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Feb 8, 2025
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see myself as a child of the civil rights movement and a child, tanzania, a child of the city of cambridge, and specifically port neighborhood where i came of age and, you know, i'm the father. johari in camera and the ceo of math talk is a children's media company that seeks to make my path find meaningful and valuable for kids. families everywhere. that is an amazing summary. and let let me commend you for bringing momma into it, your mother into it, a brilliant woman in her own. i like that. my wife likes that. you just did that for sure because she a brilliant and that doctor part of that and her great courage herself and what she has done for so many people. the question you decided to write this book and you become in many a bridge. i about it i don't know the of generations of african-american generations in the way you have told from your great grandfather all the way down your son. i looked it up. your great grandfather died in 1940, but moses was born in the thirties. you are born the seventies. your yes. your son in 2012. so amazing span. can you talk about why decided to write
see myself as a child of the civil rights movement and a child, tanzania, a child of the city of cambridge, and specifically port neighborhood where i came of age and, you know, i'm the father. johari in camera and the ceo of math talk is a children's media company that seeks to make my path find meaningful and valuable for kids. families everywhere. that is an amazing summary. and let let me commend you for bringing momma into it, your mother into it, a brilliant woman in her own. i like that....
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Feb 3, 2025
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a new oxford-cambridge corridor, redeveloping old trafford, and supporting a runway at heathrow. we are supporting innovation and going further and faster to boost growth. mr. speaker, this morning i had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others. i shall have further such meetings later today. >> mr. speaker, this pension increase by 470 pounds, and over the course of this parliament, 1900 pounds, benefiting millions of pensioners. does the prime minister agree that means testing the state pension would do severe harm, and will you confirm that this government will always protect the state pension and the triple log? p.m. starmer: let me be absolutely clear, mr. speaker. there will be no means testing of the state pension under this labor government. we are committed both to the triple block and the principle that people should receive pension based on the contribution, regardless of their wealth. his right to say 12 million pensioners receiving 470 pound increase in april. when people like the opposition say they want means testing, that means a cuts. the difference is, th
a new oxford-cambridge corridor, redeveloping old trafford, and supporting a runway at heathrow. we are supporting innovation and going further and faster to boost growth. mr. speaker, this morning i had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others. i shall have further such meetings later today. >> mr. speaker, this pension increase by 470 pounds, and over the course of this parliament, 1900 pounds, benefiting millions of pensioners. does the prime minister agree that means testing...
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Feb 8, 2025
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and i'm delighted to be in this cambridge. i'm delighted to have an opportunity to talk with maurice about this wonderful book he has written. we go back decades, although we have not seen each other, we're trying to figure this out in maybe 20 years. that's what happens when you get old. you have good friends who you don't see for 20 years, but we were immortalized together in 1985 when i after i wrote a very critical review of a disciple, theodore draper, who was then one of the most prominent historians of american and a very critical historian of american communism. and i was very critical of his disciples book. and that prompted him to attack us as new historians of american communism in pages of the new york review of books i think i got attacked after publishing what was in effect my first article and it was a moment where we were bonded in a way because we were trying to understand a topic. we felt we hadn't understood or that other people had not done justice to. and being the young turks that we were, we were trying
and i'm delighted to be in this cambridge. i'm delighted to have an opportunity to talk with maurice about this wonderful book he has written. we go back decades, although we have not seen each other, we're trying to figure this out in maybe 20 years. that's what happens when you get old. you have good friends who you don't see for 20 years, but we were immortalized together in 1985 when i after i wrote a very critical review of a disciple, theodore draper, who was then one of the most...
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Feb 8, 2025
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myself as the child of the civil rights movement, and a child of tanzania, a child of the city of cambridge specifically, the neighborhood where i came of age. and currently, i am the father of jahari and kamara, and the ceo of mathtalk which is a children's media company that makes math valuable for kids and families everywhere. host: that is an amazing summary. let me commend you for bringing your mother into it, a brilliant woman in her own right. my wife likes that you just did, that's for sure. courage and what she has done for so many people. the question, you decided to write this book -- and you have become in many ways, a bridge. i thought about it, and i don't know a story of african-american generations and the way you have told it from your great grandfather all the way down to your son. i looked it up, your great grandfather died in 19 40. bob moses in bonn in the 1930's. they are you are, born in the 1970's. your son in 2012. it's an amazing span. can you talk about why you decided to write this book? guest: so one of the first reasons was just to try to understand my dad. thi
myself as the child of the civil rights movement, and a child of tanzania, a child of the city of cambridge specifically, the neighborhood where i came of age. and currently, i am the father of jahari and kamara, and the ceo of mathtalk which is a children's media company that makes math valuable for kids and families everywhere. host: that is an amazing summary. let me commend you for bringing your mother into it, a brilliant woman in her own right. my wife likes that you just did, that's for...
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nigel farage, after the announcement, and he admitted that the silicon valley between oxford and cambridgeactually a good idea. it is a good idea because we are the world leader or the european leader, at least in thinking and developing new technologies. but we are awful at then turning them into commercial projects. so working with the americans, creating a base here, and that is where you want it. and it isn't just about a new railway. it is about, of course, making sure we have the ai revolution, which peter kyle announced only the week before. it is about making sure that we have building all along that arc so that we can have new houses, which she's announced. reduction of planning restraints. i mean, nigel's problem was that where do we get the energy to run all these big computers from, which is my point is always that, well, that's why we need to build some more nuclear power stations, because they're the ones. >> that took about 25 years to build. >> exactly. and we've already got one halfway built, another one starting. and we need two more, at least online. >> can i just point
nigel farage, after the announcement, and he admitted that the silicon valley between oxford and cambridgeactually a good idea. it is a good idea because we are the world leader or the european leader, at least in thinking and developing new technologies. but we are awful at then turning them into commercial projects. so working with the americans, creating a base here, and that is where you want it. and it isn't just about a new railway. it is about, of course, making sure we have the ai...
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he's a professor of international law and international constitutional studies at the university of cambridge. i asked him if us president trump has any legal authority to put take over the gaza strip. you know, he's speaking without any legal authority, whatever. it sounds like he is thinking in terms of his domestic practice as a property type, coon who can take over some dialect, wasteland, and turn it into a flower to florida. right. or a says florida like races, but here of course it's not an empty try to treat this as the territory which belongs to. ready palestine i the as a state, if you think it is a state already or is a self determination entity, which means that entities that this entire former state all of this, the entire series, which includes garza and nobody else can dispose of the stairs. israel has no right . ready of it, and mr. trump has absolutely no claim to the saying, as we said, we own it, we will, we will take it over. so that is uh uh, frontier. well, 1st of all, what would, what would the legal implications be then if the president were to try to act on this idea
he's a professor of international law and international constitutional studies at the university of cambridge. i asked him if us president trump has any legal authority to put take over the gaza strip. you know, he's speaking without any legal authority, whatever. it sounds like he is thinking in terms of his domestic practice as a property type, coon who can take over some dialect, wasteland, and turn it into a flower to florida. right. or a says florida like races, but here of course it's not...
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many universities are already creating a positive policies. cambridge university in the u. k. it's now okay to use a i for getting an overview of new concepts to the coach or help with time management. so i'm scholars cool for exams that should be done in a way that no one can cheat using ai and to propose students for the working world . school should teach anywhere to they i, but only using limited versions. and then it's also up to us, be honest, which context have you use a i the, you know, you probably shouldn't have. would you share that with us pfeiffer now, and see you next time the as african americans return to dawn, they price out below goals. what does that integration look like? your presence is actually creating a problem for us and we came to the contract. so the, the amount of money. so do you guys think we have at least as soon as we can test conversations and honest offices lead to greater understanding this 77 percent in 30 minutes on the w. i see all the trees getting thing, please and i'll cleans of all 5 of 20. 50 is much of a much pretty know and everybo
many universities are already creating a positive policies. cambridge university in the u. k. it's now okay to use a i for getting an overview of new concepts to the coach or help with time management. so i'm scholars cool for exams that should be done in a way that no one can cheat using ai and to propose students for the working world . school should teach anywhere to they i, but only using limited versions. and then it's also up to us, be honest, which context have you use a i the, you know,...
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which, you know, compared at least to the cambridge game is totally false. and a bit of a key of american or at least by new ministration, propaganda. and he sounded like a cross between a petulant child and a want to be mafia. don, no, no pun intended, on the done. so he, this was, we have to say probably absorbed with a grain of salt in, in moscow there wasn't much direct comments, certainly nothing from the russian president on this and simply with the threats of, of sanctions, terrorist and taxes as, as if terrorist and taxes would affect rush at all, i don't really understand, but donald trump seems to like the words, the russian presidential spokesman said there's nothing new there. you know, we've weathered 24002nd since from the west at this point there's. there's absolutely nothing interesting for us in this book. yeah. but see the website. okay . black go ahead. i think there's been a reassessment. i think the for one thing we've heard from uh trumps. nominal piece on boy, the retired general kellogg, that the 100 days is out the window. all right,
which, you know, compared at least to the cambridge game is totally false. and a bit of a key of american or at least by new ministration, propaganda. and he sounded like a cross between a petulant child and a want to be mafia. don, no, no pun intended, on the done. so he, this was, we have to say probably absorbed with a grain of salt in, in moscow there wasn't much direct comments, certainly nothing from the russian president on this and simply with the threats of, of sanctions, terrorist and...
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just think about the cambridge i looked at the scandal on. yes, that was all related to facebook. an american social media app fee is a no mock suck above. use your personal data for personal gain. facebook didn't just use its data to help advertisers, place targeted ads, and also used a i enhanced technology and tools like gps to track users information in order to learn more and more about them all while constantly improving the reach and power of the company's advertising capabilities in perhaps the creepiest example facebook applied for and received last year, a patent for a tool called techniques for a motion detection and content delivery. it would use the camera in your phone to take pictures of you as you scroll through content b o. the warning bells being run of a deep cycle relate to whether the app is actively censoring the information that uses receive weston me to call. i don't even think c was we writing history m o a, i sense this information with varying degrees of success. of course, when google launch gemini, like it had a few issues when it came to historical fa
just think about the cambridge i looked at the scandal on. yes, that was all related to facebook. an american social media app fee is a no mock suck above. use your personal data for personal gain. facebook didn't just use its data to help advertisers, place targeted ads, and also used a i enhanced technology and tools like gps to track users information in order to learn more and more about them all while constantly improving the reach and power of the company's advertising capabilities in...
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Feb 1, 2025
02/25
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a 2017 cambridge university study found that collectively they constitute the largest shareholders in nearly 90% of the companies in the s&p hundred. again, that's 500 of the largest publicly u.s. companies and their ownerships even larger today as passive investing has overtaken active investing. this consolidation of corporate power and control is unlike anything the financial markets have seen since j.p. morgan and john de rockefeller controlled much of the financial sector in the early 1900s. it is the most powerful financial cartel in u.s. history that kind of share ownership carries with it tremendous power. the big three don't beneficially own those shares, the shares in their funds. the dividends. the profits. the losses from those shares go to their clients. but the big three vote, those shares at each company's annual shareholders meeting. that gives them power over who sits on boards of directors for virtually every major company in the united states and whether shareholders or shareholder resolutions for those companies pass or fail. so when this triad of power speaks to c
a 2017 cambridge university study found that collectively they constitute the largest shareholders in nearly 90% of the companies in the s&p hundred. again, that's 500 of the largest publicly u.s. companies and their ownerships even larger today as passive investing has overtaken active investing. this consolidation of corporate power and control is unlike anything the financial markets have seen since j.p. morgan and john de rockefeller controlled much of the financial sector in the early...
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Feb 3, 2025
02/25
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he has received fellowships from the national endowment for the humanities and the university of cambridge and of course, from the american antiquarian society, where he was a jay and deborah last fellow in graphic arts in 2018 2019. he has indeed been a familiar face here, participating in our 2022 summer seminar in american visual culture and serving on our short on our short term fellowship selection committee. that same year, the project he worked on as a researcher here is now a book which he's discussing tonight. lost literacies experiments in the 19th century. u.s. comic. if you thought american comic strips began sometime around the 1890s or the early 20th century, alex is book will take you back more than a century earlier. but i'll let him tell that story. alex, welcome back to as. thank you for that kind introduction. scott and thanks to as for for hosting me, this institution just means so much to me. people like lauren hughes, nan woolverton, laura wasser, which vince golden have all been just sort of incredible of supporters of my research over the years. i mean, it's nice to
he has received fellowships from the national endowment for the humanities and the university of cambridge and of course, from the american antiquarian society, where he was a jay and deborah last fellow in graphic arts in 2018 2019. he has indeed been a familiar face here, participating in our 2022 summer seminar in american visual culture and serving on our short on our short term fellowship selection committee. that same year, the project he worked on as a researcher here is now a book which...
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Feb 3, 2025
02/25
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vanessa cambridge, thank you very much for that. kate. >> joining us to talk much more about this is cnn economics and political commentator. also an opinion columnist at the washington post. catherine rampell, thanks for coming back in, catherine. so even president trump, which is noteworthy. president trump is now acknowledging the reality that everyone else knew, which is when this trade war begins, americans are going to feel the pain. the way he put it was we may have short term, some little pain. what is that pain going to look like? >> so it depends on the product. but we are already seeing some prices being passed through. for example, customers of irving energy, which is a canadian company that supplies fuel oil and propane to much of new england. they were notified yesterday that they will bear the cost, the entire cost of those tariffs immediately. you also have lots of produce that that's coming over the border, things that companies could not stock up on. unlike refrigerators or cars or what have you, right ahead of the
vanessa cambridge, thank you very much for that. kate. >> joining us to talk much more about this is cnn economics and political commentator. also an opinion columnist at the washington post. catherine rampell, thanks for coming back in, catherine. so even president trump, which is noteworthy. president trump is now acknowledging the reality that everyone else knew, which is when this trade war begins, americans are going to feel the pain. the way he put it was we may have short term,...
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Feb 3, 2025
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peterson, how's everything going in cambridge?ivens: one of the areas that he really believed in was stem cell research. laurie hawkins: chris would get all excited. he's like, it's going to change science. it's going to change people's lives. christopher reeve: you can make a new heart. you can make a new liver. you can replace the nerves that were damaged in spinal cord injuries, juvenile diabetes, als, parkinson's disease. michael manganiello: a cure for almost everything. will reeve: my dad was obsessed with tomorrow's cure. christopher reeve: i think it's probably the greatest breakthrough in the history of science. will reeve: he would have been the first for any human trial. [video playback] - disabled groups have reacted angrily to a commercial in which the paraplegic actor christopher reeve is made to get out of his wheelchair and walk using computer technology. - millions saw it go out, some of whom rang in wanting to know where reeve had been treated. - but with disability, seem to be very upset by the message that chri
peterson, how's everything going in cambridge?ivens: one of the areas that he really believed in was stem cell research. laurie hawkins: chris would get all excited. he's like, it's going to change science. it's going to change people's lives. christopher reeve: you can make a new heart. you can make a new liver. you can replace the nerves that were damaged in spinal cord injuries, juvenile diabetes, als, parkinson's disease. michael manganiello: a cure for almost everything. will reeve: my dad...
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Feb 1, 2025
02/25
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secession white women and the politics and politics in south carolina, 1862 1861 will be published with cambridge university press in 2025. our third speaker is dr. derek o leary, who received his ph.d. in u.s. history at uc berkeley in 2020 and has taught since at bard high school, early college, d.c., and the university of south carolina. he transitioned to the federal government in 2022 and just completed the prestigious presidential management fellowship program at a prestigious. he didn't write that. his book, archival communities constructing the past in the early u.s. will be published by uva press in 2025 as well. and our final speaker is dr. john c winters, assistant director of the georgia. ann richards civil war era center at penn state. he is the author of the 2023 book the amazing iroquois and the invention of the empire state. from oxford university press and is published in various academic and public facing venues. as a public historian, john won a national park service grant for the reinterpretation of the historic fort rosalie site in natchez, mississippi. he and he directed the
secession white women and the politics and politics in south carolina, 1862 1861 will be published with cambridge university press in 2025. our third speaker is dr. derek o leary, who received his ph.d. in u.s. history at uc berkeley in 2020 and has taught since at bard high school, early college, d.c., and the university of south carolina. he transitioned to the federal government in 2022 and just completed the prestigious presidential management fellowship program at a prestigious. he didn't...
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Feb 9, 2025
02/25
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earlier when you said getting the public to think about the right things we're talking about how cambridge analytica used big data and 16 campaigns for opponent are they the other republican candidate ted cruz and how they developed this notion model about to. or that that kind of blatantly appears clusters people according to their different personality traits so this that i can i can propose direct messages for voters in the united states according to the personality and they to carry the amendment like two messages for the second amendment carrying carrying a gun for a period i'm sorry and. one was portraying i mean essentially the same message playing into their into their personality, one for like an erotic person that says vote for or they don't like the second amendment banned because. it's your security, insurance or security or something like that. and the other one was for like a very person that is very traditional, that shows a father and the son up in the back of the picture it's like it tells like i'm going for the second amendment and pass it on from like a father to your so
earlier when you said getting the public to think about the right things we're talking about how cambridge analytica used big data and 16 campaigns for opponent are they the other republican candidate ted cruz and how they developed this notion model about to. or that that kind of blatantly appears clusters people according to their different personality traits so this that i can i can propose direct messages for voters in the united states according to the personality and they to carry the...
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again, a policy that works well for the virtue signalling elites in london, oxford and cambridge, butven the office for budget responsibility concedes is bringing millions of people into britain, who are a net fiscal cost to the country and our economy. an elite obsession as well with net zero, which is pushing up energy pnces which is pushing up energy prices and decimating our traditional energy providers, forcing the shutting of factories, a loss of thousands ofjobs factories, a loss of thousands of jobs across working class towns up and down these islands, and perhaps most visibly, most importantly of all, by our broken borders, which is making a mockery of our claim to be a self—governing, independent nafion self—governing, independent nation which controls our own borders and keeps our own people safe. is this not why we are seeing all of this churn and change in the national opinion polls today? because so many people out there, i think many of the people watching this show are utterly frustrated and fed up with the policies that have been imposed on them by the uniparty in west
again, a policy that works well for the virtue signalling elites in london, oxford and cambridge, butven the office for budget responsibility concedes is bringing millions of people into britain, who are a net fiscal cost to the country and our economy. an elite obsession as well with net zero, which is pushing up energy pnces which is pushing up energy prices and decimating our traditional energy providers, forcing the shutting of factories, a loss of thousands ofjobs factories, a loss of...
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Feb 4, 2025
02/25
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tim muffett reports. of her modern languages degree at cambridge university.sed out of the blue. wasn't working properly. the equivalent of a state secondary school of young people every year if you'd like to come in. a heart screening event. the idea of the screening really is to identify young people - that potentially are at risk of sudden cardiac death. i 798 00:27:17,732 --> 00:27
tim muffett reports. of her modern languages degree at cambridge university.sed out of the blue. wasn't working properly. the equivalent of a state secondary school of young people every year if you'd like to come in. a heart screening event. the idea of the screening really is to identify young people - that potentially are at risk of sudden cardiac death. i 798 00:27:17,732 --> 00:27