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Nov 26, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN3
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eye 67
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there is a marker, a plaque card telling the information of friedman's village. when they established it, they put in it a school, post office. they -- citizens erected their own churches. they had homes for senior citizens. they had their own little marketplace and everything. most of the people went outside of friedman village to work on neighboring farms and blaugt ro the money back and the main plan was to how to survive on their own, how to work, how to create a family and just live the american way out the american dream. in 1898 or '99, they had to disban the village because it was on arlington cemetery. at the time they started building graves from the south end of friedman's village and were bringing them in the direction of the house, arlington house. so freed man's village were in between where they started the grave all the way to the house, it was in between. they said, you all have to disban and go somewhere else while we use this property to put graves on them. when friedman's village disbanded in 1898 and 1899, the citizens created the african-ame
there is a marker, a plaque card telling the information of friedman's village. when they established it, they put in it a school, post office. they -- citizens erected their own churches. they had homes for senior citizens. they had their own little marketplace and everything. most of the people went outside of friedman village to work on neighboring farms and blaugt ro the money back and the main plan was to how to survive on their own, how to work, how to create a family and just live the...
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51
Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 51
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host: so, a milton friedman, even though you may disagree with him politically. guest: yes, a milton friedman is someone i debated, in fact in 1990, when he reissued his television program, free to choose. i was on the first panel. i don't consider him to be a friend and someone who who you had respect because he was advancing his ideas. in that format of debate , but a very much admire. host: those are the types of ideas from the milton friedman's of the world, which in your view that conservatives have abandoned? guest: absolutely. the conservatives abandon friedman very early. his ideas were in fact unworkable. i don't fault them for doing that, but they never advanced a coherent view of policy. host: and why liberals should also abandon the free-market. what does that mean? guest: the rhetoric of free-market is something that liberals have learned to give lip service to as a kind of price of admission to serious policy discussion in the us. that little barb, that would apply for example particularly to this administration, to the obama administration, back in
host: so, a milton friedman, even though you may disagree with him politically. guest: yes, a milton friedman is someone i debated, in fact in 1990, when he reissued his television program, free to choose. i was on the first panel. i don't consider him to be a friend and someone who who you had respect because he was advancing his ideas. in that format of debate , but a very much admire. host: those are the types of ideas from the milton friedman's of the world, which in your view that...
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Nov 27, 2016
11/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 22
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thomas friedman: yeah, it is going to get painful.nly question is if market or mother nature or political leaders will deliver the pain, but the pain is coming. terre: do you think we have time to change? tarja: i hope so. we kind of know that whether it is already too late, but if we postpone it tomorrow, at least it does not help the situation. so it is time to act now. ♪ tarja: i think so that our children and grandchildren will say that, mommy, granny, did you really think that you did not see this? it cannot be solved at your desk. it has to be also taking a risk to try, try to make an effort in practice. and learn by doing. be ready to say that we tried enough, but now perhaps it is a new way. so, i mean to take a risk to , make a new action. kwame anthony appiah: we have to think of ways of incentivizing people to do the things that would be good to do. we have to give tax advantages to green businesses so that the technologies develop, which will mean that our industries are making money on the world's carbon neutral technolog
thomas friedman: yeah, it is going to get painful.nly question is if market or mother nature or political leaders will deliver the pain, but the pain is coming. terre: do you think we have time to change? tarja: i hope so. we kind of know that whether it is already too late, but if we postpone it tomorrow, at least it does not help the situation. so it is time to act now. ♪ tarja: i think so that our children and grandchildren will say that, mommy, granny, did you really think that you did...
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Nov 26, 2016
11/16
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WTXF
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eye 70
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. ♪ >> sean friedman is your typical little boy.e, energetic and full of life. >> final five and a half. i like to bike ride. >> reporter: sean also loves baseball and soccer and karate. you name it, sean plays it. >> take that. >> reporter: say he keeps his mom and dad on their toes would be an understatement. but danielle and jordan friedman wouldn't have it any other way. ♪ >> this is how big he was. >> reporter: sean had quite a rough entrance into the world. he was born prime mature on october 12th, 2010 at just 23 weeks. >> he was 1 pound 3.8-ounces when he was born. he spent 111 days in the nicu at saint barnabas hospital in new jersey. >> reporter: the friedmans were thrilled to finally take sean home at the end of january in 2011. but then in june, they noticed something just wasn't right with their little miracle baby. he wasn't eating and wasn't gaining weight. >> you could hear him constantly breathing, um, and then he was turning blue also on occasion. you could see the struggles. >> reporter: after several appointments
. ♪ >> sean friedman is your typical little boy.e, energetic and full of life. >> final five and a half. i like to bike ride. >> reporter: sean also loves baseball and soccer and karate. you name it, sean plays it. >> take that. >> reporter: say he keeps his mom and dad on their toes would be an understatement. but danielle and jordan friedman wouldn't have it any other way. ♪ >> this is how big he was. >> reporter: sean had quite a rough entrance...
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Nov 15, 2016
11/16
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FBC
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eye 68
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>>> new sheriff in town, adena friedman, we had her back in january from davos.nd we asked her about this. it is long coming. major promotion to ceo. she's here and a wall street pioneer. what she'd like to see changed about regulations. stay tuned. . . why pause a spontaneous moment? cialis for daily use treats ed and the urinary symptoms of bph. tell your doctor about your medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, or adempas® for pulmonary hypertension, as this may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have a sudden decrease or loss of hearing or vision, or an allergic reaction, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis. okay google, show me korean restaurants in boulder. google assistant: i found a few places. vo: the new pixel, phone by google. exclusively on verizon. the only next gen network that lets you g
>>> new sheriff in town, adena friedman, we had her back in january from davos.nd we asked her about this. it is long coming. major promotion to ceo. she's here and a wall street pioneer. what she'd like to see changed about regulations. stay tuned. . . why pause a spontaneous moment? cialis for daily use treats ed and the urinary symptoms of bph. tell your doctor about your medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest...
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Nov 29, 2016
11/16
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KQED
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i spoke to tom friedman earlier. friedman, we seem to be at a time not just in the united states but the rest of the world where politics is in turmoil. why? thomas: i would argue it is because the three largest forces on the planet, the market, mother nature, and moore's law, are in simultaneous acceleration. moore's law -- the power of chips will double every 24 months. the market is digital globalization. not your grandfather's globalization, containers on ships, but facebook, twitter, paypal. all these things are being digitized and globalized. including this show and our business. last thing is climate change, population., we are in the middle of three simultaneous accelerations at the same time and they are interacting. more technology means more globalization. more globalization leads to more climate change. and they aren't just changing things. i argue they are reshaping the workplace, reshaping geopolitics, politics, community, and ethics. katty: but couldn't that mean that people would opt for more stabilit
i spoke to tom friedman earlier. friedman, we seem to be at a time not just in the united states but the rest of the world where politics is in turmoil. why? thomas: i would argue it is because the three largest forces on the planet, the market, mother nature, and moore's law, are in simultaneous acceleration. moore's law -- the power of chips will double every 24 months. the market is digital globalization. not your grandfather's globalization, containers on ships, but facebook, twitter,...
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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KTNV
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we will come back with "new york times" columnist tom friedman. >>> back now with thomas friedman, the pulitzer prize winning columnist from "the new book "thank you for being late" and calls the great accession began ushering in a dizzying, disorienting time of change, economic and environmental. he's here to explain it right now and i want to get to the substance but closely connected and you wrote a series of columns during the campaign, very tough on donald trump. you called him a disgusting human being and now you're calling the election a moral 9/11 only 9/11 was done to us from the outside. we did this to ourselves. that's pretty apocalyptic language. >> well, you know, there's no question we saw language used in this campaign that debased and demeaned people, george, in ways we've never seen before. red lines were erased that i don't think will be easily restored. so this was a huge moral event. no question about it. >> how much of it, though, was the inevitable backlash to the kind of changes you describe in your book? >> my book basically argues we're actually in the middle o
we will come back with "new york times" columnist tom friedman. >>> back now with thomas friedman, the pulitzer prize winning columnist from "the new book "thank you for being late" and calls the great accession began ushering in a dizzying, disorienting time of change, economic and environmental. he's here to explain it right now and i want to get to the substance but closely connected and you wrote a series of columns during the campaign, very tough on donald...
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Nov 22, 2016
11/16
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KQED
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i'm pleased to have tom friedman at this table. as always. let's, so let's just start and talk about the book, first of all. thawr for being late. >> comes from meeting people for breakfast in washington d.c. over the years, charlie, every once in a while someone comes 15, 20 minutes late and say tom, i was really sorry, the weather, the traffic, somebody was talking about homework. one day, about three years ago, i said to one of them, i think my friend peter corsell. i said to him, charlie, tallly, thank you for being late. because were you late, i have been eavesdropping on their conversation. i have been people watching the lobby, fantastic. and most importantly i just connected two ideas hi been struggling with for a month. so thank you for being late. people started to get into it. they said well, you're welcome. but what they understood is i was giving myself and them permission to slow down, to rethink, to reflect. pie favorite quote in the opening chapter comes if my friend doug sideman who says when you press the pause button on a c
i'm pleased to have tom friedman at this table. as always. let's, so let's just start and talk about the book, first of all. thawr for being late. >> comes from meeting people for breakfast in washington d.c. over the years, charlie, every once in a while someone comes 15, 20 minutes late and say tom, i was really sorry, the weather, the traffic, somebody was talking about homework. one day, about three years ago, i said to one of them, i think my friend peter corsell. i said to him,...
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Nov 11, 2016
11/16
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WMUR
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. >> reporter: today's challenge, help the friedmans of ridgewood, new jersey. you have a beautiful home. >> thank you. >> reporter: now we're going to this red blower door simulates 20-mile-per-hour winds. scott's team showing us where the cold air is seeping in. >> the darker colors are colder. >> reporter: spotting problems in virtually every room, even the light fixtures. >> one of the simple things you can do is pick up an l.e.d. kit. it screws right into the socket there. >> seems like an easy fix. >> it is. >> reporter: next up, re-sealing windows. >> just run a bead of caulk along the molding there. bringing the friedman's heating bill down from $420. >> i think we can get that down somewhere maybe $350, maybe even $320. >> that'd be great! >> awesome. >> reporter: rebecca jarvis, abc news, ridgewood, new jersey. >> love the tips, rebecca, thank you. >>> when we come back, we remember two big names we've lost in music and acting. >>> and what this man was stealing, that is now on the 32 years at this place and now i've got 9 days left before retirement.
. >> reporter: today's challenge, help the friedmans of ridgewood, new jersey. you have a beautiful home. >> thank you. >> reporter: now we're going to this red blower door simulates 20-mile-per-hour winds. scott's team showing us where the cold air is seeping in. >> the darker colors are colder. >> reporter: spotting problems in virtually every room, even the light fixtures. >> one of the simple things you can do is pick up an l.e.d. kit. it screws right...
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Nov 30, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN
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eye 51
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friedman: the pentagon seems to be shocked. mr.ally focused on an and libby make another point on the economic reality. opportunityredible in green infrastructure and job-intensive projects like retrofitting buildings and building the weh-capacity lines that carry solar and wind from the places where it is generated to the cities where it is needed into a variety of other similar projects and that is exactly what the global economy needs now. we have what larry summers and others have called secular stagnation. others have different labels, than 100 years, the developed countries have had a consumer demand economy with henry ford's aphorism. we have been recycling middle income wages back into a consumer lists economy. -- consumerist economy. the combination of hyper wages totion, flinging lower cost venues and matching them with i.t., the combination of that phenomenon and the introduction of intelligence ato automation which makes fallacy. the long-held assumption which evidence has proven to be true that automation creates more
friedman: the pentagon seems to be shocked. mr.ally focused on an and libby make another point on the economic reality. opportunityredible in green infrastructure and job-intensive projects like retrofitting buildings and building the weh-capacity lines that carry solar and wind from the places where it is generated to the cities where it is needed into a variety of other similar projects and that is exactly what the global economy needs now. we have what larry summers and others have called...
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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WISN
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eye 42
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we ask the head of his transition team, joudeh and our expert, jon karl, martha fri friedman. >> announcer: after a kruring loss. >> this is painful and it will be for a long time. >> announcer: how will they redefine their path forward. we ask keith ellison. and -- >> now it's time for america to bind the wounds of division. >> announcer: with the country struggling to unite what happens next? from here now, chief anchor, george stephanopoulos. >>> good morning, the shock of the news after the biggest upset in political history, this once unimaginable image. donald trump side-by-side with president obama in the oval office. soon it will be his office and home and as america wrestles with it the first answers from shape. trump tower is buzzes with intensity. the president-elect's family, loyalist, advisers and wanna-bes all jockeying for position and the man at the center soon to be the world's most powerful now shoulders the hopes and dreams of millions of americans, the fear and anxiety of millions more. >> it is time for us to come together as one united people. >> from his moment of vi
we ask the head of his transition team, joudeh and our expert, jon karl, martha fri friedman. >> announcer: after a kruring loss. >> this is painful and it will be for a long time. >> announcer: how will they redefine their path forward. we ask keith ellison. and -- >> now it's time for america to bind the wounds of division. >> announcer: with the country struggling to unite what happens next? from here now, chief anchor, george stephanopoulos. >>> good...
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Nov 23, 2016
11/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 53
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i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table. tom: it comes from meeting people for breakfast in washington, d.c.. every once in a while, somebody will come late. one day about three years ago, him,iend peter, i said to thank you for being late. because you are late, i have been eavesdropping on their conversations. i have been people watching the lobby. most importantly, i just conducted that's connected with ideas i have been struggling. people started to get into it. i washey understood, giving them to slow down and rethink and reflect. my favorite quote in the opening chapter comes from my friend. he says, when you press the pause button on a computer, it stops. when you press because you on a human being, it start. boy, do we need to do a lot of that. charlie: what stage of acceleration? withit explains -- begins me explaining to my parking garage attendant how to write a column. if the world as a data set, this is my ogre rhythm. a new story is meant to inform. i can write about the show and inform. a column is different, i
i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table. tom: it comes from meeting people for breakfast in washington, d.c.. every once in a while, somebody will come late. one day about three years ago, him,iend peter, i said to thank you for being late. because you are late, i have been eavesdropping on their conversations. i have been people watching the lobby. most importantly, i just conducted that's connected with ideas i have been struggling. people started to get into it. i washey understood,...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 48
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. >> even the you may disagree with milton friedman politically correct. >> yes. i did debate in 1990 with the issue of television program free to choose i was on the panel. i considered him to be a friend that you have respect because he was advancing his ideas. but in that format of debate that i very much admire stripes so that is the type of activities in your view have not made that. >> but the conservatives abandoned friedman very early his ideas were not workable. the did not have a coherent view of monetary policy. >> and while liberals should abandon the free-market? >> the rhetoric of the free-market is something that liberals have learned to give lip service to with the price of admission to serious policy discussion in the united states. and battle bit would apply particularly to be a about - - obama administration back with a campaign 2008 kennedy brought obama it is the glory of the free market to. my view is this is something that
. >> even the you may disagree with milton friedman politically correct. >> yes. i did debate in 1990 with the issue of television program free to choose i was on the panel. i considered him to be a friend that you have respect because he was advancing his ideas. but in that format of debate that i very much admire stripes so that is the type of activities in your view have not made that. >> but the conservatives abandoned friedman very early his ideas were not workable. the...
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Nov 30, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN
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friedman: today? mr. gore: today. every day. and, our visual impression of sky is that it is vast and limitless. now, the news is we have gone three years in a row without an increase in the annual emissions. suggesting we might be at an inflection point. i do believe we are. but the bad news is that we are still adding to that cumulative amount. today, aon tons nontrivial fraction will still be there some 10,000 years from now. if we were to magically putting it up there tomorrow, half of it would fall out in a matter of three decades. that's really amazing. mr. friedman: we can have that impact. mr. gore: we can, if we choose to. so the cumulative amount now traps as much heat energy every day as would be released by 400,000 hiroshima atomic clouds exploding every four hours. -- every 24 hours. that is a lot of energy. oceans. into the it has a lot of consequences. ocean-based storms are getting significantly stronger. and this could disrupt the water cycle because the evaporation rate of the oceans increases. we get these mas
friedman: today? mr. gore: today. every day. and, our visual impression of sky is that it is vast and limitless. now, the news is we have gone three years in a row without an increase in the annual emissions. suggesting we might be at an inflection point. i do believe we are. but the bad news is that we are still adding to that cumulative amount. today, aon tons nontrivial fraction will still be there some 10,000 years from now. if we were to magically putting it up there tomorrow, half of it...
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Nov 23, 2016
11/16
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BLOOMBERG
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charlie: tom friedman is here. he is a pulitzer prize-winning author.e is a columnist for the new york times. he is known for tackling big ideas and wide-ranging subjects. he has a book out which some are calling his most ambitious yet. imagine that. it is called "thank you for being late." in it he argues today's world is moving faster than ever and will only get faster. i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table. as always. let's start and talk about the book. tom: it comes from meeting people for breakfast in washington, d.c. every once in a while, somebody will come late. they would say i am really sorry. one day about three years ago, i spontaneously said to my friend peter, i said to him, thank you for being late. because you were late, i have been eavesdropping on their conversations. i have been people-watching the lobby. most importantly, i just connected ideas i have been struggling with for a month. people started to get into it. what they understood, i was giving them to slow down and rethink and reflect. my favorite quote in the openin
charlie: tom friedman is here. he is a pulitzer prize-winning author.e is a columnist for the new york times. he is known for tackling big ideas and wide-ranging subjects. he has a book out which some are calling his most ambitious yet. imagine that. it is called "thank you for being late." in it he argues today's world is moving faster than ever and will only get faster. i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table. as always. let's start and talk about the book. tom: it comes...
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Nov 9, 2016
11/16
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KQED
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andrew friedman, principle at the washington update joins us to talk about that.d to see you, andrew. welcome. >> nice to see you, sue. >> let's start first of all, we go with each candidate individually. let's start with mrs. clinton. she may be working with a difficult or recalcitrant congress. what do you think she will be able to get done? >> you're right. at a minimum, she's facing a house that is republican and as you say, recalcitrant. they're not going to want to necessarily implement her programs. and that makes it harder, because a lot of her programs for the economy, additional social spending and things like that, won't happen. but i think there are three areas where we might see some progress. one is an infrastructure program, providing jobs to try to repair the nation's infrastructure. the second is perhaps repatriation of overseas earnings from multinational companies. as you know, we have $2 trillion of earnings overseas that can't be brought back without a 35% tax. and is some idea, maybe we can lower that tax rate and get that money back. i think
andrew friedman, principle at the washington update joins us to talk about that.d to see you, andrew. welcome. >> nice to see you, sue. >> let's start first of all, we go with each candidate individually. let's start with mrs. clinton. she may be working with a difficult or recalcitrant congress. what do you think she will be able to get done? >> you're right. at a minimum, she's facing a house that is republican and as you say, recalcitrant. they're not going to want to...
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49
Nov 5, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
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>> they abandoned friedman very early. his ideas were unworkable.free market is something liberals have learned to give lipservice to as a price to the discussion in the united states and that little blurb would apply particularly to this administration, the obama administration. back in the campaign if you look at the candidate's website on economic policy there was a paragraph that was to the glory of the free market and my view is this is something that inhibits liberals and progressives from having a clear idea of what needs to be done and it simply ties their hands behind their back and allows
>> they abandoned friedman very early. his ideas were unworkable.free market is something liberals have learned to give lipservice to as a price to the discussion in the united states and that little blurb would apply particularly to this administration, the obama administration. back in the campaign if you look at the candidate's website on economic policy there was a paragraph that was to the glory of the free market and my view is this is something that inhibits liberals and...
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Nov 23, 2016
11/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 163
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i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table.
i am pleased to have tom friedman at this table.
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86
Nov 15, 2016
11/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 86
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eddie lou talk to the incoming friedman onadena changes at the exchange.h: i've been working bob now for 10 years and when i came back as president and coo, he and i have been partnered together to make sure we are optimizing the business. i feel like i have my handprints on the vast majority of what we have been driving toward and focused on. my job is to continue the journey to make sure we continue to be a critical market for an infrastructure provider. bob has been very focused on technology and expanding those capabilities at the nasdaq. will that be a major focus going forward for you? adena: technology is deeply embedded in our dna. it's how we got started to be the first electronic exchange. our will continue to be focus and how we can bring emerging technologies to interact with the capital markets as efficiently and effectively as possible. service, all the other things that come with being a world-class exchange. betty: is there anything different you might do, anything you might expect to see out of the nasdaq? we have been transforming nasdaq
eddie lou talk to the incoming friedman onadena changes at the exchange.h: i've been working bob now for 10 years and when i came back as president and coo, he and i have been partnered together to make sure we are optimizing the business. i feel like i have my handprints on the vast majority of what we have been driving toward and focused on. my job is to continue the journey to make sure we continue to be a critical market for an infrastructure provider. bob has been very focused on...
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51
Nov 18, 2016
11/16
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KWWL
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also with us, composer david friedman and our dear friend david wild. now we have a surprise for you. >> first, what did you guys think of the song? >> it was beautiful. we have almost 100 of them. >> can we talk about how great of a singer? that was just amazing. gorgeous. >> well, it's easy when the song is so beautiful so thank you. >> i love the way you included the people in your performance. a lot of people don't think they should or don't or are uncomfortable. >> well, when you guys were talking, brian, you were getting so emotional. so it was hard not to include them, not not to include them. >> we have other family members here. your sister's with us and her we know you made this trip to new york as a family vacation. shauna, your kids are here, and your sister and nieces. we'll make sure you get to see asp sites as possible. you guys are going on at ride. >> an interactive tour of manhattan complete with live performances, comedy, karaoke. floor to ceiling windows. >> it's fun. >> it is fun, we've been on it. they're patented mobile theaters.
also with us, composer david friedman and our dear friend david wild. now we have a surprise for you. >> first, what did you guys think of the song? >> it was beautiful. we have almost 100 of them. >> can we talk about how great of a singer? that was just amazing. gorgeous. >> well, it's easy when the song is so beautiful so thank you. >> i love the way you included the people in your performance. a lot of people don't think they should or don't or are...