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Jul 8, 2020
07/20
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so as a result they really are more consequential how someone like james garfield or rutherford hayesere challenge the way modern presidents are come it's very interesting to think about. but they weren't. with a different era that jumped out at me. >> in a lot of ways the survey is a mirror of our times. and you see a lot of sensitivity toward issues of race and inclusion and then at the survey in 1948, johnson was 1933 doing okay. people have become much more conscious of his racist policies to abandon the freed slaves after the civil war and henry jackson who was a significant president has taken a lot of heat for both action as a slaveholder and slave trader but also to the indian tribes that was quite ferocious as a military figure and then off to the west. it tells us a lot about who we are or think we are or want to be. it was the risk there was in a story why we have so many modern presidents that it is right. i'm not so sure it is right. it reflects we are self obsessed and those like andrew jackson who are important change the country but then acquired 40 percent of the land
so as a result they really are more consequential how someone like james garfield or rutherford hayesere challenge the way modern presidents are come it's very interesting to think about. but they weren't. with a different era that jumped out at me. >> in a lot of ways the survey is a mirror of our times. and you see a lot of sensitivity toward issues of race and inclusion and then at the survey in 1948, johnson was 1933 doing okay. people have become much more conscious of his racist...
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Jul 3, 2020
07/20
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CSPAN2
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what charles patel was trying to do, he had nothing personal against james garfield. he had met the man or his wife. what he was trying to do was to reverse the election of 1880. he was not so much trying to get garfield out of office as to put someone else in office . he was trying to make chester alan arthur and his circle of friends the president and ruling circle in the united states. it was a regime change area that's a very scary thought when you think about it. and he was successful indoing it . >> and getting back and johnson i'm going to steal a question that susan asked earlier not vernon earlier this week . abraham lincoln of course is running the number one president. james buchanan who unseated him and andrew johnson who came after him are right last two, how do you explain. >> lincoln is sort of historical kryptonite. you don't want to be close to him. he had the greatest challenges of any president i think and did such a wonderful job. it's hard to look good next to that area but both buchanan and johnson were cosmically unsuccessful buchanan slid into
what charles patel was trying to do, he had nothing personal against james garfield. he had met the man or his wife. what he was trying to do was to reverse the election of 1880. he was not so much trying to get garfield out of office as to put someone else in office . he was trying to make chester alan arthur and his circle of friends the president and ruling circle in the united states. it was a regime change area that's a very scary thought when you think about it. and he was successful...
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her employer -- a branch of the well-to-do garfield family.ng sandy. but in 1963, her husband dies of a heart attack. >> she was very sad and kind of lost. >> and left with three children. >> yes. >> betty, in need of an estate lawyer, reaches out to her old employer, the garfields. they put her in touch with thei. he's 61 -- 21 years older than betty -- and yet, romance blossoms. betty and george marry and retire to george's majestic jersey estate in his french chateau, stuffed with antiques from the vanderbilt mansions. >> she liked it for the solitude. she said, "my heart sings". >> another person will secretly feel the same way. no, not sandy, but the man she gets engaged to in 1986 -- shop teacher tim perkins. >> he would come here to visite. he would say how he would redo everything. >> sandy and tim actually hold their wedding here at the chateau. it was tim's idea. he wanted to have the wedding here. >> you think in the back of his mind from the very first time he saw this house, he thought to himself, "i'd love to live there"? >> perh
her employer -- a branch of the well-to-do garfield family.ng sandy. but in 1963, her husband dies of a heart attack. >> she was very sad and kind of lost. >> and left with three children. >> yes. >> betty, in need of an estate lawyer, reaches out to her old employer, the garfields. they put her in touch with thei. he's 61 -- 21 years older than betty -- and yet, romance blossoms. betty and george marry and retire to george's majestic jersey estate in his french chateau,...
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Jul 13, 2020
07/20
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BLOOMBERG
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thanks very much, garfield. have a good week. markets live editor garfield reynolds, joining us. some breaking news on the poland story. we mentioned this in the headlines. we are getting lines from the electoral commission. the polish president duda wins by 51.2% of the vote. this is make clear still a partial vote, though having said that, the results come from 99.97% of constituencies. we reported over the weekend it postalake longer to get votes from abroad that might favor the challenger, but it seems as if most the votes have been counted and duda wins 51.2%. what does that mean for relationships between poland, eastern europeans more broadly, and the brussels hub? we will talk about that with analysis from warsaw and we have a guest to talk about this in the next hour. before that, the yield curve control debate carries on. the ecb meets to review measures to rescue the economy. central banks discuss whether to intervene in bond markets. we will discuss whether we could see yield control in europe. this is bloomberg. ♪ anna: welcome back to the european market open. still
thanks very much, garfield. have a good week. markets live editor garfield reynolds, joining us. some breaking news on the poland story. we mentioned this in the headlines. we are getting lines from the electoral commission. the polish president duda wins by 51.2% of the vote. this is make clear still a partial vote, though having said that, the results come from 99.97% of constituencies. we reported over the weekend it postalake longer to get votes from abroad that might favor the challenger,...
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Jul 7, 2020
07/20
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KNTV
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> it's 50/50. >> jimmy: they're both good. >> a corpse is great >> that's so funny >> jimmy: on garfield's. >> that is so dark >> jimmy: "the nickname van gogh gave his remaining ear. >> get ready for the corn. >> jimmy: "han solo. "richard g-ear." >> richard g-ear >> jimmy: richard g-ear, i feel like that's going to win >> richard g-ear >> jimmy: richard g-ear. you're allowed to do those ones man. you know they're going to get the votes. >> yeah. totally. that made me hate myself writing it in, but - >> jimmy: hey man, we got to win here here we go current score after round two, it looks like -- >> ooh >> oh! >> oh! >> jimmy: come on now. >> it's rigged >> jimmy: here we go it's not rigged. >> god >> jimmy: round three is the last lash. and we're never doing this game ever again whoever wins, wins forever >> i'm into this game now. >> jimmy: acro-lash, here we go last lash goes like this come up with a full name for this acronym, "m-e-m," full name >> mine's not even a real sentence ♪ >> i mean -- >> jimmy: oh no, i can't even write it >> i don't even know what i'm doing. >> jimmy: we hav
> it's 50/50. >> jimmy: they're both good. >> a corpse is great >> that's so funny >> jimmy: on garfield's. >> that is so dark >> jimmy: "the nickname van gogh gave his remaining ear. >> get ready for the corn. >> jimmy: "han solo. "richard g-ear." >> richard g-ear >> jimmy: richard g-ear, i feel like that's going to win >> richard g-ear >> jimmy: richard g-ear. you're allowed to do those ones man....
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Jul 30, 2020
07/20
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KPIX
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and those who survive covid, like greg garfield, are pleading with people to listen to the experts. >probably the healthiest person you ever met. i had no pre-existing conditions. i ski 70 to 100 days a year. >> how sick were you? >> i had sepsis, merca, a collapsed lung, i was on my death bed. >> garfield was one of the first coronavirus patients in california. the 54-year-old was on a ventilator for 31 days and hospitalized for more than 60. loss of blood pressure caused him to lose several fingers. doctors gave him a 1% chance of survival. >> my neurologist came into my room and said to me, you're a miracle. medically speaking, you should not have been here. >> what's your message to everyone watching? >> this is for real. this virus is no joke. >> reporter: what an incredible story he has. his kidneys were starting to fail. his liver starting to fail. now he says he's practically back to 100%. listen, back in the state of florida, they are closing all of their testing sites that are state run as of today at 5:00 p.m. why? because there is a tropical storm. isaias is headed this wa
and those who survive covid, like greg garfield, are pleading with people to listen to the experts. >probably the healthiest person you ever met. i had no pre-existing conditions. i ski 70 to 100 days a year. >> how sick were you? >> i had sepsis, merca, a collapsed lung, i was on my death bed. >> garfield was one of the first coronavirus patients in california. the 54-year-old was on a ventilator for 31 days and hospitalized for more than 60. loss of blood pressure caused...
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Jul 19, 2020
07/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 60
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it was first installed for james garfield when he had an assassination attempt on him, to cool it down, they put temporary air conditioning in. but the first real air-conditioning is when it was redone under harry truman. but i apologize again. and i just want to let you know that tonight in the other part of the kennedy center, "hamilton" was canceled because we were not sure that people going to that were as tough as the people that were coming to this event. [laughter] [applause] >> so why don't we start now? susan, why don't we start with you, if we could. susan, you were a teenager when your father became president of the united states. what is it like to go out on dates when you have young men, are they intimidated to call you up and how do they get through the gates, and did the secret service watch you where you go, what is that like? >> they do, david. it was difficult. i was lucky. unlike a lot of other presidential children, i grew up in alexandria, virginia, across the river. i didn't have to change schools. i was in an all girls school in bethesda, maryland. so i was datin
it was first installed for james garfield when he had an assassination attempt on him, to cool it down, they put temporary air conditioning in. but the first real air-conditioning is when it was redone under harry truman. but i apologize again. and i just want to let you know that tonight in the other part of the kennedy center, "hamilton" was canceled because we were not sure that people going to that were as tough as the people that were coming to this event. [laughter] [applause]...
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Jul 31, 2020
07/20
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country, including through depressions and wars it's not up to you to look into it, you fascist garfieldjust willfully ignoring the law barr clearly doesn't care what the constitution says, and he doesn't care if democrats disapprove of his answers. he's like a high school dip [ bleep ] who knows he is not going to get suspended by the principal because his father owns the town quarry "oh, property damage is against school policy, principal i'll make sure to tell scooch and mando that while we're keying your car. and then today secretary of state mike pompeo suggested the same thing when asked about the president's tweet, he acted like it was an open question that would be decided not by the constitution or congress, but by trump's justice department >> can a president delay the november presidential election, mr. secretary? >> senator, i'm not going to enter a legal judgment on that on the fly this morning. >> can a president delay a presidential election? >> senator, in the end, the department of justice, others, will make that legal determination. >> seth: no, they won't. it's in the
country, including through depressions and wars it's not up to you to look into it, you fascist garfieldjust willfully ignoring the law barr clearly doesn't care what the constitution says, and he doesn't care if democrats disapprove of his answers. he's like a high school dip [ bleep ] who knows he is not going to get suspended by the principal because his father owns the town quarry "oh, property damage is against school policy, principal i'll make sure to tell scooch and mando that...
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Jul 18, 2020
07/20
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CSPAN3
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"garfield." "several lifetimes." these are the titles that moore gave to each of the paintings.ington, d.c., the intimacy of legacies. the last observation, the distance between wilsons lived experience and the way he affected the world around him, leads me to my most personal thoughts. woodrow wilson was president of the united states from 1913 to 1921. for reasons i need not mention, he left a mark on the nation and the world. african-americans assessment of wilson's legacy is more complicated. his commitment to racial erasure at princeton contributed to a logic of the school that set homogeneity to be preserved. means that generations of black workers encountered new obstacles to advance professionally, to provide for their families and pass on generational growth. i stand before you as someone who has benefited from the accumulation of social status because of my parents education and work as well as their parents education and work. but there is a caveat, and it is embodied in the work history of my paternal grandfather john holloway. i never had the pleasure of meeting him
"garfield." "several lifetimes." these are the titles that moore gave to each of the paintings.ington, d.c., the intimacy of legacies. the last observation, the distance between wilsons lived experience and the way he affected the world around him, leads me to my most personal thoughts. woodrow wilson was president of the united states from 1913 to 1921. for reasons i need not mention, he left a mark on the nation and the world. african-americans assessment of wilson's...
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Jul 23, 2020
07/20
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republican senator from ohio, nominated by hayess in 1881 and rejected, renominated by president garfield in march of 1881. and confirmed by a 24-23 vote in the senate, the narrowest ever for a justice. it says on my notes yick wo was his biggest contribution to the court. >> i can't think of much else justice matthews did, although this opinion, which was significant in that it recognized a few major points, it recognized that the due process clause applies to nonsequence, that equal protection clause applies to noncitizens. it even made reference to famous civil rights act of 1866 which said people cannot be denied access to certain rights based on their skin color. so this opinion looped together a lot of major themes of the time. >> here's just a little bit of justice matthews decision. it was a unanimous decision. he wrote it on behalf of the entire court, and here's what -- some of what he wrote. "no reason for it is shown and the conclusion cannot be resisted that no reason for it exists except hostility to the race and nationality to which the petitioners belong and which, in the
republican senator from ohio, nominated by hayess in 1881 and rejected, renominated by president garfield in march of 1881. and confirmed by a 24-23 vote in the senate, the narrowest ever for a justice. it says on my notes yick wo was his biggest contribution to the court. >> i can't think of much else justice matthews did, although this opinion, which was significant in that it recognized a few major points, it recognized that the due process clause applies to nonsequence, that equal...