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Oct 31, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN2
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danielle: got it. it in the more general question, going to ask this last question before we get a closing question which will serve help wrap up the whole thing. an audience question do some political factions today want all opposition silenced on media. the sounds like your opinion on what you think here. speech of the main but it should not happen . that would be my reaction . there may be some people who believe that but have extraordinary traditions of free speech and democracy in our country. some of them have been under assault that should not be the case i hope the wisdom and common sense will prevail. that is my reaction to that. frank: one of my favorite pieces of writing john milton, tract john milton, the epic poet original enlightenment thinker wrote about the virtues of speech. now ultimately we do need to be tested by things that we can't stand. and then i do worry that as a society whether it is because it's a bubble or because of gun culture the papers orthodoxy, we cease to be exposed
danielle: got it. it in the more general question, going to ask this last question before we get a closing question which will serve help wrap up the whole thing. an audience question do some political factions today want all opposition silenced on media. the sounds like your opinion on what you think here. speech of the main but it should not happen . that would be my reaction . there may be some people who believe that but have extraordinary traditions of free speech and democracy in our...
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Oct 25, 2020
10/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 569
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no way daniel ferry could have committed both crimes.ve jaclyn moore went back to the boxes and binders piled high on her desk. >> i felt lost. i decided i need to start from the beginning and see what information derek had when he first got the case. >> and so began the education of a detective. she started reading through pages and pages of annie's notes and journal entries. who does annie turn out to be, the more you learn about her? >> she's very lost. she wants to be loved by anyone and everyone. >> and jaclyn saw that there was one person in particular annie wanted to be loved by. chris bagshaw. his name was scribbled all over her journals. veronica remembered annie gushing about him. >> she liked him. he was different. he had enough of the bad boy going on that he wasn't a goody two-shoes, so she didn't feel like he looked down at her. >> annie's diaries revealed something else too. >> she and chris had sex. >> chris was the boy annie had slept with just months before her death, after which remember, she lied about being pregnant.
no way daniel ferry could have committed both crimes.ve jaclyn moore went back to the boxes and binders piled high on her desk. >> i felt lost. i decided i need to start from the beginning and see what information derek had when he first got the case. >> and so began the education of a detective. she started reading through pages and pages of annie's notes and journal entries. who does annie turn out to be, the more you learn about her? >> she's very lost. she wants to be...
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just this morning daniel will know. we've got we've now got one of the people involved in the biden. in the biden's influence peddling in china. a guy named anthony but wilensky he's right there a need anything are in it senator cetera. and the press it's what they're trying to bury a bloody mountain it's getting to be rather too high to bury right they're not coming back from this you know and it will roll on and on and on this guy get an interview with chuck or carlson i hope your viewers can see if i stream or who are absolutely actually it will tell a lot of the story daniel and i are talking about it's all coming back home right just as daniel said. it but when it says daniel is that it will bury it we should even be talking about you know a free press because it's no longer free i mean it's all being done in broad daylight i mean you have all of these big tech companies censoring or one of the most well known along exe along the existing publications the new york post and everybody knows about it and no one really
just this morning daniel will know. we've got we've now got one of the people involved in the biden. in the biden's influence peddling in china. a guy named anthony but wilensky he's right there a need anything are in it senator cetera. and the press it's what they're trying to bury a bloody mountain it's getting to be rather too high to bury right they're not coming back from this you know and it will roll on and on and on this guy get an interview with chuck or carlson i hope your viewers can...
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and i are talking about it's all coming back home just as daniel said it what it is when it says daniel is that it went with very we should even be talking about you know a free press because it's no longer free i mean it's all being done in broad daylight i mean you have all of these big tech companies censoring or one of the most well known along igs along and that's the existing publications the new york post and everybody knows about it and no one really says no one protests you know who doesn't protest journalists don't protest this is what's really tear. all right you know i was a little boy when i was a little boy in the trade my age right now it was journalists that told the american people about what was going on in vietnam it was journalists the talked about the corruption of the nixon administration but now it's journalists when they're my primary function now is to slam other journalists for getting out of line mainstream journalists doing something that the place of independent journalism in this country is growing more significant by the day and let's let's broaden the def
and i are talking about it's all coming back home just as daniel said it what it is when it says daniel is that it went with very we should even be talking about you know a free press because it's no longer free i mean it's all being done in broad daylight i mean you have all of these big tech companies censoring or one of the most well known along igs along and that's the existing publications the new york post and everybody knows about it and no one really says no one protests you know who...
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. >> reporter: judge esther salas's son daniel was the light of her family.s about your son. >> danny was the love of our life. from the moment he was born. we struggled to have a baby. i had four miscarriages, three before him, one after him. from the moment that little boy came to this world he was the center of our universe. >> reporter: her only child murdered in their home. her husband, mark anderl, seriously wounded, targeted by a hateful killer because of who she was. >> he hated me because i was a woman. he hated me because i was latina. and that was the source of hate. that was, you know, what i had done, was i had the nerve to become a judge. >> reporter: for the first time since the tragedy judge salas sitting down recounting the devastation she and her family experienced this summer. her family had just spent the weekend celebrating daniel's 20th birthday with his friends at their home in new jersey. >> july 19th. walk us through that day. >> it was -- it was a great weekend. and danny was downstairs talking to me. as he always did. he said, "keep
. >> reporter: judge esther salas's son daniel was the light of her family.s about your son. >> danny was the love of our life. from the moment he was born. we struggled to have a baby. i had four miscarriages, three before him, one after him. from the moment that little boy came to this world he was the center of our universe. >> reporter: her only child murdered in their home. her husband, mark anderl, seriously wounded, targeted by a hateful killer because of who she was....
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Oct 15, 2020
10/20
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KSTS
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suárez. >> noticias telemundo. >> fuerza, daniel.se que hunde a las familias hispanas, esto es, el domo del dinero, por ustedes, sus presentadoras . >>> muy buenas noches, ¿ quÉ tal amigos ? este es el domo del
suárez. >> noticias telemundo. >> fuerza, daniel.se que hunde a las familias hispanas, esto es, el domo del dinero, por ustedes, sus presentadoras . >>> muy buenas noches, ¿ quÉ tal amigos ? este es el domo del
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Oct 6, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN3
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the third member of my trio is daniel webster. daniel webster was born in new hampshire. he was -- he became a lawyer. and he was probably the most gifted of the three. daniel webster is probably the greatest orator in american political history. one of the things that drew me to these three guys, very powerful speakers. very persuasive speakers. one of the things that drew me to write about them was that i'm kind of a sucker for people who know how to use the language. now, i'm a writer so that makes me interested. but one of the things i tell my writing students is, there are sort of styles of language. there are ways of writing, depending on who you're writing for and what you're trying to accomplish. when i chose to write about the three guys, i knew tifs going to be transported back to a time when political rhetoric was really important. now, this because, to put it bluntly, there wasn't a lot else going on at the time. so when daniel webster was going to give a speech, this was high entertainment. this is why, for example, some of you will know or know of the lincol
the third member of my trio is daniel webster. daniel webster was born in new hampshire. he was -- he became a lawyer. and he was probably the most gifted of the three. daniel webster is probably the greatest orator in american political history. one of the things that drew me to these three guys, very powerful speakers. very persuasive speakers. one of the things that drew me to write about them was that i'm kind of a sucker for people who know how to use the language. now, i'm a writer so...
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Oct 25, 2020
10/20
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CNBC
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so two archer daniels slides so archer daniels the up and out good up trend. what is not to like?are we back to we are exactly back to the 2018 high circle that high, and you see the arrow implying breaking out. the more authority a level has, the more authoritative the resolution final chart. this level has been in play all of the way back to 2013 and 2014 so a breakout here, and we think that's what is going to happen, deere has already done it. archer daniels is a powerful thing. we think grains are telling us that is what will happen >> tony, what do you think >> if you look at archer daniels on paper, it looks foreign it doesn't have a lot of revenue growth, operates on thin margins, but if you lock at the fact, it has a strong track record of boating earnings and having dividends for the last 45 years. so when you couple that with the fact it is outperforming its sector, i think it trades at a reasonable multiple of 15 times next year's earnings, i do think you have some upside it will be a slow grind, but that's what i like that's the type of money you would use on a slow g
so two archer daniels slides so archer daniels the up and out good up trend. what is not to like?are we back to we are exactly back to the 2018 high circle that high, and you see the arrow implying breaking out. the more authority a level has, the more authoritative the resolution final chart. this level has been in play all of the way back to 2013 and 2014 so a breakout here, and we think that's what is going to happen, deere has already done it. archer daniels is a powerful thing. we think...
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Oct 6, 2020
10/20
by
CSPAN3
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eye 69
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the third trio was daniel webster. danny webster was born in new hampshire, he became a lawyer and he was probably the most gifted of the three. daniel webster is probably the greatest orator in american political history. one of the things the drew me to these three guys were very powerful speakers, very persuasive speakers. and one of the things it truman right about them was that i'm kind of a sucker for people who know how to use the language. i'm a writer so that makes me interested in that stuff but also one of the things i constantly tell my writing students is that there are styles of language, there are ways of writing. when i chose to write i knew i was going to be transported back to a time when political rhetoric was really important. now this because, to put it very bluntly there was not a lot else going on. so when daniel webster was going to get a speech, this was high entertainment. this is why for example some of you will know of the lincoln douglas debates of 1858. this was the big deal and american p
the third trio was daniel webster. danny webster was born in new hampshire, he became a lawyer and he was probably the most gifted of the three. daniel webster is probably the greatest orator in american political history. one of the things the drew me to these three guys were very powerful speakers, very persuasive speakers. and one of the things it truman right about them was that i'm kind of a sucker for people who know how to use the language. i'm a writer so that makes me interested in...
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Oct 24, 2020
10/20
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KQED
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yo >> danielle,created an app called not nod through hope lab. can you tell us what it does and how it is meant to help e colludents? >> sure. hope lab uses technology to build resilience and coping skills among young people, adolescents and young adults. with nod, we wanted to rerdce the of the impact of loneliness on young people's well-being. create a sense of community, like will s describing outside of the app experience. nod has three main features. first, it gives students ideas, which e prompts based onthe science of social connecting, that help students take small, achievable steps toward meeting new friends, going deeper with people they start to have connections with in college. the second feature of nod's reflections but these are short, and apt exercises that help students process thin fe that come with taking a chance in meeting new people and reflecting that sometimes that es well and wanting those feelings to s and sometimes it doesn't go so well and wanting to help students reflect the with the lens of self compassion. third, eve
yo >> danielle,created an app called not nod through hope lab. can you tell us what it does and how it is meant to help e colludents? >> sure. hope lab uses technology to build resilience and coping skills among young people, adolescents and young adults. with nod, we wanted to rerdce the of the impact of loneliness on young people's well-being. create a sense of community, like will s describing outside of the app experience. nod has three main features. first, it gives students...
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Oct 26, 2020
10/20
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KQED
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joining me now by sky from san francisco is daniel raymo, the senior director ofresearch at hope lab, a nonprofit that creates digital tools such as apps and video games to improve e health and well-ing of young people. joining me by sky from chicago is will coleman, senior coatmbia college and intern hope lab. thank you ford both joining. will, can you share with us allenges you have experienced this year, especially compared to pre-covid days? >> yes, so i'm currently a senior acolumbia college chicago, and with having this, i understa the challenges that come with school, the depression can be involved. anxiety on a regular basis, but adding a global pandemic on p of all of that can really raise the bar dramatically within all those, so way more anxious, depression bicr in, being i'm behind the screen for eight hours throughout the day n having minimumraction of real-life students, and that's one of the major parts about college, is the fact that you can work with students from all around the country and workin ineld that is passionate to you personally, so when things are shifted
joining me now by sky from san francisco is daniel raymo, the senior director ofresearch at hope lab, a nonprofit that creates digital tools such as apps and video games to improve e health and well-ing of young people. joining me by sky from chicago is will coleman, senior coatmbia college and intern hope lab. thank you ford both joining. will, can you share with us allenges you have experienced this year, especially compared to pre-covid days? >> yes, so i'm currently a senior acolumbia...
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Oct 9, 2020
10/20
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KSTS
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las mujeres embarazadas >> y hoy en los deportes al detalle carlos nos tendrá una entrevista con danieln san josé para quienes tienen negocios que no han pagado el alquiler tenemos detalles >> estas son las imágenes satelitales de el a filante hablaremos de su trayectoria en el ojo del huracán que crece, el pronóstico al volver >> subtítulos patrocinados por: [información en pantalla] noticiero telemundo 48 el único en español 7 días a la semana primeros contigo . >> [música] . > miles de personas en méxico esperan el covid-19 permita retomar trasplantes pospuestos. los hospitales en este tiempo solo se realizan procedimientos médicos vigentes de córnea corazón, son 23,500 pacientes que esperan un trasplante y no solo los procedimientos médicos tuvieron que ser detenidos >> hay días que si y otros días que no baja la presión y nuevo nada más >> las autoridades de salud esperan que poco a poco se tome las cirugías ahora la lista de espera será más larga y el tiempo está en contra de los enfermos >> todos sabemos la importancia de lavarnos las manos frecuentemente para prevenir el coronav
las mujeres embarazadas >> y hoy en los deportes al detalle carlos nos tendrá una entrevista con danieln san josé para quienes tienen negocios que no han pagado el alquiler tenemos detalles >> estas son las imágenes satelitales de el a filante hablaremos de su trayectoria en el ojo del huracán que crece, el pronóstico al volver >> subtítulos patrocinados por: [información en pantalla] noticiero telemundo 48 el único en español 7 días a la semana primeros contigo ....
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Oct 24, 2020
10/20
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KQED
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, reviewing the app. >> it sounds relike it ly motivates you to take action, which is different, danielle, that what we're seeing in other social media platforms. this is definitely a use of technology than, you r,ow, facebook or twit instagram, or snapshot, or tiktok, or many of the other platforms that young people may be on. items like there is sort of this paradox here that you are working through a technology that so samany people can lead to feelings of social isolation, can lead to feelings of loneliness, can lead to screen fatigue, frankly. but thu are using in a new way. can you talk to us about that paradox and how you have balanced that feeling and that n sense of technology? >> certainly. there are a lot of challenges around screen cedependand some risks that gen z face around bullying, screens social isolation killed but at hope lab, we think about ways that technology can also build communeay and also in resilience through building coping skills to help us do what we need to do to be happy, thrive, and live well. that's what we really tried to do with the nod app. one of the
, reviewing the app. >> it sounds relike it ly motivates you to take action, which is different, danielle, that what we're seeing in other social media platforms. this is definitely a use of technology than, you r,ow, facebook or twit instagram, or snapshot, or tiktok, or many of the other platforms that young people may be on. items like there is sort of this paradox here that you are working through a technology that so samany people can lead to feelings of social isolation, can lead to...
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Oct 3, 2020
10/20
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MSNBCW
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it was, in fact, daniel myers.'ll tell you, i got a little weak in the knees. >> two years after heather's body was found, daniel myers was arrested and charged with her murder. kotsopoulos thought myers might have lured heather to his trailer hoping to have sex with her and attacked her when she refused. you ever hear the name danny myers before? >> nope. >> never. >> she never talked about him? >> never. >> myers sat in jail for a year and a half. and then came word of a deal. in exchange for no death penalty, myers agreed to plead at sentencing, d.a. tim braun gave the bogle family a glimpse into heather's last moments. >> this was her body as it was discovered. >> as for heather's cut hair? braun said that was not just the final insult in a crime of passion. it was, he said, myers' deliberate and futile attempt to remove all traces of his dna from heather's body. >> heather bogle was the real hero in this case because she fought back, and that evidence was in her fingernails. >> she helped solve her -- >> she r
it was, in fact, daniel myers.'ll tell you, i got a little weak in the knees. >> two years after heather's body was found, daniel myers was arrested and charged with her murder. kotsopoulos thought myers might have lured heather to his trailer hoping to have sex with her and attacked her when she refused. you ever hear the name danny myers before? >> nope. >> never. >> she never talked about him? >> never. >> myers sat in jail for a year and a half. and then...
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headquarters aaron has been given danielle's case he knows this girl very well as he put her 1st been behind bars. interest so this is mr. he was convicted. to the resident 2070. and so he will do this 5 years and he will be eligible to be released sometime in 2022. thanks to danielle's tattoo and the information on her cellphone erin and his colleague sami have confirmed the identity of her new trafficker. rational in its. face. consistent with the best educated yet on and. his criminal record is already pretty full. and has human history. arrests for robbery fasts for burglary. yes for felony arrests in the past and usually only area yes war. the man is around 21 years old their text conversations clearly show the nature of their relationship. anything you do for daddy so he's telling her that she appreciates everything that she does for him and he is reframe himself as daddy which is our number one term. so he wants to know where she is why you're not responding when. very common term they never call by the 1st name they don't call him by their street names in the 1st on. the. air
headquarters aaron has been given danielle's case he knows this girl very well as he put her 1st been behind bars. interest so this is mr. he was convicted. to the resident 2070. and so he will do this 5 years and he will be eligible to be released sometime in 2022. thanks to danielle's tattoo and the information on her cellphone erin and his colleague sami have confirmed the identity of her new trafficker. rational in its. face. consistent with the best educated yet on and. his criminal record...
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Oct 28, 2020
10/20
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BLOOMBERG
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daniel: currently we are overweight u.s. and emerging markets as opposed to europe in our multi-asset portfolio, so it simply reflects that risk you see in europe, and in addition to that, the relative lack of tools, options and europe to compensate for that, be it monetary stimulus, fiscal stimulus, you just don't have as evers in china, or the u.s. for that matter. rightan: europe's present now is in america's near-term future. does it have to be that way? daniel: i think there's two things we need to keep in mind. whether it is the evolution of the pandemic itself, the number of infections and the number of deaths come from that point of view, i think it is certainly a possibility that europe is ahead of the curve in this sense, and this is what we are going to see in the u.s. but what is really going to matter more for the markets is the reaction to it. it is the restrictions driving the action in the market today. we've had the increase in infections and france since august, but the markets are relatively blase about th
daniel: currently we are overweight u.s. and emerging markets as opposed to europe in our multi-asset portfolio, so it simply reflects that risk you see in europe, and in addition to that, the relative lack of tools, options and europe to compensate for that, be it monetary stimulus, fiscal stimulus, you just don't have as evers in china, or the u.s. for that matter. rightan: europe's present now is in america's near-term future. does it have to be that way? daniel: i think there's two things...
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Oct 29, 2020
10/20
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MSNBCW
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>> terrified. >> daniel?> frightened and considering ex patri patriot. >> i would be most concerned about our civil rights going backwards. >> and if the results come in and biden is the new president, sarah? >> hopeful. >> relieved and hopeful. >> peaceful. >> it's really interesting to hear directly from each of you with your different experiences and at a time where people can feel so divided and also feel that it's hard to engage let alone change our own minds. i'll just say on behalf of myself, i appreciate you sharing how you came to your judgment last time, how you're doing it this time and everyone can go out and make up, as you did, make up their own minds, change their own minds if they want. appreciate it. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> and we will be right back. t >> and we will be right back with new rewards from chase freedom unlimited, i now earn even more cash back? oh i got to tell everyone. hey, rita! you now earn 3% on dining, including takeout! bon appetit. hey kim, you now earn
>> terrified. >> daniel?> frightened and considering ex patri patriot. >> i would be most concerned about our civil rights going backwards. >> and if the results come in and biden is the new president, sarah? >> hopeful. >> relieved and hopeful. >> peaceful. >> it's really interesting to hear directly from each of you with your different experiences and at a time where people can feel so divided and also feel that it's hard to engage let alone...
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the police officers now want to know how much money danielle is earning. well much of you may proceed over to. in 2 weeks it was it a week that it's a week ok so the only bit you tell me you make $10000.00 and all you know is hair and nails and food. those and that upsets you that you're working so hard you're putting your life in danger for somebody who's promising you i don't know what that's where my frustration comes out despite danielle's statement police are enabled to arrest shy stevie the teen claims she is no longer working for. not one i thought because i had just left the hospital and got out all she's working for herself now i think she i can just get up and get out of if then i think i think there are things that they cost less than the. 'd done you know has been in a foster home since the age of 13 and her mother left her and her father is a violent and in drug addict after running away she ended up in the hands of her 1st pin the 1st child she had with her pimp was placed in care she never saw it again she's now only 16 years old but already
the police officers now want to know how much money danielle is earning. well much of you may proceed over to. in 2 weeks it was it a week that it's a week ok so the only bit you tell me you make $10000.00 and all you know is hair and nails and food. those and that upsets you that you're working so hard you're putting your life in danger for somebody who's promising you i don't know what that's where my frustration comes out despite danielle's statement police are enabled to arrest shy stevie...
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Oct 8, 2020
10/20
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BLOOMBERG
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joining me now is avail cofounder and ceo daniel hawkins . technology works -- tell eyes how the technology us how thell technology works? daniel: surgeries of all types need outside expertise in the operating room to be able to conduct those surgeries. the way the technology works is, we have a dedicated piece of siphon build hardware that has cameras and image processing equipment in it. and then there is plug-ins for all the things doctors need to be able to conduct surgery. if you think about minimally-invasive surgery using cameras, we have plug-ins for the cameras. we have plug-ins for x-ray machines and the like. ed remotely, what somebody is able to do is participate in the procedure by accessing those ,ideo images in real time everything they see remotely and choose to watch is then displayed directly on the screen inside the operating room. emily: hospitals are notoriously underfunded. what does the cost of the hardware? i now do you make money on this -- and how do you make money on this? daniel: we placed dedicated hardware into o
joining me now is avail cofounder and ceo daniel hawkins . technology works -- tell eyes how the technology us how thell technology works? daniel: surgeries of all types need outside expertise in the operating room to be able to conduct those surgeries. the way the technology works is, we have a dedicated piece of siphon build hardware that has cameras and image processing equipment in it. and then there is plug-ins for all the things doctors need to be able to conduct surgery. if you think...
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and daniel in your book you try to when you talk about this this recognition of evil i think that's a that's a big thing in the christian church in general all the evils of the world and i'm supposed to be fighting against that's your role as a christian but you know angelical church has largely not made any noise about societal problems of white supremacy or recognizing that as an essential evil why do you think it's so important right now in this nation's that at this point in this nation's history and what advice would you give church leaders who are grappling with how to speak to their congregation on this touchy issue. you know when i'm with white pastors we're doing this work i remind them that we have to take a historical viewpoint of it and the reality is christianity in america is really unique as opposed to other places because it's part of our origin story of white supremacy christianity grew up together here in the united states and so this isn't new for white christians to be turning a blind eye toward what's wrong to see as you did that powerful introduction we had to le
and daniel in your book you try to when you talk about this this recognition of evil i think that's a that's a big thing in the christian church in general all the evils of the world and i'm supposed to be fighting against that's your role as a christian but you know angelical church has largely not made any noise about societal problems of white supremacy or recognizing that as an essential evil why do you think it's so important right now in this nation's that at this point in this nation's...
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Oct 6, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 47
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artan van buren defeats daniel webster. -- martin van buren defeats daniel webster. martin van buren runs into some troubles -- a new financial panic sweeps the country. the panic of 1837. all those pet banks, the state banks that received those federal deposits, used those deposits, over speculation and western land, there was a land bubble. the bubble popped in 1837. the democrats become extremely unpopular across the country. now it is the whigs'turn. the whigs finally have their chance. in 1840, the whigs run against martin van buren. and you would think maybe they're gonna run henry clay again but no. the whigs say they will play a test run a war hero. everybody loves war heroes right? the hero of the battle of typical new -- tippecanoe in 1811, william henry harrison. we're also going to put on harrison's ticket a democrat. a democrat who was very critical of jackson, john tyler, who is a virginia planter. he was a jeffersonian, but thought jackson was to king like -- too king like. they were right. we're gonna throw a democrat in there to make it a safe modera
artan van buren defeats daniel webster. -- martin van buren defeats daniel webster. martin van buren runs into some troubles -- a new financial panic sweeps the country. the panic of 1837. all those pet banks, the state banks that received those federal deposits, used those deposits, over speculation and western land, there was a land bubble. the bubble popped in 1837. the democrats become extremely unpopular across the country. now it is the whigs'turn. the whigs finally have their chance. in...
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Oct 8, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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daniel dale is back.hink i told you but you're one of my mom's favorites. >> oh, thank you, jake's mom. so nice. >> she was born in canada, just like yourself. >> biased. >> that's right. she's very biased. the trump administration has a plan to protect americans with pre-existing conditions. here's how he said it. >> well, i hope we have a chance to talk about health care because obamacare was a disaster. the american people remember it well. and president trump and i have a plan to improve health care and protect pre-existing conditions for every american. >> i think i know the answer to this, daniel, but is that true? >> jake, it is, indeed, false. now, when they first said this, they have a plan, i gave them the benefit of the doubt. you know, maybe, it was coming in a few days, a few weeks. but this plan has perpetually been two weeks away, and has never arrived. let's just do a brief review on trump's history in pre-existing conditions. early in the administration, they made repeated efforts that wo
daniel dale is back.hink i told you but you're one of my mom's favorites. >> oh, thank you, jake's mom. so nice. >> she was born in canada, just like yourself. >> biased. >> that's right. she's very biased. the trump administration has a plan to protect americans with pre-existing conditions. here's how he said it. >> well, i hope we have a chance to talk about health care because obamacare was a disaster. the american people remember it well. and president trump...
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Oct 23, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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daniel, so that 2.2 million figure, accurate? >> so, wolf, it's a real figure, but trump falsely describes it and he's continued to do this at his rallies. now, what this figure said, it was a report from british academics and it said that in the u.s. if no u.s. government did anything to mitigate the virus, to fight the virus, and no citizen took social distancing action, then we could see 2 million-plus deaths but this was not an expectation. it was not a realistic estimate. this was a figure put out to say this is how bad it gets if you just let this virus run its course which, of course, the government was not about to do, wolf. >> let's listen to a claim made by the president, daniel, about the state of the coronavirus pandemic right now. listen to this. >> it will go away, and as i say, we're rounding the turn, we're rounding the corner. it's going away. >> all right. president keeps insisting the virus is going away. it clearly is not going away. the numbers are off. >> it's -- it's not going away, wolf. i did an analysis.
daniel, so that 2.2 million figure, accurate? >> so, wolf, it's a real figure, but trump falsely describes it and he's continued to do this at his rallies. now, what this figure said, it was a report from british academics and it said that in the u.s. if no u.s. government did anything to mitigate the virus, to fight the virus, and no citizen took social distancing action, then we could see 2 million-plus deaths but this was not an expectation. it was not a realistic estimate. this was a...
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Oct 6, 2020
10/20
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KNTV
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daniel craig you are awesome. with billie eilish and finneas. stick around thank you so much. ♪ (vo) businesses are always making choices. herere's a chchoice you d don'e to make: the e largest 5g5g network..... award-winning customer satisfaction... or insanelely great vavalue. now, with t-mobile for business, there's no compromise. network. support. value. choose. all. three. t-mobile for businesess. ready whenen you are.. toto defeat yoyour opponene, ♪ yoyou must bececome your o opp. ♪ whwhat's your r wild rabbib? ♪ my psoririasis. cosentntyx works o on all of t. cosesentyx trereats the multipiple symptomoms of psosoriatic artrthritis to p you look a and feel bebetter. don'n't use if y you're allergicic to cosentntyx. bebefore startrting, get checkeked for tubeberculo. an increreased risk of ininfections and lolowered abilility to fight t them may ococcur. tell y your doctoror about an infecection or sysymptoms, if your r inflammatotory bobowel diseasase symptomsms develop o or wors, oror if you'veve had a vacc
daniel craig you are awesome. with billie eilish and finneas. stick around thank you so much. ♪ (vo) businesses are always making choices. herere's a chchoice you d don'e to make: the e largest 5g5g network..... award-winning customer satisfaction... or insanelely great vavalue. now, with t-mobile for business, there's no compromise. network. support. value. choose. all. three. t-mobile for businesess. ready whenen you are.. toto defeat yoyour opponene, ♪ yoyou must bececome your o opp. ♪...
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Oct 2, 2020
10/20
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KQED
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danielle: i think there are a number of causes.ous disinvestment in civic education in the country. currently, we spend about $54 per year on stem education, but only five cents per year on civic education. federal spending. that is an indication of our priorities. they have significant lee -- significantly rejected. civic courses were once -- that quantity has retracted. there is less opportunity for young people to practe these skills. that is one important element. we also do have to point to the economic system and we have made the transition in the last gate and a half from being -- last decade and a half from being a reading culture to being an oral culture. argument works differently and in oral culture and we have not built up healthy norms for argument in a truly oral, sound biting culture. jeffrey: i think you are both referring to the political tribalism which pervades so much of our political culture. pete: i agree. i would say one of the initiatives that we have here is exploring the issue of loneliness. something that
danielle: i think there are a number of causes.ous disinvestment in civic education in the country. currently, we spend about $54 per year on stem education, but only five cents per year on civic education. federal spending. that is an indication of our priorities. they have significant lee -- significantly rejected. civic courses were once -- that quantity has retracted. there is less opportunity for young people to practe these skills. that is one important element. we also do have to point...
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Oct 21, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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daniel dale joins us now. daniel, i don't know when you sleep, either, to be honest. so you have seen it get worse? you have seen the amount of misleading or down right false things increase? >> yeah, the quantity has increased and the breadth of the false claims has increased. what was notable to me about this friday to sunday period was that he made 66 separate false claims. so that's not even counting the repeats of these same false claims, like sometimes he would say the same thing at five different rallies, it was 66 entirely different false things at minimum that's the minimum count and the other striking thing to me was that a lot of these false claims were written into his texts. so through the course of trump's presidency most of his lying has been ad-libbed, just kind of trump being trump, but in campaign season what i find is that his staff, his team, puts a lot of the dishonesty in his prepared text, it's dishonesty as a part of a deliberate strategy. >> only daniel dale would have an excel spreadsheet of the types of lies that you get from the president a
daniel dale joins us now. daniel, i don't know when you sleep, either, to be honest. so you have seen it get worse? you have seen the amount of misleading or down right false things increase? >> yeah, the quantity has increased and the breadth of the false claims has increased. what was notable to me about this friday to sunday period was that he made 66 separate false claims. so that's not even counting the repeats of these same false claims, like sometimes he would say the same thing at...
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arthur and pastor daniel hill takes a deep dive into the cultural and historical trails of racism in america he not only defines white supremacy and gives real world context but also speaks to the ideology that makes it so hard to root out and give steps specifically for the church on the work they have to do in teaching equity standing with black people and making america live up to its ideals hill is a racial equity advocate pastor of river city church a multi-ethnic congregation chicago and is on a mission to lead church leaders the yawn the racism deeply embedded in the white evangelical church then hill joins us now to discuss his book that takes all right supremacy through biblical lives welcome daniel. hey i mean. so you and i go way back we're both chicago people i know of your church quite a bit and you're someone who leaves this massive multicultural church in what is one of the well it is america's most segregated city chicago you seem promise that are the result of community vestment a bias criminal justice system the results of redlining how are these things addressed in
arthur and pastor daniel hill takes a deep dive into the cultural and historical trails of racism in america he not only defines white supremacy and gives real world context but also speaks to the ideology that makes it so hard to root out and give steps specifically for the church on the work they have to do in teaching equity standing with black people and making america live up to its ideals hill is a racial equity advocate pastor of river city church a multi-ethnic congregation chicago and...
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hill joins us now to discuss his book it takes all white supremacy for biblical lands welcome daniel. who i mean. so you and i go way back we're both chicago people i know of your church quite a bit and you're someone who leaves this massive most high cultural church in what is one of the well it is america's most segregated city chicago you've seen promise that are the results of community vestment a bias criminal justice system the results of redlining how are these things addressed in your church and how does your congregation live out the examples that you set out in your book. you know that's a big question. i think if you've heard the analogy right of. if there's babies being coming down to the stream of a river and you try to help the babies are coming down but at some point you have to go upstream if you're out why the baby's right over the water in the 1st place i would say that that describes the full range of a lot of we're trying to do as a church is try to support folks who are trying to navigate what you call those i'm excited hurdles and you know trying to walk with fo
hill joins us now to discuss his book it takes all white supremacy for biblical lands welcome daniel. who i mean. so you and i go way back we're both chicago people i know of your church quite a bit and you're someone who leaves this massive most high cultural church in what is one of the well it is america's most segregated city chicago you've seen promise that are the results of community vestment a bias criminal justice system the results of redlining how are these things addressed in your...
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Oct 6, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN3
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can you imagine what daniel webster thought of something like this? he's not going to like it too much. jackson is ready. and well, the country ready for jackson? that's the real question. what is this man going to do? there's no telling. he's a loose cannon, right? what's going to happen? well, henry clay says all right, well, we lost that election, that's fine, clay says. i'm going to push through my american system. and he begins with internal improvements. clay says, we need a road, we've got all these farmers from my home state of kentucky, we need a road that stretches from lexington, kentucky, to maysville, kentucky, right there along the ohio river. and i want to use federal dollars to build that road. the bill goes on jackson's, arrives on jackson's desk, after it flies through congress. jackson responds and vetoes the bill. the road veto. one of the first famous vetoes in presidential history. clay very upset. but this is just the beginning. this is just the beginning. all right. clay says, he revetoed my internal improvements bill. let's tr
can you imagine what daniel webster thought of something like this? he's not going to like it too much. jackson is ready. and well, the country ready for jackson? that's the real question. what is this man going to do? there's no telling. he's a loose cannon, right? what's going to happen? well, henry clay says all right, well, we lost that election, that's fine, clay says. i'm going to push through my american system. and he begins with internal improvements. clay says, we need a road, we've...
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Oct 24, 2020
10/20
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KSTS
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este fina semana daniel suárez traerá de regreso el casco del día de muertos que causó sensación hace bonito que he tenido y el más bonito que ha habido en nascar. el diseño del casco es una creación del artista radicado en dallas que junto en el decidieron hacer esta pieza para compartir un pedazo de la cultura mexicana con todos los fanáticos de las carrilleras de 2020 será un buen homenaje para recordar a los que ya no están con nosotros como marca la tradición. >>> una forma de pensar en ellos y agradecer por todo lo que han hecho. tan elegidos del casco que atrae hasta otros pilotos le pide en el casco por lo que decidió usarlo de nuevo. >>> mucha gente me pedía este casco. se dan cuenta lo bonito que es y lo que significa. >>> para celebrar el aniversario del casco está rifando 10 réplicas miniaturas este 10 de noviembre. >>> suscríbase para poder tener una oportunidad de ganar una pequeña réplica. >>> las 10 piezas están hechas a mano por el mismo artista que hizo el casco original, usted los puede ver a través de nuestra cadena hermana, yo quiero uno de esos. >>> yo también, p
este fina semana daniel suárez traerá de regreso el casco del día de muertos que causó sensación hace bonito que he tenido y el más bonito que ha habido en nascar. el diseño del casco es una creación del artista radicado en dallas que junto en el decidieron hacer esta pieza para compartir un pedazo de la cultura mexicana con todos los fanáticos de las carrilleras de 2020 será un buen homenaje para recordar a los que ya no están con nosotros como marca la tradición. >>> una...
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Oct 24, 2020
10/20
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MSNBCW
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>> that daniel cameron misunderstands his job. the attorney general is that he is supposed to protect the police, but he is supposed to be an advocate for victims. his job is to make sure that victims get justice. he thought he could lie to the american public, and because black women's lives are so deeply disregarded on devalued in our society that he would get away with it. what we have is a system that is trying in louisville because of all of the months of protest on behalf by activist there's to actually hold this man accountable. but he exposes a fundamental flaw within the system which is that often prosecutors work together with the police to actually stonewall the public rather than to protect and serve the people who actually pay taxes and pay their salaries. and so that means that breonna taylor was precluded from getting justice. i think we ought to be infuriated about this. not only did he not give these grand jurors to actually do their job, but then he came and misrepresented the facts and then says to us that what
>> that daniel cameron misunderstands his job. the attorney general is that he is supposed to protect the police, but he is supposed to be an advocate for victims. his job is to make sure that victims get justice. he thought he could lie to the american public, and because black women's lives are so deeply disregarded on devalued in our society that he would get away with it. what we have is a system that is trying in louisville because of all of the months of protest on behalf by...
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Oct 28, 2020
10/20
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LINKTV
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the two jurors say kentucky's republican attorney general daniel cameron never gave them the option to consider murder or manslaughter charges against the louisville police officers involved in taylor's killing. the pair had their identities concealed as they spoke with cbs's gayle king in an interview airing today. >> can ask you what you both inc. of the police behavior and actions that night? >> negligent. >> negligent? >> they could not even provide any risk assessment and a semi-they had not even done one, so the organization leading up to this was lacking stop that is what i mean by they work negligent in the operation. >> number two? >> they were criminal leading up to this. the way they moved forward, including the warrant, was deception. amy: a record 71 million early votes have already been cast in the presidential election, surpassing the 2016 early vote count. in texas, 46% of all registered voters have already cast their ballots. on tuesday, democratic presidential nominee joe biden campaigned in georgia -- a state not won by a democrat since bill clinton in 1992. trump ca
the two jurors say kentucky's republican attorney general daniel cameron never gave them the option to consider murder or manslaughter charges against the louisville police officers involved in taylor's killing. the pair had their identities concealed as they spoke with cbs's gayle king in an interview airing today. >> can ask you what you both inc. of the police behavior and actions that night? >> negligent. >> negligent? >> they could not even provide any risk...
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Oct 2, 2020
10/20
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LINKTV
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daniel rodriguez is a biologist.r the past 35 years he has been dedicating his work to preserving the species. >> one of the e reasons why we protect the spectacled bear is its important role in nature. it's a a kind of gardener. its eating h habits help to spread seeds that it consumes in other places in the form of fruits and leaves. so the spectacled bear contributes to the conservation of the forest. >> it's also the only species of bear native to south america. to finind out more about h howe animals are doing, rodriguez follows s their tracks in the forest. most bears are carnivores. but the spectacled bear is considered an omnivore. we can see signs of them eating on these bromeliads. there was a bear here a week ago at most. >> b but the bears' numbers ae lolow here in the national pak and conservation area. pohingng, getherer with rapidd urban growowth and increreing deforestation, have be forcing e e spectacled b bear o look for new hababitats, oftenn the grassy highlands. a growing issue now is bear attack
daniel rodriguez is a biologist.r the past 35 years he has been dedicating his work to preserving the species. >> one of the e reasons why we protect the spectacled bear is its important role in nature. it's a a kind of gardener. its eating h habits help to spread seeds that it consumes in other places in the form of fruits and leaves. so the spectacled bear contributes to the conservation of the forest. >> it's also the only species of bear native to south america. to finind out...