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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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they preferens said facts to anecdotes. and yet a lot of what we read in the paper is anecdote. i think anecdotes are great way to get color and texture, but need to be anchored in real numbers. i am not an a typical citizen. three out of four people think most of the information they receive about government finances are biased. the number one search query on our site is expenditures. people want to know what the money is going to. this is interesting -- 77% of people in the u.s. -- this was across democrats and republicans, bourbon and rural rural, 77 percent of people say civic education in the country is poor. interested to see if we can take the stuff we have created and let educators create civics classes for the 11th grade level, where most kids get this in school. this one was particularly disheartening. only 38% of people agreed with the idea that people generally agree on the facts even if they have different beliefs. the general notion is people that don't agree basically aren't looking at the same underlying data. people will say that they will change their belief in
they preferens said facts to anecdotes. and yet a lot of what we read in the paper is anecdote. i think anecdotes are great way to get color and texture, but need to be anchored in real numbers. i am not an a typical citizen. three out of four people think most of the information they receive about government finances are biased. the number one search query on our site is expenditures. people want to know what the money is going to. this is interesting -- 77% of people in the u.s. -- this was...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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all of the polling and anecdotal information suggests democratic and republican voters are farther aparton most issues than they have been at any point in our history. i think this reflects the difficulties with the public debate these days. has been a president source of some of his own problems. clearly, he is touch year and more concerned about his image than past presidents and more quick to leap to his self-defense at times when a greater degree of reserve might have served him better. audience, we radio are talking with james dobbins. his book is called "foreign service: five decades on the frontlines of american diplomacy." steve is joining us from michigan on the line for democrats. good morning. caller: i am a regular viewer. mr. dobbins is one of the more interesting guests you have had recently. i have read george kennan's memoirs and look forward to reading mr. dobbins' book. donald trump ran on issues with foreign leaders, the wall in mexico, and china's currency manipulation and trade problems. each time when he met them face to face, he would not bring them up. i wonder wh
all of the polling and anecdotal information suggests democratic and republican voters are farther aparton most issues than they have been at any point in our history. i think this reflects the difficulties with the public debate these days. has been a president source of some of his own problems. clearly, he is touch year and more concerned about his image than past presidents and more quick to leap to his self-defense at times when a greater degree of reserve might have served him better....
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Jul 4, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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i can sum it up in a little anecdote i think i tell in the book. once was invited to debate vietnam, about which i was ambivalent. i was sort of against but not all that much. in the 14th street union hall with a radical leftist. and i went there with one of my colleagues, the late marion maggard who had a wicked tongue. and we walked in and there were about, i don't know, 20 people scattered in this big union hall. and she said to me, do you realize every single person in this room is a tragedy to some family or other? [laughter] well, they took over america in the next 10 or 20 years, these people, those attitudes. it was a, you know, the maoists spoke of the long march through the institutions. and the long march of the institutions of anti-americanism resulted, in my opinion, first of all in the takeover of the democratic party by mcgovern and his followers and then, finally are, jumping ahead to the election of barack obama and also someone like de blasio as mayor of new york. i may offend some people here if i say that i have described what w
i can sum it up in a little anecdote i think i tell in the book. once was invited to debate vietnam, about which i was ambivalent. i was sort of against but not all that much. in the 14th street union hall with a radical leftist. and i went there with one of my colleagues, the late marion maggard who had a wicked tongue. and we walked in and there were about, i don't know, 20 people scattered in this big union hall. and she said to me, do you realize every single person in this room is a...
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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she was a mother, wonderful anecdotes talk about her, rocking a cradle with 1 foot and reading a book in sanskrit with the other. for emerson and their friendship was an important thing. they shared the interest in the outdoors, writing and reading and learning. a book like this described by emerson is one of the many ones we had in the collection, they have taken notes as they have gone through and books back and forth to different individuals, tells us a lot about using these books through history. when we are standing in the study, you have to look at the views, the landscape, from these windows in this room that back during the revolutionary period, the emerson family first looked out and saw the commotion over the northbridge, the shot heard around the world so they talk in your journal they are standing here looking out the window and think about that process, the house that is your home and witnessing the start of what would be a nature of the nation in the earliest roots. william emerson stayed at this house for five years, built at 1770, he and his wife moved in and lived her
she was a mother, wonderful anecdotes talk about her, rocking a cradle with 1 foot and reading a book in sanskrit with the other. for emerson and their friendship was an important thing. they shared the interest in the outdoors, writing and reading and learning. a book like this described by emerson is one of the many ones we had in the collection, they have taken notes as they have gone through and books back and forth to different individuals, tells us a lot about using these books through...
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
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lanes a trip down memory and it was satisfying to dredge up these anecdotes and stories and conclusions. certainly, looking back, felt it was five decades well spent. host: a quick call from james from denton, texas. you get the last word with james dobbins. good morning. caller: good morning. mr. dobbins, i think you are correct america was looking for a disruptor. much of the last cycle that wees -- several decades, have been on a steady course of both parties taking us in a direction where some of our big problems are getting bigger. i will give you an example. health care costs and entitlements are growing. i want to know. do you feel it is a sustainable course with our entitlements? mp or anyink tru other individual is likely to bring a serious debate to correct that? how serious do you think that problem is? host: james, thanks for the call from denton, texas. it is a serious question because we have a $20 trillion debt. debatewe have a national in the country which is polarized between those who do not want to raise taxes and those who do not want to reduce entitlements. and clea
lanes a trip down memory and it was satisfying to dredge up these anecdotes and stories and conclusions. certainly, looking back, felt it was five decades well spent. host: a quick call from james from denton, texas. you get the last word with james dobbins. good morning. caller: good morning. mr. dobbins, i think you are correct america was looking for a disruptor. much of the last cycle that wees -- several decades, have been on a steady course of both parties taking us in a direction where...
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Jul 10, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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just give you a little anecdote of his life, at one point he started having an affair with his cousin's wife, had two children with her and at the same time, two children with another woman and her 12 children total during his lifetime. he wrote about all of this in his autobiography. it's not something he was ashamed of if anything he was proud of it. so after these scandals, there was never really any reform. but at a healthy company, went something like this happens, you should reform the compliance and look at your code of conduct. you should think about ways that you can prevent this kind of thing from happening in the future. and that didn't happen at volkswagen. so, around the mid-20s euros euros, volkswagen -- there was one thing that they never managed to do and that was recapture volkswagen's glory in the united states and that bothered him. volkswagen decided they wanted to become the largest car company in the world and they couldn't do that without also being a force in the united states and by then, volkswagen had become just a niche brand of sending about as many cars as
just give you a little anecdote of his life, at one point he started having an affair with his cousin's wife, had two children with her and at the same time, two children with another woman and her 12 children total during his lifetime. he wrote about all of this in his autobiography. it's not something he was ashamed of if anything he was proud of it. so after these scandals, there was never really any reform. but at a healthy company, went something like this happens, you should reform the...
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go ahead sorry i know you said i mean i feel that yes you're going to be able to find a few anecdotes here and there you will but it is true that you will find there are certain colleges that will have certain bets but it's not true that all colleges are more the only school to take a definite position on this and say we will allow the free expression of every idea is the university of chicago where the president came out and said do not come here if you don't want to hear ideas you disagree with one school in all of north america no way holy disagree with it i mean you can look through i mean rice university brigham young university i mean all the over and over again you're going to see colleges that have certain points i mean universe of chicago is a kind of where milton friedman was not you know i'm i want to get back to this connection between though this denial of science and this denial of education because the dial gary's name wasn't one republican in congress who acknowledges climate change. we can there's something they're going to there's no denial of the scientific method p
go ahead sorry i know you said i mean i feel that yes you're going to be able to find a few anecdotes here and there you will but it is true that you will find there are certain colleges that will have certain bets but it's not true that all colleges are more the only school to take a definite position on this and say we will allow the free expression of every idea is the university of chicago where the president came out and said do not come here if you don't want to hear ideas you disagree...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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an anecdote will demonstrate this. during his senate career jim was asked by a constituent about his grandchildren. at the time he had 34. i might add that since then it's become 35. jim's interlocutor bet that jim could not name all of his grandchildren. in response jim began easily reciting the names of every one of them. once he had listed a good number of his grandchildren, the constituent conceded. amazed, the kentuckian asked, how do you remember all 34? jim replied, it's not hard when you pray for each of them every night. according to the senate historical office, jim is one of only three individuals to be both a member of a professional sports hall of fame and a u.s. senator. the others are basketball player bill bradley and kentucky's own happy chandler, who was commissioner of baseball. but jim is not just a baseball hall of famer. he's a hall of famer in life. a storied baseball career and more than three decades as a successful public official would be sufficient, but he is also a devoted husband, father,
an anecdote will demonstrate this. during his senate career jim was asked by a constituent about his grandchildren. at the time he had 34. i might add that since then it's become 35. jim's interlocutor bet that jim could not name all of his grandchildren. in response jim began easily reciting the names of every one of them. once he had listed a good number of his grandchildren, the constituent conceded. amazed, the kentuckian asked, how do you remember all 34? jim replied, it's not hard when...
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Jul 24, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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. >> over the years you've compiled the anecdotes and corporate television news and one of the things i chuckled about was writing up a situation in 1998 i believe and you talk to cbs news i believe the white house team maybe it was something a little more sinist sinister. take it from there and how is it is a tale for journalists, like the careful? >> legitimate leaks can be made by newsmakers and we shouldn't turn our nose up that we have to be careful about how you check it out before you report it. what you are talking about was during the monica lewinsky affair and at one point, the white house this was a story told at the time the white house wanted to get out a narrative but we didn't get to know the full story they were going to float this idea that the president did kiss monica lewinsky but that was all. they wanted to see if that would do enough to. post could they do that perfectly plausibly because of the anonymous source and because we were saying to the white house people their story was called false by the same people who planted it. we have to protect the source. if th
. >> over the years you've compiled the anecdotes and corporate television news and one of the things i chuckled about was writing up a situation in 1998 i believe and you talk to cbs news i believe the white house team maybe it was something a little more sinist sinister. take it from there and how is it is a tale for journalists, like the careful? >> legitimate leaks can be made by newsmakers and we shouldn't turn our nose up that we have to be careful about how you check it out...
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Jul 23, 2017
07/17
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BBCNEWS
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we all have anecdotal evidence that backs this up.ut of london, reasonable distances, the cities that are 200 miles away, because they cannot afford to live here and it is a boring, depressing consequence, quite aside that it is breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and our friends breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and ourfriends are breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and our friends are all leaving. i thought it would have an effect the housing market beyond london but it means demand goes up elsewhere. all these economic consequences are not always what might be foreseen. anyone who lives in london knows of people leaving for this reason. people in their 305 perhaps the largest group surveyed and they are found to be leaving. people used to live in their 305 because they believe the schools in london won't any good, now the schools in london a better than most and there is another reason why they have to leave. i was lucky enough to buy in london about 15 or more years ago and you feel guilty bec
we all have anecdotal evidence that backs this up.ut of london, reasonable distances, the cities that are 200 miles away, because they cannot afford to live here and it is a boring, depressing consequence, quite aside that it is breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and our friends breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and ourfriends are breaking us paul paying our rent and mortgages, and our friends are all leaving. i thought it would have an effect the housing market...
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Jul 17, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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resourcesre secondary from the late 19th century that have old anecdotes from people along the road, telling of the stories. there is a book called "the old pike," that is a great place for people to start looking for information. for my research, i use a lot of newspapers, a lot of period newspapers from communities along the road to see what advertisements are in there, see what they are recording, the visits by politicians and other celebrity travelers. i also use documents from some of the superintendents and people involved in the construction of the road. ledgers. tollhouse i look at maps, they are a wonderful resource. some of them show the multiple names of the road. i have been able to pull from many sources for this project. >> hillary miller, thank you for speaking with us. >> thank you. >> interested in american history our website. you can view our tv schedule, preview upcoming programs, and watch college lectures and more. american history tv. >> c-span, where history unfolds daily. 1979, c-span was created as a public service by america's public cable companies and is
resourcesre secondary from the late 19th century that have old anecdotes from people along the road, telling of the stories. there is a book called "the old pike," that is a great place for people to start looking for information. for my research, i use a lot of newspapers, a lot of period newspapers from communities along the road to see what advertisements are in there, see what they are recording, the visits by politicians and other celebrity travelers. i also use documents from...
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Jul 25, 2017
07/17
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so i want to talk to doctor dyson to answer the same question before we get into some of the anecdotes. so add to a marilyn talked about. >> it's great to be here with doctor angela and the other panel here this morning. i think about mass incarceration, we think about as the attorney mostly has said, the disproportionate concentration of people of color and what we now know as the prison industrial complex which means, local jails, federal jails, and prisons who warehouse disproportionately african-american and latina pedal people. so for nonviolent drug offenses that other people are told you go home and become a better johnny or jill, shanika and jamaal are sent to prison. there sent to prison because they're introduced to it in terms of detention in public school. look at the relationship between discipline when your children are kicked out the second and third grade, god knows even kindergarten. then they are no has a disciplinary problem then they go to detention, and then from detention docent to local detention centers. that becomes a feeding sell for a jail cell which becomes
so i want to talk to doctor dyson to answer the same question before we get into some of the anecdotes. so add to a marilyn talked about. >> it's great to be here with doctor angela and the other panel here this morning. i think about mass incarceration, we think about as the attorney mostly has said, the disproportionate concentration of people of color and what we now know as the prison industrial complex which means, local jails, federal jails, and prisons who warehouse...
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Jul 20, 2017
07/17
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WCAU
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the plan to ease restrictions on a drug anecdote that can save lives. >>> 6:24. if you plan to fly back from the u.s. to canada or mexico, you could face delays. the u.s. department of homeland security are looking at laptops. in march, authorities banned in cabin electronics because of concerns isis could hide bombs in laptops. >>> staying in the air now with a story that's trending this morning. >> you need to tell what you say you think about this. you have heard of snakes in a plane, this is feet on a plane. this picture from the flight started like this. yes, two empty seats beside me, excellent. until this happened. >> uh-oh. >> oh, my gosh! >> kicks her shoes off and puts them on the armrest. she was moving up and down one of the window sheets. >> is it ever okay to take your planes off? >> it's a woman. >> if you take your shoes off, that's the next level. that's putting your feet. >> if it's a guy, it matters if it's a man or women's feet. >> you are less grossed out if it's a woman? >> i'm grossed out either way. no thank you. >> either way, i have a pr
the plan to ease restrictions on a drug anecdote that can save lives. >>> 6:24. if you plan to fly back from the u.s. to canada or mexico, you could face delays. the u.s. department of homeland security are looking at laptops. in march, authorities banned in cabin electronics because of concerns isis could hide bombs in laptops. >>> staying in the air now with a story that's trending this morning. >> you need to tell what you say you think about this. you have heard of...
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Jul 23, 2017
07/17
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it struck me as an interesting anecdote. this point that you are making and there was some dramatic almonds that you were counting their when you talk with the bureau chief for someone way up and you say some corporations were off-limits because you've done a lot of reporting on corporate malfeasance and so one and you have left cbs and now you are at sinclair broadcasting you encounter any of that sort of thing? >> guest: not yet when i left cbs i didn't think i would work in the business at all ever again because i didn't see a place based on my friends and contacts that i could do the reporting i expected to be able to do that they would want and i would be unfettered to this opportunity came up out of the blue but they created the program. as for depending on the market. >> guest: i run my stories through the normal editorial process like it did at cbs. wasn't required but i did it. here we have a process with no one trying to shave my stories and nothing like cbs. they told you what facts they wanted on the show before
it struck me as an interesting anecdote. this point that you are making and there was some dramatic almonds that you were counting their when you talk with the bureau chief for someone way up and you say some corporations were off-limits because you've done a lot of reporting on corporate malfeasance and so one and you have left cbs and now you are at sinclair broadcasting you encounter any of that sort of thing? >> guest: not yet when i left cbs i didn't think i would work in the...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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and anecdotally place is just a takeover. >> but that is more appealing. >> is interesting. [laughter] so in any case when you have that idea isn't just wamo but uber trying to screw people go to the protest to say forgot i insulted somebody that was disabled for about was months ago. >> brands cannot rejuvenate the you need the right money and strategy. >> who does the ceo have to be? we had just gotten so many people fired. >> if there is ever a conversation to be a fly on the wall but explain one thing to meet food report to? travis kalanick. when is he coming back? i don't know. one of my responsibility is? that will not change when he comes back. >> and we are a very weak board please come. >> so the person that they want. >> and then to add that to his portfolio. >> one name that has been floated is the heir apparent. and run say complicated mission and the kind of person he would do that. >> no? no thank you. >> but there are different types of people to be in this situation would be like the former ceo of ford he has complex organizations better kn
and anecdotally place is just a takeover. >> but that is more appealing. >> is interesting. [laughter] so in any case when you have that idea isn't just wamo but uber trying to screw people go to the protest to say forgot i insulted somebody that was disabled for about was months ago. >> brands cannot rejuvenate the you need the right money and strategy. >> who does the ceo have to be? we had just gotten so many people fired. >> if there is ever a conversation to...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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BBCNEWS
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we hear details of people being shot by having long hair cuts, but this is all anecdotal.white house, and it is certainly not reassuring. yes. iam one it is certainly not reassuring. yes. i am one of fewjournalists that have got into north korea. and the country is a contradiction of itself. sometimes it seems not to know what it stands for and it wa nts, know what it stands for and it wants, but you have a leader who needs to show that he is strong to his people. and i often wonder if a lot of this is about hunger and support, as was threatening the west, as well. you could just as well be describing the united states. easter show that is strong to the people who support him. obviously, it is more democratic in america that north korea but this is concerning for north korea. —— he needs to show that he is strong to the people. not surprisingly story for me is that analysts are now saying that the flight data from the test on friday night show that the broader part of the united states are now in range. let's move on, or rather back to the front page of the times. that is
we hear details of people being shot by having long hair cuts, but this is all anecdotal.white house, and it is certainly not reassuring. yes. iam one it is certainly not reassuring. yes. i am one of fewjournalists that have got into north korea. and the country is a contradiction of itself. sometimes it seems not to know what it stands for and it wa nts, know what it stands for and it wants, but you have a leader who needs to show that he is strong to his people. and i often wonder if a lot of...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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if there's anecdotally, there's places where people just uber. >> for anecdotally i'm not going to take it anymore. >> that's more in our circle, that the more prevailing thing, i won't do that there's people out there that do area. >> my mom doesn't uber. she's not very technical. >> but she's aware. >> it's interesting. so, what in any case. this is a lot of question and we will get to q&a. you have that idea of this brand is the most important thing and it's not just way mode, is not this great bowling. there is this uber where they are trying to screw people going to theprotest. it feels very troubled . i forgot he insulted someone who was disabled, that was months ago. and it seems like can they sustain this much. >> black brands can rejuvenate if they do this right. you need the right people and right money and the right strategy. i'm not telling you anything you don't know. >> was the ceo, who doesn't have to be? doing for a cmo or cfo, head of engineering? we've gotten some of these people fired. ahead of some product, head of business, he's gone . >> if there's ever a conversat
if there's anecdotally, there's places where people just uber. >> for anecdotally i'm not going to take it anymore. >> that's more in our circle, that the more prevailing thing, i won't do that there's people out there that do area. >> my mom doesn't uber. she's not very technical. >> but she's aware. >> it's interesting. so, what in any case. this is a lot of question and we will get to q&a. you have that idea of this brand is the most important thing and it's...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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i thought this anecdote i found in the annals of congress was one of my favorite one so far. it's the beginning of the fourth congress, and they just reinstated the committee's , ands from the previous the speaker starts assigning people to it, and the previous chairman pretty much begs out of it and says it was too much work in the last congress, that he had been extremely hard employed last year and would therefore if agreeable to the house like to not be chairman of this committee. the request was denied. set, you have way too much expertise. we are through the thick of it. it's not going to be as many petitions. i will introduce data later on and discuss the data sets then. they have 77 petitions as a third congress and it went up to over 190 in the fourth. and, later on another committee member asked out and he's granted after the other committee members agree that his health has suffered as a consequence being on this committee claims. what does the petition look like? i realize in scrolling on my computer but not here, this is one of the many petitions what they actual
i thought this anecdote i found in the annals of congress was one of my favorite one so far. it's the beginning of the fourth congress, and they just reinstated the committee's , ands from the previous the speaker starts assigning people to it, and the previous chairman pretty much begs out of it and says it was too much work in the last congress, that he had been extremely hard employed last year and would therefore if agreeable to the house like to not be chairman of this committee. the...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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what we read in the paper is an adult -- say they say theyhat -- 80% prefer facts in relation to anecdotes. most people say most of the information they receive about finances is biased and the number one, search query on our website is expenditures. people want to know where the money is going to. 77% of people in the united states across democrats and republicans, urban and rural, people from all states participate, 77% say civic education in the country is poor. a guide is more interested in seeing if we could work with educators to take the stuff we've created and let them create civics classes for the left great level were most kids -- the 11th grade level where most kids get this in school. only 38% of people agreed with the idea that people generally agree on the fact they even if they have different beliefs. the general notion is people who do not agree basically are not looking at the same underlying data. people will say that they will change their belief in evidence of information. , poor, high rich school graduates, none high say we 88% of people needed to use the same data to
what we read in the paper is an adult -- say they say theyhat -- 80% prefer facts in relation to anecdotes. most people say most of the information they receive about finances is biased and the number one, search query on our website is expenditures. people want to know where the money is going to. 77% of people in the united states across democrats and republicans, urban and rural, people from all states participate, 77% say civic education in the country is poor. a guide is more interested in...
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Jul 19, 2017
07/17
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CNNW
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then you have an anecdote here about election night and what happened. the book that basically chris christie said, i've just spoken to president obama, when it was clear trump was going to win. he's going to call my cell phone, and i'm going to hand it to you, mr. president-elect, to talk to president obama. trump did not like that. >> two problems. trump did not like people stealing his thunder and christie was trying to interject himself in the most important moment in his life. so as a number of people there explained to me, trump exploded at christie and that really was the moment when christie began to drift out of trump's inner orbit. >> chris christie disputes this, by the way. do we have this, guys? listen to what governor chris christie has said about this moment. >> the book is wrong fundamentally in that there was no call from president obama that evening to me. i didn't speak with the president that night at all. >> your response? >> no disagreement there. all i said was he tried to arrange the call. >> but didn't you say chris christie said
then you have an anecdote here about election night and what happened. the book that basically chris christie said, i've just spoken to president obama, when it was clear trump was going to win. he's going to call my cell phone, and i'm going to hand it to you, mr. president-elect, to talk to president obama. trump did not like that. >> two problems. trump did not like people stealing his thunder and christie was trying to interject himself in the most important moment in his life. so as...
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Jul 6, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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i was not going to start out with this anecdote but when i heard the very strong round of applause for and colder, i thought i would begin -- for ann coulter, i thought i would begin with a brief anecdote about ann who i've known for many, many years. and uii might not be here tonight if ann had not made a different decision careerwise
i was not going to start out with this anecdote but when i heard the very strong round of applause for and colder, i thought i would begin -- for ann coulter, i thought i would begin with a brief anecdote about ann who i've known for many, many years. and uii might not be here tonight if ann had not made a different decision careerwise
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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so i want to talk to doctor dyson to answer the same question, before we get into some of the anecdotesso i want you to add to what marilyn talked about. michael: it is great to be here with doctor angela and the other s on the panel this morning. when we think about mass incarceration, we think about as said, thest disproportionate concentration of people of color and what we now know as the prison industrial complex which means, local jails, federal jails, and prisons who warehouse disproportionately african-american and latina o people. that means for nonviolent drug offenses that other people are told you go home and become a better johnny or jill, shanika and jamaal are sent to prison. they are sent to prison because they are introduced to it in terms of detention in public school. look at the relationship between discipline when your children are kicked out in the second or third grade, god knows, even kindergarten. then they are known as a disciplinary problem, then they could do detention and then they are sent from detention to local detention centers and it becomes cell,ing ce
so i want to talk to doctor dyson to answer the same question, before we get into some of the anecdotesso i want you to add to what marilyn talked about. michael: it is great to be here with doctor angela and the other s on the panel this morning. when we think about mass incarceration, we think about as said, thest disproportionate concentration of people of color and what we now know as the prison industrial complex which means, local jails, federal jails, and prisons who warehouse...
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Jul 7, 2017
07/17
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susan collins chose to share one specific anecdote of what she is hearing.o say she's hearing stand strong, we don't like this bill. >> yeah. that's what she said at the fourth of july parade. said i'm hearing from my people stay strong. and again, itgoes to show that it might be in her interests with. she was cut out with a lot middle eastings crafting the legislation. if you end up getting to that more bipartisan, all of a sudden susan collins takes center stage and they might want to run for governor of maine, too, so she has her political ear to the ground, as well. >> i saw this week interest groups basically because paul ryan and mitch mcpublcaionnell begging don't get involved, and for the most part, they backed off until this week. heritage action came out against. >> but there is one reason to be kind of bullish for mitch mcconnell and the republicans is you end up hearing from allies they are making the message this is our opportunity. you want a lot of these goodies, the tax cuts and conservative reforms, you have to vote for us. because all of a
susan collins chose to share one specific anecdote of what she is hearing.o say she's hearing stand strong, we don't like this bill. >> yeah. that's what she said at the fourth of july parade. said i'm hearing from my people stay strong. and again, itgoes to show that it might be in her interests with. she was cut out with a lot middle eastings crafting the legislation. if you end up getting to that more bipartisan, all of a sudden susan collins takes center stage and they might want to...
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Jul 14, 2017
07/17
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KQED
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>> when i started we used to call it quotes, votes and anecdotes.t is gathering public information to tell a story about your opponent. so we look at public sources, we look at everything from votes to tax records to personal stories that you can find out about someone. >> woodruff: tim miller, what would you add to that? >> i think that's right. i call it full information awareness. you want to know everything you can about your opponent, everything they've ever said, y y way they've ever made money, any way they've ever spent money so that you can use it to your advantage in the campaign and so voters know their entire record. >> woodruff: christina reynolds, anything goes? anything about their medical records, their personal life? >> no. i mean, first and foremost -- we used to have a rule that said if you can cite it, you can write it. uru need a publicly available source for something to be credible in the news or ads. second of all, if you go into things like medical records and things like that, then you start getting into worrying about blow
>> when i started we used to call it quotes, votes and anecdotes.t is gathering public information to tell a story about your opponent. so we look at public sources, we look at everything from votes to tax records to personal stories that you can find out about someone. >> woodruff: tim miller, what would you add to that? >> i think that's right. i call it full information awareness. you want to know everything you can about your opponent, everything they've ever said, y y way...
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Jul 6, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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i was not going to start out with this anecdote but when i strong round of applause for and colder, i thought i would begin -- for ann coulter, i thought i would begin with a brief anecdote about ann who i've known for many, many years. and ui might not be here tonight if ann had not made a different decision careerwise than she made. when i was at the institute for justice many of you probably know that ann was a lawyer before she became the celebrity and commentator that she is today. and she applied for a position at the institute for justice. we offered her a position working as an attorney for i.j. and she turned us down. and the reason she turned us down was that washington d.c. had a dump it in anti-smoking ordinance and she was wondering where the heck -- ordinance. and she was wondering where the heck she would be smoking. we hired a different lawyer and that lawyer and i organized a group of parents and south-central los angeles. to fight for school choice, to file a lawsuit arguing that the quality of education in south-central los angeles was so appalling that it violated
i was not going to start out with this anecdote but when i strong round of applause for and colder, i thought i would begin -- for ann coulter, i thought i would begin with a brief anecdote about ann who i've known for many, many years. and ui might not be here tonight if ann had not made a different decision careerwise than she made. when i was at the institute for justice many of you probably know that ann was a lawyer before she became the celebrity and commentator that she is today. and she...
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Jul 14, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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you'll get these anecdotes, but not enough to sink your teeth into until three weeks from now when the earnings reports really come out and then you'll get the proof as to whether it's been overdone i think it has been overdone and tom, that may be what i'm hearing from you obviously, amazon is having an effect, we can't deny that, but the beat down this sector has had is over the top. >> that's the case, sirott, when we showed on "power lunch," some of these stocks, target is selling at 0.3 times sale, jcpenney, 0.1 times sale >> that's like three plugs for "power lunch," by the way. >> that's my -- >> cutting you off here. >> that's my pay >> if you look at it and look at the negative sentiment -- behavioral finance 101 will tell you, let's look at the sector. but you also look at, what is happening with being amazon. if you have a high-quality brand or a limited brands near victoria's secret and other things you can actually sell and you don't have to actually go through amazon, you will survive. and i think the opportunity today, as jim has said, you've got to wait it out >> are th
you'll get these anecdotes, but not enough to sink your teeth into until three weeks from now when the earnings reports really come out and then you'll get the proof as to whether it's been overdone i think it has been overdone and tom, that may be what i'm hearing from you obviously, amazon is having an effect, we can't deny that, but the beat down this sector has had is over the top. >> that's the case, sirott, when we showed on "power lunch," some of these stocks, target is...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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just give you a little little anecdote out of his life, yet it will push started having an affair with his cousins wife. had two children with her and at the same time to children with another woman. and this is out of 12 children total during his lifetime. and he wrote about all this in his autobiography. it's not something he was ashamed of. if anything, he was proud of it. so after the scandals, there was never really any reform. at a healthy company was something like this happens you should reform the compliance. you should look at your code of conduct. you should think about ways that you can fit this kind of thinking happening in the future. and that didn't happen at volkswagen. so around the mid to thousands -- 2000s, there's one thing that he never managed to do during his tenure and that was to recapture volkswagens glory in the united states. and that bothered him around the mid-2000s, volkswagen decided it wanted to become the largest car company in the world. they couldn't do that without also being a force in the united states. and by then actually volkswagen had become r
just give you a little little anecdote out of his life, yet it will push started having an affair with his cousins wife. had two children with her and at the same time to children with another woman. and this is out of 12 children total during his lifetime. and he wrote about all this in his autobiography. it's not something he was ashamed of. if anything, he was proud of it. so after the scandals, there was never really any reform. at a healthy company was something like this happens you...
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Jul 13, 2017
07/17
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>> i can only speak anecdotally. there are some counties in our state that have a substantial shortage of those times of professionals, including drug counsellors, that's a challenge we ask. >> yes, quick. >> and it various by geology in southwest virginia. congressman griffith represents a very insufficient shortage of counsellors. >> urban areas yes. rural areas, no. we have a community mental health network we're proud of. again, in the rural areas. >> thank you. director boss. >> rhode island shares in the struggle with the number of psychiatrists to meet the demand. i would say there is a shortage. >> thank you. the other issue is medication treatment, director boss, with regard to that in pennsylvania had some data that says that people who are on m.a.t. may be getting some box own or something. the question is are they getting treatment. i wonder if people actually review that. i have heard the treatment is no more than a nurse the waiting room saying, "how are you doing today," and they call it group therapy,
>> i can only speak anecdotally. there are some counties in our state that have a substantial shortage of those times of professionals, including drug counsellors, that's a challenge we ask. >> yes, quick. >> and it various by geology in southwest virginia. congressman griffith represents a very insufficient shortage of counsellors. >> urban areas yes. rural areas, no. we have a community mental health network we're proud of. again, in the rural areas. >> thank...
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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what we read in the paper is an adult -- say they say theyhat -- 80% prefer facts in relation to anecdotes. most people say most of the information they receive about finances is biased and the number one, search query on our website is expenditures. people want to know where the money is going to. 77% of people in the united states across democrats and republicans, urban and rural, people from all states participate, 77% say civic education in the country is poor. a guide is more interested in seeing if we could work with educators to take the stuff we've created and let them create civics classes for the left great level were most kids -- the 11th grade level where most kids get this in school. only 38% of people agreed with the idea that people generally agree on the fact they even if they have different beliefs. the general notion is people who do not agree basically are not looking at the same underlying data. people will say that they will change their belief in evidence of information. , poor, high rich school graduates, none high say we 88% of people needed to use the same data to
what we read in the paper is an adult -- say they say theyhat -- 80% prefer facts in relation to anecdotes. most people say most of the information they receive about finances is biased and the number one, search query on our website is expenditures. people want to know where the money is going to. 77% of people in the united states across democrats and republicans, urban and rural, people from all states participate, 77% say civic education in the country is poor. a guide is more interested in...
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Jul 24, 2017
07/17
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WRC
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. >> these are the kind of fast friendships, chance encounters and anecdotes that many of you will be able to hold on showing how much he was truly embraced. many of you are sharing your thoughts and your memories online as well. we have seen the word legend and icon over and over again. more than a few of you said you watched vance your whole lives. it seems everyone agrees washingtonian. >> i think so many people are saying that vance felt like family. and that they felt that even though i hadn't met him personally, i knew him. you did know him. because who he was and the stories that he told and the person that he was every single day here at nbc washington was who he was. he was authentic and real and true to himself. that really shown through in everything he did. that's why people felt so close to him. people loved him. that's because he loved people. >> you got exactly what you thought you were getting. >> for sure. he not only was a magnetic personality. but he was so smart and thought provoking and he could talk about just about any issue and you'd feel smarter from having he
. >> these are the kind of fast friendships, chance encounters and anecdotes that many of you will be able to hold on showing how much he was truly embraced. many of you are sharing your thoughts and your memories online as well. we have seen the word legend and icon over and over again. more than a few of you said you watched vance your whole lives. it seems everyone agrees washingtonian. >> i think so many people are saying that vance felt like family. and that they felt that even...
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Jul 27, 2017
07/17
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KNTV
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. >> reporter: it seems couples stepping up to the plate to celebrate victory is a real life anecdotalhenomenon according to dr. melissa dennis. so after 108 years of sorrow, the cubs are really bringing joy to this city. >> the cubs are bringing joy, and the joy just keeps coming. >> reporter: the baby bump also apparently visited boston in the wake of the red sox win. ♪ we're all babies >> reporter: and the nfl's even created the super bowl babies choir, with kids the stork sent winning cities nine months after their big victories. phil and jackie young of iowa honeymooned at wrigley field and have named their newborn daughter ivy for the fabled foliage in the outfield. >> i'd love to have another boom of world series babies this year and then maybe next year and the year after that. >> reporter: sounds like some cubs fans want to field their own team. kevin tibbles, nbc news, chicago. >> how's that for team spirit? >>> we appreciate you spending part of your evening with us. that is "nightly news" for this wednesday night. i'm lester holt. for all of us at nbc news, thank you for wa
. >> reporter: it seems couples stepping up to the plate to celebrate victory is a real life anecdotalhenomenon according to dr. melissa dennis. so after 108 years of sorrow, the cubs are really bringing joy to this city. >> the cubs are bringing joy, and the joy just keeps coming. >> reporter: the baby bump also apparently visited boston in the wake of the red sox win. ♪ we're all babies >> reporter: and the nfl's even created the super bowl babies choir, with kids...
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Jul 4, 2017
07/17
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KNTV
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there's a lot of anecdotal information but we don't have the science behind it because it's a schedule one drug. >> reporter: back at the holistic, a growing number of pet owners are willing to give an alternative to prescription drugs a try. >> we use for headaches, for cancer, for pain. why not dogs? >> reporter: jean elle, nbc bay area news. >> i think i'll keep them in and turn the tv on. >>> what about the fog? >> the fog is going to be an issue in san francisco. inland we are going to see in spots like san jose all clear skies. what we are seeing right now, the temperature trend for santa clara goes into the low 80s by this afternoon so great grilling weather and spending time outside. we'll talk about what's ahead next. >>> no metering lights on right now at the bay bridge and i have a feeling it's probably going to stay that way. yesterday they didn't turn on until about maybe 10:00. so we'll see how the morning commute bears out. so far looking good. >>> and completely and totally unapologetic. two days after he was spotted on the state-run beach in the m middle of a governmen
there's a lot of anecdotal information but we don't have the science behind it because it's a schedule one drug. >> reporter: back at the holistic, a growing number of pet owners are willing to give an alternative to prescription drugs a try. >> we use for headaches, for cancer, for pain. why not dogs? >> reporter: jean elle, nbc bay area news. >> i think i'll keep them in and turn the tv on. >>> what about the fog? >> the fog is going to be an issue in...
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Jul 18, 2017
07/17
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KTVU
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. >> reporter: but it's not just anecdotal. in march, city workers found 13,333 used syringes on the street. the previous march the number was less than 3,000. >> but as the city is developing, we're seeing a lot more of these problems coming in to the heart of the city. we're out there cleaning them up. >> reporter: it could be worse. about 11,000 needles a month end up in these disposal boxes scattered around the city. needles that might otherwise end up on the street like these. this heroin user we found in front of the main library says he's been shooting up since last year in what's become a national opioid epidemic. >> i break the point off right away and stick it in the dirt or something. i stomp it down, put it in the can, put it in the trash, flush the toilet. >> reporter: another heroin user says he never leaves his used needles on the ground. >> i think the wrong people are disposing of drugs in the wrong way and they're disposing of their drug equipment in the wrong way. i find crack laying on the street. i find nee
. >> reporter: but it's not just anecdotal. in march, city workers found 13,333 used syringes on the street. the previous march the number was less than 3,000. >> but as the city is developing, we're seeing a lot more of these problems coming in to the heart of the city. we're out there cleaning them up. >> reporter: it could be worse. about 11,000 needles a month end up in these disposal boxes scattered around the city. needles that might otherwise end up on the street like...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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KNTV
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again, another anecdote from my brother, it got him out of the fields.e came out of the fields, and he went to cet in salinas, and he got his training there. and when he became part of the at&t company in salinas, we were so proud as a family because he was out of the fields, and now he's working in an office setting. and that wouldn't have happened without the cet training. chris: exactly. leticia: yeah, and a lot of the miracles happen within the organization. a lot of--a lot of what's happening is that we also have a wonderful relationship with our community partners. we have a wonderful relationship with workforce development, whether it be employers letting us know exactly what it is that they're looking for. because we can have marvelous programs, but they might not be relevant to the workforce, and that's key to what we've done since 1967, which is when the valley of the heart's delight began to change. we knew that we needed to advocate and be there for our community in the sense where when companies, huge companies, whether it was electronic com
again, another anecdote from my brother, it got him out of the fields.e came out of the fields, and he went to cet in salinas, and he got his training there. and when he became part of the at&t company in salinas, we were so proud as a family because he was out of the fields, and now he's working in an office setting. and that wouldn't have happened without the cet training. chris: exactly. leticia: yeah, and a lot of the miracles happen within the organization. a lot of--a lot of what's...
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Jul 22, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 75
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there is anecdotal systems. she took her in, she got better.he went on to get married, have kids, this is where she disappears. there are a lot of the sets were sent to paris -- see the little on that? he would put his own thing on and then he would grab a couple other guys so he would have multiple adult men making these accusations. then there is the parallel one that he has written for abigail williams. it is rebecca nurse, elizabeth proctor, john proctor, susannah martin. there are some others where it is just her or just him. we assume there are a lot more these pairs. we had a very nice paternalistic pat on the head. they were telling them something about ancestors that we didn't know. basically, it was good. that same conference -- dick black, john did not like it. he told them that they had a big idea. it was like how dare you criticize them? i am sitting there with wrong data. they cherry pick the data. that was him to be important. john did not like that, but i got a nice paternalistic pat on the head. when you are looking for pattern
there is anecdotal systems. she took her in, she got better.he went on to get married, have kids, this is where she disappears. there are a lot of the sets were sent to paris -- see the little on that? he would put his own thing on and then he would grab a couple other guys so he would have multiple adult men making these accusations. then there is the parallel one that he has written for abigail williams. it is rebecca nurse, elizabeth proctor, john proctor, susannah martin. there are some...
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Jul 18, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 59
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we are starting to your anecdote that offerings are kind of fill in some of that space and sort of crowd funding with the lowercase rather than regulation to broaden its meaning on that. people are seeing articles being written in firms and consultants out there talking to people about sort of crowd funding through regulation may, so that may be another recognition. as you mentioned, our division of economic risk analysis has statistics on that and we're starting to analyze data and look at potential ways that we can either make it easier or increase the threshold. >> congress recently created the small business created the small business advocate at the sec. it's a little different, but it's modeled on that. when do you think you all are going to be able to stand that? show less text 00:35:39 >> my hope is by the end of the year. so congress authorized it last year, but we had to go through some hoops on the appropriation side, so it requires inside the beltway recovery programming. we just recently got approval from the appropriators to do that, to try to stand at the office, so the ne
we are starting to your anecdote that offerings are kind of fill in some of that space and sort of crowd funding with the lowercase rather than regulation to broaden its meaning on that. people are seeing articles being written in firms and consultants out there talking to people about sort of crowd funding through regulation may, so that may be another recognition. as you mentioned, our division of economic risk analysis has statistics on that and we're starting to analyze data and look at...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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she was a mother, some wonderful anecdotes talk about her where she would be rocking a crater with one foot in reading a book in sanskrit with the other. so for emerson their friendship was really an important thing. they share the intellectualism, the interest in the outdoors, writing in learning and reading. so a book like this where it is inscribed emerson is one of the many ones way up in the collection and many books a little notes of people have lived here have taken little notes as they've gone through a given the books back and forth to different individuals. it's a collection that tells us a lot about the people who touched and use these books through history. when we're standing in the study first you have to look at at the view. this is really about the landscape as well. it was from these windows up in this room that back in the revolutionary time the families, the emerson family, first looked out and saw all the commotion over at the northbridge with a shot heard round the world. they talk about in the journals that their stand here looking out the window. just think about
she was a mother, some wonderful anecdotes talk about her where she would be rocking a crater with one foot in reading a book in sanskrit with the other. so for emerson their friendship was really an important thing. they share the intellectualism, the interest in the outdoors, writing in learning and reading. so a book like this where it is inscribed emerson is one of the many ones way up in the collection and many books a little notes of people have lived here have taken little notes as...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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midcap 400 is down 42 and the s&p 600 is down 46 we have had a decimation as everyone knows it's anecdotal and no way to model it people who were quite bullish are buying and you need that you need that. >> i think the big names in the space, the exxons, chevrons, the fact is those are not cheap companies, right they're not really making the kind of investment in their own business some of the others have come too far too fast which is the reason i prefer to play with a more broad sector in the energy etf than to go and reach for the companies that would be safe because they've paid a big dividend that they can't sustain. i take a look at this, it seems like a good setup. >>> for everything "options action", check out our website, optionsaction.cnbc.com here's what's coming up next. >>> plus, it's the question every "options action" fan wants to know -- >> how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. >> no, not that question how do i use options to figure out how much a stock will move on erpgs professor co will answer that. tweet us your questio question @options
midcap 400 is down 42 and the s&p 600 is down 46 we have had a decimation as everyone knows it's anecdotal and no way to model it people who were quite bullish are buying and you need that you need that. >> i think the big names in the space, the exxons, chevrons, the fact is those are not cheap companies, right they're not really making the kind of investment in their own business some of the others have come too far too fast which is the reason i prefer to play with a more broad...