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May 31, 2017
05/17
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BBCNEWS
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david grossman was watching as the argument progressed. since captain mannering's wife has a character so dominated a scene while not appearing. jeremy corbyn. there were four party leaders. one westminster party leader, one co—leader and a stunt double. the first question of the night, who is missing? theresa may. the reason any leading lady sends a stunt double is so she doesn't get damaged if things go wrong. so with this, amber rudd's tactic was clear. ignore the others, but slam jeremy corbyn hard at every opportunity. jeremy, i know there is no extra payment you don't want to add to, no tax you don't want to rise. but the fact is we have to concentrate our resources on the people who need it most and we have to stop thinking, as you do, that there is a magic money tree. you have to be accountable for the money you want to spend. have you been to a food bank? have you seen people sleeping around our stations? jeremy corbyn managed quite a few slams back. we cannot go on giving money away to the very rich. this government is proposing
david grossman was watching as the argument progressed. since captain mannering's wife has a character so dominated a scene while not appearing. jeremy corbyn. there were four party leaders. one westminster party leader, one co—leader and a stunt double. the first question of the night, who is missing? theresa may. the reason any leading lady sends a stunt double is so she doesn't get damaged if things go wrong. so with this, amber rudd's tactic was clear. ignore the others, but slam jeremy...
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109
May 20, 2017
05/17
by
CSPAN2
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the man named david grossman they very influential book that extraordinary percentage of people wear their lives were on the line and then never fired their guns there was enormous in addition with 40,000 rifles left that reflected the majority of them but a majority of them were loaded repeated the and were just about to shoot that i better go again with the enormous inhibitions and he argues with the greatest bit of optimism killing somebody faceless on either side of the planet is easy but those eyes they see 10 feet away there is enormous inhibition that is something for optimism there but u.s. military now trains more drone pilots and actual pilots. >> remember what i said before about castrating males? just told the brat and try not to fall into too much despair i spend time on the college campus i tried to console myself that this will generate a whole new generation of activism but if that produces 10 times the activism the '60s did that will be an uphill battle over the next four years i don't have a lot of brown's -- ground you can watch this day by day i live in mali and i
the man named david grossman they very influential book that extraordinary percentage of people wear their lives were on the line and then never fired their guns there was enormous in addition with 40,000 rifles left that reflected the majority of them but a majority of them were loaded repeated the and were just about to shoot that i better go again with the enormous inhibitions and he argues with the greatest bit of optimism killing somebody faceless on either side of the planet is easy but...
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33
May 12, 2017
05/17
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BBCNEWS
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our technology editor david grossman is with me now and has been following this story this evening.w deep are the tentacles of this ra nsomwa re? we know that it affects windows operating systems by microsoft. over the easter weekend, somebody dumped on the internet on an obscure website tools to exploit former abilities. —— on an obscure website tools to exploit vulnerabilities. who did it, we do not know. but rumours are swirling on the internet that the tools were developed by the american national security agency. we know from wikileaks they have those kinds of capabilities but we cannot verify where the tools came from or who use them. we know that somebody exploited the vulnerabilities that those tools exploited to attack a lot of organisations. they spread the malware around the internet using ransomware. microsoft say that all that was necessary for anyone to protect themselves was to use free antivirus software, and make sure operating systems were regularly updated. microsoft issued the patches. the question is, why didn't the nhs do that, why were they vulnerable? today w
our technology editor david grossman is with me now and has been following this story this evening.w deep are the tentacles of this ra nsomwa re? we know that it affects windows operating systems by microsoft. over the easter weekend, somebody dumped on the internet on an obscure website tools to exploit former abilities. —— on an obscure website tools to exploit vulnerabilities. who did it, we do not know. but rumours are swirling on the internet that the tools were developed by the...
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36
May 11, 2017
05/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 36
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david grossman has been gauging reaction. i normally vote for labour.a member of the labour party. but i'm loathe to say what i really think at the minute. go on, tell me. no. and where does this manifesto fit into the political firmament? 0ur panel is raring to go, with our left—right blackboard. good evening. it was not so long ago we moaned about all political parties looking and sounding the same. failure to offer proper choice to the voter, failure to bring anything new to the table. well, no—one looking at labour's manifesto — in whatever form it finally emerges — can parrot that line now. if the leaked draft remains true to character, then this is a bold political treatise, and one we're exploring across the show tonight. it offers a role for the state, perhaps not seen since the post—war days of clement attlee. it seeks bigger national services for both health and education, on top of the renationalisation of some rail and energy firms. you can call it backward looking, if the talk of unions and a new "department for labour" makes you think of t
david grossman has been gauging reaction. i normally vote for labour.a member of the labour party. but i'm loathe to say what i really think at the minute. go on, tell me. no. and where does this manifesto fit into the political firmament? 0ur panel is raring to go, with our left—right blackboard. good evening. it was not so long ago we moaned about all political parties looking and sounding the same. failure to offer proper choice to the voter, failure to bring anything new to the table....
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38
May 26, 2017
05/17
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BBCNEWS
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david grossman has our first report. nothing has changed. has she done another u—turn, jeremy?apparently. blimey, you can't trust this woman. at the beginning of the week the election looked very different. theresa may's unprecedented manifesto u—turn on the social care was dominating the headlines and labour was sensing an opportunity. and then... it might appear unseemly, callous even, to ask what impact the dreadful events in manchester will have on a general election campaign. but it is undeniable the campaign was interrupted. and it has now restarted. re—focused on new themes, security, on terrorism. it is also undeniable that how we see our party leaders is partly informed by how they respond to profound events. the solutions they offer. it's the stuff of politics. it's what elections are all about. restarting campaigning today, jeremy corbyn gave his assessment of the lessons of the manchester attack. he said labour would reverse police cuts. he also outlined what he saw as some of the causes of terrorism. many experts, including professionals in our intelligence and sec
david grossman has our first report. nothing has changed. has she done another u—turn, jeremy?apparently. blimey, you can't trust this woman. at the beginning of the week the election looked very different. theresa may's unprecedented manifesto u—turn on the social care was dominating the headlines and labour was sensing an opportunity. and then... it might appear unseemly, callous even, to ask what impact the dreadful events in manchester will have on a general election campaign. but it is...