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Jul 11, 2020
07/20
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so many of his friends, advisers, campaign chairman, et cetera, are in jail. and for the president to be able to issue a pardon on the basis of a crime that the person committed assisting the president is ridiculous, and there ought to be a law, and i'm recommending we pass a law that presidents cannot issue a pardon if the crime that the person is in jail for is one that is caused by protecting the president, which this was. it's appalling. >> i appreciate your time. thank you. >> my pleasure. thank you so much, anderson.
so many of his friends, advisers, campaign chairman, et cetera, are in jail. and for the president to be able to issue a pardon on the basis of a crime that the person committed assisting the president is ridiculous, and there ought to be a law, and i'm recommending we pass a law that presidents cannot issue a pardon if the crime that the person is in jail for is one that is caused by protecting the president, which this was. it's appalling. >> i appreciate your time. thank you. >>...
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Jul 16, 2020
07/20
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CSPAN2
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we had to shut down schools in march come purchasing laptops for kids, by wi-fi, et cetera. the heroes act which is what's been proposed in the house, which has passed the the houset would provide about $60 billion for schools. again, not enough. most districts or most education advocates missing are saying td need around $200 billion to reopen schools. right now senator lamar alexander who is the senate education committee, he's talking about possibly providing 60-$70 60-$70 billion for schools and that money would really be wgeared toward reopening costs such as ppe, transportation, et cetera, school district did you pay their staff. so the reopening costs might help but billy what districts need is enough money to basically survive the school year. what i should would emphasize that federal dollars are only 10% of school funding. the vast majority of schools will local and state aid and state aid has plummeted. >> host: we show this article in the last segment when we talk about school reopens. in early june report from association of school administrators reopening means
we had to shut down schools in march come purchasing laptops for kids, by wi-fi, et cetera. the heroes act which is what's been proposed in the house, which has passed the the houset would provide about $60 billion for schools. again, not enough. most districts or most education advocates missing are saying td need around $200 billion to reopen schools. right now senator lamar alexander who is the senate education committee, he's talking about possibly providing 60-$70 60-$70 billion for...
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Jul 14, 2020
07/20
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CNNW
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we should be able to give them the equipment to do so in testing, tracing, treating, et cetera, but it is a recognition that unless you have a very, very low percentage of -- of incidence of the infection you really have to consider locking down. >> all right. house speaker nancy pelosi, we appreciate you joining this program this morning. >> my pleasure. don't forgot the defense production act. it's the answer to so much. thank you. >> we'll keep talking about it. you have a good afternoon.
we should be able to give them the equipment to do so in testing, tracing, treating, et cetera, but it is a recognition that unless you have a very, very low percentage of -- of incidence of the infection you really have to consider locking down. >> all right. house speaker nancy pelosi, we appreciate you joining this program this morning. >> my pleasure. don't forgot the defense production act. it's the answer to so much. thank you. >> we'll keep talking about it. you have a...
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Jul 14, 2020
07/20
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there's a cash flow issue, storage issue, et cetera.verybody has to have 90 days of ppe in their own stockpile. lesson learned, and that's a state record. >> any idea how many days an average hospital in new york in nukes he would have on hand at this point back? >> they should have 90 days on hand now, or they would've had to get a waiver from the department of health because they didn't have the cash flow or something like that. but i have not heard of anyone getting a waiver. >> to the compass point, it's the 90 days have the highest burn rate, so at the peak of a new wave or something like that, and we're talking this, many of the hospitals we checked region as well have more than 90 days. they have gone extra cautious, some have 12020 days worth of materials. we are tracking all of that i don't know if waivers either but will check on that. >> but that does not apply to testing equipment. that was only hospital ppe. [inaudible question] >> what was the second question? [inaudible question] >> i don't think the state funding formula
there's a cash flow issue, storage issue, et cetera.verybody has to have 90 days of ppe in their own stockpile. lesson learned, and that's a state record. >> any idea how many days an average hospital in new york in nukes he would have on hand at this point back? >> they should have 90 days on hand now, or they would've had to get a waiver from the department of health because they didn't have the cash flow or something like that. but i have not heard of anyone getting a waiver....
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Jul 5, 2020
07/20
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et cetera. so we are all in the side of justice here. i think that is a very refreshing thing, not just to see it as mentor the perpetrators, not that simple. for that is a big thing. i'm of course the other reality is as i know from my work for eight or ten years, the majority of senior men, senior managers and corporate america have been putting their shoulder to the wheel. taking on female lgbt disabled new migrant could understand groupthink is about ideas. they value and need these people. the last thing i want to do is throw cold water on the possibility of that. >> we need to emphasize the value and the enormous shared i guess in yearning for a greater degree of respect and dignity. with the men and women in the managerial ranks. >> let me ask one more question i think there's a common thread here in the composition today and in the book around inclusion important it is to create when checked by our leaders are inclusive and we speak of culture people actually speak up. >> way to subscrib
et cetera. so we are all in the side of justice here. i think that is a very refreshing thing, not just to see it as mentor the perpetrators, not that simple. for that is a big thing. i'm of course the other reality is as i know from my work for eight or ten years, the majority of senior men, senior managers and corporate america have been putting their shoulder to the wheel. taking on female lgbt disabled new migrant could understand groupthink is about ideas. they value and need these people....
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Jul 20, 2020
07/20
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our group, for instance, we put out multiple offense, videos, et cetera. the things we are continuing to find is that blacks in america are actually resonating to fact. case in point. the only things like who margaret sanger was come what her organization was about, how they been impacted. they are also learning there is been one political party in the united states history that has fought against blacks movingth forward, and that's -- that history is one that no one else can you die. blacks are awakening to that. they are understanding the impact of the democratic party and this is like president donald j. trump is polling just not 12% but in some of the polls we looking at a size 28-32%. these things are coming out in spite of the mainstream ability to seemingly try to shut the years to blacks in america with these facts from the most recent abc news "wall street journal" poll has the presence of african-americans at 6% for joe bidenn and 80%, 14% undecided or don't know. >> guest: again you know, , when i see these polls i can't help steve, but to refle
our group, for instance, we put out multiple offense, videos, et cetera. the things we are continuing to find is that blacks in america are actually resonating to fact. case in point. the only things like who margaret sanger was come what her organization was about, how they been impacted. they are also learning there is been one political party in the united states history that has fought against blacks movingth forward, and that's -- that history is one that no one else can you die. blacks...
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Jul 30, 2020
07/20
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lance, there is always questions about what apple has up its sleeve in terms of new product design, et cetera. anything to look for?
lance, there is always questions about what apple has up its sleeve in terms of new product design, et cetera. anything to look for?
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Jul 4, 2020
07/20
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, that we will be able tojust back go et cetera, that we will be able to just back up where we left offnk, absolutely set to become the greatest, greatest story of sport. the 2022 commonwealth games are said to be the first major multisports event to have more women's mental events than men. i'd genuinely believe this can be a blip and i've really think that we got sports governing bodies who have the capability of bringing the women's sport, women's game back quickly. the new women's super league campaign is set to begin at the start of september and will be the first big marker when it comes to the return of women's sport in this country this year. 0nly the return of women's sport in this country this year. only time will tell, though, if the appetite from fans, broadcasters and sponsors is still there. hello there. there's no sign of our weather settling down any time soon. and this weekend it stays certainly unsettled with cloud and rain on the way and there will be some strong winds as well, particularly as we head into sunday. scenes like these, i think, be quite commonplace over
, that we will be able tojust back go et cetera, that we will be able to just back up where we left offnk, absolutely set to become the greatest, greatest story of sport. the 2022 commonwealth games are said to be the first major multisports event to have more women's mental events than men. i'd genuinely believe this can be a blip and i've really think that we got sports governing bodies who have the capability of bringing the women's sport, women's game back quickly. the new women's super...
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Jul 14, 2020
07/20
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CNBC
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the centralization in terms of the leadership, top five stocks in the states and 25% cap, et cetera that's not as healthy in the environment of the recession in an environment where we are looking for the economy to recover. you'd expect those to be beneficiaries of that. totally, absolutely understand that the kinds of companies that have been leading the market have been in most cases, terrific business plans and their future is probably quite good issues around regulation will hold that and i do come back to valuation at some point, it becomes a factor i expect big company's argument is weaker than some other parts of the market. >> william, you talk about the earnings being a potential catalyst you think about the vaccine developments yesterday, you had this piece of news come out to the vaccine makers, moving markets yesterday early in the morning how do you think investors react to further vaccine news? what is the expectation here are we set up for disappointment or are we set up for the upside? >> undoubtedly, the vaccine that was effective was transformational i'm no medical exper
the centralization in terms of the leadership, top five stocks in the states and 25% cap, et cetera that's not as healthy in the environment of the recession in an environment where we are looking for the economy to recover. you'd expect those to be beneficiaries of that. totally, absolutely understand that the kinds of companies that have been leading the market have been in most cases, terrific business plans and their future is probably quite good issues around regulation will hold that and...
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Jul 7, 2020
07/20
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you've got pharmacy in there amazon is delivering food from whole foods, et cetera the category is a very large category our getting bigger in the category i think will make it even more affordable for consumers. >> interesting comments there from ceo of course uber dara khosrowshahi talking about the anti-trust amp indications of postmates that was announced yesterday. our viewers may recall the long conversations they had with, long-running conversations they had had grubhub that did fall apart because of concern about anti-trust opposition to that potential deal, not just at the federal level, if it would have been there, but also more at the state and even local level, and i asked mr. khosrowshahi if he'd ask that for the postmates deal. they will be large in san francisco and new york but he said is he not concerned because of the competition from three big players and the fact he believes it will become more affordable perhaps for more consumers as a result of that. >> yes, it was a great interview, david i was amazed, he was so bullish about food delivery and kept going back a
you've got pharmacy in there amazon is delivering food from whole foods, et cetera the category is a very large category our getting bigger in the category i think will make it even more affordable for consumers. >> interesting comments there from ceo of course uber dara khosrowshahi talking about the anti-trust amp indications of postmates that was announced yesterday. our viewers may recall the long conversations they had with, long-running conversations they had had grubhub that did...
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Jul 27, 2020
07/20
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, et cetera. sometimes these people and organizations are investigated for decades. these are not violent revolutionary threats. but rather political dissidents who oppose certain aspects of government policy and perhaps even a particular form of government that we have. they do so through specific needs, ostensibly protected under the constitution, although as we noted in our class on free speech, not so much at the turn of the century when anarchists were strictly policed. political spying will begin around 1908, 1909, and run to about 1924 and will stop for about a decade. the impetus to stop it is known as the first red scare. immediately after the first world war comes to an end, the following year, 1919, sees a number of actions that will raise a lot of concerns about government surveillance. the seattle general strike in early part of 1919 shuts down that city, tens of thousands of workers go on strike across industries. in the spring of 1919, a bomb plot is broken up, and then there's a wa
, et cetera. sometimes these people and organizations are investigated for decades. these are not violent revolutionary threats. but rather political dissidents who oppose certain aspects of government policy and perhaps even a particular form of government that we have. they do so through specific needs, ostensibly protected under the constitution, although as we noted in our class on free speech, not so much at the turn of the century when anarchists were strictly policed. political spying...
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Jul 26, 2020
07/20
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, et cetera. the real challenge was how could they appeal to the new immigrant worker in the heart of american industry? if they're going to claim to be the party of workers? and next time we will see how the socialist party and the industrial workers of the world tries to address this problem of how to organize the new industrial proletarians. so that's all for today. [indistinct conversations] >> listen to lectures in history on the go by streaming our podcast anywhere, anytime. americanatching history tv only on c-span3. >> this is american history tv on c-span3, were each weekend, we feature 48 hours of programs exploring our past. >> the korean war began 70 years ago, june 25, 1950. it ended with an armistice agreement in july, 1950. next, an oral history interview with u.s. army veteran harold christenson recorded by the korean war legacy foundation. he discusses his service as upland sergeant and the loss of two friends in the war within a few months of arriving in korea. the project was un
, et cetera. the real challenge was how could they appeal to the new immigrant worker in the heart of american industry? if they're going to claim to be the party of workers? and next time we will see how the socialist party and the industrial workers of the world tries to address this problem of how to organize the new industrial proletarians. so that's all for today. [indistinct conversations] >> listen to lectures in history on the go by streaming our podcast anywhere, anytime....
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Jul 7, 2020
07/20
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MSNBCW
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there are food deserts, et cetera.er, the cause stems from your socioeconomic status and what you have access to and the type of lifestyle you have access to and the underlying conditions that might lead to which we know now affect the outcome of covid-19 infections. >> sad to say, it seems like so many health issues in this country, that it is related to socioeconomic status. how critical would a federal mask man date be to the fight against covid? would it actually make a difference? >> i think it absolutely would. one of the most powerful studies i've seen recently and i think we may even talk about this is the report by goldman sachs you've got up on the screen right now. whether you're looking at this as a political issue and not quite certain where you sit on the fence or look at it as an infringement on your rights, i think in one instance the people we can trust the most are the bankers because they have one vested interest, our economy recovering. they consider masks essential to our economy recovering. for me
there are food deserts, et cetera.er, the cause stems from your socioeconomic status and what you have access to and the type of lifestyle you have access to and the underlying conditions that might lead to which we know now affect the outcome of covid-19 infections. >> sad to say, it seems like so many health issues in this country, that it is related to socioeconomic status. how critical would a federal mask man date be to the fight against covid? would it actually make a difference?...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 25, 2020
07/20
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SFGTV
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the development authority hope it go ahead and have folks coming visit, et cetera. cal trans and the reason we refer to it is e2 was the foundation, one of the old found aigs frofoundations from the ba. they repurposed it into a viewing area. that is something we want to make sure is able to access as part of the net work. next slide, please. let's talk about what we're most excited about is really developing pedestrian bicycle path on the western side of the island which would lead from the right side of the picture there, viewing landing area, down along hill crest and that road. we see a rare opportunity that i want to chat with you about in that regard. entails is improvements as part of our contract that we just started recently. improvements along hill crest road that the development authority has received a grant for improvements along hill crest. their mission is to get folks in the landing area. we thought it was very important and wanted to build a partnership and treb you're tred development authority and other partners are excited on our initial discussi
the development authority hope it go ahead and have folks coming visit, et cetera. cal trans and the reason we refer to it is e2 was the foundation, one of the old found aigs frofoundations from the ba. they repurposed it into a viewing area. that is something we want to make sure is able to access as part of the net work. next slide, please. let's talk about what we're most excited about is really developing pedestrian bicycle path on the western side of the island which would lead from the...
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Jul 10, 2020
07/20
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CNBC
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i think the ability to carry out some of these and bilateral leverage et cetera, i'm not particularly happy to see that this is the tactic we continue to play, again, through tariffs and different type of trade sanctions. this is what this administration likes to do. they haven't always been good for u.s. companies i think in the short run this is a headline at a time that certain segments of luxury, not all luxury, some parts of luxury are impervious to this, but luxury should be coming under pressure >> i know you're partial to an hermes scarf. >> always. who watching the show isn't? listen, i'm going to be as delicate as i possibly can, you know, i'm not looking to cast apersi aspersions to our french friends, but the red ribroader t i'm hard pressed to believe this has any impact whatsoever. >>> coming up, the race to $2 trillion the chart master is with us. he'll break down which tech titans will get there first. at leaf blowers. you should be mad your neighbor always wants to hang out. and you should be mad your smart fridge is unnecessarily complicated. make ice. making ice. bu
i think the ability to carry out some of these and bilateral leverage et cetera, i'm not particularly happy to see that this is the tactic we continue to play, again, through tariffs and different type of trade sanctions. this is what this administration likes to do. they haven't always been good for u.s. companies i think in the short run this is a headline at a time that certain segments of luxury, not all luxury, some parts of luxury are impervious to this, but luxury should be coming under...
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Jul 27, 2020
07/20
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CSPAN3
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you are filth, et cetera, et cetera. protestants, catholics, and jews will know you for what you are, an evil abnormal beast. you are done. there is only one thing left to do. you know what it is. you have 34 days left. you are done. there is but one way out for you. you had better take it before your filthy, abnormal self is bared to the nation." he is encouraged to kill himself because he is such a threat to the nation in their view. king does not obviously kill himself. the fbi then offers to turn the tape over to the press. the press turns him down and the fbi backs off in the face of a looming congressional investigation into federal surveillance. from 1965 to '67, lyndon johnson takes over for the assassinated kennedy, cracks down on wiretapping. there are a couple of court cases, katz versus the united states. in these cases the supreme court changes its tune and says wiretaps must follow the same procedures as a warrant. following probable cause. the people initiating the tap have to specify the crime they are in
you are filth, et cetera, et cetera. protestants, catholics, and jews will know you for what you are, an evil abnormal beast. you are done. there is only one thing left to do. you know what it is. you have 34 days left. you are done. there is but one way out for you. you had better take it before your filthy, abnormal self is bared to the nation." he is encouraged to kill himself because he is such a threat to the nation in their view. king does not obviously kill himself. the fbi then...
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Jul 20, 2020
07/20
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BBCNEWS
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with a lot of businesses, they are either constrained because of the pandemic and the recession et ceteraey themselves, then after the training is done, some of these employees will move on to other jobs. so we need some intervention from government to help people read skill and —— re— skill, get ready for the jobs in the future. and i likely to be unemployed. we lost you there for a few moments so we didn't quite hear everything you had to say. in terms of what the uk chancellor has already announced, support for employers, encouragement to keep people injobs and also apprenticeships, et cetera. what do you make about what is in place already? so, what we need is... no, i'm afraid we're going to have to say goodbye to her. it's a real shame. going to have to say goodbye to her. it's a realshame. she going to have to say goodbye to her. it's a real shame. she is the chief economist at kpmg. the technical reasons, we couldn't hear what she had to say. just imagine, there is so much detail on our website and if you go to the business page, there is all sorts of detailed analysis for those w
with a lot of businesses, they are either constrained because of the pandemic and the recession et ceteraey themselves, then after the training is done, some of these employees will move on to other jobs. so we need some intervention from government to help people read skill and —— re— skill, get ready for the jobs in the future. and i likely to be unemployed. we lost you there for a few moments so we didn't quite hear everything you had to say. in terms of what the uk chancellor has...
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Jul 20, 2020
07/20
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as we gain more experience, we're learning that the elderly, those with co-morbidities, et cetera. the other part of that that was really important is who should be included in the clinical trials? so we really need vulnerable populations, people who are at risk for severe disease to be included. we need those who are in underrepresented groups, underrepresented minorities, et cetera, to be included, because we need to understand the i have indication and safety in all populations. when fda gets those data, mike, we'll be able to help the manufacturer figure out what are the indications? does this work in vulnerable populations? does it work in underrepresented mine minority poli populations? again, mike, really the data and the science and the medicine drive this conversation. it's the way that it should be. and we all want 100% effective vaccine there's nothing 100% in medicine. we want it to be effective in those who are most at risk for severe disease. one last point on this, mike, because it might get lost sometimes in the translation. we had at the end of the day, what we wer
as we gain more experience, we're learning that the elderly, those with co-morbidities, et cetera. the other part of that that was really important is who should be included in the clinical trials? so we really need vulnerable populations, people who are at risk for severe disease to be included. we need those who are in underrepresented groups, underrepresented minorities, et cetera, to be included, because we need to understand the i have indication and safety in all populations. when fda...
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Jul 4, 2020
07/20
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KQED
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failure as a country,if as citizene don't, between advocating in our own ways for that production, et cetera, and to follow this u we've put out, with core, a manual. it's a kind of idiot's guideite. to setting up test sites. it's not a complicated thing to do. you need the ppe, you need the testing, you need a lab relationship. that can be -- that can happen all over this country. and the success will be when every american has the opportunity to be tested twice a week. and the more americansn that opt that program, the sooner this thing's going to be disarmed. >> there are a lot of people who don't want to get tested twice a week. they don't want to wear a mask. what do you think about incentivizing themay to in some maybe either tying it to unemployment benefits, tying it to ppp payments, the small business ans program. do you think people just do it through the goodness as you said, hearts, if they're, looking at their own family, or is there a way to mandate itc orrage it? >> the first thought is, is that it's about leadershi this is -- the idea -- it's not only the united statesr part
failure as a country,if as citizene don't, between advocating in our own ways for that production, et cetera, and to follow this u we've put out, with core, a manual. it's a kind of idiot's guideite. to setting up test sites. it's not a complicated thing to do. you need the ppe, you need the testing, you need a lab relationship. that can be -- that can happen all over this country. and the success will be when every american has the opportunity to be tested twice a week. and the more americansn...
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117
Jul 13, 2020
07/20
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CNNW
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and said okay, here's what we know and here's how this changes what i may have said a week ago, et cetera. that's not what the president has done consistently >> no. what the president has done consistently is to try to downplay in the interests of preserving confidence in the economy, which he thought was his ticket to re-election and the thing that made him feel good about his presidency, try to gloss over the facts, and so you've seen this from the beginning all the way through the springtime. take a listen. >> by april, you know, in theory, when it gets a little warmer, miraculously goes away. the coronavirus, which is, you know, very well under control in our country. we have very few people with it. we're going down, not up. we're going substantially down, not up. again when you have 15 people and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero, that's a pretty good job we've done. >> reporter: what we've got now is a situation where the facts have turned unambiguously bad, not just in blue states which had a problem early on and have done somewhat better but it'
and said okay, here's what we know and here's how this changes what i may have said a week ago, et cetera. that's not what the president has done consistently >> no. what the president has done consistently is to try to downplay in the interests of preserving confidence in the economy, which he thought was his ticket to re-election and the thing that made him feel good about his presidency, try to gloss over the facts, and so you've seen this from the beginning all the way through the...
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Jul 21, 2020
07/20
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CNNW
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but if you have it under control you can do it under circumstances with distancing, et cetera. can you explain to folks why that's important? and why forcing schools that have the big outbreaks might be dangerous. >> absolutely. in fact, yesterday, results were released from the study in south korea where they did do a lot of contact tracing and showed that particularly older children transmit the virus very efficiently. so if we have a lot of virus circulating the community and put those kids back in school, the challenge becomes you can create super spreading events that the teachers, the janitors, the cafeteria workers, all of the adults supporting the kids have potential to then get the virus and bring it back home to their families. so even if kids are minimally symptomatic with a high virus burden in the community, all of those adults that support all of those kids have real risks of creating exponential spread in the community again. >> the governor of missouri, mike parsons said in a radio interview that the science is clear, we know that kids are impacted a lot less an
but if you have it under control you can do it under circumstances with distancing, et cetera. can you explain to folks why that's important? and why forcing schools that have the big outbreaks might be dangerous. >> absolutely. in fact, yesterday, results were released from the study in south korea where they did do a lot of contact tracing and showed that particularly older children transmit the virus very efficiently. so if we have a lot of virus circulating the community and put those...
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81
Jul 4, 2020
07/20
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KQED
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that have died from this thing who were -- who we here with us -- grandparents, fathers, mothers, et cetera. even some children. they were just here with us alive a minute ago. and now we imagine them piled up like wood in the rain. and the only way that they get an honorable passing is if we commit ourselveshe toilver linings. >> how do you understand how partisan every element of this pandemic has become? even the debate about reopening? i mean, last week there were protesters in orange county,lo just south of s angeles, your home beach, otesting the beach closures. the president is criticizing impeople who disagree with it seems like every aspect of this can't be removedns from the partip. how do you think about that? >> well, what we see, as i said, principally in quite marnalized areas, is that the -- the larger number of peoplest who are the ulnerable and the most without and who ha been before this covid-19, they are the ones who ar largely most concerned about opening too fast, and i do find it upsetting to see that people who have large groups of people who have never known any opp
that have died from this thing who were -- who we here with us -- grandparents, fathers, mothers, et cetera. even some children. they were just here with us alive a minute ago. and now we imagine them piled up like wood in the rain. and the only way that they get an honorable passing is if we commit ourselveshe toilver linings. >> how do you understand how partisan every element of this pandemic has become? even the debate about reopening? i mean, last week there were protesters in orange...
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108
Jul 15, 2020
07/20
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CNNW
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a lot of people leave town, et cetera. as we transition intoation, a lot of people return to town and that removes some of the safety margin or that buffer that we had within june or july. so the system is really at the breaking point. in fact, the state director and governor started standards of care, a triage system that you might use when or -- you would use when the resources are outstripped by the demand for health care. >> sanjay, the system is at the breaking point, it's not just mr. humble that's talking about that. we hear that around the country. it was another record breaking day yesterday across the country and in so many states. what's this next week going to look like? >> well, you know, i mean, one thing that we're seeing in arizona as well as several other states this very predictable sort of lag time. right? i think you have the increase in the number of diagnosed cases. diagnosed infections and then a couple of weeks after that is when you start to see the increase in hospitalizations. i think you know so
a lot of people leave town, et cetera. as we transition intoation, a lot of people return to town and that removes some of the safety margin or that buffer that we had within june or july. so the system is really at the breaking point. in fact, the state director and governor started standards of care, a triage system that you might use when or -- you would use when the resources are outstripped by the demand for health care. >> sanjay, the system is at the breaking point, it's not just...
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Jul 15, 2020
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you know, the wisdom of wearing masks, et cetera.en that the data in this country and every other country that's been through this has shown it helps, it saves lives. are you just amazed we are where we are today? >> i hate to admit that some americans, you know, didn't really take the pandemic seriously when things started opening up. they just figured we're back to normal again and katie, unbar the door, we're back socializing and you have seen it all over the country. the numbers are spreading. so we have to take this seriously. the measures that we can take now shy of closing door are wearing a mask and being safe. i urge not only the citizens of charleston, but all over this country from folks to follow these simple practices. it matters to all of our citizens and it matters to our economy going forward. >> yeah. do you still get pushback to the argument? do you find people who say this is my constitutional right not to wear a mask? >> we have almost a unanimous vote last night. there's a little pushback out there, but really no
you know, the wisdom of wearing masks, et cetera.en that the data in this country and every other country that's been through this has shown it helps, it saves lives. are you just amazed we are where we are today? >> i hate to admit that some americans, you know, didn't really take the pandemic seriously when things started opening up. they just figured we're back to normal again and katie, unbar the door, we're back socializing and you have seen it all over the country. the numbers are...
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Jul 6, 2020
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you have a background in democratic politics, usia associate director, speechwriter for al gore, et cetera has the trump administration been a proponent for the issues that you care about in telecommunications? >> guest: they have. and they have been in the senate and in the congress administration has been advocating for extending broadband for all but this is not a province of only, the perspective is not only the administration of one side of congress but it's a bipartisan perspective. i've been so encouraged and so optimistic to see my democratic colleagues and republican colleagues across the aisle, both houses of congress or state houses across the administration at the fcc all joined around some fundamental principles that we need to adhere to in principle number one that we have to take seriously our task of investing in broadband. go to public private partners could end the digital divide regardless of where you live or what your income is. you know, i am encouraged by the progress that you see. i'm hopeful that progress will continue to keep pace but i'm also mindful that the key
you have a background in democratic politics, usia associate director, speechwriter for al gore, et cetera has the trump administration been a proponent for the issues that you care about in telecommunications? >> guest: they have. and they have been in the senate and in the congress administration has been advocating for extending broadband for all but this is not a province of only, the perspective is not only the administration of one side of congress but it's a bipartisan perspective....
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Jul 21, 2020
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but not in a world where people need to take care of children, go to work, et cetera. so i do hope there's a little bit more of a focus from national leadership on where these delays are exist and if there needs to be increased funding to the state to fix the glitch. >> you heard talk of the defense production act which the president could invoke to get all the factories to ramp up to produce whether it's the swabs or the needles or when we do have a vaccine, et cetera. do you see a lot of power behind that from the medical community to push the president to go in that direction, is that going to happen? >> i feel a little jaded right now because that push did take place in march or april and it took a while for the testing to ramp up. there would need to be another massive outcry for this to happen and i do think, unfortunately, as more political pressure mounts, that could actually take place because sadly, this entire pandemic has become politicized but we heard earlier today, the white house's, one of the communication officers for the trump campaign really defend
but not in a world where people need to take care of children, go to work, et cetera. so i do hope there's a little bit more of a focus from national leadership on where these delays are exist and if there needs to be increased funding to the state to fix the glitch. >> you heard talk of the defense production act which the president could invoke to get all the factories to ramp up to produce whether it's the swabs or the needles or when we do have a vaccine, et cetera. do you see a lot...
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Jul 24, 2020
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to tweet, that et cetera. then you look at these new fox news poll numbers on critical states for the president to win, and they are striking. minnesota has biden at 51% and the president at 38%. michigan 49% for biden and 40% for the president, pennsylvania, 50% for biden and 39 for the president. not only did biden is ahead there, but ahead by wide margins. what's your reporting on how this is tipping the happened of the president, influencing his decisions? >> big time. i mean, those are public polls. it's one thing for your home state of minnesota, poppy, which has been trending blue. >> that's huge for minnesota, yes! >> reporter: despite the fact that before the pandemic the trump campaign was very sort of bullish that maybe they could -- they could win it back, and if those polls, you know, stay the way they are, it's going to be hard. never mind michigan and pennsylvania which are at least recently more traditional spring states that the president won last time and that is the reason he is the presiden
to tweet, that et cetera. then you look at these new fox news poll numbers on critical states for the president to win, and they are striking. minnesota has biden at 51% and the president at 38%. michigan 49% for biden and 40% for the president, pennsylvania, 50% for biden and 39 for the president. not only did biden is ahead there, but ahead by wide margins. what's your reporting on how this is tipping the happened of the president, influencing his decisions? >> big time. i mean, those...
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Jul 21, 2020
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risk them picking up an infectious disease that spreads to me and my wife or their grandparents, et cetera. and this is where i come down. i don't understand why if it's so important to our federal leadership that kids go back to school, and i agree with the principle as you do why we don't have testing up to speed so that the day before school kids can all get tested. teachers can all get tested. administrators and custodians can all get tested and then there could be tests at the school every two weeks or so with obviously everybody washing their hands, wearing masks, et cetera. i would feel much more comfortable. and yet what i'm hearing from the federal leadership is go back to school and nothing along the lines of -- and here's how we're going to protect your children. >> well, there are so many different models of that. and i think what's being discussed now, jake, is different types of approaches to do what i just said to adhere to the principle of getting the children back to school. but in order to safeguard them, their health and their welfare as well as the teachers to do some s
risk them picking up an infectious disease that spreads to me and my wife or their grandparents, et cetera. and this is where i come down. i don't understand why if it's so important to our federal leadership that kids go back to school, and i agree with the principle as you do why we don't have testing up to speed so that the day before school kids can all get tested. teachers can all get tested. administrators and custodians can all get tested and then there could be tests at the school every...
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Jul 14, 2020
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we should be able to give them the equipment to do so in testing, tracing, treating, et cetera, but ita recognition that unless you have a very, very low percentage of -- of incidence of the infection you really have to consider locking down. >> all right. house speaker nancy pelosi, we appreciate you joining this program this morning. >> my pleasure. don't forgot the defense production act. it's the answer to so much. thank you. >> we'll keep talking about it. you have a good afternoon. >> it is the summer of covid in this country, the summer of protests as well, and now a summertime surge in crimes. what happens in america when the police and the people both come under fire? don lemon will host a special etition of "cnn tonight" with a look at crime, protection and your safety. that's 10:00 p.m. on cnn. i love rakuten, it's basically free money. it's an easy way to earn cashback on the stuff i'm already buying. when you have a child and they're constantly growing out of clothing, earning cashback from rakuten just makes everything easier. sometimes it's 3% sometimes it's 8% but you'r
we should be able to give them the equipment to do so in testing, tracing, treating, et cetera, but ita recognition that unless you have a very, very low percentage of -- of incidence of the infection you really have to consider locking down. >> all right. house speaker nancy pelosi, we appreciate you joining this program this morning. >> my pleasure. don't forgot the defense production act. it's the answer to so much. thank you. >> we'll keep talking about it. you have a good...
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Jul 22, 2020
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there has to be, and there have been a lot of juryis prudence, et cetera, et cetera. but there has to be more than a tenuated relationship of commerce with the ability of government to involve itself in private affairs. >> however, it is fairly expansive. there is no if, ands or buts about it. but you've got the case of wicker versus fill born where anything that can be aggregated is within the reach of congress. but nonetheless, it it's not a blank check of authority to have congress make almost anything that may otherwise be a private concern one of a public concern. >> and i think it's an incredibly important point that the interstate commerce clause takes us away from the 14th amendment. again, when we talk about the civil rights cases really crushing the ability of the 14th amendment to realize its possibility to really end racial inequality, especially as to black americans, to go to the interstate commerce clause is to go back to article 1 of the constitution. so it takes you away from the 14th amendment and away from the enforcement provisions of the 14th amen
there has to be, and there have been a lot of juryis prudence, et cetera, et cetera. but there has to be more than a tenuated relationship of commerce with the ability of government to involve itself in private affairs. >> however, it is fairly expansive. there is no if, ands or buts about it. but you've got the case of wicker versus fill born where anything that can be aggregated is within the reach of congress. but nonetheless, it it's not a blank check of authority to have congress...
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Jul 6, 2020
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they're now going to land at jfk, newark, et cetera. you know?reak anywhere is a outbreak everywhere. that's the new mentality we have to have. we can't protect ourselves as an island. because we're not. we have people coming in and out all day long. and when you have these spikes, in china and europe, that's how it happened the first time. now people can come from florida, anywhere else. we are already seeing it. we have had significant clusters where people came from out of state, attended a function, bang. the next day we have an increase in the infections. we're doing so many tests and so many tracings that we can trace it back to patient zero and they're very often from out of state. we have a down state. we have it upstate. it is inevitable. so yes. new yorkers have to be smart. but we also have a problem that if the virus is increasing anywhere it is going to travel here and then we will have a problem. t denying covid is really advancing the covid virus. and i know this is a politically charged environment right now. and somehow covid has
they're now going to land at jfk, newark, et cetera. you know?reak anywhere is a outbreak everywhere. that's the new mentality we have to have. we can't protect ourselves as an island. because we're not. we have people coming in and out all day long. and when you have these spikes, in china and europe, that's how it happened the first time. now people can come from florida, anywhere else. we are already seeing it. we have had significant clusters where people came from out of state, attended a...
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Jul 24, 2020
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, before we again thank the witnesses, et cetera. >> i appreciate that opportunity, chairman. this is an important committee. it's important for us as the members of the ways and means to help focus on how do we make social security sustainable, ongoing program. as a former state treasurer and my background as an engineer, i deal a lot with data and facts and i would rather make sure we have the right facts before us before we move forward with a solution that may not correct and may not work in those cases. thank you for the opportunity to say that. >> thank you, again, sir. i want to thank all the witnesses as well for your expert testimony. i appreciate your taking your time and let us all have our sleeves rolled up, so to speak, and shoulder to the wheel and let us hope before we adjourn in august, we provide the american people with a solution to the concerns that have been raised here this afternoon during this hearing. thank you so much, with that, this meeting is adjourned. i just would like to remind everyone that members will have two weeks to submit written question
, before we again thank the witnesses, et cetera. >> i appreciate that opportunity, chairman. this is an important committee. it's important for us as the members of the ways and means to help focus on how do we make social security sustainable, ongoing program. as a former state treasurer and my background as an engineer, i deal a lot with data and facts and i would rather make sure we have the right facts before us before we move forward with a solution that may not correct and may not...
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Jul 20, 2020
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how would they be able to afford that on low-wage incomes, et cetera the issue that the study broughty important, that tells us that children, young adults, but especially june. high and high school students will be able to carry and transmit the coronavirus that's not necessarily safe. and especially with bringing cases home to their families, older relatives, people at risk, teachers who may be older or and staff with pre-existing conditions so it's one issue after another. your question about, is it safer to send the younger kids to school than the older kids, we don't know yet we simply don't have enough data, and hopefully, we will by the time september rolls around, but right now, we are still struggling with needing more information and not having enough clear answers, katy >> why is it that older kids are more easily spreading this virus? does it have to do with the lung capacity >> yeah, it might have to do with things like the breathing rate, how much air is expelled, how much the air that's expelled actually contains the virus. are we talking about big droplets, like if a y
how would they be able to afford that on low-wage incomes, et cetera the issue that the study broughty important, that tells us that children, young adults, but especially june. high and high school students will be able to carry and transmit the coronavirus that's not necessarily safe. and especially with bringing cases home to their families, older relatives, people at risk, teachers who may be older or and staff with pre-existing conditions so it's one issue after another. your question...
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Jul 21, 2020
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and things are happening too like the remdesivir and other elements, steroids, et cetera. but these trends could change without our continued and relentless focus. that's what we have. we have a relentless focus, and it's been that way from the beginning. but we have learned so much. as you know, in recent weeks we've seen a concerning rise in the cases in many parts of our south. you look at south, southwest and west, this growth in cases first began to appear in mid-june, primarily among 18 to 35 year olds, many of whom were asymptomatic. we're also facing the challenge of a significant spike in virus cases across the rest of the western hemisphere including mexico. mexico has been hit very, very, very hard. as you know, the president, a great gentleman, was here two weeks ago and they have really been hit hard. because we've achieved four fold increased testing capacity in two months, we're successfully identified for symptomatic and mild cases, some cases so mild you really don't even treat them. some cases with children where they don't even know that they're ill. and
and things are happening too like the remdesivir and other elements, steroids, et cetera. but these trends could change without our continued and relentless focus. that's what we have. we have a relentless focus, and it's been that way from the beginning. but we have learned so much. as you know, in recent weeks we've seen a concerning rise in the cases in many parts of our south. you look at south, southwest and west, this growth in cases first began to appear in mid-june, primarily among 18...
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Jul 4, 2020
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, et cetera. i think what you've seen in that article is doing their best to be socially distanted, wearing a mask, washing their hands, doing all of these things very carefully. and then you to decide, do i need to have somebody come into my house? in that article what the people said if they had workers come into the house, they would be in a different part of the house and everybody would wear masks. i think that is very reasonable. i use the example all the time that i just had a birthday, and i really wanted to spend it with my mom. that was really important to me. what i did is i quarantined for two weeks. my family, we quarantined for two weeks. so we were able to see my mom safely because she is in her late 70s, and of course in this vulnerable age group, and that was something proactive that we could do, and all be able to have the experience of being able to be together. so there is always something you can do. everybody can do something. >> briefly before i let you go, there was this ar
, et cetera. i think what you've seen in that article is doing their best to be socially distanted, wearing a mask, washing their hands, doing all of these things very carefully. and then you to decide, do i need to have somebody come into my house? in that article what the people said if they had workers come into the house, they would be in a different part of the house and everybody would wear masks. i think that is very reasonable. i use the example all the time that i just had a birthday,...
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Jul 24, 2020
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we have relationships with community leaders, churches, businesses, et cetera. the funding should be set up in such a way there are resources available so that people can have access to care, there's resources available so everyone has ppe, so people can be tested and also resources available so that people can find medical homes and get preventative care. so the money that we have received thus far have been used to key our staff employed so that we can treat this vulnerable population. without that money, a lot of my peers across the country would have had to downsize and the amount of care that we would have been able to deliver would have been significantly less. >> thank you. >> the thing, one last thing, people respond to people that look like them, and the idea of being comfortable with people that look like me and understand me is significant. thank you. >> thank you very much. >> thanks. >> thank you. i'm uncertain whether tim scott has returned yet and it looks like he's been a bit delayed, so we'll next call on josh holly. >> thank you, madam chair, a
we have relationships with community leaders, churches, businesses, et cetera. the funding should be set up in such a way there are resources available so that people can have access to care, there's resources available so everyone has ppe, so people can be tested and also resources available so that people can find medical homes and get preventative care. so the money that we have received thus far have been used to key our staff employed so that we can treat this vulnerable population....
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Jul 6, 2020
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decided to join up with our sister publications in india and china and spain, the middle east and et cetera and continue to focus basically through this initiative under one sky on the people who are directly affected by travel in all areas of the market so that we're seeing the amazing people and the amazing places it's not just hotels and restaurants, et cetera but also sustainability and we need to continue to shine a light on other businesses going forward. >> right from the start a lot of businesses were told to look back over their costs that demand is going to be less than what it was before they need to spend less on marketing and advertising and we know that many, many businesses across the board say the collapse in advertising at the start of this crisis what are you witnessing now? you see more travel taking place? it's still down but just how bad is the advertising side of the industry >> the advertising side is really intense. and that's currently the british publications here at this point. however there's still people who look at traveller as a trusted and authoritative platf
decided to join up with our sister publications in india and china and spain, the middle east and et cetera and continue to focus basically through this initiative under one sky on the people who are directly affected by travel in all areas of the market so that we're seeing the amazing people and the amazing places it's not just hotels and restaurants, et cetera but also sustainability and we need to continue to shine a light on other businesses going forward. >> right from the start a...
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Jul 4, 2020
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department of defense, for example, only required about 1 tenth of its employees, soldiers, active duty, et cetera to sign nondisclosure agreements and now expanded it to cover everybody and from agency to agency you get completely different results from the reviews. i mean, a great case study is actually the hillary clinton e-mail. the state department did a review of all her e-mail and said, there's no classified items in here. it was sent over an unclassified system, it's not national security system. the cia got involved and said, wait a second, we are finding some mentions of drone strikes, drones, that's a hugely secret compartment and program. you can't have that in unclassified e-mail. we don't have emails released yet but according to what members of congress mentioned them, they were new york times stories and aides are sending her new york times stories and aides and herself thinking they are on front lines, but in cia rules that has to be classified. you see the difference between agencies. i will tell you we have a document on our website where two different versions ten days apart, o
department of defense, for example, only required about 1 tenth of its employees, soldiers, active duty, et cetera to sign nondisclosure agreements and now expanded it to cover everybody and from agency to agency you get completely different results from the reviews. i mean, a great case study is actually the hillary clinton e-mail. the state department did a review of all her e-mail and said, there's no classified items in here. it was sent over an unclassified system, it's not national...
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Jul 10, 2020
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yes there is an advantage to being aggressive if you have the right strategy you can sell online, et cetera some companies manage, they were on amazon's cross hairs, they survive, but now there is a downside you have to do this to survive, is that an argument for why technology is out performing and might continue to? >> i mean there is a couple arguments. that is clearly a good one we value growth. growth is an important component to what a company is worth the nasdaq 100 is trading at 31 times forward earnings and the components to it don't make mathematical sense but you're right they -- there is certainly a tail wind towards them that the market is aware of another aspect is they're producing more certain results right now than cyclical businesses in a pandemic you know i came here today with my oakmark mask. i'm not wearing it, but you know it is really an environment right now that the market wants to reward certainty. you look at netflix or am zon and you feel like they're going to learn we feel like things will come back to normal in three to five years and you're seeing some of the
yes there is an advantage to being aggressive if you have the right strategy you can sell online, et cetera some companies manage, they were on amazon's cross hairs, they survive, but now there is a downside you have to do this to survive, is that an argument for why technology is out performing and might continue to? >> i mean there is a couple arguments. that is clearly a good one we value growth. growth is an important component to what a company is worth the nasdaq 100 is trading at...
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Jul 23, 2020
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, et cetera, and we cannot do that because one bad thing happens. >> what about the folks who say all of those types of jobs, all of those positions, all the workers coming into the country that it's time for american workers to have a privilege status of some sort when it comes to being trained, being worthy, being available, being hired first for those positions. that's a good question except it doesn't deal with reality. just before the pandemic, the unploim rate in the united states is the lowest in 65 years. there was significant shortage of workers that we had traditionally educated here in the united states and then they were talking about sending people home. my suggestion is clearly we have to train workers who are not skilled but we have to keep the workers who are training in our universities or here's what happens. if we don't have them, they go somewhere else and that's where we have to send the work where the skilled people are, if you keep those people up to date it creates extraordinary numbers of jobs for people that work within those countries, within those companies
, et cetera, and we cannot do that because one bad thing happens. >> what about the folks who say all of those types of jobs, all of those positions, all the workers coming into the country that it's time for american workers to have a privilege status of some sort when it comes to being trained, being worthy, being available, being hired first for those positions. that's a good question except it doesn't deal with reality. just before the pandemic, the unploim rate in the united states...
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Jul 11, 2020
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department of defense for example only required about one tenth of its employees, soldiers, active-duty et cetera to sign these nondisclosure agreements. now they've expanded to cover everybody. from agency to agency you get completely different results from these reviews. a great case study is the hillary clinton e-mail. the state department did a review of all of her e-mail and said there is no classified items in here. it was sent over in an unclassified system it's not national security secret the cia got involved and said wait a second, we are finding mentions of drone strikes. drone is a hugely secret program you can't have that in unclassified e-mails. we don't have all those e-mails released yet. but according to what members of congress have said about them, the drone strike mentions were u.s. times stories in her aides are sending her "new york times" stories the eighth and the herself the thinking it's on the front page of the "new york times" it can't be classified. but within the cia rules any mention of those programs has to be classified. they are see the incredible difference betw
department of defense for example only required about one tenth of its employees, soldiers, active-duty et cetera to sign these nondisclosure agreements. now they've expanded to cover everybody. from agency to agency you get completely different results from these reviews. a great case study is the hillary clinton e-mail. the state department did a review of all of her e-mail and said there is no classified items in here. it was sent over in an unclassified system it's not national security...
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Jul 6, 2020
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we were very impressed by things like the leisure sector, et cetera, coming back quicker. then you look at today the nonmanufacturing data that came back, the orders were strong business activity was strong and you see employment is coming back but still it's going to take a longer period of time i think across the board whether it is car sales or trucking data we see, comet is, you know, had a burst of fiscal stimulus but it is pretty solid in terms of recovery. >> clearly though, some of that is priced into certain sectors of the stock market. where can you still find value, rick is it -- is there any sectors in the u.s. or perhaps internationally that stand out to you >> so i say domestically, i still think it's hard as you said, to see the nasdaq hit a record it it's hard to envision that you keep going given how much you moved. that being said, i also think we're going through what is a remarkable period of time with technology changing the evolution of how commerce works today and the scaleability you're seeing that industries can create i think there is upside there
we were very impressed by things like the leisure sector, et cetera, coming back quicker. then you look at today the nonmanufacturing data that came back, the orders were strong business activity was strong and you see employment is coming back but still it's going to take a longer period of time i think across the board whether it is car sales or trucking data we see, comet is, you know, had a burst of fiscal stimulus but it is pretty solid in terms of recovery. >> clearly though, some...
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Jul 16, 2020
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raoult, people are afraid to go vote, they have to go vote by mail, et cetera, et cetera. i want to get news on these vaccine trials. ultimate success is predicated on producing antibodies. butth they didn't dr. fauci and others say that the antibody response may disappear after aon few months? do these things seem contradictory, dr. oskoui? >>co they do. one doesn't really know whether these antibodies, how long they last and whether they are effectivee but none of these vaccine makers t are looking at any t-cell immunity immunity. the t cell is very important in this vital response and in our response to this virus and i don't see any metric how any of these vaccine makers are measuring this pair that's the asked. how long does immunity lasts and what are we showing in terms of t cell training when the vaccine is given? >> laura: we certainly hope we can make a lot of progress but we have to be honest with what we know and what we don't know. gentlemen, invaluable. thank you so much for the national museum of afghan american history and culture, they have a new missioa e
raoult, people are afraid to go vote, they have to go vote by mail, et cetera, et cetera. i want to get news on these vaccine trials. ultimate success is predicated on producing antibodies. butth they didn't dr. fauci and others say that the antibody response may disappear after aon few months? do these things seem contradictory, dr. oskoui? >>co they do. one doesn't really know whether these antibodies, how long they last and whether they are effectivee but none of these vaccine makers t...
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Jul 29, 2020
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i saw some suggestion today that the whole do it yourself, do it at home, et cetera, et cetera thing may be peaking that's why the stock has had the run that it's had. >> well, you can always make that case. you can look at amazon, the stock should pull back, because the trent tore at home and order everything in is peaking, but we feel there's a definite move toward remote working. it might be able to country in two, three years, but you continue to have companies say we're happy to have our employees work wherever they want home sales are much stronger than we expected so you see people moving they renovate. they paint there doesn't soo emto be that major, you know, drop in interest, in renovating and redoing houses what you're saying could have happened, but it's not happening yet. >> let's get to rahel solomon who has another stock today on the move. >> that would be for shopify it was well beyond expectations, saying that covid-19 led many businesses to adopt the platform to take sales online, leading to 97% growth in their top line compared to a year ago taking a look at the st
i saw some suggestion today that the whole do it yourself, do it at home, et cetera, et cetera thing may be peaking that's why the stock has had the run that it's had. >> well, you can always make that case. you can look at amazon, the stock should pull back, because the trent tore at home and order everything in is peaking, but we feel there's a definite move toward remote working. it might be able to country in two, three years, but you continue to have companies say we're happy to have...
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Jul 16, 2020
07/20
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they have to vote by mail, et cetera, et cetera. i want to get to the news on the vaccine trials. the ultimate success predicated on producing antibodies. but didn't dr. fauci and others say the antibody response may vanish after a few months? don't these things seem contradictory, doctor? >> they do. one really doesn't know whether the antibodies, how long they will last and if they are effective but what concerns me is none of the vaccine makers are looking at t cell immunity. the t cell is important in the viral response and our response to the virus. i don't see any metric by which any of these vaccine makers are measuring this. and that is really the important question to ask. how long will this last and what are we showing in terms of t cell training to fight future viral infections, this viral infection when the vaccine has given? >> laura: well, we certainly hope we can make a lot of progress. we have to be honest what we know and what we don't know. gentlemen become invaluable. thank you so much. the national museum of african-american history and culture, they have a new
they have to vote by mail, et cetera, et cetera. i want to get to the news on the vaccine trials. the ultimate success predicated on producing antibodies. but didn't dr. fauci and others say the antibody response may vanish after a few months? don't these things seem contradictory, doctor? >> they do. one really doesn't know whether the antibodies, how long they will last and if they are effective but what concerns me is none of the vaccine makers are looking at t cell immunity. the t...
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Jul 2, 2020
07/20
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people die suddenly in their home, et cetera. public health has known about that phenomenon all the time for every disease, influenza, et cetera. they have ways to estimate a number more accurately. inevitably at the end of a season, the true number, which is the incremental number of deaths above the baseline that is seen every year, more or less the same per month, it's adjust adjusted. so this is an old, non-politically charged statistic call adjustment that has been made for decades. 20, 25% under count, that feels about right for diseases. >> dr. sepkowicz, thank you for talking with us, we appreciate it. >> thank you very much. >>> this is "cnn newsroom." stunning revelations about what president trump hears about russia during his intelligence briefings from former administration officials who were there. we will have the disturbing details. that's coming up. >>> meantime, russia is releasing early results from its controversial vote. what it means for president putin and how the u.s. president could be boosting his popula
people die suddenly in their home, et cetera. public health has known about that phenomenon all the time for every disease, influenza, et cetera. they have ways to estimate a number more accurately. inevitably at the end of a season, the true number, which is the incremental number of deaths above the baseline that is seen every year, more or less the same per month, it's adjust adjusted. so this is an old, non-politically charged statistic call adjustment that has been made for decades. 20,...