich of ohio running for the nomination, but of course kasich is not a factor, having only won his home state. that essentially means that donald trump is going to be the republic
anand i give you my word with tt i will continue this fight with all of my strength and all of my ability. [ cheers and applause ] >> you are extraordinary and we will continue to fight next week and next month and next year and together we will continue as long as god grants us the strength to fight on. [ applause ] >> for one thing remains as true today as it was 40 years ago in kansas city. in this fight for the long-term future of america, there is no substitute for victory....
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111
May 28, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 111
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anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the energy focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. into acuses the company smaller piece of the pie. the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. will that be the long-term revenue growth area for hpe? be seen.ins to but in the near term, the deal makes sense. shery: microsoft is making as many as 1,850 job cuts while taking a $950 million impairment and restructuring charge. give us a sense of where these cuts are coming from, and what this tells us about the strategy. cory: one of the things it tells us is that the $9.5 billion acquisition of nokia, one of the last eight deals, was a disaster. $7 million last year, another $1 billion down now. it shows that decision at the time, which was cont
anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the energy focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. into acuses the company smaller piece of the pie. the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. will that be the long-term...
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May 17, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 76
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anand we bet them. and there are about $80 billion less money you alll have had to pay in the ensuing years. why did we beat them? one is we e went up and down the state. it was a real grarassroots effort. harvey rosenfield and others were involved.d. second, the media covered it every day, and especially the "los angeles times." and, third, it was something everyone understood, when they write their auto insurance, you know, checkck so it wasn't complex to understand. so it is true. the corporations have twisted grotesquely ththis ininitiative right thahat you have against y. i mean, even the tobacco companies blocked one recently, didn't they? there was supposed to be a little higher tax on tobacco. tobacco's not very popular these days. but they twisted it because they dominated ththe airwaves with their prpropaganda. ok, so campaign finance reform. if you want to have an honest initiative referendum/recall process, youou got to have publc funding g of public campaigns. otherwise, you will get this g
anand we bet them. and there are about $80 billion less money you alll have had to pay in the ensuing years. why did we beat them? one is we e went up and down the state. it was a real grarassroots effort. harvey rosenfield and others were involved.d. second, the media covered it every day, and especially the "los angeles times." and, third, it was something everyone understood, when they write their auto insurance, you know, checkck so it wasn't complex to understand. so it is true....
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May 25, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 51
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. >> they say israel can send something like this, missile, anand instead of the missile, they use human being. >> the military says it's courageous, it's not what i'm told that i'm going to attack 70 virgins. you don't believe everything. >> no, no, don't worry. >> jamal is so happy. >> no, no. >> for me the only solution is a one-step solution. because the situation now -- >> how one step? >> one-step solution. one person, one vote. >> where? >> all over the land. >> jamal, you don't differentiate in what is needed and what is -- what is needed is love and peace. but we are not so good. >> i was with kahlil. let's go here. >> we were like what i would say -- >> let's listen to the music. >> i think i'm going to come back and crash that guitar. that would bring a moment of comedy. >> there are hundreds of checkpoints throughout the occupied territories to make the israelis feel safer. the palestinians, on the other hand, see these checkpoints as a method for the israelis to humiliate them and control their lives. when we traveled, jamal and i had to pass many roadblocks, tunnels that co
. >> they say israel can send something like this, missile, anand instead of the missile, they use human being. >> the military says it's courageous, it's not what i'm told that i'm going to attack 70 virgins. you don't believe everything. >> no, no, don't worry. >> jamal is so happy. >> no, no. >> for me the only solution is a one-step solution. because the situation now -- >> how one step? >> one-step solution. one person, one vote. >>...
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40
May 20, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN3
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eye 40
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my name is rajesh anand s. an. i'm one of the founders of ultra testing a company i started three years ago with my old college roommate from m.i.t. art checkman who's not here with us today. someone has to run the business. together we started a company that we believe will revolutionize the software testing industry. more importantly, we're building a business that we hope will prove the tremendous economic opportunity to be unlocked by employing individuals on the autism spectrum. david whom you saw in the video is one of our team members the ultra. david graduated in 2001 with a computer science degree and he was eager to start work. he interviewed for dozens and applied for dozens of positions but unfortunately was not able to find a job in his field or any field. he was eager to work, so he started volunteering at a computer repair shop and helping friends and family with their i.t. issues. for over a decade david tried to find paid work without success. in 2014 he applied for a part-time software tester posi
my name is rajesh anand s. an. i'm one of the founders of ultra testing a company i started three years ago with my old college roommate from m.i.t. art checkman who's not here with us today. someone has to run the business. together we started a company that we believe will revolutionize the software testing industry. more importantly, we're building a business that we hope will prove the tremendous economic opportunity to be unlocked by employing individuals on the autism spectrum. david whom...
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May 24, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
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eye 68
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was in college that i actually took courses with some great and wonderful cognitive psychologists anandding the e mind and especially the developmentnt of the mindnd. walter: it's rare that i get the opportunity to do this in an interview setting, so i'm gonna take full advantage of it. meltzoff: ha! walter: you're one of the few people i can stick my tongue out at-- meltzoff: : that's right. walter: and connect with you in a certain way. meltzoff: that's right. walter: because you stuck your tongue out, stuck your basically your reputation out t there and got great results, didn't you? meltzoff: that's right, that's right. yeah, well, i take that as a compliment. and i was interested in n studying t the ororigins of imitation, how wewe learn by observing others. imitation is one of f the chieff chchannels that t we pick up information n about our culture, and wanted to look at the biological basis o of this and ended up testing newboborn babis where i put out my tongue e to e whwhat they would do. walterer: and you learned? meltzoff: and i i learned that babies in the newborn hospital
was in college that i actually took courses with some great and wonderful cognitive psychologists anandding the e mind and especially the developmentnt of the mindnd. walter: it's rare that i get the opportunity to do this in an interview setting, so i'm gonna take full advantage of it. meltzoff: ha! walter: you're one of the few people i can stick my tongue out at-- meltzoff: : that's right. walter: and connect with you in a certain way. meltzoff: that's right. walter: because you stuck your...
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May 22, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 145
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was in college that i actually took courses with some great and wonderful cognitive psychologists anand the e mind and especially the developmentnt of the mindnd. walter: it's rare that i get the opportunity to do this in an interview setting, so i'm gonna take full advantage of it. meltzoff: ha! walter: you're one of the few people i can stick my tongue out at-- meltzoff: : that's right. walter: and connect with you in a certain way. meltzoff: that's right. walter: because you stuck your tongue out, stuck your basically your reputation out t there and got great results, didn't you? meltzoff: that's right, that's right. yeah, well, i take that as a compliment. and i was interested in n studying t the ororigins of imitation, how wewe learn by observing others. imitation is one of f the chieff chchannels that t we pick up information n about our culture, and wanted to look at the biological basis o of this and ended up testing newboborn babis where i put out my tongue e to e whwhat they would do. walterer: and you learned? meltzoff: and i i learned that babies in the newborn hospital woul
was in college that i actually took courses with some great and wonderful cognitive psychologists anand the e mind and especially the developmentnt of the mindnd. walter: it's rare that i get the opportunity to do this in an interview setting, so i'm gonna take full advantage of it. meltzoff: ha! walter: you're one of the few people i can stick my tongue out at-- meltzoff: : that's right. walter: and connect with you in a certain way. meltzoff: that's right. walter: because you stuck your...
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May 28, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
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. >> in that condition, we will be able to control the movement of the s smugglers and to interact anandvent them from being active at sea. reporter: the frankfurt takes the refugees to sicily. during the trip, crew members k the refugees about the smugugglers. they find that the smugglers are using the naval vessels as part of the business. >> they told us come in soon as we were in international waters, we would be picked up. reporter: christine is just relieved that there are no serious injuries among this group of refugees. even though she knows that traffickers are using the military, she believes the mission is still worthwhile. >> passing s ships are always requireded to pick up anynyone n distress. and that is what thehey are doi. i think they are better r than that, but they are trying anyway. reporter: christine's d deploymt on the franknkfurt will in shortly. but she will leaeave with a good feeling, knowing that the number of refugees has been cut in half since the patrols began. dan: for those of us were bridges, the story right now is the referendum over whether to stay in
. >> in that condition, we will be able to control the movement of the s smugglers and to interact anandvent them from being active at sea. reporter: the frankfurt takes the refugees to sicily. during the trip, crew members k the refugees about the smugugglers. they find that the smugglers are using the naval vessels as part of the business. >> they told us come in soon as we were in international waters, we would be picked up. reporter: christine is just relieved that there are no...
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May 18, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
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so there is no such enormous gap between rich anand poor. and d if you travel in the north of spain, where e this company s the largest company in that part of spain, you will sesee that their cities and towns--i was there this summer--you can see right away. you don't have the slum over here and the fancy neigh-- you don't have any of that. there are people with more and less, but it's, the gap is completely different. it's a part of the e world in which you could say something like the following and not be lying through your teeth: "everybody's in the middle class." they really did that. but if you want that, this is a way to get it. here's a second thought: you think if the workers made the decisions collectively, they would decide to close the factory or the office where they're working and open one in china, thereby destroying their jobs, their incomes, and the community? ehh, i would guess not. not a big chancece of that. you know what they would do instead? they would say, "whatever problems our company has"--like all l companies, the
so there is no such enormous gap between rich anand poor. and d if you travel in the north of spain, where e this company s the largest company in that part of spain, you will sesee that their cities and towns--i was there this summer--you can see right away. you don't have the slum over here and the fancy neigh-- you don't have any of that. there are people with more and less, but it's, the gap is completely different. it's a part of the e world in which you could say something like the...
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102
May 25, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 102
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anand: at the end of the day, this is not a company that is either piecemeal or together will post incrediblerowth rate from a revenue standpoint. this is modest revenue growth at best, coupled with heavy cost cuts from time to time, coupled with some acquisitions and the best teachers. hopefully, the earnings growth rate is slightly better than the sales growth rate and a good amount of cash flow being thrown off. this is the way we have to think in piece and hp ink, or as a whole. emily: our bloomberg intelligence senior analyst. thank you for weighing in. more automakers are backing ride-hailing apps. toyota is making a strategic investment in uber and will offer car leases to uber drivers. the company did not comment on the size of the investment. this comes on the heels of volkswagen investing $300 million in a company in israel that offers rides for as low as a dollar and includes delivery of goods. they made the investment to move digital offerings and move beyond the diesel engine manipulation scandal. remember, gm bought a 9% stake in lyft in january. this news comes at a time when s
anand: at the end of the day, this is not a company that is either piecemeal or together will post incrediblerowth rate from a revenue standpoint. this is modest revenue growth at best, coupled with heavy cost cuts from time to time, coupled with some acquisitions and the best teachers. hopefully, the earnings growth rate is slightly better than the sales growth rate and a good amount of cash flow being thrown off. this is the way we have to think in piece and hp ink, or as a whole. emily: our...
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May 5, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN2
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eye 68
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fred chronicle the reemergence of the center of polymer research and were visiting helplessness fred anand one of the imagining a reinvention playbook in which transitioning regions of turned local universities and the open innovation hubs and business of appliances have built promising new industrial strategies. they have traveled america and europe and return the optimistic view that dozens of all places of becoming launch pads for the new. this is a welcome counter to a scary decline is him that is now dominating the presidential campaign, for example. indeed, this is especially noteworthy. while working at the world bank in 1981: the term emerging markets and in a previous book to clear the onset of the emerging market it was not the beginning of the american century. so with that ii would like to introduce her to esteemed authors write -- moderated by my colleagues. you'll meet him shortly. a brookings trustee as senior advisor of the public policy advisory firm. until recently the principal founder and ceo emerging markets management and investment firm. a supporter both the metro pr
fred chronicle the reemergence of the center of polymer research and were visiting helplessness fred anand one of the imagining a reinvention playbook in which transitioning regions of turned local universities and the open innovation hubs and business of appliances have built promising new industrial strategies. they have traveled america and europe and return the optimistic view that dozens of all places of becoming launch pads for the new. this is a welcome counter to a scary decline is him...
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159
May 30, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 159
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anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the company focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. so, it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. but again, the risk here is that now you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. so, will that be the long-term revenue growth area for hpe? that remains to be seen. but in the near term, this deal makes sense. shery: microsoft is making as many as 1850 job cuts while taking a $950 million impairment and restructuring charge. give us a sense of where these cuts are coming from, and what this tells us about the new strategy. cory: one of the things it tells us is that the $9.5 billion acquisition of nokia which was steve ballmer's last big deal, was a disaster. $7 billion last year, another $1 billion dow
anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the company focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. so, it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. but again, the risk here is that now you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems....
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May 29, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 122
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anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the company focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. will that be the long-term revenue growth area for hpe? that remains to be seen. but in the near term, the deal makes sense. shery: microsoft is making as many as 1,850 job cuts while taking a $950 million impairment and restructuring charge. give us a sense of where these cuts are coming from, and what this tells us about the strategy. cory: one of the things it tells us is that the $9.5 billion acquisition of nokia by steve ballmer, one of the last big deals, was a disaster. $7 million last year, another $1 billion down now. it shows that de
anand: no, but it makes sense.s -- have one part of the company focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. will that be the...
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May 2, 2016
05/16
by
MSNBCW
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. >> all right, so we have been watching there, just happened within the past hour in anand.ted cruz approached trump's supporters. the man refused to give his name. the man you heard talking to ted cruz but interrupted cruz and was called him "lying ted" and chant and yelling chants like "do the math." as you saw for quite a while engaged with this trump supporter and trying to convince him that the right path was to vote for him, ted cruz. you can hear from that man he was talking to, a lot of resistance, and he said it at one point, you will find out tomorrow, indiana don't want you. let's bring in our leader of the stop trump campaign, ken blackwell. he's a senior advisor. ken, you have been listening to what we just played on the air. as i watched that, that was unique. it is unique to see and exchange between a candidate and one individual voter who are dead set in voting for the opposition. ken, hold on for one moment because i believe halie jackson is able to get with ted cruz and talking to him live. >> it is a fundamentally choice, do we get through campaigns throug
. >> all right, so we have been watching there, just happened within the past hour in anand.ted cruz approached trump's supporters. the man refused to give his name. the man you heard talking to ted cruz but interrupted cruz and was called him "lying ted" and chant and yelling chants like "do the math." as you saw for quite a while engaged with this trump supporter and trying to convince him that the right path was to vote for him, ted cruz. you can hear from that man...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
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eye 151
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they try to get into the u.s., denied entry, anand they also ty to get into canada full up dust canada. >> it was a second ship to be turned away. the first being the komagata maru. this was the pattern canada has in its history. whitea pardon based on superiority and that canada has to confront and has to face head on and we have notot done that o far. the apology goes some part in addressing that. i'm glad the prime minister did not top it. that this was just about this one incident. i'm glad to see was acknowledged there were discriminatory laws. i think what is even more important for me, the leaders of the opposition too get a step further and said, these -- let's name it, these were racist immigration laws. the idea of race entered the house of commons and was talked about. that pleased me. the leader of the ndp connected it to what happened to a boatload -- a ship load of refugees who came four years ago i knew ship who were subjected to very similar conditions beyond the role of law by the then conservative governmement. they were put in hazmat suits and denied access to lawyer
they try to get into the u.s., denied entry, anand they also ty to get into canada full up dust canada. >> it was a second ship to be turned away. the first being the komagata maru. this was the pattern canada has in its history. whitea pardon based on superiority and that canada has to confront and has to face head on and we have notot done that o far. the apology goes some part in addressing that. i'm glad the prime minister did not top it. that this was just about this one incident....
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39
May 27, 2016
05/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 39
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this will be followed, moderate discussion with a task force led by anand parekh et al.ut an open question and answer period and all of you here in the audience levitt opportunity for some questions. so at this time please welcome a wonderful friend of bpc, the senior health and housing task force member, secretary cisner cisneros. [applause] >> thank you. bill, thank you very much for your kind words. and thank you for your service. i first had the opportunity to meet bill here at the bpc about four years ago after a career on capitol hill, and now here at the bpc where he is focused on these really importantly shows before our country. four years ago he was helping staff the task force that built with deficit reduction issues and overlap between those questions of the trajectory of national expenditures for medicare, medicaid, social security and the work of this task force overlap greatly. because what we've tried to do in this work is to find ways to shave the increase in costs by having people live healthier lives in their own homes for as long as possible. i also w
this will be followed, moderate discussion with a task force led by anand parekh et al.ut an open question and answer period and all of you here in the audience levitt opportunity for some questions. so at this time please welcome a wonderful friend of bpc, the senior health and housing task force member, secretary cisner cisneros. [applause] >> thank you. bill, thank you very much for your kind words. and thank you for your service. i first had the opportunity to meet bill here at the...
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83
May 30, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 83
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anand: no, but it makes sense. have one part of the entity focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. again, the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. so, will that be the long-term revenue growth area for hpe? that remains to be seen. but in the near term, the deal makes sense. shery: microsoft is making as many as 1,850 job cuts while taking a $950 million impairment and restructuring charge. give us a sense of where these cuts are coming from, and what this tells us about the new strategy. cory: one of the things it tells us is that the $9.5 billion acquisition of nokia by steve ballmer, one of the last big deals, was a disaster. they took on a write-down last year, another $1 billion d
anand: no, but it makes sense. have one part of the entity focus on hardware, predominantly networking, storage, and servers, and then finding a way to exit the services business to a company that focuses on exactly that portion of the business. it is a good strategy. it refocuses the company into a smaller piece of the pie. again, the risk here is that you have an extremely small pie you are focusing on, one that is on hardware, predominately selling to corporate i.t. systems. so, will that be...
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245
May 23, 2016
05/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 245
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they really just only care about profit and having global control overer our food supply, anand they're not open-minded about having their food labeleded or tested properlrly, and they certaiainly don't care a about e were -- care about the people eating it or the farmers were and death traps and committing suicide on a daily basis. amy: in mexico, demonstrators said they did not want monsanto's genetically-modified because of native crops. >> so every time someone once to sew corn, they have to ask permission and pay month center to do it. each time someone sells corn, that the pay commission to them. we believe in mexico, is the origin point of corn, the most important grain for humanity today, the selling of monsanto's seeds in not be allowed at any point. we are the genetic reservoir of this grain. after oil, so most widely used product. amy: the world meteorologicall organization has called for all states to ratify and implement the paris climate accords as high temperatures continue to smash global records. spokesperson claire nullis said urgent action is needed to -- after april
they really just only care about profit and having global control overer our food supply, anand they're not open-minded about having their food labeleded or tested properlrly, and they certaiainly don't care a about e were -- care about the people eating it or the farmers were and death traps and committing suicide on a daily basis. amy: in mexico, demonstrators said they did not want monsanto's genetically-modified because of native crops. >> so every time someone once to sew corn, they...