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May 13, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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attack of nope and then you shake your other way out of i did not openly and clearly condemn their capacious of kuwait. at the same time he didn't openly and clearly supported. he tried in his own way to simultaneous to play both sides and his position was interpreted as supporting the iraqis his calculations were wrong and we paid a tremendous price for them. on a fact that hold the international community would link an iraqi withdrawal from kuwait to israeli concessions in the occupied territories. but the palestinian leader miscalculated about. the dreams of statehood and recognition he had harbored not too long ago. the promise of peace in the middle east. but a new dilemma after the death of the man at the center of the palestinian struggle . now more than 40 years after to status meant how far as the p.l.o. come to achieving its hopes and dreams concluding the turbulent story of the struggle for palestinian homeland. history of a revolution on al-jazeera. one half scottish and half lebanese so diversity is really important to me and al-jazeera is the most diverse place i've ever worked
attack of nope and then you shake your other way out of i did not openly and clearly condemn their capacious of kuwait. at the same time he didn't openly and clearly supported. he tried in his own way to simultaneous to play both sides and his position was interpreted as supporting the iraqis his calculations were wrong and we paid a tremendous price for them. on a fact that hold the international community would link an iraqi withdrawal from kuwait to israeli concessions in the occupied...
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May 12, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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did not openly and clearly condemn their capacious of kuwait at the same time he didn't openly and clearly support it. he tried in his own way to simultaneous to play both sides and his position was interpreted as supporting the iraqis and his calculations were wrong and we paid a tremendous price for them. on a fact that hold the international community would link an iraqi withdrawal from kuwait to israeli concessions in the occupied territories. but the palestinian leader miscalculated back to. the dreams of statehood and recognition he had harvard not too long ago now named. played an important role in protecting human. touch face. as yugoslavia disintegrated war descended on its inhabitants. amidst the death and destruction one man created a peaceful microcosm for boys whose fathers faced each other in battle episode 3 of football rebels enters the world of footballing legend push each. who when from coaching boys football to teaching young men life. push each of the siege of sarajevo on al-jazeera. culturally i believe the muslims had to for greater effect on europe than europe the mi
did not openly and clearly condemn their capacious of kuwait at the same time he didn't openly and clearly support it. he tried in his own way to simultaneous to play both sides and his position was interpreted as supporting the iraqis and his calculations were wrong and we paid a tremendous price for them. on a fact that hold the international community would link an iraqi withdrawal from kuwait to israeli concessions in the occupied territories. but the palestinian leader miscalculated back...
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May 15, 2020
05/20
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KQED
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man 6: ...in the capacy for goodness.ential for greatness. ♪ man 7: the torch has been passed of to a new generation americans. man 1: pbs. man 3: pbs. girl: pbs. ♪ captioning sponsored by newshour productions, llc >> woodruff: good evendrg, i'm judy wf. on the newshour tonight, the covid conflict-- amid a mounting death toll, a whistleblower lays out u.s. missteps as the president breaks with scientists on re-opening schools and offers support to protests againstwn locksh then, lead in a crisis-- rto former white house chiefs of staff from both s offer lessons learned from their experiences during times of turmoil. pluscovid behind bars-- the pandemic exposes healthcare shortcomings of the prison system, now a breeding ground for contagion. all that and more on tonight's pbs newshour.
man 6: ...in the capacy for goodness.ential for greatness. ♪ man 7: the torch has been passed of to a new generation americans. man 1: pbs. man 3: pbs. girl: pbs. ♪ captioning sponsored by newshour productions, llc >> woodruff: good evendrg, i'm judy wf. on the newshour tonight, the covid conflict-- amid a mounting death toll, a whistleblower lays out u.s. missteps as the president breaks with scientists on re-opening schools and offers support to protests againstwn locksh then, lead...
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May 4, 2020
05/20
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KQED
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and wete have orary shortages of swabs, transport media, and reagents and ings, but we really have capaci here due tothe generosity of the bio hub and our graduate students from ucsf, where we are staffing a clinical laboratory. boratory into a clinical search laboratory. we have extended that capacity to the other health departments in california if they needto use it. so, that is good. there are still, i think, a part of providto use cy on the testing. there is a kind of siege what we are trying to bust through now. you can tell people yeah, you can come get tested come down. we can accommodate you if you want to screen people at a nursing home for instance, whatever you would like you know, if you wa to scre people in a homeless shelter, we have the capacity. >> dr. rutherford, six months from now, how well our lives have changed in the bay ea from the coronavirus? facemasks? ll be were >> i think so, unless a vaccine comes along very quickly. that is only november. i think ifyou ask where will we be 12 mohs from now,i think we would be in the middle of a massive vaccination campaign.
and wete have orary shortages of swabs, transport media, and reagents and ings, but we really have capaci here due tothe generosity of the bio hub and our graduate students from ucsf, where we are staffing a clinical laboratory. boratory into a clinical search laboratory. we have extended that capacity to the other health departments in california if they needto use it. so, that is good. there are still, i think, a part of providto use cy on the testing. there is a kind of siege what we are...
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May 30, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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to do tonight is try to concentrate on the substance rather than the ceremony since zoom is not a capaciouslace to exchange awards and the like so we will have a series of conversations with our four winners and then walk us through that, when we are done we will take your questions in chat and we will try to wrap up in an hour using the zoom best practice of not leaving you in front of your computer screen for too long of time especially this time of day. as we get started, those of you who may be new to the awards and to the legacy that they honor, we have a short video about the lucas prizes. >> people talk about -- they almost always talk about the process of writing, sitting there by the keyboard and writing it down, it's in many respects not the most important because the most important part is the report. you been an incredibly diligent reporter but the devotion -- it was detailed and serious but also and entertaining as well. >> he had a set of ideas about nonfiction writing and what he really hoped for is he would be an elevation of nonfiction book writing to the level of literatur
to do tonight is try to concentrate on the substance rather than the ceremony since zoom is not a capaciouslace to exchange awards and the like so we will have a series of conversations with our four winners and then walk us through that, when we are done we will take your questions in chat and we will try to wrap up in an hour using the zoom best practice of not leaving you in front of your computer screen for too long of time especially this time of day. as we get started, those of you who...
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May 19, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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and calling for a new research agenda of nuanced capacious and comprehensive latino and comprehensive history, we must first ask preliminary questions about what research has been done, is currently on the table or yet to be pursued. is there such a thing is latino political history? if so, what does it look like? what does mainstream political history stand to lose by not including latino actors and institutions? how would incorporating latinos into the discourse of american political history change the field and larger narrative? today, we will discuss some of the most pressing issues concerning the role of latinos and the american political past. joining us today and making the case for latino political history or some of the leading voices in this field. rosy now lasagna is a historian of latino history with a research and teaching focus on mexican american history, the american west, migration and immigration, and comparative studies in race and ethnicity. she is the author of an american language, the history of spanish in the united states. it is a political history of the span
and calling for a new research agenda of nuanced capacious and comprehensive latino and comprehensive history, we must first ask preliminary questions about what research has been done, is currently on the table or yet to be pursued. is there such a thing is latino political history? if so, what does it look like? what does mainstream political history stand to lose by not including latino actors and institutions? how would incorporating latinos into the discourse of american political history...
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May 10, 2020
05/20
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CNNW
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you can't ask someone to do something that is beyond their capaci capacity, beyond their limits. we can handle the reopening but every state, almost every state has a significant financial problem because of the loss of revenue due to the economy. think of how a state works. you close down businesses. their income drops. they're not paying an income tax. states revenue drop proportionately. that is what is happened. you look at our economy was doing great. really great in this state. then comes the covid virus and the impact on our financial plan is about 61 billion dollar. we then have to pay for all of this covid related work, all this hospital work and testing and everything that's going on. that's about another $5 billion per year. we then have essential state agencies that are operating that also have taken a tremendous financial loss. the mta operates the subways and buses, collects revenue from tolls when people go over bridges or tunnels or through tunnels. yeah, ridership is down 92%. cars aren't driving and not paying their tolls. tremendous revenue loss at the mta. por
you can't ask someone to do something that is beyond their capaci capacity, beyond their limits. we can handle the reopening but every state, almost every state has a significant financial problem because of the loss of revenue due to the economy. think of how a state works. you close down businesses. their income drops. they're not paying an income tax. states revenue drop proportionately. that is what is happened. you look at our economy was doing great. really great in this state. then comes...
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May 5, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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it's been about hospital capaci capacity. there are some hot spot wes worry about. now next thing is learning to live with the virus and figure out what the best social distancing to do going forward will be. the virus won't be tamed until we have a vaccine. this has to be something we think about going forward and come up with proper guidance for people to be able to be as safe as they can be knowing we'll get deaths as we see people interacting. >> we have hospital capacity. how do you keep hospital capacity and reopen the economy? or is it like you literally open the door a bit and you open the door a little bit? >> exactly. you have to peel back some of the social distancing measures and take a look and see. what's happening opinion are our hospitals okay. are health departments able to do contact tracing. you continue to do that until you hit a tweet spot where you're not worried about the hospitals and you have some degree of economic activity. that has to be done in a measured way and data driven and you can't be hasty about it and expect to have no consequen
it's been about hospital capaci capacity. there are some hot spot wes worry about. now next thing is learning to live with the virus and figure out what the best social distancing to do going forward will be. the virus won't be tamed until we have a vaccine. this has to be something we think about going forward and come up with proper guidance for people to be able to be as safe as they can be knowing we'll get deaths as we see people interacting. >> we have hospital capacity. how do you...
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May 10, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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grew up around and those that are being honored tonight and to concentrate on the substance not a capacious place and then to have a series of conversations and then when we are done we will take questions in chat to wrap up in an hour using the best practice not keeping you in front of your computer screen for too long especially this time of day. new to the awards and the legac legacy, we have a short video. >> talk about the process of writing at the keyboard. it's not the most important par part. [inaudible] this work was detailed. >> and with a set of ideas and what he hoped for is the elevation of nonfiction programs. >> he cared so much about the craft and then said to do something and carry forward. >> and david marinus and robert caro, on and on with this silly group of americans. and none of this would be possible. >> and talk about narrative nonfiction. >> and it would allow me to take more time of the debt for the first time author. it gave me confidence. >> because this type of work that is narrative nonfiction is exactly what i wanted to do when i grew up. >> and it is the sto
grew up around and those that are being honored tonight and to concentrate on the substance not a capacious place and then to have a series of conversations and then when we are done we will take questions in chat to wrap up in an hour using the best practice not keeping you in front of your computer screen for too long especially this time of day. new to the awards and the legac legacy, we have a short video. >> talk about the process of writing at the keyboard. it's not the most...
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popular retailers like walgreens and rite aid and also wal-mart are expanding their testing capaci capacity. walmart will have five more testing locations in five states this week and plans to expand to 49 states and puerto rico. this morning the president of walgreens spoke about the work under way on "gma." >> we're really focused on underserved areas and proud to be working with the administration and state and local governments to do that for two reasons. one to give the visibility and, second to help america kind of get back to work again. >> he says people interested in getting testing can go to the walgreens website to take a survey and see if they qualify for this additional testing. earlier this week, we told you that cvs plans on opening drive-thru testing sites at their minute clinics. they hope to have testing sites at 1,000 locations by the end of the month. reggie? >> jobina, thank you. >>> some promising news at ucsf where a global team of scientists are now working on existing drugs to see if they can help fight coronavirus. the details were released in the journal "nature"
popular retailers like walgreens and rite aid and also wal-mart are expanding their testing capaci capacity. walmart will have five more testing locations in five states this week and plans to expand to 49 states and puerto rico. this morning the president of walgreens spoke about the work under way on "gma." >> we're really focused on underserved areas and proud to be working with the administration and state and local governments to do that for two reasons. one to give the...
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May 26, 2020
05/20
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 92
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they are open one-third capaci capacity. we have requirements for you to wear a mask until your order is taken or your food is served. obviously, you sit there and enjoy it then. the waitstaff has to wear a mask. they are following those guidelines. people are coming back. for a while while he opened them up, they weren't even fields to one-third capacity because the public did not have confidence. that confidence they are gaini gaining. they are understanding the safety precautions. we hope that we can increase that down the road, because that's really a hardship on many businesses to restrict their occupancy to that level. they really are following guidelines very closely. >> neil: i ask a lot of your colleagues across the country what it would take for you to rein in this reopening. you mentioned testing that's going on right now. it does lead to a peeking cases or more of a peek then we have seen. but how do you judge at which point you say, i'm going to slow this down? >> you probably watch the hospitalization rates mor
they are open one-third capaci capacity. we have requirements for you to wear a mask until your order is taken or your food is served. obviously, you sit there and enjoy it then. the waitstaff has to wear a mask. they are following those guidelines. people are coming back. for a while while he opened them up, they weren't even fields to one-third capacity because the public did not have confidence. that confidence they are gaini gaining. they are understanding the safety precautions. we hope...
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May 13, 2020
05/20
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CNNW
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. >>> and coming up, when is it safe to reopen, and in what capaci capacity? as various u.s.tates take different approaches, we will hone in on the response in california, next. want to brain better? unlike ordinary memory supplements neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. it's my own thing that i can do for me. since i don't have time to read, i mean i might as well listen. if i want to catch up on the news, or history, or learn what's going on in the world, i can download a book and listen to it. i listen to spanish lessons sometimes to and from work. yea, it makes me want to be better. audible reintroduced this whole world to me. it changes your perspective. it makes you a different person. see what listening to audible can do for you. they have businesses to grow customers to care for lives to get home to they use stamps.com print discounted postage for any letter any package any time right from your computer all the amazing
. >>> and coming up, when is it safe to reopen, and in what capaci capacity? as various u.s.tates take different approaches, we will hone in on the response in california, next. want to brain better? unlike ordinary memory supplements neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. it's my own thing that i can do for me. since i don't have time to...
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119
May 21, 2020
05/20
by
KQED
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eye 119
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like, your lung capaci doesn't come back up right away.still can't taste or smell for god knows how long this is going to be. i still get pain in my knees that i didn't have before. just don't brush it off thinking, "99% of us are going to get well." well, you're not going to get 100% well. >> my advice would be to have compassion for each other, and quit trying to hurry the process of getting back out there and getting back to work, because it'll happen. it's just, you've got to listen to the experts. before the pandemic, i think a lot of people didn't realize where their food came from. we've heard other friends that have seen signs that people saying, "we love truck drivers." truck drivers have never asked for hazard pay. you know, in fact, our rates have gone down since the pandemic started. so we're ming less overall than when this first started. we just want to still be able to do our jobs, and i just hope that people don't forget about it as time goes on. my name is chante drew. >> my name is ron drew. >> and this is our "brief but
like, your lung capaci doesn't come back up right away.still can't taste or smell for god knows how long this is going to be. i still get pain in my knees that i didn't have before. just don't brush it off thinking, "99% of us are going to get well." well, you're not going to get 100% well. >> my advice would be to have compassion for each other, and quit trying to hurry the process of getting back out there and getting back to work, because it'll happen. it's just, you've got...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 49
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free enterprise was a much more capacious language. free-market has a political meaning but largely in an economic register. free enterprisers never restricted themselves to purely economic but more what is freedom? and that is what they cared about. i think that in the period between the 1930's and 1970's, free enterprise was the term of choice. by maybe the 1980's, free market had overtaken it significantly. one interesting thing you say about unionism is that one of the figures i write about in my book is walter reuther, who was big user of the term "free enterprise." he was a thinker on the left side of the labor spectrum who wanted to resuscitate and redefine the term in some way in the 1950's. >> right here. >> david walsh, grad student at winston. to build on that point, i was interested in the rear appropriating free enterprise term. for the right wingers who used the term free enterprise, what was there vision of what labor it looks like in a free enterprise system? >> let me step back from that because this is part of what is
free enterprise was a much more capacious language. free-market has a political meaning but largely in an economic register. free enterprisers never restricted themselves to purely economic but more what is freedom? and that is what they cared about. i think that in the period between the 1930's and 1970's, free enterprise was the term of choice. by maybe the 1980's, free market had overtaken it significantly. one interesting thing you say about unionism is that one of the figures i write about...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 41
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i am not sure if we are going to start thinking out of a more capacious definition of war and violence, that it can happen at home, that it cannot be impersonal, it can be about economics, can that be something that is interesting to think about with the 18th and 19th century. not sure. it's an idea. >> it will be interesting to think through what extent, where you draw the lines around it. what is the utility of either expanding the definition. sometimes, i don't know the answer to this question, but is it a metaphor of violence in some situations? or is it actual definition of violence. there's a trade offer which one of those it is. but yes, that is a great question. >> we have one here. >> i i am bark, thank you for the great panel. i was thinking about your panel, like his top last night overturns an older narrative, a non violent american past. he focused on why that old nerve tip existed. you gestured to this about rosa parks, how it's a sweet story, or how the founders warned us to think of the red pollution as non violent. but i wonder how through time, this sort of narrative
i am not sure if we are going to start thinking out of a more capacious definition of war and violence, that it can happen at home, that it cannot be impersonal, it can be about economics, can that be something that is interesting to think about with the 18th and 19th century. not sure. it's an idea. >> it will be interesting to think through what extent, where you draw the lines around it. what is the utility of either expanding the definition. sometimes, i don't know the answer to this...
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May 6, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 135
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the notion capacious enough to be appropriated by actors across the political spectrum. critics tied to a more systematic critique of corporate capitalism than military state, or they could use it in liberal or conservative fashions to denounce particular practices of the military economy as a wasteful and the unfortunate product of selfish interests run amuck, and to demand more effective control on rational organization, and regulatory public acts on market mechanisms. so eisenhower's notion of a military industrial complex fit in the third way of thinking and arguing within which i have suggested to contextualize current talk about a deep state in the u.s. ways that registered the emergence of the national security state in big government at mid-20th century. in its emphasis on a duality built into the state, it represented a shift away from a more one dimensional, more conspiratorial populous critique of the military and industry as selfish interests which had occupied center space in american politics in the early to mid-1930s. it had done so in the context of broad
the notion capacious enough to be appropriated by actors across the political spectrum. critics tied to a more systematic critique of corporate capitalism than military state, or they could use it in liberal or conservative fashions to denounce particular practices of the military economy as a wasteful and the unfortunate product of selfish interests run amuck, and to demand more effective control on rational organization, and regulatory public acts on market mechanisms. so eisenhower's notion...
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May 19, 2020
05/20
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CNBC
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eye 95
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louisiana properties tomorrow then thursday, mississippi allows kai issy knows to reopen with 3550% capaciapacity even red rock resorts is benefitting though casinos there are still close ed but it's the anticipation that the locals will be anxious to get back to playing. take one last look here at the game -- [ inaudible >> contessa -- breaking up a little bit but we got the point. nice move in the casino stocks today. wanted to hit consumer staples for you as well. weaker today but they've been a good bet for investors during the pandemic crisis. not all staple stocks are created equally. look at coke versus pepsi. one of the age old corporate rivalries. the price divergence in the market is the widest it's been in decades look at that right now the highest it's been since back to 2000. pep issy is down 3% so far this year coke down 20%. big outperformance from pepsi. coke has more exposure to restaurants, bars, stadiums, the away from home business. pepsi doesn't break it out, but it's a lot less than that. pepsi has an edge with snags while coca-cola is only in beverages. it has quaker
louisiana properties tomorrow then thursday, mississippi allows kai issy knows to reopen with 3550% capaciapacity even red rock resorts is benefitting though casinos there are still close ed but it's the anticipation that the locals will be anxious to get back to playing. take one last look here at the game -- [ inaudible >> contessa -- breaking up a little bit but we got the point. nice move in the casino stocks today. wanted to hit consumer staples for you as well. weaker today but...
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May 4, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 71
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pros, our hospitals were over capaci capacity, particularly in the southeast area of the state, several weeks ago. parts of the state are seeing an increase in the rate of rise of cases and we know their hospital capacity is not what it should be. we have to get our testing up as i know people across the country are working on. while we are cautiously optimistic, we still need to be very careful. >> what do you say to those in the state who are going, you know what, yeah, southeast michigan is being hit hard. are you not comfortable having sort of a let's isolate parts of the state, tougher stay-at-home measures for southeast michigan, let's loosen things up in more rural parts of the state? why are you not there yet? >> so we actually look at this data on a daily basis regionally. so again, wee still seeing, for example, on the western side of the state, that there are actually increases in the rate of rise of cases. we have several outbreaks there. we also know, again, in some of our rural areas, the number of hospital beds is actually not what it should be. many of our hospitals in o
pros, our hospitals were over capaci capacity, particularly in the southeast area of the state, several weeks ago. parts of the state are seeing an increase in the rate of rise of cases and we know their hospital capacity is not what it should be. we have to get our testing up as i know people across the country are working on. while we are cautiously optimistic, we still need to be very careful. >> what do you say to those in the state who are going, you know what, yeah, southeast...