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Nov 7, 2014
11/14
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dr. jackson: the baseline is the way it used to be. but every generation of fisheries' biologists makes a new baseline when they start their career. and so the fisheries' biologists from 30 years ago -- their baseline was maybe 10% of the fisheries' biologists' baseline from the generation before. this is an example of the shifting-baseline syndrome. it's an incredibly important idea. it's the most important idea about understanding the environment and human impact on the environnt. you cannot understand the problem just by looking at the way the world is now. narrator: so jackson looks to the past. and while he researches all of the human impacts on the ocean like pollution and global warming his focus has been on the effects of overfishing. he has concluded from various sources that the global population of large fish has declined by 90% since 1950. dr. jackson: we know things like that from data from the japanese fishing industry. they have a massive fishing fleet, and they kept very good records. and in the beginning of the japanes
dr. jackson: the baseline is the way it used to be. but every generation of fisheries' biologists makes a new baseline when they start their career. and so the fisheries' biologists from 30 years ago -- their baseline was maybe 10% of the fisheries' biologists' baseline from the generation before. this is an example of the shifting-baseline syndrome. it's an incredibly important idea. it's the most important idea about understanding the environment and human impact on the environnt. you cannot...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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dr. jackson. >> good afternoon dr. jackson i'm not going to repeat anything the gentleman said but welcome, welcome back i've been knowing him for a long, long time before there was a commission and i think because he have also told the truth he wouldn't lie i remember saying to him don't go around the bush tell it like it is and he got rid of and it hurt me very bad i want to say to the listening audience those who are watch i know paul i want you to get our bicycle and read about that all second corinthians one through 8 it is the vision of paradis i from hunters point shipyard had a vision but it's become the valley of the dry bones i would like to say that we as a people should understand that i do have a history of that shld they going to have a place we met and one day they tore it ban u down because of the toxins the politics that is being played on the people to come to san francisco to live over there and olsen lee have changed the map made it a different color and pit a to b that's why they built the housing a
dr. jackson. >> good afternoon dr. jackson i'm not going to repeat anything the gentleman said but welcome, welcome back i've been knowing him for a long, long time before there was a commission and i think because he have also told the truth he wouldn't lie i remember saying to him don't go around the bush tell it like it is and he got rid of and it hurt me very bad i want to say to the listening audience those who are watch i know paul i want you to get our bicycle and read about that...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 4, 2014
11/14
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dr. espanola jackson and ace washington. >> hello, again. >> thank you dr. espanola jackson you know, i love history i've been a resident of bayview hunters point since 1948 came to san francisco in 1943 by in 1992 dan gale the president of the united states came to bayview hunters point and came for a project that the tenants started and it was called r f c management council where the tenants were to the trained to be managers and layperson's all of the departments that were able to have the tenants to run and operate public housing themselves there was 20 tenants trained as managers 12 was hired i don't know what happened to the rest of them let me say this to you you know the tenants should have had a say i went to all the tenants meetings that was being held and the developer who was representing that area alice griffith was named after a commissioner and that's the reason why it was named alice griffith because that area most people didn't know that it was building built as i stated in 1962 so you know because of the landfill water come into the 30 stor
dr. espanola jackson and ace washington. >> hello, again. >> thank you dr. espanola jackson you know, i love history i've been a resident of bayview hunters point since 1948 came to san francisco in 1943 by in 1992 dan gale the president of the united states came to bayview hunters point and came for a project that the tenants started and it was called r f c management council where the tenants were to the trained to be managers and layperson's all of the departments that were able...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 6, 2014
11/14
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dr. jackson do you have a copy of the letter? i have one right here to give you if you don't have one and do you have the lease? >> and then 5 thousand square feet adjacent. >> the exact same thing why don't we move forward we can talk about this. >> i'm sorry we can't talk about it now, it's not on the agenda. >> that's my space. >> okay. at this point do we have any another public comment before we move on? item 5 communication >> commissioners? members of the public any comment on communications? okay. is it on communications? >> yes. >> commissioners no one is going to disrespect dr. espanola jackson i've had a lot of patience i served through 3 generals 3 i pay attention to the communication as to the deliberations about the 5 thousand square feet and the additional 4 thousand plus the 3 thousand 4 hundred square feet was a space vacant so a gentleman could have a media center that was vested and many of your staff members were aware of it now what's happening is they're not paying attention there's one person trouble maker
dr. jackson do you have a copy of the letter? i have one right here to give you if you don't have one and do you have the lease? >> and then 5 thousand square feet adjacent. >> the exact same thing why don't we move forward we can talk about this. >> i'm sorry we can't talk about it now, it's not on the agenda. >> that's my space. >> okay. at this point do we have any another public comment before we move on? item 5 communication >> commissioners? members of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 4, 2014
11/14
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dr. espanola jackson, ace washington and two others. >> dr. jackson. >> i think mrs. jackson left good afternoon first madam chair rosales fellow commissioners attorney and staff director bohe and welcome back mr. booster to see i know you never left and the comments you made earlier were very warming a recipe of hunters point shipyard someone that's attended thousands and thousands of meetings for the last 20 something years someone that's read the development plan i can assure you that you to the rest of the city and us we're looking up to you to help us in the critical stage of the presentation of the project to move this project forward the reason you're not seeing a lot of the residents of bayview hunters point to be honest some of the people have retired because they day and day out even when we're not here there's ongoing meetings in the community on the cac the pack was banned a few years ago we've spent that 20 years putting alice griffith and all those other plans i know where we are seeing you all here we don't need to be coming here maybe a little bit of ti
dr. espanola jackson, ace washington and two others. >> dr. jackson. >> i think mrs. jackson left good afternoon first madam chair rosales fellow commissioners attorney and staff director bohe and welcome back mr. booster to see i know you never left and the comments you made earlier were very warming a recipe of hunters point shipyard someone that's attended thousands and thousands of meetings for the last 20 something years someone that's read the development plan i can assure you...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 4, 2014
11/14
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dr. jackson. >> next mr. washington. >> just speaking on this values i was one of the ones back years ago so almost like a dream what i mean here only we have less opposition the train is moving and we can't stop it the deal is what i come out of it my 25 years of documentation is to merely from this point on out to document to take photographs for the future so people can see what happened in this 10 year trajectory i'm in the past i've been around and documented everything what i see is new players i see new people with the city government and some of the old faces way don't see it is the people that t will impact and effect this is the residents of the san francisco housing authority because redeveloped you guys are you stumbling us i have a story to tell about that i'm a new man a new era but i have no time for eras this is misguided leadership and efforts in the past and the most egregious violation i'm not going to accept is undermining our community there has been done for over decades after decade thr
dr. jackson. >> next mr. washington. >> just speaking on this values i was one of the ones back years ago so almost like a dream what i mean here only we have less opposition the train is moving and we can't stop it the deal is what i come out of it my 25 years of documentation is to merely from this point on out to document to take photographs for the future so people can see what happened in this 10 year trajectory i'm in the past i've been around and documented everything what i...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 27, 2014
11/14
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dr. ricky choi. caroletta jackson. dante henderson and let's have all of the student goes first, so if you are a student and i named you at the end, why don't we have all the students go first and then we'll bring the rest of the folks up. >> president fewer, commissioners, my name is cheryl sandoval and 8th grade student and i'm here to ask you to vote yes on the youth violence resolution. violence has affected people around me, my school mates and me. there is students in san francisco that have cases like rashon and sometimes on my way home on the radio i hear news about teens getting killed. i think that there should be a stop to all of this. some of my classmates lost their education time thinking about what happened to rashon. it's hard to move on and forget about this tragedy. i hope you will vote yes on this resolution tonight for the youth to get hem and to be able to go to school. >> >> >> president fewer and commissioners, i'll theo coler white and student in san francisco unified school district and i go to
dr. ricky choi. caroletta jackson. dante henderson and let's have all of the student goes first, so if you are a student and i named you at the end, why don't we have all the students go first and then we'll bring the rest of the folks up. >> president fewer, commissioners, my name is cheryl sandoval and 8th grade student and i'm here to ask you to vote yes on the youth violence resolution. violence has affected people around me, my school mates and me. there is students in san francisco...
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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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FOXNEWSW
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like michael jackson after him, elvis dr.man to man to ensure steady supply of the perception drugs that ultimately killed him, we have this evidence that stark reality because of the widow of elvis dr. here in las vegas. thank you for being with us, we're joined. as your husband lay dying from stage four cancer, he told you something about a safe deposit box, what was it? >> he told me he took with medications from elvis presley and that someday i might need to tell the story and show this medication so people would understand he lived with a stigma all these years he was the one who caused the drug problem to elvis presley. >> he was widely regarded in the 70s as one of those doctors who helped kill elvis by overprescribing prescription medicines. he told you to look in the safe deposit box and what did you see? >> i was amazed at the amount of prescriptions that were given to this man. >> let's go over some of the drugs found. these two bottles are quaaludes. these were both prescribed, 300 primitives each prescribed by th
like michael jackson after him, elvis dr.man to man to ensure steady supply of the perception drugs that ultimately killed him, we have this evidence that stark reality because of the widow of elvis dr. here in las vegas. thank you for being with us, we're joined. as your husband lay dying from stage four cancer, he told you something about a safe deposit box, what was it? >> he told me he took with medications from elvis presley and that someday i might need to tell the story and show...
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Nov 16, 2014
11/14
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KNTV
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jackson. >> reporter: medical workers carefully moved dr. martin salia in a pod when he landed in omaha. the surgeon too sick to walk. >> he is seriously ill. more ill than any of the patients that have been transported from western africa to the united states. >> he was diagnosed with the ebola virus in sierra leone on monday. he was working in a hospital in free town. his son said he saw his father a month ago in maryland before he returned to west africa to help treat ebola patients. >> he decided to work there because he found out that was his true calling, he is a hero to me. >> today his wife appears to visit him. they hope to use drugs to treat the patient. he is the third patient to be treated at the bio containment unit and the fifth so far, including thomas eric dungeon. the ebola outbreak, the worst in history, has killed more than 5,000 people worldwide and nearly all of them in west africa. he explained why he needed to be there. >> he told me he needed to do it and i knew that deep within myself that the people in freetown needed help. >> the doctor who cared for so many, n
jackson. >> reporter: medical workers carefully moved dr. martin salia in a pod when he landed in omaha. the surgeon too sick to walk. >> he is seriously ill. more ill than any of the patients that have been transported from western africa to the united states. >> he was diagnosed with the ebola virus in sierra leone on monday. he was working in a hospital in free town. his son said he saw his father a month ago in maryland before he returned to west africa to help treat ebola...
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Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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joining me now, criminal defense attorney and hln legal analyst joey jackson and dr.oseph mccormick with the university texas school of public health. joey, let's begin with you. we know while she doesn't have to quarantine herself any more she has to abide by a few guidelines, upon tore herself -- monitor herself, notify public health and talk to them in terms of coordinating her travel, continue to monitor and if she does see a symptom needs to let everybody know immediately. would you consider these new guidelines a legal win for kaci hickox? >> good morning, ana. you know look, this is an issue where you have the public's interest and it's immediately in conflict with the individual's interest to move about freely. and the judge did temper his decision in the way you noted. she has to submit to direct monitoring which means her temperature will be taken and they will follow and evaluate her every day to ensure she's okay. of course in addition to that, she'll coordinate the travel with local officials and if she becomes symptomatic, she'll of course know if i them
joining me now, criminal defense attorney and hln legal analyst joey jackson and dr.oseph mccormick with the university texas school of public health. joey, let's begin with you. we know while she doesn't have to quarantine herself any more she has to abide by a few guidelines, upon tore herself -- monitor herself, notify public health and talk to them in terms of coordinating her travel, continue to monitor and if she does see a symptom needs to let everybody know immediately. would you...
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Nov 20, 2014
11/14
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so let's talk about this with hln legal analyst and criminal defense attorney joey jackson and joined by psychiatrist dr. gail saltz. bill cosby knew the allegations were out there and resurfaced, why was he granting interviews? >> that's what his public relations people have to answer. on the one hand he has a job to do and certainly he's introducing new material and his career, he's building upon it, even at 77, but from a legal perspective, this is where the lawyers will tell you to keep your mouth shut so it's a fine line. your lawyers say, carol, be guy he, don't say a word. anything you say can be used to harm you later about you your public relations people say get out there, because work to do and a future to build and that's the result. >> he's working on an nbc show and had something special on netflix, both of which have been canceled. dr. gail, cosby said he doesn't want to dig my these allegations by commenting on them but at some point, he begins to look guilty, even if he's not. >> i think what's raising people's suspicions about actual guilt has to do with the number of women that have c
so let's talk about this with hln legal analyst and criminal defense attorney joey jackson and joined by psychiatrist dr. gail saltz. bill cosby knew the allegations were out there and resurfaced, why was he granting interviews? >> that's what his public relations people have to answer. on the one hand he has a job to do and certainly he's introducing new material and his career, he's building upon it, even at 77, but from a legal perspective, this is where the lawyers will tell you to...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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KNTV
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jackson at the port of l.a. tonight, hallie, thanks. >>> three days after our nation was declared ebola-free, another ebola patient is on his way to this country for treatment. dr. martin salia is expected to arrive tomorrow at the nebraska medical center. he's a permanent resident of the u.s. originally from sierra leone where he was volunteering treating the sick when he came down with ebola symptoms. that same hospital in nebraska by the way has already successfully treated two americans, a doctor and the nbc news cameraman. >>> overseas tonight the u.s. campaign of air strikes against isis has been underway now for months, but is it working? there have been some successes. today iraqi forces, for example, supported by u.s. air strikes took back a strategic refinery town from isis militants. but there's also new evidence that isis attacks have actually increased since this air campaign got underway. we get the story tonight from our chief foreign correspondent richard engel. >> reporter: the air strikes are easy to count. each plume of fire and debris has been numbered. the pentagon says there have been 883 u.s. air strikes on isis fighters, safe houses and
jackson at the port of l.a. tonight, hallie, thanks. >>> three days after our nation was declared ebola-free, another ebola patient is on his way to this country for treatment. dr. martin salia is expected to arrive tomorrow at the nebraska medical center. he's a permanent resident of the u.s. originally from sierra leone where he was volunteering treating the sick when he came down with ebola symptoms. that same hospital in nebraska by the way has already successfully treated two...
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Nov 21, 2014
11/14
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dr. sedrick alexander, thank you for being with me this morning. >> thank you for having me. >> sadly, i don't know where joey jackson is. stuck in the elevator. he'll join us later in "the newsroom." >>> still to come in "the newsroom" -- >> i think it's amazing, i think it's six years too late. >> i'm angry because i feel the immigration system has failed our family. >> tears of happiness, and outright anger. the president gets mixed reactions from the american public as he pushes on with a plan to overhaul the immigration system. up next we'll hear from those who say the president's strategy didn't go far enough. dad,thank you mom for said this oftprotecting my future.you. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family, get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >>> all right so the dow is going a little crazy, i'm talking about in a good way. alison kosik is at the new york stock exchange, it continues to rise, ri
dr. sedrick alexander, thank you for being with me this morning. >> thank you for having me. >> sadly, i don't know where joey jackson is. stuck in the elevator. he'll join us later in "the newsroom." >>> still to come in "the newsroom" -- >> i think it's amazing, i think it's six years too late. >> i'm angry because i feel the immigration system has failed our family. >> tears of happiness, and outright anger. the president gets mixed...
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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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compared to what the folks in the ford had an andrew jackson was catapulted to prominence by destroying the ford. but i will keep the $20. [laughter] >> dr. horne to say the least you are extremely impressive and extremely educational. i feel like you took me from kindergarten to ph.d. level in the last hour, very impressive. but in the pantheon of our great great leaders, potential leaders like william edward berger dubois's and malcolm malcolm x they make threatened to take united states before the international community in regard to genocide and racial suppression and degradation? >> why did you ask that question? first of all dubois as you probably know file the petitions circa 1946 with the newly born united nations with the human rights violations against people of african descent but perhaps the most successful well-known effort involved paul roberson as you correctly point out approximately 1950 or 1951 when william patterson and the civil rights congress and you may recall i wrote a book on william patterson that came out last year, black revolutionary. this was a very significant effort. it got tremendous amount of internation
compared to what the folks in the ford had an andrew jackson was catapulted to prominence by destroying the ford. but i will keep the $20. [laughter] >> dr. horne to say the least you are extremely impressive and extremely educational. i feel like you took me from kindergarten to ph.d. level in the last hour, very impressive. but in the pantheon of our great great leaders, potential leaders like william edward berger dubois's and malcolm malcolm x they make threatened to take united...
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Nov 3, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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abernat abernathy, jesse jackson, the close aides around king and the people who had been working with him for years trying to put this cam pain on, literally a month after dr. king's death. so this organization it starts to become apparent as marchers begin to descend on washington in 1965 and 1966. they came from the west, the northwest, the midwest, northeast, and of course the south. and i hope that in his comments and remarks that carlos might speak a little bit about his experience on the caravan from the west. i remember some interesting stories that he told, some of which are in the book. and the most photographed of the caravans, however, was the mule train, as you can see here, a classic symbol of southern poverty, sharecroppers, black southern poverty. and what this did was, inadvertently or perhapsed a very tently that this campaign was one more civil rights cam pain and not the multirights cam pain that the sclc and dr. king originally sought. by using this symbol over and over again and having a reporter, it seems just cover and follow the mule train, the national press reinforced this idea that this is really about southern poverty, not about
abernat abernathy, jesse jackson, the close aides around king and the people who had been working with him for years trying to put this cam pain on, literally a month after dr. king's death. so this organization it starts to become apparent as marchers begin to descend on washington in 1965 and 1966. they came from the west, the northwest, the midwest, northeast, and of course the south. and i hope that in his comments and remarks that carlos might speak a little bit about his experience on the...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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abernathy and a young jesse jackson, the folks that were the close aides around king, the people who had been working with him for years trying to put this campaign on a month after dr. king's death. so, this disorganization -- it starts to become apparent as marchers began to descend on washington through the nine caravans modeled after the 1965.mery march in west,ame from the northwest, midwest, northeast, and of course the south. i hope in his comments that carlos might speak about his experience on the caravan from the west. i remember some interesting stories he told, some of which are in the book. photographed of the caravans, however, was the mule train. a classic civil of southern poverty, sharecroppers, even black southern property. -- poverty. what this did was inadvertently reinforced the notion that the campaign was one more black civil rights campaign, and not the multiracial campaign that scls and dr. king had thought. by having a reporter cover and ressow the mule train, the p reinforce the idea that this is really about southern poverty. not about westerner midwesterner northeastern, puerto ricans and native americans. upother symbol that ended distr
abernathy and a young jesse jackson, the folks that were the close aides around king, the people who had been working with him for years trying to put this campaign on a month after dr. king's death. so, this disorganization -- it starts to become apparent as marchers began to descend on washington through the nine caravans modeled after the 1965.mery march in west,ame from the northwest, midwest, northeast, and of course the south. i hope in his comments that carlos might speak about his...
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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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jackson was catapulted into prominence by destroying the negro fort. [laughter] [applause] but i'll keep the $20 for the time being. [laughter] >> [inaudible] >> oh, okay. >> dr. horne to say the least, you were extremely impressive tonight, extremely educational. i feel like you took me from kindergarten to ph.d. level in the past hour. [laughter] very impressive. but in the pantheon of our great black leaders, quintessential leaders like duboise paul robison malcolm x, didn't they threaten to take the united states before the international community in regards to genocide and racial suppression and degradation? >> i'm glad you asked that question. >> could you elaborate? [laughter] >> well, first of all, duboise, as you probably know, filed a petition circa 1946 with the nay shent, then newly-born united nations with regard to human rights violations against people of african descent. but perhaps the most successful, well known effort involved paul robison, approximately 1950-1951 when in league with william patterson and the civil rights congress. you may recall i wrote a book that just came out last year, "black revolutionary." and this was a very signifi
jackson was catapulted into prominence by destroying the negro fort. [laughter] [applause] but i'll keep the $20 for the time being. [laughter] >> [inaudible] >> oh, okay. >> dr. horne to say the least, you were extremely impressive tonight, extremely educational. i feel like you took me from kindergarten to ph.d. level in the past hour. [laughter] very impressive. but in the pantheon of our great black leaders, quintessential leaders like duboise paul robison malcolm x,...
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Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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jackson, nbc news, walnut creek, california. >> let's dive into this in a little bit. what are the pros and cons of it? dr.ties, your gut reaction? >> it sounds a little worse than it actually is. i want to say one thing at the outset. this is not about women who are anticipating any difficulty with their fertility, right? there are a lot of families who have premature ovarian failure. for them it's an amazing technology. this is separate. this is talking about women in their 20s who are being exposed to this technology as a potential viable option to preserve their fertility. >> do the reality check. number one, how successful is it? does it give people a false assurance that they will, if they freeze their eggs, be able to put off child bearing? >> that, of course, is probably a philosophical and ethical issue. it's very expensive. not all insurances will obviously cover it. there are some risks involved. the issue is this. if you preserve, if you freeze an egg in your 20s, that egg is actually healthier than a 35-year-old one. >> it's a younger egg. >> right. but here is the issue. the technology is sti
jackson, nbc news, walnut creek, california. >> let's dive into this in a little bit. what are the pros and cons of it? dr.ties, your gut reaction? >> it sounds a little worse than it actually is. i want to say one thing at the outset. this is not about women who are anticipating any difficulty with their fertility, right? there are a lot of families who have premature ovarian failure. for them it's an amazing technology. this is separate. this is talking about women in their 20s...