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Sep 12, 2021
09/21
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white feminist can attend marches have black brown friends and in some cases black and brown themselves. and yet be devoted to an organizational structure and system of knowledge that ensures that black asian and brown women's burien says and needs and priorities remain sidelined. more broadly, to be a white feminist, you simply have to be a person who assess the benefits conferred by white supremacy at the expense of people of color while claiming to support gender equality and solidarity with all women. this book is a critique of whiteness within feminism. it is directed at pointing out what must be broken down in order for something new, something better to take its place. it explains why intervention that simply adds black, asian or brown women to existing structures have not worked because it is a critique. it has not been possible to present the diversity of views that exist among and between black, asian and brown women. others are doing this work, but for that effort be given, this project of dismantling has to be done. this book captures what whiteness has done within the femin
white feminist can attend marches have black brown friends and in some cases black and brown themselves. and yet be devoted to an organizational structure and system of knowledge that ensures that black asian and brown women's burien says and needs and priorities remain sidelined. more broadly, to be a white feminist, you simply have to be a person who assess the benefits conferred by white supremacy at the expense of people of color while claiming to support gender equality and solidarity with...
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Sep 27, 2021
09/21
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jeffrey brown has a preview for our arts and culture series, canvas. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: when the operan my bones” opens tonight at the metropolitan opera, the stakes will be incredibly high: the first production in 18 months at the met, the country's largest performing arts company, after the covid shutdown. the first opera by a black composer in the met's 138 year history. the first ever with a black director. but there's also a deeply personal side. ask composer terence blanchard. >> when i was a kid, my father loved opera and my father was a big fan of it and always played his opera recordings at the house, man. and it was pretty funny, you know, i tell people all the time, as soon as he would put his records on you would hear doors slamming in the house because people were trying to find some peace and quiet and he didn't care. he would just sit up in the front of the house a listen to, you know, la boheme or carmen or any one of those classics. >> brown: everybody else is running away, but he's happy. >> yeah. >> brown: terence blanchard would come to love opera himself and his fa
jeffrey brown has a preview for our arts and culture series, canvas. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: when the operan my bones” opens tonight at the metropolitan opera, the stakes will be incredibly high: the first production in 18 months at the met, the country's largest performing arts company, after the covid shutdown. the first opera by a black composer in the met's 138 year history. the first ever with a black director. but there's also a deeply personal side. ask composer terence...
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Sep 17, 2021
09/21
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: actor mandy patinkin is the "voice" of franklin. >> brown: also in the works?caust and the united states." that's burns' voice at this early stage of production. >> you know, i'm greedy for the experience of working on a film. if i were given a thousand years to live,hich i won't, i would never run out of topics. i cannot not be rushing as i approach my 70s to make films about, not just the u.s., but about "us." that is to say, the lowercase, two-letter, plural pronoun. all of the intimacy of that and all the majesty, the complexity, the contradiction and the contversy of the us. >> brown: and when you're looking at this long arc of your own career, where does muhammad ali, where does that story fit into it? >> he's the guy i want to go out to dinner with. >> brown: he is? >> he's the guy. you know, i'd take abraham lincoln, i love elizabeth cady stanton, ida b. wells is a hero-- i'm working on another project, i love her. obviously, harriet tubman. louis armstrong. but i just added to that ever-expanding dinner table, muhammad ali. >> brown: that's a good dinn
: actor mandy patinkin is the "voice" of franklin. >> brown: also in the works?caust and the united states." that's burns' voice at this early stage of production. >> you know, i'm greedy for the experience of working on a film. if i were given a thousand years to live,hich i won't, i would never run out of topics. i cannot not be rushing as i approach my 70s to make films about, not just the u.s., but about "us." that is to say, the lowercase, two-letter,...
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Sep 23, 2021
09/21
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i agree with senator brown. i'm old enough just to remember, just old enough to remember when folks were talking about trickledown economics. as a pastor i've worked and conducted my ministry in these communities that have been hearing folks talk about trickle down for the last 40 years. the way to grow an economy is from the bottom up. the right thing to do is the smart thing to do. mr. president, the expanded child tax credit is changing lives right now, and we have a chance in this economic package we're working on to secure this investment for working georgians and americans into the future. and it's why i believe -- and that's why i believe we should make it permanent. and i'll keep advocating for that, but extending this critical tax cut right now is the right thing to do for working families. we ought to do it. we ought not just talk about it. we ought to do it. the scripture says he has shown your own mortal what is good and what does the lord require but that you do justice, love kindness, and walk humb
i agree with senator brown. i'm old enough just to remember, just old enough to remember when folks were talking about trickledown economics. as a pastor i've worked and conducted my ministry in these communities that have been hearing folks talk about trickle down for the last 40 years. the way to grow an economy is from the bottom up. the right thing to do is the smart thing to do. mr. president, the expanded child tax credit is changing lives right now, and we have a chance in this economic...
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Sep 2, 2021
09/21
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jeffrey brown reports for our arts and culture series, canvas. >> brown: from wispy swirls of pencil,road, to more detailed, vibrant drawings-- this is the "art of the car," and the people behind them. for detroit institute of arts curator ben colman, it offered a unique challenge. >> the biggest artworks i've ever worked with and moving them around the museum was no small task. >> brown: all right. now, you just called them artworks. >> there's quite a bit of artistry in car design. >> brown: these are not the family minivan. the exhibition, “detroit style: car design in the motor city, 1950 to 2020” features 12 american designed autos, some that became icons of an era and sold in the many millions. others, so-called ¡concept cars', one-off ideas with plenty of ¡wow' factor, like this 1958 firebird iii from general motors. i mean, this one, of course, certainly looks like a jet or a rocket. >> so the prompt to the design studio for this car was to design the car an astronaut would drive to the launch pad before flying to the moon, and you absolutely get that sensibility from this, it
jeffrey brown reports for our arts and culture series, canvas. >> brown: from wispy swirls of pencil,road, to more detailed, vibrant drawings-- this is the "art of the car," and the people behind them. for detroit institute of arts curator ben colman, it offered a unique challenge. >> the biggest artworks i've ever worked with and moving them around the museum was no small task. >> brown: all right. now, you just called them artworks. >> there's quite a bit of...
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Sep 29, 2021
09/21
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>> brown: for now, at least, it is. for the pbs newshour, i'm jeffrey brown in new york.news update before we go: a los angeles judge has suspended britney spears' father, jamie spears, from conservatorship of the singer's estate. the judge called it a "toxic environment," and appointed a temporary conservator. and that's the newshour for tonight. i'm amna nawaz. join us online and again here tomorrow evening. for all of us at the pbs newshour, thank you and see you soon. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> the landscape has changed, and not for the last time. the rules of business are being reinvented, with a more flexible workforce, by embracing innovation, by looking not only at current opportunities, but ahead to future ones. >> people who know, know b.d.o. >> for 25 years, consumer cellular has been offering no-contract wireless plans, designed to help people more of what they like. our u.s.-based customer service team can help find a plan that fits you. to learn more, visit www.consumercellular.tv. >> the ford foundation. working with visi
>> brown: for now, at least, it is. for the pbs newshour, i'm jeffrey brown in new york.news update before we go: a los angeles judge has suspended britney spears' father, jamie spears, from conservatorship of the singer's estate. the judge called it a "toxic environment," and appointed a temporary conservator. and that's the newshour for tonight. i'm amna nawaz. join us online and again here tomorrow evening. for all of us at the pbs newshour, thank you and see you soon....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 15, 2021
09/21
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SFGTV
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thank you reverend brown. thank you, cassie cook for your courage and everyone who's joining us here today and, as i said, you know, we don't know how long covid will be with us. but we want to make sure we do our part so we begin to open up everything we need to and finally i'll just say dr. colfax touched on it a little bit the people in the hospital are younger and we've had about 1800 people who were hospitalized and 1600 people were vaccinated. if just shows you that if more people were. so we've got work to do. we're out here. we'll be out here another hour and a half. please come to the philmore mini park between turk and golden gate to get your vaccine today. thank you. any questions from the press? >> reporter: [inaudible] have you seen any uptick in vaccination rates? >> we have seen an uptick in the percentage of people who've been vaccinated and so that's been good. we've also even though we're still seeing a lot more cases than we're comfortable with, we see the average numbers decline. so that's
thank you reverend brown. thank you, cassie cook for your courage and everyone who's joining us here today and, as i said, you know, we don't know how long covid will be with us. but we want to make sure we do our part so we begin to open up everything we need to and finally i'll just say dr. colfax touched on it a little bit the people in the hospital are younger and we've had about 1800 people who were hospitalized and 1600 people were vaccinated. if just shows you that if more people were....
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Sep 15, 2021
09/21
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jeffrey brown has the story, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: more than 20 and her husband fred viebahn took up ballroom dancing. it was originally an escape, a bit of joy, after a fire had damaged their charlottesville, virginia home. soon, though, it gained new importance, after dove was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1997. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i so basically had to learn to regain my balance. i lost feeling in my fingers and my toes. luckily, my husband and i do ballroom dancing. and that helped me, because i learned a different way of feeling pressure on the floor. it's trite to say, you know, when life hands you a lemon, you'll make lemonade. but basically, that's what i was doing, making a lot of lemonade. >> brown: dove is one of the nation's best known poets: former poet laureate, winner of the pulitzer prize, professor at the university of virginia, editor of an anthology of american poetry. but she'd kept her condition private, until now, in a new volume that explores bother personal health and our collective well-being. it's called “playst for the apoca
jeffrey brown has the story, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: more than 20 and her husband fred viebahn took up ballroom dancing. it was originally an escape, a bit of joy, after a fire had damaged their charlottesville, virginia home. soon, though, it gained new importance, after dove was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1997. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i so basically had to learn to regain my balance. i lost feeling in my fingers and my toes....
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Sep 3, 2021
09/21
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jeffrey brown reports for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ( cheers and applause ) >> brown: it was perhaps the grandest opening of a music venue in the covid-19 era. in early august-- a year late, because of the pandemic-- the san diego symphony debuted the rady shell, a spectalar $85 million outdoor performance space on the city's waterfront, a new home for music of all kinds. ♪ ♪ ♪ 3,500 people took in the celebration, conducted by music director rafael payare. >> it was wonderful. you could feel the electricity on the stage and from the audience. >> brown: the symphony originally planned to use the shell as its summer home. but with the pandemic-- and now the highly transmissible delta variant-- it will perform here through the fall. >> the timing of everything, it seems like it was meant to be, without sounding too corny. the beautiful thing about this venue is that even though it's outdoor-- and you remember that you are outdoor when you just look-- you could see the coronado bridge, you could see mexico, you-- or you could see the seagulls going around-- is that the feeli
jeffrey brown reports for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ( cheers and applause ) >> brown: it was perhaps the grandest opening of a music venue in the covid-19 era. in early august-- a year late, because of the pandemic-- the san diego symphony debuted the rady shell, a spectalar $85 million outdoor performance space on the city's waterfront, a new home for music of all kinds. ♪ ♪ ♪ 3,500 people took in the celebration, conducted by music director rafael payare....
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Sep 28, 2021
09/21
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brown: senator warren is recognized. sen. warren: you have taken actions to begin the oversight of our banks. i would like to -- i would like you to think about these in hindsight. first, the stress tests. when the tests were set up, bank supervisors could restrict stock buybacks and dividend payments to strengthen the bank's balance sheet. in 2019, you took that power away and we now know from the fed's own research that when the economy hit choppy waters last year, those banks needed stimulus from the taxpayers and without this taxpayer help, they would have faced up to $300 billion in losses. meaning, they were in a sharply weakened position to withstand stress. chair powell, do you regret weakening the stress test. mr. powell: i don't think we have weakened to be stress test and i'm not sure what you're referring to. when banks fail the stress test, their distributions are limited. sen. warren: i have hear that you took away the power to restrict stock buybacks and dividend payments to be used to strengthen the balance sh
brown: senator warren is recognized. sen. warren: you have taken actions to begin the oversight of our banks. i would like to -- i would like you to think about these in hindsight. first, the stress tests. when the tests were set up, bank supervisors could restrict stock buybacks and dividend payments to strengthen the bank's balance sheet. in 2019, you took that power away and we now know from the fed's own research that when the economy hit choppy waters last year, those banks needed stimulus...
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Sep 23, 2021
09/21
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so the child tax credit grows i agree with senator brown. am just old enough to remember talking aboutkl trickle-down economics. as a pastor i have conducted my ministry in these communities that have heard people talk about trickle-down for the last 40 years way to t grow the economy is from the bottom up the right thing to do is the smart thing to do mr. president it is changing lives right now we have a chance to work on to secure this investment for americans into the future and that is why i believe we should make it permanent. i will keep advocating for that but extending that critical tax get right now is right thing to do for working families we ought to do it. not just talk about it that do it. scripture says he has shown you what is good what does the lord require that you do justice and love kindness and walk humbly with your god i see the face of god i yield the floor >> hello
so the child tax credit grows i agree with senator brown. am just old enough to remember talking aboutkl trickle-down economics. as a pastor i have conducted my ministry in these communities that have heard people talk about trickle-down for the last 40 years way to t grow the economy is from the bottom up the right thing to do is the smart thing to do mr. president it is changing lives right now we have a chance to work on to secure this investment for americans into the future and that is why...
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Sep 15, 2021
09/21
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BBCNEWS
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sky brown would take bronze at 13 years _ sky brown would take bronze at 13 years of— sky brown wouldbronze at 13 years of age! this sky brown would take bronze at 13 years of age!— sky brown would take bronze at 13 earsofaue! ,, years of age! this summer's sporting success stories _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt a _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt a little _ success stories felt a little different. from sky brown... .. two emma raducanu. young women at the top of their game. the raducanu bounce is certainly being felt here at the home of the london lions. they have just become only the second british team to reach the women's eur basket qualifiers. this club is now professional. i women's eur basket qualifiers. this club is now professional.— club is now professional. i don't think ou club is now professional. i don't think you can — club is now professional. i don't think you can not _ club is now professional. i don't think you can not be _ club is now professional. i d
sky brown would take bronze at 13 years _ sky brown would take bronze at 13 years of— sky brown wouldbronze at 13 years of age! this sky brown would take bronze at 13 years of age!— sky brown would take bronze at 13 earsofaue! ,, years of age! this summer's sporting success stories _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt a _ years of age! this summer's sporting success stories felt a little _ success stories...
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Sep 18, 2021
09/21
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when we protested, whether it was around george floyd's murder last year in minneapolis or michael brown's killing by a policeman in ferguson, missouri, and some were out looting and destroying protocol. we denounced it. we never protested that they were prosecuted for looting or destroying property or somehow political prisoners. we said that is not what we're about. if we had -- imagine if national action network, my group, or black lives matter or naacp had called for rallies to defend those that burned stalls in minneapolis last year and we had a rally calling them political prisoners, we would have been totally castigated and rightfully so, and that's what we saw today. the takeaway from that story today should not be that, yes, they didn't have a lot of violence, just a few arrests, and yes, the numbers were embarrassing, the takeaway is they were there defending insurrectionist, violent people who caused the death of five people, that capitol police were injured. they were calling for the death of the sitting vice president of their party and the speaker of the house. that's the tak
when we protested, whether it was around george floyd's murder last year in minneapolis or michael brown's killing by a policeman in ferguson, missouri, and some were out looting and destroying protocol. we denounced it. we never protested that they were prosecuted for looting or destroying property or somehow political prisoners. we said that is not what we're about. if we had -- imagine if national action network, my group, or black lives matter or naacp had called for rallies to defend those...
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Sep 24, 2021
09/21
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>> brown: sikander, born in pakistan and living in the u.s.3, is known for examining and breaking down familiar archetypes and stereotypes of art history, and questioning the assigned roles of women and simplistics notions of an east-west "divide." she began in art school in lahore, studying the refined tradition of persian and indian manuscript, or "miniature," painting, dating to the 16th century, and then began to play with it and make it her own. adding the image of a friend, for example. >> this took me almost two years. >> brown: really? >> yes. >> brown: in her most renowned early work, called "the scroll," she captured her own life within this history. that's her, a ghostlike presence throughout the scene, which can be "read" left to right. >> at the end you also see her. she's painting herself, but you never really get to see her face. >> brown: in fact, the entire exhibition, titled "extraordinary realities" and starting at the morgan library and museum in new york, is a kind of portrait of the young artist. mostly paintings from sik
>> brown: sikander, born in pakistan and living in the u.s.3, is known for examining and breaking down familiar archetypes and stereotypes of art history, and questioning the assigned roles of women and simplistics notions of an east-west "divide." she began in art school in lahore, studying the refined tradition of persian and indian manuscript, or "miniature," painting, dating to the 16th century, and then began to play with it and make it her own. adding the image...
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Sep 28, 2021
09/21
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chair brown: the senate from massachusetts, senator warren. senator warren: during your time as chair you have taken plenty of actions to weaken the fed's regulatory oversight of our largest banks. today i want to talk about three instances of that and ask you to think about them in hindsight. first, the stress test. these are designed to tell whether or not big banks can survive without a taxpayer bailout. when the tests were first set up, banks' supervisors could restrict stock buybacks and dividend payments to strengthen the bank's balance sheet. in 2019, you took that power away. we now know from the fed's only research that when the economy hit choppy waters last year, those banks needed stimulus from the taxpayers. and that without this taxpayer help they would have faced up to $300 billion in losses. meaning that they were in a sharply weakened position to withstand the stress. chair powell, do you regret weakening the stress test? chairman powell: i don't think we have weakened the stress test. when banks fail, the stress test their di
chair brown: the senate from massachusetts, senator warren. senator warren: during your time as chair you have taken plenty of actions to weaken the fed's regulatory oversight of our largest banks. today i want to talk about three instances of that and ask you to think about them in hindsight. first, the stress test. these are designed to tell whether or not big banks can survive without a taxpayer bailout. when the tests were first set up, banks' supervisors could restrict stock buybacks and...
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Sep 28, 2021
09/21
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brown: thank you. madam secretary, last night my re-public and colleagues blocked efforts to provide critical disaster relief to millions of americans to keep the government open and to raise the debt ceiling so that the government can pay our bills on time, something we have always done bipartisanly, including right after the republicans passed their deficit austin corporate tax giveaway via reconciliation. be brief, if you would. what would be the impact on our economy if they block all efforts to raise the debt ceiling? [indiscernible] sec. yellen: -- event in american history. it would be disastrous for the american economy, for global financial markets, and for millions of families and workers whose financial security would be jeopardized by delayed payments. for example, nearly 50 million seniors could stop receiving social security payments, receive them delayed. our troops would not know when their paychecks would come. 30 million families who rely on the child tax credit would not receive the
brown: thank you. madam secretary, last night my re-public and colleagues blocked efforts to provide critical disaster relief to millions of americans to keep the government open and to raise the debt ceiling so that the government can pay our bills on time, something we have always done bipartisanly, including right after the republicans passed their deficit austin corporate tax giveaway via reconciliation. be brief, if you would. what would be the impact on our economy if they block all...
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Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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he lied by a factor of 7, out going governor jerry brown had a plan to clear 500,000 acres, it has notsources for 100 billion train that goes nowhere to no why that gavin newsom supports, have we not added to our water infrastructure system in california in 50 years, when the state was half the side. we do have wet years, and the water drains out to the ocean, not stored. we have plans for new reservoirs and to raise dams, they just sit there because of the fear of lawsuit from the environmental extremists, we have rolling brown outs we're not properly investing in our energy grid, we spend more money on weather depend so-called renewables like wind and solar that are unreliable. forever these reasons, crimes, bad schools, rising homeless, outrageous cost of living, highest tax in the nation, people are leaving, i urge everyone to vote yes on recall, sign ballot and tell 10 of your friends to do so. mark: amazing, if you are a radical left wing democrat, if you were running against a white governor who was a republican with this record, you would be supported by all newspapers in calif
he lied by a factor of 7, out going governor jerry brown had a plan to clear 500,000 acres, it has notsources for 100 billion train that goes nowhere to no why that gavin newsom supports, have we not added to our water infrastructure system in california in 50 years, when the state was half the side. we do have wet years, and the water drains out to the ocean, not stored. we have plans for new reservoirs and to raise dams, they just sit there because of the fear of lawsuit from the...
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Sep 17, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN3
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senator brown and i have filed exactly those for congress to act to overturn it. thank you very much all of you for your testimony. thank you mr. chairman. >> thank you senator van holland. senator smith, thank you for allowing senator warnock to go next, from georgia, recognized for five minutes. >> thank you, so very much, mr. chairman. as chair of the subcommittee on financial institutions, and consumer protection, i'm very concerned about this issue. i want to make it very clear that i'm going to do everything i can to protect consumers. but especially the most marginalized. vulnerable people are the ones who are targeted by these loans. and this so-called true lender rule what a misnomer, there's nothing true about it, it provides an avenue for predatory lenders to partner with banks, to pedal harmful, short-term loans with triple digit interest rates. triple digits. in state that's have reasonable and often caps like north line on interest rates to protect consumers. nearly 16,000 pay day stores operate nationwide. i've seen this up close and firsthand as a
senator brown and i have filed exactly those for congress to act to overturn it. thank you very much all of you for your testimony. thank you mr. chairman. >> thank you senator van holland. senator smith, thank you for allowing senator warnock to go next, from georgia, recognized for five minutes. >> thank you, so very much, mr. chairman. as chair of the subcommittee on financial institutions, and consumer protection, i'm very concerned about this issue. i want to make it very clear...
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Sep 21, 2021
09/21
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CNBC
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is anybody concerned about the fact, josh brown, i come to you on that, that apple is down from the 52-week high alphabet's on track to snap an eight-month winning strong, the strongest since '09, the s in, h is poised for the worst semiconductor etf since march 2020 are we in the midst of the big no-no happening and people like mike wilson who is coming on in a second will be right we're going to get that correction >> well, listen, i hope we do. i have stock to buy. if we're saying that if the strategists at all-time highs two weeks ago were saying that there was 5% to 7% left of the market this year wouldn't tobaccit be great to buy the market 10% lower and say they're right and instead of 5 to 7 it would be 15 to 17? we talked about the idea that the market had been vulnerable for a while and you just had the ongoing deterioration in breadth in advance versus decline an the stocks above the 2 hun-day et cetera, et cetera and there were strong stocks still accounting for most of the gains this summer and now they're hitting those stocks historically, that hasn't been the start of th
is anybody concerned about the fact, josh brown, i come to you on that, that apple is down from the 52-week high alphabet's on track to snap an eight-month winning strong, the strongest since '09, the s in, h is poised for the worst semiconductor etf since march 2020 are we in the midst of the big no-no happening and people like mike wilson who is coming on in a second will be right we're going to get that correction >> well, listen, i hope we do. i have stock to buy. if we're saying that...
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Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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but as jeffrey brown reports, the face of leadership looks different this year.rt of our race matters series. >> brown: meet the mayor, the old one: always a white male, and for 90 years, all but one, irish. but look now: change is in the air in boston, where the top candidates this year are all women of color who serve on the city council. acting mayor kim janey and andrea campbell, both black... michelle wu, taiwanese- american... annissa essaibi george, daughter of tunisian and polish parents. >> brown: to many, like cheryl clyburn crawford, it's a watershed moment. she grew up here and now heads massvote, aid at increasing voter participation in communities of color. >>t one point, we could not see ourselves, a female, a black female mayor? this just wasn't in the cards. we didn't see . as the demographics change in the city, is more, is becoming more mixed, diverse, people see themselves in their role, in those roles and say, i can. like, that role is open for me. >> brown: this is a city of rich history, but part of that history includes deep racism. when i
but as jeffrey brown reports, the face of leadership looks different this year.rt of our race matters series. >> brown: meet the mayor, the old one: always a white male, and for 90 years, all but one, irish. but look now: change is in the air in boston, where the top candidates this year are all women of color who serve on the city council. acting mayor kim janey and andrea campbell, both black... michelle wu, taiwanese- american... annissa essaibi george, daughter of tunisian and polish...
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Sep 9, 2021
09/21
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BBCNEWS
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tue: cleveland browns doing something this time? time? t“t2 cleveland browns were good doing something this time? tt2 cleveland browns were good last year, but i think they may be one of the better teams in the nfl. this could be there year. i'm looking at them to come back and motivate that fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players _ fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players returning _ fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players returning from - are also players returning from injuries. are also players returning from in'uries. ., ., , ,, ., injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot- that team _ injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that team is _ injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that team is going _ injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that team is going to - injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that team is going to play - injuries. lot of pressure on preston lot. that team is going to play as l lot. that team is going to play
tue: cleveland browns doing something this time? time? t“t2 cleveland browns were good doing something this time? tt2 cleveland browns were good last year, but i think they may be one of the better teams in the nfl. this could be there year. i'm looking at them to come back and motivate that fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players _ fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players returning _ fan base, and they deserve it. there are also players returning from - are also...
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Sep 8, 2021
09/21
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they specifically are targeting black and brown folks. i would love and my last few minutes, pastor i appreciate your testimony. i wonder as you think about your parishioners, how would you connect this bank scheme with our history of other policies and practices that have discriminated against like and brown people? specifically, we have banks that make it harder for black and brown people to borrow money. at the same time, we make it easier for predatory lenders ike this to come into communities and trap people. >> thank you. i will simply say that again, we have a history of redlining black and brown communities. that history now continues and in the past, neighborhoods were targeted or zip codes were targeted for noninvestment. non-loan, non-bank opportunities. now, the target is to exploit those already vulnerable. i think it would be just another concept to the occ instead of protecting predators, let's see to it the banks serve all consumers and all consumers in a way that is just fair and oral. -- fair and moral. i agree and i thi
they specifically are targeting black and brown folks. i would love and my last few minutes, pastor i appreciate your testimony. i wonder as you think about your parishioners, how would you connect this bank scheme with our history of other policies and practices that have discriminated against like and brown people? specifically, we have banks that make it harder for black and brown people to borrow money. at the same time, we make it easier for predatory lenders ike this to come into...
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Sep 4, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN2
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they were allowed to in the way black and brown could not do that so let's be clear about that. is that happened in we find diverse in the central cities because the size and the bureaucracy made it so one of the few institutions that stayed in the fifties and sixties if you talk about being fortified and then to take advantage of the urban renewal policy selection differently face of urban renewal we talk about highways and bulldozers but we don't talk enough about the fact the housing act of 1949 and ten years later that offered two dollars for every dollar supplied by a city that was created by those urban universities to be the friendly face of urban renewal. this is real. so the fortification was to demolish black and brown neighborhoods and businesses and get them evicted or replace them with campus buildings it was limiting commerce and making these areas truly residential or institutional with respect to the university campus buildings by the time we get to the nineties back to the city movement young professionals empty-nesters the children of suburban sprawl began to l
they were allowed to in the way black and brown could not do that so let's be clear about that. is that happened in we find diverse in the central cities because the size and the bureaucracy made it so one of the few institutions that stayed in the fifties and sixties if you talk about being fortified and then to take advantage of the urban renewal policy selection differently face of urban renewal we talk about highways and bulldozers but we don't talk enough about the fact the housing act of...
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Sep 2, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN3
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arguably, more important or as important as brown. as brown versus board of education. huge ruling. do you think that the boycott was necessary? to that ruling? >> i think it was. i think the boycott, while it wasn't an illegal action or might have not produced, you know -- might have not taken down separate versus equal, i think it definitely changed people's perceptions of what was happening with separate versus equal and i mean, a media campaign, it reverberated throughout the country. so i think you change people's hearts and you change people's minds. maybe that is playing into the myth, but you had allyship grow probably in the north which is probably what people down like boycotting needed or -- yeah. >> kind of to that extent. you talked about how there were previously cases that had been lost in courts about buses. like desegregating them. i think that the boycott was necessary to, again, help with media, the media push, to finalize, like you said, the nail in the coffin, just because in the past there had been a couple failures. >> okay, yeah. anyone else? christine, did y
arguably, more important or as important as brown. as brown versus board of education. huge ruling. do you think that the boycott was necessary? to that ruling? >> i think it was. i think the boycott, while it wasn't an illegal action or might have not produced, you know -- might have not taken down separate versus equal, i think it definitely changed people's perceptions of what was happening with separate versus equal and i mean, a media campaign, it reverberated throughout the country....
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Sep 24, 2021
09/21
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BBCNEWS
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,., ., , ben brown.ten days _ ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is _ ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is retailers - ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is retailers and - the next ten days is retailers and the next ten days is retailers and the suppliers will start to stock all of their warehouses for the big christmas rush. so you get the food in place so you really focus on those last two or three weeks i'm getting the food into the storeroom and you have to have it in your supply chain to start with and that build—up is going to start in the next week or so. on the next week or so. unless he get drivers that are going to see significant disruption because we are already struggling now and imagine what it will be right in christmas when we are all out in supermarket buying more than we normally would. it's been a really tough year and a tough few weeks with carbon dioxide issue coming onto the back of the covid—19 problems we've had in terms o
,., ., , ben brown.ten days _ ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is _ ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is retailers - ben brown. the reason we are seeing the next ten days is retailers and - the next ten days is retailers and the next ten days is retailers and the suppliers will start to stock all of their warehouses for the big christmas rush. so you get the food in place so you really focus on those last two or three weeks i'm getting the food into the...
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Sep 19, 2021
09/21
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MSNBCW
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joining me now is john brown.amily were evicted from their home in kansas city, missouri. he's traveling to d.c. this week with a group of people who have recently been evicted or fallen behind on rent, to meet with government officials and call attention america's current eviction problem. john, welcome to the show. thank you so much for sharing your story with us. can you just start off by telling our viewers on this sunday morning what happened to you in very personal terms. how did you come to be evicted, and what happened to your life after that. to you, to your family, to your work life, and beyond. >> well, back in march of last year, during the pandemic, my business slowed down greatly and my partner lost her job. and our landlord put us out. i tried to support my family by being a good worker. it wasn't enough doing doordash and postmates. and being poor is very expensive in america. we had to stay in a hotel for months, just me and my daughter and my partner. my other two kids stayed with friends and fam
joining me now is john brown.amily were evicted from their home in kansas city, missouri. he's traveling to d.c. this week with a group of people who have recently been evicted or fallen behind on rent, to meet with government officials and call attention america's current eviction problem. john, welcome to the show. thank you so much for sharing your story with us. can you just start off by telling our viewers on this sunday morning what happened to you in very personal terms. how did you come...
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Sep 3, 2021
09/21
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y poor brown latin x city. capital city.and, for decades, the university found different ways to fortify itself and the stories that we have been telling all along. in fact, the style of the university of chicago that we are all familiar with, that was modeled on trinity's campus. which is what we are well known. the medieval design, that comes from trinity college in the middle of the state. and, so, we get to the 1990s, there is that same story of enlightened self interest. for years, the elite nature was able to rise above in a modest capital city. the poverty got to the point where people were not coming to the school in the 80s and 90s. poverty looked different. and, so, trinity did something that even its own trustees and dalums thought that they would never do. they hired this interesting character by the name of evan. did not get a bachelors degree until he was in his 30s and only in the university president of a two-year college. he had been a republican mayor and then he also worked under democrat jimmy carter. a r
y poor brown latin x city. capital city.and, for decades, the university found different ways to fortify itself and the stories that we have been telling all along. in fact, the style of the university of chicago that we are all familiar with, that was modeled on trinity's campus. which is what we are well known. the medieval design, that comes from trinity college in the middle of the state. and, so, we get to the 1990s, there is that same story of enlightened self interest. for years, the...
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Sep 3, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN3
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arguably, how important or as important as brown, right? has brown versus board of education. huge ruling. do you think that the boycott was necessary? to that ruling. aisha? >> i think it was because i think the boycott well it was not in any legal action, or might have produced it might have not taken down -- i think it changed peoples perceptions of what was happening with separate versus equal. a media campaign, it reverberated throughout the country. i think you change peoples hearts and change peoples minds, and maybe that is playing into the myth, but you definitely had allyship grow, and it's probably what people needed. >> to the same extent you talk about how they were there were previous cases that were lost, and i think that the boycott was necessary to help the media to give immediate push, and to finalize this and put the nail in the coffin. just because in the past there had been failures. >> okay yeah anyone else? >> ok yes i think that's a strong argument, because the supreme court or court officials are not operating in a vacuum. so to understand that public
arguably, how important or as important as brown, right? has brown versus board of education. huge ruling. do you think that the boycott was necessary? to that ruling. aisha? >> i think it was because i think the boycott well it was not in any legal action, or might have produced it might have not taken down -- i think it changed peoples perceptions of what was happening with separate versus equal. a media campaign, it reverberated throughout the country. i think you change peoples hearts...
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from nashville, kane brown!r it's mine, so ♪ ♪ ohhhhhh ohhhh ohhh we'll lie and swear we're through ♪ ♪ with the lonely drunken deja vu ♪ ♪ ohhhh ohhhh ohhhhhh five minutes out of downtown ♪ ♪ ain't nothing but a countdown ♪ ♪ one mississippi two mississippi ♪ ♪ three shots of whiskey are you on your way ♪ ♪ we're tipsy, baby come kiss me ♪ ♪ i can't wait i can't wait ♪ ♪ one mississippi two mississippi three in the mornin' ♪ ♪ we'll be on our way so tipsy can't stop kissin' ♪ ♪ i can't wait i can't wait forever ♪ ♪ every time i'm at this bar ♪ ♪ tap on the shoulder turn around ♪ ♪ and baby there you are ♪ ♪ and it's fire yeah, like this bourbon 100-proof ♪ ♪ yeah, they don't burn the way you do ♪ ♪ yeah, we're better in the dark, so ♪ ♪ ohhhhhh ohhhh ohhh we'll lie and swear we're through ♪ ♪ with the lonely drunken deja vu ♪ ♪ ohhhh ohhhh ohhhhhh five minutes out of downtown ♪ ♪ ain't nothing but a countdown ♪ ♪ one mississippi two mississippi ♪ ♪ three shots of whiskey are you on your way ♪ ♪ we're tipsy, bab
from nashville, kane brown!r it's mine, so ♪ ♪ ohhhhhh ohhhh ohhh we'll lie and swear we're through ♪ ♪ with the lonely drunken deja vu ♪ ♪ ohhhh ohhhh ohhhhhh five minutes out of downtown ♪ ♪ ain't nothing but a countdown ♪ ♪ one mississippi two mississippi ♪ ♪ three shots of whiskey are you on your way ♪ ♪ we're tipsy, baby come kiss me ♪ ♪ i can't wait i can't wait ♪ ♪ one mississippi two mississippi three in the mornin' ♪ ♪ we'll be on our way so...
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1.3K
Sep 4, 2021
09/21
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fairly confident in that, and this person has sort of light brown hair. so, we say blonde to brown.ikely blonde to brown. so, it's sort of on the -— the lighter brown side, and most likely doesn't have a lotta freckles. >> there was one detail in john doe's profile that turned out to be crucial information. the color of his eyes. remember brittani's description of joran dough? well, it turns out she was wrong. john doe's eyes weren't brown. >> we found that this person has green to hazel eyes. >> which is unique. >> it's fairly unusual, yes. >> green eyes. the same color as justin hansen's and the sketch itself. here it is. >> when we saw that composite, i was like, oh, my god. >> it was that close. >> it was. >> oh yeah. >> to justin. >> we think it's -- yeah. yeah. >> yeah, but i still didn't want to get my hopes up because i didn't want to get disappointed again. >> still not convinced this man was the guy she'd spent years hunting, gonterman, along with a fellow detective wearing a body cam, paid justin a visit. >> hi, how are you? are you justin? >> i am justin. >> okay, cool.
fairly confident in that, and this person has sort of light brown hair. so, we say blonde to brown.ikely blonde to brown. so, it's sort of on the -— the lighter brown side, and most likely doesn't have a lotta freckles. >> there was one detail in john doe's profile that turned out to be crucial information. the color of his eyes. remember brittani's description of joran dough? well, it turns out she was wrong. john doe's eyes weren't brown. >> we found that this person has green...
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Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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FBC
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liz: yeah, go browns, right?much a part of the fox bet push, but he doesn't like my browns and my baker mayfield, so i get mad at him. >> i'm sorry about your browns. liz: [laughter] thanks, kip levin, and by the way fox bet and fox business share the same parent company fox corporation, we'll see you next time, dow jones industrial 242 points to the upside the global chip shortage chip ping away at some of the biggest names in business, but our countdown closer says he has the one name that will continue to rise above the semiconductor sector's problem. why? well you'll want to listen to him, because he's got $310 billion under management, b mo arnesto ramos is here with his top pick, next. that building you're trying to sell, - you should ten-x it. - ten-x it? ten-x is the world's largest online commercial real estate exchange. you can close with more certainty. and twice as fast. if i could, i'd ten-x everything. like a coffee run... or fedora shopping. talk to your broker. ten-x does the same thing, - but wit
liz: yeah, go browns, right?much a part of the fox bet push, but he doesn't like my browns and my baker mayfield, so i get mad at him. >> i'm sorry about your browns. liz: [laughter] thanks, kip levin, and by the way fox bet and fox business share the same parent company fox corporation, we'll see you next time, dow jones industrial 242 points to the upside the global chip shortage chip ping away at some of the biggest names in business, but our countdown closer says he has the one name...
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0.0
Sep 1, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN
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after more than $2 trillion spent in afghanistan, a cost researchers at brown university estimated would be over $300 million a day for 20 years in afghanistan, for two decades. yes, the american people need to hear this. $300 million a day for two
after more than $2 trillion spent in afghanistan, a cost researchers at brown university estimated would be over $300 million a day for 20 years in afghanistan, for two decades. yes, the american people need to hear this. $300 million a day for two
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brown bodies drawer. and i don't know if we love deserting. i just love not being hungry, written and performed chiefly by young hispanics and african americans. the videos garnered over a 1000000 views on youtube. so i, i think awareness makes it possible for people to make choices. i think we're fighting to be heard. i think we're fighting, get the word out. i think we're fighting against interest that wants to see us fail as long as big, so to spending money, they don't sleep that the campaign a fight against them can't sleep. meanwhile, 3000 miles away on the east coast. another activist has risen up and coming to podium to tell the community it is being decimated. and how is a crisis in our community and from me as a crisis, because i'm finding that i'm losing more people to sweets than i am to the streets . and i'm losing more people took diet related issues than i am to the streets, to gun violence. this is an epidemic, and one that i'm deeply concerned about the already in his combat against this
brown bodies drawer. and i don't know if we love deserting. i just love not being hungry, written and performed chiefly by young hispanics and african americans. the videos garnered over a 1000000 views on youtube. so i, i think awareness makes it possible for people to make choices. i think we're fighting to be heard. i think we're fighting, get the word out. i think we're fighting against interest that wants to see us fail as long as big, so to spending money, they don't sleep that the...
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50
Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 50
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we talked to the ceo of travel and leisure on demand, michael brown after this. this is bloomberg markets. we have been talking about the each -- issuance of debt. when it comes to airlines, it is jumping pretty strongly. the industry outstanding debt of 23%. now at $340 billion. this year, global air carriers have sold $63 billion in bonds and loans. what makes that interesting is it is a sector that is very much in the grips of a global pandemic. a vote of confidence for the rs. matt: not even close on return to normal. i say this having been in berlin 's brand-new airport yesterday. my flight was delayed for hours and i ended up skipping it. most of the airport is shut down and there are very few employees in the airport. after i bailed on my flight, i look for somebody to help retrieve my bags. there weren't any british airways employees left. i think it's interesting they borrowed so much money and are operating still with such a skeleton crew. there just are not the amount of services or employees you would expect for an industry that has borrowed $350 bill
we talked to the ceo of travel and leisure on demand, michael brown after this. this is bloomberg markets. we have been talking about the each -- issuance of debt. when it comes to airlines, it is jumping pretty strongly. the industry outstanding debt of 23%. now at $340 billion. this year, global air carriers have sold $63 billion in bonds and loans. what makes that interesting is it is a sector that is very much in the grips of a global pandemic. a vote of confidence for the rs. matt: not...
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28
Sep 25, 2021
09/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 28
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gordon brown, in those days. who meet the politicians coming across? gordon brown, in those days.vernor, _ gordon brown, in those days. who was then the incoming governor, and - gordon brown, in those days. who was then the incoming governor, and he . then the incoming governor, and he matt 7 the government of the fed in washington. we went into the white house and met the chief adviser to the president that we use our test books. ministers came over, but so did mervyn king. that was an amazing opportunity. did mervyn king. that was an amazing o- ortuni . ., �* did mervyn king. that was an amazing ouortuni . ., �* ., , did mervyn king. that was an amazing mortuni . ., �* ., , ., did mervyn king. that was an amazing ouortuni . ., �* ., , ., , opportunity. you've only had this “ob since opportunity. you've only had this job since may- — opportunity. you've only had this job since may. you _ opportunity. you've only had this job since may. you haven't - opportunity. you've only had this job since may. you haven't got i opportunity. you've only had this i job since may. you haven't go
gordon brown, in those days. who meet the politicians coming across? gordon brown, in those days.vernor, _ gordon brown, in those days. who was then the incoming governor, and - gordon brown, in those days. who was then the incoming governor, and he . then the incoming governor, and he matt 7 the government of the fed in washington. we went into the white house and met the chief adviser to the president that we use our test books. ministers came over, but so did mervyn king. that was an amazing...
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Sep 13, 2021
09/21
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KNTV
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. >>> the cleveland browns iffiaso against the chiefs that's up next rich, indulgent chocolate with aramel filling. with love from san francisco. ghirardelli caramel squares. makes life a bite better. nope - c'mon him? - i like him! nooooo... nooooo... quick, the quicker picker upper! bounty picks up messes quicker and is 2x more absorbent, so you can use less. bounty, the quicker picker upper. frank is a fan of fast. he's a fast talker. a fast walker. thanks, gary. and for unexpected heartburn... frank is a fan of pepcid. it works in minutes. nexium 24 hour and prilosec otc can take one to four days to fully work. pepcid. strong relief for fans of fast. what makes febreze air effects different? while cheaper aerosols rely on artificial propellants...k. febreze uses a 100% natural propellant. check it out! pressure created by what's in your air makes the bottle spray. which means freshness everyone will love. i took my favorite cereal and made it waaay better, tony. shaq you're using my crunchy, delicious kellogg's frosted flakes. i added cinnamon basketballs. cinnamoooooooonnnnnnn!!!
. >>> the cleveland browns iffiaso against the chiefs that's up next rich, indulgent chocolate with aramel filling. with love from san francisco. ghirardelli caramel squares. makes life a bite better. nope - c'mon him? - i like him! nooooo... nooooo... quick, the quicker picker upper! bounty picks up messes quicker and is 2x more absorbent, so you can use less. bounty, the quicker picker upper. frank is a fan of fast. he's a fast talker. a fast walker. thanks, gary. and for unexpected...
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Sep 4, 2021
09/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 36
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kids in black and brown families in 2021. i just want to say that explosively. >> i think when you talk about the conversation of school choice, when is school choice you made an intentional school choice that is a rightful educational choice and the moral choice for your child but we associate something else other kinds of policies and implications that were true that leads into the bias that you spoke about, i think it's really important that's one of the curiosities i've had and i've been thinking a lot about as i read your book and also discussions i've had in presenting a book clubs that i read recently in just witnessing people grappling what is come up for them. i want to know you talking about elite white environment and i'm curious how your own educational background, your partner john's educational background, how did that inform about where you want to center to school. >> that is another, racial bias in deep unconscious coding around race is outplay, the other thing that i feel is very much outplay is a generation
kids in black and brown families in 2021. i just want to say that explosively. >> i think when you talk about the conversation of school choice, when is school choice you made an intentional school choice that is a rightful educational choice and the moral choice for your child but we associate something else other kinds of policies and implications that were true that leads into the bias that you spoke about, i think it's really important that's one of the curiosities i've had and i've...