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Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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BLOOMBERG
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gene: a little bit, but they are expensive.damentals are strong but we need to recognize we are in a unique, unsustainable growth environment. we have had jobs added in that is not normal in the last few months and that says there is pent-up demand while we get people back into the labor force. fundamentals are strong and credit spreads reflect that. we need to be careful how companies are using that cash. we are seeing an uptick in dividends and buybacks. it improved a bit in the second quarter but we need to be diligent, because spreads are coming at a level that does not provide a cushion. jonathan: let's explore when the fed holds back. this is from the boston fed president saying this about point back on qe, if you continue to purchase assets, the action primarily is in pricing, not so much employment. i don't think asset purchases are having the desired impact in promoting employment. that is a fed official questioning the value of qe, the value of it, and suggesting what we have all been talking about for the last 10 yea
gene: a little bit, but they are expensive.damentals are strong but we need to recognize we are in a unique, unsustainable growth environment. we have had jobs added in that is not normal in the last few months and that says there is pent-up demand while we get people back into the labor force. fundamentals are strong and credit spreads reflect that. we need to be careful how companies are using that cash. we are seeing an uptick in dividends and buybacks. it improved a bit in the second...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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with the idea the epigenetic clock this is what happens look at the marks and what determines which genes are turned on or turned off in ourselves. so it must be a relationship between this and aging. so they are speculative so a lot of biological data is put out online so with that is the thing that sticks to your dna basically so with loads of this data completely unrelated experiments with developmental abnormalities and dozens of different tissues the only constraint wires that has to have a marker and he found off of those millions is scattered across the genome he could take 250 to determine the age of the person and it is incredible so incredible in fact it couldn't be published because nobody including him did not believe it so this is a fascinating area of aging if you have accelerating age it's even higher. not suggesting you have aged more rapidly than someone that's younger but they find these all the time. so because of the culture of open data see you have to show the sheer power to find these signals if there are any or not. >> . >> talk about bio hacking that that is the e
with the idea the epigenetic clock this is what happens look at the marks and what determines which genes are turned on or turned off in ourselves. so it must be a relationship between this and aging. so they are speculative so a lot of biological data is put out online so with that is the thing that sticks to your dna basically so with loads of this data completely unrelated experiments with developmental abnormalities and dozens of different tissues the only constraint wires that has to have...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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ouwere already doing some gene therapies for extreme diseases for example, these gene therapiesare approvedut they've been used in hospitals now . so as you get more use on these things will gradually going to get back to these. we've got severe disease, people have mild disease and eventually we will just get the general public so even if these things are five or 10 or 15 years away it isdecades , not centuries. the other thing, as i sort of talk about all this data and biology during the end of the science i talk about how this publication computational revolution will mean we end up doing assistance to summarize that. we need to build computer models for human beings eibecause we're targeting thos in hallmarks of aging . we need to understand how those things interrelate in clever ways. you just don't want to kill cells, you want to do something more subtle and improve our biology in such a way to stop us growingold, to reprogram our bodies to age . i know that sounds like a crazy sci-fi, it's going to be the future. why am i speculating in this way? if you think about this could easily
ouwere already doing some gene therapies for extreme diseases for example, these gene therapiesare approvedut they've been used in hospitals now . so as you get more use on these things will gradually going to get back to these. we've got severe disease, people have mild disease and eventually we will just get the general public so even if these things are five or 10 or 15 years away it isdecades , not centuries. the other thing, as i sort of talk about all this data and biology during the end...
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Aug 20, 2021
08/21
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to reactivate another gene.that is been seen to be really helpful there and then we could go into sort of some of the more innovative or different types which just basically increase the functionality. so one example is let's say you think of base editing. there is one company working on that there that is ipoed, it is called beam. and you could think about it like a pencil and an eraser. so you if think about it, you're on the white piece of paper again, in the pencil and eraser, you might have some lead or debris or eraser debris, but essentially your paper looks get better this will work for one-third of all joan genetic disease mutations because it needs to correct base pairs but i just heard the last caller speaking about that as well and so this could be really exciting and some companies working on beam like i mentioned, they're working on it for sickle cell and verb is working on it for the pcs k9 gene to target ldl or bad cholesterol. >> so if it is good for a third of diseases, you also cover stem cell
to reactivate another gene.that is been seen to be really helpful there and then we could go into sort of some of the more innovative or different types which just basically increase the functionality. so one example is let's say you think of base editing. there is one company working on that there that is ipoed, it is called beam. and you could think about it like a pencil and an eraser. so you if think about it, you're on the white piece of paper again, in the pencil and eraser, you might...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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gene therapy and stem cell therapy, we are already doing gene therapies, extreme diseases, gene therapiesre approved and have been used in hospitals now so as you get used to doing these things, people who have severe and mild diseases tell us finally safety get them to the general public entity even if they are ten or 15 is a way, take decades, centuries were talking and the other thing is i talked about this data, i talk about how revolution means we do assistance biology to summarize that. rather than targeting what i showed on the slide earlier, we need to understand how these relate and intervene in clever ways. we need to improve biology in such a way to stabilize it and stop growing, reprogram our bodies not to age. so far into the future, if you think about sci-fi, it could easily happen in the next 50 years because of you think about the last 50 years, is a total revolution in biology computing power which has doubled since the 60s and so on. think of your middle age in good health now, you could expect to get the first generation, maybe stan so treatment to extend your life and
gene therapy and stem cell therapy, we are already doing gene therapies, extreme diseases, gene therapiesre approved and have been used in hospitals now so as you get used to doing these things, people who have severe and mild diseases tell us finally safety get them to the general public entity even if they are ten or 15 is a way, take decades, centuries were talking and the other thing is i talked about this data, i talk about how revolution means we do assistance biology to summarize that....
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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gene therapy and stem cell therapy, these are more speculative and we are already doing some gene therapyr extreme diseases. these are approved have been used in hospitals now so as you get used to doing these things, gradually for people with mild disease until we are eventually in the general public so even if these things are five or ten or 15 years ago, is decades, not centuries we are talking about. the other thing, as i talked about this data, for the end i talked about revolution will mean we have a system to summarizelo, we need to build computer models for humans. we need to understand how they relate, intervene and clever ways. we want to do something more subtle, and proof biology and stabilize it, reprogramming our bodies not to age. as i was writing, it's going to be so far, why am i speculating this if you think about this, record happen in the next 50 years because of you think about the last ten years, spent a total revolution in computing sinceer the 1950s and so on. it would be a far better. if your middle age can include help, you can expect to get a first generation, a
gene therapy and stem cell therapy, these are more speculative and we are already doing some gene therapyr extreme diseases. these are approved have been used in hospitals now so as you get used to doing these things, gradually for people with mild disease until we are eventually in the general public so even if these things are five or ten or 15 years ago, is decades, not centuries we are talking about. the other thing, as i talked about this data, for the end i talked about revolution will...
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Aug 9, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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that's not to say that genes aren't important. in fact lifestyle scientists are at work now trying to breed supermom and cows as alarming as that sounds but for animals and humans is not a simple as a good mom gene story and dna is only one poorly understand part of what we see. moms environment is much more established an ed study -- it easy to study. i'm just going to list a few circumstantial factors minor and major attempt implants maternal behavior in various degrees. so do the mom babysit as a kid? how old is she? did she bottler? did she have a c-section or a natural birth and was an unusually painful delivery did you have a boy or girl and how much money is in her bank account? did she work the late shift issue single and is a diet include a lot of this? speaking of diet there's another study when and make it an the importance of moms broader social world to wales which is a rare animal that has grandmother involvement. there is some evidence that she's meddling in your parenting anyway. the mothers childhood relationship
that's not to say that genes aren't important. in fact lifestyle scientists are at work now trying to breed supermom and cows as alarming as that sounds but for animals and humans is not a simple as a good mom gene story and dna is only one poorly understand part of what we see. moms environment is much more established an ed study -- it easy to study. i'm just going to list a few circumstantial factors minor and major attempt implants maternal behavior in various degrees. so do the mom babysit...
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Aug 14, 2021
08/21
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lunar module pilot gene cernan had flown on gemini 9, john young had been on gemini 3 and gemini 10.y would face problems on apollo 10, problems that would be solved for apollo 11. most would be minor, but they would be solved. stafford, young, cernan. they brought to their mission enthusiasm, dedication, responsibility. even amazement. and through the means of color television they took us with them as they played their part in man's greatest adventure. >> we are go for a mission to the moon at this time. tom stafford reports they are go. we're coming up on the 22nd mark. t minus 20 seconds and counting. 17 seconds and counting. guidance internal. 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, we have ignition sequence start. engines on. 5, 4, 3, 2 -- all engines running. launch commit. liftoff. we have liftoff 29 minutes past the hour. >> staging lights up. >> roger. >> good ignition on the second stage. >> staging was quite a sequence. >> just like old times. it's beautiful out there. >> you guys sound ecstatic. >> man, this is the greatest job. >> apollo 10 was headed for its initial parking orbit a
lunar module pilot gene cernan had flown on gemini 9, john young had been on gemini 3 and gemini 10.y would face problems on apollo 10, problems that would be solved for apollo 11. most would be minor, but they would be solved. stafford, young, cernan. they brought to their mission enthusiasm, dedication, responsibility. even amazement. and through the means of color television they took us with them as they played their part in man's greatest adventure. >> we are go for a mission to the...
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Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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it's incredible. >> we see it all here, gene. the colors are really beautiful. >> that's great. the blackest black that you ever could conceive is the setting for all of this. >> right. >> so stafford, young and cernan began their coast away from earth, their speed continually dropping as the arms of earth's gravity tried to pull them back. to control the temperature of the space craft, they performed a slow, steady rotation. >> shortly we'll soon be about 55,000 miles out. >> that's right. >> that sounds like a long way from home, gentlemen. >> and the call sign charlie it was time to check the space craft, the command module, the lunar module, it was time for conversation and time to show the people at home what space travel is like. >> you have your choice, if you don't like things right side up, you can go upside down. >> i just do whatever he says. >> roger. down here we have one in each direction. >> it's the only way to fly. >> farther and farther from earth, stafford, young and cernan flew on their wingless flight, now off the rotating home planet day and night became on
it's incredible. >> we see it all here, gene. the colors are really beautiful. >> that's great. the blackest black that you ever could conceive is the setting for all of this. >> right. >> so stafford, young and cernan began their coast away from earth, their speed continually dropping as the arms of earth's gravity tried to pull them back. to control the temperature of the space craft, they performed a slow, steady rotation. >> shortly we'll soon be about 55,000...
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Aug 5, 2021
08/21
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BLOOMBERG
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gene: it does mean we could push below 1% on the 10 year.t does mean we get exceptionally low and lower yields. i think this harkens back to a 2012 type scenario, where the economy was still improving come of fed had yet to taper or tighten, and real interest rates to need to grind lower. it seems -- real interest rates continued to grind lower. it seems counterintuitive, but it has happened. jonathan: if return to school happens, we start to see people returning to jobs in a bigger way, what would happen to tips? what would happen to real yields if everyone said we no longer need that inflation protection? what would happen to real yields? gene: i think there's a lot of upside to real yield, and that is a painful environment for tips. i think it is one that confuses investors because they say it is an inflationary environment. we can see the cpi prints. we would expect that tips do well. the truth is in that environment, tips really get run over. it is a risk to tips, but also high-quality fixed income, which is why it makes sense to have a
gene: it does mean we could push below 1% on the 10 year.t does mean we get exceptionally low and lower yields. i think this harkens back to a 2012 type scenario, where the economy was still improving come of fed had yet to taper or tighten, and real interest rates to need to grind lower. it seems -- real interest rates continued to grind lower. it seems counterintuitive, but it has happened. jonathan: if return to school happens, we start to see people returning to jobs in a bigger way, what...
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Aug 28, 2021
08/21
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so gene, why are so many people surprised with how this ended? >> right, i don't know. i don't know. how would you imagine this war would end? it's messy. it's tragic. but it was going to end more or less this way, different event, god willing the suicide bombing wouldn't have happened, maybe more people would have gotten out. but the fact is this was bound to end in a messy, sad, tragic way, because we were going to leave. whether last year, this year, right now, next year, five years from now, we were going to leave. the taliban was going to still be there. isis-k was still going to be there. and afghanistan was still going to be afghanistan. we gave it the illusion of a secular democracy, but not the actuality of a secular democracy, because frankly, not enough afghans bought into that idea. and that's just the sad fact. >> i want to bring the audience up on something we just got in, some new reporting from nbc news. the target of tonight's drone strike was an isis-k fighter thought to be involved in planning for future attacks according to two u.s. defense officials
so gene, why are so many people surprised with how this ended? >> right, i don't know. i don't know. how would you imagine this war would end? it's messy. it's tragic. but it was going to end more or less this way, different event, god willing the suicide bombing wouldn't have happened, maybe more people would have gotten out. but the fact is this was bound to end in a messy, sad, tragic way, because we were going to leave. whether last year, this year, right now, next year, five years...
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Aug 15, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN3
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because you deliver a gene it's not the simplest thing for direct clinical translation. my colleague in switzerland has recently used it to confer light sensitivity at least on the human beings and so there will be cases where there are cases where it's dreck we useful but much more significant is the understanding when any kind of treatment becomes more powerful and with psychiatry we just need understanding of what we are doing our clinical trials. i came from a hospital where we are doing experiments to understand better the human state of this association. this is where the self becomes fragmented and people are aware of physical experiences but they don't attribute them to themselves so they don't care as much about them. this is clinically important shows people have trauma if, in end ptsd and borderline. optogenetic has helped us understand the state more deeply and going back and forth to the laboratory to the clinical setting. we have patients who are undergoing normal clinical therapy with electrodes in their brain to find the source and then the normal course
because you deliver a gene it's not the simplest thing for direct clinical translation. my colleague in switzerland has recently used it to confer light sensitivity at least on the human beings and so there will be cases where there are cases where it's dreck we useful but much more significant is the understanding when any kind of treatment becomes more powerful and with psychiatry we just need understanding of what we are doing our clinical trials. i came from a hospital where we are doing...
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Aug 11, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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the vectors deliver new working copies of sma genes to the motor neuron cells.he disease, helping babies breathe without a ventilator and even crawl and walk. he shouldn't really feel anything. he's got a cannula in, which is a little bit of plastic into his vein. and the drug just goes through that over an hour. injune, five—month—old arthur became the first baby to receive this revolutionary treatment on the nhs. now edward is one of a handful of babies being treated for the first time at the children's hospital in sheffield. sma itself is actually the most common genetic condition that causes infant deaths and severe disability — worldwide. about 90% of children with sma type one would die by age two. so this treatment would drastically change the disease progression and outcome of each patient. you don't know what's around the corner. there's only five years' worth of data. so, from what i've seen from other children, theyjust get stronger. so the world really is his oyster. thank you, guys. edward has no idea he has just received the most expensive drug in
the vectors deliver new working copies of sma genes to the motor neuron cells.he disease, helping babies breathe without a ventilator and even crawl and walk. he shouldn't really feel anything. he's got a cannula in, which is a little bit of plastic into his vein. and the drug just goes through that over an hour. injune, five—month—old arthur became the first baby to receive this revolutionary treatment on the nhs. now edward is one of a handful of babies being treated for the first time at...
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Aug 9, 2021
08/21
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CNBC
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later, a kiss for crypto rocker gene simmons has been setting on the biggest on doge coin tell us why he's so positive on the crypto space gold at the lows of the session. april of last year silver is now down 8% in past week copper and lumber, you know, also down. does smod commodity sell off give you pause for concern transitory as the fed says what are your thoughts >> i think it tells you that think think or crude who firmed up the dollar, who firmed up the ten-year u.s. treasury yields. they think the fed will start to taper soon if you go back to 2013 in the december meeting, the fed started to taper bond purchases in 85 billion a month to 75 trillion and they started tarping $10 billion. if you look at the risk assets that we talked about, that would signal maybe we get it as soon as jackson hold at the end of this month or the next meeting in september that the fed might really start speaking to it. obviously, i have no idea but when you look add crude oil, i'll tell you what happened from december to 2013 to december 2014 when that taper was in full effect crude oil got caugh
later, a kiss for crypto rocker gene simmons has been setting on the biggest on doge coin tell us why he's so positive on the crypto space gold at the lows of the session. april of last year silver is now down 8% in past week copper and lumber, you know, also down. does smod commodity sell off give you pause for concern transitory as the fed says what are your thoughts >> i think it tells you that think think or crude who firmed up the dollar, who firmed up the ten-year u.s. treasury...
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Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN3
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and later, air force veteran and former nasa flight director gene kranz discusses his life and career culminating with stories about apollo 11 and apollo 13. >> may 5, 1961. freedom 7. the united states took the first small step on its journey to the moon. america's first man in space,
and later, air force veteran and former nasa flight director gene kranz discusses his life and career culminating with stories about apollo 11 and apollo 13. >> may 5, 1961. freedom 7. the united states took the first small step on its journey to the moon. america's first man in space,
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Aug 14, 2021
08/21
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joining me now is texas state representative, up with of them who has not returned to the chamber, gene wu. at least you haven't been arrested. >> look we've been doing our absolute best to stay safe and stay away from the house chamber and we're going to make this work. democrats are doing everything the they can to protect the voting reits of texans and try from text the voting rights of all americans in this prohe sees. >> that's tinting part because you're kind of the tip of the spear in terms of this conversation and this effort that's going on across the country. we've just seen census results this week which show us what you knew was happening in america, the changing face of america and that fundamentally underpins what they are trying to do in the texas state house because that changing face of america is occurring in texas as well and the only way -- not the only way they could appeal to the
joining me now is texas state representative, up with of them who has not returned to the chamber, gene wu. at least you haven't been arrested. >> look we've been doing our absolute best to stay safe and stay away from the house chamber and we're going to make this work. democrats are doing everything the they can to protect the voting reits of texans and try from text the voting rights of all americans in this prohe sees. >> that's tinting part because you're kind of the tip of the...
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Aug 11, 2021
08/21
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. >> that was texas state representative gene wu reacting to arrest warrants being issued for him and 51 of his democratic colleagues after they broke quorum for the third time. speaker of the texas house signed warrants. lawmakers would not be jailed if arrested, they could be brought back into the state capital then giving republicans that quorum. the post is reporting just five more lawmakers are needed back in austin for the state to move ahead with its voting restriction legislation. joining our conversation, texas state representative jasmine crockett, who remains in d.c. claire mccaskill is still with us. how are you? do you fear arrest?
. >> that was texas state representative gene wu reacting to arrest warrants being issued for him and 51 of his democratic colleagues after they broke quorum for the third time. speaker of the texas house signed warrants. lawmakers would not be jailed if arrested, they could be brought back into the state capital then giving republicans that quorum. the post is reporting just five more lawmakers are needed back in austin for the state to move ahead with its voting restriction legislation....
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Aug 14, 2021
08/21
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two texas house democrats, state representative gene wu, and the texas supreme court blocked an order protecting texas democrats from civil arrest. what happens next? >> so look, we were never surprised that the cards were stacked against us. we knew that the supreme court justices were hand picked by governor abbott, this is a corrupt system. we were never surprised about this. the fact that they would be so bold about it, was kind of surprising. we're here. we're going to be fighting forward on keeping republicans from rigging the system, from politicians from rigging the system for themselves, and we're going to fight this every step of the way. we're going to use every method, every tool we have available. >> representative israel, the texas senate passed its version of an elections bill this week, despite the 15-hour filibuster that i was talking about from one of our democratic colleagues. looking at this legislation as a whole, how does it add barriers to ballot access? >> well, it adds barriers
two texas house democrats, state representative gene wu, and the texas supreme court blocked an order protecting texas democrats from civil arrest. what happens next? >> so look, we were never surprised that the cards were stacked against us. we knew that the supreme court justices were hand picked by governor abbott, this is a corrupt system. we were never surprised about this. the fact that they would be so bold about it, was kind of surprising. we're here. we're going to be fighting...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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but basically enter on - - anticancer genes so they stop dividing. if you got the telomerase that these anticancer genes in combination and why hasn't give that genetic modification. so if you add the telomerase that doesn't work if you add in those it does seem to improve lifespan with healthier lives in the more recent experiment that's optimistic for the rest of us so there was some temporary telomerase and then just added for a short period of time it extended it but they would live 20 percent longer. forty years old if you convert the years not just longer but healthier. and better performance walking a tight rope that we can all aspire to as we get older. so we have these different therapies with the new nuanced approach and then with the human therapies. so the cells that i mentioned one of the ways when the telomeres get too short the means is stops dividing is just a biological world word meaning how old so that means as the bodies age we accumulate one of the reasons i have already mentioned is the tell me's - - the telomeres get very short
but basically enter on - - anticancer genes so they stop dividing. if you got the telomerase that these anticancer genes in combination and why hasn't give that genetic modification. so if you add the telomerase that doesn't work if you add in those it does seem to improve lifespan with healthier lives in the more recent experiment that's optimistic for the rest of us so there was some temporary telomerase and then just added for a short period of time it extended it but they would live 20...
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Aug 12, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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this is the archivist of the united states and i'd like to welcome you to the the gene baker the author of "the man i knew" the amazing story of george h.w. bush's post-presidency. on wednesday june 9 at 1:00 p.m. we'll present a program in partnership with the u.s. association of former members of congress called can congress or form itself again. library of congress carla hayden and current and former members of congress. on tuesday june 8 at noon the store and michael burlingame will be here with his new book in american marriage based on 30 years of research where he describes and analyzes the marriage between abraham lincoln and mary todd. there is presidential libraries the national archives preserves the records of their presidents back to herbert herber are the stories told in library cover the president's entire life not just their time in the highest office of the nation. his return to private life and number of them turned to humanitarian causes and advisory roles and you'll find those activities documented in the library as well. after leaving office in 1993 george bush rema
this is the archivist of the united states and i'd like to welcome you to the the gene baker the author of "the man i knew" the amazing story of george h.w. bush's post-presidency. on wednesday june 9 at 1:00 p.m. we'll present a program in partnership with the u.s. association of former members of congress called can congress or form itself again. library of congress carla hayden and current and former members of congress. on tuesday june 8 at noon the store and michael burlingame...
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Aug 2, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN
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psaki: thank you, gene. you can help us out -- mr. sperling: i was just identifying what the more targeted estimates are of the people who say in surveys that they feel at some point -- i'm saying that is why the assistance is so important, because you could hit a sizable impact of people who could be at risk each month, if everybody was operating. it could be a meaningful number. though, every eviction is heartbreaking, so i do not want to play down those who could still face it. but just to stress that the state and local governments accelerating with 290,000, and if it keeps getting larger and sustains for several months, that they could have a sizable impact. press sec. psaki: thank you. mr. sperling: thank you. >> [indiscernible] press sec. psaki: ok. >> -- michigan in the final. [laughter] press sec. psaki: a couple things for you at the top. today the department of education released their return to school roadmap, of great interest to many parents and communities across the country, and that outlines resources and to support t
psaki: thank you, gene. you can help us out -- mr. sperling: i was just identifying what the more targeted estimates are of the people who say in surveys that they feel at some point -- i'm saying that is why the assistance is so important, because you could hit a sizable impact of people who could be at risk each month, if everybody was operating. it could be a meaningful number. though, every eviction is heartbreaking, so i do not want to play down those who could still face it. but just to...
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Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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BLOOMBERG
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we help to find the genetic associations with the old factory gene -- old factory -- smelling gene andle are affected. it is the piece of the puzzle we are trying to contribute to. emily: you have a collaboration with gsk, 40 or so programs in development. talk to us more specifically about what you are most excited about, where you are excited to see some breakthroughs? anne: i have to say that, drug discovery is one of the most interesting areas and offer such a challenging problem. in a short timeframe, 23andme has been able to collaboratively develop 40 programs with gsk. gsk had the first program that is in the clinic now in phase one, and 23andme has a program solely on behind it that we have said would potentially be in the clinic before march next year, so end of march next year, so i am enthused, because i think genetics really has this opportunity to make drug development more successful and faster, and so for 23andme to say we are empowering these customers to come together and we will help by having treatments and cures that have come from this crowd sourced community will
we help to find the genetic associations with the old factory gene -- old factory -- smelling gene andle are affected. it is the piece of the puzzle we are trying to contribute to. emily: you have a collaboration with gsk, 40 or so programs in development. talk to us more specifically about what you are most excited about, where you are excited to see some breakthroughs? anne: i have to say that, drug discovery is one of the most interesting areas and offer such a challenging problem. in a...
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Aug 24, 2021
08/21
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CNBC
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exist on an iphone platform. >> so interesting to see if 3 trillion is even the ceiling steve kovac, gene munster, thank you for joining us today as you heard from gene, he thinks this is the greatest corporate handover of all time. >>> we'll have more on all the day's big movers you need to see brian sullivan's ev road trip through california. is the charging infrastructure good enough to support an influx of electric cars that's still ahead on "the exchange." i'm evie's best camper badge. but even i'm not as memorable as eating turkey hill chocolate chip cookie dough creamy premium ice cream and chasing fireflies. don't worry about me. i'm fine. you can't beat turkey hill memories. what if you could have the perspective to see more? at morgan stanley, a global collective of thought leaders offers investors a broader view. ♪♪ we see companies protecting the bottom line by putting people first. we see a bright future, still hungry for the ingenuity of those ready for the next challenge. today, we are translating decades of experience into strategies for the road ahead. we are morgan stanl
exist on an iphone platform. >> so interesting to see if 3 trillion is even the ceiling steve kovac, gene munster, thank you for joining us today as you heard from gene, he thinks this is the greatest corporate handover of all time. >>> we'll have more on all the day's big movers you need to see brian sullivan's ev road trip through california. is the charging infrastructure good enough to support an influx of electric cars that's still ahead on "the exchange." i'm...
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Aug 4, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN
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it wasn't concluded on monday when gene sperling came to the briefing room. yesterday it concluded, and of course they made the announcement as a result. reporter: one more question. what is the white house doing to push forward the nomination of david chipman at the atf? the vote could hinge on the vote of senator angus king in maine, who has been pushed by the local maine sportsmen groups, the national gun rights advocates. has the white house reached out specifically to senator king on this issue, and is the white house fully committed to chipman , or might it go with a different nominee at some point? sec. psaki: well, i'm not going to read out private conversations with members of congress, but i will tell you that we knew this wouldn't be easy. atf hasn't had a confirmed director in six years and only one confirmed director since the position became senate confirmable. so we've been eyes wide open into the challenge from the beginning, but we are disappointed by the fact that many republicans are moving in lockstep to try to hold up his nomination and h
it wasn't concluded on monday when gene sperling came to the briefing room. yesterday it concluded, and of course they made the announcement as a result. reporter: one more question. what is the white house doing to push forward the nomination of david chipman at the atf? the vote could hinge on the vote of senator angus king in maine, who has been pushed by the local maine sportsmen groups, the national gun rights advocates. has the white house reached out specifically to senator king on this...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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CNBC
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why are investors so bullish with me is gene munster. gene, it's good to have you.or this breakout move by alphabet lately? >> there are two reasons first it was undervalued entering the year. google is in fact the oxygen of the internet second is that there has been this advertising boom. 82% of google's business is ad based. and the ad business saw this rebound with the reopening and also inflationary environment. when you put that together, the numbers are staggering because their ad business grew 70% in june, it grew 34% in the march quarter. so to answer your question is what has driven it, it has been largely those two factors. and then maybe add a little bit of other bets. they have got about seven other core businesses within that. these are things that fall under the line wamo pops its head up occasionally in the news that business is getting more optimism and has been driving shares. >> so essentially advertising. so eyeballs online, let's call it you see google what it's doing, you see facebook up 40%, while apple and amazon are trailing. you know, still,
why are investors so bullish with me is gene munster. gene, it's good to have you.or this breakout move by alphabet lately? >> there are two reasons first it was undervalued entering the year. google is in fact the oxygen of the internet second is that there has been this advertising boom. 82% of google's business is ad based. and the ad business saw this rebound with the reopening and also inflationary environment. when you put that together, the numbers are staggering because their ad...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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they start to think that particular mutated genes can cause cancer. and by this point, it start to fade away. he dies in 1970, and, you know, the stuff that he studied, that was considered old world science. that was considered basic biochemistry, you know? sure, you know, metabolic enzymes are part of, you know, what a cell does, but they don't really matter in cancer. cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes and, you know, it's not basic biochemistry. so it just gets lost. it's just amazing how quickly it happens. partially because people don't like warburg, but more so just because new science is so much more sophisticated. and, you know, by, you know, the 1980s, you know, people had heard of warburg, and you have these famous papers and textbooks coming out that don't mention hum. even as lawsuit -- mention him. even as late as 2006 you have the seminal textbook that's put out that doesn't mention warburg at all. you know, the emperor of all maladies doesn't even mention warburg, the famous paper the hallmarks of cancer which talks about the six
they start to think that particular mutated genes can cause cancer. and by this point, it start to fade away. he dies in 1970, and, you know, the stuff that he studied, that was considered old world science. that was considered basic biochemistry, you know? sure, you know, metabolic enzymes are part of, you know, what a cell does, but they don't really matter in cancer. cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes and, you know, it's not basic biochemistry. so it just gets lost. it's just amazing...
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Aug 11, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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they deliver a new working copies of the genes— deliver a new working copies of the genes to _ deliver't — and even crawl and walk. he shouldn't really feel anything he -ot shouldn't really feel anything he got a _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which is - shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which is a - shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which is a bit i shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which is a bit of| got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic— got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic into _ got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic into his _ got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic into his vein. _ got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic into his vein. and - got a cannula in which is a bit of plastic into his vein. and the i got a cannula in which is a bit of. plastic into his vein. and the drug goes _ plastic into his vein. and the drug goes t
they deliver a new working copies of the genes— deliver a new working copies of the genes to _ deliver't — and even crawl and walk. he shouldn't really feel anything he -ot shouldn't really feel anything he got a _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which _ shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which is - shouldn't really feel anything he got a cannula in which...
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Aug 2, 2021
08/21
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MSNBCW
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gene, i want to put up the biden approval. joe biden was seen by a lot of voters as better on this.ear in the 60s. which means by definition more conservatives supporting him. it seems to be slitting a little bit. democrats, gene, are frustrated because they say it's partly a consequence of red state decision making in certain places where the surge is. we talked about florida. gene, at the end of the day, pandemic a lot like the economy, the incumbent president is going to own them no matter what. >> that's right. and i think those figures reflect a more general frustration. a lot of people figured by this summer, by the height of the summer we'd be pretty much over it, everybody would be vaccinated and we'd be able to get about our normal lives. now in a lot of places, we're talking about indoor mask mandates, again because of delta. it is simply true that as science learns more, you have to adjust the response sometimes based on new information. that's not a very subtle or exotic thought, but it's -- it is i think coming as a disappointment and surprise to a lot of people that th
gene, i want to put up the biden approval. joe biden was seen by a lot of voters as better on this.ear in the 60s. which means by definition more conservatives supporting him. it seems to be slitting a little bit. democrats, gene, are frustrated because they say it's partly a consequence of red state decision making in certain places where the surge is. we talked about florida. gene, at the end of the day, pandemic a lot like the economy, the incumbent president is going to own them no matter...
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it prompts scolding for poor choices and accusations of laziness. unlimited genes provide an alibi. what it will be city were a collective failure or not an individual symptom of the free market that hates that, that produce dispatch those and a be for genic society, the news, the global phenomenon, not one country to talk today. ah, the right now there are 2000000000 people adults and children who are overweight or. busy obese, this only happens by magic, it takes work and you need to look at who it is, is driving that process. well, otherwise we'll live in societies in which, you know, one on of every 3 people has diabetes where everybody is obese, where people are dying of stroke and heart attack at age 40. i mean, the choice is an obvious one. if we don't do something, we will collapse as society is not just in america, but in mexico and russia, and china and europe. it's happening everywhere. mm. almost everywhere in the world, men and women are battling this fate. political leaders, physician regular citizens. they brave the multinational we truly believe that the industry is
it prompts scolding for poor choices and accusations of laziness. unlimited genes provide an alibi. what it will be city were a collective failure or not an individual symptom of the free market that hates that, that produce dispatch those and a be for genic society, the news, the global phenomenon, not one country to talk today. ah, the right now there are 2000000000 people adults and children who are overweight or. busy obese, this only happens by magic, it takes work and you need to look at...
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Aug 30, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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metabolism being connected to all of this and they start to look for the connection of the cancer gene and how cells take up nutrients in it really is remarkable over the next, a first everybody's skeptical but the next decades in 15 years they start to see that the cancers singling networks were actually fundamentally linked to lead into metabolism and it seems the most fundamental of many of the networks is actually controlling the tablets them and getting nutrients into the cell and its when the nutrients come into the cell phone that the proliferation process occurs, the direction that people thought they cancer cells step back and say they thought that metabolism was an afterthought where in fact metabolism is driving the process and it's kind of remarkable because if you think of a cell that divides it doesn't have a way to pick up nutrients and integrated into this process that will collapse once cancer science referred to as a catastrophe for the cell and if you think about it from the perspective of a single cell organism i said before the cancer cell acts a lot like a single
metabolism being connected to all of this and they start to look for the connection of the cancer gene and how cells take up nutrients in it really is remarkable over the next, a first everybody's skeptical but the next decades in 15 years they start to see that the cancers singling networks were actually fundamentally linked to lead into metabolism and it seems the most fundamental of many of the networks is actually controlling the tablets them and getting nutrients into the cell and its when...
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Aug 2, 2021
08/21
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KQED
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gene sperling today said that thousands of americans could be facing eviction.sident biden says he will be double, triple chegging, he will be kicking the tires to try to find legal options and other ways to help people but there really is the big question of whatore the white house and kok can do. there really, the white house is really putting it in the hands of congress and local authorities am but that is where some people feel as though the white house is scapegoating, shifting the blame here, shifting responsibility. the whe house though is jund scoring theare doing all they can. >> woodruff: all right, yamiche alcindor on this fast-moving story. thank you very much. >> woodruff: our other lead, the long-awaited infrastructure investment and jobs act was officially introduced in the senate last night. the roughly $1 trillion bill, over 2,7 pages long, is the product of weeks of negotiations among a bipartisan group of 10 senators and the white house. lisa desjardins joins me now to take us through it. so lisa, a little light reading for you over the last l
gene sperling today said that thousands of americans could be facing eviction.sident biden says he will be double, triple chegging, he will be kicking the tires to try to find legal options and other ways to help people but there really is the big question of whatore the white house and kok can do. there really, the white house is really putting it in the hands of congress and local authorities am but that is where some people feel as though the white house is scapegoating, shifting the blame...
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Aug 3, 2021
08/21
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MSNBCW
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gene. >> yeah, this is tough stuff. look, you've got different personalities at work here, too.ening rod or maybe a lightening bolt. she is a fiery speaker, a fiery person. to say that she doesn't mince words is really an understatement. and a lot of people including jim clyburn were offended and really ticked off by some of the things she said during the 2020 presidential campaign including really a cold reference to joe biden that didn't go very well. >> we got that headline. >> and so they've all piled in behind shontel brown, but turner has the money. she has more money than brown. i don't know if that's going to be the deciding factor. and as you said it's a special election. an off-cycle special election primary. so who knows what turnout will be like, but you expect it to be pretty low. so the question is who motivates their voters to go out and vote? and we'll find out i guess in a little while. >> jeremy, let's look on the republican side. what's going on in that race? ten republicans running in this -- in the primary. who's -- i mean, are all ten actually viable, or wa
gene. >> yeah, this is tough stuff. look, you've got different personalities at work here, too.ening rod or maybe a lightening bolt. she is a fiery speaker, a fiery person. to say that she doesn't mince words is really an understatement. and a lot of people including jim clyburn were offended and really ticked off by some of the things she said during the 2020 presidential campaign including really a cold reference to joe biden that didn't go very well. >> we got that headline....
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ah, gene shillinger is coordinating the energy. his nonprofit youth speaks holt's writing workshops for young people in the bay area. he wants to use wrap and smoke and where to raise consciousness and thwart food and st propaganda. this idea that they were being lied to, that's what inspired them to become change agent. that's what turned their palm from being a piece of art into a weapon. armed with talent and a video camera, they launched an awareness campaign called the bigger picture. so for me, each one of those films as a stone that we were throwing at at the waterhole and trying to see which one could make the biggest way always the middle. my debbie was seen with the wake up, walked through the bus pass, mcdonald the liquor stores past pop, past the 1st visit to the 2nd burger king ordered my favorite, well, hash brown bodies. and i don't know if we love deserting. i just love not being hungry, written and performed chiefly by young hispanics and african americans. the videos garnered over a 1000000 views on youtube. so i,
ah, gene shillinger is coordinating the energy. his nonprofit youth speaks holt's writing workshops for young people in the bay area. he wants to use wrap and smoke and where to raise consciousness and thwart food and st propaganda. this idea that they were being lied to, that's what inspired them to become change agent. that's what turned their palm from being a piece of art into a weapon. armed with talent and a video camera, they launched an awareness campaign called the bigger picture. so...
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Aug 6, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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my personal favourite, "at least you have doctor genes."nalising comments are really hard because you don't feel seen, you don't feel heard. and then no—one's acknowledging the importance of genetic identity. singing using dna matches from their 23andme genetics test, eve and jessica have been able to identify at least a dozen half siblings. i look at this photo and i think a lot of things. i'm sad that i was so dispensable and i'm super creeped out. it's a hurtful photo because, like, lam... i am nothing to my biological father. that hurts. it seems so cold and calculated, and it is something so foreign to who i am and how i go through life, and how i experience my relationships, that it's hard for me to relate to someone like that. but at what point do you become so callous to this and so calculated that this is just a normal routine? like, how does this become normalised for him? the bbc reached out to both dr kim mcmorries in texas and dr paul bjones in colorado. neither responded to our multiple requests for comment. i feel like this c
my personal favourite, "at least you have doctor genes."nalising comments are really hard because you don't feel seen, you don't feel heard. and then no—one's acknowledging the importance of genetic identity. singing using dna matches from their 23andme genetics test, eve and jessica have been able to identify at least a dozen half siblings. i look at this photo and i think a lot of things. i'm sad that i was so dispensable and i'm super creeped out. it's a hurtful photo because,...
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Aug 30, 2021
08/21
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
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cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes, and it is not basic biochemistry, so it gets lost. it is just amazing how quickly it happens. partially, you know, because people don't like him, but more so i think because the new science seemed so much more sophisticated, and, you know, by the 1980s, some people haven't heard of him, and you have, you know, these famous papers and textbooks coming out that don't mention him. even as late as 2006, you have, you know, this textbook that robert weinberg that puts out. it doesn't even mention him. the famous paper, the hallmarks of cancer which talks about the six basic functions of cancer comes out in 2000 and it doesn't even mention this shift of fermentation which, you know, really is fundamental to cancer. it is amazing how it got lost, and, you know, a lot of what i write about in the last part of my book is how it was rediscovered and why it is so important. >> that's what i would like to talk about for now. for our members and those listening to this, i always like to give people sort of something to take home, so the story in y
cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes, and it is not basic biochemistry, so it gets lost. it is just amazing how quickly it happens. partially, you know, because people don't like him, but more so i think because the new science seemed so much more sophisticated, and, you know, by the 1980s, some people haven't heard of him, and you have, you know, these famous papers and textbooks coming out that don't mention him. even as late as 2006, you have, you know, this textbook that robert...
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Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
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cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes and, you know, it's not basic biochemistry. so it just gets lost. it's just amazing how quickly it happens. partially because people don't like warburg, but more so just because new science is so much more sophisticated. and, you know, by, you know, the 1980s, you know, people had heard of warburg, and you have these famous papers and textbooks coming out that don't mention hum. even as lawsuit -- mention him. even as late as 2006 you have the seminal textbook that's put out that doesn't mention warburg at all. you know, the emperor of all maladies doesn't even mention warburg, the famous paper the hallmarks of cancer which talks about the six basic functions of cancer that comes out in 2000. and it doesn't even mention, you know, the shift offer fermentatn which really is fundamental to cancer. so it's amazing how it got lost, and, you know, a lot of what i write about in the last part of my book is how it was discovered and why it's to important. >> can that's what i would -- and that's what i would like to talk about now. ju
cancer is a sophisticated disease of genes and, you know, it's not basic biochemistry. so it just gets lost. it's just amazing how quickly it happens. partially because people don't like warburg, but more so just because new science is so much more sophisticated. and, you know, by, you know, the 1980s, you know, people had heard of warburg, and you have these famous papers and textbooks coming out that don't mention hum. even as lawsuit -- mention him. even as late as 2006 you have the seminal...