WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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WHUT
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that changed politics in america.reinforced the idea that the only way to campaign and make a splash is on television. in local races you have to buy the time. and it's gone crazy. the amount of money it costs to hold office in the united states or even run for office in the united states based upon the fact it has to be on television is obscene. tavis: so are you happy with what you have bequeathed my generation or do you owe us an apology? >> a very big apology. the amount of money, and it all touched off that night, the amount of money that goes into television campaigning is obscene. tavis: tell me -- take me back to 1960 -- i had the pleasure of talking to you about this before and i know you've been asked about it 1,001 times and take me back to that debate and tell me since that was the first one that was televised, what made the difference that night? >> jack kennedy's persona. nixon walked in, he banged his knee on the car coming in, he had an infection, he wasn't well, he'd been campaigning all day, jack ken
that changed politics in america.reinforced the idea that the only way to campaign and make a splash is on television. in local races you have to buy the time. and it's gone crazy. the amount of money it costs to hold office in the united states or even run for office in the united states based upon the fact it has to be on television is obscene. tavis: so are you happy with what you have bequeathed my generation or do you owe us an apology? >> a very big apology. the amount of money, and...
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 89
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one of the things we mentioned is change, and changing delivery. if we don't make sure we are getting the quality we want from those changes, how are we knowing we are getting the quality? is that one of the tools we should be considering? >> i think registries are just one aspect of applying this incredible power of information technology to health care in a way we have failed. everybody in this room must marvel at how many of us go see a new physician and what you get is a clipboard with a piece of paper on it. and you have to reinvent yourself with each visit and each new doctor because there isn't the it platform we need. >> let me just jump in your. for people who might think that registries are things you sign up for when you're getting married. why do you clarify what registries are? >> there are various forms of registries, but often there are ways of garnishing information from populations of patients, perhaps population of patients with the same disease or sing the same kind of treatment to learn from them, to learn what works and what do
one of the things we mentioned is change, and changing delivery. if we don't make sure we are getting the quality we want from those changes, how are we knowing we are getting the quality? is that one of the tools we should be considering? >> i think registries are just one aspect of applying this incredible power of information technology to health care in a way we have failed. everybody in this room must marvel at how many of us go see a new physician and what you get is a clipboard...
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136
Aug 9, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 136
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change that. pay them more to take care of sick patients and then you're going to see a different kind of behavior. also, have a situation where they keep you for a long time. you have an incentive to stay with them for a long time. suddenly, their behavior is going to change, because if you -- if they let you get sick, if they don't prevent your illnesses, it's on their tab. well, that changes their incentive structure tremendously. right now, things change. your employer decides he wants a cheaper deal, switches insurance companies. not a very good incentive for them to do the right thing. so i could be wrong, but, i think, you know, psychology has this concept called the fundamental attribution error, which is we attribute to people bad behaviors and it's really the environment, that almost all of us set in that environment would bailiff badly. it seems to me that that's what we've got and what we need to do is to look into the structure of the system. it's too easy for us to point fingers and
change that. pay them more to take care of sick patients and then you're going to see a different kind of behavior. also, have a situation where they keep you for a long time. you have an incentive to stay with them for a long time. suddenly, their behavior is going to change, because if you -- if they let you get sick, if they don't prevent your illnesses, it's on their tab. well, that changes their incentive structure tremendously. right now, things change. your employer decides he wants a...
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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MSNBC
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strategy change all? and will this election change life at all for afghan families?w, jack jacobs. let me ask about u.s. strategy. depending on the outcome of the election, will there be a change in u.s. strategy? >> i doubt it. i think the strategic change has already taken place with the installation of stan mccrystal. a proven commander who's done well in conventional war. isolating areas and empowering local chieftons. overall, we're going to be fighting a nation-building exercise. the general has asked for more troops. the likelihood is he's not going to get them. he's got about 60,000. i think he wants another 10,000. i bet you he'd tell you he wants 100,000, but he's not going to get them. >> when you ask leaders here in the united states about nation-building, the general consensus is it something we shouldn't be involved in. we're realizing that to win a war on terror, you do have to nation build. how do you do that when the taliban is willing to go out and kill civilians to make a point? >> you asked the question, what's the taliban's strategy and their str
strategy change all? and will this election change life at all for afghan families?w, jack jacobs. let me ask about u.s. strategy. depending on the outcome of the election, will there be a change in u.s. strategy? >> i doubt it. i think the strategic change has already taken place with the installation of stan mccrystal. a proven commander who's done well in conventional war. isolating areas and empowering local chieftons. overall, we're going to be fighting a nation-building exercise....
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Aug 2, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 169
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that changed. they became violent, and it became overtime members of gangs that went to prison primarily for drug purposes. they became as the juices of as education. they became rooted in the community. all kinds of changes. these changes economically have the following impact. particularly for immigrants. it used to be it did not matter whether you spoken hungarian, german, french, italian, spanish. if you could get a job in a factory you could do that. that was a rung on a ladder that you pull yourself and your family up on. with the manufacturing jobs disappeared it became much harder. announcing these are the only reason is that things exist because they existed before this. a major impact on how gangs hardened. the alternative for the gang members. the cabin between the office suite and hot food counter at mcdonald's or you name your fast food place became just too far if you could not get a handle on the industrial ladder. that is true for all young people. we are still dealing with the prob
that changed. they became violent, and it became overtime members of gangs that went to prison primarily for drug purposes. they became as the juices of as education. they became rooted in the community. all kinds of changes. these changes economically have the following impact. particularly for immigrants. it used to be it did not matter whether you spoken hungarian, german, french, italian, spanish. if you could get a job in a factory you could do that. that was a rung on a ladder that you...
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Aug 5, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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you can change a device. >> why can't you change a @@@ device technology is very well recognized. an iterative process. we had a vivid description of how it develops over time. you can't change a drug overtime. it is what it is. >> professor at the 11. >> there are differencees between drugs and devices but the difference had to do with the warning, the warning is much more like a device in the sense that the due process that you can change the warning, if the warning is in working or something else has come up that needs to be changed, it is the same iterative process. i suggest the difference is not that great at all. >> >> reporter: drugs all the time for dosages and recommended treatment for drugs. >> that is changing the labeling. it is not changing the molecular entity, which is the drug. you can change the device by adding something to it, by putting bells and whistles on it. you can do that once you have a molecular entity. >> seems to me they're changing drug that all times. i haveat all times. i have to think about that. >> dirksen senate office building what people who
you can change a device. >> why can't you change a @@@ device technology is very well recognized. an iterative process. we had a vivid description of how it develops over time. you can't change a drug overtime. it is what it is. >> professor at the 11. >> there are differencees between drugs and devices but the difference had to do with the warning, the warning is much more like a device in the sense that the due process that you can change the warning, if the warning is in...
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Aug 25, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 238
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those are changes that are built in the current law. those are changes we haveo deal with. are changes we hope to deal with when we deal with health reform in the grand scheme of things, but right now we are not dealing with them in his health reform package. thank you. [applause] >> i am here to speak about the situation ostensiy from the doctor's perspective i don't pretend to represent all the physicians in america, and it would be an egregious error to imagine that physicians all have the same position on health care for. they are just like the rest of americans that they have all sorts of partisan inclinations one way or another. the point though i would like to make that i think has been lost in some of the dinner recently, is that there is something very common among all positions that seems to be in the background of this. and quite silly, that is the hippocratic condition. physicians are professionals bound together by an oath and in cornerstones of that oath are to do good, and to always avoid harm for their patients. that is there from day one. i am privileged to
those are changes that are built in the current law. those are changes we haveo deal with. are changes we hope to deal with when we deal with health reform in the grand scheme of things, but right now we are not dealing with them in his health reform package. thank you. [applause] >> i am here to speak about the situation ostensiy from the doctor's perspective i don't pretend to represent all the physicians in america, and it would be an egregious error to imagine that physicians all have...
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199
Aug 9, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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eye 199
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they see it as an evolving revolution changes in like that the changes they made because twitter, theyare reacting to the world about them. mark himself, does he go on facebook and use it? i don't know. >> host: have you tried to forbid him? >> guest: he is a private eye can i do have a fan page on facebook so if mark wants to get involved that would be great. i don't know what he does on facebook but i know he has a site. they all do and they blocked, they are not public sites. >> host: is there going to be another facebook or, do you think facebook -- >> guest: personally i think facebook is the next facebook. it will keep getting bigger and bigger. i think that facebook is the next generation and will grow and grow and have a billing and members one day. it will be a quarter of the world of facebook one day. i do think there is always something like twitter that will come. there will always be other things but i don't think facebook will go the way of friendster for. facebook is a well-designed site but who knows, right? in this world to arnall some cade might be leaning around and
they see it as an evolving revolution changes in like that the changes they made because twitter, theyare reacting to the world about them. mark himself, does he go on facebook and use it? i don't know. >> host: have you tried to forbid him? >> guest: he is a private eye can i do have a fan page on facebook so if mark wants to get involved that would be great. i don't know what he does on facebook but i know he has a site. they all do and they blocked, they are not public sites....
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505
Aug 29, 2009
08/09
by
WETA
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eye 505
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and i think this was a change. thinkbama was regarded as a nnedy-esque figure. >> let's lk about hlth care. you did some reporter ght -- reporting on how the debateis shapin up despite the abnce ofed kennedy. tell us about h that is shapg up. >> a very prominent and respectable reblican pollste put it very well this week. he said, senator -- president obama, excuse me, people want him to succeed, people like him. republicansnd better unrstand that. he problem is that he has his own dete to ke and the oba plan and the numbers d support ha gone down. they had better come up in every with a recantingaepackaging, w and improvedchanged plan if it is going to be suessful. quite honestly, if people say ted kennedy is miss, he is missed in the sen that ted kennedy uld have told very early on what the proems were and what toobout the his ability t forge coalition is just so impssive. >> also he cld sell. it is gng to be a compromise. he coul have sold it to the liberals. >> the expression that y have heard at the table befo
and i think this was a change. thinkbama was regarded as a nnedy-esque figure. >> let's lk about hlth care. you did some reporter ght -- reporting on how the debateis shapin up despite the abnce ofed kennedy. tell us about h that is shapg up. >> a very prominent and respectable reblican pollste put it very well this week. he said, senator -- president obama, excuse me, people want him to succeed, people like him. republicansnd better unrstand that. he problem is that he has his own...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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WMPT
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eye 273
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it has not had much success in changing the trend. the talks to replace it are entering their final phase. at 8 g8 summit in july, some ambitious targets were set. negotiations have snagged on disputes about responsibility of action to be taken by rich and poor countries. time is running out to meet the december deadline. hence the arctic excursion. >> ban ki-moon is hoping that this trip will build the political consensus necessary to reach an agreement. he is heading to a norwegian island near the arctic circle. >> you or watching "bbc world news." britain's sweetheart storm's the charts at after nearly half a century. now been shrinking and the bad behavior that goes with it is most strongly associated with countries in northern europe. there are signs that the heavy drinking culture is moving further south. young people in italy seem to be hitting the bottle at an alarming rate. >> people come to italy's capital to see the beautiful buildings, the ancient sites, and to get a taste of the way of life. drinking has always been a par
it has not had much success in changing the trend. the talks to replace it are entering their final phase. at 8 g8 summit in july, some ambitious targets were set. negotiations have snagged on disputes about responsibility of action to be taken by rich and poor countries. time is running out to meet the december deadline. hence the arctic excursion. >> ban ki-moon is hoping that this trip will build the political consensus necessary to reach an agreement. he is heading to a norwegian...
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Aug 14, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN
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eye 172
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we worked for change. we voted for change, and now we want the change that we fought like hell for.we are proud of our role in american politics. we are happy to be a part of netroots nation. we are honored to be sponsoring this opening reception. i hope it is good. i hope there is some news here and some food here, and i hope you enjoy it. our members make up the most active and powerful union in america. today, we are in the battle of our lives as we push congress to enact real health care reform. we are using our union's power to counter some of the union lines that are spreading from coast-to-coast. we have spent roughly $1 million in the past month alone countering those lovely friends of america, the insurance companies. we are prepared to spend that much more in the months ahead. ouróy nurses are on tv with a powerful ad advocating for real health care reform. we have put organizers and staff into key congressional districts. we will not back down from this fight. america's working families are depending on us. this month, we are joining progressives in taking our message dir
we worked for change. we voted for change, and now we want the change that we fought like hell for.we are proud of our role in american politics. we are happy to be a part of netroots nation. we are honored to be sponsoring this opening reception. i hope it is good. i hope there is some news here and some food here, and i hope you enjoy it. our members make up the most active and powerful union in america. today, we are in the battle of our lives as we push congress to enact real health care...
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Aug 27, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN
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eye 175
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changed. until then it is just the same old two guys up there. host: 1 message from twitter. let me come back to more of your phone calls. here is some reporting from a couple of newspapers beginning with the front page of ""the new york times" -- ted kennedy was in a wheelchair at the end, struggling to speak. but from the time his cancer was diagnosed 15 months ago, he spoke of having a good ending for himself. by every account he did. he took phone calls from president obama, house calls from his peace. just a few weeks ago he crooned after dinner with his son patrick and also with his with his wife. it shows that he was at peace with the end of his life and grateful for the chance to savor the salty air with his loved ones. good morning, how do you think that senate vacancies should be filled? caller: they pushed kennedy, and i don't even remember how many years ago -- but he pushed to have it with the governor could pick because of the time they had a democratic governor. i do not underst
changed. until then it is just the same old two guys up there. host: 1 message from twitter. let me come back to more of your phone calls. here is some reporting from a couple of newspapers beginning with the front page of ""the new york times" -- ted kennedy was in a wheelchair at the end, struggling to speak. but from the time his cancer was diagnosed 15 months ago, he spoke of having a good ending for himself. by every account he did. he took phone calls from president obama,...
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Aug 9, 2009
08/09
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WMPT
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eye 524
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by 199populationsor 200hem thaty changed. any given year, only about one-third of the growth in the united states population was due to the birth rate here of the natout and about two-thirds was due to direct immigration and the indirect immigration ividsacts, which is births to iresigrants. because in the long term which basically prevents the united states from ever establishing the population -- stabilizing the populatiodea >> and so a lot of well-meaning people, myself included, saying, look, this is not what the >> bonnie: rmesid u.s. population growth was making it ever more politically and technica1970y infeasible to meet environmental goals set in the 1970s. yet the environmental movement of the late 196iifewas willing to forsake its original goals level of iresigration that was four times higher than it was before the first either da that what was it about immigration that made environmental groups, rom and large, meekly acquiesce to iresigration levels that clashed head-on with the fundamental goal of population sta
by 199populationsor 200hem thaty changed. any given year, only about one-third of the growth in the united states population was due to the birth rate here of the natout and about two-thirds was due to direct immigration and the indirect immigration ividsacts, which is births to iresigrants. because in the long term which basically prevents the united states from ever establishing the population -- stabilizing the populatiodea >> and so a lot of well-meaning people, myself included,...
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473
Aug 12, 2009
08/09
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WMPT
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lim is the special climate change adviser at the united nations development program. welcome to the show. >> pleased to be here. >> as we just reported there, lack of rainfall in nepal is forcing farmers to make new choices in the crops that they grow. and i'm wondering, are we seeing this elsewhere in the world? >> oh, yes, many places in the world are being affected in the same way. we're seeing crops switching in the andes in peru. in africa, switching from -- to rice. so it's a real, real impact that we're seeing all over the world. >> probably americans don't think of nepal as being impacted. week of more larger country, more developed countries. and yet as you just outlined there are a number of nations perhaps we don't think about. >> right. >> that are suffering or trying to come up with new ways to grow crops to feed their people. give us examples of how they're struggling with this. >> well, for example, nepal and bhutan and countries which are close to glaciers suffer a lot from glacial retreat. and what's happening in those regions is that the glacial lake
lim is the special climate change adviser at the united nations development program. welcome to the show. >> pleased to be here. >> as we just reported there, lack of rainfall in nepal is forcing farmers to make new choices in the crops that they grow. and i'm wondering, are we seeing this elsewhere in the world? >> oh, yes, many places in the world are being affected in the same way. we're seeing crops switching in the andes in peru. in africa, switching from -- to rice. so...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
105
105
Aug 28, 2009
08/09
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WHUT
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eye 105
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that changed the senate, and i think that changed capitol hill. i remember being at those hearings. it struck me as totally not consistent with kennedy, but he had that streak in him. for all the accomplishments you see, he was a very divisive figure. when he put his flag and said it you did not support this, you are against the poor, it is anti-american, a lot of people's careers were made in opposition to ted kennedy. >> there is another big gorilla in the room now, and that is the deficit. suddenly, we have new numbers we cannot comprehend, trillions and trillions of dollars in debt. is this going to change the political debate? >> it is terrible for obama. we have these polls now showing that people actually do care about deficits. they are very concerned about how it affects them. this is going to make it much harder for obama to get his agenda through because the deficits are terrible. >> i was speaking to a liberal journalist -- there are such things -- and he said he has a child and wonders about how far down the line this debt will go. >> right, let me let the journalists a
that changed the senate, and i think that changed capitol hill. i remember being at those hearings. it struck me as totally not consistent with kennedy, but he had that streak in him. for all the accomplishments you see, he was a very divisive figure. when he put his flag and said it you did not support this, you are against the poor, it is anti-american, a lot of people's careers were made in opposition to ted kennedy. >> there is another big gorilla in the room now, and that is the...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
215
215
Aug 19, 2009
08/09
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WHUT
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eye 215
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will that change? >> i think it will change because obviously the growth model here will change. the amount of consumption will not be out there. people will save more. if it's happening and it will continue, i think. but the fundamental question here, i think, is the development issue. so we need to pay more attention to the development issue. development for all the developing countries. so if the... the issue of development has been given more attention fchltd if more help is providing to the developing country and then the consumption will... there will be the consumption. the consumption for all the developing countries put together will increase. >> rose: what they worry about is that you're going to stop buying our treasuries. you're goingop buying our debt. >> i think the question has been put to both the vice premier and also the counselor. >> rose: i was here, yes. >> right. i think they have answered the question. >> rose: so repeat it for the audience. >> i think china will have to invest somewhere. >> rose: (laughs) that's true. >> if the conditions are good-- and i
will that change? >> i think it will change because obviously the growth model here will change. the amount of consumption will not be out there. people will save more. if it's happening and it will continue, i think. but the fundamental question here, i think, is the development issue. so we need to pay more attention to the development issue. development for all the developing countries. so if the... the issue of development has been given more attention fchltd if more help is providing...
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146
Aug 16, 2009
08/09
by
HLN
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eye 146
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of credit card companies today are preparing for that new change -- >> right. >> -- by making some changes today. and making it possible for them to maybe move down in rates later after the full law goes into effect. >> obviously, this all goes into effect in february but folks need to know what happens this week. on thursday some of the rules are taking effect. talk to us about those starting with the protection from arbitrary rate increases. >> that's correct. there are two clauses of the entire act that actually go into effect on thursday. the first is the protection from arbitrary rate increases which is a clause that requires that the credit card companies give consumers 45-day notice before any rates are changed. typically, it has been arbitrarily changed by the credit card company and you find out after the fact. and now you have to have a 45-day notice before any changes can be made. >> okay, what else is happening on thursday? >> the second big thing that's changing is the grace period adjustment. there used to be a minimum 14-day grace period for you to be able to pay your bill.
of credit card companies today are preparing for that new change -- >> right. >> -- by making some changes today. and making it possible for them to maybe move down in rates later after the full law goes into effect. >> obviously, this all goes into effect in february but folks need to know what happens this week. on thursday some of the rules are taking effect. talk to us about those starting with the protection from arbitrary rate increases. >> that's correct. there...
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191
Aug 15, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
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eye 191
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on climate change. the ipc see. as you probably know, it is made of over a thousand of the world's best of dates. they were rightly awarded the nobel peace prize, the announced efforts. importantly, they regard climate change as real, their findings were taken by world leaders, so much so, they were used to frame legislation to the end of the century. the other agencies are prepared to hold grand meetings and copenhagen and then agree, 40 or more years, the assumption is global heating is so serious that expensive action is needed now if we are to avoid damaging climate change affecting our children and grandchildren. obviously it will be the cool spell indicating they have overestimated climate change. i think that instead they have underestimated the severity of global heating, mainly because they paid too much attention to human factors to industrial and domestic pollution, they have not enough attention to the earth's response to what we are doing. this is going to be the subject of my talk this eve
on climate change. the ipc see. as you probably know, it is made of over a thousand of the world's best of dates. they were rightly awarded the nobel peace prize, the announced efforts. importantly, they regard climate change as real, their findings were taken by world leaders, so much so, they were used to frame legislation to the end of the century. the other agencies are prepared to hold grand meetings and copenhagen and then agree, 40 or more years, the assumption is global heating is so...
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342
Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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WMPT
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eye 342
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that could clearly change. but so far we have seen no evidence that anybody is pushing for that. >> for more on today's violence and what it means, we are joined once again by michael wahid hanna, who follows iraq closely who is a fellow with the foundation here in new york. we were just reporting that this is the least deadly month for civilians and for military personnel, the month july. and i'm wondering just the significance of today's attacks. how bad are they in that contrast? >> well, we're likely to see some bombings and some level of violence in iraq for years to come. and i'm pleasantly surprised at the transition, in terms of iraqi supremacy in terms of securing urban centers. and so i don't think this is going to have an appreciable impact on u.s. and iraqi planning that the point. because, again, they haven't had strategic impact. they haven't had undermined or threatened the iraqi government at this point. >> "the new york times" is also reporting today that there was a senior american military ad
that could clearly change. but so far we have seen no evidence that anybody is pushing for that. >> for more on today's violence and what it means, we are joined once again by michael wahid hanna, who follows iraq closely who is a fellow with the foundation here in new york. we were just reporting that this is the least deadly month for civilians and for military personnel, the month july. and i'm wondering just the significance of today's attacks. how bad are they in that contrast?...
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Aug 8, 2009
08/09
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FOXNEWS
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eye 234
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so the rhetoric is changing. are the tactics necessarily changing?think we have gotten much better in -- at targeting people in northwestern pakistan, parts of afghanistan. for two straightforward reasons, we have been at war a long time. our military has gotten very, very good. two, the pakistanis got really scared, really scared when the taliban came within 60 miles of the capital. now the pakistanis, for the first time, are giving us real intelligence and helping us kill the taliban they don't want around. but obama, he is letting our military do most of what it needs to do in afghanistan because he wants the problem to go away. he made a campaign promise he was going to win. the problem, laura, is our military is doing a great job. we don't have a strategy. lawyer lure is in charge of our strategy in afghanistan? one person, who is it? >> really, there is no one person in charge. ultimately the president. stanley mccrystal, great soldier tasked with what may be an impossible mission has been conducting a review. trying say-to-say what's working w
so the rhetoric is changing. are the tactics necessarily changing?think we have gotten much better in -- at targeting people in northwestern pakistan, parts of afghanistan. for two straightforward reasons, we have been at war a long time. our military has gotten very, very good. two, the pakistanis got really scared, really scared when the taliban came within 60 miles of the capital. now the pakistanis, for the first time, are giving us real intelligence and helping us kill the taliban they...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN
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eye 159
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this figure, again shows the change in the change in employment. and the movement in job loss from the first quarter to the second was the largest in almost 30 years. in other words, after we administered the medicine, the economy that was in freefall stabilized. stabilized substantially. and looks as though it could begin to recover in the second half of the year. of course, identifying the effects of the recovery act from the behavior of just a few data points is inherently difficult. we don't observe what would have happened in the abscess of fiscal stimulus. one way to try to add rigor of the analysis in the behavior of key indicators is to do a formal economic exercise. we forecast the usual behave wror of g.d.p. and employment jointly using data from 1990, through 2007. what we're going do do is forecast g.d.p. growth and average job loss in the second quarter of 2009 using actual data up through the first quarter of the year. all right. what this picture shows, is the forecast of employment change that's the light blue that's the light blue
this figure, again shows the change in the change in employment. and the movement in job loss from the first quarter to the second was the largest in almost 30 years. in other words, after we administered the medicine, the economy that was in freefall stabilized. stabilized substantially. and looks as though it could begin to recover in the second half of the year. of course, identifying the effects of the recovery act from the behavior of just a few data points is inherently difficult. we...
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but a lot has changed since then.pting for today's military. >> you could have two individuals, for example, patrolling the streets of baghdad, one individual being on active duty and another individual being a guard reserve member that was called up. when they return, they would have received very different benefits. now under this program, because it's based on active service, those individuals can end up receiving the same benefits. >> the new bill allows veterans who serve at least ten years to pass unused benefits on to their families. >> my daughter now, who is 16, will get her first two years of college paid by this gi bill program. my daughter, who is ten, veronica, she will receive the second two years. >> when i have kids and it comes their time to go to school, i'll be able to let them use the gi bill and pay for education using the benefits from when i went. >> then there's joe giding. he served in the army in world war ii and used the benefits to learn a life long trade which he's still using now at the a
but a lot has changed since then.pting for today's military. >> you could have two individuals, for example, patrolling the streets of baghdad, one individual being on active duty and another individual being a guard reserve member that was called up. when they return, they would have received very different benefits. now under this program, because it's based on active service, those individuals can end up receiving the same benefits. >> the new bill allows veterans who serve at...
524
524
Aug 31, 2009
08/09
by
WMPT
tv
eye 524
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they didn't think things were going to change. many people thought karzai was going to win no matter what happened. >> let's talk about general mcchrystal's assessment, reportedly that america and nato will need to send more troops. surprising to you? >> it isn't surprising. we have a long way to go to make afghanistan safe, especially in the south and the east. now, the problem is i don't think there's a lot of support here in washington for sending additional troop. so it isn't clear to me that mcchrystal will actually ask for more troops right away. he may ask for them in the next month. but what he may try to do instead is do a little creative mathematics. maybe move some of the jobs that soldiers are doing, noncombat jobs, to contractors so he can bring in more fighting forces. that's what we really need, are additional fighting forces on the ground. >> karen von hiple, in washington, d.c., thank you very much for joining us. thank you. >>> that brings to us our new segment, how you see it. we would like to know do you think
they didn't think things were going to change. many people thought karzai was going to win no matter what happened. >> let's talk about general mcchrystal's assessment, reportedly that america and nato will need to send more troops. surprising to you? >> it isn't surprising. we have a long way to go to make afghanistan safe, especially in the south and the east. now, the problem is i don't think there's a lot of support here in washington for sending additional troop. so it isn't...
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173
Aug 16, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 173
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that is the typical history of the earth's climate change, a similar change to hot, which took placefive million years ago when a relatively large quantity of co2 was released into the air by geological action. i find it extraordinary that my fellow scientists could have put their names to predictions as far ahead of the end of the century and in the face of these great uncertainties. i personally know scientists at the ipcc and some of them are close friends, and i know that they are wise, competent and principled. so what on earth made them make the wrong kind of climate model and assume that their forecasts were good enough for governments to make policy on? one answer may be that they had no option. having persuaded governments that large and expensive modeling centers with huge computers in them, the battleships of the climate war, having persuaded them that they were needed, they just had to sail in these battleships and hope for the best. government and research agencies have spent so much money on modeling that they are cutting back funds for observation and spent instead on
that is the typical history of the earth's climate change, a similar change to hot, which took placefive million years ago when a relatively large quantity of co2 was released into the air by geological action. i find it extraordinary that my fellow scientists could have put their names to predictions as far ahead of the end of the century and in the face of these great uncertainties. i personally know scientists at the ipcc and some of them are close friends, and i know that they are wise,...
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108
Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN
tv
eye 108
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this figure again shows the change in the change in employment. and a movement in job loss from the first quarter to the second was the largest in almost 30 years. in other words, after we administered the medicine, the economy was that was in free fall stabilized. stabilized substantially, and it now looks as though it could begin to recovery in the second half of the year. of course, identifying the effects of the recovery pact of just a few data points is inherently important, we don't observe what would have happened in the absence of fiscal analysis. one way to provide rigors to the analysis to do a more formal ecomomet rhythm cs forecast. let me discuss the results of a typical one. we forecast the usual behaviors of g.d.p. jointly using data from 1990 through 2007. then what we're going to do is forecast g.d.p. growth and average job loss in the second quarter of 2009 using actual data up through the fourth quarter of the year. what this picture shows is the forecast of employment change, that's the light blue bar moving this procedure. wit
this figure again shows the change in the change in employment. and a movement in job loss from the first quarter to the second was the largest in almost 30 years. in other words, after we administered the medicine, the economy was that was in free fall stabilized. stabilized substantially, and it now looks as though it could begin to recovery in the second half of the year. of course, identifying the effects of the recovery pact of just a few data points is inherently important, we don't...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
246
246
Aug 23, 2009
08/09
by
WHUT
tv
eye 246
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then things changed. many black churches began focusing less on social justice issues and more on saving souls and preaching the gospel of prosperity, which teaches that the faithful will be rewarded with material blessings. >> i would just admonish those who preach prosperity to remember that the one who founded the christian church had one pair of shoes. >> we believe christ came to set the captives free, to bring sight to the blind, to clothe the naked, to find housing for those who are looking for housing. that's the work of the church. we must return back to the values that made the black church a true success. >> and we came by here to tell you young people that we're sorry. we're sorry because we left you to fend for yourselves. >> reporter: outside the chapel at the special healing service, there was an empty casket. no one needed to ask why. they all know someone. >> bring, heavenly father, what only you can give.oc >> reporter: a few days earlier, someone dumped the body of a young man who had b
then things changed. many black churches began focusing less on social justice issues and more on saving souls and preaching the gospel of prosperity, which teaches that the faithful will be rewarded with material blessings. >> i would just admonish those who preach prosperity to remember that the one who founded the christian church had one pair of shoes. >> we believe christ came to set the captives free, to bring sight to the blind, to clothe the naked, to find housing for those...
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Aug 19, 2009
08/09
by
MSNBC
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eye 187
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nothing has changed. >> nothing has changed. the president has always said he wants to lower costs, choice and competition. public option is a good way to do that. >> nothing has changed. nothing has changed. okay. so i guess the public option is not dead at all. it was all just a big misunderstanding. nothing has changed. of course, in terms of what the white house is saying about the public option, things really have changed. it's been quite a change over the last 24 hours. the public option has been retrieved from under the bus where it was thrown this weekend. it's been dusted off and the white house is now saying, let's bygones be bygones. things really have not changed, however, in the u.s. senate. senator kent conrad, a democrat who's been at the center of the health care legislation debate, had this to say about the public option this weekend -- >> there are not the votes in the united states senate for the public option. there never have been, so to continue to chase that rabbit, i think, is just
nothing has changed. >> nothing has changed. the president has always said he wants to lower costs, choice and competition. public option is a good way to do that. >> nothing has changed. nothing has changed. okay. so i guess the public option is not dead at all. it was all just a big misunderstanding. nothing has changed. of course, in terms of what the white house is saying about the public option, things really have changed. it's been quite a change over the last 24 hours. the...
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183
Aug 4, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 183
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, schedule changes that the government makes, some are quantity changes, requirements changes, and so there is a mutuality of responsibility. not all that falls on the contractor. but in some -- but we're not suggesting that the contractors have no responsibility for performance. >> just one question. fixed contracts and cost overruns, did the contractors have to eat that? >>>> yes, they parable responsibility for the killing at contract at that price. >> that losses of soared by the contractor. >> and 70% of all government contracts are awarded on a fixed-price basis. 70% according to the omb numbers. >> thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, senator byrd's. thank you for your attention to this as well, given your background and experience. it's helpful the have you and senators like center matt cassel -- senator mechanicaccas. a return to the issue of rollovers again were contractors are given a couple of bites at apple. let's start with mr. assad. your agency's experience with rollovers, is that less frequently, about the same, or more frequently? >> it is definitely a trend in to
, schedule changes that the government makes, some are quantity changes, requirements changes, and so there is a mutuality of responsibility. not all that falls on the contractor. but in some -- but we're not suggesting that the contractors have no responsibility for performance. >> just one question. fixed contracts and cost overruns, did the contractors have to eat that? >>>> yes, they parable responsibility for the killing at contract at that price. >> that losses of...
650
650
Aug 20, 2009
08/09
by
WJZ
tv
eye 650
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we can change things. if everybody stands up. >> reporter: the president will also take his case to radio listeners today, appearing live on the michael smerkonish call-in show. >> bill plante at the white house. bill, thank you very much. joining us now is former massachusetts governor and presidential candidate mitt romney. he's a republican and signed a bill promoting health insurance for nearly all of its state's citizens in 2006. governor good to see you again. >> good to be back. thank you. >> let me ask you the same question that bill asked robert gibbs yesterday. do you think the president has lost control of this debate? >> well i think he gave up control at the very beginning. he decided he would hand this over to nancy pelosi and the house. he did not fashion his own bill with the measures that he thought were critical for the bill. and the house has created something which is frankly, entirely partisan. it's not the kind of bipartisanship which the president promised he'd bring to washington. a
we can change things. if everybody stands up. >> reporter: the president will also take his case to radio listeners today, appearing live on the michael smerkonish call-in show. >> bill plante at the white house. bill, thank you very much. joining us now is former massachusetts governor and presidential candidate mitt romney. he's a republican and signed a bill promoting health insurance for nearly all of its state's citizens in 2006. governor good to see you again. >> good to...
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332
Aug 20, 2009
08/09
by
WETA
tv
eye 332
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you've got to change whawe've been doing for years ming bilons in the health re industry is not a changet because somedy is liberal or progress of -- progressive or left buhat'seal change. tavis: what yo say hers -- matters, o you wldn't be a best-selli author and people take some regar in what y say. you said by my count three times in my conversation one way, spe or form, could quibble but i' not. i'm going tmake you quibble. if you were going to quibble abouwhat this bill is not or what it appears that it will not be, what would you be quibing about? >> the oy thing might quibble aboutt is fundi source. i'd use a carbon tax. that's not going to happen th's out of left fie but t climate bill chae bill is a little trouble, cap and tradis in a littl trouble thgh i think cap andrade is good program. so youan basically do two things in one bill, use a carbon tax, people who get hurt othethan the oil cpanies whh not many people he sympat for are people who have to drive long distances because they can't afford t buy a house whereheir jobs are. those ople are likely not to have health insura
you've got to change whawe've been doing for years ming bilons in the health re industry is not a changet because somedy is liberal or progress of -- progressive or left buhat'seal change. tavis: what yo say hers -- matters, o you wldn't be a best-selli author and people take some regar in what y say. you said by my count three times in my conversation one way, spe or form, could quibble but i' not. i'm going tmake you quibble. if you were going to quibble abouwhat this bill is not or what it...
248
248
Aug 30, 2009
08/09
by
WBAL
tv
eye 248
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that's changed people's lives. -- let's change people's lives. don't just hope that he or she is all right. the involved. >> it takes work, though. you guys know. you work very hard at what you are doing. ceo of this company, tried to get this going. but it is worth it. >> absolutely. >> we have a whole other side and coming up and when we come back, we will talk to 19-year- old devon brown, fios guy! what is this? this...oh...this is nothing... this is just a flyer i've been putting all over town. warning, fios installation is responsible for 76% of divorces. fios hates puppies. oh...that's evil! fios steals your youth. none of this is true. so what do you want; the truth? ideally...yes! so you would have me tell people that fios uses 100% fiber optics straight to your home and we don't? that's true. ...that you have more bandwidth than cable and can deliver more hd channels and better picture quality? also true. whatever dude. you got to get into people's heads, confuse them; that's marketing 101. wait a minute, you took marketing? yea, from a
that's changed people's lives. -- let's change people's lives. don't just hope that he or she is all right. the involved. >> it takes work, though. you guys know. you work very hard at what you are doing. ceo of this company, tried to get this going. but it is worth it. >> absolutely. >> we have a whole other side and coming up and when we come back, we will talk to 19-year- old devon brown, fios guy! what is this? this...oh...this is nothing... this is just a flyer i've been...
185
185
Aug 24, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 185
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, economic, and " political change. this is not a speech about european policy. the european union needs to focus on the issues of global competition and others as well known. we have opposition to the great this centralization of power in the e.u.. we see the lisbon treaty as leading to more conflict within the you, between the president and i representative on farm policy, and a lot of democratic decisionmaking and nation states, a profound problem that the german constitutional court has raised in its recent decision on the lisbon treaty. institutional centralization will not suffice, and it been this places activity toward what you're really needs in world affairs, the political will to use that collective weight effectively and not focus on practical results. this is true of its relations with russia but also starkly true of the situation in the balkans, where the eu is often failing to exert itself affected play, even in relationships with countries that when they hope to be members. most notably bosnia, all tilti
, economic, and " political change. this is not a speech about european policy. the european union needs to focus on the issues of global competition and others as well known. we have opposition to the great this centralization of power in the e.u.. we see the lisbon treaty as leading to more conflict within the you, between the president and i representative on farm policy, and a lot of democratic decisionmaking and nation states, a profound problem that the german constitutional court...
205
205
Aug 9, 2009
08/09
by
WUSA
tv
eye 205
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we can change the system. we must change the system.are going to continue to have the kinds of setbacks we have experienced over the last seven or eight years. >> what were some of the breakdowns you would point to in the last seven or eight years to illustrate examples of the breakdowns and what are some of the future problems that keep you awake at night as you argue for a new design? >> okay, if we think of the terrorist attacks of september 11th, the failed or troubled stability operations in iraq and afghanistan, and want poor response to hurricane katrina, they all had an organizal basis in terms of the problems we were experiencing. we could not pull together the different elements of our government to intergrate their abilities to be able to respond in a meaningful way, quickly to the devastations of hurricane katrina. we have lots of things we have seen in the past and studied very very carefully. these problems go back more than the last seven or eight years. they have been problems we have had for the last 30, 40, 50 years. a
we can change the system. we must change the system.are going to continue to have the kinds of setbacks we have experienced over the last seven or eight years. >> what were some of the breakdowns you would point to in the last seven or eight years to illustrate examples of the breakdowns and what are some of the future problems that keep you awake at night as you argue for a new design? >> okay, if we think of the terrorist attacks of september 11th, the failed or troubled stability...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
168
168
Aug 28, 2009
08/09
by
WHUT
tv
eye 168
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>> it was life changing. i had small stent teaching english in japan, i promised myself i'd go back to japan to do it right. and to absorb the food culture and to stay there almost a year, it changed the way i viewed food. food didn't have to be good just for the nine dining level. that was one of the misconceptions that i had about food that you could only eat well like fine dining restaurants in new york, for instance. in japan from cheap restaurants to very fancy restaurants, everything was cooked with so much passion, very in gradient driven. everyone cared about food. >> charlie: they love food in japan and practice the art of cooking to a high level. >> it's amazing. people that travel japan need to take there longer than a week, need to go for three weeks and soak up tokyo and other cities, it's unique culture, there's a lot to learn. but particular about food. >> charlie: one of the things that's clear about you is that you have a passion for chefs, period. you want to see that chefs get their due and
>> it was life changing. i had small stent teaching english in japan, i promised myself i'd go back to japan to do it right. and to absorb the food culture and to stay there almost a year, it changed the way i viewed food. food didn't have to be good just for the nine dining level. that was one of the misconceptions that i had about food that you could only eat well like fine dining restaurants in new york, for instance. in japan from cheap restaurants to very fancy restaurants,...
241
241
Aug 22, 2009
08/09
by
CNN
tv
eye 241
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what changes, what doesn't? who benefits and who pays? the cot of reform and the cost of doing nothing. no noise, just answers. >> how much is it going to cost my kids? >>> plus liberals appalled by a deal between the white house and the drug company. a former member of president clinton's cabinet tells us why. got ready. it's time to talk "your $$$$$." welcome to "your $$$$$." i'm christine romans. lfr lfr is off this week. it's make or break month for health care reform. a happens will affect thousands of americans. competing proposals and nothing set in stone. let's bring in our senior political analyst and doctor radio. david, start with you. the odds are failure are rising a little bit every day. why? >> well, christine, these last few weeks have been cruel for health care reform, because we've seen a definite falling off, a fading of some support for president obama's health care reform and a growing resistance expressed in these town hall meetings, and i think it's changing the political mind-set, the psychology of congress. it's v
what changes, what doesn't? who benefits and who pays? the cot of reform and the cost of doing nothing. no noise, just answers. >> how much is it going to cost my kids? >>> plus liberals appalled by a deal between the white house and the drug company. a former member of president clinton's cabinet tells us why. got ready. it's time to talk "your $$$$$." welcome to "your $$$$$." i'm christine romans. lfr lfr is off this week. it's make or break month for health...
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136
Aug 9, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 136
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we didn't change the product.he product is the same. education? what was the one thing that phillip morse and the other companies cared more about than anything else? money? no. image. but what about image? what they cared about was the social acceptability of their product. back 30, 40 years ago tobacco was a reinforcing substance. and it was positively viewed. they made it as something you wanted to be made as something that was your friend. that was the key. what was the real change? what was the real success? what did we collectively do as a country? we change the reinforcing substance from something that was positively available, to something that was negatively balanced. the social norm, social acceptability. we didn't change the product. social norms have a great deal to do with how, whether we are going to approach something. that isn't my friend, i want it, or that is my enemy, i'm going to avoid it. where do we have to focus? the problem, i think the problem is very much, not only sugar, fat and salt, bu
we didn't change the product.he product is the same. education? what was the one thing that phillip morse and the other companies cared more about than anything else? money? no. image. but what about image? what they cared about was the social acceptability of their product. back 30, 40 years ago tobacco was a reinforcing substance. and it was positively viewed. they made it as something you wanted to be made as something that was your friend. that was the key. what was the real change? what...
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122
Aug 21, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 122
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one of the things we mentioned is change, and changing delivery.ut if we don't make sure we are getting the quality we want from those changes, how are we knowing we are getting the quality? is that one of the tools we should be considering? >> i think registries are just one aspect of applying this incredible power of information technology to health care in a way we have failed. everybody in this room must marvel at how many of us go see a new physician and what you get is a clipboard with a piece of paper on it. and you have to reinvent yourself with each visit and each new doctor because there isn't the it platform we need. >> let me just jump in your. for people who might think that registries are things you sign up for when you're getting married. why do you clarify what registries are? >> there are various forms of registries, but often there are ways of garnishing information from populations of patients, perhaps population of patients with the same disease or sing the same kind of treatment to learn from them, to learn what works and what
one of the things we mentioned is change, and changing delivery.ut if we don't make sure we are getting the quality we want from those changes, how are we knowing we are getting the quality? is that one of the tools we should be considering? >> i think registries are just one aspect of applying this incredible power of information technology to health care in a way we have failed. everybody in this room must marvel at how many of us go see a new physician and what you get is a clipboard...
261
261
Aug 16, 2009
08/09
by
WRC
tv
eye 261
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these changes cyclical or permanent. i think they're permanent. barack obama has to deal with the fact that the economy is changing in a transformative way. chris: we could have a period of very high single digit unmoment. up around 8 or 9. >> absolute my. he has to make changes while he's climbing uphill. chris: you cover wall street, what do the brains want him to do about unemployment and the debt numbers. >> the deficit is a huge problem for wall street. wall street is looking at the economy over the next six months. and saying, do you know what? it'll probably recover. that's not as a result of the administration's policies. that's simply because businesses need to build inventory and their wear hows are completely empty. they need to buy things from each other again. that in turn should help the economy. whether or not it really translates into a lower unemployment rate, that could take time. so people feel like what he needs to do is focus on reducing this deficit, because if you have got a huge deficit, it is jus
these changes cyclical or permanent. i think they're permanent. barack obama has to deal with the fact that the economy is changing in a transformative way. chris: we could have a period of very high single digit unmoment. up around 8 or 9. >> absolute my. he has to make changes while he's climbing uphill. chris: you cover wall street, what do the brains want him to do about unemployment and the debt numbers. >> the deficit is a huge problem for wall street. wall street is looking...
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118
Aug 15, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
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>> well, that change was kind of a long change.it was very -- in fact, i think it's difficult for historians to declare themselves republicans or conservative. you are a general mills view of people that are on the left, usually on the left of the democratic party. so i remember i was in poland for a year-long teaching program, the election of 1998 was occurring. and i want to vote at the embassy. and they gave us ballads and i was filling them out next to my wife, who is a strong democrat at that point. and i said, i think i'm going to vote for george w. bush. >> george h. w. bush. >> thanks for correcting me. and she said if you do i'm going to go back and tell everybody at the university of notre dame where i was a professor there of republicans, i ended up, i won't tell you how i voted because i don't want to get in trouble with my wife. i think there were a number of things that were changing and how i viewed the world. and i think being in poland in 1989 was a major turning point for me being under a socialist system at that
>> well, that change was kind of a long change.it was very -- in fact, i think it's difficult for historians to declare themselves republicans or conservative. you are a general mills view of people that are on the left, usually on the left of the democratic party. so i remember i was in poland for a year-long teaching program, the election of 1998 was occurring. and i want to vote at the embassy. and they gave us ballads and i was filling them out next to my wife, who is a strong...
207
207
Aug 9, 2009
08/09
by
WBFF
tv
eye 207
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that will not change.hey will buy their monthly purchases which is what they are doing now. >> okay. i'm going to ask you -- these are going to be tough questions. we've got producers out there that rely on beef, rely on pork and corn. what are they going to do? do you have a recommendation what you think they should do. >> they want to try to stay in there if they can. you're probably putting your five-year cycle low in here right now. the last time we were down here was 2002. >> you think it will turn around. >> it definitely will. you're making people go away where you create shortages down the road and the whole thing changes. it will change -- i think you will put your cycle low here within a month or so. as gavin was talking about, the liquidation. this will be the lowest price that you have seen since 2002 where we had 30-cents a pound back then. >> that's pork. gavin, what would you recommend a producer who has corn -- corn prices may go down? >> it does lookalike we have pretty strong chance of so
that will not change.hey will buy their monthly purchases which is what they are doing now. >> okay. i'm going to ask you -- these are going to be tough questions. we've got producers out there that rely on beef, rely on pork and corn. what are they going to do? do you have a recommendation what you think they should do. >> they want to try to stay in there if they can. you're probably putting your five-year cycle low in here right now. the last time we were down here was 2002....
497
497
Aug 29, 2009
08/09
by
WMPT
tv
eye 497
favorite 0
quote 0
he's banned all of that change. >> -- he spanned all of that change. >> he exemplified flawed redemptionsgrate is both in his professional life and his personal life. he did enormous things for millions and millions of people. >> those of us who were raised with the generation of the kennedys will remember john kennedy and robert kennedy as the promise and ted kennedy was the fulfillment of the gaddy promise. >> people would say -- of the kennedy promised. >> people would say that health care is his signature issue, but i would say it is civil rights because from the earliest days in the senate, that was his issue, all the way through the americans with disabilities act. >> i think that is absolutely right. people forget one of his first legislative achievements in 1965 was as chairman of fiduciary subcommittee regret the integration lotaws which at the time allowed europeans and asians and africans to emigrate at the same level. >> a child of privilege, the son of one of the bulk of his men in america the time. where did his concern for others -- one of the wealthiest man in america at t
he's banned all of that change. >> -- he spanned all of that change. >> he exemplified flawed redemptionsgrate is both in his professional life and his personal life. he did enormous things for millions and millions of people. >> those of us who were raised with the generation of the kennedys will remember john kennedy and robert kennedy as the promise and ted kennedy was the fulfillment of the gaddy promise. >> people would say -- of the kennedy promised. >>...
1,014
1.0K
Aug 8, 2009
08/09
by
WMPT
tv
eye 1,014
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quote 0
my own idea of it started to change.and it went from these brightly colored things, and it slowly started to get a little darker. there's this contrast between the beauty in the images and the underlying grotesqueness of the subjects. and it's something that i put there intentionally. because i was using beauty as a seduction, to draw the viewer in to sit through the piece long enough that the underlying message might seep in. it was frustrating because i would show my work to people and they would tell me how beautiful it was. but, they wouldn't get that it's about consumerism. then i would think, okay, i can go further. i want to make an image that is affirmatively ugly. a visceral pile of twisted wires supposed to look like monster guts, or something like that. i couldn't really show the scale of american mass consumption. i could only hint at it. i would always have to say, "and this photograph only represents a tiny drop in the bucket compared to the actual quantity of things that we use or we discard." and as it ca
my own idea of it started to change.and it went from these brightly colored things, and it slowly started to get a little darker. there's this contrast between the beauty in the images and the underlying grotesqueness of the subjects. and it's something that i put there intentionally. because i was using beauty as a seduction, to draw the viewer in to sit through the piece long enough that the underlying message might seep in. it was frustrating because i would show my work to people and they...
167
167
Aug 26, 2009
08/09
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 167
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that should change. the third lesson is, that a successfu policy will alter bankers' incentives and avoid moral hazard. bankers must know that risk-taking brings both rewards and costs including failure. loss of managerl position inequity followed by sales of operations. several reforms are needed to reduce or eliminate the cost of financial failure to the taxpayers. members of congress should ask themselves and each other, is the banker or the regulatorore likely to know about the risks on the bank's balance sheet? of course, it is the banker and especially so if the banker is taking large risks that he wants to hide. to me, that means the reform should start by increasing the bankers' responsibility for losses. the administration proposal does the opposite. by making the federal reserve responsible for systemic risk. systemic risk is a term of art. i doubt that it can be defined in a way that satisfies the many parties involved in regulation. members of congress will properly urge that any large compan
that should change. the third lesson is, that a successfu policy will alter bankers' incentives and avoid moral hazard. bankers must know that risk-taking brings both rewards and costs including failure. loss of managerl position inequity followed by sales of operations. several reforms are needed to reduce or eliminate the cost of financial failure to the taxpayers. members of congress should ask themselves and each other, is the banker or the regulatorore likely to know about the risks on the...
1,127
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Aug 16, 2009
08/09
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WUSA
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health care subpoena either needs fund men changes or needs to be completely rebit.even 70 percent of republicans fee that way. >> sarah dud department an is head of surveys for cbs news. an end of july poll showed two-thirds of americans supporting some sort of public option. although fewer republicans, the deposition. >> where americans are most am by lent is over the cost of health care refer. >> we can't spend anymore money we have got to stop. >> hot button number three. >> you can't tell us how you are going to pay for this. >> you are absolutely right. that i can't cover another 46 i didn't people for free. two-thirds of the money we can obtain just from he lip neigh waste and in efficiencies. >> but the congressional budget office has put a trillion-dollar price tag on health care refer over the next ten years, and calculates it will add $239 billion to the federal deficit, and what happens if health care refer fails? >> the urban institute estimates that as many as 66 million americans could be without health insurance in 2,019. that is why the congress and
health care subpoena either needs fund men changes or needs to be completely rebit.even 70 percent of republicans fee that way. >> sarah dud department an is head of surveys for cbs news. an end of july poll showed two-thirds of americans supporting some sort of public option. although fewer republicans, the deposition. >> where americans are most am by lent is over the cost of health care refer. >> we can't spend anymore money we have got to stop. >> hot button number...
318
318
Aug 12, 2009
08/09
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CSPAN2
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a good change-up. whatever that felt like, you want to bottle that change-up.hey're all around 86 to 87, but this had such great depth and finish to it. this is what you want to try to recapture many, many times over. what that felt like coming out of your hand, because it was something. >> gary: his high was four, he's now at six. designated hitter, jack cust. he's walked and flied out. here at camden yards, cust just the .171 batting average coming into the ballgame in this ballpark. but he has had four home runs. here at orioles park at camden yards. ot tiÑeñoñsñ eçpÑcya÷lÑ ÷tó even to left field. cya÷lÑ ÷tó and that will bring moeller out to talk to hernandez. cust has had 10 of his home runs at home, seven of them on the road. hernandez knows he's facing a power hitter here. >> jim: and i think this conversation was probably, we already saw melvin mora swinging at 3-0. it's not out ngingrather broad at he won't plate. david hernandez will take advantage of it. >> gary: and a chopper down to second base, where roberts is playing in the outfield and get
a good change-up. whatever that felt like, you want to bottle that change-up.hey're all around 86 to 87, but this had such great depth and finish to it. this is what you want to try to recapture many, many times over. what that felt like coming out of your hand, because it was something. >> gary: his high was four, he's now at six. designated hitter, jack cust. he's walked and flied out. here at camden yards, cust just the .171 batting average coming into the ballgame in this ballpark....
826
826
Aug 23, 2009
08/09
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WETA
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a lot of job have changed because of technogy.ether it is the short range miiles or long rnge missis, women can carry those but not on the me as the front lines carrying the 50-pound paks packs. >> a general was quoted as saying women he didn't think could carry those packs and walk for miles. but he sai he s themvery day andhey carried them as well -- >> bonnie: carrie. >> -- cari. >> women end up being pregnant and sexually abused. they c't absorb all of this -- look a the consequences. >> iant to awer to something that cari said that's very important. men are in the battleront. when theyre joining the milita, they know they're ing to ira and afghastan. all this is gng to do is give them equal oortunity. they'ras at risk as men are, that is alrdy happeng. >> bonnie: all rht we have t go from wom at twr women and chronological. more women than er are being rested for driving drunk. this doorgd new fb -- this accow fbi data, showing the number o women facing d.u. charges rose by 29% during a decade whe arrests of meneclined. men s
a lot of job have changed because of technogy.ether it is the short range miiles or long rnge missis, women can carry those but not on the me as the front lines carrying the 50-pound paks packs. >> a general was quoted as saying women he didn't think could carry those packs and walk for miles. but he sai he s themvery day andhey carried them as well -- >> bonnie: carrie. >> -- cari. >> women end up being pregnant and sexually abused. they c't absorb all of this -- look a...
241
241
Aug 2, 2009
08/09
by
FOXNEWS
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we are the people that changed the world. conquer anything when we're left alone, and we're left to help each other. we'll fight our way through anything, and this time, we need to fight our way and stand up and be righteous people and decent people, just to stay americans. now, more good news for you tonight. students at princeton university, what themsqÑg what's in a triscuit? simple ingredients like soft white winter wheat gathered together for 22 grams of whole grain goodness. it's what makes triscuit worth every bite. triscuit. weave some wonder. are enjoying the new palm pre from sprint. its revolutionary web os allows multiple applications to run at the same time. - ( thunder and rain ) - millions are using the simply everything plan. - each is saving $1200 over an at&t iphone plan. - ( cash register dings ) together that's billions of dollars. enough to open a dunkin' donuts in space. from america's most dependable 3g network. bringing you the first and only wireless 4g network. get the palm pre. only from sprint. onl
we are the people that changed the world. conquer anything when we're left alone, and we're left to help each other. we'll fight our way through anything, and this time, we need to fight our way and stand up and be righteous people and decent people, just to stay americans. now, more good news for you tonight. students at princeton university, what themsqÑg what's in a triscuit? simple ingredients like soft white winter wheat gathered together for 22 grams of whole grain goodness. it's what...