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47
Feb 24, 2015
02/15
by
ALJAZAM
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i have brown skip, i spend as much time as i can in the sun to get browner.call me black, what does this mean? this refs to a category, it refers to a race that we know is a social construct, constructed to support sociopolitical and sociopolitical hierarchy, they are not power categories, not culture or biological. >> did you feel oppressed by racial stereotypes existent around you? >> i felt - well, yes. and that's the thing i should say, to say that racism invented is not real - i may not consider myself a black person. i may find other categories more salient. that will not stop someone who has incredibly simplistic and derogatory views of black people from treating me poorly, alas. you can't be racism, i don't believe in it. >> how you see yourself is not you. >> not at all. time and again we were discriminated against on account of our skip colour in boston massachusetts, time and again. no one in our family was blind to that reality. at the same time, when my sister and i got to high school, we spent time with brown skinned peoplele who were not all fr
i have brown skip, i spend as much time as i can in the sun to get browner.call me black, what does this mean? this refs to a category, it refers to a race that we know is a social construct, constructed to support sociopolitical and sociopolitical hierarchy, they are not power categories, not culture or biological. >> did you feel oppressed by racial stereotypes existent around you? >> i felt - well, yes. and that's the thing i should say, to say that racism invented is not real -...
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76
Feb 13, 2015
02/15
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LINKTV
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and that's what you're seeing right here with this browner, rder stem. that is all new grth.arrator: in order to survive, the willow must grow above the browsing height, where herbivores such as elk can no longer reach it. well, here we have a much larger willow. and its growth pattern over the last few years is pretty different from what we were seeing in the rest of the plot. here we see that the last few years have actually not been browsed. so, for vegetated... all covered. 100% overall. narrator: the research team is finding that the willow population is starting to recover in certain areas of the park. dr. crabtree: in particular, where the wolves have created, you might say, fear in the elk where wolves can go in and effectively kill elk elk might not even be going down into those areas and willow is allowed to grow up and get high enough to where it escapes browse heighth from the elk. and we're seeing this in several areas of the northern part of the park. narrator: since the researchers can only monitor a fraction of the willow from the ground, they must turn to the
and that's what you're seeing right here with this browner, rder stem. that is all new grth.arrator: in order to survive, the willow must grow above the browsing height, where herbivores such as elk can no longer reach it. well, here we have a much larger willow. and its growth pattern over the last few years is pretty different from what we were seeing in the rest of the plot. here we see that the last few years have actually not been browsed. so, for vegetated... all covered. 100% overall....
57
57
Feb 7, 2015
02/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 57
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. >> that's the basis for white flight and you've seen this over the years as districts become browner, folks start moving into private schools are attempting to carve out a space like what we've seen in st. georges parish in baton rouge louisiana. folks in the wealthier parts of town are trying to separate themselves from the lower socioeconomic part of town. >> and folks in that community say it's not about race. if this resegregation we're seeing is not about race, an attempt to try to take these people at their word, how much of this resegregation is really about poverty the idea that i don't want my kids in schools with high percentage of kids on free or reduced lunches? >> well, either/or is a pretty bad thing. you can use place as a proxy for race. because unfortunately in many of our states and many of our districts, place is -- homes are segregated communities are segregated. can you use place as a proxy for race. but the same -- you can use place as a proxy for race but the same pernicious basis is the same as racism. you can segregate towns and have the same effect of segreg
. >> that's the basis for white flight and you've seen this over the years as districts become browner, folks start moving into private schools are attempting to carve out a space like what we've seen in st. georges parish in baton rouge louisiana. folks in the wealthier parts of town are trying to separate themselves from the lower socioeconomic part of town. >> and folks in that community say it's not about race. if this resegregation we're seeing is not about race, an attempt to...
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111
Feb 19, 2015
02/15
by
WTXF
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eye 111
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dark moles and tags harmless to your health but damageing to appearance and self-confidence and the brownerthe darker the lesions are likely to be. joyce evans tells us there may be something you can do about them. ♪ report. >> i think they came so quick. >> reporter: little raiseed mole like lesions. >> and they just like started coming and not stopping. >> reporter: the first when angela parker was barely 30. >> in the beginning it really didn't bother me. then i started noticing i was like where did these moles come from. >> reporter: john cans sr. russ skin growths mostly hereditary. >> some big/small very irritating. >> reporter: snagging on clothing jewelry, wiping a little too hard can draw blood. >> you know i just dealt with it. report roar until a friend told her she didn't have to. and where she mitt go for help. dermatologist vaughn graves. >> everybody gets them. but in african-americans particularly you notice them because they're more pig menned a lot of the time. >> reporter: angela now in her 40 has seen and felt enough. >> they're benign and non problematic and nuisance to
dark moles and tags harmless to your health but damageing to appearance and self-confidence and the brownerthe darker the lesions are likely to be. joyce evans tells us there may be something you can do about them. ♪ report. >> i think they came so quick. >> reporter: little raiseed mole like lesions. >> and they just like started coming and not stopping. >> reporter: the first when angela parker was barely 30. >> in the beginning it really didn't bother me. then...
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104
Feb 19, 2015
02/15
by
WTXF
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eye 104
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and tags harmless to your health but damaging to appearance and even yourself confidence and the brownerr skin, the darker the lesions are liking to be. joyce evans tells us now there may be something you can do about them. ♪ >> i think they came so quick. >> reporter: little raceed mole like lesions. >> they just like started coming and not stopping. >> reporter: the first when angela park parker was barely 30 30. >> in the beginning it really didn't bother me. i started notice noticing. where do these moles come from. >> non cancerous skin growths. mostly hereditary. >> some big some small. they very irritating roar report snagging on clothing jewelry wiping a little too hard can draw blood. >> you know, i just dealt with it. >> reporter: until a friend told her she didn't have to. and where she might go for help dermatologist vaughn graves. >> everybody gets them. but in african-americans particularly you notice them because they're more pig menned a lot of the time. >> reporter: angela now in her 40s had seen and felt enough. >> ones we know are benign and non problematic are nor of
and tags harmless to your health but damaging to appearance and even yourself confidence and the brownerr skin, the darker the lesions are liking to be. joyce evans tells us now there may be something you can do about them. ♪ >> i think they came so quick. >> reporter: little raceed mole like lesions. >> they just like started coming and not stopping. >> reporter: the first when angela park parker was barely 30 30. >> in the beginning it really didn't bother me....
46
46
Feb 17, 2015
02/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 46
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browner here at stanford. he was one those men who always boosted youngster alone.troduced me to the leading engineer in san francisco mr. louis gem. he gave me a temporary appointment. he had an application for an engineer to go to australia. and there i went on the first $10,000 job. then subsequently to that your work took you to countries all over the world didn't it mr. hoover? >> yes. as a partner in an engineering international engineering firm. we managed mines in china and india and burma and australia and russia. i don't know where all. including the united states and canada. so that during the first seven years of this century i wandered around the world seven times with my entire family. >> well, it must have been good to get home then after one of those long trips in those days. >> always a thrill to come back to america. this is a place where freedom really lived. >> did you practice engineering in russia during the czarist days? >> yes, sir. we had very large operations which we managed in russia. one of them was at a place called kishtem in the urals
browner here at stanford. he was one those men who always boosted youngster alone.troduced me to the leading engineer in san francisco mr. louis gem. he gave me a temporary appointment. he had an application for an engineer to go to australia. and there i went on the first $10,000 job. then subsequently to that your work took you to countries all over the world didn't it mr. hoover? >> yes. as a partner in an engineering international engineering firm. we managed mines in china and india...
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328
Feb 19, 2015
02/15
by
CNBC
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eye 328
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>> there's a reason that bruce browner is now the leader of illinois.s has one of the worst ratings in the country. the 234u governor proposed major changes there. and their pension system is not fully funded. i this week did another opening for a business a manufacturing company in southeastern wisconsin that came up from illinois. why? because our tax burden is down. the economy is moving up. we've got a stable workforce. we've got all the advantages you want. there's still plenty more work to be done but there is a sharp contrast, no doubt about it. >> we can go right to the election coming up. you are -- have staked out a position, probably to the right of maybe the other person that people talk about the most i guess, because you both have double digits. that's governor jeb bush. you've got -- are you happy to have the koch brothers associated with your name? because that's another -- there's more philanthropic endeavors named after koch. but you look at how they're pigeon holed by the progressive media, they seem like really bad guys. you want the
>> there's a reason that bruce browner is now the leader of illinois.s has one of the worst ratings in the country. the 234u governor proposed major changes there. and their pension system is not fully funded. i this week did another opening for a business a manufacturing company in southeastern wisconsin that came up from illinois. why? because our tax burden is down. the economy is moving up. we've got a stable workforce. we've got all the advantages you want. there's still plenty more...
345
345
Feb 4, 2015
02/15
by
MSNBCW
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eye 345
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. >>> welcome back to "morning joe," joining us now is bill browner. finance murder and one man's fight for justice. good to see you. >> good to see. >> you i hope you can take us through it. it is incredible. you are running a hedge fund in russia. all of a sudden vladimir putin decides he doesn't like the way you are doing business in his country. instead of running away you kind of took him on. >> what happened was i was exposing russia and the companies i invest in obviously, vladimir putin and his pals were benefiting from that. they kicked me out of russia and raided my office and seized documents to steal $230 million of taxes we paid. i hired a young lawyer to investigate. he finds the whole scam. he exposes the scam. and then he is arrested by the same people he exposed, put in jail tortured for 358 days and killed five years ago at the age of 37. >> your attorney is killed in jail. you have been doing be though in russia for sometime. at what point did it turn? when did putin decide you needed to leave the country? >> what happened he became
. >>> welcome back to "morning joe," joining us now is bill browner. finance murder and one man's fight for justice. good to see you. >> good to see. >> you i hope you can take us through it. it is incredible. you are running a hedge fund in russia. all of a sudden vladimir putin decides he doesn't like the way you are doing business in his country. instead of running away you kind of took him on. >> what happened was i was exposing russia and the companies...