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Apr 16, 2014
04/14
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dr. russell?good news and bad news. what we know certain kinds of cells do sort of reach their peak in terms of their duplication and replication, sort of their peak development relatively early in life. when we get elderly the decline is offset by simultaneous gains and wisdom in experience. for example, few years ago, "sully" sullenberger was one of the older pilots for his airline when he successfully brought his plane down on the hudson river, probably because of all the wisdom that he had acquired with all the decades in the cockpit. so the bottom line i think is, yeah, past a certain age a guy will probably not be doing certain things like playing college football for example, because of the physical performance effects, however, if that same individual is able to, oh, i don't know, write an excellent book about jesus with some first-hand reportage into it, which is the better contribution to humanity? jenna: one of the articles put it this way, that you may be slower but you could be smarte
dr. russell?good news and bad news. what we know certain kinds of cells do sort of reach their peak in terms of their duplication and replication, sort of their peak development relatively early in life. when we get elderly the decline is offset by simultaneous gains and wisdom in experience. for example, few years ago, "sully" sullenberger was one of the older pilots for his airline when he successfully brought his plane down on the hudson river, probably because of all the wisdom...
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Apr 28, 2014
04/14
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FOXNEWSW
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dr. russell moore.good to be with you, gretchen. >> i've seen some of your sermons. you do bring in pop culture. i think that's great because you are very relatable to all different levels of society. my question is, is your approach sort of a new way forward for christian conservatives? >> i'm not sure how new it is. in some ways i think it is very old. christians have always sought to maintain what jesus told us which is to see the world around us as a mission field and to speak to the people around us with both conviction and with kindness with both grace and with truth, to call sin what it is so that we can call grace what it is. >> so you have become so influential. you just recently met with president obama. i'm interested in knowing about that but first i want to ask you about your upcoming meeting with possible presidential candidate jeb bush. did you want to meet with him or did he want to meet with you? >> he asked to meet with him but i'm happy to me with him. i'm happy to meet with anybody w
dr. russell moore.good to be with you, gretchen. >> i've seen some of your sermons. you do bring in pop culture. i think that's great because you are very relatable to all different levels of society. my question is, is your approach sort of a new way forward for christian conservatives? >> i'm not sure how new it is. in some ways i think it is very old. christians have always sought to maintain what jesus told us which is to see the world around us as a mission field and to speak...
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Apr 29, 2014
04/14
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FOXNEWSW
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dr. brian russell is a carolina call psychologist and joins us now. this is the reasoning behind it.ay when you bite into a drumstick or corn on the cob, that you have to grimace. and if you grimace, it sends signals to your brain that you're going to be a little bit more aggressive. could that be true? >> okay, first of all, i can't believe that somebody goes to work every day and spends their life studying stupid stuff like this. i don't know how you get a job like that. but i put absolutely zero chicken stock in this study. people have been eating chicken wings, chicken drumsticks for millenn millennia. and i don't think it's made them any more aggressive. if you're a parent, it's fine, don't worry about it. >> this is what one of the researchers say. since biting food increases aggression and noncompliance, it may not be wise to serve young children chicken wings shortly before bedtime or to serve steak and corn on the cob in the company of dinner guests. >> it says children will be twice as aggressive -- if you buy two lottery tickets, you're twice as likely to win and you're no
dr. brian russell is a carolina call psychologist and joins us now. this is the reasoning behind it.ay when you bite into a drumstick or corn on the cob, that you have to grimace. and if you grimace, it sends signals to your brain that you're going to be a little bit more aggressive. could that be true? >> okay, first of all, i can't believe that somebody goes to work every day and spends their life studying stupid stuff like this. i don't know how you get a job like that. but i put...
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737
Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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KGO
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dr. russell moore, president of the southern baptist ethics.alph reed, chairman of the faith and freedom coalition. and our own cokie roberts. welcome to you all. we'll talk about politics in a minute. but easter, a fitting time to talk about religion and faith, as christians flock to churches, but maybe not as many this year. let me read you these numbers from gallup, attendance is down across the country. in 1992, 70% of respondents said they were a member of a church or a synagogue. in 2013, that number had dropped to 59%. reverend, what is happening? >> listen, no question those numbers are correct. i'm an evangelist. i want people to know that god loves them, that god is real. this is easter. jesus christ came to this earth to take our sins. he died on the cross. >> i know you're going to be in church today. but let's talk about the change, let's talk about this declining number. what do you do about it? >> i keep telling people about god's love. because even though people may not be going to church, people still want to know the truth, an
dr. russell moore, president of the southern baptist ethics.alph reed, chairman of the faith and freedom coalition. and our own cokie roberts. welcome to you all. we'll talk about politics in a minute. but easter, a fitting time to talk about religion and faith, as christians flock to churches, but maybe not as many this year. let me read you these numbers from gallup, attendance is down across the country. in 1992, 70% of respondents said they were a member of a church or a synagogue. in 2013,...
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Apr 10, 2014
04/14
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MSNBCW
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dr. king and civil rights leaders who stepped up to the microphone. bill russell sudden emergence of openly gay players in college and professional sports. >> it seems to me it may not be a good correlation, but, a lot of questions they asked about gay athletes were essentially the same questions they used to ask about us black athletes. asked me how would you feel about playing with a gay player? and i have one question? can he play? [ applause ] [ sponge ] welcome back to "you make a choice." meet our contestant. will she choose to help maintain her hands... or to really clean her dishes? oooh, we have a game changer?! [ female announcer ] dawn hand renewal with olay beauty has a specially designed formula that helps lock in your hands' natural moisture while getting dishes squeaky clean. [ sponge ] sparkling dishes and fabulous hands -- she looks happy about those prizes! [ female announcer ] dawn does more. [ sponge ] so it's not a chore. without standard leather. you are feeling exhilarated with front-wheel drive. you are feeling powerful with a 4-cylinder en
dr. king and civil rights leaders who stepped up to the microphone. bill russell sudden emergence of openly gay players in college and professional sports. >> it seems to me it may not be a good correlation, but, a lot of questions they asked about gay athletes were essentially the same questions they used to ask about us black athletes. asked me how would you feel about playing with a gay player? and i have one question? can he play? [ applause ] [ sponge ] welcome back to "you make...
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Apr 10, 2014
04/14
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dr. king and civil rights leaders who stepped up to the microphone. bill russellt the sudden emergence of openly gay players in college and professional sports. >> it seems to me it may not be a good correlation, but, a lot of questions they asked about gay athletes were essentially the same questions they used to ask about us black athletes. asked me how would you feel about playing with a gay player? and i have one question? can he play? [ applause ] >>> when the president and first lady arrived at bush intercontinental airport in houston the airport's namesake, former president, george h.w. bush welcomed them. when the president comes to your hometown, you show up to meet him. coming up next, the scandal inside the secret service. agents falling down drunk and when they're not falling down chasing hookers. where castles were houses and valiant knights stood watch for the kingdom was vast and monsters lurked in the deep and the good queen showed the boy it could all be real avo: all of great britain, all in one place book on expedia before april 30th and save up
dr. king and civil rights leaders who stepped up to the microphone. bill russellt the sudden emergence of openly gay players in college and professional sports. >> it seems to me it may not be a good correlation, but, a lot of questions they asked about gay athletes were essentially the same questions they used to ask about us black athletes. asked me how would you feel about playing with a gay player? and i have one question? can he play? [ applause ] >>> when the president and...
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Apr 8, 2014
04/14
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CNNW
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dr. king, then he would call governor wallace, then he'd call senator dirksen. and then he'd be on the phone with richard russellery stop. >> he'd call them in the morning, he'd call them at night, he'd have a cocktail with them. there is a story of calling a senator at 2:00 in the morning and he said i hope i didn't wake you up. and the senator said, no, just lying here in the bed hoping my president would call. >> reporter: johnson's arm twisting worked. the bill fought its way through congress. the filibuster was broken by republicans and democrats. with his signature, lbj made the civil rights agect of 1964 the w of the land fouling a ground swell of public support after violence and hate had tested the nation. and carol, seems like such a long time ago, but i remember as a little girl growing up my parents telling me stories about how they were not able to go to the neighborhood school or the swimming pool or church because it was for whites only. they grew up in the rural south in louisiana. and it's about how far our country has come. and the question here, what makes it different the times of lbj to the
dr. king, then he would call governor wallace, then he'd call senator dirksen. and then he'd be on the phone with richard russellery stop. >> he'd call them in the morning, he'd call them at night, he'd have a cocktail with them. there is a story of calling a senator at 2:00 in the morning and he said i hope i didn't wake you up. and the senator said, no, just lying here in the bed hoping my president would call. >> reporter: johnson's arm twisting worked. the bill fought its way...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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CSPAN2
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dr. kling and i endorse at the state level, and also those experiments were designed by heat's. there's a new book out by russell sage called fighting for good evidence, social policy, which recounts the story of how difficult it was to get that, to mount this experiment is going to design them and implement them and then to use their findings. in policy terms. so i'm all for favoring where they do the right thing. in my conception of what the right thing is. and opposing them an when they don't. i don't think there's anything disqualifying about highly educated technological elites. i don't think -- they certainly exhibit times and often more systematically a certain of the biases that dr. kling recounts but they also tend to be more open to new evidence that i think now in heat are. they have the techniques. they've mastered the techniques for designing and then evaluating evidence that we need to make better decisions. >> we have time for a few questions from the floor. before we do, let me talk a bit about, for the next 20 minutes. after the questions we're going to take a break for lunch. lunch is up one fl
dr. kling and i endorse at the state level, and also those experiments were designed by heat's. there's a new book out by russell sage called fighting for good evidence, social policy, which recounts the story of how difficult it was to get that, to mount this experiment is going to design them and implement them and then to use their findings. in policy terms. so i'm all for favoring where they do the right thing. in my conception of what the right thing is. and opposing them an when they...