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Apr 8, 2020
04/20
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KRON
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take a more tailored or a big country and there's a big differee between what's going on in new york andin new orleans and what's going on in omaha nebraska,but no matter what doctor uci saysveryone everywhere shld be operating under physicaseparation guidelines, reporting in washington on morgan right. >>and it s been a lovely evening time for another look at the forecast of a breeze to rodriguez joins us again haima presa. >>i pattern and a very lovely y, thanks to the double digit warming we actually wanted to write about where we should be for this time of year. so let's take a look at daytime highs because we were at or slightly below normal or most of the bay area, here's a live look outside in the east bay over berkeley andt's going to make were beautiful sunset out there this eveng, so head out and enjoy it. we also have a superman to look or 2 major tonight won that in ju a minute but stormtracker or tracking very cleaskies out their future cast is going to show that clearing trend continuing for most of tonight during the overnit hours shortly before sunrise we're going to notice
take a more tailored or a big country and there's a big differee between what's going on in new york andin new orleans and what's going on in omaha nebraska,but no matter what doctor uci saysveryone everywhere shld be operating under physicaseparation guidelines, reporting in washington on morgan right. >>and it s been a lovely evening time for another look at the forecast of a breeze to rodriguez joins us again haima presa. >>i pattern and a very lovely y, thanks to the double...
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57
Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 57
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because really nothing happened he just said some bad things to me and he did but nothing happened andin i'm okay seven that second experience she started to realize she didn't owe anyone anything. i came all the way uptown and she said yes. you came all the way of town and you will not even have an orgasm. thinking that she owed them to get out of there to have a clear sense of her own right to not have sex that she did not want to have a then the idea in the book of sexual citizenship that people have the right to have a sexual experience and also not to and other people have those same rights heterosexual men were socialized to be very attentive to their own right ofof pleasure and not so attentive to other people's rights and women were socialized to care about what they owed other people and to be less r certain of their own right to sexual determination including the right to say no. the point isn't to say it is her fault she should have a better idea of her own sexual citizenship but what kind of world are we building were a beautiful confident effective young woman feel so indebt
because really nothing happened he just said some bad things to me and he did but nothing happened andin i'm okay seven that second experience she started to realize she didn't owe anyone anything. i came all the way uptown and she said yes. you came all the way of town and you will not even have an orgasm. thinking that she owed them to get out of there to have a clear sense of her own right to not have sex that she did not want to have a then the idea in the book of sexual citizenship that...
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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eye 152
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agency and what i wasbo tweeting was doing exactly what i said -- getting the clinical labs in the game andin gethe academic labs in the game. so those are the kinds of things i was advocating from the outside. and i probably would've been working the same kin of issues from the inside. >> do you think that the fda made a mistake by not aowing private labs to stand up testing earlier, to be ableng to scale tesarli? >> yeah, i don't know where those decisions were made. my hunch is that the professional staff at the fdaan the career staff at the fda very much wanted to get these labs in the game. i know how they operate.ow i ow they think. and i'm hard-pressed to believe that the scientific staff didn't want to find way to get the academic labs and the clinical labs stood up earlier and y to develop a point-of-care diagnostic earlier. now, why that didn't happen, i don'know. >> look, i mean, there are some who speculate that it wasn't the professional staff at allul that's to but it's some of the political staff, and that there are some reports that the president, not wanting to hear how dire
agency and what i wasbo tweeting was doing exactly what i said -- getting the clinical labs in the game andin gethe academic labs in the game. so those are the kinds of things i was advocating from the outside. and i probably would've been working the same kin of issues from the inside. >> do you think that the fda made a mistake by not aowing private labs to stand up testing earlier, to be ableng to scale tesarli? >> yeah, i don't know where those decisions were made. my hunch is...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN
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some projections have the andine slowing between now june. these are all projections, just like they had projections as to how fast and far the disease would increase. those projections, as we know, were wrong -- they were not wrong, but we did not hit the projections because of our actions and what we did and what the federal government did. luckily, the disease did not go as high as they thought in the projections. you now have the corresponding question, how fast is the decline, how low is the decline? again, the variable is what we do. we change the projection on the way up and we can change it on the way down. but it is purely dependent on what we do. are we socially distancing? are we testing? how fast we reopen? how do we reopen? andanswer those questions you determine what the rate of decline is. done, can'twe are stay in the house anymore, let's reopen. just start business tomorrow, let's go. what happens? that is what happens. all of the progress we made is experts, or virtually all experts will say not only did the virus spread inc
some projections have the andine slowing between now june. these are all projections, just like they had projections as to how fast and far the disease would increase. those projections, as we know, were wrong -- they were not wrong, but we did not hit the projections because of our actions and what we did and what the federal government did. luckily, the disease did not go as high as they thought in the projections. you now have the corresponding question, how fast is the decline, how low is...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN
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that he andining his family decided to go up north and go skiing, which seemed like a safe activity because few people were going north. quote, the president only thing i can think of that was out of the ordinary is i touched a gasoline pump handle. i shared that story because what we know is that covid-19 can live on a steel surface for 72 hours. think about how many people touch a gas pump handle in the span of three days. that is why we do not want anyone on the road who does not have to be there. a couple of weeks ago, i'm going to give you an update on pp. a couple weeks ago -- on ppe. acouple weeks ago, we had days worth of ppe in south michigan hospitals. since then, michiganders and businesses have stepped up to donate ppe to their hospitals in their areas. her state procurement office has been working 24/7 -- our state procurement opposite has been working 20 47 to make sure we read -- we procure ppe. fema sent 800,095 masks today. worths point, a few days is a vast improvement from where we were a week ago. at, our goal is to have couple weeks worth of ppe. we are going to continu
that he andining his family decided to go up north and go skiing, which seemed like a safe activity because few people were going north. quote, the president only thing i can think of that was out of the ordinary is i touched a gasoline pump handle. i shared that story because what we know is that covid-19 can live on a steel surface for 72 hours. think about how many people touch a gas pump handle in the span of three days. that is why we do not want anyone on the road who does not have to be...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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and consumed are already starting to reopen so when someone says what if people hear chinese virus andine answer is we should blame china. we can't afford the luxury anymorein of nonjudging this towards our country with habits that kill millions of people everywhere. >> tucker: so everything you just heard is factually true, so naturally "the daily beast" which is run by the dumbest andc worst b people in the world sumd pt up this way, "bill maher goes on despicably racist rant against china over coronavirus." china, the most racist country in the world. china the country where the communistld party has now imposd tight new restrictions on any research and to have exactly coronavirus began. so in effect, our media are freely choosing to follow the directives of the chinese communist party. don't ask any questions that might make china look bad otherwise you are racist. that said, wet markets may not be the actual origin of the coronavirus. in fact, there is quite a bit of evidence the wet market is not where it came from. in it was funded in part from $83.7 million grant from the u.s. go
and consumed are already starting to reopen so when someone says what if people hear chinese virus andine answer is we should blame china. we can't afford the luxury anymorein of nonjudging this towards our country with habits that kill millions of people everywhere. >> tucker: so everything you just heard is factually true, so naturally "the daily beast" which is run by the dumbest andc worst b people in the world sumd pt up this way, "bill maher goes on despicably racist...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN
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touch, andin hopefully that will be something with telehealth that will make a big difference. each site will start by doing 200 tests a day. we will see where it goes from there. i think if the model is successful, which we think it will be, we would want to replicate this in other parts of the state. we are looking at places like ime date. miami-dade. it is exciting to move the ball forward on testing. i want to thank the urban league of broward. they have been in assisting and closing the gap. they are consistently rated very high for how they are using that money and the results they are getting. i commend the broward urban league for the work they are doing. they had a good impacts using state funds in this community. this is an example of doing even more, which we are very pleased about. i want to get an update. this is a health issue. the health crisis. that has been the number one thing that we have been dealing with day after day. if you look outside of that, we are now in an economic crisis as well because of the results of this national shutdown. it has thrown a lot
touch, andin hopefully that will be something with telehealth that will make a big difference. each site will start by doing 200 tests a day. we will see where it goes from there. i think if the model is successful, which we think it will be, we would want to replicate this in other parts of the state. we are looking at places like ime date. miami-dade. it is exciting to move the ball forward on testing. i want to thank the urban league of broward. they have been in assisting and closing the...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 96
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bringing things when he connected massachusetts responsibility to rogers with the state antebellum laws andin the latimer case . the attorney general in fact was also dismissive of and compared him to the black radical past. he rolled massachusetts and no basis for detaining rogers and booker t. washington of the tuscany institute and the most powerful black man in the country confirmed white insistence that rogers should return to north carolina for judgment. the school principal personally contacted north carolina's governor to advise him against giving in to the unreasonable demand of colored boston's tiny but vocal minority. in response, rogers attorneys much like the radicals of old compiled a writ of habeas corpus arguing north carolina improperly indicted rogers after he fled the state. in addition to his invocation of the black radical past trotter used his ties to fellow black bostonians to organize mass resistance for rogers extradition and hired them to serve as rogers attorney. during his four years at harvard from 1891 to 1895 trotter cultivated lifelong bonds with some of the le
bringing things when he connected massachusetts responsibility to rogers with the state antebellum laws andin the latimer case . the attorney general in fact was also dismissive of and compared him to the black radical past. he rolled massachusetts and no basis for detaining rogers and booker t. washington of the tuscany institute and the most powerful black man in the country confirmed white insistence that rogers should return to north carolina for judgment. the school principal personally...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 35
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to see ourselves not only as just our social identity but appreciate and see how we are interacting andin interrelated to bigger social self. that's what i'm saying. >> i was wondering when he mentioned the idea of curiosity that to me is a big thing because it kind of helps to counteract the fear of the unknown. if you are curious you are awkward yet when he talked about anxiety tomorrow for withdrawing inward. >> absolutely and you know all of human history these two processes have beeny going on simultaneously sometimes more and sometimes the other. one process is we are always putting her tentacles out and exploring what's out there and we are also periodically closing ranks and saying they are coming, they are coming, look out. let's get together. bring out the swords. both of those things are always going on and sometimes it's more of one and sometimes more of the other. >> how does the narrative in the narrative-based argument account for the phenomenon that huge amounts of people follow a single leader right off the cliff. is there a tipping point where the insanity stops like an
to see ourselves not only as just our social identity but appreciate and see how we are interacting andin interrelated to bigger social self. that's what i'm saying. >> i was wondering when he mentioned the idea of curiosity that to me is a big thing because it kind of helps to counteract the fear of the unknown. if you are curious you are awkward yet when he talked about anxiety tomorrow for withdrawing inward. >> absolutely and you know all of human history these two processes...
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Apr 18, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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. >> ranorter: you andin the media faced criticism for dly not going after this claim as aggressivelymaybe the claims against brett kavanaugh. we're looking at the man who looks like will be the democratic knoll knee. where does this go from here? >> i think we'll continue tee some atlets review this story, and then i think we have to wait and see what happens. notably, president trump has unlegations, though some athese him have not, and they've sent out tweetsnd other messages about them. but i think, you know, everything is really overshadowed by the coronavirus right now, so the question will be, as we move into the fall campaign, these allegations get more traction, are there more accusations at come out, out i there?ort of all that's because there's no real pattern for joe biden in terms of sexual assault right now. generallyou look for that pattern. we're not seeing that here. unfolds which will have a lot to do with, in fact, how the virus unfolds. >> reporter: lisa lerer of the "new york times" joining us tonight. thanks, lisa. >> thanks. >> woodruff: after the pandemic a for
. >> ranorter: you andin the media faced criticism for dly not going after this claim as aggressivelymaybe the claims against brett kavanaugh. we're looking at the man who looks like will be the democratic knoll knee. where does this go from here? >> i think we'll continue tee some atlets review this story, and then i think we have to wait and see what happens. notably, president trump has unlegations, though some athese him have not, and they've sent out tweetsnd other messages...
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86
Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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eye 86
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households and businesses through an incredibly difficult perii in whch they are facing losses of jobs andin and are struggling to meet every day expense force this is due to no fault of their own and no problems with theob market or their businesses. so congress has passed the cares act, that plus two earlier acts, we're seeing a fiscal response that is now a little bit larger than what congress did in response to the financial crisis in 200 now, if this continues, congress will have to do more, and they'rtalking about ackage. and the federal reserve response has been utterly heroic. my hat is off to my successor chair powell and his colleagues for what they've announced and the creativity of whathey're doing. >> reporter: in terms of what congress has done -- and i know you have been advising some of the democrats in congress -- the people we just heard who are struggling who completely lost their jobs, how confident aru e at most of them are going to be helped? >> well, i think most of them will be helped. eligibility for unemployment insurance is very broad. congress extended it toor sel
households and businesses through an incredibly difficult perii in whch they are facing losses of jobs andin and are struggling to meet every day expense force this is due to no fault of their own and no problems with theob market or their businesses. so congress has passed the cares act, that plus two earlier acts, we're seeing a fiscal response that is now a little bit larger than what congress did in response to the financial crisis in 200 now, if this continues, congress will have to do...
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87
Apr 3, 2020
04/20
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 87
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market with the realreal, a company worth over half $1 billion, with over 2300 employees, including andin-houseemologists brand authenticators, and 15 million members. the company rose 45% in its first day of trading after a spectacular three hundred million dollar ipo in june 2019. but since then, there have been bumps in the road, including having to withdraw the company's outlook for the full year of 2020 as a result of the coronavirus. you took the company public. huge, very successful ipo. tell me about that moment and what that felt like. >> it was actually just a fabulous day and fabulous moment and a critical milestone for the company. it raised our visibility, gave us the capital, and i feel good about being a public company. emily: at the high, the company has been worth $2.5 billion. cnbc did a big investigation about authentication of the company. and they say that they found hundreds of items that were fake. what went wrong there? julie: we are the only company that works incredibly hard in that market. we have great processes, incredible sophistication, a is stillteam, but it most
market with the realreal, a company worth over half $1 billion, with over 2300 employees, including andin-houseemologists brand authenticators, and 15 million members. the company rose 45% in its first day of trading after a spectacular three hundred million dollar ipo in june 2019. but since then, there have been bumps in the road, including having to withdraw the company's outlook for the full year of 2020 as a result of the coronavirus. you took the company public. huge, very successful ipo....
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Apr 18, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 61
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crow era should be most obvious expression of the confederate generation's response to a war defeat andin utter destruction of their slavery based social system. who grasps these four things about the civil war start toward gaining a general understanding of the real war, what i would call the war, when a lot of this has been in the books for a long time. we add to it. we understand more about it. could get the outlines of this for a long time and i'll just reiterate. not suggesting these are the only four large framing elements aware of.e should be i'm out of time. i can't go on and on. can but i won't. [laughter] to add as myave own coda to this. there's one other thing that i hope everyone will understand about the american civil war and that is, and jack talked about and john talked about this. i think we've all talked about it in one way or another. that however complicated you wark some part of the civil was, it was far more complicated than that. not nearly at this as long as jack. [laughter] best who really is the looking 92-year-old i know. thing in my many decades now of studyin
crow era should be most obvious expression of the confederate generation's response to a war defeat andin utter destruction of their slavery based social system. who grasps these four things about the civil war start toward gaining a general understanding of the real war, what i would call the war, when a lot of this has been in the books for a long time. we add to it. we understand more about it. could get the outlines of this for a long time and i'll just reiterate. not suggesting these are...
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99
Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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eye 99
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he sort of vas lated back andin fortuding a tweet at one point praising the transparency of president xi in china. >> it is an issue i'm sure we will be covering, it will come up in both campaigns. tamara keith and amy walter, good to talk to you both. >> good to talk to you. k >> woodruff: when you th essential workers during this pandemic, typically first resonders and hospital work come to mind. but a key function of society: picking up our garbage to keep our communities clean. pbs station wttw in chicago is of conversations whand" series individuals affected by the pandemic. w sanitatiker, sammy dattulo says his job is as essential as ever. >> the fire departments are worried about catching this, no, they are not going do that. o we can't stop, we have t our job. just like the first responders. we serv now we're protecting because if we g don'tet the garge, they got all this bacteria and you know, people can get infected by that. i take pride in my job, i love my job. i can't wait to get up inhe morning and go to work because i love my job. and what is great, the best part about
he sort of vas lated back andin fortuding a tweet at one point praising the transparency of president xi in china. >> it is an issue i'm sure we will be covering, it will come up in both campaigns. tamara keith and amy walter, good to talk to you both. >> good to talk to you. k >> woodruff: when you th essential workers during this pandemic, typically first resonders and hospital work come to mind. but a key function of society: picking up our garbage to keep our communities...
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293
Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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eye 293
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because the thing i feel most ssionate about is people taking this more seriously andin stin their houses. right now, any symptom that you have could be covid. f and not ak out or panic about that, because panic doesn't help your imystem. but to just stay inside. the amount of support that i've received, i mean just hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people. the emotion that comes up is just overwhelming gratitude and sound strange coming from a therapist, but recognizing that i matter more to people than maybe i usually think that i do. when you find out that y matter and you didn't necessarily conceive of yourself that way, i think that does alter, you know, how you show up in the world. my name is kat zwick and this is my brief but spectacul take on surviving covid-19. >> woodruff: kat, thank you so much for sharing. kat is no longer in isolation and while her health has from the virus. still recvering millio oviewers watched her video online and she's responded to many of your questions on our facebook page. and you can find all our brief but spectacular segments at pbs.org/newshou
because the thing i feel most ssionate about is people taking this more seriously andin stin their houses. right now, any symptom that you have could be covid. f and not ak out or panic about that, because panic doesn't help your imystem. but to just stay inside. the amount of support that i've received, i mean just hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people. the emotion that comes up is just overwhelming gratitude and sound strange coming from a therapist, but recognizing that i matter more...
151
151
Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 151
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he did not get a giant flow of money into the south and what you did was buy up southern railroads andin southern factors until the south became what woodward said, a colonial economy. the south was absorbed into the national economy as a second rate region and that lasted a long time and in the 30s franklin d roosevelt said the south is the number one economic problem of the nation. african-americans who were at the bottom of the poorest part of the nation suffered the most, of course, from this but a lot of white people also suffered economically whereas the well-to-do plantation merchant elite which had helped to overthrow reconstruction did pretty well for themselves but most southerners did not. >> so they were colonial but local elites were the one who made the decision, i think, to [inaudible] while they enjoyed power spirit right, because to really develop the south you would've had to crack the jim crow system and you would've had to allow african americans reelect economic opportunities and you would've had to have education for them and for poor whites and they did not want to
he did not get a giant flow of money into the south and what you did was buy up southern railroads andin southern factors until the south became what woodward said, a colonial economy. the south was absorbed into the national economy as a second rate region and that lasted a long time and in the 30s franklin d roosevelt said the south is the number one economic problem of the nation. african-americans who were at the bottom of the poorest part of the nation suffered the most, of course, from...
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79
Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 79
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we are seeing an arab world in different ways andin different places, saudi arabia , tony has got a version of it, struggling to find its way towards perhaps pluralism. >> i used that line when i was a spokesperson in baghdad because i would face their angry journalists and personally, i didn't think the in invasion of iraq was a good idea but i did my job really but as a spokesperson, and i was lucky, i never went with official talking points. and i hear somebody wants to put that. i engaged them as a person, as a human being. i listened and i responded, the academic and me allowed me to go into broader areas. not just say this is our policy for, and so to me as an era, the era in me detests the fact that most of the arab world is ruled by dictators. and they are having me identifies with the youth today that we see in the streets in beirut and in baghdad . what to get rid of this oppressive structure. but so i want to get rid of that.identify with that at the same time i understand that american soldiers in baghdad rubbed arabs the wrong way all over the region from baghdad to morocco. th
we are seeing an arab world in different ways andin different places, saudi arabia , tony has got a version of it, struggling to find its way towards perhaps pluralism. >> i used that line when i was a spokesperson in baghdad because i would face their angry journalists and personally, i didn't think the in invasion of iraq was a good idea but i did my job really but as a spokesperson, and i was lucky, i never went with official talking points. and i hear somebody wants to put that. i...
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61
Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 61
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washington had made the offer in january of '77 andin had invited him to his headquarters for a din der, and i think hamilton was convinced that this is definitely going to be well worth it. so our first proof of this agreement is washington's orders of march 1st, 1777, and it reads headquarters, morristown, alexander hamilton esquire is appointed aide-de-camp and you'll heard about scammel during the siege of george toumpt you can find transcripts like this let her on the army corps website. the torrential descriptions are at founders already archives.org. now a lot of authors will say this is all happening when hamilton is 22 years old. actually 20. michael newton and other scholars were able to prove that alexander hamilton was not -- >> were you helping washington as his chief of staff? could you have risen in battles as many times as he did? he's his youngest aide-de-camp and most are in the 30s. lots of aide-de-camp, a lot of turnover by the age of 32 it. a wonderful book by the name of arthur l arthur levkowitz. filled with frustrations and all kinds of peaks and valleys. washing
washington had made the offer in january of '77 andin had invited him to his headquarters for a din der, and i think hamilton was convinced that this is definitely going to be well worth it. so our first proof of this agreement is washington's orders of march 1st, 1777, and it reads headquarters, morristown, alexander hamilton esquire is appointed aide-de-camp and you'll heard about scammel during the siege of george toumpt you can find transcripts like this let her on the army corps website....