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Jul 20, 2018
07/18
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bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market. bob michele, j.p. morgan, thank you very much. bobank you. jonathan: will back before the year out -- year is out. from new york, that does it for nextd we will see you week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." ♪ mark: i'm mark crumpton. european union exit negotiations says a backstop agreement for the irish border is a central in order for a deal to be achieved with the u.k. the issue must be settled and he added there must be an insurance policy to address the issues of ireland and northern ireland, something he discussed. yesterday that bordernot asking for a between us and ireland and the rest of the u.k. becausechecks on good if the u.k. wants to be in the , we cannot afford to lose time on this issue. mark: he says he feels the back backstop imposed is technically workable and can be improved. the white house says it is not considering supporting a call i've vladimir putin for a
bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market. bob michele, j.p. morgan, thank you very much. bobank you. jonathan: will back before the year out -- year is out. from new york, that does it for nextd we will see you week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." ♪ mark: i'm mark crumpton. european union exit negotiations says a backstop agreement for the irish border is a central in order for a deal to...
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he got to some recorded so you'd hear for went back to bob where they used to work and some together and. bob bob said this and together and. told bob and bob came down and i auditioned them and we got is first songs recorded just the same you know so i didn't discovered i just was the man. no one's heard of you know it isn't it but anyway today there was like welcome x. milk a jug of a big bell fame was in the twenty first century did you get to meet. strangers thing is. when i went to new york the they market mccausland speak i was on my way to the border. and heard it don't work oh. he's gone so. that's it they were you interested in the in that in the bad store rights over the good well as it as it seemed there in history books well he was a king he's ok before the veil of speech and welcome to. the jerusalem i don't know you know the media. artist obvious when promote who they want to promote but when you look at that ghost who. freedom fighters their parts were kind of different you know malcolm was blunt. just get to the point and maybe speak of violence in him you know fight fire with fir
he got to some recorded so you'd hear for went back to bob where they used to work and some together and. bob bob said this and together and. told bob and bob came down and i auditioned them and we got is first songs recorded just the same you know so i didn't discovered i just was the man. no one's heard of you know it isn't it but anyway today there was like welcome x. milk a jug of a big bell fame was in the twenty first century did you get to meet. strangers thing is. when i went to new...
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very good performance by bob bob the walls was meant to. play the game weeds with great maturity when we had to hold a position and to keep control of the game when the show to call for was useful to bring move on then for the have more freedom but that freedom not to do silly things you had freedom to keep the ball away from the bench was arius to keep to keep the ball to assist griezmann for a great chance he was very very mature and probably see the pictures for the goal now i mean it's another goal from a set piece in this world cup as you know set pieces are something. that you can train. your dog damage. more of your physical condition and when you are in a competition like these where the accumulation of comes you have just to recover then is very difficult to have training sessions of development of tactical situations that creates even more spending of energy. opening the door for more small injuries so what can you train said please you don't run. you don't spend any of your and there's attics or sees you do it you do it in a rela
very good performance by bob bob the walls was meant to. play the game weeds with great maturity when we had to hold a position and to keep control of the game when the show to call for was useful to bring move on then for the have more freedom but that freedom not to do silly things you had freedom to keep the ball away from the bench was arius to keep to keep the ball to assist griezmann for a great chance he was very very mature and probably see the pictures for the goal now i mean it's...
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Jul 21, 2018
07/18
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bob: thank you. bob michele -- jonathan: bob michele from jpmorgan, thanks to him.new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ alix: commodities in crisis. copper leaves commodities into corrections territory. and alcoa cutting its 2018 profit forecast, the latest victim in president trump's trade battle. room for everyone. cpi leader peter coleman talks about china's rising lng demands and how it can absorb the junk in u.s. exports. ♪ alix: i'm alix steel. welcome to "bloomberg commodities ed.
bob: thank you. bob michele -- jonathan: bob michele from jpmorgan, thanks to him.new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ alix: commodities in crisis. copper leaves commodities into corrections territory. and alcoa cutting its 2018 profit forecast, the latest victim in president trump's trade battle. room for everyone. cpi leader peter coleman talks about china's rising lng demands and how...
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Jul 1, 2018
07/18
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BLOOMBERG
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bob: no. mark: no. jonathan: leveraged loans or u.s. high-yield into year-end? priya: leveraged loans. jonathan: i know you didn't want to answer this, bob, but you are on the spot now. come on. bob mark: loans, they're both right. jonathan: come on. [laughter] jonathan: 7:21 next friday ahead of payrolls, if there isn't a presidential tweet, are you going to be bearish for the payrolls report? if you don't get the presidential preview, are you bearish the payrolls report? priya: no. i think he has been told not to tweet, but no. bob: no. mark: same. jonathan: guys, where's the fun with this? [laughter] it has been great to catch up with you. that does it for us. we will see you at 1:00 p.m. next friday new york time, 6:00 p.m in london. this was "bloomberg real yield"" this is bloomberg tv. ♪ >> oil rises over 10%. is it a short term supply or a longer treatment affected by iran. trade battles claim another victim. we look for the opportunities on trade. china could buy 4 million tons of soybeans from brazil. the problem is recovering from a trucker's strike. alix: i am alix steel. welcome to "bloomberg: commodities edge," 30 minutes focused on the companies, physical assets, an
bob: no. mark: no. jonathan: leveraged loans or u.s. high-yield into year-end? priya: leveraged loans. jonathan: i know you didn't want to answer this, bob, but you are on the spot now. come on. bob mark: loans, they're both right. jonathan: come on. [laughter] jonathan: 7:21 next friday ahead of payrolls, if there isn't a presidential tweet, are you going to be bearish for the payrolls report? if you don't get the presidential preview, are you bearish the payrolls report? priya: no. i think he...
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Jul 21, 2018
07/18
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are bob michele, the firm's global head of fixed income, and lisa coleman, the firm's head of global investment grade corporate credit. bob, i should say thank you for finally inviting me over again. bobno, thanks for coming back. it is good to have you here. jonathan: the federal reserve pushes back against higher interest rates. does it change anything for chair powell? bob: it doesn't. the fact that you have tweets today and yesterday tells you how independent the fed is. i think it is a complex question. certainly, the president gets to appoint who they want as the fed chair, so they pick someone who is reasonable and moderate like jay powell. they know kind of what they are going to get. i think it was a good appointment, but he is on his own now. and i think he has laid out a very credible path going forward. jonathan: it's safe to say that the president's tweets this friday have had more impact than what is happening with jay powell in congress. what is happening with the treasury curve? it has been flat and then all of a sudden we get steepness during the week. bob: there are a couple things going on. certainly there is a belief the fed is going to stick to its rate path, that
are bob michele, the firm's global head of fixed income, and lisa coleman, the firm's head of global investment grade corporate credit. bob, i should say thank you for finally inviting me over again. bobno, thanks for coming back. it is good to have you here. jonathan: the federal reserve pushes back against higher interest rates. does it change anything for chair powell? bob: it doesn't. the fact that you have tweets today and yesterday tells you how independent the fed is. i think it is a...
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Jul 20, 2018
07/18
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bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market. bob: equal conviction. jonathan: bobp. morgan, thank you very much. bob: thank you. jonathan: our thanks to bob. from new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ two, down and back up. our phones are more than just phones. they are pocket sized personal trainers... last minute gift finders... siri: destination ahead. and discoverers of new places. it's the internet in your hand. that's why xfinity mobile can be included with xfinity internet. which could save you hunreds of dollars a year. plus get $150 when you bring in your own phone. its a new kind of network designed to save you money. click, call or visit a store today. bloomberg daybreak: middle east." turkey's troubles deepen. credit rating, cut farther. lira plunges to new lows. signs of an aid package on the way for arraignment. a bond rally fizzles as investor anxiety returns. year to date drop, is now the time to buy the bon d? ♪ markets began digesting
bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market. bob: equal conviction. jonathan: bobp. morgan, thank you very much. bob: thank you. jonathan: our thanks to bob. from new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ two, down and back up. our phones are more than just phones. they are pocket sized personal trainers... last minute...
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Jul 13, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN2
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bob. bob passed away a few years ago, he has left a legacy in the city for his work on helping men overcome addiction. the way he got to the work was that bobn alcoholic on the streets of the city. until faith transformed his life and he sought to give that gift to others. he started a project, residential center for men trying to overcome addiction. he was a drill sergeant for the older willingness and tidiness of the center. he was very tough. he believed in the dignity of those men and he wanted them to believe in their own dignity. because of it, he ran an incredibly successful center, compared with other work in the area as overcoming addiction. i'm sorry to say, public policy too often undermines work like this. government handouts without expectations undermined the tough love approaches of people like bob and, policy must change in order for these good works to expand their transformation efforts. we as a nation has focused a lot on the material needs. but we have not done very well in our concern for the overall dignity and well-being of those in tough circumstances. if we're going to address need, we have to understand that need g
bob. bob passed away a few years ago, he has left a legacy in the city for his work on helping men overcome addiction. the way he got to the work was that bobn alcoholic on the streets of the city. until faith transformed his life and he sought to give that gift to others. he started a project, residential center for men trying to overcome addiction. he was a drill sergeant for the older willingness and tidiness of the center. he was very tough. he believed in the dignity of those men and he...
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i think anyway let's see how he transformed the exhibition rooms in the freedom board a museum in bob bob let there be lights as told in the old testament of the bible this was the crowning act of creation. without lights we could not see without sleights there would be no life. no life or something that was important to us physically. literally the skin. or trial it produce letterman so what happens to be a food. we don't think of it that way. james tyrrell himself is a creator of lights not a gaunt but an artist whose material is light artificial as well as natural. is installations have no subjects and no focal points they shroud viewers in lines until they lose orientation. no focus no object no thing and you see that when you get the white out while skiing you can see it. flying when you're after the cloud and after you gauge an instrument flying. also when you dive we are entering this new. landscape which is the landscape with horizon and we're learning to navigate it. charles arts is a sensual experience. what it first looks like a painting is really a space. here everyone who giv
i think anyway let's see how he transformed the exhibition rooms in the freedom board a museum in bob bob let there be lights as told in the old testament of the bible this was the crowning act of creation. without lights we could not see without sleights there would be no life. no life or something that was important to us physically. literally the skin. or trial it produce letterman so what happens to be a food. we don't think of it that way. james tyrrell himself is a creator of lights not a...
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Jul 22, 2018
07/18
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BLOOMBERG
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bob michele. i should say thank you. bob: thank you for being back. jonathan: the federal reserve pushes back against higher interest rates. does it change anything? bob: it doesn't. the fact that you have tweets yesterday tells you how independent the fed is. certainly, the president gets to appoint who they want as the fed chair, so they pick someone reasonable and moderate like jay powell. they know kind of what they are going to get. i think it was a good appointment. he is on his own now. he had laid out a credible path going forward. jonathan: it's safe to say that from the president's tweets, what is happening with the treasury curve? it has been flat, and all of a sudden we get steepest during the week. bob: there are a couple things going on. there is a belief the fed will stick to the rate path that we will see increases every other meeting for now. a great set of words. i think also there has been news out of japan that the bank of japan may tinker with its optimal yield curve control so , they may let the long end go and be supported by market forces. jonathan: lisa, perception is everything. if it wasn't under a close watchful eye of the
bob michele. i should say thank you. bob: thank you for being back. jonathan: the federal reserve pushes back against higher interest rates. does it change anything? bob: it doesn't. the fact that you have tweets yesterday tells you how independent the fed is. certainly, the president gets to appoint who they want as the fed chair, so they pick someone reasonable and moderate like jay powell. they know kind of what they are going to get. i think it was a good appointment. he is on his own now....
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Jul 21, 2018
07/18
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bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market? bob: equal conviction. jonathan: there you go. bobp. morgan, thank you very much. bob: thank you. jonathan: our thanks to bob. from new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ ♪ alix: commodities in crisis. alcoa cutting its product -- 2018 profit forecast, the latest victim in president trump's trade battle. we talk about china's rising lng demands and how it can absorb the junk in u.s. exports. ♪ alix: i'm alix steel. welcome to bloomberg "commodities edge." it is 30 minutes of focused on the company's ph
bob: we are ready. we have the brazilian keeper. jonathan: you have more conviction about that than the treasury market? bob: equal conviction. jonathan: there you go. bobp. morgan, thank you very much. bob: thank you. jonathan: our thanks to bob. from new york, that does it for us and we will see you next week. from new york, this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪ ♪ alix: commodities in crisis. alcoa cutting its product -- 2018 profit forecast, the latest victim...
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Jul 20, 2018
07/18
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BBCNEWS
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bob marley to bob the builder. 0ur entertainment correspondent colin paterson charts the history of the biggest—selling music compilation series in the world. now that's what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed forever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this is their london base. how many of you are there here? there's only eight of us. steve pritchard has been there since now 20, and has a theory why it's survived. it's that strange mix of current music, because now is always about currency, and nostalgia, because mums and dads remember their first now and maybe want to buy it for the kids or for the family in the car. now 44, with number ones from steps... # tragedy! now 44 was the biggest selling now album ever. released in november 1999, people bought it for their millennium parties. robbie williams has made the most now appearances with 31, and now 48 even became a crucial plot point in peter kay's car share. # you can't hurry love... most music fans seem to remember their first now album. this was mine, the originalfrom 1983. so i thought i would go out and about and hear people's memories. oh, this was literally the first one we got, on cassette. # karma, karma, karma, karma, karma chameleon... karma chameleon, can't argue with that. too shy, kajagoogoo. slightly dodge. # too shy, shy, hush hush, eye to eye... every christmas, i get one. every birthday. who would give you it? grandma, or my dad. had grandma ever heard of anyone on it? definitely not. but my grandad liked the sugababes. # cos i know how i feel about you now... it would always be the best side of it as well. usually, the first disc was the best disc. # ooh, ijust wanted to get your name... liam payne appears on now 100 and thinks the series was ahead of its time. that was almost the world's first playlist a little bit, which is now the theme of the industry for all the different platforms that you listen to music on. it's all about playlists, so they kind of kicked that off. and now believe they will survive because, with so much choice out there, many consumers actually like the simplicity of it all being done for them. # 0ne kiss is all it takes... the next goal — to make it to now 200 in the year 2053. now, that's what i call a long way in the future. colin paterson, bbc news. here with me now are alex mccloy, the director of digital at now music, and dan stubbs, the commissioning editorfor the music journalism website nme. 0h, oh, that takes me back! think i did sadly by the first one! but what i wa nt to sadly by the first one! but what i want to know is, what's the secret, what is the recipe for the success? i think because now is such a time capsule of what is popular, it's not... it is the popular culture that chooses the tracks and we just cu rate that chooses the tracks and we just curate those. so now is a memory maker and it evokes positive, warm emotions and it takes you back to car journeys, holidays, emotions and it takes you back to carjourneys, holidays, times from the past. the downside of them, it says here, from boblbum, you would listen to it and there would be some good ones and there and there would be the ones who didn't want to hear! i think that is pa rt of didn't want to hear! i think that is part of the joy of it. it just takes three months of music with almost no kind of narrative. so you get these mad things. but you when you rip back to old ones from the past, they are a real time capsule of that time, in the sense of the revisionist history of music which writes out all these tracks and there they are lurking on an album. i think that is part of the pleasure of it. did you buy them? i did. retrospectively i collected the old ones on vinyl. i had about 1—220 on vinyl. my first one was now four which we had on vhs.” vinyl. my first one was now four which we had on vhs. i still remember trying to record radio1 which we had on vhs. i still remember trying to record radio 1 on the old cassette. and trying to get rid of the djs. we have just relaunched it on cassette and it is amazing, it's
bob marley to bob the builder. 0ur entertainment correspondent colin paterson charts the history of the biggest—selling music compilation series in the world. now that's what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed forever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this is their london base. how many of you are there...
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one of the gangs and i says later it was a stronghold as we all know now it's bob and bob the smithereens war is awful we americans should maybe be a little more tolerant made to hatred for bashar he had a war it was an awful war and you fought it awfully but so do we everybody does that's the horrible thing about wars and they're not good when it was government funding the white helmets right now that say it's one sided here it's the only can we trust you there's no question there's a look there i'm sure there are some people in the white helmet that were very actually doing with you know trying to save lives but the it's pretty clear now that they're basically the major funding also i think america was indirectly supplying some money certainly the brits were and so certainly it was a hedge it was a propaganda gorga zation to along with possibly doing some real good relief work but too many times you've seen this same child in photographs you know year after year always covered in dust i mean there's been a lot of actually good reporting on it that they do and gauge anti assad but it's v
one of the gangs and i says later it was a stronghold as we all know now it's bob and bob the smithereens war is awful we americans should maybe be a little more tolerant made to hatred for bashar he had a war it was an awful war and you fought it awfully but so do we everybody does that's the horrible thing about wars and they're not good when it was government funding the white helmets right now that say it's one sided here it's the only can we trust you there's no question there's a look...
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one of the gangs and i says later it was a stronghold as we all know now it's bob and bob the smithereens war is awful we americans should maybe be a little more tolerant made to hatred for bashar he had a war it was an awful war and he fought it awfully but so do we everybody does that's the horrible thing about wars and they're not good when it was government funding the white helmets right now that say it's one sided here it's the you know it can we trust you there's no question there's a look there i'm sure there are some people in the white helmets i were very actually doing with you know trying to save lives but the it's pretty clear now that they're basically the major funding also i think america was indirectly supplying some money certainly the brits were and so certainly it was a hedge it was a propaganda organization to along with possibly doing some real good relief work but too many times you see in this same child in photographs you know year after year always covered in dust i mean there's been a lot of actually good reporting on it that they do and gauge anti assad but it'
one of the gangs and i says later it was a stronghold as we all know now it's bob and bob the smithereens war is awful we americans should maybe be a little more tolerant made to hatred for bashar he had a war it was an awful war and he fought it awfully but so do we everybody does that's the horrible thing about wars and they're not good when it was government funding the white helmets right now that say it's one sided here it's the you know it can we trust you there's no question there's a...
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Jul 26, 2018
07/18
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WTTG
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more pressure on the trump withistration t meethe t hsed them and hd u toha tation to geh k, bob aeyt this k, bob aeyt this ho tiofng you at r couano it ght now,ogle and nest e devices, plus the fastestnternet available, channels,uspl .anget heet tfa 1stest speedsith a 2-year agreementejust $79.99 h fi i .nekellptg' tfa 1stest speedsith a 2-inisscps meaeeejust $79.99 h b ofaisin ya.es quro r tictim and grod.veniy yl al heuces,thatte f training this gl o asecn ts inndniteths's the a likely major in ranagementnd uer that connectioyn future do l verys successful business a ll>>rinwiehe four w cats. [ laughter ] >> the parasite still has to get in your brain. >> i don't understand. if you were a student could you imagine signing up for the stud? >> no.ut noteah, phat parasite in my all right thas, erin .ble t ianofterhe lsf ot' tha a smour will ear chakk of t the seven day next. >> fresh at 10a from snl to sinatra standin room only comedian actor and singer joe piscopo will join plus us black klansman star john david washington live in theofhet. osr ♪ ♪ unch thursdenedayht seehods say fermoimng back.
more pressure on the trump withistration t meethe t hsed them and hd u toha tation to geh k, bob aeyt this k, bob aeyt this ho tiofng you at r couano it ght now,ogle and nest e devices, plus the fastestnternet available, channels,uspl .anget heet tfa 1stest speedsith a 2-year agreementejust $79.99 h fi i .nekellptg' tfa 1stest speedsith a 2-inisscps meaeeejust $79.99 h b ofaisin ya.es quro r tictim and grod.veniy yl al heuces,thatte f training this gl o asecn ts inndniteths's the a likely major...
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Jul 2, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN
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. >> wonderful. .e have a question from bob who would like to ask after bob? bob, please go ahead. >> i want to remind people that after miller was decided, the congress overturned it in part by passing the right to financial privacy act. the act said that if the federal government agency wanted to get your records, it had to give you notice and you had 10 days to go into court and show the records were not relevant to a legitimate law enforcement investigation. an incredibly low standard. congress exempted a bunch of agencies from this minimal requirement and over the years exempted a bunch of other activities. there is nothing left of the law. this was a democratically controlled activist congress in 1978. does anyone have any hope that congress can actually, effectively, do any of this in the future? i remind you that reform has been sitting around for a long time and they have not been able to pass that. i think the prospect of getting anything out of the congress anytime in the next five or 10 years is incredibly small. i'm not going to progress to take about
. >> wonderful. .e have a question from bob who would like to ask after bob? bob, please go ahead. >> i want to remind people that after miller was decided, the congress overturned it in part by passing the right to financial privacy act. the act said that if the federal government agency wanted to get your records, it had to give you notice and you had 10 days to go into court and show the records were not relevant to a legitimate law enforcement investigation. an incredibly low...
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Jul 4, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN3
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bob dole. do you remember bob dole? they shrug. i don't remember bob dole. so this wall is sort of a mix -- a mish-mash of different cartoonist work. this is richard thompson. that is me. another richard thompson. that is me. thuz are a column of color valtmans in comparison to the pure cross hatch around the fireplace. these are water color images. these were done in the 1970s. richard thompson's style is just -- i mean, as a cartoonist, i look at this and it's such a beautiful combination of loose lines. he was influenced a lot by some of the great english cartoonists, and then he took it to his own sort of place. a spire to this kind of aloofness but i'm still at age 60 something and working on it. this is one i did for politico. this is a caricature of bernie sanders. i do a cross hatch and then add water color. and richard's approach was a classic sort of dip pen. he works in a style that would have fit in perfectly in the 19th century in some ways but very modern. this is another richard thompson. you can see the difference. i rely on a lot of black an
bob dole. do you remember bob dole? they shrug. i don't remember bob dole. so this wall is sort of a mix -- a mish-mash of different cartoonist work. this is richard thompson. that is me. another richard thompson. that is me. thuz are a column of color valtmans in comparison to the pure cross hatch around the fireplace. these are water color images. these were done in the 1970s. richard thompson's style is just -- i mean, as a cartoonist, i look at this and it's such a beautiful combination of...
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Jul 18, 2018
07/18
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FOXNEWSW
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bob menendez may have some competition on his hands. his challenger is republican bob and he joins me next. >> bob menendez chose a life in politics servingetting indicted. bob human chose a life of service. he's the better bob for senate. all while creating a masterpiece made of tea leaves? ♪ ♪ yes. but this isn't for just anyone. ♪ ♪ hong yi! it's for the strongest man in her life. ♪ ♪ life. lived red's way. chase. make more of what's yours. before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, lucy could only imagine enjoying a slice of pizza. now it's as easy as pie. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? for all-day, all-night protection. with tripadvisor, finding your perfect hotel at the lowest price... is as easy as dates, deals, done! simply enter your destination and dates... and see all the hotels for your stay! tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites... to show you the lowest prices... so you can get the best deal on the right hotel for you. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com (burke) so we know how to seen cover al
bob menendez may have some competition on his hands. his challenger is republican bob and he joins me next. >> bob menendez chose a life in politics servingetting indicted. bob human chose a life of service. he's the better bob for senate. all while creating a masterpiece made of tea leaves? ♪ ♪ yes. but this isn't for just anyone. ♪ ♪ hong yi! it's for the strongest man in her life. ♪ ♪ life. lived red's way. chase. make more of what's yours. before discovering nexium 24hr to...
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Jul 15, 2018
07/18
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FOXNEWSW
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bob mueller took him off the team as soon as he found about the texts. the only reason we know about peter strzok's texts is because bob mueller essentially fired him. judge jeanine: did bober ask him anything about the investigation? he was asked that in congress. >> philippe has a tough time with the facts. he's spinning the facts to make it sounds like bob mueller is a white knight. the inspector general brought those texts to the attention of bob mueller. this was not bob mueller trying to do the right thing. what you seem to be avoiding is the fact that strzok already made incredibly critical decisions for your former boss, and the initiation of the investigation into donald trump. that's like rock a mcdonald's and five days later someone said we caught you robbing the mcdonald's. he got kicked off the investigation after the critical decisions is ridiculous. >> i don't think we need to get nasty and get mcdonald's into this. peter rock did not exemplify the behavior he should have in terms of his text messages. you were in the secret service. you worked with dozens and hundreds of other agents. you know there is no bias to the left among law enforcement. it's crazy
bob mueller took him off the team as soon as he found about the texts. the only reason we know about peter strzok's texts is because bob mueller essentially fired him. judge jeanine: did bober ask him anything about the investigation? he was asked that in congress. >> philippe has a tough time with the facts. he's spinning the facts to make it sounds like bob mueller is a white knight. the inspector general brought those texts to the attention of bob mueller. this was not bob mueller...
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Jul 19, 2018
07/18
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CNBC
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bob pisani joins us from the new york stock exchange. hi, bob. >> melissa, it may not be roaring back to life, exactly, but bitcoin has been definitely picking up its head up off the floor. some reports are calling this a short squeeze and up four consecutive days from 7,000 to $7400. bitcoin is on google it's dropped dramatically in the past few month, but cryptos tend to move on two things. number one, they tend to move on regulatory news and number two, any indication that more users might be coming online in this case, this week's news is mostly about more potential users and traders of crypto. so on tuesday, we noted mastercard had published a document saying how they would speed up cristo transactions holding both fiat currencies and crypto currencies. mastercard getting involved in cryptos and bitcoin was up 3% and its best performance in three months on friday we reported coinbase was considering adding to its platform, bitcoin cash, ethereum and litecoin on their platform these coins all jumped and even bitcoin was up 5% that day so bitcoin volume is only modestly higher and then only in the last few days and futures volumes haven't changed too much so don't get too excited yet there's one other possible positive here. regulatory, on tuesday, fed chair jerome powell said the fed was not thinking of creating a crepto currency. sounds like a negative the purists are seeing this, they don't want government intervention or oversight. if the fed gets into crypto business there is potential for much more regulation in their minds, the purists' mind, this would be a negative so powell saying this could be viewed as a mild positive for prices, i think is an interesting idea if you accept the fact that more regulation would be negative for cryptos. melissa, back to you >> bobks bob pisani at the new york stock exchange let's trade it when we were speaking to barry. >> the amazing thing is crypto had no reaction. >> that was the best scenario. >> and that's how it should work and that's how the asset classes are designed to do, and the fiat currency markets and here's a currency, alternative currency they doesn't sway necessarily with the global political whim we've had a lot of positive news and i've been at the plasma talking about all of these positive developments and bob just laid a lot of them out and i think we just got to the point where the sellers were done. the sellers were exhausted and buyers came in we popped tires. 6800, big technical resistance and we busted through that, up 9% it looks to me like we may have bottomed here. >> some traders out there saying that it was all part of a short squeeze. let's welcome back arthur hayes, the co-founder of bitmix, the largest crypto trading exchange by volume. we've just given you a nickname arthur, m
bob pisani joins us from the new york stock exchange. hi, bob. >> melissa, it may not be roaring back to life, exactly, but bitcoin has been definitely picking up its head up off the floor. some reports are calling this a short squeeze and up four consecutive days from 7,000 to $7400. bitcoin is on google it's dropped dramatically in the past few month, but cryptos tend to move on two things. number one, they tend to move on regulatory news and number two, any indication that more users...
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Jul 24, 2018
07/18
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FOXNEWSW
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bob macdonald's case and bob menendez case and you feel that your husband, that what they did was more egregious than what he did and that politics came into play. how so? >> with senator menendez, he was given the jury instructions that we wanted in our case. if we were given the same law that he was given in his trial, my husband would be a free man today. but the court played politics and they had to bury my husband so deep that he could never come out and protest. they gave him a 14 year sentence for asking for campaign contributions essentially. >> martha: i'm just curious, it seems to me that one of the strongest arguments you have, and i know you go back to the case and talk about the way the jury instructions and all of that, which is very interesting, is the length of the sentence. is that something that you are pursuing with the white house in terms of a possible pardon for him? to say that time served is enough, he has missed so much time with his two daughters growing up and he will never get that back? >> absolutely. my older daughter just graduated from college. she's heading off to graduate school. my younger daughter is learning how to drive and as i'm sitting there next to her in the passenger seat and thinking this is a job for her father. he should be sitting here next to her teaching her how to drive and these are moments that we will never get back. his sentence is at least double that of any other elected official up until that point and it's outrageous for what the charges are. even if you take the charges for face value and believe somehow that it was a fair trial and that it's just, that sentence is so out of line from anything in the history of the united states. >> martha: we will see where it goes. patty, thank you very much. good to have you here tonight and we will be watching it very closely. our thanks to you. >> thank you. >> martha: let's bring in marc theissen at american enterprises. and charlie hurt, both are fox news contributor. juan williams is here as well. cohost of "the five" and a fox news political analyst. obviously, patty blagojevich wants to get her husband out of prison, and who can blame her? he missed a lot of time at home with their family. what do you make of her arguments and the fact that she is making it analogous in some ways to what she sees happening now and she believes that it was politically motivated in terms of the length of time of that sentence? >> first of all, your heart breaks for her and for her family and her kids, because they didn't do anything wrong. they've lost their dad to a long prison term and a husband to a long prison term so they are doing their best to try and figure out a way to get their husband back and father back and that's completely understandable. however, their case has no legal merit. he was convicted of 18 counts, 13 were upheld on appeal. at the five were dismissed were because of bad jury instruction on a technicality. he was convicted of wire fraud, attempting to solicit bribes and not just in the case of the obama senate seat. he was convicted of extorting a children's hospital for a $50,000 contribution in order to release money to them. he was convicted of extorting racetrack owners before refusing to sign legislation for racetracks. there's a lot of stuff going on, there was not just one case. it was a pattern of extortion. they have lost all their appeals and they have no choice but to get a commutation from the president. it's their only hope. what they're doing is playing the comey card, they are playing the mueller card to make their case. >> martha: exactly and you make excellent points. he was impeached overwhelmingly by the illinois house and senate as well. i think the only person who voted not to impeach him was his wife's sister, who was serving in the house. she stuck up for him. but i do think that there is a legitimate claim in terms of the time served and when you look at bob menendez and bob macdonald in virginia, there are a lot of similarities and they got off much easier. >> sure. there's a great argument there in terms of the amount of time. the courts have basically been sort of moved on the issue of what exactly is political corruption? and this is a major constitutional issue and the reason is because there are a lot of skeezy politicians that do skeezy things. we don't like that. and we want to do something to curb that. but of course there is something more terrifying than a skeezy politician, and that is prosecutors that pursue politicians, professional prosecutors who pursue professional politicians and we don't really understand everything that's going on and we don't understand are they politically motivated, are they not? that's where i think she raises a lot of interesting points at a time where we ought to be thinking about these sorts of things. from the beginning, the reason the investigation into the trump campaign and those around dona
bob macdonald's case and bob menendez case and you feel that your husband, that what they did was more egregious than what he did and that politics came into play. how so? >> with senator menendez, he was given the jury instructions that we wanted in our case. if we were given the same law that he was given in his trial, my husband would be a free man today. but the court played politics and they had to bury my husband so deep that he could never come out and protest. they gave him a 14...
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Jul 1, 2018
07/18
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KPIX
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bob! >> hey, how are you? >> reporter: following this podnesday's speech in north dakota, a man who sounds like president trump can be heard speaking on the phone to someone posing as democratic senator bob menendez. >> so, bobe's what-- let me do this. i'm on air force one. i'm just coming back from an amazing rally in north dakota, actually. >> reporter: but this was the man on the other end of the phone: comedian john melendez, >> posing as the new jersey senator as a practical joke for his s tuttering john" podcast. as it was a lot easier than i could have ever imagined. >> reporter: after initially being rebuffed by the white ftuse switch board, melendez claims he was eventually patched through to jared kushner, the s soident's son-in-law and advisor, who said the president ad would call him back. melendez said, 20 minutes later, he was connected to president trump. >> i think we can do a real immigration bill. we have to have security at the border. bi have to have it. e it was definitely him. there's no way they're going to deny it. >> reporter: asked for a response, the white house has tt denied the incident, telling nes news, "we are not engaging on this at all." the white house did call the office
bob! >> hey, how are you? >> reporter: following this podnesday's speech in north dakota, a man who sounds like president trump can be heard speaking on the phone to someone posing as democratic senator bob menendez. >> so, bobe's what-- let me do this. i'm on air force one. i'm just coming back from an amazing rally in north dakota, actually. >> reporter: but this was the man on the other end of the phone: comedian john melendez, >> posing as the new jersey...
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Jul 6, 2018
07/18
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bob. >> hi, bob. >> hello?we decided to make him a psychologist. >> we seem to have run out of things to say. >> why don't we pray? >> let's pray for the end of this session. >> i didn't know anything about therapy prior to that. >> i'm from the planet bluthar. it's in the galoo galaxy. >> how -- how long you going to be in town? >> i didn't want to do a show, "where are your children?" i didn't want to be the dumb dad. >> sit, boy. >> howard, i don't care, i just don't want to make any more decisions. >> people will say, "gee, my dad and i used to watch the show. and it was great." and then you realize you're part of people's lives. ♪ >> the '70s was the era where a certain artistry developed. "m.a.s.h." really changed people's perception of what the sitcom can be. the sitcom could be cinematic. >> "m.a.s.h." was shot like a movie. and "m.a.s.h." was maybe the single most unique situation comedy ever. >> i have a headache. a tremendous headache. it goes all the way down to my waist. >> the television series "m
bob. >> hi, bob. >> hello?we decided to make him a psychologist. >> we seem to have run out of things to say. >> why don't we pray? >> let's pray for the end of this session. >> i didn't know anything about therapy prior to that. >> i'm from the planet bluthar. it's in the galoo galaxy. >> how -- how long you going to be in town? >> i didn't want to do a show, "where are your children?" i didn't want to be the dumb dad. >>...
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Jul 28, 2018
07/18
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MSNBCW
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but with regards to bob mueller's investigation it becomes interesting because we've talked about this for weeks. bob mueller is operating on bob mueller's time line and until he releases that report, until there's a conclusion reached in that report, all of this is -- is politics. meaning outside of that investigation. and bob mueller to his credit has done a completely apolitical type of investigation despite the onslaught of hyper political tensions outside of it coming at him from both sides. so until that conclusion is reached and until that report is made public, you know, no one knows what's on the tapes. but i will say, why was michael cohen recording those tapes? i think you know, the president has tried to go after him for that. >> i think a lot of people want to know that reason. >> julia, let me play for you what rudy giuliani said right after this allegation was made. let's listen. >> ip expected something like this from cohen. he's been lying for years. i don't see if he had any credibility. if you had a trial and there won't be a trial, which lie do you want to pick? the first lie, the second lie, some new lie? t
but with regards to bob mueller's investigation it becomes interesting because we've talked about this for weeks. bob mueller is operating on bob mueller's time line and until he releases that report, until there's a conclusion reached in that report, all of this is -- is politics. meaning outside of that investigation. and bob mueller to his credit has done a completely apolitical type of investigation despite the onslaught of hyper political tensions outside of it coming at him from both...
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Jul 20, 2018
07/18
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BBCNEWS
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since then, the albums have sold more than 120 million copies, and featured hits from bob marley to bobrespondent colin paterson charts the history of the biggest—selling music compilation series in the world. now that's what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed for ever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this is their london base. how many of you are there here? there's only eight of us. steve pritchard has been with now since now 20, and has a theory why it's survived. it's that strange mix of current music, because now was always about currency, and nostalgia, because mums and dads remember their first now and maybe want to buy it for the kids or for the family in the car. now 44, with number ones from steps... # tragedy! now 44 was the biggest selling now album ever. released in november 1999, people bought it for their millennium parties. robbie williams has made the most now appearances with 31, an
since then, the albums have sold more than 120 million copies, and featured hits from bob marley to bobrespondent colin paterson charts the history of the biggest—selling music compilation series in the world. now that's what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed for ever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this...
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Jul 16, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN3
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bob to talk to this, america didn't have adequate infrastructure of treatment folks that knew how to deal with heroin annexed. addicts. the methadone treatment programs were not that expensive. bob, i would like for you to talk to the relative expenses. again, that was jerry jaffe's mantra. let's get treatment into america , and this created the compassionate balance between what was perceived as only the nixon administration's focus on law enforcement balanced with compassionate programs. did forook at what this the law enforcement side. we are seizing importation. we are increasing the price of drugs. we are doing our dead level best to end the availability of heroin. and at the same time, we are making treatment available for those people are. you've got this very happy balance at the time between stronger law enforcement and wider availability of treatment. when you go back to jerry jaffe in the press room, he's being , created by executive order. this is the actual legislation. the room is full. this legislation passed the congress without a single dissenting vote. nixon said off-camera, time and people, theo his votes are for law enforcement. people don't want addicts roaming around on the streets. that is what my constituency wants. but we can't do that to these addicts without supplying treatment. there aren't any votes for expanded treatment. we are going down both paths at once. i'm concerned about running out of time. we've got to start to conclude here. slide to more than a talk about. person i'm the only who's known all 17 of them. >> we can get through them. withre's nixon meeting treasury and law enforcement people in the oval office, talking about drugs yet again. here's another meeting in the cabinet room. chronology,rough a nixon is doing something at least every other month on drug abuse treatment or law enforcement. here he goes down to texas and he's talking to the customs agents where the stuff has started to come in a cross the border. -- weare two articles don't have time for you to read them. veryad written at the time important articles. this is science magazine. this one he co-authors with wilson. author of the broken windows theory, that you have to get on petty crime right away. he co-authors a wonderful article which we recommend to all of you. and this is another signature. bob is in this. we've broken into color pictures. bills. nixon signing to we're going to the last three slides. you can hold still. ab organized and sponsored 35th anniversary reunion of the people who worked on the drug treatment side in the nixon administration. this is the morning panel. jerry jaffe is at the podium. they are talking about this dramatic change in treatment and fighting drug abuse that had occurred under the nixon administration. bob himself addressing the second panel. we didn't get a picture of the panel. but it was so interesting because of this reunion. h.e.w. headed the best. he had been a bureaucrat for 30 years and never had he remembered a situation like what happened when the nixon administration took leadership of drug abuse treatment. he said he was called into a meeting at the secretary's office, the only time he saw the secretary, and richardson said this is an initiative, the president is exercising leadership, and i don't want to hear my departments not s
bob to talk to this, america didn't have adequate infrastructure of treatment folks that knew how to deal with heroin annexed. addicts. the methadone treatment programs were not that expensive. bob, i would like for you to talk to the relative expenses. again, that was jerry jaffe's mantra. let's get treatment into america , and this created the compassionate balance between what was perceived as only the nixon administration's focus on law enforcement balanced with compassionate programs. did...
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Jul 5, 2018
07/18
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CNBC
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bob, thanks bob pisani at the nyse. >>> our next guest sent shock waves, shock waves across the crypto market when he made the comments on cnbc earlier today >> bitcoin's historically traded at two and a half times its mining cost. so it's not out of the question that it could be over 20,000 by the end of the year. >> bitcoin would still have to rally over 200% to reach 20,000, but the $20,000 comment was interpreted by some as a sign of bearishness. we may remember even as bitcoin has plunged, tom lee stood by his 25,000 year-end price target he is back to say that his reports of his bearishness have been greatly exaggerated >> i was on "squawk box" with you early this morning and it did take me back instead of saying 25k do you stand by 25k? >> i do think it's the first time i've ever heard someone thinking something could triple is a bearish comment >> yes. >> right i may have misspoken a little bit. what i was trying to illustrate is given what the mining cost will be and applying the historical average of two and a half times mining cost, that would imply a fair value over 20,000, roughly 22,000 so we still think bitcoin can reach 25,000 by the end of the year or something like that, but it is still a huge move from where it is now. >> so you're not bearish and i can tell how it's completely exaggerated and taken out of context. >> we've had rob on from your shop as well and you would put bitcoin up and he would come over and i would ask him is 25 possible and he said it's going to be hard, but yeah, that's the forecast >> if you look at the history. bobnted out, bitcoin moved from 7,000 to 10,000 in a couple of week, but from a historical perspective, over any six-month period 25 time it's more than tripled. so, in other words, in any typical period bitcoin can triple one or three times. it's not out of the question that bitcoin can make a big move from here and i would just point out that what makes it unusual today is bitcoin is trading below mining cost and six months forward. this is only roughly ten years in history, bitcoin has had a positive return in nearly 100% of instances whenever it's traded below mining cost >> the risk reward is a symmetrically positive >> this has got to start soon. >> six months out and we are six months into the year and we have six months left. >> bitcoin is quite volatile and it's only got a ten-year history and in the entire history it's always been a good time to buy below cost. >> i don't understand why mining cost is necessarily a floor. we've seen in other, mining gold and things trade below t
bob, thanks bob pisani at the nyse. >>> our next guest sent shock waves, shock waves across the crypto market when he made the comments on cnbc earlier today >> bitcoin's historically traded at two and a half times its mining cost. so it's not out of the question that it could be over 20,000 by the end of the year. >> bitcoin would still have to rally over 200% to reach 20,000, but the $20,000 comment was interpreted by some as a sign of bearishness. we may remember even as...
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Jul 2, 2018
07/18
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but if he comes on board as a cooperating witness with bob mueller, bob mueller can certainly work cooperativelye state authorities and ent near what's called a global plea agreement. i've done it many times. when an cooperating witness has criminal exposure in multiple jurisdictions, one prosecutor can take the lead and work cooperatively with the other jurisdictions to bring him on as what we call a global cooperator. so i really think cooperation with the mueller investigation is the only game in town at this point for michael cohen. >> you got to wonder what his legal team is think right now, meaning the president's, not cohen's. thank you so much, glen k kirshner, appreciate it. >>> doubling down on tariffs against key u.s. allies. despite all the pressure from business leaders, world leaders. they're saying the move will trigger job losses and harm economic growth. >> the european union is possibly as bad as china, just smaller. okay. it's terrible what they did to us. european union, take a look at the car situation. they send mercedes in. we can't send our cars in. look what they do to o
but if he comes on board as a cooperating witness with bob mueller, bob mueller can certainly work cooperativelye state authorities and ent near what's called a global plea agreement. i've done it many times. when an cooperating witness has criminal exposure in multiple jurisdictions, one prosecutor can take the lead and work cooperatively with the other jurisdictions to bring him on as what we call a global cooperator. so i really think cooperation with the mueller investigation is the only...
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Jul 27, 2018
07/18
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KPIX
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bob noids house. bob was mowing the lawn. they were discussing the state of their current jobs as well as the possibility of a new industry. >> reporter: elizabeth jones is intel's archivist. she runs the intel museum in santa clara,and apparen b it's a good idea in. >> he did, and on july 18th, 1968, intel was incorporated. >> reporter: ahis previous semd the circuit. a way to etch all the circuits onto a tiny slice of silicon. >> we have intel's first product, a memory chip called the 3101. >> before that, how did they make memory? >> thts this larger device on top called core memory. >> reporter: smaller also meant faster and easier to make. this plant near portland, oregon, one of intel's oldest, is what a chip factory looks like today. no tv crew has ever been allowed inside before. do you have this in a khaki? >> no, i'm sorry. >> reporter: isha evans, intel's chief strategy officer, showed me how to put on the so-called bunny suit. that's her on the left. i did take a thorough shower this morning. why was all this necessary? >> we want maximum purity as the material is being assembled. >> reporter: each shiny round sheet of silicon fits about 500 identical chips, which will be cut apart and installed into the micro processors, the electronic brains that control just about everything in our lives with an on switch. each chip is etched with impossibly small channels of circuitry only ten mothillionthf an inch wide. is it some little switch watch maker with a magnifying glass? >> robots. >> how would you say the making of silicon chips has changed in 50 years? >> you know what? the basic principles and fundamentals haven't changed at all. just a lot more automation, a lot more complexity. and also more layers. >> i see. and that's to get more circuitry into less space? >> that's exactly right. >> reporter: getting more circuitry into less space is the whole point of moore's law. that's gordon moore's prediction way back in 1965 that we'd be able to double the amount of circuitry, meaning power and memory, that can be crammed onto a chip about every year and a half. he's basically been right for all 50 years. >> now, you know that moore's law is not a law of physics. it's the result of tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people making ongoing improvements in reducing the width of these lines that are printed on the integrated circuits. >> reporter: john dor started working at intel in 1974. today as chairman of kleiner perkins. he's one of the world's most successful venture capitalists. >> someone once said if supplied to automobiles today, cars would cost a few pennies. they'd get thousands of miles per gallon, and we wouldn't even and get another one.rked them. t >> reporter: in the beginning, intel made computer memory, chips for storing information. but things really took off in 1971 when bobes invented micro processors, that is chips that could process information. and then -- >> with this tool for modern times -- >> reporter: ibm came along. >> ibm chose to base its personal computer on intel's architecture. >> and had ibm chosen some other company's chip -- >> intel probably wouldn't be here today. >> the makeup of the company started with the founders, and they said these simple words back 50 years ago. don't be encumbered by the past. go and do something wonderful. >> bob swan is intel's interim ceo. >> and there's another saying associated with this company, which is only the paranoid survive. >> we're always looking, always worried, always curious. who is doing something else? and if we're not worried about them, they will catch up to us. >> reporter: it hasn't all been smooth sailing. the company famously missed the boat on making the processors for smartphones like the iphone. then as pc sales began to slip, intel had to lay off thousands rsr the but today intel s
bob noids house. bob was mowing the lawn. they were discussing the state of their current jobs as well as the possibility of a new industry. >> reporter: elizabeth jones is intel's archivist. she runs the intel museum in santa clara,and apparen b it's a good idea in. >> he did, and on july 18th, 1968, intel was incorporated. >> reporter: ahis previous semd the circuit. a way to etch all the circuits onto a tiny slice of silicon. >> we have intel's first product, a memory...
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Jul 16, 2018
07/18
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bob dupont. bob, where were you when nixon was elected and how did you become involved in this? bob: my life changed when richard nixon was inaugurated in a dramatic way. and let me go back before that how i got to that point where my life changed so dramatically. i graduated from emory college in atlanta in 1958 and from harvard medical school in 1963. i did my psychiatric training at harvard and came to n.i.h. for research training. when i finished that in 1932, it was time for me to find my first job. up until that time i had been in training. one day a week during his -- my residency, i worked for the state prison which was distinguished as the place where malcolm x served six years and i really fell in love with the prisoners and the prisons as a career thought. and i thought i really care about these people. i want to help them. i want to make a career in this area and find some way to use my medical knowledge to do something about that. so come my time, i finished my training july 1st of 1968, which is very important time for what we're talking about, i went to work for the d
bob dupont. bob, where were you when nixon was elected and how did you become involved in this? bob: my life changed when richard nixon was inaugurated in a dramatic way. and let me go back before that how i got to that point where my life changed so dramatically. i graduated from emory college in atlanta in 1958 and from harvard medical school in 1963. i did my psychiatric training at harvard and came to n.i.h. for research training. when i finished that in 1932, it was time for me to find my...
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Jul 25, 2018
07/18
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bob in alleys where there was no hope. i have been with bob and families after their relatives were shot. bob has worked to bring help to the helpless and hope to the hopeless. bob, you are a good man. and i thank you and your family, your wife and children, for what you have meant to our community and to our world. true soldiers are always reluctant to come off the battlefield, but there comes a time when we must put away our swords and shields to practice war no more. when that time comes, bob, just know, that you have made a difference. when you came to south austin, newspapers were writing it would be the next big slum. they did not know you and they did not know the people of south austin. south austin is not a slum. it is a vibrant, forward thinking, forward moving community. bob, you have done the master's work. you have fed the hungry. clothed the naked. brought hope to the hopeless. and help to the helpless. you have lifted spirits and you have taught people how to love and how to live. and how to work together. i close by leaving these words with and for you. if, when you give the b
bob in alleys where there was no hope. i have been with bob and families after their relatives were shot. bob has worked to bring help to the helpless and hope to the hopeless. bob, you are a good man. and i thank you and your family, your wife and children, for what you have meant to our community and to our world. true soldiers are always reluctant to come off the battlefield, but there comes a time when we must put away our swords and shields to practice war no more. when that time comes,...
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Jul 27, 2018
07/18
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CNNW
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we spend so much time talking about bob mueller, and bob mueller is not harry potter.s not the guy who's going to make it all better tomorrow and give us the country we want. we have to stay focused on the mid-term election. when i'm out there in red states and red districts they're not talking about this stuff. they're talking about jobs and price of gas. sometimes i think democrats get so gleefullyrump is disqualifying himself, but we're not qualifying ourselves. >> you don't want democrats to make russia the central theme of investigation, but i talked to some who say we should make trump the central theme of this campaign. >> listen, if you haven't figured out by now you like trump a lot or udon't like trump a lot, the people voting in the mid-term election who matter, that's really where the action plays out. they are still trying to figure out who is going to help me with the health care bills, the education bills. we got more jobs, i got two or three of them and i still can't get the health care. that's the situation i want the democrats to stay on top of. you'v
we spend so much time talking about bob mueller, and bob mueller is not harry potter.s not the guy who's going to make it all better tomorrow and give us the country we want. we have to stay focused on the mid-term election. when i'm out there in red states and red districts they're not talking about this stuff. they're talking about jobs and price of gas. sometimes i think democrats get so gleefullyrump is disqualifying himself, but we're not qualifying ourselves. >> you don't want...
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Jul 12, 2018
07/18
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CNNW
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bob mueller's per sengs of you, it couldn't possibly be your bias. bob mueller doesn't ask you about a single one of them. then i look at other people bob mueller picked on his team, people like lisa paige. i'm curious to know if he asked her about any of her incendiary text messages. throughout the team you've got people working for bob mueller who have active connections to hillary clinton. greg anders donated to the clinton campaign, kyle freiny. james corals donated to the clinton campaign. andrew weissman, the number two for mueller, attended hillary clinton's election night party. aaron zelby represented justin cooper who set up hillary clinton's private e-mail server. then it's you and ms. paige. it's really interesting to me that when you were so damaging to the investigation that you had to go, that bob mueller, the person who brought in all these people that had connections to hillary clinton's campaign did not ask you about a single text message. i tend to believe that it's because he did not want to know the answer and that there was bias and that your perception of bob mueller's perception of you is totally unreliable and i
bob mueller's per sengs of you, it couldn't possibly be your bias. bob mueller doesn't ask you about a single one of them. then i look at other people bob mueller picked on his team, people like lisa paige. i'm curious to know if he asked her about any of her incendiary text messages. throughout the team you've got people working for bob mueller who have active connections to hillary clinton. greg anders donated to the clinton campaign, kyle freiny. james corals donated to the clinton campaign....
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Jul 23, 2018
07/18
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MSNBCW
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bob dole wasn't on board with -- >> happy birthday, bob dole. >> happy birthday, bob dole. ith newt gingrich's revolution, not all of it. bob dole is much more of an eisenhower republican. as the generations move on, you have a chance to redefine what the party stands for. i think it is natural. >> look, i don't think leader pelosi should be saying anyone is inconsequential. it is not the right message from a leader of the house democrats, particularly one who has had challenges against her leadership. i just think that was completely off message and borderline insulting to some of her members. >> history. we could learn from it. there was a recent election, and democrats did lose. time to get it together and power through to the next one. thank you, both, so much. you know how i always end this show. with good news. there's always good news somewhere, and we believe good news ruhles. an assistant volunteer fire chief in lancaster county, south carolina, arrived as a surprise birthday celebration this weekend at the firehouse. the biggest and best surprise came out of the fi
bob dole wasn't on board with -- >> happy birthday, bob dole. >> happy birthday, bob dole. ith newt gingrich's revolution, not all of it. bob dole is much more of an eisenhower republican. as the generations move on, you have a chance to redefine what the party stands for. i think it is natural. >> look, i don't think leader pelosi should be saying anyone is inconsequential. it is not the right message from a leader of the house democrats, particularly one who has had...
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Jul 19, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN2
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bob alvarez, formerly of the department of energy. bob? >> i'm recovering from the department of energy. [laughter] >> what i'm going to talk about here are mostly predisposal issues associated with nuclear power plants. especially the spent fuel aspect of it, which is really the most significant long-lasting problem facing the closure of power plants. as you know, nuclear power plants are no longer just about generating electricity. they have become major large scale radioactive waste management operations. after about 60 years, the united states has generated roughly 30% of the total global inventory of spent nuclear fuel. by far, the largest, about 80,000, 150 metric tons, about 125 sites, 99 which are operational. why should we be concerned about this? as i have said, because mainly because this material which is considered some of the most hazardous material on the planet. it is a unique material that is sort of the -- something that was totally new and unthought about until about the 1950s when the united states government began to sort of ponder the subject of what do we do with these wastes? in 1959, university professor at johns hopkins testified before congress the first time they inquired into the subject, the toxicity, radioactive chemical is greater by far than any industrial material which we have here to dealt with. he said we dispose of waste of almost every industry in the united states by actual conversion into harmless material. he stressed this is the first series of wastes of any industry where this disposal is nonexistent. spent fuel is essentially bound up in more than 244,000 long rectangular assemblies, containing tens of millions of rods that in turn contain trillions of pellets about the size of a fingerprint. and they stay -- they have a radioactive core for about six years, 5 to 6 percent of that uranium is converted to highly radioactive material that are ranging from half lives of seconds to millions of years. because of this -- these extraordinary hazards, it's been long recognized that this fuel should be disposed of contained, actually disposal is not necessarily the appropriate term, but contained for a period of time of at least 10,000 to 100,000 years which sort of transcends the geologic epic defining human civilization. this is a slide that was given to me by david craft, which i think it is very useful about where the paths are right now. one thing that's key is indefinite storage seems to be the likely commonality as opposed to what will happen. as i said, there are major radioactive waste generators. they contain about 23 billion -- of radioactivity. these are considered the largest concentrations of artificial radioactivity on the planet. one way to compare that is how much radioactivity has been generated by the production of nuclear weapons in the united states. the radioactive in their high level waste is about 30 times less than what's been generated by commercial nuclear power plants. the amount of radioactive -- a very dangerous isotope, roughly 40% of the longer lived isotopes and spent fuel is about 350 times more than what's released in the environment by all 600 plus atmospheric nuclear weapons tests in spent fuel. about 700 metric tons of plutonium. the global inventory of plutonium is about 250 metric tons so there's a lot of stuff in there. right now about 70% of the waste that's been generated by nuclear power plants, spent fuel is sitting in pools and densely compacted. the rest is in dry storage. this is a graph to give you an idea of reactors that are -- this is somewhat dated because i think there's some additional reactors should be added to this, but this gives you an idea of spent fuel, future stranded reactors. we're looking at more than a quarter of the total spent fuel generated by nuclear power plants in this country now at stranded reactors or soon to be stranded reactors. one of the major -- we've talked a lot about the radioactive hazards of these wastes but the other principle danger is it gives off tremendous amounts of heat in the form of what's called decay heat, thermal heat. if you pull a full core that's been irradiated for a few years out of a reactor, at the same time, it gives out enough decay heat to fire a steel mill blast furnace. that's quite hot and it is enough to cause the spent fuel to catch fire as well as even over time the heat remains a problem for about 1200 years when you get into geologic disposal. the heat is so great it can actually destabilize the disposal medium, so you have to deal with the issues with decay heat. we got involved with this problem in 2002, 2003, following the 9/11 attacks. my colleagues and i put together a working group and basically determined -- reported in a very scientific journal that if somebody or some event were to cause the pools to drain at u.s. nuclear power plants as they are currently with spent fuel that it would lead to a catastrophic release of radioacty that would be far better than a meltdown. the nuclear regulatory commission opposed to what we had to say. the national academy was called in to referee our dispute. they came with findings in 2005 which the nrc attempted to suppress and rewrite, but they basically agreed with us that you have to take this problem seriously. these spent fuel pools are holding about four to five times spent fuel than their current designs allowed. because of that, these spent fuel pools were never meant to hold this material longer than five years. now they are holding them for decades, and they don't have the same type of safety measures that a reactor has, like the secondary containment, the big dome. it doesn't have independent water supply. it doesn't have its own independent source for electricity. we pointed out that one of the big problems is a spent fuel pool fire, a couple years ago my colleagues have updated their analysis and basically pointed out that if an accident were to cur -- occur at the reactor, about 8 million people would have to be evacuated because of land contamination. the damages on the average would be around 2 trillion dollars. this is far greater than hurricane katrina. we are look at something that would be brought about technological disaster that would be comparable to war. one of the problems with spent fuel is it's sort of unresolved is the fact that the nuclear regulatory commission has been allowing the reactor operators to irradiate the fuel longer by increasing the amount of uranium 235 from about 3 1/2 to almost 5 percent in content. what this does is it builds up a great deal more radioactivity products as well as fissile materials and this stuff is very hot, and the nrc does not have a technical basis to support the safe transport of this material, and it's likely to be trapped at reactor sites until we figure out whether this stuff can be safely moved. what the research is showing that the longer you keep the stuff in a reactor and irradiate, the thinner it becomes, the more likely it corrodes. it becomes very vulnerable to movement and vibrations, and so -- there's no technical basis in terms of information to tell you about the levels that they are burning up right now, whether it's safe or any long-term storage or movement. this gives you an idea of how much -- burn up at stranded reactors, roughly 23%. there's a lot of effort to try to push for an interim storage site to get it out of my backyard. hence you have a lot of legislative initiatives that have been promoted over the last few years to do that. this is easier said than done because we have a basic problem where transportation infrastructure near reactor sites are variable and changing. each spent fuel canister -- challenges, some of the dry casts out there are not suitable for transport. the pick up and transportation order hasn't been determined. and what you have is a steady growth of shutdowns and a buildup that's going to clog the system. so will the older stuff have priority? what if the older stuff is further away? these are issues that have not been worked out. and the high burn up material which gives out an awful lot of thermal heat may result in being trapped sites for much longer periods than we have been led to believe. it could have a major impact because transportation and certainly disposal will certainly involve repackaging of as many as 11,800 disposal canisters. now, where is the money coming from? under the nuclear waste policy act, the users of nuclear generated electricity are levied a user fee of 1 mill per kilowatt hour and that is to pay for the search and the opening of a repository. it does not pay for the establishment of an interim storage site, the transport of that material to that site, the repackaging of the material for disposal. that is to be borne by the rate payer at this time. although there is legislation that's been offered that would allow the doe to assume title for a pilot program, but beware of that, because that could turn into a down payment for a balloon mortgage. we don't really -- we're looking at expense -- things have not been costed out in an adequate fashion. this is a rough graph. i will give you a quiz on it when i'm done. to give you an idea of what it would cost maybe to store some of the stranded spent fuel, gets up to about 3.8 billion dollars. this is doe numbers. you know, doe has a great record of missing the target when it comes to costs inflation. repackaging is one of the big issues that's not been dealt with. when they shut the reactors down, they remove the infrastructure to allow for repackaging which are the pools. so -- and a lot of these dry casts cannot necessarily be opened without some sort of infrastructure. doe expects a repository to be opened if the planets line up and congress goes along with the licensing process and a ribbon cutting ceremony they will come up -- they will be able to open a repository by 2048 and then after that it will take about 50 years to fill the repository, and you're basically looking at perhaps the repackaging of 80,000 small canisters. the costs doe has been looking at this, you are looking at maybe a billion dollars per reactor additional costs to repackage. uncertainties, i found this to be a very interesting quote. they are hedging their bet when they issued their decommissioning report. this report should not be taken as any indication -- how doe will eventually perform its obligations or any specific expectations regarding that performance. so these guys are essentially on their own trying to make things up as they go along. so the basic approach undertaken in this country is for storage disposal of spent fuel needs to be fundamentally revamped. we need to address the vulnerabilities of storage and spent fuel pools. i think they need to be rapidly thinned out. take about ten years. estimate costing between 3.5 and 7 billion dollars to do that. that would greatly reduce your hazards, your consequences, and instead of waiting for problems to arise, which tends to be the modus operandi of the regulators in the government, they need to develop a transparent comprehensive road map of what the problems are for the public to understand, what are we talking about in terms of interim storage? how long will it take? how much will it cost? otherwise, the united states would depend on these leaps of faith with regard to nuclear waste storage and leaps of faith as a stage for largely unfunded radioactive waste balloon mortgage payments in the future. thank you very much. [applause] >> thank you, bob alvarez. bob, i should mention -- is currently a senior scholar at the institute for policy studies and he like all of our panelists will be available for media interviews at the conclusion of this session. we also have reserved about half hour for you to quiz our experts up here and we will save questions until all of the panelists are done. next we have kevin camps. kevin is a nuclear waste specialist with the organization beyond nuclear. he also works with a number of other organizations and has been following these issues for a good deal of time. he's going to talk about some of the difficulties with storage options and also about some alternatives for those of you who remember bonanza, the 20th century tv program. >> i apologize in advance i will have to skip through slides, but bob has done a great job. i will fly through some images. we oppose not only the current risky pool storage but also the inadequate dry cast storage and that's why we're calling for hardened on site stora
bob alvarez, formerly of the department of energy. bob? >> i'm recovering from the department of energy. [laughter] >> what i'm going to talk about here are mostly predisposal issues associated with nuclear power plants. especially the spent fuel aspect of it, which is really the most significant long-lasting problem facing the closure of power plants. as you know, nuclear power plants are no longer just about generating electricity. they have become major large scale radioactive...
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Jul 29, 2018
07/18
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bob! love you, man. that is bob. [applause] this is bob, matt, i do not know if matt is here. and me. hite album. it is. this is our record. and it does rock. it is cool. but it's serious. you know i hope -- real soon. i want to thank c-span for coming. that is real cool. detroit, look at the camera. everybody turn around and stand up. turn around, stand up. everybody. tell them we count! -- we read books too! detroit public library. they are in bankruptcy, when they had the art museum that cut the budget here. art is cool, i love it. the way we got the art, was, our collectors in europe, predominantly jewish, sold it to get out to save their families. their children, basically. so i don't really hold onto things more powerful than a beautiful piece of art is literacy, books. writings, the most democratic art of them all. not all born to chisel or paint or play. but just about everybody on planet earth, just about everybody is taught in some way, shape or form to take a pencil to a piece of paper and put your thoughts down. support your public library and support literacy. i want to th
bob! love you, man. that is bob. [applause] this is bob, matt, i do not know if matt is here. and me. hite album. it is. this is our record. and it does rock. it is cool. but it's serious. you know i hope -- real soon. i want to thank c-span for coming. that is real cool. detroit, look at the camera. everybody turn around and stand up. turn around, stand up. everybody. tell them we count! -- we read books too! detroit public library. they are in bankruptcy, when they had the art museum that cut...
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Jul 6, 2018
07/18
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KNTV
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bob swims every day to stay up to the task. as for working with guards a quarter of his age? >> i try to give them their space. >> reporter: there's also a lot they could learn. >> bob has seen rescues, bob knows what could happen. >> reporter: lifeguards with life experience spending their golden years back in the sun. >> kristen dahlgren reporting there. it's not the only workplace turning to retirees. older americans are quickly becoming fixtures in seasonal jobs and a benefit is that they don't go back to school before labor day so you can be sure that bob and the others will be there on the lifeguard stand through the summer. but i think he said it best. it is about identifying the problem before a problem. you know? you don't have to worry he's checking out the girls or anything. >> not going to be scrolling through instagram while lifeguarding. >> he is 85. he is not dead. >> i don't know about that one. >> the teenagers like, how you doing? >> yeah. so that's really good and people heading to the pools this weekend. >> why. >> so you do have to make sure you're careful about that and also the beaches this weekend. as we take a live look outside right now in dublin, already locks
bob swims every day to stay up to the task. as for working with guards a quarter of his age? >> i try to give them their space. >> reporter: there's also a lot they could learn. >> bob has seen rescues, bob knows what could happen. >> reporter: lifeguards with life experience spending their golden years back in the sun. >> kristen dahlgren reporting there. it's not the only workplace turning to retirees. older americans are quickly becoming fixtures in seasonal...
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Jul 30, 2018
07/18
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FBC
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bob mueller and bob mueller's team. lou: and this has been going on for some time, this appeal to the court of public opinion. because the special counsel is leaking left and right, behaving like nothing so much as a prosecutor, he is more, if you will, you know, he's on a jihad of some sort and it's an' of --e profession if it can be safely called that, has simply permitted it without comment. there is no independent objective voice now whatsoever to be heard. it is appalling what has happened and what has been permitted by the republican leadership in both the house and the senate. this is a disaster for the country and the president, frankly, has been, to me, so wronged that it is almost impossible to make it all right. >> well, at the end of the day i think it is congress that may make the call here. if you think, as i do, that there would be constitutional problems with indicting a sitting president, then the only remedy would be impeachment. as you know, that's something that would be decided by the congress. so the fact that trump, the fact that mueller, the fact that everyone is focused on the equities here, public opinion really spinning this and framing it the way they want to makes all of the sense in the world. lou: i think somehow there should be a legal action against robert mueller for taking on the political responsibility of the congress and the senate instead of a legal proceeding against the president. you said impeachment. my god, tom, what would they impeach him for. where's the high crime? or is it even a low crime? you're the attorney. you're the prosecutor. the former deputy attorney general. how? in the hell can anyone in the justice department go to work and say what am i doing today, i'm persecuting the president of the united states and we've been doing it over two years and by the way, there's not a damn bit of evidence. what person can look themselves in the mirror and say they have any integrity at all? >> well the constitutional standard is high crimes and misdemeanors and we haven't seen any evidence of that on the president's behalf. lou: let's go to low crime. let's go to little bitty damn crime. let's keep it real. there is no evidence of any crime whatsoever, high or low. >> i think at this point mueller has not shown his cards, if he has the cards to play. he has not linked any sort of meetings with the russians. maybe he gets trump's relative osar the people close to the president but he hasn't shown anything linking the president himself to something that would warrant impeachment. lou: what are we to do? the default here is instead of being persecuted by a damn special counsel -- excuse me for swearing but i am so fru frustrd and annoyed and disgusted with this entire process and the cowards, the cowardly fools and the leadership of our congressary our senate who have permitted this to go on, what is the -- the default ask impeachment for no crimes being found or no evidence of crimes being found during a special counsel information? that now becomes the default position now? >> the default position would be bob mueller gives the president a clean bill of health. he wraps the investigation up in a few months and says i have found in evidence of wrongdoing by the president. lou: wrap it up in a few months? how about a few hours. what do we need, a little, you know, 400-page document full of nonsense that amount to nothing but nothing is the starting point, it's all they could report. how many pages should that be, one, maybe two. >> and as we know from american history, these independent counsel investigations are always far longer than you thought they were going to be, not shorter. but it doesn't seem to me to be out of the question if mueller gets what he wants, an interview with the president, that he would be able to bring this thing to close. lou: the hell with mueller. this is not a game. this is the president of the united states. this nation deserves full-time leadership and no further effort to subvert, to overthrow the presidency of donald j. trump. it's ignorant open stupid beyond
bob mueller and bob mueller's team. lou: and this has been going on for some time, this appeal to the court of public opinion. because the special counsel is leaking left and right, behaving like nothing so much as a prosecutor, he is more, if you will, you know, he's on a jihad of some sort and it's an' of --e profession if it can be safely called that, has simply permitted it without comment. there is no independent objective voice now whatsoever to be heard. it is appalling what has happened...
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Jul 11, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN
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we see groups pop up like these islamic extremist groups, the drc, but have no relation to to bob desha bob. -- two shabbat. >> i think we will see everything, we are seeing what you just said. you use contemporary examples. i will give you a slightly different answer. i'm going to answer your question by saying here's what i the convergence -- and unfortunately isis has been a pioneer in these arenas. example foren an aspiring us -- extremists. the power of online radicalization. we have never seen anything like this. no longer does someone trying to recruit a terrorist ever have to physically meet an aspiring terrorist. you don't even have to directly communicate. just get the right video in the and you will inspire without any instruction. no preparation, trainingm, resourcing, a complete decentralization of the recruitment process. it has been astonishingly effective. we wouldn't be having the conversation we are happen -- we weren'tng if it incredibly effective. we wouldn't be spending all this time. i also talked about in my the ubiquitouss availability of increasingly powerful techno
we see groups pop up like these islamic extremist groups, the drc, but have no relation to to bob desha bob. -- two shabbat. >> i think we will see everything, we are seeing what you just said. you use contemporary examples. i will give you a slightly different answer. i'm going to answer your question by saying here's what i the convergence -- and unfortunately isis has been a pioneer in these arenas. example foren an aspiring us -- extremists. the power of online radicalization. we have...
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Jul 24, 2018
07/18
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KRON
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bob melvin... asked after the game about that "bridge trophy" he hoisted after the game...(sot: bob melvin) lvin>" (reporter: how heavy is that trophy?) heavier than i thought, i mean its got to be at least fifty pounds i would think. it's you know that the spotlight that the baseball world is looking at these games so you know it's rewarding won two out of three over there losing the first one and won two out of three over here losing the first one. so it kind of shows you the mettle of this team. and you know having a lead like we did today and losing it and these guys come right back. its kinda who we are and what we have established and you know each and evrey game until that last out we have a chance to win." former heisman trophy winner turned new york mets monor leaguer tim tebow may be done with his season.... he broke the hamate bond in his right hand... the injury was sustained friday night against trenton... tebow will have surgery on tuesday and is expected to miss the rest of the season... he plays outfield for the binghamton mets which is new york's double-a team also played in
bob melvin... asked after the game about that "bridge trophy" he hoisted after the game...(sot: bob melvin) " (reporter: how heavy is that trophy?) heavier than i thought, i mean its got to be at least fifty pounds i would think. it's you know that the spotlight that the baseball world is looking at these games so you know it's rewarding won two out of three over there losing the first one and won two out of three over here losing the first one. so it kind of shows you the mettle...
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Jul 20, 2018
07/18
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BBCNEWS
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since then, the albums have sold more than 120 million copies, and featured hits from bob marley to bobion series in the world. now that‘s what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed for ever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this is their london base. how many of you are there here? there‘s only eight of us. steve pritchard has been with now since now 20, and has a theory why it‘s survived. it‘s that strange mix of current music, because now is always about currency, and nostalgia, because mums and dads remember their first now and maybe want to buy it for the kids or for the family in the car. now 44, with number ones from steps... # tragedy! now 44 was the biggest selling now album ever. released in november 1999, people bought it for their millennium parties. robbie williams has made the most now appearances with 31, and now 48 even became a crucial plot point in peter kay‘s car share. # you can‘t hur
since then, the albums have sold more than 120 million copies, and featured hits from bob marley to bobion series in the world. now that‘s what i call music! 1983, and the compilation album changed for ever. no more dodgy cover versions of the latest hits. on now, it was the real thing. 11 number ones from duran duran... nows came out at a rate of three a year, so 35 years later, here we are at now 100, and this is their london base. how many of you are there here? there‘s only eight of us....