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Oct 12, 2024
10/24
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not because i can make the book about everybody because it has to be intelligible for everybody. and like that notion of intelligibility requires more stretching maybe than you think. so they were very helpful for for me for that. i also think that notion of intelligibility is important for one of the core arguments in your book is that freedom requires. and so i'm wondering if you can talk a little bit about the role solidarity in freedom. you know, thanks for solidarity. solidarity comes as as the last in the of the fight forms, but it kind of circles around to embrace all of the others, you know, sovereignty is is is about the beginning of life. for me, unpredictability is about the early stages of life and dealing with the predictability, the physical world and dealing with to predict what, i think of as the predictive fine power of the digital world and mobility is kind of a is about getting out into the world and you know what what institutions do we have to have in place so people can rebel right? solidarity circles back on all those earlier forms because excuse me, withou
not because i can make the book about everybody because it has to be intelligible for everybody. and like that notion of intelligibility requires more stretching maybe than you think. so they were very helpful for for me for that. i also think that notion of intelligibility is important for one of the core arguments in your book is that freedom requires. and so i'm wondering if you can talk a little bit about the role solidarity in freedom. you know, thanks for solidarity. solidarity comes as...
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Oct 29, 2024
10/24
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because of some - is in part because of some state _ is in part because of some state including _ isncluding some key. is in part because of some - state including some key swing states— state including some key swing states have _ state including some key swing states have actually _ state including some key swing states have actually changed i states have actually changed levels — states have actually changed levels since _ states have actually changed levels since the _ states have actually changed levels since the last - states have actually changed levels since the last electionj levels since the last election to try— levels since the last election to try and _ levels since the last election to try and make _ levels since the last election to try and make things - levels since the last election to try and make things more streamlined. _ to try and make things more streamlined. they— to try and make things more streamlined. they are - to try and make things more . streamlined. they are allowing more _ streamlined. they are allowing more time _ streamlined. they are allowing more
because of some - is in part because of some state _ is in part because of some state including _ isncluding some key. is in part because of some - state including some key swing states— state including some key swing states have _ state including some key swing states have actually _ state including some key swing states have actually changed i states have actually changed levels — states have actually changed levels since _ states have actually changed levels since the _ states have...
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Oct 14, 2024
10/24
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at america and loving her more because she is flawed, not despite those flaws, because it reminds me, i guess, of my own journey is we all have our scars and we become a better person if we acknowledge it and make a commitment to be better, not to just pretend it never existed at all. just don't look at it. but donald trump came down that elevator 2015. speaking of ugly scars, you see that as something just to ride you. you were early breaking point and had been emerging a while for me because, look, a lot of people, the universality of classic conservatism, as i call it now, i still have a deep, passionate love for that. when i heard jack kemp speak about about policies that addressed poor, that spoke to that mexican catholic poor kid in me where i could dedicate my life. and there somebody who cared about it that talked about ownership and the human spirit and the value of lifting up all like i. i didn't just believe that i passionately committed my life to it. and, and that sorry. i kind of went down rabbit hole there because i really that's what still drives me is whether it whet
at america and loving her more because she is flawed, not despite those flaws, because it reminds me, i guess, of my own journey is we all have our scars and we become a better person if we acknowledge it and make a commitment to be better, not to just pretend it never existed at all. just don't look at it. but donald trump came down that elevator 2015. speaking of ugly scars, you see that as something just to ride you. you were early breaking point and had been emerging a while for me because,...
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Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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BELARUSTV
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and hammer throw, did everything better than anyone else, because i believe that if you start doing something, you have to go all the way, probably that's why i'm sitting in front of you now and will answer your questions. vladislav, you didn't finish in a minute, this only means that you have something to tell the children, so we'll do that. we have 100 participants in the studio, each with their own question, let's see how long you can answer. are you ready? yes. then let's begin. please, whoever is ready to ask a question, raise your hand. good afternoon, i have a question, you were introduced as a fashion expert, aren't you a stylist, what's the difference between a fashion expert and a stylist, oh, you're so good, i think you've already won, this is the best question, no one has ever asked this, so i'll explain, and at first i was a hairdresser, a hairdresser is, well, let 's be honest, it's a lower level, the next level, you are a hairdresser and you style clothes, that is, you not only cut hair on the set, you style hair, but you also decide what kind of belt there will be, what kind o
and hammer throw, did everything better than anyone else, because i believe that if you start doing something, you have to go all the way, probably that's why i'm sitting in front of you now and will answer your questions. vladislav, you didn't finish in a minute, this only means that you have something to tell the children, so we'll do that. we have 100 participants in the studio, each with their own question, let's see how long you can answer. are you ready? yes. then let's begin. please,...
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Oct 24, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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but we can't because not legal. so, you know and i but also i don't i don't wish violence on people you know, the people that like that that destroy want to destroy else that says more about them than it does about so just you have to grow a thick skin and it takes right into our next question you know like you talked about your child rearing and you spoke about up as a christian and what ways do that, how you responded to some of the criticism that you received along the way. so grew up southern baptist in the bible belt and but i was my my mom was a sunday school teacher. and but we were raised that god is love, love thy, neighbor as thyself. be a good you help those need that's that's the type christian that i was raised to be so in my speech at that the library board in my original speech what i think have really made them mad i said that i was that god is love. but as an adult i realized that what our community means that god is love only. if you if you have the same political beliefs as they like that they sti
but we can't because not legal. so, you know and i but also i don't i don't wish violence on people you know, the people that like that that destroy want to destroy else that says more about them than it does about so just you have to grow a thick skin and it takes right into our next question you know like you talked about your child rearing and you spoke about up as a christian and what ways do that, how you responded to some of the criticism that you received along the way. so grew up...
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you said that and he's not defending because the left instead of going to the founded in because he, they hate him to. i think that's not how i think they should defend email that particular issue because there is actually a position which is close to the goals position, which is uh, fads having ended up in a hole in the i mean some that defend you are going to go to what we desire about the, you know, no, there's any further humanity in your weapons, but he's a rough ma. all these are a file jets getting the children in gaza. some of them is a french, the components being used. i want to go back to the holocaust. uh but uh it was this day in 1962. the dress you needed was to have uh remove themselves from a cuba in return for the united states. removing this from turkey. any possibility the britain and the united states and france will remove that long range weaponry from ukraine. any possibility that negotiations on the table that they could somehow avoid the retaliatory russian strike that he's being threatened by a peruvian, if written and going to be fronts gets its way. it allo
you said that and he's not defending because the left instead of going to the founded in because he, they hate him to. i think that's not how i think they should defend email that particular issue because there is actually a position which is close to the goals position, which is uh, fads having ended up in a hole in the i mean some that defend you are going to go to what we desire about the, you know, no, there's any further humanity in your weapons, but he's a rough ma. all these are a file...
0
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Oct 30, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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but because i feel i have to. people have told me that i have to stand for election. so i look at that and i go, hmm, what have these people done to feel like they were compelled to stand for election. so then i go back to 1765 and i find that the alliances almost, all of whom go on to become loyalists or leaders of the sons of liberty in new york. james alonso junior was called the oracle of the sons of liberty. they helped organize protests to our parliament and secure repeal of the stamp act. james delancy strikes up a friendship with the marcus of rockingham, who is the prime minister. when the stamp act is repealed and eight and on the 8th of november 16 five. so about a week after, the stop box meant to be introduced. he writes rockingham and he proposes the formation of an american parliament and the colonies and it would be entirely, almost entirely independent from the parliament in britain, parliaments in britain we just regulate trade and police. what he meant by police is that if the french come, the b
but because i feel i have to. people have told me that i have to stand for election. so i look at that and i go, hmm, what have these people done to feel like they were compelled to stand for election. so then i go back to 1765 and i find that the alliances almost, all of whom go on to become loyalists or leaders of the sons of liberty in new york. james alonso junior was called the oracle of the sons of liberty. they helped organize protests to our parliament and secure repeal of the stamp...
6
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Oct 6, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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not because i can make the book about everybody because it has to be intelligible for everybody. and like that notion of intelligibility requires more stretching maybe than you think. so they were very helpful for for me for that. i also think that notion of intelligibility is important for one of the core arguments in your book is that freedom requires. and so i'm wondering if you can talk a little bit about the role solidarity in freedom. you know, thanks for solidarity. solidarity comes as as the last in the of the fight forms, but it kind of circles around to embrace all of the others, you know, sovereignty is is is about the beginning of life. for me, unpredictability is about the early stages of life and dealing with the predictability, the physical world and dealing with to predict what, i think of as the predictive fine power of the digital world and mobility is kind of a is about getting out into the world and you know what what institutions do we have to have in place so people can rebel right? solidarity circles back on all those earlier forms because excuse me, withou
not because i can make the book about everybody because it has to be intelligible for everybody. and like that notion of intelligibility requires more stretching maybe than you think. so they were very helpful for for me for that. i also think that notion of intelligibility is important for one of the core arguments in your book is that freedom requires. and so i'm wondering if you can talk a little bit about the role solidarity in freedom. you know, thanks for solidarity. solidarity comes as...
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Oct 26, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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it means a lot to me as a chinese immigrants because because of today we're facing a different kind of discrimination that often said, oh, we're part of america. we're all you know, we didn't give much to this country. we're just come here to take advantage of things. that's why i think it's very important to set record straight that the early chinese immigrants helped build america. you know, we built the real world. and, you still just railroad the agriculture kind of food. yes, agriculture, industry. it will not cut california. it would never become to become the breadbasket of united states. even now, the chinese immigrants, japanese immigrants korean immigrants who build the levees, you know, standing water, deep waters, you know, collecting dirt with barrels with hints. so so i think it's it's very important. what do we see happening? eight, eight, eight. 1880 was the discrimination against the chinese because they were blamed labor union. canadian. chinese immigrants for stealing jobs for so their willingness to do anything at any wage in order to survive and then so they persua
it means a lot to me as a chinese immigrants because because of today we're facing a different kind of discrimination that often said, oh, we're part of america. we're all you know, we didn't give much to this country. we're just come here to take advantage of things. that's why i think it's very important to set record straight that the early chinese immigrants helped build america. you know, we built the real world. and, you still just railroad the agriculture kind of food. yes, agriculture,...
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13
Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN3
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because this is not the faint of heart. you put yourself out there, you become a target politically in so many other ways, but nonetheless a political target. and so you have to know why you're doing this because that makes it worthwhile. and my why i never intended to run for public office, i mean i grew up in a political family my brother was we always thought he would i never even thought of it. i thought of it when when they asked me when people came to me and asked me to run for congress. yes. i had been volunteering in the democratic party. i was chair of the democratic party. i loved that loved advancing other candidates causes of the democrats. but i never, ever had ambition or thought about running until till they and said you love the issues. why you do this, you should upon them in the congress it didn't mean i would be elected dementors wanted me to run and that's another thing. so watch my daughter alexandra who at the time was 16, our five. we had five children and years and seven days. four of them were away
because this is not the faint of heart. you put yourself out there, you become a target politically in so many other ways, but nonetheless a political target. and so you have to know why you're doing this because that makes it worthwhile. and my why i never intended to run for public office, i mean i grew up in a political family my brother was we always thought he would i never even thought of it. i thought of it when when they asked me when people came to me and asked me to run for congress....
0
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN3
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at america and loving her more because she is flawed, not despite those flaws, because it reminds me, i guess, of my own journey is we all have our scars and we become a better person if we acknowledge it and make a commitment to be better, not to just pretend it never existed at all. just don't look at it. but donald trump came down that elevator 2015. speaking of ugly scars, you see that as something just to ride you. you were early breaking point and had been emerging a while for me because, look, a lot of people, the universality of classic conservatism, as i call it now, i still have a deep, passionate love for that. when i heard jack kemp speak about about policies that addressed poor, that spoke to that mexican catholic poor kid in me where i could dedicate my life. and there somebody who cared about it that talked about ownership and the human spirit and the value of lifting up all like i. i didn't just believe that i passionately committed my life to it. and, and that sorry. i kind of went down rabbit hole there because i really that's what still drives me is whether it whet
at america and loving her more because she is flawed, not despite those flaws, because it reminds me, i guess, of my own journey is we all have our scars and we become a better person if we acknowledge it and make a commitment to be better, not to just pretend it never existed at all. just don't look at it. but donald trump came down that elevator 2015. speaking of ugly scars, you see that as something just to ride you. you were early breaking point and had been emerging a while for me because,...
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. >> we've de—industrialized because we're pursuing because of the net zero policies we're pursuing.e with that. >> i don't agree with that. >> why is our electricity so much more expensive than anywhere else in the world? >> well, mainly because of the energy companies making an absolute fortune, because we've got more renewables than anybody else. >> we've cut carbon emissions more than anybody else, which is great, and we should be pleased with that as long as we're prepared to close down industry and have our old people and poor people paying big bills, well, the industry being closed down is separate to this. >> some of it is part of it. but look at what's happening to car manufacturing in germany. >> the biggest single, the biggest single price, even above wages for all heavy industry is energy. and claire, i suppose you know, in a sense i can't really blame ed miliband because it was your lot that started all this, wasn't it? >> but it was. and boris johnson and his obsession with getting to net zero, and it was always a bonkers strategy to start with. i don't think that anybo
. >> we've de—industrialized because we're pursuing because of the net zero policies we're pursuing.e with that. >> i don't agree with that. >> why is our electricity so much more expensive than anywhere else in the world? >> well, mainly because of the energy companies making an absolute fortune, because we've got more renewables than anybody else. >> we've cut carbon emissions more than anybody else, which is great, and we should be pleased with that as long as...
0
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Oct 29, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN
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i said everybody because i was testing her because i know some, some deserve to be there. right? alice? if you would have said everybody, i wouldn't have probably listened to. she said no, no, by no means some are very bad people, you know, rough people. but she said some are great. i said, can you give me a list and she gave me a list of a lot of good people that are right. i hear they're doing really well too. so we got them out of jail, too -- great to see you. thank you. thank you, alice. we love alice. host: there's so many things we accomplish and people want to know what, when you win as things come forth, what happens for you in the second term? for faith office? what's your administration look like? mr. trump: first of all, we are going to set that up and we'll be talking to you and all of the people that we just met and anybody else that you think is appropriate. we have, but it's important and it will be directly into the oval office. and me, so we'll do that now. we have to save religion in this country. i mean, honestly, religion is under threat in this country. seri
i said everybody because i was testing her because i know some, some deserve to be there. right? alice? if you would have said everybody, i wouldn't have probably listened to. she said no, no, by no means some are very bad people, you know, rough people. but she said some are great. i said, can you give me a list and she gave me a list of a lot of good people that are right. i hear they're doing really well too. so we got them out of jail, too -- great to see you. thank you. thank you, alice....
0
0.0
Oct 24, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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because my uncle was president kennedy, because my family has been active in policy, because i am anotherto reach them because they wanted to make a difference. that was my one real value in getting these stories was that they were talking to a kennedy and they were being asked to do something for their country. basically. [laughter] the bottom line was they wanted to help others and i got to be the conduit to have them help their fellows. not only because i am working on policy change and they know that and appreciate it but they also know i have had similar kind of experience does come really with the shame of having these illnesses on the perceptions created when you are someone with -- someone who is well known to have these problems. but i have an incredible network of people in the mental health and addiction world. so i put the call out to all of my friends to help me find stories. and i basically called the leaders of the nih to study these illnesses, leaders of major psychiatric departments and big medical centers, i called all these people and they said if you have any stories t
because my uncle was president kennedy, because my family has been active in policy, because i am anotherto reach them because they wanted to make a difference. that was my one real value in getting these stories was that they were talking to a kennedy and they were being asked to do something for their country. basically. [laughter] the bottom line was they wanted to help others and i got to be the conduit to have them help their fellows. not only because i am working on policy change and they...
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i had a visit to because that sits on my trip. and while i was there, i, we, we were all taken into a room in the back of the contest that we had a men meeting with the member of the can. i said, and i didn't know this was going to happen. but he drew out something which is called a jerusalem declaration, which is something that we were off to sign in, the sort of co operative environment. and it says that, you know, you will put the interest that means right this time is the only person that didn't sign it because i didn't want to sign something that was going to make the united beholden to something like that. they could, i should. but most of the people didn't sign it and you know, part of it back. and i think what was that old about as time is going on, i realize that, you know, they were a couple of american congressmen with me on the trip. but i realize that almost everybody who becomes a congressman are saying it's a, is expected to sign or all the saw in this jerusalem declaration, which made them play just personally to s
i had a visit to because that sits on my trip. and while i was there, i, we, we were all taken into a room in the back of the contest that we had a men meeting with the member of the can. i said, and i didn't know this was going to happen. but he drew out something which is called a jerusalem declaration, which is something that we were off to sign in, the sort of co operative environment. and it says that, you know, you will put the interest that means right this time is the only person that...
6
6.0
Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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PRESSTV
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eye 6
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this needs to be sanctions, arms embargos, uh, boycot on every t possible, because there are a lot of companies and lot of uh tech companies specifically, with the use of ai, with the use of uh by way, i listen to devices all of that that all arms and facilitates and aids the entity, whether they're using it to uh identify and put marks on palestinians in occupied palestine, or the using it to locate um resistance members in lebanon or targeted attacks, essentially it there is no limit to what they will do, that is especially due to netanyahu's bolden stance uh with all his, i mean achieved through. i say in inverted uh quotes inver because essentially he's bombed everything he can to try and break the will of the people uh he's gone into beyond indiscriminate bombing to just bombing with volume try to shock people shock them into fear uh psychological welfare because mean if ghaza didn't teach him that you can bomb everything and you can kill as many people but they've still got some of the highest literacy rates in the world um is our neighbor in lebanon, so we uphold the same value
this needs to be sanctions, arms embargos, uh, boycot on every t possible, because there are a lot of companies and lot of uh tech companies specifically, with the use of ai, with the use of uh by way, i listen to devices all of that that all arms and facilitates and aids the entity, whether they're using it to uh identify and put marks on palestinians in occupied palestine, or the using it to locate um resistance members in lebanon or targeted attacks, essentially it there is no limit to what...
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Oct 25, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN
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i imagine it is quite effective in part because of that. >> it catches your eye because you think its not what it is about. people don't like political ads. that was something you were saying. we want it to look like they are just talking to you and it is a facetime. we did not want that to look like a political ad. we have a couple successful ads this cycle that could be selling anything. if you are not reading the captions, you are not sure what they are selling it. it is because you want it to catch people's eye. if they think it is a political ad, they will immediately shut it out because no one wants to hear these attacks back and forth anymore. >> what do you think when you look at that ad? >> i agree. i love the design. it was fun and personal. it also spoke to something i have been thinking about since thinking about the title of this panel. how is digital media shaped the 2024 election? talking with an audience of students of media and public affairs, so i think if i say the medium is the message, this will be something a lot of people are familiar with. when i was growing u
i imagine it is quite effective in part because of that. >> it catches your eye because you think its not what it is about. people don't like political ads. that was something you were saying. we want it to look like they are just talking to you and it is a facetime. we did not want that to look like a political ad. we have a couple successful ads this cycle that could be selling anything. if you are not reading the captions, you are not sure what they are selling it. it is because you...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
21
21
Oct 8, 2024
10/24
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SFGTV
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eye 21
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and i'm not going to get all political because i can't because we're in the people's house. but, you know, district elections sort of started fragmenting our city. we are one big city. we're one big family, and we embrace newcomers, people who want to relocate and live here. it's an expensive place. so we got to be a community, helping one another. so thank you for what you do. and thank you for bringing everett. jason, just, you know, just all the work that you do and hopefully step at a time. we change, you know, the paradigm of what's going on here in our city because we can do i. it's san francisco. that's right. thank you julie. thanks for having us. god bless you all. thank you. so do we have any public comments for members of the public who would like to make public comment on line? item three presentation by rudy corpus. please approach the podium when it is free. mr. phi. have a good day guys. okay, sorry, i've been here only 20 years, so it's true they beat me, but okay. the only problem we have here is that you seem to still be confused between reality and fiction
and i'm not going to get all political because i can't because we're in the people's house. but, you know, district elections sort of started fragmenting our city. we are one big city. we're one big family, and we embrace newcomers, people who want to relocate and live here. it's an expensive place. so we got to be a community, helping one another. so thank you for what you do. and thank you for bringing everett. jason, just, you know, just all the work that you do and hopefully step at a time....
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34
Oct 6, 2024
10/24
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FOXNEWSW
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now he hates them all because there trump supporters. uses thing about working men and women and he's like the people who will raise your taxes because i don't care about you. [laughter] is also a fake farmer. did you know? in new jersey, they had to change the law because they were giving property tax credit to farmers and here's this gigantic property new jersey, 100 acres or whatever and should have been like 150,000 and 600 a year had like selling like corn on the side of the road. there's some corn and they changed the law because he and bon jovi were taking advantage of his tax credit endorsing press you want to raise taxes. i'm fine with you trying to not pay taxes if you don't endorse people who will raise mine. that makes you a gigantic hypocrite. the ei ei zero band. [laughter] >> i'll put you down as a maybe. [laughter] >> when you look at this, i'm not a big springsteen guy but everybody jumped again is a branding exercise not doing it on behalf of truth taylor swift is detecting abortion rights but need the president can do
now he hates them all because there trump supporters. uses thing about working men and women and he's like the people who will raise your taxes because i don't care about you. [laughter] is also a fake farmer. did you know? in new jersey, they had to change the law because they were giving property tax credit to farmers and here's this gigantic property new jersey, 100 acres or whatever and should have been like 150,000 and 600 a year had like selling like corn on the side of the road. there's...
12
12
Oct 9, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 12
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and so what was really beautiful about yank is that because it printed letters in because it lettersin response to this dialogue happening across the world really among americans talking about sometimes the raincoats are in the leak all the time and whether we should have racial integration in the military so it was a powerful periodical and they did a lot a serious -- they covered a lot of serious issues including that of that episode is covered ins the book and there's a lot more to letters that went back a and forth in response to trim my's letter rowe a final letter saying it's encouraging to me to see this response and to w see that so my people feel the same way as i do and i think if we all come together we can stamp out racial discrimination in our generation. >> and you can draw your own conclusions whether we were successful. i think they are a lot of stories in this book that get us thinking about what is democracy in what is it to us today and it's important reflections [inaudible] >> he is also covered in the book. yet arguably the most popular cartoon of world war ii. h
and so what was really beautiful about yank is that because it printed letters in because it lettersin response to this dialogue happening across the world really among americans talking about sometimes the raincoats are in the leak all the time and whether we should have racial integration in the military so it was a powerful periodical and they did a lot a serious -- they covered a lot of serious issues including that of that episode is covered ins the book and there's a lot more to letters...
13
13
Oct 9, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 13
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he's a great tactician because he isn't, but because he out the problem, because he's a very good lawyer. he spends the whole he brought a trunk of law books with them. he spends the whole night reading international law. and the next day when the major comes to get to have a conversation john butler says come tomorrow you know i've got to think about this. he says that i'm these slaves were being used to build fortifications and they are contrabands of war no different than a gun you left on the battlefield no different than a cannon no different than the horse. and so i cannot return contrabands of war to you. and then he says and but the major says, what about the fugitive law and the fugitive slave clause of the constitution? and butler says well, one of the in felicity's of your page i love this one of the felicity's of your position is that the fugitive slave law does not extend to nations which virginia pretends to be. but butler being a good lawyer. oh knows there's always room for negotiation right. you always settle the case. so he. however, if your colonel come here and swear
he's a great tactician because he isn't, but because he out the problem, because he's a very good lawyer. he spends the whole he brought a trunk of law books with them. he spends the whole night reading international law. and the next day when the major comes to get to have a conversation john butler says come tomorrow you know i've got to think about this. he says that i'm these slaves were being used to build fortifications and they are contrabands of war no different than a gun you left on...
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Oct 2, 2024
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pn the 1790s, because. there were these two warring nations that had hated each other for centuries france and great britain and, there were different factions of americans sided with both. and so by having perspectives in the cabinet, washington could make sure he wasn't veering down one path or the other. so i nodded to this moment earlier in our conversation. 1793 was both one of the high points of war of, washington's foreign policy, but also the high point of cabinet activity. in february of 1793, france declared war on great britain. it quickly spiraled into an international washington received word of it in april and he immediately sent the cabinet a list of 13 questions, basically saying, what do we do? how do we do it? how do we manage our existing relations and how do we manage citizens such that they stay out of this conflict? they met as a group and he decided to issue a proclamation. now, notice the proclamation doesn't actually say neutrality because neutrality is a very technical legal term.
pn the 1790s, because. there were these two warring nations that had hated each other for centuries france and great britain and, there were different factions of americans sided with both. and so by having perspectives in the cabinet, washington could make sure he wasn't veering down one path or the other. so i nodded to this moment earlier in our conversation. 1793 was both one of the high points of war of, washington's foreign policy, but also the high point of cabinet activity. in february...
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Oct 6, 2024
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and you're going to have to do everything very quickly because we're speeding up the publication because it's election year. so i said, that's fine. and so i said, when? when was one date? and he says, february 20th. and i almost fell off my chair. that is the birthday of my father. and that is the person that i thought of when i looked up. so gave me the title. and as i say that's a total latino broke the just wonderful thank you so much it's such an intimate you know it all my guests gets me teary eyed because a lot of us were probably lucky to have beautiful fathers that in our lives. but thank you so much for sharing that story. so, you know, you talk about latino land, a country unto itself, almost that if it were a country, we would be the fifth largest economy, the world. that's how powerful we are, right, with our purchasing power and all of that. but you said that we are a people with no name. explain what you meant by that. we've been given all these names. we've never really announced a name for ourselves. i remember coming the age of ten to some individuals where there were n
and you're going to have to do everything very quickly because we're speeding up the publication because it's election year. so i said, that's fine. and so i said, when? when was one date? and he says, february 20th. and i almost fell off my chair. that is the birthday of my father. and that is the person that i thought of when i looked up. so gave me the title. and as i say that's a total latino broke the just wonderful thank you so much it's such an intimate you know it all my guests gets me...
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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is there a connie because there. has to be. big. what it because. yeah all i'm saying and i love. it just you know you're in middle name. yes is get to know your family no no your middle name is is no yeah. oh well --. i. i didn't know that you know, i see a lot of my nieces are here and nina is the oldest niece and husband, eric and. and then stacy is nina's sister and the youngest. and then the next sister is charlotte and that's her daughter. and just tina is just tina. constance. yeah, named after your sister, june her mother is your sister. ginger my sister. june and my oldest sister, she, she became see, she was a real go getter. she became like president of the school in osceola county, florida so she emerged after, she had children and then that's when josephine really, you know, but at the point but we can i just tell about it and all father he became the father was the first chinese born admiral in the u.s. navy. in the u.s. navy. and then just he and his father john fu was the first chinese born general in the u.s. army. and he is a lawyer so it's ti i told you, my sist
is there a connie because there. has to be. big. what it because. yeah all i'm saying and i love. it just you know you're in middle name. yes is get to know your family no no your middle name is is no yeah. oh well --. i. i didn't know that you know, i see a lot of my nieces are here and nina is the oldest niece and husband, eric and. and then stacy is nina's sister and the youngest. and then the next sister is charlotte and that's her daughter. and just tina is just tina. constance. yeah,...
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Oct 12, 2024
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we do have some recorded things because they're meeting in because the spanish there, because the spanish are trying like spanish agents are trying to take credit for all of this, like writing back with facilitated this that the other thing. no they didn't. anyway so they're they're writing down but native people exchanging strings of beads belts of, beads and things like that that signify their commitment in alliance with one another in these spaces. mary so before the pan alliance and because of the settlers encroaching upon their tribal lands before, the pan alliance and all this where the native tribes. did they ever have a sense of unity before then? i don't know. coming together for whatever reason or this is first of its kind where they're coming together as a unity and having to defend their lands and their way of life. so i don't want to overgeneralize because there there certainly are moments people come together for different reasons. right. and. there's there's kind of there can be these moments of having an ambassador that can be exchanged in in towns and stuff. but generally
we do have some recorded things because they're meeting in because the spanish there, because the spanish are trying like spanish agents are trying to take credit for all of this, like writing back with facilitated this that the other thing. no they didn't. anyway so they're they're writing down but native people exchanging strings of beads belts of, beads and things like that that signify their commitment in alliance with one another in these spaces. mary so before the pan alliance and because...
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Oct 21, 2024
10/24
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we do have some recorded things because they're meeting in because the spanish there, because the spanish are trying like spanish agents are trying to take credit for all of this, like writing back with facilitated this that the other thing. no they didn't. anyway so they're they're writing down but native people exchanging strings of beads belts of, beads and things like that that signify their commitment in alliance with one another in these spaces. mary so before the pan alliance and because of the settlers encroaching upon their tribal lands before, the pan alliance and all this where the native tribes. did they ever have a sense of unity before then? i don't know. coming together for whatever reason or this is first of its kind where they're coming together as a unity and having to defend their lands and their way of life. so i don't want to overgeneralize because there there certainly are moments people come together for different reasons. right. and. there's there's kind of there can be these moments of having an ambassador that can be exchanged in in towns and stuff. but generally
we do have some recorded things because they're meeting in because the spanish there, because the spanish are trying like spanish agents are trying to take credit for all of this, like writing back with facilitated this that the other thing. no they didn't. anyway so they're they're writing down but native people exchanging strings of beads belts of, beads and things like that that signify their commitment in alliance with one another in these spaces. mary so before the pan alliance and because...
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Oct 11, 2024
10/24
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so people are confused because. they hear about a movement which calls, woke and calls itself a progressive and anti-racist and they want freedom and liberty and all those buzzwords. and what i want to be part of that, i want to be on side. and then they look a bit closer and they realize that actually the movement does exactly the opposite of everything it says on the tin know. so in to make it accessible. what i tried to do in the book the puritans is make this analogy with religion because all of a sudden it makes sense, it becomes comprehensible, you know, religious fundamentalist believers believe all kinds of nonsense and and they do so because they have a belief system in place, a kind of ideology a kind of structure. i mean the notion if you take any ideology, it's not just religion you could it could be marxism. it could be any set of rules that are provided for you so that you surrender your own critical faculties and, are effectively reading from a script. and this makes sense. why are good people suddenl
so people are confused because. they hear about a movement which calls, woke and calls itself a progressive and anti-racist and they want freedom and liberty and all those buzzwords. and what i want to be part of that, i want to be on side. and then they look a bit closer and they realize that actually the movement does exactly the opposite of everything it says on the tin know. so in to make it accessible. what i tried to do in the book the puritans is make this analogy with religion because...
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because, because, because now they can say and it's i mean, the thing is, the fact that i've been here24 years now and people didn't ask that question back in the day. >> they called anybody wanting to move to this country an asylum seeker, as if it's so horrible where they're from that they're seeking asylum here and now. they just say , well, it now. they just say, well, it must be really good here. i don't like a confident british people. i think i like them to be to think, wow, things must be really bad here for them. maybe i don't care, but anyway. but you know what? the other important news is that people are unhealthy. according to the university of oxford. did you want to add something to that story? >> no, no, no, story? > no, no, no, no , story? >> no, no, no, no, i story? >> no, no, no, no, i didn't say where you were jumping off. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> more health, fun and games and as i said, because what i said, what i said, i'm not sure i believe what i said, but yeah, that's a big no no. >> it's a big story. the next one is a big story. baby boomers do it. say, yeah, it's
because, because, because now they can say and it's i mean, the thing is, the fact that i've been here24 years now and people didn't ask that question back in the day. >> they called anybody wanting to move to this country an asylum seeker, as if it's so horrible where they're from that they're seeking asylum here and now. they just say , well, it now. they just say, well, it must be really good here. i don't like a confident british people. i think i like them to be to think, wow, things...
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Oct 23, 2024
10/24
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and he really hathe field more or less to himself because roosevelt just isn't able to campaign because it was wounded fairly, fairly seriously in the assassination attempt. and so in the short term, not that it would have changed the results of the 1912 election, but in the short term, it really meant that in the closing days of the election, wilson is the voice out there, you know, hitting the stump, making the speeches, getting the the media coverage. and i think that really fills his sails as he goes into the final days of the campaign. well, we mentioned the death of the sitting vice president, the assassination attempt on the former president. are we missing any other key moments from the election trail that year, in the final weeks before the 1912 election? those are the pretty big ones. those are those shake up the race. it just it didn't pick up necessarily the fundamentals of the race. but there are moments that when you think back to 1912, that you think just how much madness was in the campaign and around the election and in a period in which americans really felt like the w
and he really hathe field more or less to himself because roosevelt just isn't able to campaign because it was wounded fairly, fairly seriously in the assassination attempt. and so in the short term, not that it would have changed the results of the 1912 election, but in the short term, it really meant that in the closing days of the election, wilson is the voice out there, you know, hitting the stump, making the speeches, getting the the media coverage. and i think that really fills his sails...
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how to sign, but because of justice because of human resources. i think we have a situation where young people will get their information from a different source to get the information, not from the legacy media, which design is control. but from social media, from instagram, from kicked off because they get the information from other sources. they really get to know that i think one of a staff are about to send their standing for their own humanity. and now this young young people of ivy league level that would be the leaders of the us in the future and the other parts of the world. so i do agree that the train is left and i think these ratings uh realize that their images is being added, being tarnished. and that was the, their strength. that was the only thing that was keeping the world supporting is where it is because they felt. busy that this was the democracy in them, at least this was a human rights country that respected as b g u t and so on. and also now they're part of not only the. busy allies, but they're complicit in a more problems
how to sign, but because of justice because of human resources. i think we have a situation where young people will get their information from a different source to get the information, not from the legacy media, which design is control. but from social media, from instagram, from kicked off because they get the information from other sources. they really get to know that i think one of a staff are about to send their standing for their own humanity. and now this young young people of ivy...
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20
Oct 8, 2024
10/24
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it's because _ systems. we arejust a big neural network. it's because of - systems.like geoffrey hinton _ network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that - network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that we - network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that we have all of the opportunities ai has to offer. the challenge will be to prevent it getting out of control. pallab ghosh, bbc news. sky—watchers in scotland and north east england were treated to a rare celestial phenomenon last night known as �*steve' — short for strong thermal emission velocity enhancement — which sometimes appears during the northern lights. it's a thin purply coloured ribbon of light which lasts for 20 minutes to an hour. as well as steve, the northern lights were spotted across the uk last night from northern scotland to kent. i still have never seen them. have you seen them, ben? i haven't and there is a much chance tonight because for many of us there is a lot of cloud and rain. this was cardiff earlier on. a soggy scene. there is this rash of downpours
it's because _ systems. we arejust a big neural network. it's because of - systems.like geoffrey hinton _ network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that - network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that we - network. it's because of pioneers like geoffrey hinton that we have all of the opportunities ai has to offer. the challenge will be to prevent it getting out of control. pallab ghosh, bbc news. sky—watchers in scotland and north east england were treated to a rare...
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0.0
Oct 29, 2024
10/24
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long time and because i've been doing this for so long, i am personally really frustrated because just like you, just like everybody else, i was locked in, you know, during the pandemic and frustrated and thinking, why have we not learned these lessons? and everything you said is absolutely correct. and i'm really hoping that everybody reads this book and really learns from this. yomentioned the short term impact on the balance sheet, which is signify market. is there a way that we could influence boards? and let me just say that, you know, typically board members are in a position longer than senior staff of ceos. and i'm asking that because i'm trying to find a way that we could actually have an impact where the time horizon that we look at is a little bit longer. because if we're all we're looking at its quarterly, then of course we're going to want to slash that inventory. you know, pay ourselves, write these the the profits, bonuses, whatever and then we move on. and ultimately, as a society, we are extremely vulnerable. yeah, it's a really important question. i mean, there is a c
long time and because i've been doing this for so long, i am personally really frustrated because just like you, just like everybody else, i was locked in, you know, during the pandemic and frustrated and thinking, why have we not learned these lessons? and everything you said is absolutely correct. and i'm really hoping that everybody reads this book and really learns from this. yomentioned the short term impact on the balance sheet, which is signify market. is there a way that we could...
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because the lifting tell going to the family be in because he, they hate him to. i think that's a clever i think they should defend him on that particular issue because there is a duty, a position which is close to the goals position, which is uh, franz having in depth and a whole. and i mean, some of the friends are going to go to what we desire about the, you know, no, there's any kind of humanity in your weapon stays a rough ma, all these are a file jet scaling, the children and guys a, some of them is a french, the components being used. i want to go back to the holocaust. uh but uh it was this day and 1960 to the address you need the cost you have uh remove themselves from a cuba in return for the united states. removing this from turkey. any possibility the britain and the united states and france will remove a long range weaponry from ukraine. a, any possibility that negotiations on the table that they could, someone will avoid the retaliatory russian strike that he's being threatened by booting, if written and can keep him to be fond skeptics way. it allow
because the lifting tell going to the family be in because he, they hate him to. i think that's a clever i think they should defend him on that particular issue because there is a duty, a position which is close to the goals position, which is uh, franz having in depth and a whole. and i mean, some of the friends are going to go to what we desire about the, you know, no, there's any kind of humanity in your weapon stays a rough ma, all these are a file jet scaling, the children and guys a, some...
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23
Oct 4, 2024
10/24
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she could do it because she got that cash.nd i think that my understanding of women's lives -- her life was difficult, growing up during the carter years, the horrible economy. what's happening now was just mind boggling. my god, it seems like every 20 years we have this economic problem that wipes out everybody's savings. isn't that convenient? and i think that americans, courtesy of the internet, courtesy of these kinds of conversations, are becoming aware, at least, that things -- again, something's not right. things don't have to be like this. that we deserve better, that we know people that wars and there's always going to be problems but strength matters. the united states matters. the attacks on jews now, all of that, by the way, is also meant to inculcate fear in everyone, and as we allow attacks on the jewish community to continue, it sends a message that there is no law and order, that all this talk about hate crimes, by the way, was just talk. because now, what, it suddenly doesn't apply if you're jewish? it's a rem
she could do it because she got that cash.nd i think that my understanding of women's lives -- her life was difficult, growing up during the carter years, the horrible economy. what's happening now was just mind boggling. my god, it seems like every 20 years we have this economic problem that wipes out everybody's savings. isn't that convenient? and i think that americans, courtesy of the internet, courtesy of these kinds of conversations, are becoming aware, at least, that things -- again,...
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because that doesn't happen quickly. but the interpretation so that it could be in cases where, you know, if this is a, really, a, a strong, a case of instrumental us migration. that, that, that it could be treated as a fact that if a whole style country is trying to send people over that immediately and in a geographically lead me to a location that could go, there was not the right to seek asylum, but we wouldn't remain or we would keep those stations open for seeking asylum somewhere else, and this is also the claimant would be doing. we have the law now in place, but we haven't used it yet. and for using the law of. oh, really allowing our border thoughts to um, to not people seek asylum. there is a very, very high head of for taking that thing to use. and secondly, countries like norway or, or some of the baltic countries, poland. all of these countries have been issued or have been a subject and the victim to this phenomenon over the course of the g. s and to every country has been treating it. and in, in some way,
because that doesn't happen quickly. but the interpretation so that it could be in cases where, you know, if this is a, really, a, a strong, a case of instrumental us migration. that, that, that it could be treated as a fact that if a whole style country is trying to send people over that immediately and in a geographically lead me to a location that could go, there was not the right to seek asylum, but we wouldn't remain or we would keep those stations open for seeking asylum somewhere else,...
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Oct 29, 2024
10/24
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lose my mind - because i don't know where she is. because i don't know where she is i_ because i don'tw where she is i finally— because i don't know where she is. i finally remembered - because i don't know where she is. i finally remembered her- is. i finally remembered her phone — is. i finally remembered her phone had _ is. i finally remembered her phone had a _ is. i finally remembered her phone had a location... - phone had a location... studio: _ phone had a location... studio: as _ phone had a location... studio: as donald - phone had a location... . studio: as donald trump phone had a location... - studio: as donald trump plays a video we are going to come away from that speech in mar—a—lago, where at different stages of this as donald trump australia campaign, so we had wild claims, we had his interpretation of what he thinks is going on. but he started by talking about leading and also in swing states, despite what all the polling as saying, that he lives in only a few of them. he talked about kamala harris obliterating reporters, dissipating the middle class, the bloodshed a
lose my mind - because i don't know where she is. because i don't know where she is i_ because i don'tw where she is i finally— because i don't know where she is. i finally remembered - because i don't know where she is. i finally remembered her- is. i finally remembered her phone — is. i finally remembered her phone had _ is. i finally remembered her phone had a _ is. i finally remembered her phone had a location... - phone had a location... studio: _ phone had a location... studio: as _...
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6.0
Oct 5, 2024
10/24
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ESPRESO
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missiles, which we do not have enough, which we need for others available and possible soldiers, becauses it is ukraine above all else, and they have israel on fire, they have trivan in danger, they have africa, they have latin america, they say, we gave you everything we could, but we will never devastate until zero our warehouses, the europeans have an even funnier story, they emptied theirs warehouses, and the new factories did not get off the ground, did not fulfill their plans and... but you have rockets for 300 km, and recently they launched a clearing for 500 and there are even developments for over a thousand, so maybe we will give you money and you will make them more, you have the opportunity to release neptune 100 pieces a year, let us help you financially, score 300, no, you must give us, otherwise you are guilty, this is not how responsible people behave. at this point, the victory plan is a set of one-sided requirements. here i want to briefly touch on the history. was such was president roosevelt of the united states at the outbreak of world war ii, when britain was one on
missiles, which we do not have enough, which we need for others available and possible soldiers, becauses it is ukraine above all else, and they have israel on fire, they have trivan in danger, they have africa, they have latin america, they say, we gave you everything we could, but we will never devastate until zero our warehouses, the europeans have an even funnier story, they emptied theirs warehouses, and the new factories did not get off the ground, did not fulfill their plans and... but...
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Oct 21, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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because you can't undo that. the legacy goes back to that these systems, the nuclear triad, the icbm's, the submarines, the bombers. they were created and configured to fight and win nuclear war. >> fight and win a nuclear war and still are. >> so, that hasn't changed, it's just that the policy in air quotes, has shifted, but the fundamental sort of paradox of deterrence is that we will never use these weapons unless we have to and so then, if you're the defense department, you're going to say unless we have to, you're going to plan for what happens if you have to. >> and you argue that being ready to go to nuclear war in a few minutes notice is essential to the deterrence mission. >> that's how it's been set up. that's how it's been set up and how do you unravel that? and i don't have the answer, but many waist-wise people have been dedicated to looking at these issues. >> and will have to in part in a second because the new york times in a glowing review of your book does take issue this with and say once you p
because you can't undo that. the legacy goes back to that these systems, the nuclear triad, the icbm's, the submarines, the bombers. they were created and configured to fight and win nuclear war. >> fight and win a nuclear war and still are. >> so, that hasn't changed, it's just that the policy in air quotes, has shifted, but the fundamental sort of paradox of deterrence is that we will never use these weapons unless we have to and so then, if you're the defense department, you're...
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7.0
Oct 6, 2024
10/24
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also because saudi arabia considers its own shiite minority a danger to its own statehood.is the answer to your question, it means that it turns out that everything is solved with the arabs, but there is an unresolved palestinian problem that no one understands how to solve, because if they want to destroy you, if the population that lives in this territory wants to live in your , then how do you solve this problem, it's like between the russians and ukrainians, if the russians believe that ukraine is russia, you can at least... fight the wall, you won't convince them, well, there is no political solution, it doesn't exist, it doesn't exist, it's the same here, so if these people have support in iran , today the key is iran, let's imagine that the islamist regime in iran, this islamic steocracy is destroyed, that a democratic state appears there, this state will not support israel in the palestinian issue, it will demand the creation of a palestinian state, but in no will give money to radical palestinian groups, and it will not try to destroy lebanese statehood, as iran is
also because saudi arabia considers its own shiite minority a danger to its own statehood.is the answer to your question, it means that it turns out that everything is solved with the arabs, but there is an unresolved palestinian problem that no one understands how to solve, because if they want to destroy you, if the population that lives in this territory wants to live in your , then how do you solve this problem, it's like between the russians and ukrainians, if the russians believe that...
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Oct 8, 2024
10/24
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this is sort of where there is an impact where because one region is doing it and because that region, a big region and does have a lot of imports it, is starting to encourage other regions to put a carbon price in india now has a carbon price. china now has a carbon price partially as a response to the carbon border have just been a mechanism and we'll see how it plays out. the us is, you know, fighting its ally europe on the carbon border adjustment mechanism. they don't want a carbon border, but the eu is sticking with it and we'll see how that plays out. i think the other thing that that drives i mean, one is is to extent it puts pressure on other countries to also put a carbon price, but also i think drivers as for other countries try to produce the least carbon intensive goods that they can write, you can see an impact the the eu could try to see, you know, which country can produce in the lowest carbon way possible. so we get it for the cheapest price and india can't do it, you know, in a low carbon way, then move and to find another market that can so you can also see the pres
this is sort of where there is an impact where because one region is doing it and because that region, a big region and does have a lot of imports it, is starting to encourage other regions to put a carbon price in india now has a carbon price. china now has a carbon price partially as a response to the carbon border have just been a mechanism and we'll see how it plays out. the us is, you know, fighting its ally europe on the carbon border adjustment mechanism. they don't want a carbon border,...
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because this is your field. >> well i think sometimes you have to look at the past. it's not always about the future. we used to have polytechnics, art schools. >> no, i agree with that. >> no, i agree with that. >> you know, we had polytechnics, art schools from 1992. every university and the polytechnics all said, right, we're universities now. and actually that model doesn't always work because you have local people who want to stay locally. >> and dame andrea, you were schools minister. so how would you fix the situation? because my view is that i think the budget should be there for young people. yes, but i think it should be spread more evenly and we should get over this obsession with university and think of other ways that our young people can be educated. >> i completely, and i was proud of our record in government, actually with apprenticeships. and i think degree apprenticeships are fantastic. and the t levels that we brought out for a while, i remember going to a northern university, so northern coll
because this is your field. >> well i think sometimes you have to look at the past. it's not always about the future. we used to have polytechnics, art schools. >> no, i agree with that. >> no, i agree with that. >> you know, we had polytechnics, art schools from 1992. every university and the polytechnics all said, right, we're universities now. and actually that model doesn't always work because you have local people who want to stay locally. >> and dame andrea,...
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>> because. >> because. >> wait , >> because. >> wait, wait, lesbian sex?s is a conflicting. >> well, this is a conflicting. >> would you, louis? would you or have you slept with any of these? >> why are they all bald here? >> why are they all bald here? >> do you know what? that's yes. >> that's the first silence we've had in three years of him thinking. >> yes, he would. you know what? >> yes, he would. you know what? >> you reach a certain age and you want. or you could. you would. but you know the problems. what's the problem? >> you think that they're going to take your money? >> what's worse than that? yeah, they're going to cost a lot worse than that. they're going to they're just going to say, i don't care about your money. >> you probably have the only sex robot in history. stop whining and complaining. >> don't they all. >> don't they all. >> it would be matched with your personality type. louis, i like how they described in the article these people as wealthy horn bags. only the daily star could get away with using words . could get away with usi
>> because. >> because. >> wait , >> because. >> wait, wait, lesbian sex?s is a conflicting. >> well, this is a conflicting. >> would you, louis? would you or have you slept with any of these? >> why are they all bald here? >> why are they all bald here? >> do you know what? that's yes. >> that's the first silence we've had in three years of him thinking. >> yes, he would. you know what? >> yes, he would. you know...
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of by colleagues found about half of the heatwave deaths in europe are because —— because it means 10% because of climate change and the rest of the of the natural chaotic nature 10% might not sound much but it can make the difference between so the damages are disproportional to, between so the damages are disproportionalto, or disproportional to, or seemingly small changes disproportionalto, or seemingly small changes in rainfall. �* , , ., , rainfall. briefly, institutions and governments _ rainfall. briefly, institutions and governments are - rainfall. briefly, institutionsj and governments are taking rainfall. briefly, institutions - and governments are taking this and governments are taking this and adapting the way heavyin heavy in spain there is a huge amount to, i have been told we have dramatic pictures coming to us of a rescue, and this is a baby i think we can see here being rescued from this helicopter, lots of honeyings in action winching —— helicopters, in action, winching babies and old people to safety, have dramatic as we know that rescuers continue to work tirelessly
of by colleagues found about half of the heatwave deaths in europe are because —— because it means 10% because of climate change and the rest of the of the natural chaotic nature 10% might not sound much but it can make the difference between so the damages are disproportional to, between so the damages are disproportionalto, or disproportional to, or seemingly small changes disproportionalto, or seemingly small changes in rainfall. �* , , ., , rainfall. briefly, institutions and...