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Aug 8, 2017
08/17
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namely, that priority is climate change. please visit with your staff and make them aware of this shift in perspective within the executive branch." in more climate news, a new study has revealed more than 6 % of the world's gdp is poured into fossil fuel subsidies each year -- a staggering amount of money that tops $5 trillion annually. the study was published in the journal world development. the pentagon is considering launching airstrikes in the philippines against isisis militants. that's accocording to a an c nes report based on two unnamed defense officials, who say the strikes would likely be carried out by unmanned drones. on monday, secretary of state rex tillerson met with philippines president rodrigo duterte on the sidelines of a regional security summit in the philippines capital, manila. in syria, the local journalistic group raqqa is being slaughtered silently says up to 18 civilians were killed in u.s.-led coalition bombing and artillery shelling in raqqa monday, as the u.s.-backed campaign to seize the city
namely, that priority is climate change. please visit with your staff and make them aware of this shift in perspective within the executive branch." in more climate news, a new study has revealed more than 6 % of the world's gdp is poured into fossil fuel subsidies each year -- a staggering amount of money that tops $5 trillion annually. the study was published in the journal world development. the pentagon is considering launching airstrikes in the philippines against isisis militants....
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Aug 28, 2017
08/17
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LINKTV
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, changing rapidly, and changing primarily because of human activitieies. the e science tells us that. extreme events are one of thee most important parts of our changing climate and having very serio r ramifatioionsn ourr ciety. particular, we're seeing more large heat eventsts, less cold events, and a significant increase in precipitation happening as largrger events. one of the inings 'reeeingg is at the wet are gting wetr r anthe drdrare gettttg dririer >> yoknow wha i wasi was born he in pinview, i s raiseinin plaviewew.'vevelways beenn n plaiiew,w, a it juju-- it seems like it d doing nothing t t gettg hotttt and dri and lesrarain yrlrly. >> it's beeaa tou droroug. in2010, weadad lik29 i incs of inin, ani didid't t ink there'd evere another poor y. inin011, we d d 5 ines of rain.ororst dught i'd ever seen. and 2011 w t the fst t tim we'veevever h to ababdon our crop. anwewe hado pickcknd chooswhwhich op w we re gonon save, whiccrcrop wwerere gna abandon. d,d, manthatat w-- thawawas li chohoosg which chilwewe wergonna se, or leave hind, and we nev h ha
, changing rapidly, and changing primarily because of human activitieies. the e science tells us that. extreme events are one of thee most important parts of our changing climate and having very serio r ramifatioionsn ourr ciety. particular, we're seeing more large heat eventsts, less cold events, and a significant increase in precipitation happening as largrger events. one of the inings 'reeeingg is at the wet are gting wetr r anthe drdrare gettttg dririer >> yoknow wha i wasi was born...
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Aug 22, 2017
08/17
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BBCNEWS
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but that will have to change, and that will change immediately.y's harbouring of militants and terrorists whose target us service members and officials. —— who target. it is time for pakistan to demonstrate its commitment to civilisation, order, and to peace. i want to bring in my colleague now. he was the bbc‘s correspondent in afghanistan and the region during the search, the obama surge, when an extra 100,000 troops were deployed to afghanistan —— during the surge. did you detect any major changes of policy that will make a difference? it was interesting in that clip, a stark warning to pakistani, where he said that we are giving money to a country that harbours those terrorists, and that is going to change. i would terrorists, and that is going to change. iwould be terrorists, and that is going to change. i would be interested to see how that will change. the pakistani military will balk at something like that. there was talk about the sacrifices that have been made by their own military in fighting insurgency, but there is to give evidence to
but that will have to change, and that will change immediately.y's harbouring of militants and terrorists whose target us service members and officials. —— who target. it is time for pakistan to demonstrate its commitment to civilisation, order, and to peace. i want to bring in my colleague now. he was the bbc‘s correspondent in afghanistan and the region during the search, the obama surge, when an extra 100,000 troops were deployed to afghanistan —— during the surge. did you detect...
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Aug 5, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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>> host: you may have seen we have hadvent in the past for "washington journal" what is color of change?. >> evade justice ratio organization with those thatat m champion solutions to mobilize on 1.with those families to translate that presence on the wider issue to make real change to make silicon valley or hollywood.has >> how long has this been around?. >> is started 12 years agoane it was caused by bad decision makers. with those decision makers. and with those images in my mind for the black people on their ruth beguine the government not be left toanki die. with bad generational povertygeog if it is all part of but the government and media and corporation those to send it to more people to build that type of power to do a legal case to the ability to make their voices heard on impact. >> so what about racial justice? floor from warr legacies civil-rights groupsmo >> we set in the middle generation lee in rework close the with the wide range of organizations with that decentralized model to create their own petitions but at the same time we are working on voting rights and criminal
>> host: you may have seen we have hadvent in the past for "washington journal" what is color of change?. >> evade justice ratio organization with those thatat m champion solutions to mobilize on 1.with those families to translate that presence on the wider issue to make real change to make silicon valley or hollywood.has >> how long has this been around?. >> is started 12 years agoane it was caused by bad decision makers. with those decision makers. and with...
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Aug 11, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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your brain would then change, it would learn the error and change its representation of the apple. so you would see the apple differently. we have a very fancy name for this in the science of psychology and neuroscience, we call it learning. this is what you do when you learn. your breathtaking information that does not have the force of a can use it to better in the future. your brain can also be an unscrupulous scientist and ignore the dater altogether maintaining its predictions are reality like we saw with the square. or, like the quintessential scientist, your brain can run armchair experiments to imagine a world, pure simulation without any sensory input or any prediction error at all just as he did as he imagined everyone or hearing the sound of your song that you cannot get out of your head. and how emotions are made, explain more about how simulations give meaning to sensations that allow you to experience the world and act in the world. the examples that i have used here so far about objects and events in the outside world apples and squares. but the really important and
your brain would then change, it would learn the error and change its representation of the apple. so you would see the apple differently. we have a very fancy name for this in the science of psychology and neuroscience, we call it learning. this is what you do when you learn. your breathtaking information that does not have the force of a can use it to better in the future. your brain can also be an unscrupulous scientist and ignore the dater altogether maintaining its predictions are reality...
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Aug 5, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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guest: of change? a 21st-century racial justice organization that works to change the policies and practices that hold lack people back and champions solutions that move all of us forward. we use the internet and technology to mobilize our 1.2 million members, their friends thefamily, to translate presence that black people have in the world on a wide range of issues to make change. ,hether it is in silicon valley hollywood, wall street, and washington. host: how long has the group been around and how did it get started? guest: it started 12 years ago in the aftermath of hurricane was caused by bad decision makers and turned into a life altering disaster by those same decision-makers. those images that are still seared in my mind, and probably ofso many of your viewers, black people on their roof thanking the government to do something and being left to die. while those issues of geographic segregation, generational poverty, the impact of climate change, criminal justice, was all part of what was going
guest: of change? a 21st-century racial justice organization that works to change the policies and practices that hold lack people back and champions solutions that move all of us forward. we use the internet and technology to mobilize our 1.2 million members, their friends thefamily, to translate presence that black people have in the world on a wide range of issues to make change. ,hether it is in silicon valley hollywood, wall street, and washington. host: how long has the group been around...
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Aug 15, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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a variety of changes. something has to be done about that at some point and there are a variety of things that could be done revenue increases in the combinations of those things. the chief actuary at raleigh was a wide variety of changes associated with program and their impact on our program. it's also useful in what this paper does is analyze the individual behavioral effects of any change in their effects on welfare in the state through the household consumption through this project uses the structural model and i will explain what it isn't the next few slides to evaluate this impacts of changes associated with social security for the program that has similar effects on the program's bottom line. so economic models present a way to analyze these effects if you think about what are reduced for model does it's a linear regression model. what a structural model does is a little bit different that it starts with assumptions on workers utility function how they feel towards different things and in this mode
a variety of changes. something has to be done about that at some point and there are a variety of things that could be done revenue increases in the combinations of those things. the chief actuary at raleigh was a wide variety of changes associated with program and their impact on our program. it's also useful in what this paper does is analyze the individual behavioral effects of any change in their effects on welfare in the state through the household consumption through this project uses...
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they knew that climate change was real i mean that's what you're seeing here is a climate change it's dirty and it makes the air bad right it's not a good idea and they knew this is early as late hundred seventy nine they were sounding a little internal alarms on climate change you know these researchers have found an internal memo from the year of the most widely held theory about climate change is that the increase in atmospheric c o two was due to fossil fuel combustion i was back in seventy nine that was back before was even like a whimper and. you know there was like you didn't even register you kind of duplicitous you know and then they had a peer reviewed study by a scientist seventeen years later concluded that the body of evidence now points towards a discernible human influence on the globe because as you know climate change global climate the causes that climate change all of the. it's happening while exxon mobil is spending tens of millions of dollars to put editorials in place you know these advertorials like in places like you know the new york times or you know spending
they knew that climate change was real i mean that's what you're seeing here is a climate change it's dirty and it makes the air bad right it's not a good idea and they knew this is early as late hundred seventy nine they were sounding a little internal alarms on climate change you know these researchers have found an internal memo from the year of the most widely held theory about climate change is that the increase in atmospheric c o two was due to fossil fuel combustion i was back in seventy...
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Aug 9, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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and climate change. i feel very, very connected first to the u.n., family history, my grandmother clara who was my role model until you died at 98 and have was in geneva in 1945 is part of the the american delegation to organize the u.n. she served as our u.s. representative to the ilo from 45-57 when they involuntarily kicked her out of the department of labor. she did work for usaid for the next 15 years until they kicked her out at age 82. for the women in the room, in 1972 just before they kicked her out she authored something called the percy an amendment to the u.s. foreign relations act which as went around the world visiting one of 50 countries she noticed usaid money was for training and education was unequally spent almost completely on the men and the boys. the first amendment says it has to be spent equally on men and women. it still part of the law and is probably one of the great pieces of our pride. i was born in the free territory of trieste which is united nations protectorate from 1945-
and climate change. i feel very, very connected first to the u.n., family history, my grandmother clara who was my role model until you died at 98 and have was in geneva in 1945 is part of the the american delegation to organize the u.n. she served as our u.s. representative to the ilo from 45-57 when they involuntarily kicked her out of the department of labor. she did work for usaid for the next 15 years until they kicked her out at age 82. for the women in the room, in 1972 just before they...
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Aug 10, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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this thing with the climate change really amazes me. i remember when aerosol sprays came out i think in the mid or late 50's and already they were concerned about the ozone layer so there's absolutely no excuse and fast moving forward today, with this gentlemen talking about the report from scientists, i'd like to point out that none of the politicians and especially mr. trump do not have a ph.d. in anything especially science and the thing, the other thing that nobody seems to mention is the emissions from all the bombs and war machines that we're dropping. it's not just automobiles. it's absolutely disgusting that we're political footballs and nothing but a commodity and that doesn't mean just us here in america but the global community and civilian population. we're at the mercy of people who want accolades to our self-serving and money, money, money and i would like to say one, make one comment from your previous guests as far as north korea goes. number one, kim jung ung un is not stupid. i think it's an ego thing and i'm very upse
this thing with the climate change really amazes me. i remember when aerosol sprays came out i think in the mid or late 50's and already they were concerned about the ozone layer so there's absolutely no excuse and fast moving forward today, with this gentlemen talking about the report from scientists, i'd like to point out that none of the politicians and especially mr. trump do not have a ph.d. in anything especially science and the thing, the other thing that nobody seems to mention is the...
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Aug 14, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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however, things have changed. since president trump decided to withdraw from the paris climate agreement on june 1st, it is imperative for leaders such as congressman don beyer to reaffirm the leadership role that the united states has to play, the united states must play on the international stage and especially on issues such as climate change. congressman beyer isn't only my role model, he's america's strongest member of congress fighting against global climate change. i first met congressman beyer as a volunteer for his campaign three years ago when he encouraged me to stay involved in not only policy, but politics. and i went on to serve as an intern. before being elected to virginia's 8th congressional district in 2014, congressman beyer servedded as two-term incumbent lieutenant governor and most importantly, ambassador to switzerland under president obama. before inviting congressman beyer up to deliver the speech, after speech we'll be followed by a conversation between congressman beyer and mr. george in
however, things have changed. since president trump decided to withdraw from the paris climate agreement on june 1st, it is imperative for leaders such as congressman don beyer to reaffirm the leadership role that the united states has to play, the united states must play on the international stage and especially on issues such as climate change. congressman beyer isn't only my role model, he's america's strongest member of congress fighting against global climate change. i first met...
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no it's really tricky to describe i mean times have changed so much and are continuing to change what was normal then and was acceptable is not really acceptable anymore it's that's definitely good you know i mean we've we've gone through a lot of political correctness and i think for good reason because we're actually asking people to respect each other but of course political can correctness can go into strange places too because people aren't being authentic but i would still prefer that people were respectful men were respectful of women women were respectful of men decent behavior is firm and as i'm a better order now like for example i've been a fan of domicile my life overgrow women as equal i work for women i never thought good to hear but i never thought that was odd i think i've thought about this a lot and i actually think that the word feminist and the you know it's a bit like art when you see art. people have different relationship to it and people take a meaning from the word feminism and the take their own interpretation of that word so some people feel of feminism is t
no it's really tricky to describe i mean times have changed so much and are continuing to change what was normal then and was acceptable is not really acceptable anymore it's that's definitely good you know i mean we've we've gone through a lot of political correctness and i think for good reason because we're actually asking people to respect each other but of course political can correctness can go into strange places too because people aren't being authentic but i would still prefer that...
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Aug 9, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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a things have changed. president trump decided to a star from the paris climate agreement on june 1. it is imperative for leaders such as congressman buyer to reaffirm the leadership role that the united states has to play. the united states must play, on an international stage. especially on climate change. congress buyer is not only mike romano, he is america's strongest member of congress fighting against global climate change. i first met congressman byer when i was a volunteer for his campaign when he encouraged me to stay involved in not only policy but also politics and then i went on to serve as campaign in turn are his reelection campaign. before being elected to congressionalhth district, congressman byer served as the governor of the commonwealth of virginia, the president of the senate and the ambassador to switzerland and lichen seen under resident obama. let me briefly say this speech will be followed by a conversation between car was meant by her and george ingram. george ingram serves as the
a things have changed. president trump decided to a star from the paris climate agreement on june 1. it is imperative for leaders such as congressman buyer to reaffirm the leadership role that the united states has to play. the united states must play, on an international stage. especially on climate change. congress buyer is not only mike romano, he is america's strongest member of congress fighting against global climate change. i first met congressman byer when i was a volunteer for his...
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Aug 9, 2017
08/17
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FOXNEWSW
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w about climateha change? i find it remarkable.on and say, do you have an opinion about whether or not yos should have children respective to climate change, and almost everyone of them said, yes, i worry about this enormously. i worry about the future that my children will have. >> tucker: one second, you're not winning me over. just hold on.ç >> people care about the future of their children. they really do, tucker. >> tucker: everybody cares about the future for their children.ker: >> would you deny that our society is medicine is based on science. based on science? media is based on science. all of the things that we have to see about what science is telling us is that climates change is going to create a situation which is very, veryret dangerous and difficult for civilizations to endure. climate change will raise sea levels to the point to which it is swamped. >> tucker: can i ask you a question, or are you going to continue with this stuff? let me ask you a simple>> question. >> you still haven't answered my question.e do y
w about climateha change? i find it remarkable.on and say, do you have an opinion about whether or not yos should have children respective to climate change, and almost everyone of them said, yes, i worry about this enormously. i worry about the future that my children will have. >> tucker: one second, you're not winning me over. just hold on.ç >> people care about the future of their children. they really do, tucker. >> tucker: everybody cares about the future for their...
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Aug 26, 2017
08/17
by
LINKTV
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, changing rapidly, and changing primarily because of human activitities. ththe science tells us that. extreme events are one of ththe most important parts of our changing climate and having very serusus ramicatatio on ouou societyin particular, we're seeing more large heat evenents, less cold events, and a significant increase in precipitation happening as lalarger events. one of thththingse' seeinin isisthat the wet areetting wteter d the e y are gegeing ddri. >> u know wt? i w--i was born re in lainview, was raid d in pinviviewi' always be i in plnvieiew,nd it t st-- it seems like iisis doi nothinbubut geing hohoer and dri and less rain yearly. >> 's ben n a tgh d droht. 2010, h had le 2929 ihes of rain, ani i did't ink the'd ev be another po day. . 2011, whahad 5 cheses of rai w worstrought 'd ev seen. and 2011asas theirstst te we' everad to o andon our crop. d d we h to pipi and choe e whiccropop wwere g gna save, whh h crope wewereonna abandonanand, m, ththatas-- tht t was ke c choing which chd d we we gonnlose, or leavbehind, and we nerer had to do a
, changing rapidly, and changing primarily because of human activitities. ththe science tells us that. extreme events are one of ththe most important parts of our changing climate and having very serusus ramicatatio on ouou societyin particular, we're seeing more large heat evenents, less cold events, and a significant increase in precipitation happening as lalarger events. one of thththingse' seeinin isisthat the wet areetting wteter d the e y are gegeing ddri. >> u know wt? i w--i was...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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they change the army. that's what we are for, to drive change. as we went back into iraq in 2003, i was a brigade commander at the time. i tend to reserve criticism for myself and/or the organization unassociated with. i was an armored brigade commander at that time, with elite force that invaded. i would tell you probably one of the problems we had as a look back on it now is we thought we knew what we were dealing with. i was pretty sure i had good intelligence. i had satellite photographs. i it varies things like that. i had a false sense of understanding of what it was, and i will leave it at that level where i was as a colonel. what that does is, if you start developing a battle plan based on your sort of false understanding and your sort of level of assurance, one of the reasons you get to that is you take previous experience and you artificially set it on top of your current experience. that's a common problem. you should look back in history, not be captive to a i would say that my level at least i believe at that level we were probably c
they change the army. that's what we are for, to drive change. as we went back into iraq in 2003, i was a brigade commander at the time. i tend to reserve criticism for myself and/or the organization unassociated with. i was an armored brigade commander at that time, with elite force that invaded. i would tell you probably one of the problems we had as a look back on it now is we thought we knew what we were dealing with. i was pretty sure i had good intelligence. i had satellite photographs. i...
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Aug 4, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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changes in demographics. we made changes in that that hasn't been terribly significant going forward. so we project a larger deficits on social security's finances than does the trustees. they see the75 year actuarial balance 1% of gdp. that is half a percent from ours. not a huge difference but a difference. a lot of that is actually is gdp growth, projected gdp growth going forward. projected short fall between income and costs. that's a little bit different. they see that as about 1.5%. we see that 1.5%, about four percentage points smaller. they see 11.5. we see 5.9%. a little bit smaller. different projections of factors influence things. taxable earnings, we see lower interest rates. we have slower economic growth. in fact we see potential economic growth settling in 1.8, 1.5% of gdp. and that one comes from if you want to look at productivity, lable force growth. we have a labor force challenge with baby boomers. we adjusted forecasted immigration for example. we don't see immigration increasing very m
changes in demographics. we made changes in that that hasn't been terribly significant going forward. so we project a larger deficits on social security's finances than does the trustees. they see the75 year actuarial balance 1% of gdp. that is half a percent from ours. not a huge difference but a difference. a lot of that is actually is gdp growth, projected gdp growth going forward. projected short fall between income and costs. that's a little bit different. they see that as about 1.5%. we...
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458
Aug 9, 2017
08/17
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FOXNEWSW
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do you understand the science of climate change?ce controls -- besides dictate everything we do in our society paid science means that climate change is real. that fracking pollutes groundwater. that this television works, that car's work. it presumably says that underneath your hair there is a brain behind those eyes. of course, i haven't seen it. science wouldn't tell us there is a bunch of hamsters up there. what i am saying to you, tucker, to make this argument about what the scientists are doing -- >> tucker: -- >> tucker: hilarious. we'll get back to that in one second. >> asked your question and you haven't answered it. >> tucker: do i understand science? >> to understand what the science is telling us? i find it remarkable. i talked to malign the most about this question and say, do you have an opinion about whether or not you should have children respect of change, and almost everyone of them said, yes, i worry about this enormously. i worry about the future that my children will have. >> tucker: one second, you're not winn
do you understand the science of climate change?ce controls -- besides dictate everything we do in our society paid science means that climate change is real. that fracking pollutes groundwater. that this television works, that car's work. it presumably says that underneath your hair there is a brain behind those eyes. of course, i haven't seen it. science wouldn't tell us there is a bunch of hamsters up there. what i am saying to you, tucker, to make this argument about what the scientists are...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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primarily, there we are seeing the federal reserve changing their pattern up interest rate changes. again, what is going to be a long-term interest rate is hard to project. we made changes that will not be terribly significant going or word. reject the larger deficits in social security finances as will do the trustees. they see the 75-year actuarial elements as being -1% of gdp. that is about half a percentage point more than ours. gdpt of that is actually growth. projected gdp growth going forward. projected shortfall between income and cost. that is a little bit different. we see it at about 1.5%. about four percentage points smaller. they see it as 1.5%, we see it as 1.9%. rejections of factors influence things. , we see lowergs interest rates. we have slower economic growth. economic growth settling in at about 1.8% or 1.9% of gdp. that one comes from -- if you want to see a simple recipe -- look at productivity, labor force growth. we have a labor force growth challenge with aging baby boomers. we just adjusted our forecast on immigration. we don't see it increasing very much.
primarily, there we are seeing the federal reserve changing their pattern up interest rate changes. again, what is going to be a long-term interest rate is hard to project. we made changes that will not be terribly significant going or word. reject the larger deficits in social security finances as will do the trustees. they see the 75-year actuarial elements as being -1% of gdp. that is about half a percentage point more than ours. gdpt of that is actually growth. projected gdp growth going...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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MSNBCW
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clearly there have been changes. there are a lot of new faces high up in city government, a lot of new places like this urban league community empowerment center behind me. but on this there is some consensus -- ferguson still has a lot of work to do. >> they're burning down. >> reporter: donald had a back row seat when ferguson erupted in a violent fury three years ago this beaweek. riot police have faded from view and the neighborhood where michael brown was gunned down by darren wilson is calm again. but frustrations and doubts linger. >> it takes time. trust is something that's extremely hard to win back. if you break that trust, sometimes you can win it back. sometimes you can't. >> to win people over and restore faith in the police, the majority black city overhauled the department, appointing the first african-american to lead the force, attacking a problematic culture spelled out in ale damning justice department probe released in 2015. for starters, the small department is more diverse today than the day mic
clearly there have been changes. there are a lot of new faces high up in city government, a lot of new places like this urban league community empowerment center behind me. but on this there is some consensus -- ferguson still has a lot of work to do. >> they're burning down. >> reporter: donald had a back row seat when ferguson erupted in a violent fury three years ago this beaweek. riot police have faded from view and the neighborhood where michael brown was gunned down by darren...
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Aug 8, 2017
08/17
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we're talking about somatic cell changes, changes to adults or ids but not heritable. like i said, it is very attractive to be able to cure diseases that have a known single mutation that's pozz sieve. for example, sickle cell disease is one that's talked about a lot, it's attractive for something like this because it's in the blood so it's possible to take blood stem cells from a patient, do the editing outside the body and replace the correctly edited cells so they repopulate the blood supply and the sickle cell mutation has been known far long time. it's a severe disease we have no treatment for it right now and there's a fairly large group of people that are affected. so i think that will likely be one of the early targets of gene editing. walter: as we do our moral spectrum, that's pretty solidly in the yeah, let's do that won't affect the germ line, won't affect children but will save people from a bad disease. in guangzhou, china is apparently ahead of us in this, we'll get to the fact that we're not spending enough on research so china takes the lead. but they'
we're talking about somatic cell changes, changes to adults or ids but not heritable. like i said, it is very attractive to be able to cure diseases that have a known single mutation that's pozz sieve. for example, sickle cell disease is one that's talked about a lot, it's attractive for something like this because it's in the blood so it's possible to take blood stem cells from a patient, do the editing outside the body and replace the correctly edited cells so they repopulate the blood supply...
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Aug 2, 2017
08/17
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CNNW
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must we change? do we really have to change? can we change? and then will we change?e first one, mother nature has joined the debate. turns out she's way more persuasive than any of us climate activists. there are a lot of groups out there been doing great work at the grassroots level, but these climate-related extreme weather events are really getting the attention of people, even folks who don't want to use phrases like "global warming," but they're seeing the changes. now, the second question is really important. can we change? because you're right, if we decide we have to change, but we don't have the ability to, then, you know, i don't want to hear about it anymore. it's just a formula for depression and anxiety. but luckily, we now have the solutions. people s wt happened with the cost reductions with computer chips and cell phones and flat screen tvs. the great news is that same pattern is happening with solar panels and windmills and now batteries and electric cars and l.e.d.s and all kinds of efficiency improvements. so we really do have the ability to change
must we change? do we really have to change? can we change? and then will we change?e first one, mother nature has joined the debate. turns out she's way more persuasive than any of us climate activists. there are a lot of groups out there been doing great work at the grassroots level, but these climate-related extreme weather events are really getting the attention of people, even folks who don't want to use phrases like "global warming," but they're seeing the changes. now, the...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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BBCNEWS
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, the current administration's is not climate change. down on the fact that he is a sceptic when it comes to climate change, which is very worrying for the planet. yes, but we do not know that this has come from the white house, do they? i am sure that it has. staff at the natural resources conservation centre and the department of agriculture. he has pulled out of the climate change agreement and has been quite bullish about the fact that he does not have the same thinking on climate change that other world leaders have, so i think he is very much a sceptic when it comes to this. ok, all right. beulah story we will look at is the cricket. we love our cricket, don't we? we do. i once tried to talk about cricket to michael parkinson and he said what the hell do you know about cricket? however, i am familiar with moeen ali. i have two older brothers and the cricket mad husband, so there is no escape! this is talking about moeen ali being put ona par is talking about moeen ali being put on a par with ian botham because she is such a good al
, the current administration's is not climate change. down on the fact that he is a sceptic when it comes to climate change, which is very worrying for the planet. yes, but we do not know that this has come from the white house, do they? i am sure that it has. staff at the natural resources conservation centre and the department of agriculture. he has pulled out of the climate change agreement and has been quite bullish about the fact that he does not have the same thinking on climate change...
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Aug 2, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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the biggest change in 50 years. thank you all very much. reporter: can you give us a comment on russian sanctions, please? senator cotton: we are excited to introduce version two of the raise act, which will change our legal immigration system and the way that we award one million green cards every single year. it will help working-class americans get a pay raise that have lacked for too long. in my lifetime, 40 years. if you have a high school diploma or less, your wages have in stagnant or declining, as well as your quality of life.
the biggest change in 50 years. thank you all very much. reporter: can you give us a comment on russian sanctions, please? senator cotton: we are excited to introduce version two of the raise act, which will change our legal immigration system and the way that we award one million green cards every single year. it will help working-class americans get a pay raise that have lacked for too long. in my lifetime, 40 years. if you have a high school diploma or less, your wages have in stagnant or...
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Aug 31, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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eye 47
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change has climate to be addressed strongly. payident trump has to attention, and listen to the people. people there are under such stress, that they need clothes, food, shelter. they do not have homes, some have left without their medications, gas prices may go -- ind i just feel that feel very badly for the people. if we do not address climate change, we may have more of this. so, please mother's is a crisis. the president withdrawing from the paris climate accords, and then you have governors around the country saying, we are going to abide by that climate agreement. l
change has climate to be addressed strongly. payident trump has to attention, and listen to the people. people there are under such stress, that they need clothes, food, shelter. they do not have homes, some have left without their medications, gas prices may go -- ind i just feel that feel very badly for the people. if we do not address climate change, we may have more of this. so, please mother's is a crisis. the president withdrawing from the paris climate accords, and then you have...
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Aug 2, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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employable we have got to change that. as business guys, you and i understand we need a new approach. we need to fix this immigration system. we took a look at best practices, countries like canada, australia and others. what we are introducing is modeled on the current canadian and australian system. it is pro-worker, pro-growth, and has been proven to work. both are extreme the successful in attracting highly skilled workers to those countries. the goals of our nation's's immigration system should protect the interest of working americans, including immigrants and talented individuals who come here legally and want to work and make a better life for themselves. the current system makes it virtually impossible for them to do that. if we are going to be an innovator and leader economically, it inherited our immigration system focuses on highly skilled, permanent workers who can add value to our economy and ultimately achieve their own version of the american dream. we are talking about measured, rational approach to immigr
employable we have got to change that. as business guys, you and i understand we need a new approach. we need to fix this immigration system. we took a look at best practices, countries like canada, australia and others. what we are introducing is modeled on the current canadian and australian system. it is pro-worker, pro-growth, and has been proven to work. both are extreme the successful in attracting highly skilled workers to those countries. the goals of our nation's's immigration system...
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Aug 31, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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we are in the middle of a climate change and climate of technology and change and globalization. we are going through three climate changes at once. you want brazilians -- you want to resell against. i thought how do we win the climate changes and then i realized there was a woman of 3.8 billion-years-old, she was mother nature and she has been through more then anybody so i interviewed her and said how do you produce this when the climate changes and she said first of all, i do this unconsciously but i am incredibly adaptive. only the adaptive survive. in the portal ecosystem is the most resilient ecosystem. then she said i do believe in the state of the body and a circular. i'm very sustainable. then she said i'm incredibly entrepreneurial. she said you can't build anything resilient without time and to speed up the growth of a tree or gestation and all of. and the ecosystem is in balance it is highly resilient to the invasive species. the party lost ownership of the system and donald trump was an invasive species. that is exactly what happened by the way. last, she said i beli
we are in the middle of a climate change and climate of technology and change and globalization. we are going through three climate changes at once. you want brazilians -- you want to resell against. i thought how do we win the climate changes and then i realized there was a woman of 3.8 billion-years-old, she was mother nature and she has been through more then anybody so i interviewed her and said how do you produce this when the climate changes and she said first of all, i do this...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
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BBCNEWS
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change is always different, and if you have been changing for a number of years, change can be difficultl to the changes. there has been perhaps less variation in results as some might have affected, so it might have been uncomfortable and difficult at times, but it seems most of us have risen well to the challenge. what is planned for a—levels? risen well to the challenge. what is planned for a-levels? the first of the league formed a—levels were awarded last week, with less radical change. —— first of the re—formed. we will see the a—levels come through the system... if you were grading yourself on the performance today, what would you give yourself? at the moment i think we are pleased with the way in which the results have panned out today. more than a five? i would not wish to be boastful. we can only use our best endeavours to anticipate what the results look like, but we were not too far off. you are looking relieved, i have to say! not as relieved, i have to say! not as relieved as many students today. thank you very much for coming in. there's been a sharp fall in the number of
change is always different, and if you have been changing for a number of years, change can be difficultl to the changes. there has been perhaps less variation in results as some might have affected, so it might have been uncomfortable and difficult at times, but it seems most of us have risen well to the challenge. what is planned for a—levels? risen well to the challenge. what is planned for a-levels? the first of the league formed a—levels were awarded last week, with less radical...
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climate change white house reviewing new report that finds strong link between climate change and human activity a climate report based on work conducted by scientists thirty federal agencies its conclusions about the far reaching damage already occurring already occurring already are covering from global warming government report finds drastic impact of climate change on us extreme weather could kill all hundred and fifty thousand people each year in europe by the end of the century say scientists hundreds of millions of people will be exposed to deadly weather those are a few of the headlines from their food. this week that was this week fox news. and then we have c.n.n. where we know all of this is going on both mention it for about three seconds every two years where you will will will slip it in there i don't remember the exact numbers but it is like a year ago they counted the number of times climate change was talked about on c.n.n. n.b.c. c.b.s. all of them it was like ten it was like a hand fall about as much as they talked about. like. shirt collar for that week so how do they
climate change white house reviewing new report that finds strong link between climate change and human activity a climate report based on work conducted by scientists thirty federal agencies its conclusions about the far reaching damage already occurring already occurring already are covering from global warming government report finds drastic impact of climate change on us extreme weather could kill all hundred and fifty thousand people each year in europe by the end of the century say...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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KQED
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eye 136
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and you really just can't change the man by changing staff.just is not going to work with donald trump. he doesn't want to be managed. he wants to be his own chief of staff, his own communications director, and his own chief counsel. >> woodruff: what do you see, barry bennett? >> well, i think that if his mission were to change donald trump that would probably be a failure in the end. i think his mission, though, is to make trump better. every player needs a coach. this white house team has needed a coach for six months, frankly. and i hope that he is that good coach that they need-- an enforcer, systems, rules, processes all matter. and he seems-- the first three days-- i know it's a short time to judge him, but i'm pretty excited about those three days. >> woodruff: well, ther there aa few reports coming out, apparently the door to the oval office open to everybody, or many, is now closed. there's some discipline there. and we're also noticing the president isn't tweeting as mup. now it's only three days. >> three days. >> woodruff: but may
and you really just can't change the man by changing staff.just is not going to work with donald trump. he doesn't want to be managed. he wants to be his own chief of staff, his own communications director, and his own chief counsel. >> woodruff: what do you see, barry bennett? >> well, i think that if his mission were to change donald trump that would probably be a failure in the end. i think his mission, though, is to make trump better. every player needs a coach. this white house...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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but yes, you can make changes that are very precise, imagine, imagine being able to make a single change to a single letter in the 3 billion base pairs of dna in a human cell. that is the kind of accuracy that we have with this technology. walter: explain to me the scientific and maybe we'll get to the moral difference, of doing that, in a human being or in a cell, or animals which is perhaps easier and doing it in the germ line. what does it mean to do it in the germ line. >> when we talk about doing it in an adult person, or anything or plant or animal, we're talking about making changes to the cell and ways that the dna changes are not heritable by future generations. in the germ line, that is not changed. those changes become part of the entire organism, and the cells are allowed to develop into an embryo. and those changes can be passed on to future generations. becomes a permanent alteration. it is sort of changing the evolution of the species at that point. walter: but our evolution is always change, right, so what is the difference here? here, we are doing a targeted fashion, mak
but yes, you can make changes that are very precise, imagine, imagine being able to make a single change to a single letter in the 3 billion base pairs of dna in a human cell. that is the kind of accuracy that we have with this technology. walter: explain to me the scientific and maybe we'll get to the moral difference, of doing that, in a human being or in a cell, or animals which is perhaps easier and doing it in the germ line. what does it mean to do it in the germ line. >> when we...
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Aug 11, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 110
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they changed. most of all, brains change. circuits form. neurons wor weekend, patterns grow and brains expand and as a result, people change and they can change extraordinarily. some examples of it, change in people that can occur over the course of decades. a man who moves me enormously, a man by the name of john newton was a british theologian, he was a leading abolitionist and played a central role in the banning of slavery at the beginning of the 1800s in england. john newton spent the early decades of his adult life as the captain of the slave ship, and after he retired from that, he spent decades as a local person investing in the slave trade and growing rich from it until one day something changed in him. something changed, something changed and he celebrated it to the thing he is most known for historically in a hymn that he wrote, amazing grace. another example, a man, who on the morning of december 6, 1941 was the lead pilot and one of the squadrons that took off from an air force base in japan and attacked pearl harbor. he was on
they changed. most of all, brains change. circuits form. neurons wor weekend, patterns grow and brains expand and as a result, people change and they can change extraordinarily. some examples of it, change in people that can occur over the course of decades. a man who moves me enormously, a man by the name of john newton was a british theologian, he was a leading abolitionist and played a central role in the banning of slavery at the beginning of the 1800s in england. john newton spent the...
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Aug 13, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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eye 85
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in order for the climate change issue to be relevant to us, climate change organizations need to hire more people of color, number one. but they also need to try to make their message relevant to the communities that they are trying to canvas in. >> i want to add another piece of that. i was in chicago. and byp100 was running around talking about police violence. one of the kids said to me -- i see you have a flint t-shirt on. do you know that chicago has some of the highest lead levels in the elementary schools? i had no idea. here we have a natural organizer, already in the streets. out there passing his message along. and one of his side items that he talked to me about was environmental justice. until we get funded, until we get funded -- then guess what? it is a nonstarter. there has to be an entity --what is it? what is the percentage of the black and latino vote? somewhere around 45%? we are a part of this process? if you want us to vote on these issues and if you want to win on these issues, a very easy way to do that is to organize in these communities. that is a simple point
in order for the climate change issue to be relevant to us, climate change organizations need to hire more people of color, number one. but they also need to try to make their message relevant to the communities that they are trying to canvas in. >> i want to add another piece of that. i was in chicago. and byp100 was running around talking about police violence. one of the kids said to me -- i see you have a flint t-shirt on. do you know that chicago has some of the highest lead levels...
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that would mean changing the whole entire system changing the industry we know here in nova scotia where i'm at right now in nova scotia we have thirty two hundred people that work for michelin tires there was some talk about moving some of the operations to the states or leaving some things in canada if you if you move this supply chain you're trying to change it around so companies will just get up and leave north america all together because they could actually save money by working from let's say europe or from asia so the supply chains that we have right now are actually helpful to the people that we have our labor markets here in north america can canadians are not in competition with americans when it comes to even moving across the border we make the same type of wages you do so it's not about somebody trying to undercut somebody else that same way with the supply chains they are relevant to one another we work on the same level and that has to be maintained and kept up to date and of course pushed forward so people are hoping here at least that nafta does stay the same when it c
that would mean changing the whole entire system changing the industry we know here in nova scotia where i'm at right now in nova scotia we have thirty two hundred people that work for michelin tires there was some talk about moving some of the operations to the states or leaving some things in canada if you if you move this supply chain you're trying to change it around so companies will just get up and leave north america all together because they could actually save money by working from...
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promise to me that he will change his policy he will change his internal and international policy that he will respect democratic values much more has them here because he was just relating to the verdict seriously in the country the promise to me is that he will change his position the ways of russia and the ways that conflict regions and he will begin the negotiation process but i remember quite well be able to solves. and eight when we were very near to as they were in applies the. country doing to people around here. just were doing and. idolizes they were giving to. these i saw that unfortunately i will have no any kind of mechanisms to every very serious problems for the country in the future and of course i said. either you are destined to doing what you promised or i will leave because i don't want to be a part of the process process which is reading my country in absolutely wrong direction and. very serious problems because of why i decided to leave will eventually do came back when you founded the democratic movement united georgia. what move the to do to come back only war o
promise to me that he will change his policy he will change his internal and international policy that he will respect democratic values much more has them here because he was just relating to the verdict seriously in the country the promise to me is that he will change his position the ways of russia and the ways that conflict regions and he will begin the negotiation process but i remember quite well be able to solves. and eight when we were very near to as they were in applies the. country...
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Aug 8, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
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changes in demographics, we've made some changes lately. that hasn't been terribly significant going forward. so we reject the larger deficits in social securities announces as does the trustees. they see the 75 year actuarial balance of being negative 1% of gdp. about half a percentage point smaller than ours, not a huge difference but a difference. again, a lot of that is actually gdp growth, projected gdp growth going forward. and a projected shortfall between income and cost. that's a little bit different. they see it at about 1.5%. we see that 1.5%, about four percentage point smaller -- face it at 1.5, we see it at 1.9%. different projections of factors that influence things, taxable earnings. we see lower interest rates. we have slower economic growth. in fact, we see potential economic growth settling in at about 1.8, 1.9% of gdp. and that one comes from if you want to see a simple recipe, look at productivity, labor force growth. we have labor growth challenge with aging baby boomers. we just adjusted our forecasted immigration, fo
changes in demographics, we've made some changes lately. that hasn't been terribly significant going forward. so we reject the larger deficits in social securities announces as does the trustees. they see the 75 year actuarial balance of being negative 1% of gdp. about half a percentage point smaller than ours, not a huge difference but a difference. again, a lot of that is actually gdp growth, projected gdp growth going forward. and a projected shortfall between income and cost. that's a...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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if this bill becomes law, that will begin to change. we will also begin to attract the very best, most haunted -- most talented workers from around the country who do not , drive down wages for working-class americans and who more jobs forte all americans, including the immigrants. it is a sensible, incremental, common sense step toward reforming the immigration system
if this bill becomes law, that will begin to change. we will also begin to attract the very best, most haunted -- most talented workers from around the country who do not , drive down wages for working-class americans and who more jobs forte all americans, including the immigrants. it is a sensible, incremental, common sense step toward reforming the immigration system
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Aug 8, 2017
08/17
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KTVU
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now that has changed.peratures, which were cold in june and july, kept the coast and the city cool. they were hard-pressed to get above 66 or 67. the ocean temperatures have now come up so the lows on the coast and in the city are warmer. inland temperatures, which were hot for a long time, are now actually below average because the fog bank has lifted and we have an area of low pressure coming in. thunderstorm activity associated with that low continues to fire up over the mountains, especially late in the afternoon and in the evening. also in northeast california. and even in mendocino county. i can see those building yesterday. there is a little bit of spin right there. there is still a component. i think that will replace the main low that just went through. that keeps our pattern on hold. 60s, 70s and 80s for the highs. a few 90s inland. everyone is close on the lows. 58, half moon bay. hayward, 61. 62, kelseyville. upper 50s in windso
now that has changed.peratures, which were cold in june and july, kept the coast and the city cool. they were hard-pressed to get above 66 or 67. the ocean temperatures have now come up so the lows on the coast and in the city are warmer. inland temperatures, which were hot for a long time, are now actually below average because the fog bank has lifted and we have an area of low pressure coming in. thunderstorm activity associated with that low continues to fire up over the mountains,...
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changed a lot of and. a little more closely than they were before straight out of telling his secret strange fan encounters plus how he's changed over the years will be right back. all the world. and all the news companies merely players but what kind of part is r t america r t america offers more artsy american personnel. many ways to use landscape just like the real news big names good actors. and in the end you could never. so much park in all the worlds all the world all the world's a stage and we are definitely a player. called the feeling. every the world should experience the. role. according to josh. welcome to the world come along for the ride. as you know that work better. yet. the. beast. back with high school can't wait for the big three is going to go all former n.b.a. and college players to not just all n.b.a. you have to be retired from nambiar you have to be over thirty and ready to go big three dot com for one is coming to your city and for more information you're only says continue to be
changed a lot of and. a little more closely than they were before straight out of telling his secret strange fan encounters plus how he's changed over the years will be right back. all the world. and all the news companies merely players but what kind of part is r t america r t america offers more artsy american personnel. many ways to use landscape just like the real news big names good actors. and in the end you could never. so much park in all the worlds all the world all the world's a stage...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 27
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you changed it, you are trying to change it from within the company.that is a very good question. you need to be successful in the short term, yet not lose in the long-term. this is the balance you need to strike. it is that simple. in essence you need to keep the difference between the short-term aspect and the long-term aspect. you just need to keep the distance very close. because the wider it gets, the more active it is to say hey, this is the performance cap i want now. francine: it was pretty controversial when you went to see vladimir putin a couple years ago. are you ever concerned about being controversial? joe: the intent was not to be controversial. francine: in march 2014, joe kaeser met with vladimir putin at his residence outside moscow. it was days after russia had annexed crimea and just as the west was launching its own showdown. president obama: together, we have condemned russia's invasion of ukraine and rejected the legitimacy of the crimean referendum. joe: the outcome was complicated, to put it positively. because first of all, i
you changed it, you are trying to change it from within the company.that is a very good question. you need to be successful in the short term, yet not lose in the long-term. this is the balance you need to strike. it is that simple. in essence you need to keep the difference between the short-term aspect and the long-term aspect. you just need to keep the distance very close. because the wider it gets, the more active it is to say hey, this is the performance cap i want now. francine: it was...
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Aug 10, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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eye 89
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i was just wondering, how change? guest: ozone and climate are two things, i'm not entirely familiar what that be.age might host: murphy, north carolina, there, a watching republican. caller: good morning. host: morning. caller: how much consideration they take into radient heat blacktop, skyscrapers, concrete, let's face it, it city all night long, every is still warm after the sun goes down. point.et's take that guest: yeah, when you talk about limate change, more spatially different, you know, temperature monitors and weather monitoring monitors, but yeah, there is such a thing as heat island effect and it will feel hotter in the concrete new york city or washington, d.c. than it would packed area ely with more green space. colman, white house reporter, thank you very much. reporting on eenews.net. appreciate the conversation. break and to take a come back and open the phone lines. you can continue talking about public policy or political debates happening in washington. there are the phone numbers on screen. o to
i was just wondering, how change? guest: ozone and climate are two things, i'm not entirely familiar what that be.age might host: murphy, north carolina, there, a watching republican. caller: good morning. host: morning. caller: how much consideration they take into radient heat blacktop, skyscrapers, concrete, let's face it, it city all night long, every is still warm after the sun goes down. point.et's take that guest: yeah, when you talk about limate change, more spatially different, you...
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133
Aug 22, 2017
08/17
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MSNBCW
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he talked about a change but there was no real change in what he was talking about and he talked about principled reason without principles or without a realistic view towards what would be necessary to achieve what he talked about, which is victory. we're for the going to achieve any kind of victory in afghanistan. as it happens, trump was probably right on the campaign trail. this is not a place where we are going to succeed aand he brough this up tonight and, as you say, he did so in a way that rushed pence in. we have to ask, why did he do it? he did it to change the conversation. he did it to get away from the disaster of last week. he did it in a way that brought that up. because if you listened to the first part of the speech, what did you hear? we want to fight against bigotry. we are one people. we must be tolerant. we are fighting for each other. he ignored the fact that he wants to kick lgbt troops out of the military. and he ignored the fact that the principle agitate for for divisions in the united states of america right now is the president of the united states. >> evan,
he talked about a change but there was no real change in what he was talking about and he talked about principled reason without principles or without a realistic view towards what would be necessary to achieve what he talked about, which is victory. we're for the going to achieve any kind of victory in afghanistan. as it happens, trump was probably right on the campaign trail. this is not a place where we are going to succeed aand he brough this up tonight and, as you say, he did so in a way...