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Feb 12, 2020
02/20
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new york as like city,est -- city, etc., we have the nation. across the american library association has asked all of its member across the nation to open their doors. and i've been to those libraries. important. that is a way that people can -- it's just not the libraries. etc.the businesses, when i was in baltimore, aryland, they wanted a storefront operation where people could come in and be assisted. that.'t do but in meeting with the mayor, ormer senator from maryland, the former chair of this identified tc., we in one day going through the hard-to-count communities 80 different locations where people could use the computer. if they want to use the computer, there will be more avenues than ever. time, they can make a simple toll free call, they can do it on their way to work. want to do it while driving a car. they can submit their information that way or they can paper.n if they don't, then we send someone to collect it from them. this year the census centers for ng those struggling with their rm to. owever, my knowledge is the bureau has
new york as like city,est -- city, etc., we have the nation. across the american library association has asked all of its member across the nation to open their doors. and i've been to those libraries. important. that is a way that people can -- it's just not the libraries. etc.the businesses, when i was in baltimore, aryland, they wanted a storefront operation where people could come in and be assisted. that.'t do but in meeting with the mayor, ormer senator from maryland, the former chair of...
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Feb 21, 2020
02/20
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BLOOMBERG
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john: the issue you have, if you do achieve spending, whether it is germany, the dots, etc., whetheris fre -- the dutch, etc., whether it is france, it clamps it down the moment you turn the tabs on, then you are not working in concert. let's be clear, we talked about this in the past, it took a long time for europe to come together, but eventually, having looked at all the different options, it came to something, which was supportive of the banks, a comprehensive package that included the deals, so intervention works. francine: what is it too late? if you do the policies, have you missed it? john: this is the nature of the eurozone political mix, isn't it? it is a very consensus-belt arrangement, something that has existed since the treaty of rome. we would expect within the mechanism to take some time, but let's be clear -- europe does respond to crises. we would expect this as part of the package of policy measures in response to the next economic crisis. so i think to expect the eurozone in particular to do the that wefiscal stimulus saw out of the u.s. and that we may be about t
john: the issue you have, if you do achieve spending, whether it is germany, the dots, etc., whetheris fre -- the dutch, etc., whether it is france, it clamps it down the moment you turn the tabs on, then you are not working in concert. let's be clear, we talked about this in the past, it took a long time for europe to come together, but eventually, having looked at all the different options, it came to something, which was supportive of the banks, a comprehensive package that included the...
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Feb 14, 2020
02/20
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KQED
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., etc. butre you have tmber that in the case of the roger stone investigation, they are on the sameenage. the pres sought the recommendation of seven to nine years was way too long and .utrageous, and so did the attorney general if he is trying to do the president's bidding, maybe is theoise of the president tweeting about it he doesn't like. nada: we had anothe case where there is concern about political ioconsider potentially influencing the department of justice's decision-making. tell us about that. gary: a couple of interesting devepments today. andrew mccabe, former deputy director of the fired a couple of days before he was due to retire, missing out on all those pension rights, etc. he was accused of lying to an inspector general about talking to a journalist. that has been hanging over m him for ths or so. today the department of justice nounced they would not b pursuing that. that is likely to upset the president, asndrew mccabe has been a target of the president's ire on many occa
., etc. butre you have tmber that in the case of the roger stone investigation, they are on the sameenage. the pres sought the recommendation of seven to nine years was way too long and .utrageous, and so did the attorney general if he is trying to do the president's bidding, maybe is theoise of the president tweeting about it he doesn't like. nada: we had anothe case where there is concern about political ioconsider potentially influencing the department of justice's decision-making. tell us...
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knock on the doors and hand out leaflets how to protect yourself whom to call when you're infected etc and these household committees that govern. the residence at the grassroots level they have started here in beijing to register everybody who has been out in and out of the city within recent days no matter where they have been a lot of it is just. i feel is just activity for the sake of activity but it's definitely that all levels of state and of society are mobilized and go into that a little more for us there's been praise and criticism in the international community for how china has responded to the virus what have your impressions bed. i think there's no doubt that we would not have this crisis if the authorities in one hand had reacted timely they kept telling people that there was no danger when they already knew that the virus was spreading from human to human that is the critical thing before they that what they have told people is you can only get infected if you get in touch with infected animals not how many people get in touch with infected animals. but the virus was alr
knock on the doors and hand out leaflets how to protect yourself whom to call when you're infected etc and these household committees that govern. the residence at the grassroots level they have started here in beijing to register everybody who has been out in and out of the city within recent days no matter where they have been a lot of it is just. i feel is just activity for the sake of activity but it's definitely that all levels of state and of society are mobilized and go into that a...
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job losses especially in the east etc etc but this is not an excuse this is not an excuse to blame at minorities point at minorities and point at muslims were meanwhile part of the society for decades i mean and this is the got the ones where we got killed just yesterday were mostly could and turkish they were muslims and this is a chain of terror attacks since the last 2030 years we have to remind on murder very turkish family was killed or insulting in the end as you murders there has been a history of this is that this didn't start with exactly or they didn't start out if they created a new climate the new. atmosphere where these kind of right wing ideologies can spread easily while our security forces intelligence was watching them has eyes closed on the metal from germany scream party thank you. that's what i saw on the corona virus outbreak the world health organization is warning that the world must act quickly to get the disease under control because the window of opportunity is closing the w.h.o. is concerned about a surge in cases with no clear link to china which is at the
job losses especially in the east etc etc but this is not an excuse this is not an excuse to blame at minorities point at minorities and point at muslims were meanwhile part of the society for decades i mean and this is the got the ones where we got killed just yesterday were mostly could and turkish they were muslims and this is a chain of terror attacks since the last 2030 years we have to remind on murder very turkish family was killed or insulting in the end as you murders there has been a...
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Feb 23, 2020
02/20
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CSPAN3
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1924.3 and goodeadline from housekeeping and one from the washington post, from harper's magazine, etc.. it was not just journalists who can included almost immediately after the 19th amendment that women's suffrage have been a failure. this was something scholars tended to believe as well. for reasons i can talk more about, we have very, very little data about women voters in the. immediately after suffrage. as you probably are aware, citizens do not place pink and blue ballots into ballot boxes. so we do not actually, from the official voting record, have a way to know how wet men and women voted. not have a waydo to know how men and women voted. in illinois they did count men's and women's allis differently in 1916 and in 1920. -- ballots different late. virtually everything we know about how women voted comes from one state and two elections. before gallup and everyone else went on to invent survey research in the 1930's and the 1940's turn we see this also in popular histories. a book, popular history of the 19 20's. in another, she seemed to be little interested once she had it.
1924.3 and goodeadline from housekeeping and one from the washington post, from harper's magazine, etc.. it was not just journalists who can included almost immediately after the 19th amendment that women's suffrage have been a failure. this was something scholars tended to believe as well. for reasons i can talk more about, we have very, very little data about women voters in the. immediately after suffrage. as you probably are aware, citizens do not place pink and blue ballots into ballot...
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what we've got to deal with criminality we've got to deal with drug abuse etc when you put these things empirically together then you realize it really has nothing to do with criminality and it's more about signifying to the rest of the country that we represent the interests of a white majority and will do anything to ever voices people's people from countries that we don't agree with lane or the government will completely deny that and i know i mean be feel free to talk about it in the context of 919 all those years ago but we have a more multi-colored cabinet never never had a situation like that and you're talking about racism as if it in the days of margaret thatcher this is just it i think they like to keep us disk. cussing racism is really superficial most pantomime level and we've had 2 female prime ministers both of them tories and yet living standards for the majority of women the degree of equal pay is still an issue neither premiership did much to advance the interest of true feminism and the same is true with the most diverse cabinet that we've had in history but yet the mo
what we've got to deal with criminality we've got to deal with drug abuse etc when you put these things empirically together then you realize it really has nothing to do with criminality and it's more about signifying to the rest of the country that we represent the interests of a white majority and will do anything to ever voices people's people from countries that we don't agree with lane or the government will completely deny that and i know i mean be feel free to talk about it in the...
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working men's clubs very active organizations for unity solidarity of black and asian people students etc because the racism was so offensive and so clear you knew what the enemy was and the fact you had to organize had to be solidarity and collective action to overcome those things when out of. that thought try. ideal of anyone being able to make it on their own pull themselves up by the bootstraps has filtered down and cross roots organizations and we no longer feel that need to have collective action and they are mindful of another fact you can be pointed out. in 919 marcus garvey had over 6000000 members of the un i.a.e.a. with no facebook no instagram to speak of no phones widely but the conditions of oppression was so clear the material disadvantage was so obvious that we had to organize and i think now would be living under this delusion that things have somehow improved because we've had a black president and a few black m.p.'s you know i should say the 9091 politics right actually brought down that have to say with the labor leadership going on here strong lisa nally all these di
working men's clubs very active organizations for unity solidarity of black and asian people students etc because the racism was so offensive and so clear you knew what the enemy was and the fact you had to organize had to be solidarity and collective action to overcome those things when out of. that thought try. ideal of anyone being able to make it on their own pull themselves up by the bootstraps has filtered down and cross roots organizations and we no longer feel that need to have...
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Feb 2, 2020
02/20
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thehe ohio, etc. -- up ohio, etc. again, one of the reasons that black people were used a bit in terms of this, initially, you are talking about hunting wild horses and cows. that was tough work. again, trying to locate them and bring them out of the bush, etc. that is often the kind of work that blacks often did. >> [inaudible] >> thank you. ok. >> [inaudible] >> ok. there you go. when i grew up, if anybody asked me about cowboys, this is what i would've been talking about. ottery, cassidy, jean roy rogers, those were the kinds of cowboys i was taught about. i had no idea there were black cowboys. that was just nothing i had knowledge about. probably most of my peers, if you asked anybody growing up in illinois about cowboys, by and large that's what you would probably wind up with. however, in 1966, ok, this book came out. one year earlier, derman jones was a professor from the university of california that wrote this book. they were english majors and english professors, literature professors. they were not histori
thehe ohio, etc. -- up ohio, etc. again, one of the reasons that black people were used a bit in terms of this, initially, you are talking about hunting wild horses and cows. that was tough work. again, trying to locate them and bring them out of the bush, etc. that is often the kind of work that blacks often did. >> [inaudible] >> thank you. ok. >> [inaudible] >> ok. there you go. when i grew up, if anybody asked me about cowboys, this is what i would've been talking...
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120
Feb 9, 2020
02/20
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yes, rebecca, etc.? good? ok. 1894, united states raises tariffs on cuban sugar. and the response was, cuban resistance to spanish colonization. that starts in cuban people have 1895. been trying to declare themselves independent from the spanish at this point for decades. economic95 the situation is desperate. therefore the spanish used increasingly brutal tactics. so the spanish use concentration camps for cuban resisters. what usually happens to people in concentration camps? >> they die. prof. edwards: yes, they die. some say hundreds of thousands of cubans died in these camps. it's very deadly. this is also widely reported in u.s. newspapers at the time. so americans were well aware of this and americans actually identified with this because to many americans this sounded like u.s. independence. right? americans rising up the british tocap against the british declare their independence. so for a lot of americans this was a sympathetic cause. at the same time, there are u.s. sugar companies that are also invested in sugar production in cuba. it's not that just
yes, rebecca, etc.? good? ok. 1894, united states raises tariffs on cuban sugar. and the response was, cuban resistance to spanish colonization. that starts in cuban people have 1895. been trying to declare themselves independent from the spanish at this point for decades. economic95 the situation is desperate. therefore the spanish used increasingly brutal tactics. so the spanish use concentration camps for cuban resisters. what usually happens to people in concentration camps? >> they...
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Feb 22, 2020
02/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 45
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who they can marry, etc, it's fundamentally not independent.so for much of the world this political cartoon really captures, it here is uncle sam selling stuff and europe has a very long shopping list and basically they are asking, how is my credit? how much can i borrow from you in order to keep fighting. so if you were to ask a german, a british person what are the americans doing in 1914 they would say fanning their pockets. and do not ever forget that the fattening of those pockets comes at the cost of european lives, that american greed and willingness in particular to sell to anyone could ultimately result in the collapse of european empires more so than europeans killing themselves. so to come back to the question that tom asked many weeks ago, how is it that the germans are always pinned at the bad guys? we can see as early as 1914 we are starting to vilified the roles of even some neutrals, in this case the u.s.. in this political cartoon we see an image of food, apples in that barrel and it's important to remember that 1914 was a real
who they can marry, etc, it's fundamentally not independent.so for much of the world this political cartoon really captures, it here is uncle sam selling stuff and europe has a very long shopping list and basically they are asking, how is my credit? how much can i borrow from you in order to keep fighting. so if you were to ask a german, a british person what are the americans doing in 1914 they would say fanning their pockets. and do not ever forget that the fattening of those pockets comes at...
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107
Feb 21, 2020
02/20
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ALJAZ
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you know explore think revolution etc etc it is possible that we might. live at the end not the unknown because if there are constant all and all the author of the establishment and no some kind of understanding. between mr o'mahony or for that matter any on their of their moderate to reach the united states the hardliners would have without ruining the internet in tehran as we saw. the right cream and vent don't rain because before from bad to ows many are trying you know anya what they bought the who actually to do to destroy. the hi there there is a difference and that's been like i've been not that all it is that it is hardliners who would be more powerful if they'd read some kind of on this and the video might have to say then you could be sent and that the book. the kremlin has denied meddling claims in the forthcoming 2020 u.s. presidential election aimed at boosting donald trump's chances comes after u.s. media reports intelligence officials reportedly warned members of congress at a classified briefing that russia was again interfering in america
you know explore think revolution etc etc it is possible that we might. live at the end not the unknown because if there are constant all and all the author of the establishment and no some kind of understanding. between mr o'mahony or for that matter any on their of their moderate to reach the united states the hardliners would have without ruining the internet in tehran as we saw. the right cream and vent don't rain because before from bad to ows many are trying you know anya what they bought...
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Feb 21, 2020
02/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 77
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at europe and saw the at the etc etc so really there has been a year of this election. is the political economy well she's very much a holes. to the kind of approach which we buy year by year message that eve and me there's a match trying to reshape that tom i know i understand the and this engine between you know our and united states what there is in any of today's election on the contrary would be hard liners who would be pressing for more and yet medicare. and. you know explore think never lotion etc etc is it as clear and simple as saying this is about reformists or non reformist because despite whatever the result is if it comes to interacting legislation or taking the country in a particular direction that has to go to the guardian council anyway and they then will decide whether that whatever vote is actually happens. well actually. it is possible that we might have. been like at the end not that i know because there is. a law and all their off of their establishment and know some kind of understanding. between their arrest or on me or for that matter any of the
at europe and saw the at the etc etc so really there has been a year of this election. is the political economy well she's very much a holes. to the kind of approach which we buy year by year message that eve and me there's a match trying to reshape that tom i know i understand the and this engine between you know our and united states what there is in any of today's election on the contrary would be hard liners who would be pressing for more and yet medicare. and. you know explore think never...
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Feb 26, 2020
02/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 57
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that line from my testimony was related to facilities, factories, railways, etc. like infrastructure. the reason they may not deploy to protect those infrastructure projects is they are increasingly using private security companies and a combination of those companies and local forces to protect those investments. for the rest of them, the maritime stuff, the larger pri projects, and energy investments -- bri projects, and energy investments they are deploying it to protect those. >> in the first instance the host country forces private security etc.. they had the invitation from the host country, don't you think they would? >> it depends on how the private security company relationship evolved and what the threat is. as an example, in south sudan they are deploying their peacekeeping troops through the u.n. but they are actually deploying pla there as well as in some cases using local security forces to protect the oil fields. if you are talking about a factory in uganda, there was a wave of unrest in 2018 in uganda that threatened chinese citizens, they asked th
that line from my testimony was related to facilities, factories, railways, etc. like infrastructure. the reason they may not deploy to protect those infrastructure projects is they are increasingly using private security companies and a combination of those companies and local forces to protect those investments. for the rest of them, the maritime stuff, the larger pri projects, and energy investments -- bri projects, and energy investments they are deploying it to protect those. >> in...
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Feb 8, 2020
02/20
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if we can delete the information, etc. but, is it ever really deleted? rep. schakowsky: i will ask kyle that, our expert on this. kyle: i think a lot of that comes down to compliance which bumps up something else your committee has jurisdiction on which is the ftc. do you think they need a lot more resources? rep. schakowsky: absolutely. the federal trade commission, which is the agency that will be the cop on the beat, absolutely does need more resources, more expertise. 40 people -- actually, they have had plenty of complaints in the last year. it is not horrible for 40 people, but we definitely need more. they need more money. and, we do want them to be the ones that ultimately will be the arbiter of whether or not this is really deleted. peter: you said something in a statement that no longer is the internet just part of our lives, but it is running or it is in charge of our economy in many ways. googleseholden to the and the facebooks of the world, or do we have to use them? rep. schakowsky: a woman and knocked on my door the other day. everyone knows wh
if we can delete the information, etc. but, is it ever really deleted? rep. schakowsky: i will ask kyle that, our expert on this. kyle: i think a lot of that comes down to compliance which bumps up something else your committee has jurisdiction on which is the ftc. do you think they need a lot more resources? rep. schakowsky: absolutely. the federal trade commission, which is the agency that will be the cop on the beat, absolutely does need more resources, more expertise. 40 people -- actually,...
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Feb 6, 2020
02/20
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CSPAN3
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a decade they're just in terms of how long people living, etc, etc so i don't think that should be terribly painful and the third is a means test which has been ferociously resisted in the past but i don't really say why and people say you can't do that because back in 1935 there was a promise to everybody that this would be your money. it would not be the first time that program turned out to be not exactly the same as some thought it was going to look like 50 years ago and you know, i know a lot of people, myself included who don't really need that social security, and i would not take it. i did not take my full salary as governor because i did not need to and people should have that option on top of the table that are not even sure should be an option, if they were wealthy enough, i don't think they should get it. i can tell you it is a tiny fraction of the other income that on a ton of people have so those are the three things i would do along the way but after that i would talk to someone who knows a lot more about engineering than i do to figure out how to restructure the trust fund b
a decade they're just in terms of how long people living, etc, etc so i don't think that should be terribly painful and the third is a means test which has been ferociously resisted in the past but i don't really say why and people say you can't do that because back in 1935 there was a promise to everybody that this would be your money. it would not be the first time that program turned out to be not exactly the same as some thought it was going to look like 50 years ago and you know, i know a...
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other women in there to get water in the market etc but you see it in public events etc simply because you've got her children were not able to get married and things like that so it's important that we actually address it or at least equally and and be able to tackle this issue from a very old wide perspective and approach all the members of the society not just limited to the women was as much as gender inequality is what we treated by. brought up i think. not just that women but as you get my saddle problem for me what about the men i mean when you talk to men who are are they are the men are they the biggest hindrance here in stopping this practice. i hesitated to look at it from a man we meant perspective i look at agenda which is a system as an organizing of how society functions so when. basically reporting this ystem of each at the gender inequality it's really how to talk that those values the values that to drive be a check and. so i would say that you put some of them find at the mine does not want. children for example to be cut but you find that they will many because it's
other women in there to get water in the market etc but you see it in public events etc simply because you've got her children were not able to get married and things like that so it's important that we actually address it or at least equally and and be able to tackle this issue from a very old wide perspective and approach all the members of the society not just limited to the women was as much as gender inequality is what we treated by. brought up i think. not just that women but as you get...
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Feb 10, 2020
02/20
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ALJAZ
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and a you etc it was vague he in terms of bringing. resolution 206063 i think it was about not mistaken when it was but it's at the last time on the u.n. security council but i think the big challenge here is that africa's need to bring a consensus back to the table and right now we're finding that if you're looking at africa if somehow the more the african region is completely out of that strategic and but in terms of what needs to happen and what needs to go ahead in terms of a consensus because we're not seeing that and of course the external role of actors like turkey russia even the western powers except to have actually had constructed the architecture on what their interests are within libya and in particular around the north africa and so he'll reach an. extent is the a you failed on libya effectively been sidelined as far as libya and that conflict spill over into the hell are concerned. it's representative a last minute addition to to the palin conference can it can be a you provide any solution to the conflict in libya or is
and a you etc it was vague he in terms of bringing. resolution 206063 i think it was about not mistaken when it was but it's at the last time on the u.n. security council but i think the big challenge here is that africa's need to bring a consensus back to the table and right now we're finding that if you're looking at africa if somehow the more the african region is completely out of that strategic and but in terms of what needs to happen and what needs to go ahead in terms of a consensus...
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industries around the world that don't have this burden of providing health care for their employees etc how did this all happen dr michael has a very important point if you're dependent on the employers for the health care you're afraid to go on strike because if you are you're afraid of being fired because if you're fired you lose that if you go on strike you lose that so having private health care by your corporations instead of the government gives your employer a hold over you and so instead of bargaining for higher wages and better working conditions your universe 1st thing is my go to live we saw this this past year with the united auto workers when they went on strike g.m. pulled out health care but one of the things that always keeps democrats from backing medicare for all our universal health care let's call it that is the union workers because the union workers they say like their health care and they have a you know these cadillac plans and that they don't want to lose that right that they've worked so hard and when i many strikes over the generations to get and they don't wa
industries around the world that don't have this burden of providing health care for their employees etc how did this all happen dr michael has a very important point if you're dependent on the employers for the health care you're afraid to go on strike because if you are you're afraid of being fired because if you're fired you lose that if you go on strike you lose that so having private health care by your corporations instead of the government gives your employer a hold over you and so...
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etc are women i mean married or not married the fact is that the way that the document was approach means. sort of started school days in place and what we have is essentially a position of don't ask don't tell so in a way it is for everybody's discontent but at the same time it does not take the position of for. beating this which would have put the church in those spots in a very difficult position this is this document clickety to amazonia there was a specific document that the priests had made a specific request because the acute shortage of things not just in the amazon is but as you mentioned other parts of the blunt as that so how does the catholic church make up for this is it the same policy following don't tell don't ask don't tell well i mean they should that you have precisely this when they said the very center of the problem and nobody really has come up with a solution i mean the solution or at least the police a position that sort of the more conservative sides of the church are essentially putting forth which is a thorough prohibition on the sacraments essentially b
etc are women i mean married or not married the fact is that the way that the document was approach means. sort of started school days in place and what we have is essentially a position of don't ask don't tell so in a way it is for everybody's discontent but at the same time it does not take the position of for. beating this which would have put the church in those spots in a very difficult position this is this document clickety to amazonia there was a specific document that the priests had...
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and try and figure out the exact sequence of the of the of the rival time for the alleged assailant etc of the of the shooting of the of this sequence of events and build their case from there are pod you mentioned you talked to a witness to part of that sequence of events what did that person have to say. that's right he owns a sports bar there are a number of sports bars here as such as the 1st one is it the one where the 1st shooting took place he owns a sports bar about 50 meters away from there so just piecing it over here on the corner and he hears loud sounds and right away he says to himself that's a gun and he runs out he hears about 67 shots and he sees a man on the sidewalk and it's over to my right at that cream colored. building there's a man on the sidewalk right in front of that green colored building and he goes over and the man still breathing but eyes are closed he told me and he runs back and you know we order says 21 guests he had counted them 21 guests to go back away from the window and get deep into that club it's a sports bar and also the it was last night was a
and try and figure out the exact sequence of the of the of the rival time for the alleged assailant etc of the of the shooting of the of this sequence of events and build their case from there are pod you mentioned you talked to a witness to part of that sequence of events what did that person have to say. that's right he owns a sports bar there are a number of sports bars here as such as the 1st one is it the one where the 1st shooting took place he owns a sports bar about 50 meters away from...
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through the the perseveration of lawyer this morning cetera etc there is absolutely no harm that has been proven although hyper claimed for 10 years without any proof whatsoever just talking about yesterday the 1st day this hearing the guardian newspaper quote alarming headline it says julie the sound was handcuffed 11 times stripped naked twice in this case files confiscated after the 1st day was accidentally hearing that's according to his lawyers do you know i think about that. this was the issue was raised this morning by julian's lawyer and it's really outrageous the fact of the matter whether the court building here is only around the corner and is joined by under the. tunnel to the prison. what i'm. earth can justify the fact of han coughing up person 11 times in the simple process of getting him from a to b. and then back and why strip sort of his time to time and what is most concerning how on earth can they take away his legal documents yesterday when he was back into the prison building the lawyers were raising this concern this morning to the judge who basically said well
through the the perseveration of lawyer this morning cetera etc there is absolutely no harm that has been proven although hyper claimed for 10 years without any proof whatsoever just talking about yesterday the 1st day this hearing the guardian newspaper quote alarming headline it says julie the sound was handcuffed 11 times stripped naked twice in this case files confiscated after the 1st day was accidentally hearing that's according to his lawyers do you know i think about that. this was the...
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job losses especially in the east etc etc but this is not an excuse this is not an excuse to blame at minorities point at minorities and point at muslims were meanwhile part of the society for decades i mean this is the got the ones where we got killed just yesterday were mostly could ish and turkish they were muslims and this is a chain of terror attacks since the last 2030 years we have to remind on murder turkish family was killed or insulting in the end as you murders there has been a history of this is that this didn't start with exactly what it is they didn't start out if they created a new climate the new. atmosphere read these kind of right wing ideologies can spread easily while our security forces intelligence was watching them because i scrolled sed mostly from germany's green party thank you. all take a look at some of the other stories making news around the world libya's military strongman khalifa haftar has said that he will accept a cease fire if turkish and syrian bursaries leave the country in an interview with the russian media he also demanded the to. libya's inter
job losses especially in the east etc etc but this is not an excuse this is not an excuse to blame at minorities point at minorities and point at muslims were meanwhile part of the society for decades i mean this is the got the ones where we got killed just yesterday were mostly could ish and turkish they were muslims and this is a chain of terror attacks since the last 2030 years we have to remind on murder turkish family was killed or insulting in the end as you murders there has been a...
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Feb 24, 2020
02/20
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KSTS
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implementado, esto no afectara a las personas que quieranir comprar otras cosas, sólo hot dogs, pizzas, etc. >> un río atmosférico se ve en el mapa, fuertes lluvias en texas. >> para nosotros, cielos mayormente despejados. >> en >> temperaturas en el rango de los 70 grados. >> temperaturas en los 50 grados a eso de las 5 o 6 de la tarde. >> a partir de los próximos días, veremos un ligero aumento en las temperaturas en nuestra zona. >> más. >> se enviaran más de un millon de teléfonos con 5 g >> se limitara la cantidad de dispositivos debido al coronavirus. >> twitter mostrará los contenidos no confiables serán mostrados en naranjo, para así evitar la desinformación. >> los empleados de esta empresa no podrán usar la red social tik toqué >> la tecnología está ayudando a la compra de ropa a través de internet. >> 102 mil millones de dólares se vendieron el año pasado en ropa a través de internet. >> esta aplicación permite tener una medición de tu cuerpo en muy pocos segundos. >> solo necesitas la aplicación y una pared. >> una vez listo, podrás ver tu talla ideal en más de 50 tiendas. >> lo
implementado, esto no afectara a las personas que quieranir comprar otras cosas, sólo hot dogs, pizzas, etc. >> un río atmosférico se ve en el mapa, fuertes lluvias en texas. >> para nosotros, cielos mayormente despejados. >> en >> temperaturas en el rango de los 70 grados. >> temperaturas en los 50 grados a eso de las 5 o 6 de la tarde. >> a partir de los próximos días, veremos un ligero aumento en las temperaturas en nuestra zona. >> más....
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Feb 3, 2020
02/20
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are in a sort of new gilded age and is that true where we have a business type to become president etc.? it was a pushback president teddy roosevelt came in and there was president franklin roosevelt and the advocate of taxation and rules to make the senate elections more democratic to spread democracy and reduce the wealth inequality. for the money to get into the elections. after the citizens united case this was a case in which it was decided that there could be basically in an limited flow of corporate money and president obama said this is going to open the floodgates to the foreign influence and that really cut me short because i hadn't realized that was a discussion than that when you make it so easy for dark money to come into the campaigns, campaign contributions usethe campaigncow each of these successive court decisions a bit harder and harder for people like you and me to track what is going on. you could spend a whole year on what the playability is to some political action group to try to figure out who is giving to elections and robert mueller for example found that ukra
are in a sort of new gilded age and is that true where we have a business type to become president etc.? it was a pushback president teddy roosevelt came in and there was president franklin roosevelt and the advocate of taxation and rules to make the senate elections more democratic to spread democracy and reduce the wealth inequality. for the money to get into the elections. after the citizens united case this was a case in which it was decided that there could be basically in an limited flow...
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Feb 26, 2020
02/20
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CSPAN
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help boost my innate union system like vitamin c, garlic, turmeric, ginger, oranges, etc., etc.. i want your comments on that. host: let's let her respond. guest: i just want to re-emphasize what i said to the earlier caller about it depends on what mask you are using. it is possible they can give you a false sense of security and possibly put you more at risk. it is not recommended that people in the general public use masks. in particular, there is limited evidence -- we believe that a healthy person wearing a mask is not how mask can protect you. it is potentially better for people who are sick to wear a mask so they don't expel the virus. we don't want to create a situation in which people go out and get masks and we don't have them for our health care workers. in terms of your suggestions for the other things, i don't think there is really strong evidence that they are going to help. i am a mom and i meant a lot of moms groups on the i was talk about garlic and elderberry. i just don't think there is great evidence that they are going to protect. host: did you have a follow-
help boost my innate union system like vitamin c, garlic, turmeric, ginger, oranges, etc., etc.. i want your comments on that. host: let's let her respond. guest: i just want to re-emphasize what i said to the earlier caller about it depends on what mask you are using. it is possible they can give you a false sense of security and possibly put you more at risk. it is not recommended that people in the general public use masks. in particular, there is limited evidence -- we believe that a...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 25, 2020
02/20
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SFGTV
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please follow the normal rules that are posted about turning off your cell phone, etc., etc. open for public comment. >> my name's john stinson. i'm a 45-year member of our pension fund. there were two things the public pension funds have in common. number one, they're all underfunded. number two, one of the reasons why they're all underfunded is because they're over diversefied in high-risk investments like hedge funds. most pension funds want 7% to 7.5% return on their investments. to get a 7% to 7.5% return on investments, it's not necessary to invest in any high-risk investments like hedge funds. two months ago, i gave you multiple portfolios of your stocks and bonds went back 94 years, and the average return just on combination of stocks and bonds and passive investments in those were more than 8%. that's going back 94 years. fourth, you don't have to go back 94 years. let's just go back ten years, and investments in stocks, bonds, real estate, and public utilities, and passive investments in those investments. number one, s&p 500, and the passive investments. one year r
please follow the normal rules that are posted about turning off your cell phone, etc., etc. open for public comment. >> my name's john stinson. i'm a 45-year member of our pension fund. there were two things the public pension funds have in common. number one, they're all underfunded. number two, one of the reasons why they're all underfunded is because they're over diversefied in high-risk investments like hedge funds. most pension funds want 7% to 7.5% return on their investments. to...
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etc i think that's not necessarily the best approach where you're coming from i really like in that is if we have a health vic's back and give people a perspective not only just on how they can best use their money how to lead but also how to take care of their own health because they're going to see things happen. in advance of what they're going to see in the news because honestly the news and other media tend to be a little bit behind in the 1st stages of something that wag phase but the markets themselves are usually very close to what's happening on the ground and so we may be able to look to the markets as opposed to the media as a way of being able to give us a perspective on what's happening in our world so creating this how to fix index is not a complicated matter you can simply put together an index of sensitive stocks and other securities that would reflect this and that that's an interesting project for sure now speaking of economics chinese markets and supply chains are shut down at the moment for the most part do you think this is something to expect more of in the glo
etc i think that's not necessarily the best approach where you're coming from i really like in that is if we have a health vic's back and give people a perspective not only just on how they can best use their money how to lead but also how to take care of their own health because they're going to see things happen. in advance of what they're going to see in the news because honestly the news and other media tend to be a little bit behind in the 1st stages of something that wag phase but the...
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any time if you have a problem with a regulator if you have a problem with a law there's a new law etc that could put in risk the company in your business and that's not only right now a startup it's a company that gives. an income families and more people know so you also have to the mention that mexico was one of the 1st countries to have a fin tick law which started working about 3 years ago and right now they have started taking in application and also giving out. some some licenses but it has been that very slow process and got caught in the middle of the change of government so that also slow that down but it's very good because now the companies that have applied and are going to have licenses now they're going to have some clarity of how fin to can interact with. regulate that financial industry for example has been very hard for fin ticks crypto companies opening bank accounts having accounts to do for ticks or having this interaction so this puts the rules of how we should interact but it also puts up the bar it puts up the bar because now opening crypto often think accenture
any time if you have a problem with a regulator if you have a problem with a law there's a new law etc that could put in risk the company in your business and that's not only right now a startup it's a company that gives. an income families and more people know so you also have to the mention that mexico was one of the 1st countries to have a fin tick law which started working about 3 years ago and right now they have started taking in application and also giving out. some some licenses but it...
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Feb 24, 2020
02/20
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ALJAZ
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people who are in government operations medical workers people delivering supplies post walk workers etc they're also allowed to leave the city and that it was stuck outside the city during the lockdown an hour loud to enter an important caveat though as it seems that normal one residence if you don't have a specific reason for having to leave the city will not going to be allowed to leave still so it's not like we're going to see a massive exodus but this is a significant significant change and it does signal some positive movements and we've also seen some other provinces 4 provinces united way joe in sensi province also lower their alert level saying that people can go back to work but we have to remember in kuwait province situation does remain critical we've had 150 deaths reported in the last 24 hours morse of them in kuwait province and there are still about 50000 people in hospital receiving care about 10000 of those are in critical condition and there are still 4000 suspected cases yet to be confirmed so for the government it's really about toeing the swine line between encourag
people who are in government operations medical workers people delivering supplies post walk workers etc they're also allowed to leave the city and that it was stuck outside the city during the lockdown an hour loud to enter an important caveat though as it seems that normal one residence if you don't have a specific reason for having to leave the city will not going to be allowed to leave still so it's not like we're going to see a massive exodus but this is a significant significant change...