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Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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i want to talk more about this dissonance factor. this is the president talking about kim jong-un and north korea at that rally last night. >> what i did with north korea was great. i got along great with chairman kim. i got along great. i got the hostages back. didn't have to pay anything. they're not testing any more nuclear. they haven't had a test in nine months. and you know what else? they're not sending rockets over japan and they're not sending missiles over japan and they're not launching missiles anymore. they haven't launched one in nine months. >> at almost that exact moment, the secretary of state, admiral, was in the air, heading to singapore for a meeting of asian nations where he's going to talk about north korea and about compliance with sanctions. and he was telling the press on the record that they are cheating and that their neighbors are cheating. russia, china, others are cheating, breaking u.n. sanctions, which we now see the treasury acting on today. >> indeed. another remarkable disconnect. and, a, it tells y
i want to talk more about this dissonance factor. this is the president talking about kim jong-un and north korea at that rally last night. >> what i did with north korea was great. i got along great with chairman kim. i got along great. i got the hostages back. didn't have to pay anything. they're not testing any more nuclear. they haven't had a test in nine months. and you know what else? they're not sending rockets over japan and they're not sending missiles over japan and they're not...
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i think you're going to enjoy the world of acoustics. ( dissonant acoustic noise ) this sucks! ( knocking ) who could that be? good lord! that could start a fire! ( laughing ) now what's happening? he's stomping it good. and there's doodies in there, right? there sure is, pops. there sure is. ( cheers and applause ) >> from comedy central's world news headquarters in new york, this is "the daily show" with trevor noah. ( cheers and applause ) ♪ >> trevor: welcome to "the daily show"! thank you so much for tuning in! i'm trevor noah! our guest tonight -- our guest tonight, rapper a$ap rocky is joining us, everybody! ( cheers and applause ) yeah! we're going to talk about rap and youth culture, word up! ( laughter ) but first, let's catch up on today's headlines. let's kick off with news from wall street. >> some major news on wall street. apple just became the first american public company to reach $1 trillion in value. >> trevor: $1 trillion. that's it, folks. apple has officially won capitalism. wrap it up. it's over. i'm going to be honest. i don't know how they made $1 trill
i think you're going to enjoy the world of acoustics. ( dissonant acoustic noise ) this sucks! ( knocking ) who could that be? good lord! that could start a fire! ( laughing ) now what's happening? he's stomping it good. and there's doodies in there, right? there sure is, pops. there sure is. ( cheers and applause ) >> from comedy central's world news headquarters in new york, this is "the daily show" with trevor noah. ( cheers and applause ) ♪ >> trevor: welcome to...
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Aug 9, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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not trying to criticized disson or marconi, they did amazing things, but tesla did as well. these are few pictures of him as he ages. you get some sense of him. through the idealism the hogue he bring power to ann around the world freely. thought he would create robots that would he thought he it would create robots that would eliminate drudgery. he basically was driven by in her forces that felt the sheer creation was the most important thing in the world. i would a argue that we are all the better for it. thank you very much. [applause] >> we have time for just a few questions. if anybody has questions about tesla for our guest author. >> i'm. in yourou book it seems like you speak a lot about his brilliance. do you mention any of this eccentricities. >> he made a lot ofg mistakes. not long after the ripe others with their airplanes they said there's no way that airplanes can make it. they are toooo heavy. that was the way to go. einstein who is two decades younger than he was, tesla thought that he had split an atom and no energy came out so he said atomic power is bunk.
not trying to criticized disson or marconi, they did amazing things, but tesla did as well. these are few pictures of him as he ages. you get some sense of him. through the idealism the hogue he bring power to ann around the world freely. thought he would create robots that would he thought he it would create robots that would eliminate drudgery. he basically was driven by in her forces that felt the sheer creation was the most important thing in the world. i would a argue that we are all the...
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Aug 9, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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not trying to criticized disson or marconi, they did amazing things, but tesla did as well. these are few pictures of him as he ages. you get some sense of him. through the idealism the hogue he bring power to ann around the world freely. thought he would create robots that would eliminate drudgery. basically driven by inner forces that felt that sheer creation was the most important thing in the world, and i would argue that we all are the better for it. so thank you very much. [applause] >> we have time for just a few questions. if anybody has questions but tesla for our guest author. yep? >> hi. in your book it seems like outcome speak of his brilliance, but you mentioned any of his ex-sentriesties. >> he made a lot of mistakes. not long after the wright burglary flew their airplanes he ceremonies cannot make it. they're too heavy. said he zeppelin. >> tess la thought the split an atom and no energy came out so it's atomic power is bunk. won't work. he thought that cosmic rays could go faster than the speed of lying. so he got things right but my point was that his battin
not trying to criticized disson or marconi, they did amazing things, but tesla did as well. these are few pictures of him as he ages. you get some sense of him. through the idealism the hogue he bring power to ann around the world freely. thought he would create robots that would eliminate drudgery. basically driven by inner forces that felt that sheer creation was the most important thing in the world, and i would argue that we all are the better for it. so thank you very much. [applause]...
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Aug 22, 2018
08/18
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so, he had this cognitive dissonance between opposing what the americans wanted. now, the strategy talks moved on apparently for their own and both sides were encouraging this issue to come together. particularly among fdr and churchill and the top advisors. notably, a lot of the generals did not know about both strategy negotiations and the bomb. where they did have that convergence of knowledge they also were converging and how they talked about it. now, the evidence is circumstantial. it's quite extensive. personally, i found a persuasive that they came to a conjunction in august of 1943 that led to a quid pro quo. while this is happening, the plan for operation overlord had to be created while the top people were arguing. so long as there was no plan for cross channel attack, both of the allies could agree could succeed, it was easy to push back against advocates for that idea. the british and americans did agree to establish an ally planning team in london of march of 1943. that was going to be led by the newly designated chief of staff to the supreme allied
so, he had this cognitive dissonance between opposing what the americans wanted. now, the strategy talks moved on apparently for their own and both sides were encouraging this issue to come together. particularly among fdr and churchill and the top advisors. notably, a lot of the generals did not know about both strategy negotiations and the bomb. where they did have that convergence of knowledge they also were converging and how they talked about it. now, the evidence is circumstantial. it's...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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the soap and weed challenges us to be firm dissonances in the pursuit of truth and justice a big deludes forgiveness of these sin these are the scandal of betrayal felt by so many families. well a series of revelations of a b.s. by catholic institutions and clergy have significantly undermined the church's influence in arlen's like many other countries that's been rocked by scandals of the sexual abuse of children by priests condemned by the pope as an atrocity he has also condemned the practice which saw a church run institutions routinely take babies from unmarried mothers and put them up for adoption the pope said it was not to send for mothers to search for their lost children as church officials had told them and for the scandal was the so-called magdalene laundries where thousands of women were of the church regarded as fallen were held in institutions and forced to work the pope has met survivors of the laundries and off the tuam mother and baby home where the remains of about eight hundred babies and small children were found in a month masquerade last year the scandals have led
the soap and weed challenges us to be firm dissonances in the pursuit of truth and justice a big deludes forgiveness of these sin these are the scandal of betrayal felt by so many families. well a series of revelations of a b.s. by catholic institutions and clergy have significantly undermined the church's influence in arlen's like many other countries that's been rocked by scandals of the sexual abuse of children by priests condemned by the pope as an atrocity he has also condemned the...
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Aug 25, 2018
08/18
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the final bike want to highlight -- call the three lives of james mad disson, and this is the -- mad disson and this is james madison's evolution as a political figure and he was a very different kind of man than he began in the revolutionary period and definitely his role in the constitution. people think of james madison as a small government, we don't want that big federal government encroaching. when he was writing the station and when he defended it in the federalist papers he wanted the congress of the united states to have a veto over state legislative legislation, can you imagine that? he actually favored a strong -- much stronger central government, and was only later when we actually started to have a stronger central government, once the constitution was implemented, the fell back on the jefferson point of jew. he was a strong ally and went even further than alexander hamilton in his philosophy of government. so great read. great book. well done. and finally, can't end the year without recommending walter isaacson's biography of the life of da vinci. great book, fascinatin
the final bike want to highlight -- call the three lives of james mad disson, and this is the -- mad disson and this is james madison's evolution as a political figure and he was a very different kind of man than he began in the revolutionary period and definitely his role in the constitution. people think of james madison as a small government, we don't want that big federal government encroaching. when he was writing the station and when he defended it in the federalist papers he wanted the...
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ministration is we need to ensure that we have our allies on board with us so there's a bit of a dissonance here where the president is calling for allies to help us on north korea but he's then sanctioning them and putting tariffs on them in other instances and so that doesn't make them necessarily want to cooperate in the way that we think they should and that is undermining efforts as well where does this leave south korea and that is deep concern for united states we've been able to maintain a strong alliance with south korea but right now south korea's policy in many ways it was driving the diplomacy in pulling the united states and north korea together if we pull back south korea is not going to pull back with us they're still going to engage north korea they have direct equities their interest in not having any military action with north korea we can't afford a separation from south korea though if we're going to have a successful negotiation my fear is that we're going to begin to have a separation that is analogous to our separation with many of our european allies and with canada
ministration is we need to ensure that we have our allies on board with us so there's a bit of a dissonance here where the president is calling for allies to help us on north korea but he's then sanctioning them and putting tariffs on them in other instances and so that doesn't make them necessarily want to cooperate in the way that we think they should and that is undermining efforts as well where does this leave south korea and that is deep concern for united states we've been able to...
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Aug 17, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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development corporation does have a protocol on on labor and migration but many in many cases the such a dissonance between what is what is the in the protocol and the way in which states and nations and governments relate to the protocol and last year i think that it's also important to note that. you know many of these mining companies are not necessarily from this country and there's a debate about whether the foreign direct investment and foreign companies are of best placed to produce jobs to produce well being to build up mining communities to build up houses education and the things the social amenities that would give community members an enhanced sense of life and and hans life choices my opinion is that the state must always have a role to play we cannot allow foreign capital on no matter what the how well dressed their intentions may be to continuously run roughshod over our local in our local policy and development polities terminating the environment disrespecting labor rights and also disrespecting the lives of people once they have discarded them from the workforce so i think that th
development corporation does have a protocol on on labor and migration but many in many cases the such a dissonance between what is what is the in the protocol and the way in which states and nations and governments relate to the protocol and last year i think that it's also important to note that. you know many of these mining companies are not necessarily from this country and there's a debate about whether the foreign direct investment and foreign companies are of best placed to produce jobs...
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Aug 5, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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the chinese government has demolished the studio of the dissonant artist ai wei wei to be removed to hurry as the demolition began without any warning. critic of the government who claims they've been persecuting him for years and twenty eleven he was detained for eighty one days after being accused of tax evasion charges he says were politically motivated. music faster than russia has lots of heavy metal and it's not just on the stage tens of thousands of fans want to see their favorite bands and some of russia's latest weapons i mean is that. it's a summer staple for many russians here is the largest rock festival some also call it russia's woodstock a huge appointment with the finest of the country's music scene. which. has been missed for the past three seasons it's amazing. you can hear your favorite musicians all your favorite musicians in one place the festival started two decades ago after the fall of the soviet union but recently it also became an exhibit ground for the most unlikely of institutions the russian ministry of defense its presence felt from the air with the perf
the chinese government has demolished the studio of the dissonant artist ai wei wei to be removed to hurry as the demolition began without any warning. critic of the government who claims they've been persecuting him for years and twenty eleven he was detained for eighty one days after being accused of tax evasion charges he says were politically motivated. music faster than russia has lots of heavy metal and it's not just on the stage tens of thousands of fans want to see their favorite bands...
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Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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CNNW
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it's more than just cognitive dissonance, it aamounts to what is undermining one of our greatest weapons in this struggle which is the opportunity to publicly shame and confront the russians and putin. the president far from doing that, from from in helsinki saying we know what you have been doing, we are aware of it, we will responsibility not only with sanctions but with our own measures, he goes out of his way to say well, he denied it and therefore i have no way to solve the truth of this so we give away, surrender one of our greatest weapon which is is the opportunity to call out what is being done and to confront the president of russia about these activities. >> there's also a question about another important institution and that is the democratic process here in the united states. so we've hearing from dni coates coats that this will be a top security but molly is this destined to be undermined. >> as you said the disconnect isn't new but there are a couple things that are new. the volume of the warnings from numerous officials in the administration, clearly they have stopped wai
it's more than just cognitive dissonance, it aamounts to what is undermining one of our greatest weapons in this struggle which is the opportunity to publicly shame and confront the russians and putin. the president far from doing that, from from in helsinki saying we know what you have been doing, we are aware of it, we will responsibility not only with sanctions but with our own measures, he goes out of his way to say well, he denied it and therefore i have no way to solve the truth of this...
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the cognitive dissonance is about to make your head explode. i thought we cared about meddling, national classified information. they take a casual attitude. remember feinstein was the one who, when the intelligence community inspector general charles mccullough, an obama appointee found classified information on hillary's secret e-mail server and bullied by diane fine stein until he dropped it. which is a huge deal. lou: not unacquainted with huge deals, it was senator feinstein, chair of the intelligence committee when it was discovered that john brennan's cia had been surveilling the committee's servers, first, he denied it so they not only spied on the senate intelligence committee, which has oversight responsibility in addition to everything else, if that wasn't bad enough. they were in charge of oversight. he denied doing so and had to admit he did, and she said, well, we're not going to prosecute anybody despite his actions as the head of the cia in that an agency surveilling. i mean feinstein has a record here, one wonders why anyone li
the cognitive dissonance is about to make your head explode. i thought we cared about meddling, national classified information. they take a casual attitude. remember feinstein was the one who, when the intelligence community inspector general charles mccullough, an obama appointee found classified information on hillary's secret e-mail server and bullied by diane fine stein until he dropped it. which is a huge deal. lou: not unacquainted with huge deals, it was senator feinstein, chair of the...
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Aug 31, 2018
08/18
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you know, a speech writer and person a respect a lot, mark salter, wrote about the dissonance from throughoutthe globe, really. hayes daughter was in the peace cor corps. he said america has my back. i know that because there are people like john mccain. at this time of america first and where there is a lot of retrenchment from the world in this country, mccain was a light for america's ideals throughout the world, standing for freedom and liberty. those are going to be massive shoes to fill in the years ahead, in the hopes that we live up to what he promised. >> tim, i have so enjoyed hearing some of the john mccain stories over the past year. his chief of staff at the service in arizona yesterday had a few great stories. do you have any jaohn mccain stories you can share on television? >> you know, i was a young man, so i didn't rise to the level. the famous john mccain stories, the meaner nastier name he called you if he liked you. i didn't earn a nickname from him. i had a special moment with him. he didn't like to talk about his time in the hanoi hilton in the cells. the campaign strate
you know, a speech writer and person a respect a lot, mark salter, wrote about the dissonance from throughoutthe globe, really. hayes daughter was in the peace cor corps. he said america has my back. i know that because there are people like john mccain. at this time of america first and where there is a lot of retrenchment from the world in this country, mccain was a light for america's ideals throughout the world, standing for freedom and liberty. those are going to be massive shoes to fill...
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Aug 8, 2018
08/18
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FOXNEWSW
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the canadian speaking out on the detention of some dissonance there in saudi arabia, saudi arabia isw they out of our internal business. here's a little bit from both sides. >> we continue to engage diplomatically and politically with the kingdom of saudi arabia. we have respect for their importance in the world and recognize that they have made progress on a number of important issues. but we will at the same time continue to speak clearly and firmly on issues of human right rights. >> we do not accept being told what to do and we do not accept our country interfering with internal affairs, just as we do not interfere with any country's internal affairs. we think what canada did was unacceptable. we did not discuss internal affairs or impose our values and principles on any country. >> shannon: so saudi arabia has expelled the canadian ambassador, and any new investments. they are really pushing back hard. >> i think it's great that -- for any of the countries, it would be great if the world had a more unified rejection of a place like iran which has at least as many of the same hum
the canadian speaking out on the detention of some dissonance there in saudi arabia, saudi arabia isw they out of our internal business. here's a little bit from both sides. >> we continue to engage diplomatically and politically with the kingdom of saudi arabia. we have respect for their importance in the world and recognize that they have made progress on a number of important issues. but we will at the same time continue to speak clearly and firmly on issues of human right rights....
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Aug 12, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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journalist for years and also just seeing how journalists tend to cover protests, there's a real dissonance in terms of how we think about and talk about protests in the past versus contemporary times, and that bar is always shifting. so belle mentioned rosa parks and watered-down history. i feel like everyone knows who rosa parks is. everyone is civil rights movement, awesome, generally speaking. the majority of americans. but how you are introduced to her is usually there's this really oversimplified parable about how she is like this older woman who was tired, she's just like nope, not getting up from the seat. which is absurd, because she was in her 40s, she had been a member of the naacp for 12 years. this was a well-coordinated action, african-americans had been doing this same kind of action for years. so it just so happened that was the moment that helped turn the tide, right. the way we talk about protest is like always shifting. again, we have the way we think about the civil rights movement, of course no one is going to say the people who sat at the lunch counters and freedom rid
journalist for years and also just seeing how journalists tend to cover protests, there's a real dissonance in terms of how we think about and talk about protests in the past versus contemporary times, and that bar is always shifting. so belle mentioned rosa parks and watered-down history. i feel like everyone knows who rosa parks is. everyone is civil rights movement, awesome, generally speaking. the majority of americans. but how you are introduced to her is usually there's this really...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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being a journalist for years and also seeing how journalists tend to cover protests, there's a real dissonance of how we think about and talk about protests in the past versus contemporary times and that bar is always shifting, so belle mentioned rosa parks and watered-down history, everyone know who is rosa parks is, civil rights movement, awesome, the majority of americans and but how introduced to her is there's this really oversimplified parable, no, i'm not getting up from the seat which is absurd because she was in her 40's, she had been a member of the naacp for 12 years, this was a well-coordinated action, african americans had been doing this same kind of action for years. so it just so happened that that was the moment that helped turn the tide. the way we talk about protest is like always shift, so, again, we have the way we think about civil rights movement, no one is going to say the people who sat at lunch counters, freedom writers, they were wasting their time, get a job and yet so often that's how we tend to see the conversation around protests today from occupy wall street to
being a journalist for years and also seeing how journalists tend to cover protests, there's a real dissonance of how we think about and talk about protests in the past versus contemporary times and that bar is always shifting, so belle mentioned rosa parks and watered-down history, everyone know who is rosa parks is, civil rights movement, awesome, the majority of americans and but how introduced to her is there's this really oversimplified parable, no, i'm not getting up from the seat which...
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Aug 2, 2018
08/18
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MSNBCW
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so there's this dissonance between what jurors are hearing on the stand from all these other witnesseshich is very damning and what manafort is himself. >> i love that moxie. let me show you pictures of the home, a description of what the landscaper described in court that he maintained 14 foot hedging, lawns, a bed of hundreds and hundreds of white flowers, and another with flowers in the shape of the letter "m." some -- jurors don't respond well to that, as we remember from enron. >> what was that "m" carved out for, manafort, money laundering or must make more money? the odd thing that emerges in this testimony today that, you know, he loses around $600,000 in 2015. he loses over a million in 2016. yet he's continuing to spend like king midas. you get the sense, like many people that tried to hitch their way gones to tru wagons to trump's star that they saw him as a profit center, and they saw this as a short-term way to make money. it would seem that's what paul manafort was thinking. the other great thing about the case today is that the bookkeeper testifies, and as a journalist i
so there's this dissonance between what jurors are hearing on the stand from all these other witnesseshich is very damning and what manafort is himself. >> i love that moxie. let me show you pictures of the home, a description of what the landscaper described in court that he maintained 14 foot hedging, lawns, a bed of hundreds and hundreds of white flowers, and another with flowers in the shape of the letter "m." some -- jurors don't respond well to that, as we remember from...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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CNNW
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talk to us about that dissonance, the disconnect between the republican party that senator mccain envisionedchanges that he wasn't supportive of. >> sure. i mean, remember that both in 2000 and again in 2008, his campaign bus and campaign plane were called the straight talk express, right? he didn't mince words. he told you what he thought. he nee he told you what he was thinking. although he was a lifelong republican, he was always willing to work across the aisle. he saw politics as a necessary part of governance and a part of how this country was great but did not let that stop him from doing the right thing for the greatest number of people, whether that was finding allies with republicans or finding allies with democrats, whatever the case might have been. i think certainly in the last couple of years, as we've seen, this was no longer the party of not only john mccain but of george bush or mitt romney. this is a new republican party, one that, you know, looked, unfortunately, down on senator mccain as someone who wasn't pure enough, whatever that case might have been, because he was wi
talk to us about that dissonance, the disconnect between the republican party that senator mccain envisionedchanges that he wasn't supportive of. >> sure. i mean, remember that both in 2000 and again in 2008, his campaign bus and campaign plane were called the straight talk express, right? he didn't mince words. he told you what he thought. he nee he told you what he was thinking. although he was a lifelong republican, he was always willing to work across the aisle. he saw politics as a...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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is function -- i mean, i couldn't do this if i didn't have some hope -- then there's a cognitive dissonance that we can'tly with anymore. because -- can't live with anymore. because what we profess to value is not aligned with what we're actually practicing, but we're taught not to see this, right? so i'm going to keep going. so this first set i think of as color blind, right? so there's kind of two sets of dominant white narratives, and probably the first, most classic is i was taught to treat everyone the same. anybody ever heard that one? [laughter] all right. you ready? not one single person in this room was taught to treat everyone the same. you weren't. you don't. you couldn't be. you could be told. i could lecture you and lecture you just like you all know you shouldn't judge, right? so you're not judging, right? [laughter] no judging. okay. that's what it means. you can't treat everyone the same. you don't. and you don't even want to because people have different needs. but when i hear this from a white person, there's a bubble over my head. and the first thing in that bubble is, oh
is function -- i mean, i couldn't do this if i didn't have some hope -- then there's a cognitive dissonance that we can'tly with anymore. because -- can't live with anymore. because what we profess to value is not aligned with what we're actually practicing, but we're taught not to see this, right? so i'm going to keep going. so this first set i think of as color blind, right? so there's kind of two sets of dominant white narratives, and probably the first, most classic is i was taught to treat...
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Aug 4, 2018
08/18
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MSNBCW
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. >> and i want to step back and look at the intellectual dissonance in the white house.orters that the president's national security advisers with your were going to show up, they did. they delivered a forceful message that russia meddled in the last election, they are trying to meddle in the midterms coming up. i should point out all of them to a tune said the president cares deeply about this, he sent them there, the president had nothing on his schedule that afternoon, i would argue it would have been more forceful if he delivered an opening statement before an event like that. but to that point that you've got senior advisors of the president saying one thing, you have his daughter saying they are not fake news, they are not the enemy of the people, he's saying something different. how do you process or interpret what is coming out of this white house? does that matter the apparatus around the president says one thing and he says something different? >> i think both are important. i think that some of the folks who are in the white house whether they be political app
. >> and i want to step back and look at the intellectual dissonance in the white house.orters that the president's national security advisers with your were going to show up, they did. they delivered a forceful message that russia meddled in the last election, they are trying to meddle in the midterms coming up. i should point out all of them to a tune said the president cares deeply about this, he sent them there, the president had nothing on his schedule that afternoon, i would argue...
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Aug 20, 2018
08/18
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BLOOMBERG
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speculative dissonance is the name of the chart. we see ten-year treasury speculative bets massively short. at the same time, you see speculative dollar bets and they are very long. worried theach treasury shorts are going to get squeeze rather than the dollar longs getting hurt? question. a good first of all the treasury short is far larger. the dollar long as the longest in a year, but it has been longer before. this treasuries position is worse than anything seen before. normally a dollar long in a treasury short are two positions that are coherent. if you imagine that if you're going to get a big dollar move upward, that would imply there is going to be a flow down in exports. it also implies disinflationary pressure. it is the opposite view to the treasury short. with both positions in extreme, it is likely one is going to be squeezed. our view tends to be it is more likely treasuries will be squeezed more painfully than the dollar view. have been talking about the possibility of an inverted curve for a very long time. i am pre
speculative dissonance is the name of the chart. we see ten-year treasury speculative bets massively short. at the same time, you see speculative dollar bets and they are very long. worried theach treasury shorts are going to get squeeze rather than the dollar longs getting hurt? question. a good first of all the treasury short is far larger. the dollar long as the longest in a year, but it has been longer before. this treasuries position is worse than anything seen before. normally a dollar...
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Aug 9, 2018
08/18
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that's not to say that we don't speak up for dissonant, we don't protest when vietnam engages.we do. but again, it's a tailored approach for the country at hand to places like indonesia, the philippines much more open to democratic consolidation. >> when they put on this proposition . cara can answer as well. but if you don't want to do. we are free and open. [inaudible] is dictators ships and double standards. i think there's some truth to that. my read on asian democratization here they got a bad name because of barack in the air of spring, but in the 80s and 90s, but my read was we have leverage first overseas countries. we have leverage over south korea, taiwan, philippines as a security threat and we're able after embracing and building trust. you agree with that read? >> absolutely. it is a big contrast today when you look at cambodia and burma for example in the chinese have more leverage than we do. you know, they can provide a buffer and you can see it on the ground in both to build leverage first. >> a democracy agenda is not going to help even though it has been an i
that's not to say that we don't speak up for dissonant, we don't protest when vietnam engages.we do. but again, it's a tailored approach for the country at hand to places like indonesia, the philippines much more open to democratic consolidation. >> when they put on this proposition . cara can answer as well. but if you don't want to do. we are free and open. [inaudible] is dictators ships and double standards. i think there's some truth to that. my read on asian democratization here they...
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Aug 1, 2018
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. -- cognitive dissonance. it makes me feel it i have dropped acid. for the record, i have never dropped acid. [laughter] >> having practiced medicine, it is incredible how much the federal government loads upon us. my job dropped when you said most providers are pleased about the electronic health record. it is the leading cause of burnout. so i am much or who was so enamored. the electronic health record is so burdensome. clicking for every five minutes of seeing a patient. reality.arallel chide ort not to confront, but just to observe. dr. book, i like your perspective. we have now put the are notrator -- we looking at the administrative burden on the patient or physician, but on the administration. primaryabout the direct care model, in which a patient pays a monthly fee and the doctor does not know the insurance company for those services paid for by the monthly fee and the patient does not have a adoptable. just the monthly fee. senator cantwell and i have the bill that would promote this. familiar with it but it sounds like it has potential. is
. -- cognitive dissonance. it makes me feel it i have dropped acid. for the record, i have never dropped acid. [laughter] >> having practiced medicine, it is incredible how much the federal government loads upon us. my job dropped when you said most providers are pleased about the electronic health record. it is the leading cause of burnout. so i am much or who was so enamored. the electronic health record is so burdensome. clicking for every five minutes of seeing a patient....
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Aug 4, 2018
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there is a cognitive dissonance. dr. cutler you mentioned how ascribing to the federal government the role of making things less administratively burdensome. it makes me feel it i have dropped acid. not that i have ever -- for the record, i have never dropped acid. [laughter] have a gossidy: we torry overload 629 different regulatory requirements from four different federal agencies. you could give me the same thing for insurance. having practiced medicine, it is incredible how much the federal government loads upon us. my job dropped when you said most providers are pleased about the electronic health record. i read the leading cause of , burnout is the electronic health record. not sure who is finding it -- who is so enamored. the electronic health record is so burdensome. somebody put in their testimony 30 minutes of clicking for every , five minutes of seeing a patient. it is a parallel reality. i say that not to chide or confront, but just to observe. dr. book, i like your perspective. we have not looked at the admi
there is a cognitive dissonance. dr. cutler you mentioned how ascribing to the federal government the role of making things less administratively burdensome. it makes me feel it i have dropped acid. not that i have ever -- for the record, i have never dropped acid. [laughter] have a gossidy: we torry overload 629 different regulatory requirements from four different federal agencies. you could give me the same thing for insurance. having practiced medicine, it is incredible how much the federal...
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Aug 14, 2018
08/18
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that was a cognitive dissonance for our culture. the people in charge, our parents, the authority figures and the institutions we had revered, military and educational institutions, a little institutions, maybe they are not doing the right thing and we have never really been able to sort it out since. it is very painful. i think there is heroism on all sides and i think that is where we need to get to as a culture. the young men that died are heroes and they felt they were doing the right thing and the young people on the campuses who were back home who thought the war was wrong and try to stop it also were doing what they thought was the right thing. and because of the politics, which i'm sure we will get to, and how our politicians have exploited this schism, feel like we somehow have to choose between the two. i think we have to move beyond that. >> i would like to move into the protest movement itself and ask doug stanton how early did organize protest begin for the war and where did they begin? >> wow. i think they began much e
that was a cognitive dissonance for our culture. the people in charge, our parents, the authority figures and the institutions we had revered, military and educational institutions, a little institutions, maybe they are not doing the right thing and we have never really been able to sort it out since. it is very painful. i think there is heroism on all sides and i think that is where we need to get to as a culture. the young men that died are heroes and they felt they were doing the right thing...
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Aug 13, 2018
08/18
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that is a cognizant dissonance for our culture. the people in charge, our parents, their authority figures, the institutions we have revered, the military, educational institutions, political institutions, maybe they're not doing the right thing. and we've never really been able to sort that out since then. and it's very painful, but there's sort of -- i think there's heroism on all sides. th that is where we need to get to as a culture, and the young men that doug wrote about were trying to serve the country and do what they felt were the right thing. but the people on the campuses who were back home and trying to stop the war also thought that they were doing the right thing. and so basically part of politics as i am sure that we will get to and how the politicians have exploited this schism feel like we somehow have to choose, you know between the two. and i think that we have to move beyond that. >> i wanted to move into the ro protest movement, itself, and ask doug stanton, how early did organized protests begin for the war an
that is a cognizant dissonance for our culture. the people in charge, our parents, their authority figures, the institutions we have revered, the military, educational institutions, political institutions, maybe they're not doing the right thing. and we've never really been able to sort that out since then. and it's very painful, but there's sort of -- i think there's heroism on all sides. th that is where we need to get to as a culture, and the young men that doug wrote about were trying to...
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Aug 7, 2018
08/18
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should we get dissonance around polling numbers or policy, that could be a catalyst as well.could be short-term fix. where the market sells off, you get clarity in november, and then you can get at the next leg. scarlet: what is interesting as you name a couple macro catalysts and not anything specific to the companies in the faang whether it is facebook him out for that. if we get some kind of bad news or negative catalyst, that is not enough to pull them back and pull the broader market back? lisa: the way the market action couple weeks ago around the night that we had that , in facebook, it was very, very telling. because there you had a massive selloff in one stock that was a large cap leadership stock, and the futures overnight were flat. that suggests to us that there's still a view, it an amount of complacency in the market, there is still a huge amount of investors who are willing to call this an idiosyncratic event. the problem is when you start getting a series of city -- of idiosyncratic events and you start adding facebook to netflix to twitter and let's see who t
should we get dissonance around polling numbers or policy, that could be a catalyst as well.could be short-term fix. where the market sells off, you get clarity in november, and then you can get at the next leg. scarlet: what is interesting as you name a couple macro catalysts and not anything specific to the companies in the faang whether it is facebook him out for that. if we get some kind of bad news or negative catalyst, that is not enough to pull them back and pull the broader market back?...
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Aug 4, 2018
08/18
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highlight, although actually there's one more i didn't bring and that's called the three lives james mad disson and this is one of the state -- states of james madison's evolution as a political figure, and he ended up being a very different kind of man than he began in the revolutionary period and definitely his role in the constitution. people think of james madison as a small government, we don't want that big central government encroaching. nothing could be further from the truth. when he was writing the constitution and deferredded nit he federalist papers he wanted the congress of the united states to have a veto over state legislative legislation. can you imagine that? he actually favored a strong -- much stronger central government. and was only later when we actually started to have a stronger central government, once the constitution was. meted. the fell back on the jenson of environment that's not how the started. he was a strong ally and went even further than alexander hamilton in his philosophy of government. so great read, great book, well done. and finally, can't end the year wi
highlight, although actually there's one more i didn't bring and that's called the three lives james mad disson and this is one of the state -- states of james madison's evolution as a political figure, and he ended up being a very different kind of man than he began in the revolutionary period and definitely his role in the constitution. people think of james madison as a small government, we don't want that big central government encroaching. nothing could be further from the truth. when he...
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>> there seems to be pervasive cognitive dissonance in that regard.arted with government out of our lives and now it is government take care of us. there are real causes for this. they are problematic in this is a symptom of things, college education in america is markedly expensive, wildly over expensive. dagen: that is because of government. the free flow of money and the student loan business controlled by uncle sam. >> exactly right. the solution isn't free education, it is simpler than that. i am on college campuses regularly. do they need to have dorms, second and third department out of business school, a lot of reasons college is expensive. maria: explained the difference between socialism and democratic socialism. are in the spokeswoman kelly mcinerney wrote an op-ed saying it is foolish for democrats to follow any form of it but you are seeing this idea that democratic socialism is different. >> it seems to be professed by democratic socialists that it is different but i don't really see that voters understand the difference. voters understa
>> there seems to be pervasive cognitive dissonance in that regard.arted with government out of our lives and now it is government take care of us. there are real causes for this. they are problematic in this is a symptom of things, college education in america is markedly expensive, wildly over expensive. dagen: that is because of government. the free flow of money and the student loan business controlled by uncle sam. >> exactly right. the solution isn't free education, it is...
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Aug 9, 2018
08/18
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for example, there's quite a bit of cognitive dissonance going on, for example in commentary we haven which explodes that he is hindering all efforts of multiculturalism. i think that is something we have to deal with. i think the date is important, like nigel farage yesterday, he made a comment saying that politicians aren't happy with what borisjohnson said but the country is happy and today, we are here saying that the country isn't happy with what you are saying. how can you be more british than us? i want to read some comments coming through on social media, linda says, "my brother is deaf and lip—read, he went into a shop and when he went to pay he did not know what the assistant said because her mouth was covered and she refused to remove her veil. the manager had to be called and served my brother but my brother felt he was competing humiliated because he was competing humiliated because he was holding up the cube and it emphasised is disability. why was she serving on a still? a lot of people who can only partially need to be to lip—read". how do you feel about that? i don't
for example, there's quite a bit of cognitive dissonance going on, for example in commentary we haven which explodes that he is hindering all efforts of multiculturalism. i think that is something we have to deal with. i think the date is important, like nigel farage yesterday, he made a comment saying that politicians aren't happy with what borisjohnson said but the country is happy and today, we are here saying that the country isn't happy with what you are saying. how can you be more british...