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Jul 25, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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of services and categories of enrollees (including each 1903a enrollee category and each category ofexcluded individuals under subsection (e)(1)) and the numbers of enrollees within each of such enrollee categories, as the secretary determines are necessary (including timely guidance published as soon as possible after the date of the enactment of this section) in order to implement this section and to enable states to comply with the requirement of this paragraph on a timely basis. "(b)reporting on qualified inpatient psychiatric hospital services.-not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of this section, the secretary shall modify the cms-64 report form to require that states submit data with respect to medical assistance expenditures for qualified inpatient psychiatric hospital services (as defined in section 1905(h)(3)). "(c)reporting on children with complex medical conditions.-not later than january 1, 2020, the secretary shall modify the cms-64 report form to require that states submit data with respect to individuals who- "(i)are enrolled in a state plan under t
of services and categories of enrollees (including each 1903a enrollee category and each category ofexcluded individuals under subsection (e)(1)) and the numbers of enrollees within each of such enrollee categories, as the secretary determines are necessary (including timely guidance published as soon as possible after the date of the enactment of this section) in order to implement this section and to enable states to comply with the requirement of this paragraph on a timely basis....
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Jul 11, 2017
07/17
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BLOOMBERG
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new categories.rvices enabling virtually everything around us to be connected and be reinvented. we can play a role in those. yousef: while we expand on a little more in terms of your water thoughts of the industry and where innovation goes from here. what is keeping you up at night in terms of that excitement you have, just like when you get a new product and can't wait to open it and try it out with mark -- try it out? guest: that's exactly how i feel, like a kid in a candy store. the candy store is logitech were have great hardware, great software, and great design. now we can apply that to almost anything. it is just super exciting. we are literally reinventing categories we were already in, like the clicker, which is now growing rapidly. we are also intrigued new categories like in-home cameras, and going more deeply into things like gaming. there are so many opportunities for us right now that it really is exciting. what keeps me awake at night is nothing about the external environment. as your
new categories.rvices enabling virtually everything around us to be connected and be reinvented. we can play a role in those. yousef: while we expand on a little more in terms of your water thoughts of the industry and where innovation goes from here. what is keeping you up at night in terms of that excitement you have, just like when you get a new product and can't wait to open it and try it out with mark -- try it out? guest: that's exactly how i feel, like a kid in a candy store. the candy...
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Jul 27, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 69
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that's the first category. the second reform that we proposed is what i eluded to earlier, about per beneficiary caps, and that was in our legislation -- on those caps, though, what the underlying senate bill did was allow the spending to grow very rapidly on those caps. only in the eighth year did we ask that the growth rate slow down slightly so that we would have a reasonable chance that the growth in the program would be about the same as the economy. so that's what we proposed. that was what was in the bill. that's what we have been hearing about all of these draconian cuts. let's get into the discussion about these cuts. we have another chart that illustrates some of this because this has been a favorite theme for some of my colleagues on the other side to talk about all of these cuts. well, if you look at c.b.o. score -- now, again, is this the senate bcra, the legislation that we didn't get enough votes this week to pass this, but i hope we will revisit this. the largest of the so-called cuts in medicai
that's the first category. the second reform that we proposed is what i eluded to earlier, about per beneficiary caps, and that was in our legislation -- on those caps, though, what the underlying senate bill did was allow the spending to grow very rapidly on those caps. only in the eighth year did we ask that the growth rate slow down slightly so that we would have a reasonable chance that the growth in the program would be about the same as the economy. so that's what we proposed. that was...
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Jul 11, 2017
07/17
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BBCNEWS
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eye 100
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it is a sort of intermediate category.e employees with the most rights, then at the bottom you have contract is with no rights. they are saying you will have a new category of contract is with the same rights that workers have, such as holiday pay and minimum wage. if workers have those rights, if employers have to give them those rights and make more tax payments, what is the appeal left for employers? you have to look at the wider economy. other employers have to work with the law, paid minimum wage, there is no reason why new technology companies operating in the gig economy should not do the same. i think it is right that there is a level playing field for all companies. the tax is not just about getting employers to pay more tax, they have also discussed cash in hand jobs such as window cleaning, where they have said we should all be paying more tax? yes, it is right so that everybody should pay tax no matter what they do. if you are letting people not pay tax, then, that would not be right. we talked about the gig ec
it is a sort of intermediate category.e employees with the most rights, then at the bottom you have contract is with no rights. they are saying you will have a new category of contract is with the same rights that workers have, such as holiday pay and minimum wage. if workers have those rights, if employers have to give them those rights and make more tax payments, what is the appeal left for employers? you have to look at the wider economy. other employers have to work with the law, paid...
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Jul 28, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 54
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that's the first category.he second reform that we propose is what i alluded to earlier, that bill clinton democratic senate proposal of establishing per beneficiary caps and that was in ourt legislation. those caps though what the underlying senate bill did was allow the spending to grow very rapidly on those caps. only in the eighth year did we ask that the growth rate would slowdowns slightly so that without a reasonable chance that the growth in the program would be about the same as the economy. so that's what we have proposed. that was what was in the bill. that's what been hearing about all these draconian cuts. so let's get into this discussion about these cuts. we have another chart that illustrates some of this. this is been a favorite theme for some my colleagues on the other side to talk about all these cuts. if you look at cbo score, now again this is the senate bcra, the legislation that we didn't get enough votes this week to pass this, but i hope we will revisit this. the largest of the so-calle
that's the first category.he second reform that we propose is what i alluded to earlier, that bill clinton democratic senate proposal of establishing per beneficiary caps and that was in ourt legislation. those caps though what the underlying senate bill did was allow the spending to grow very rapidly on those caps. only in the eighth year did we ask that the growth rate would slowdowns slightly so that without a reasonable chance that the growth in the program would be about the same as the...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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these categories are what he called measurable types.the process is that , the prophecies that are creating our rhythms which there are countless which are proprietary or clandestine, constantly hour at work in almost every function of contemporary life. they quote, transpose on us like gender, race, class and citizenship in a quantitative measurable form. we're not overgeneralizing but it characterizes as in other words, other adherents in the way we find it do fail to capture anything other than the stripped-down data categorical similes and it's not their power or even a flaw in their design. they also govern much of our interconnected world and they do so on their motives. to prepare for another serious reference, notable types are extrapolated towards perhaps not a progressive but regressive future that reduces us to a machine ofhistology. within this framework , there is a world non- scholarship and intervention between our regular world and the invisible world of control that is increasingly shaping and governing it. he is a profe
these categories are what he called measurable types.the process is that , the prophecies that are creating our rhythms which there are countless which are proprietary or clandestine, constantly hour at work in almost every function of contemporary life. they quote, transpose on us like gender, race, class and citizenship in a quantitative measurable form. we're not overgeneralizing but it characterizes as in other words, other adherents in the way we find it do fail to capture anything other...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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but there was something different for these categories. to conflate homefront and war experiencesy -- would fuel a divide. sometimes soldiers try to bring the war home. wrote to his wife from eight red cross hospital in europe shortly after v-day. he thought more graphic details would get through the censor. his letter is horrific. it is unusual. maybe someone will tell me i am wrong. i am the luckiest fellow alive, he wrote. never thought i would live to see this through. he thought to give her an outline of what he had done in north africa and italy. yet many terrifying near misses. in,, a truck he was sitting the person was killed but he was unscathed. some of his stories were gruesome. drinking from a clear mountain creek, only to find decaying bodies in the creek upstream. entering a cave with hundreds of rome.s of a massacre in and hearing a strange sound -- what was that? it was the maggots at work on the bodies. i am not like ernie pyle, he wrote. i do not mind looking at dead men. but these sights and sounds will remain with me fo
but there was something different for these categories. to conflate homefront and war experiencesy -- would fuel a divide. sometimes soldiers try to bring the war home. wrote to his wife from eight red cross hospital in europe shortly after v-day. he thought more graphic details would get through the censor. his letter is horrific. it is unusual. maybe someone will tell me i am wrong. i am the luckiest fellow alive, he wrote. never thought i would live to see this through. he thought to give...
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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then there are some nonconformist districts that do not fall into any of those categories. the upshot is democrats cannot get to the math they need for the majority without winning in every single one of those kind of districts. host: the messaging has to be a serious concern for the democratic party. how do you reach out for those in the crowd said voted for president trump? guest: people want to feel like people care about what is going on in their daily lives and in the economy in their area, and they feel like democrats have been really focused on urban on the coast, and not places that have struggled in the new economy. they want to make sure that whoever they've vote for is focusing on jobs and their economic struggles and daily lives, and really making things better for them and not just concentrated on those other things. host: we will look at these areas across the country and what it means for democrats in my be interested in taking back the house. 202-748-8000 for democrats. for republicans, it is 202-748-8001. .ndependents, 202-748-8002 if you are a democrat who
then there are some nonconformist districts that do not fall into any of those categories. the upshot is democrats cannot get to the math they need for the majority without winning in every single one of those kind of districts. host: the messaging has to be a serious concern for the democratic party. how do you reach out for those in the crowd said voted for president trump? guest: people want to feel like people care about what is going on in their daily lives and in the economy in their...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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in every domain, it has gotten harder to distinguish between news categories. those categories. in cyber, what counts as a civilian target is almost impossible. cybery kind of offensive will have spillover effects in simplyhe, the user cannot draws those distinctions. i don't know how those things will kind of unfold in the coming years, but i think each in opposite ways challenges our ability to use those paradigms anymore. yes, you areside, correct. i was using 1868, i went to 1907. that was using the quote. is a precision or accuracy we are talking about? one of the things with a lack of transparency and the very statements we don't know who we kill but we are convinced it was the correct person and that we kill people at various times over. should we keep open the idea that these drones are precisely that they are accurate? at least in terms of what information we have, we should be able to -- >> sometimes we do not know the identity? >> right. we know we killed somebody but we have less of an idea that was the right person, and that that was the person we were intending to
in every domain, it has gotten harder to distinguish between news categories. those categories. in cyber, what counts as a civilian target is almost impossible. cybery kind of offensive will have spillover effects in simplyhe, the user cannot draws those distinctions. i don't know how those things will kind of unfold in the coming years, but i think each in opposite ways challenges our ability to use those paradigms anymore. yes, you areside, correct. i was using 1868, i went to 1907. that was...
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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themselves. >> you put forward in the book that we should eliminate those categories. in a lot of different places. certificate to college or professional level sports and everything or most things in between. 9:00 p.m.onight at eastern on c-span2's book tv. coming up over the fourth of july holiday on the spent two's's book tv, monday at 8:30 p.m. eastern, and author discusses his book, talking back, talking black. to see if i could make the general public have a more positive view of the dialect that most black americans use in casual situations. at seven: 15 a.m. eastern, author and puts her prize winning historian with his book, "the american spirit." down, youget knocked do not whimper and wine. you get back up on your feet and continue on. something we all need to be reminded of. and we aren't marked -- reminded of it by the examples in this story of our own country. >> utah senator mike lee with his book, written out of history, forgotten founding fathers who fought big government." they readt -- unless both sides of the argument. unless you read from the antife
themselves. >> you put forward in the book that we should eliminate those categories. in a lot of different places. certificate to college or professional level sports and everything or most things in between. 9:00 p.m.onight at eastern on c-span2's book tv. coming up over the fourth of july holiday on the spent two's's book tv, monday at 8:30 p.m. eastern, and author discusses his book, talking back, talking black. to see if i could make the general public have a more positive view of...
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Jul 8, 2017
07/17
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WTTG
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. >> and then the different categories of facebook users, which one are you. news at 11 starts rights now. >>> we begin tonight with a developing story in prince george county. two adults and two children recovering from a serious crash 7:00 tonight suitland in hill crest hight. four vehicles involved. u.s. park police say one of the children is in critical condition and other three victims are staibling. there's no word what caused crash but road is now back open to traffic. >> and also tonight an up close look at how drivers are putting kids at risk thanks for joining us i'm shawn ya yancy. >> i'm lauren demarco in for tony. >> many kids are attending school this summer and montgomery county police say some drivers stopped buses it's dangerous and i will legal. kristin leon is live in bethesda with more of this. hey, kristin. >> good evening, ladies, we're standing in front of a bus drop-off as we speak in the county. and as of last year. october of last year we're told that montgomery county police teamed one district to install a hundred cameras on school
. >> and then the different categories of facebook users, which one are you. news at 11 starts rights now. >>> we begin tonight with a developing story in prince george county. two adults and two children recovering from a serious crash 7:00 tonight suitland in hill crest hight. four vehicles involved. u.s. park police say one of the children is in critical condition and other three victims are staibling. there's no word what caused crash but road is now back open to traffic....
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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of self. >> so you put forward in the book we should eliminate those categories. and a lot of different places? from the birth certificates to college or professional level sports or everything in between. i would love to hear from you as that is very forsberg thinking and having grown up with boito ways and girls tories in the mass toy stores we are segregated from the moment we come out getting the blue of bed or the pink of pip. now there are cakes now revealing as a society. so there are two questions do you think it is getting worse? but there is of a juxtaposition of activists who were trying to break down the stereotypes or how we've table each other and we are restricting people is it getting worse at warm level or better add another? or is it even possible?. >> those are great questions one of the things is distinguish we should always ask the question does gender matter? if so then how or why? so there is a lot of assumptions built into those it is one thing to invoke that with the policy like the bus company that was the administrative policy that the c
of self. >> so you put forward in the book we should eliminate those categories. and a lot of different places? from the birth certificates to college or professional level sports or everything in between. i would love to hear from you as that is very forsberg thinking and having grown up with boito ways and girls tories in the mass toy stores we are segregated from the moment we come out getting the blue of bed or the pink of pip. now there are cakes now revealing as a society. so there...
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100
Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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eye 100
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still just about 2% of the total category, but not expected to slow down. >> it's just as important as reporter: to meet demand, some brands are working to re-engineer products into more natural versions but what do words like natural even mean? >> i think of a farm >> to be honest, i don't know what it means. natural. >> reporter: believe it or mot, the word "natural" doesn't mean much the beauty industry is virtually unregulated, leaving companies to set their own standards >> i think we have a right to know what's in our products. >> reporter: according to the fda, they do not approve cosmetics, but they do approve color additives used in cosmetics. it's the responsibility of cosmetic manufacturers to ensure, before marketing their products, that the products are save when used as directed on their label, or under customary conditions of use. jessica alba's company has paid nearly $9 million to resolve lawsuit, accusing the brand of adding chemicals to products they claimed were natural. they say, we vigorously deny any and all allegations in the lawsuit. we stand behind the safety
still just about 2% of the total category, but not expected to slow down. >> it's just as important as reporter: to meet demand, some brands are working to re-engineer products into more natural versions but what do words like natural even mean? >> i think of a farm >> to be honest, i don't know what it means. natural. >> reporter: believe it or mot, the word "natural" doesn't mean much the beauty industry is virtually unregulated, leaving companies to set...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 42
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i'm making up these categories as i go. the discursive effects, think of the emancipation proclamation. it is saturated in the laws of armed conflict. that emancipation is necessary as a war measure. war frameworkof setting up the justification and then emancipation sets off a humanitarian law crisis, worrying about what the humanitarian effects of emancipation will be. essentially, this is the point -- there are essentially no lawyers and the executive ranch in 1852. william whiting is running around saying he is a solicitor of the white house, but nobody is really sure what that means. they have to reach out to a columbia professor to find someone to write a code of war. there are no boots on the ground in the law domain. this may help explain in part why the use and bella looks different now. there are people there standing behind the targeting officers who can offer advice, and that is a new effect, but it does not mean that the law matters now and did not before. >> i just want to say i completely agree with that. forg
i'm making up these categories as i go. the discursive effects, think of the emancipation proclamation. it is saturated in the laws of armed conflict. that emancipation is necessary as a war measure. war frameworkof setting up the justification and then emancipation sets off a humanitarian law crisis, worrying about what the humanitarian effects of emancipation will be. essentially, this is the point -- there are essentially no lawyers and the executive ranch in 1852. william whiting is running...
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157
Jul 5, 2017
07/17
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FOXNEWSW
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category, i might get that.d on '80s movies. >> kimberly: that is what we did very well into rage together. >> dana: yes, we did. >> greg: movies for people in their 80s? "on golden pond"? >> jesse: also a movie from the '80s. what would be our category at jeopardy, not political? >> kimberly: for specialty and pepperoni. that frequently comes up on the show. he had come would probably. -- food would be good. fashion, i would be good at. american political history, but that is politics. what else? law, can i have that? 's are too obvious? >> jesse: we will allow law. juan, what would be yours? we can give you politics because let's be honest, you don't know that much. [laughter] >> juan: i know enough to get the answers. but i would say, historical figures, if you could do that, is not political? >> jesse: that's good. >> juan: you could do historical figures or -- >> kimberly: that's politics, too. >> jesse: may be. we are going to allow it. i would like to compete in the high school jeopardy. i really want to
category, i might get that.d on '80s movies. >> kimberly: that is what we did very well into rage together. >> dana: yes, we did. >> greg: movies for people in their 80s? "on golden pond"? >> jesse: also a movie from the '80s. what would be our category at jeopardy, not political? >> kimberly: for specialty and pepperoni. that frequently comes up on the show. he had come would probably. -- food would be good. fashion, i would be good at. american...
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Jul 19, 2017
07/17
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WRC
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if you fall in those categories reduce your outdoor activities. high pressure sitting right down on top of us. poor air quality all the way through the end of the week. four things to know. one or two isolated storms today. heat index 100 or higher likely today, tomorrow on through the weekend. saturday and sunday both flirting with 100 but should be an isolated chance for some thunderstorms coming back into the picture on saturday and sunday. any help in traffic today melissa? >>> just one problem as far as any crashes. taking a look here again college park. route 1 there at berwyn road crash affecting lanes in each direction here this morning. it's been there for a couple of hours. hoping it gets out of the way in the next little bit. outer loop at branch road work there. not looking bad when you take a big look at the beltway. 66 and 95 in virginia just fine and 95 in marylan take you ten minutes. inbound same situation, outbound. >>> one day she was your average bride to be. next the center of a controversial officer involved shooting. new inf
if you fall in those categories reduce your outdoor activities. high pressure sitting right down on top of us. poor air quality all the way through the end of the week. four things to know. one or two isolated storms today. heat index 100 or higher likely today, tomorrow on through the weekend. saturday and sunday both flirting with 100 but should be an isolated chance for some thunderstorms coming back into the picture on saturday and sunday. any help in traffic today melissa? >>>...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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themselves. >> host: so you put forward in the book that we should eliminate those categories in a lot of different places. so from a birth certificate, to college or professional level sports and everything in between her most things in between. i would love to hear from you, that is very forward thinking and having grown up with the boy toys and girl toys and aisles of mass toys stores, we are segregated right down from the moment we come out. i you getting a blue outfit or pink outfit, now there are cakes that are made the revealed cakes we are even now doing that as a society. i wonder so, there's two questions, do you think it's getting worse but there is this position of activists were were really trying to break down the stereotypes and trying to break down how you label each other and that were restricting people. to think it's getting worse at one level and better at another? or do you think that it's even possible in the society. >> those are great questions. i think one of the things i trust and i talked about in the book as i think we should always ask that question, does g
themselves. >> host: so you put forward in the book that we should eliminate those categories in a lot of different places. so from a birth certificate, to college or professional level sports and everything in between her most things in between. i would love to hear from you, that is very forward thinking and having grown up with the boy toys and girl toys and aisles of mass toys stores, we are segregated right down from the moment we come out. i you getting a blue outfit or pink outfit,...
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Jul 6, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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. >> that libel is one of our historically different but very distinct categories. you don't make the claim that this falls into a category of low value speech in the way that libel laws and the defamation does were fighting words or something like that. you're not looking to create a new category so in that case it seems that viewpoint based band applies and, as i said, i would be interested to hear your answer of why the example that i stated is not viewpoint based. it says you can't say something bad and you say something good about the money but not something bad about somebody or something. >> certainly if you think about category of people like political officials and said you can't say anything bad about any of them but you can say all the good things you want, that is point space because it would be protected a discrete group of people. let me give a couple of answers. >> why is that -- >> but if you didn't limit it, if you say you can't say anything bad about anybody anytime that the cake was marked. >> again, were not seen the campaigning bad but you can r
. >> that libel is one of our historically different but very distinct categories. you don't make the claim that this falls into a category of low value speech in the way that libel laws and the defamation does were fighting words or something like that. you're not looking to create a new category so in that case it seems that viewpoint based band applies and, as i said, i would be interested to hear your answer of why the example that i stated is not viewpoint based. it says you can't...
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Jul 13, 2017
07/17
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WRC
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pick a category. >> do you have a category that you're itching to do?u -- exen like to choose u.s. history for 40,000. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: u.s. history! >> steve: let's see the question. >> for 73 please. >> steve: u.s. history for 40. which of the founding fathers is credited with inventing the bifocal lens? >> jimmy: i know this. >> ben franklin. >> steve: yes! ben franklin. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] benjamin franklin. you knew that. >> jimmy: did you have any -- amy, did you have any -- >> i did. i knew it was ben franklin. yes. >> steve: he invented the glasses. >> yeah, little, tiny things. >> steve: he also invited that stove. and he invented the $100 bill. >> and he invented kites, and keys, and lightning. >> steve: sure. [ light laughter ] all right jimmy, it's your turn. pick a category. choose carefully. >> jimmy: all right. okay, all right. maya, stop yelling at me. let's say geography for 50. >> wow. >> steve: world geography. >> jimmy: oh, no! >> steve: let's see the question. 50 points. what is the large lake at lies high in the andes a
pick a category. >> do you have a category that you're itching to do?u -- exen like to choose u.s. history for 40,000. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: u.s. history! >> steve: let's see the question. >> for 73 please. >> steve: u.s. history for 40. which of the founding fathers is credited with inventing the bifocal lens? >> jimmy: i know this. >> ben franklin. >> steve: yes! ben franklin. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] benjamin franklin. you knew that....
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Jul 7, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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the way the political conversation has gone is it is easier to put people in categories, very firm categories where there is no luck's ability simply for advocating a particular message on a number of different issues. if we are going to transcend that, this is a good place to start to embrace nuance, to say that sometimes political agendas at the expense of the individual and groups of people are not really worth it. we have to move past that. i agree with parts of what you said. the reason it is there is there is too much at stake. >> and then who defines it? >> it depends, blacks have different -- defined himself internally to counter how blacks have an defined externally so that is another tension that exists. it is a both and. >> to add one thing to that, i have a white great-grandmother. which accounts for exactly nothing in my relationship to race in this country. i jokingly -- jokingly said to someone you could be pulled over by a police officer and say, this is embarrassing, you think i am black. i have a white great-grandmother, actually. but that is what i mean about the lightness
the way the political conversation has gone is it is easier to put people in categories, very firm categories where there is no luck's ability simply for advocating a particular message on a number of different issues. if we are going to transcend that, this is a good place to start to embrace nuance, to say that sometimes political agendas at the expense of the individual and groups of people are not really worth it. we have to move past that. i agree with parts of what you said. the reason it...
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Jul 7, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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you've got to go out and redefine the category, make people believe that you're the leader in the category continue to invest and innovate in that category, and they stop doing that, and they use a lot of their capital on actual hardware itself as opposed to innovating on software, and i think it just caught up with them but it's a really interesting lesson for the rest of us out there which if you don't innovate you become a twitter, you become a yahoo, you become a jawbone there are companies that continue to fail to move and take chances and continue to reinvest and end up losing in the long run. >> just to be clear, twitter didn't liquidate, right? >> no, no, i'm not saying they go out of business neither did aol liquidate. the question is do you become a factor are you a factor in the next generation if you look at what's going on with snapchat, one of the reasons it's great they went public for them they have to continue to innovate if facebook is able to fast copy and put it out to more people than snapchat has, then they will constantly have to innovate until they have another brea
you've got to go out and redefine the category, make people believe that you're the leader in the category continue to invest and innovate in that category, and they stop doing that, and they use a lot of their capital on actual hardware itself as opposed to innovating on software, and i think it just caught up with them but it's a really interesting lesson for the rest of us out there which if you don't innovate you become a twitter, you become a yahoo, you become a jawbone there are companies...
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Jul 13, 2017
07/17
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WJLA
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so it opened up so many categories. >> in the comedy categories, "modern family" and "black offish" for outstanding comedy series. "black-ish" stars vying for wins for acting. >> i'm so happy for you. >> i'm happy for you. >> we find out the winner september 17. the 69th annual emmy award show will be in l.a. hosted by stephen colbert. in los angeles, marci gonzalez, abc7 news. alison: all right. that should be a lot of fun. now check out this picture. this is great. right there is donnie wahlberg with the staff at a waffle house in charlotte. he said they gave him a royal treatment and he tried to return the favor. he left $2,000 tip on $80 tab and he gave a waitress tickets and backstage kids on the block concert for her and her mom. he spent $80 at the waffle house. he was eating a lot. larry: a lot of food. a look at the many characters of harrison ford, hans solo and indiana enjoys celebrates his 75th birthday today. -- indiana jones celebrates his 75th birthday today. >> a woman's purse is a first for me. >> coming up, how long the owner of the purse was waitinger that catch. >> t
so it opened up so many categories. >> in the comedy categories, "modern family" and "black offish" for outstanding comedy series. "black-ish" stars vying for wins for acting. >> i'm so happy for you. >> i'm happy for you. >> we find out the winner september 17. the 69th annual emmy award show will be in l.a. hosted by stephen colbert. in los angeles, marci gonzalez, abc7 news. alison: all right. that should be a lot of fun. now check out...
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Jul 12, 2017
07/17
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FBC
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very few outlier categories that stumbled. which category. i doubt that anything in the inflation that were seen as transitory. i think that is why she has become so much more. with the housing market is down 60% year over year. these numbers are going to begin to get the fed's attention. it's good to see all of you. we will see you next time. the closing bell is ringing and 49 minutes. elon musk brought into the mainstream. but it has taken one gigantic leap forward. the cofounder is here to explain and we will show it to you here. some of the biggest names in business descending on sun valley idaho for the conference here. warren buffett is there. really looking for that next diamond in the rough. he is in the gem estate to tell us about the next made sure merger. the power couple heading to sun valley that could hold the key to that deal. potsch: you each drive a ford pickup, right? (in unison) russ, leland, gary: yes. gary: i have a ford f-150. michael: i've always been a ford guy. potsch: then i have a real treat for you
very few outlier categories that stumbled. which category. i doubt that anything in the inflation that were seen as transitory. i think that is why she has become so much more. with the housing market is down 60% year over year. these numbers are going to begin to get the fed's attention. it's good to see all of you. we will see you next time. the closing bell is ringing and 49 minutes. elon musk brought into the mainstream. but it has taken one gigantic leap forward. the cofounder is here to...
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Jul 12, 2017
07/17
by
BBCNEWS
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we will start with the category 5 hurricane. it gets richer material by the day. we use fa ke material by the day. shall we use fake news? it is quite astonishing. i love the analogy between house of cards, which many will have seen, with kevin spacey, incredible. getting back to the point is you cannot believe that a really key conversation took place even if this lawyer says it wasn't of consequence, in view of the situation and the daily attack on hillary clinton during that period, you would have thought james comey and the fbi would have got this news immediately. they seem to go from one crisis to another. that is a brilliant way they close ranks on each other. reince priebus, the white house chief of staff, is now being suggested that perhaps he should move on. they are trying to clear a path to get where they need to. it does build up this picture of anxiety from within, doesn't it? everyone getting suspicious of eve ryo ne everyone getting suspicious of everyone else as to where the legs are coming from. who is running the show? -- leaks. the trail is mov
we will start with the category 5 hurricane. it gets richer material by the day. we use fa ke material by the day. shall we use fake news? it is quite astonishing. i love the analogy between house of cards, which many will have seen, with kevin spacey, incredible. getting back to the point is you cannot believe that a really key conversation took place even if this lawyer says it wasn't of consequence, in view of the situation and the daily attack on hillary clinton during that period, you...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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WJLA
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washington not just top 10 finishes in five out of 10 categories. work force, economy, tech and innovation and access to capitol. >> a robust, growing economy, innovative entrepreneurs, safe communities. >> reporter: but as is offen the case here clouds are building. home construction is slowing down. boeing the state's largest employer is cutting jobs, nearly 10,000 in the last year, prompting a big i told you so from the critics of insentives given the company. >> boeing is gaining the fine print of these two huge incentive packages that total more than $11 billion. >> reporter: and the state only recently began reinvesting in its troubling infrastructure. >> we know talent is going to drive the energy source of the future. >> reporter: but the challenges leave washington facing a nagging question. has the state reached its peek or is there room to grow higher? in mt. ranier national park, washington. >> its work force is also the least educated in the nation. >>> up next we're on the money. stay safe. a little device with a powerful purpose and m
washington not just top 10 finishes in five out of 10 categories. work force, economy, tech and innovation and access to capitol. >> a robust, growing economy, innovative entrepreneurs, safe communities. >> reporter: but as is offen the case here clouds are building. home construction is slowing down. boeing the state's largest employer is cutting jobs, nearly 10,000 in the last year, prompting a big i told you so from the critics of insentives given the company. >> boeing is...
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Jul 7, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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at some point, the market starts saying, okay, you're going to have this category >> at which category just the prime numbers if they have prime video and music and retailing, there's too in different levers they can pull on this way they pull a rabbit houf a hat, $190 in the stock. >> we're just weeks away from what could cause a massive disruption in snaps already struggling stock julia is in los angeles with a look at what could mean for the stock. >> well, nearly 60% of snap's shares will become unlocked on july 31st, with another 25% unlocked a month later now, snap chat shares have been struggling since the pop the sell off accelerating after its first earnings report. the stock is now down about 40% from its highs hovering around its ipo price and short interest is on the rise the number of shares shorted nearly doubled from 39 million in may to more than 70 million in june. according to fact set. and mkm partners note that is if history is a guide, snap could have a rough few weeks 30 days prior, facebook, twitter and link ed in traded down by 2% on average, but the stocks dipp
at some point, the market starts saying, okay, you're going to have this category >> at which category just the prime numbers if they have prime video and music and retailing, there's too in different levers they can pull on this way they pull a rabbit houf a hat, $190 in the stock. >> we're just weeks away from what could cause a massive disruption in snaps already struggling stock julia is in los angeles with a look at what could mean for the stock. >> well, nearly 60% of...
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Jul 6, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 55
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i have attempted to group in the succeeding slides the categories of literature. as i say, there's over 100 monographs, no article or literature cited in this presentation, and i've tried to cluster them according to categories. one notable category is to look at the literature of conservative or neo conservative critiques of the counterculture. i did an article on this very topic for a book that david and beth bailey put together for colombia, the colombia guide to the '60s, which actually investigated what the ultimate impact of the counterculture was from the period where it is first noticed in the mid 1960s, differentiated from the beats, and bringing it up to the present. one of the things that struck me about this is invariably writers on the left regarded the counterculture as a gigantic failure in many respect, but it was the people on the right that regarded the counterculture's impact as catastrophically effective. so you wouldn't think you would go there, but it raises some interesting questions about who is paying attention to whether culture trumps po
i have attempted to group in the succeeding slides the categories of literature. as i say, there's over 100 monographs, no article or literature cited in this presentation, and i've tried to cluster them according to categories. one notable category is to look at the literature of conservative or neo conservative critiques of the counterculture. i did an article on this very topic for a book that david and beth bailey put together for colombia, the colombia guide to the '60s, which actually...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN2
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problems with that, not everybody wants to be in that third category. it kind of opens up this big question that we have to talk about which is the real variety of december letter. >> host: let's get into that. i would love for you to give a definition of people that are born in ursa and i think that kind of broadens the conversation. >> guest: absolutely. it is that her that -- the term we use for people with a combination of these characteristics, so whether that is in terms of reproductive organs, genitalia, or loans, chromosomes, so anything that is not dyadic. so, now we are talking about those identities and sometimes does go along with trans identities and sometimes they don't, but under the umbrella of transgender is a term, you have people that are gender conforming to the female to male or male to female identify and then there are people that are non- binary who identify as may be both male and female or neither, so there've been interesting lawsuits where people have fought for legal recognition of a non- binary gender classification and i t
problems with that, not everybody wants to be in that third category. it kind of opens up this big question that we have to talk about which is the real variety of december letter. >> host: let's get into that. i would love for you to give a definition of people that are born in ursa and i think that kind of broadens the conversation. >> guest: absolutely. it is that her that -- the term we use for people with a combination of these characteristics, so whether that is in terms of...
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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more likely to be in the first category. of peoplehe category who say that we need to keep this together. oa.uld not leave the jcp o it.what comes out of be inen -- they tend to the other category. people would say, you're not deal tong from this begin with. why should we accept being humiliated as well. there's also the political dynamic. think paul is absolutely right. perceived abrogate there's an urge to respond. there is a demand that we need in response.ng iran sanctions, when this was saw them saying y and z.x, it was return to pond to u.s. action against iran. it would be very difficult for to iranian policymakers basically see the u.s., taking perceivedat are not jcoa compatible with the and not present themselves in in some way.n -- i terms of the inspections, don't want to say the administration joseph sold it. iran upperception in the nuclear deal it's different from the nuclear deal itself. the polls wen conducted immediately after the nuclear deal. deal toerceive the include hold sanctions. people perceive the
more likely to be in the first category. of peoplehe category who say that we need to keep this together. oa.uld not leave the jcp o it.what comes out of be inen -- they tend to the other category. people would say, you're not deal tong from this begin with. why should we accept being humiliated as well. there's also the political dynamic. think paul is absolutely right. perceived abrogate there's an urge to respond. there is a demand that we need in response.ng iran sanctions, when this was...
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Jul 14, 2017
07/17
by
BBCNEWS
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, and womankind as a whole is in another category.'m very interested on how it came to be on the front of the sun. this is a private cabinet meeting. someone has chosen to share the details.|j wonder who could that have been. you will not tell us. what we have to look at now. the inner movements of the cabinet. philip hammond has renewed power within the cabinet. whether he has been flexing his muscles, you might assume, by making these comments. earlier he said to these comments. earlier he said to the labour mp these comments. earlier he said to the labourmp in these comments. earlier he said to the labour mp in the chamber accusing her of the hysterical when she asked a question about how businesses in ireland fare after brea kfast. businesses in ireland fare after breakfast. he said he would urge her not to be in hysterical. he got into trouble for that. another comedy has made. i would suggest there is no doubt he did make it. absolutely no doubt. his track record will not helping. a picture of a female train driver called paulin
, and womankind as a whole is in another category.'m very interested on how it came to be on the front of the sun. this is a private cabinet meeting. someone has chosen to share the details.|j wonder who could that have been. you will not tell us. what we have to look at now. the inner movements of the cabinet. philip hammond has renewed power within the cabinet. whether he has been flexing his muscles, you might assume, by making these comments. earlier he said to these comments. earlier he...
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Jul 12, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 79
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basically it says maybe, maybe 1.2 million of the four to 5 million kids in that category are protected. all the rest, 4 million plus to use the headline word are at risk. this is an obnoxious and an obscene bill and we should stop it. >> i don't often correct my democratic leader but i have to do today because he made a minor error in our colleagues had just had six months to put together a healthcare bill that had seven years and six months and the amendment is not the answer. it would roll back protections for people with pre-existing conditions and it would cost more for consumers. the fact is we could fix the uncertainty in the marketplace today if we work together. that's what the american people want us to do. one of the things we need to do is address the cost-sharing payments that go out to help people afford health insurance. this administration has created chaos by refusing to say they are going to commit to pay those payments and we have had insurance carriers say that's why they are leading the market because they cannot count on those payments. i passed legislation that wo
basically it says maybe, maybe 1.2 million of the four to 5 million kids in that category are protected. all the rest, 4 million plus to use the headline word are at risk. this is an obnoxious and an obscene bill and we should stop it. >> i don't often correct my democratic leader but i have to do today because he made a minor error in our colleagues had just had six months to put together a healthcare bill that had seven years and six months and the amendment is not the answer. it would...
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
by
CNBC
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and why don't you take categories and say what categories you would get rid of and what categories youwe going? salena: we're gonna have to start with the products that we make the least margin on. lemonis: in order for this business to really be profitable, they have to get to a 50% margin. the only way to do that is to eliminate the low-margin things and find things that are greater than 50% that are gonna allow us to land at the end of the year at 50%. cody: paddleboards produced $38,000. margin was 26% on these. so...not making the cut. lemonis: so paddleboards should go. salena: wet suits... billy: you got -- i mean, that's -- those, actually, are pretty popular. salena: casual boots are actually doing pretty good. jess: so... chris: you want to come back, and we'll work through some of this? lemonis: you guys learning anything? jess: yeah. chris: we learned a lot. jess: definitely. chris: yeah. jess: women's swim bottoms, bikini bottoms, were 50%. billy: men's, actually -- the work shorts was 47.39%. lemonis: so better than our company average. jess: and women's tops -- 50.82%. l
and why don't you take categories and say what categories you would get rid of and what categories youwe going? salena: we're gonna have to start with the products that we make the least margin on. lemonis: in order for this business to really be profitable, they have to get to a 50% margin. the only way to do that is to eliminate the low-margin things and find things that are greater than 50% that are gonna allow us to land at the end of the year at 50%. cody: paddleboards produced $38,000....
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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but in other words, then anything other than those strip down dave negative categories. and then they do so on their terms. with this serious reference to be extrapolated that reduces us so within this framework with a scholarship brickbat addition in the real world and the invisible world that is increasingly shaping government. said at the university of michigan please welcome. [applause] >> diane very happy to be here also that friends and family and people that i want to meet. and we could talk about this in the future so it being keyed did good job of explaining the idea not to that individually we are made of data at. rather rather it comes to us from a single thesis you are not who you thank you are. but there is that centesis that the terms of the data are not of the reality. so we the coveys things that is asymmetrically disturbing the resources but that is the way we negotiate they don't try to put you through those legal procedures the to find that category so with that targeting mechanism the at what we've feet give israel about who we are it is said to us bu
but in other words, then anything other than those strip down dave negative categories. and then they do so on their terms. with this serious reference to be extrapolated that reduces us so within this framework with a scholarship brickbat addition in the real world and the invisible world that is increasingly shaping government. said at the university of michigan please welcome. [applause] >> diane very happy to be here also that friends and family and people that i want to meet. and we...
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Jul 4, 2017
07/17
by
BBCNEWS
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, £10,000 and if you we re that category, £10,000 and if you were taken to hospital for at least six than a week, £3500. that is just the first allocation. depending how much money we actually end up with there will be more later on in a few weeks' time. obviously you're well of the anger there has been amongst many in the community at the lack of organisation, the problems in getting people rehoused, getting them temporary accommodation and so on. are you now confident that three weeks on, the people who were working on the ground, your organisation and others, are now working in a way that is genuinely beginning to dispel some of that distrust that people had and is now actually helping people? distrust that people had and is now actually helping people ?|j distrust that people had and is now actually helping people? i very much hope so, i know best what we're doing, i can't comment much on what others are up to. but it is coming together. we really understand how angry and worried people are on the ground. everyone wants to help, it is just getting that organised. it has taken lon
, £10,000 and if you we re that category, £10,000 and if you were taken to hospital for at least six than a week, £3500. that is just the first allocation. depending how much money we actually end up with there will be more later on in a few weeks' time. obviously you're well of the anger there has been amongst many in the community at the lack of organisation, the problems in getting people rehoused, getting them temporary accommodation and so on. are you now confident that three weeks on,...
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Jul 20, 2017
07/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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, so defined categories for us.d --en we see hedge release a hedge fund etf, it can .ean first, direct this fund is investing like a hedge fund, buying and selling derivatives, and that will be the jpmorgan and working examples. there is hedge fund replication, also. that means they will use statistical measures to synthetically replicate the returned string of the hedge fund index. does but it qia uses etf, so it is not an actual hedge fund. the third is copycats. it goes along equities. julie: eric balchunas walking us through hedge fund like ats. vonnie: thank you. still ahead, it is not just health care worrying washington. there is also other drama ahead. this is bloomberg. ♪ ♪ >> breaking news. attorney general jeff sessions has been speaking at a news conference in washington. he says he will continue as attorney general as long as it is appropriate. again, jeff sessions saying he will continue as attorney general. this after president trump gave an interview to the new york times yesterday in which he said h
, so defined categories for us.d --en we see hedge release a hedge fund etf, it can .ean first, direct this fund is investing like a hedge fund, buying and selling derivatives, and that will be the jpmorgan and working examples. there is hedge fund replication, also. that means they will use statistical measures to synthetically replicate the returned string of the hedge fund index. does but it qia uses etf, so it is not an actual hedge fund. the third is copycats. it goes along equities....
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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eye 45
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i would put john mccain in that category too. certainly not to be forgotten of equal praise are susan collins and lisa murkowski. they are amazing. women are in so many instances stronger than men. they brag less about it, but they are. and last night sort of proved that. as somebody who is in a family of strong women, i very much appreciate their strength, their courage, and their dedication to principle. despite the entreaties. where do we go from here? john mccain said it all on tuesday night. i hope this is a turning point. his speech when he returned to the senate and his vote last night and his actions in the last few days. do i hear an echo? you know, on health, we've got to shut that off, whoever is doing it. ok, thank you. on health care, i hope we can work together to make the system better in a bipartisan way. and i'm optimistic that that can happen. i think at the very beginning we should stabilize the system. we should make permanent the cost-sharing which keeps people's premiums down and keeps the counties that are
i would put john mccain in that category too. certainly not to be forgotten of equal praise are susan collins and lisa murkowski. they are amazing. women are in so many instances stronger than men. they brag less about it, but they are. and last night sort of proved that. as somebody who is in a family of strong women, i very much appreciate their strength, their courage, and their dedication to principle. despite the entreaties. where do we go from here? john mccain said it all on tuesday...
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN
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then there are some nonconformist districts that do not fall into any of those categories. the upshot is democrats cannot get to the math they need for the majority without winning in every single one of those kind of districts. host: the messaging has to be a serious concern for the democratic party. how do you reach out for those in the crowd said voted for president trump? guest: people want to feel like people care about what is going on in their daily lives and in the economy in their area, and they feel like democrats have been really focused on urban on the coast, and not places that have struggled in the new economy. they want to make sure that whoever they've vote for is focusing on jobs and their economic struggles and daily lives, and really making things better for them and not just concentrated on those other things. host: we will look at these areas across the country and what it means for democrats in my be interested in taking back the house. 202-748-8000 for democrats. for republicans, it is 202-748-8001. .ndependents, 202-748-8002 if you are a democrat who
then there are some nonconformist districts that do not fall into any of those categories. the upshot is democrats cannot get to the math they need for the majority without winning in every single one of those kind of districts. host: the messaging has to be a serious concern for the democratic party. how do you reach out for those in the crowd said voted for president trump? guest: people want to feel like people care about what is going on in their daily lives and in the economy in their...
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Jul 14, 2017
07/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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bob: we think geography not category.e practically cover everything except cognac and irish whiskey. we could do something organically. hand, our view is there is one phenomenal brand and irish whiskey. there are new distilleries coming. be a lot of irish whiskey. mark: that was my interview. financeead, the irish minister, what the eu will be demanding from the u.k. post-brexit. this is bloomberg. ♪ mark: we have the latest on exit. the eu is coming to a trade agreement with japan. why can't the do the same thing with the u.k.? we pose that question to the irish finance mr. -- minister. with japanhad this for many years. this has been underway for quite some time. think both the european union and the united kingdom have said that a matter of future engagement would be after the. that is what the future relation would the between the u.k. in the european union. jonathan: i understand that it takes time. the approach so far seems to be very political, about punishing the united kingdom. the sensible approaches to agree. f
bob: we think geography not category.e practically cover everything except cognac and irish whiskey. we could do something organically. hand, our view is there is one phenomenal brand and irish whiskey. there are new distilleries coming. be a lot of irish whiskey. mark: that was my interview. financeead, the irish minister, what the eu will be demanding from the u.k. post-brexit. this is bloomberg. ♪ mark: we have the latest on exit. the eu is coming to a trade agreement with japan. why can't...
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123
Jul 22, 2017
07/17
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MSNBCW
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we started to uncover the category and realized it was this $5 billion category that was just right for reinvention. >> galit was confident she was on to something big. but how she felt about sara's part in it was another story. >> she was going to see it no matter what. it was convincing her that i was the person she wants to get excited about. >> we had a lot of heart to hearts and said, you know, if we really want to do this, you have to do it together and you have to be fully committed. >> they got natural food brand gu are you greg sliceon on board and the trio officially launch foodstirs in 2015. they started with a baking kit subscription service they sold online. then they moved to nationwide distribution of their organic baking mixes. in some ways, sara's celebrity status meant there was more to prove. >> i think it was like a novemberty circus act, oh, buffy bakes, but there was no intention of taking it seriously. >> an actor is rejected so many more times on a daily basis than any average human. as an actor, you go to audition after audition. but we know that it only takes o
we started to uncover the category and realized it was this $5 billion category that was just right for reinvention. >> galit was confident she was on to something big. but how she felt about sara's part in it was another story. >> she was going to see it no matter what. it was convincing her that i was the person she wants to get excited about. >> we had a lot of heart to hearts and said, you know, if we really want to do this, you have to do it together and you have to be...