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Jan 7, 2019
01/19
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there is a level of unconscious and conscious bias that occurs in medical settings. >> reporter: charles johnsonas turned his tragedy into action. maternal deaths act. it became law last year. it requires states to review every pregnancy-related death. charles' other fight, making sure his boys remember their mother. >> the toughest question my sons have ever asked me is, is mommy mad at me? why won't we she come home? >> reporter: his answer, mommy is in heaven and loves you forever. >> i think kyra's legacy will be one of being able to show people that regardless of the ances, t wins. >>> ts welker for that report. >>> just ahead, a preview of the biggest night in college football. >>> plus u.s. and china trade talks could calm market mayhem. cnbc's steve sedgwick will break it down and tell us what to expect on wall street today. it looks like jonathan on a date with his wife. entresto is a heart failure medicine that helps your heart so you can keep on doing what you love. at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. it helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. d
there is a level of unconscious and conscious bias that occurs in medical settings. >> reporter: charles johnsonas turned his tragedy into action. maternal deaths act. it became law last year. it requires states to review every pregnancy-related death. charles' other fight, making sure his boys remember their mother. >> the toughest question my sons have ever asked me is, is mommy mad at me? why won't we she come home? >> reporter: his answer, mommy is in heaven and loves you...
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Jan 6, 2019
01/19
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there is a level of unconscious and conscious bias that occurs in medical settings. >> reporter: charles johnson has turned his tragedy into action. helping to pass the preventing maternal deaths act. it became law last year. it requires states to review every pregnancy-related death. charles' other fight, making sure his boys remember their mother. >> the toughest question my sons have ever asked me is, is mommy mad at me? why won't we she come home? >> reporter: his answer, mommy is in heaven and loves you forever. >> i think kyra's legacy will be one of being able to show people that regardless of the circumstances, that love always wins. >> charles says his message to the medical community, listen to women when they say something doesn't feel right. >> it's so heartbreaking. what can hospitals do? >> hospitals across the country are starting to develop protocols to deal with emergencies like kyra's. cedars-sinai, the hospital in los angeles where kyra passed away, says they can't comment on specific cases, but added it thoroughly investigates any situation where there are concerns about a pa
there is a level of unconscious and conscious bias that occurs in medical settings. >> reporter: charles johnson has turned his tragedy into action. helping to pass the preventing maternal deaths act. it became law last year. it requires states to review every pregnancy-related death. charles' other fight, making sure his boys remember their mother. >> the toughest question my sons have ever asked me is, is mommy mad at me? why won't we she come home? >> reporter: his answer,...
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Jan 14, 2019
01/19
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howard johnson, ramada i think represents valuation. charles: folks we have to leave it there. get you on later. hopefully you come back in the show, give us ideas off the air. new warnings, artificial intelligence could replace 40 to 47% of all jobs next 10 or 15 years. will new jobs be created before those jobs displaced or are we seeing a crisis we've never seen before. >>> apple need a content provider this year before it's too late? maybe netflix? we'll be right back. ve such a g. thanks to you, we will. this is why voya helps reach today's goals... all while helping you to and through retirement. can you help with these? we're more of the plan, invest and protect kind of help... voya. helping you to and through retirement. metastatic breast cancer is relentless, but i'm relentless too. mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i. i treat my mbc with everyday verzenio, the only one of its kind that can be taken every day. verzenio is the only cdk4 & 6 inhibitor approved with hormonal therapy that can be taken every day for post menopausal women with hr+, her2 negative m
howard johnson, ramada i think represents valuation. charles: folks we have to leave it there. get you on later. hopefully you come back in the show, give us ideas off the air. new warnings, artificial intelligence could replace 40 to 47% of all jobs next 10 or 15 years. will new jobs be created before those jobs displaced or are we seeing a crisis we've never seen before. >>> apple need a content provider this year before it's too late? maybe netflix? we'll be right back. ve such a g....
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Jan 5, 2019
01/19
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house dinner honoring america's space team, president johnson praised the leadership of nasa's outgoing director james webb. ♪ on hand was charlesfor his solo flight 41 years ago, and the astronauts from apollo seven and apollo eight, who earned their place in history. they autographed a document which will hang in the treaty room, alongside mementos of earlier space men who visited the mansion. president johnson: before the countdown for apollo 8 begins, i want to say to the men in this group, we pray for you, we think of you, we wish you godspeed, we wish you a safe return, and the only person in the world that is going to be more concerned about you than i am is the girls who wait for your return. >> 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, nine, we have a condition sequence -- ignition sequence start, the engines are on. 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, we have commenced. we have lift off. 7:51 a.m. eastern standard time. we have cleared the tower. [beeping] >> craft clear. narrator: 65 years after orville and wilbur wright piloted the first plane over kitty hawk, the apollo eight crew was launched on mans first trip to the moon. it was described as an absolu
house dinner honoring america's space team, president johnson praised the leadership of nasa's outgoing director james webb. ♪ on hand was charlesfor his solo flight 41 years ago, and the astronauts from apollo seven and apollo eight, who earned their place in history. they autographed a document which will hang in the treaty room, alongside mementos of earlier space men who visited the mansion. president johnson: before the countdown for apollo 8 begins, i want to say to the men in this...
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. >> reporter: when kira and charlesir johnson met in fo 2004, the planned to spend forever toe ther. they werjoyed when they welcomed their first son, charles>> he's handsome. >> reporter: their second son soon followedd delivehrough a routine c section after a he will the thi pregnancy. it was apr 12th, 2016. >> hey. on reporter: their celebra quickly turned to concern though when charles noticed blood in kira's catheter. he alerted doctors, but says minutes turneded into hours. >> i'm begging and pleading for them to do>> something. eporter: finally, he says after ten hour us, doctors decided she need ed surgery, bu u it was too late. she hemorrhaged to death. she was 39 years old. >> never imagined that i'd be sitting hereoday and that we would have left the hospital without my wife. >> reporter: about 700 women die each y in the u.s. due tor pregnancy delivery complications and african-american mothers are four times more likely to be b victims than white women. dr. montgomery wright says the causes of racial despairty aren't fully known. >> i think there's level of unconscious and conscious bias that occurs in medical settings. >> repo
. >> reporter: when kira and charlesir johnson met in fo 2004, the planned to spend forever toe ther. they werjoyed when they welcomed their first son, charles>> he's handsome. >> reporter: their second son soon followedd delivehrough a routine c section after a he will the thi pregnancy. it was apr 12th, 2016. >> hey. on reporter: their celebra quickly turned to concern though when charles noticed blood in kira's catheter. he alerted doctors, but says minutes turneded...
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Jan 14, 2019
01/19
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are all students of the great charles black, who would want to focus not only on the text, but the structure of the constitution. benno: i should mention that andrew johnson was impeached for trying to fire the secretary of war, stanton, and in doing that, he violated an act that said that certain positions, including the secretary of war, the person holding that office could not be removed by the president without the advice and consent of the senate. that is itself plainly unconstitutional. akhil: the tenure of office act. benno: yes, because a president cannot be an executive in office unless he can fire those who work for him. akhil: and washington insisted on that. the first congress agreed with him. benno: right, and you cannot have it any other way unless you have an executive. there is one very large consequence to the argument that philip and akhil have, with which i completely agree, that impeachment is a legal proceeding and not purely political. the essence of a legal proceeding is that like cases have to be decided like. so the grounds of impeachment have to be -- if you impeach a president whom you don't like, who is not of your party, with
are all students of the great charles black, who would want to focus not only on the text, but the structure of the constitution. benno: i should mention that andrew johnson was impeached for trying to fire the secretary of war, stanton, and in doing that, he violated an act that said that certain positions, including the secretary of war, the person holding that office could not be removed by the president without the advice and consent of the senate. that is itself plainly unconstitutional....
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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the gentlemen i know who is doing work in this area is charles roman, involved in the gary johnson campaignand trying to set up mutual aid organizations. i think it's come to gated and a lot of it has to do with the rise of the welfare state and substituting war, mutual aid a lot of things going on in eminent domain, licensing restrictions that it never stating these poor neighborhoods and people used to write about that they would go into these poor neighborhoods, black and immigrant you name it 100 years ago and comment on the different mutual aid societies. and that just is not as much the case. i think it has a lot to do with all the things put together. we are destroying the infrastructure, the social in in the structure, socio- one in the back there. >> you know of years ago there was case regarding a gay person b review service by a baker and then the supreme court ruled in favor of the bigger because it was his right so wouldn't it be beneficial if like people were allowed to reject those certain ethnicities because it won't necessarily do harm to society but rather to the business
the gentlemen i know who is doing work in this area is charles roman, involved in the gary johnson campaignand trying to set up mutual aid organizations. i think it's come to gated and a lot of it has to do with the rise of the welfare state and substituting war, mutual aid a lot of things going on in eminent domain, licensing restrictions that it never stating these poor neighborhoods and people used to write about that they would go into these poor neighborhoods, black and immigrant you name...
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Jan 16, 2019
01/19
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johnson. hadley, her dear friend. norma, bob, jesse, again, lorraine, viney, and again county commissioner ray charles brooks who was also someone that dionne mentored and who was her precinct administrator. but also a very, very clear friend. we lost a giant in fort worth by losing dionne. she will be missed because she was a friend to so many and always had so many colorful and wonderful and humorous things to say. but i can can tell you that our city is better off, our county is better off because of dionne moves to fort worth with her husband and helped make it a bert place for everybody. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from missouri, mrs. wagner, for five minutes. mr. speaker, i rise today to stand with the hundreds of thousands of americans who are traveling to washington for the 46th annual march for life. fighting for their rights of the most vulnerable americans and my most precious responsibility since long before i was elected to congress. those notably i can remember marching to defend our unborn children when i was pregnant with my son steven in january of 1990. an
johnson. hadley, her dear friend. norma, bob, jesse, again, lorraine, viney, and again county commissioner ray charles brooks who was also someone that dionne mentored and who was her precinct administrator. but also a very, very clear friend. we lost a giant in fort worth by losing dionne. she will be missed because she was a friend to so many and always had so many colorful and wonderful and humorous things to say. but i can can tell you that our city is better off, our county is better off...
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Jan 3, 2019
01/19
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johnson. >> senators at that time, ofticularly everett dirksen illinois, begin to look back at the charles sumnerl and they shape thenowledge to 1964 civil rights act in a way that it would stand up to muster.tional >> it received bipartisan support of more than two-thirds of the members of the house and senate. an overwhelming majority of republicans and democrats voted for it. >> warm applause for members of parties as the president sets to work. it is work. nearly 100 pens to affix his signature. republicano to leader everett dirksen and democratic whip, hubert humphrey. in many ways, the 1964 civil rights act is the culmination of effort of charles sumner and the fact that the 64 civil act woodconstitutional challenges is due in good part to the experiences of the sumner act in the 1880's. >> the old chamber where sumner conflicts aree debated and compromises reached is also where future supreme justice, roger tawny, becomes the senate's first ever rejection of a cabinet nominee, casualty of the personal and political war between president henry jackson and senator clay. his 1834 defeat for t
johnson. >> senators at that time, ofticularly everett dirksen illinois, begin to look back at the charles sumnerl and they shape thenowledge to 1964 civil rights act in a way that it would stand up to muster.tional >> it received bipartisan support of more than two-thirds of the members of the house and senate. an overwhelming majority of republicans and democrats voted for it. >> warm applause for members of parties as the president sets to work. it is work. nearly 100 pens...
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Jan 6, 2019
01/19
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johnson. >> senators at that time, particularly everett dirksen of illinois, begin to look back at the charles they use that knowledge to shape the 1964 civil rights act in a way that it would stand up to constitutional muster. >> it received the bipartisan support of more than two thirds of the members of both the house and the senate. an overwhelming majority of republicans as well as democrats voted for it. >> warm applause for members of both parties as the president sets to work. it is work. he uses nearly 100 pens to affix his signature. souvenirs go to republican leader everett dirksen and democratic whip, hubert humphrey. >> so in many ways, the 1964 civil rights act is the culmination of the efforts of charles sumner of the 1870's, and the fact that the '64 civil rights act withstood constitutional challenges is due in good part to the experiences of the sumner civil rights act in the 1880's. ♪ narrator: the old chamber where sumner was caned, where conflicts are debated and compromises reached is also where future supreme court justice roger tony becomes the senate's first ever rejec
johnson. >> senators at that time, particularly everett dirksen of illinois, begin to look back at the charles they use that knowledge to shape the 1964 civil rights act in a way that it would stand up to constitutional muster. >> it received the bipartisan support of more than two thirds of the members of both the house and the senate. an overwhelming majority of republicans as well as democrats voted for it. >> warm applause for members of both parties as the president sets...
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Jan 17, 2019
01/19
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charles: blake, you have got to love it. joining me to discuss this latest salvo, "wall street journal" editorial page writer jillian melchior, and editor-in-chief of "axios," nick johnson is good one. it is a pretty good comeback. he got on excursion, public relations event. if you want to fly commercial your prerogative. >> this is clearly escalation. this is not what i expected. i called the hill reporter. what is the scene on the capitol. it is dead. there is no negotiations going on. no leadership involved talking here. very slow. instead of moving in direction of compromise, they're moving in the opposite direction. that is not something making nancy pelosi come to negotiating table. charles: jillian. >> this is not great sign for solution to the shut down. both sides are shut down. a lot of critical government functions still going on but a lot of really important ones suspended. one of the most important ones talking about immigration is 3/4 of the immigration judges are not hearing cases. we're looking at backlog of more than 800,000 cases this is extending it by 20,000 per week that the shutdown goes on. for each of those you will see more immigrants, some who
charles: blake, you have got to love it. joining me to discuss this latest salvo, "wall street journal" editorial page writer jillian melchior, and editor-in-chief of "axios," nick johnson is good one. it is a pretty good comeback. he got on excursion, public relations event. if you want to fly commercial your prerogative. >> this is clearly escalation. this is not what i expected. i called the hill reporter. what is the scene on the capitol. it is dead. there is no...