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Mar 13, 2014
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its unique geographical and is responsible for its extraordinary care. with surrounding mountains and rivers. two hundred years. in nineteen twenty. stevenson expedition. and in southwestern. ruth donnelly d g and some of the city's inquiry into mr ripper the you them. stevenson who crossed the trooper be long term interest like you. i was we all take a nap times and department would charge to ma this retrograde to be a long and tiring process the unremitting you it's recalling all. and if you can be squeezed onto the mattress russian border. but while the dollar spent. star intensity. this made the price is even trickier box office apple trees in the street was fined the company hits and three mm mm. this field. we crossed the river. in sixteen men's journal showing other foreign exporters to cross the street or she does stevens and his team mates recently legal theory to the opening of the river. everyone's spirits stevens was finally able to appreciate the ancient singer see you know what to expect stephen just tossing them into one of them. some of t
its unique geographical and is responsible for its extraordinary care. with surrounding mountains and rivers. two hundred years. in nineteen twenty. stevenson expedition. and in southwestern. ruth donnelly d g and some of the city's inquiry into mr ripper the you them. stevenson who crossed the trooper be long term interest like you. i was we all take a nap times and department would charge to ma this retrograde to be a long and tiring process the unremitting you it's recalling all. and if you...
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Mar 29, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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what sort of geographic area are we talking about? >> that is one of the things. i realized very early that i had to construct my own to really explore and evidence the breath. in the realize that, you know, there have been useful. did not really respect the reality. when i looked at what was going on on the ground i came up with the idea of the marin landscaped . this marin landscape, though brother and the. [indiscernible] and when we think of those, we have this idea of people, but what i saw was that actually it leaves a very large area. at the borders, but they also went to the city. the people lived. they're living in secluded areas as. that, you know, it was part of this landscape. and that landscapes actually went into the transition and into the cities. so we have a very large measure. also they use the entire, then move from one to another or from one state to another. there were using the entire geographic to their advantage. >> when people escaped from plantations and lived in the woods or other areas, their families come with them or do they go back t
what sort of geographic area are we talking about? >> that is one of the things. i realized very early that i had to construct my own to really explore and evidence the breath. in the realize that, you know, there have been useful. did not really respect the reality. when i looked at what was going on on the ground i came up with the idea of the marin landscaped . this marin landscape, though brother and the. [indiscernible] and when we think of those, we have this idea of people, but...
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Mar 19, 2014
03/14
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BLOOMBERG
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juan valdes from national geographic.ing up next, you will meet a globetrotting editor. ♪ >> this is "taking stock" on bloomberg. i'm pimm fox. we will look at today's market moving headlines with julie hyman. >> let's start with wells fargo. the ceo's annual compensation has been left unchanged for 2013. this is even after the bank reported more profit than jpmorgan chase, the largest u.s. bank by assets. taking home a computer thumb drive containing personal data on over 20,000 fellow workers. the irs says the data was unencrypted but the personal data of hundreds of millions of taxpayers was not breached. and officially named phil jackson the new president, james dolan said he was willingly and gratefully giving up control of the organization. jackson was with the new york knicks for their record championships. >> as we have been reporting all day, the u.s. and the european union imposing sanctions against russia. vladimir putin remains defiant and with a sweep of his pen, he signed a treaty to make crimea part of russ
juan valdes from national geographic.ing up next, you will meet a globetrotting editor. ♪ >> this is "taking stock" on bloomberg. i'm pimm fox. we will look at today's market moving headlines with julie hyman. >> let's start with wells fargo. the ceo's annual compensation has been left unchanged for 2013. this is even after the bank reported more profit than jpmorgan chase, the largest u.s. bank by assets. taking home a computer thumb drive containing personal data on...
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Mar 24, 2014
03/14
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what geographic area? >> i realized very early to explore and evidence king riots reflect then when i look at what is going on with a grand -- the ground the maroons landscape. to go have the same deals -- ideals. but maroons means a very large area. sometimes it means the border of the petition but the people live with the interplant sometimes not very far but difficult to except. with the maroons landscape to go into the plantation so we have a very large opposed that the maroons used the entire southern landscape moving from one state to another. >> host: what role did family relations play? to live in the words are other areas? back to see their families. >> that is what was very fascinating. when people run away to the north. they severed relations spending the rest of their lives they wonder if they died. one of the reasons maroons became maroons they wanted to live with their fridley's. to be free to live with their families. to be at the border but as you know, with the domestic slave trade was mor
what geographic area? >> i realized very early to explore and evidence king riots reflect then when i look at what is going on with a grand -- the ground the maroons landscape. to go have the same deals -- ideals. but maroons means a very large area. sometimes it means the border of the petition but the people live with the interplant sometimes not very far but difficult to except. with the maroons landscape to go into the plantation so we have a very large opposed that the maroons used...
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Mar 11, 2014
03/14
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what i do i request input from the geographic commanders. my job as the supporting commander to provide them forces. there does come a time i run out of forces. i've got to work with the g.c.c.'s and services to do the best we can. >> do you look at those guys and do you discuss with them what that level is that they need to have in order for you to perform your mission? >> yes, ma'am, absolutely. >> you feel confident the numbers being put forward now that those missions can still be performed? >> yes, ma'am. i'm confident right now with the 697 we'll be able to meet the majority of those missions. now, again, it depends -- >> but also with the other -- >> with the services. >> cuts in manpower. >> i think it's unknown at this point in time. i will tell you that intuitively i would say we are going to be strained on some of the key enablers. but empirical i'm not sure i can give you an answer just yet. >> if you are constrained, that's going to determine, then, where your forces are going to be deployed. you mentioned not just middle east b
what i do i request input from the geographic commanders. my job as the supporting commander to provide them forces. there does come a time i run out of forces. i've got to work with the g.c.c.'s and services to do the best we can. >> do you look at those guys and do you discuss with them what that level is that they need to have in order for you to perform your mission? >> yes, ma'am, absolutely. >> you feel confident the numbers being put forward now that those missions can...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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ALJAZAM
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for us, having the ability to be geographically specific when we're sending out alerts, that helps toigate that. to be honest we've not had any feedback from any individual that's participating in our program, asking us not to send out as many alerts. >> you just hit on a very interesting point. the individual participating in your program. >> individual participates -- >> ing being what you're asking the individual to do is volunteering to receive this information. the power ever that is if people are there and ready to have that information a part of their social media need, allow their friends to be part of this network -- >> may i comment quickly on that amanda, is that okay? >> go ahead tim. >> can i quickly comment on that? i like that idea actually, the notion you would recruit people, i call this the electronic pos eposse, to be alerted when these things happen and to be geographically targeted, the concern about, the amber alerts on their televisions on their smartphones and on highway signs, that's where the concern is. it's definitely different than milk carton 2 is attempt
for us, having the ability to be geographically specific when we're sending out alerts, that helps toigate that. to be honest we've not had any feedback from any individual that's participating in our program, asking us not to send out as many alerts. >> you just hit on a very interesting point. the individual participating in your program. >> individual participates -- >> ing being what you're asking the individual to do is volunteering to receive this information. the power...
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Mar 13, 2014
03/14
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ALJAZAM
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for us, having the ability to be geographically specific, that really helps to mitigate that.o be honest, we have not had feedback from on individual participating in our program, asking us not to send out as many alerts. >> you hit on an interesting point. are people participating in your program. >> what you are asking people to do is volunteering. to receive the information. i think the power of that is people are there and waiting and ready to have that information. be a part of their social media, allow their friends to be a part of the network. >> may i comment quickly, is that okay? >> go ahead, tim. i like that idea. actually. the notion that you would receipt people as part of - i call this the electronic posy who are attentive to the issue. the question with alert fatigue doesn't come when you look at people volunteering, to geographically target. the concern is when everyone receives the alerts on their smartphones, highway signs, that's where it comes in. it's definitely different from what milk carton 2 is teaming. >> can i comment? i have to take issue. sorry if
for us, having the ability to be geographically specific, that really helps to mitigate that.o be honest, we have not had feedback from on individual participating in our program, asking us not to send out as many alerts. >> you hit on an interesting point. are people participating in your program. >> what you are asking people to do is volunteering. to receive the information. i think the power of that is people are there and waiting and ready to have that information. be a part of...
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Mar 21, 2014
03/14
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COM
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available for the first time on home video, it'snational geographic's 3rd world girls gone wild!eir shirts up is complete withoutnational geographic's 3rd world girls gone wild. call now. man: dave chappelle! [applause, cheering, whistling...] hey... [laughing] welcome back to chappelle's show.
available for the first time on home video, it'snational geographic's 3rd world girls gone wild!eir shirts up is complete withoutnational geographic's 3rd world girls gone wild. call now. man: dave chappelle! [applause, cheering, whistling...] hey... [laughing] welcome back to chappelle's show.
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 20, 2014
03/14
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SFGTV
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. >> i appreciate that and i guess you touched on this in terms of geographically my sense that there is a big focus on certain areas where we have the most extreme challenges and sometimes it's harder to get attention on some of the areas that maybe are or not quite as concentrated in terms of the challenges that have problems in the castro or parts of upper market and do you think that this will allow the hot team to have a more consistent broader geographic reach? >> yes. >> okay. thank you. >> one thing i would like to add, colleagues, when i first started talking with barbara and maria around this idea is how do we increase the number of people on the streets reaching out to individuals and what i respect quite a deal is behind every person working on the streets of our case managers is detailed behind them and stabilization beds. i would like to thank all of you working on the supplemental and really thinking about what an enhancement means and obviously something i thought about and why it's important and as you described it is making a real different. supervisor mar? >>supervi
. >> i appreciate that and i guess you touched on this in terms of geographically my sense that there is a big focus on certain areas where we have the most extreme challenges and sometimes it's harder to get attention on some of the areas that maybe are or not quite as concentrated in terms of the challenges that have problems in the castro or parts of upper market and do you think that this will allow the hot team to have a more consistent broader geographic reach? >> yes....
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Mar 13, 2014
03/14
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KPIX
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she is one of 11 award winning women of vision featured in a special national geographic feature. >>ted more. they tend to think there are stories and perspectives they might be privy to that one of their male counterparts might not get. >> reporter: there's a sensitivity in these photographs. the old friends bunking down in a nursing home, customers in a beauty shop . for some projects only women would get entry, like the series on 20th century slaves by jodi cobb. this photograph is from a red light district in india where huge numbers of women are lured or sold into the sex industry. cobb spent a year traveling across the world to report the story. >> there are women now, like can you still picture them, like the stories stay with you? >> oh, i -- i just -- absolutely. i know in india, my assistant and i would come out of the brothels and we'd sit in the car and just cry. then we said, right, okay, we have to do this. we're here for a reason. and that reason is that 40 million people are going to see these photographs. >> reporter: another theme of the exhibit is courage. this pho
she is one of 11 award winning women of vision featured in a special national geographic feature. >>ted more. they tend to think there are stories and perspectives they might be privy to that one of their male counterparts might not get. >> reporter: there's a sensitivity in these photographs. the old friends bunking down in a nursing home, customers in a beauty shop . for some projects only women would get entry, like the series on 20th century slaves by jodi cobb. this photograph...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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national geographic believes this cat may be the one that it tagged and named p-22 but they don't knowure. >>> well, moving to sports most of the major conference men's tournaments get under way and 12 teams have already booked their place in march madness. >> this morning's highlights though are all from the nba. we get those from our guys at espn. >>> good morning, welcome to our "sportscenter" studio. i'm stan verrett. this is neil everett. rocket and thunder have long memories. >> i have on long underwear but nothing to do with the highlight. kevin durant, patrick beverly and westbrook. beverly went after westbrook that caused a knee injury that knocked him out of the playoffs and oklahoma city stoppeded by knocking them out of the playoffs. james hard en has a beard. kevin durant, step-back bobby jack. he's going to cross over there. pick it up off the floor. durant had 42 and thunder win 106-98. >>> blazers and grizzlies. battling at the bottom of the western conference in the playoff race. grizzlies down 3. gasol. final seconds. lilith had 32 points. blazers still down now, mike
national geographic believes this cat may be the one that it tagged and named p-22 but they don't knowure. >>> well, moving to sports most of the major conference men's tournaments get under way and 12 teams have already booked their place in march madness. >> this morning's highlights though are all from the nba. we get those from our guys at espn. >>> good morning, welcome to our "sportscenter" studio. i'm stan verrett. this is neil everett. rocket and...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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"national geographic" believes this cat may be the one that it had tagged and named p-22, but they don'tfor sure. >>> well, moving to sports now, most of the major conference men's basketball tournaments get under way today, and now 12 teams have already booked their place in march madness. >> this morning's highlights though are all from the nba, and we get those from our guys at espn. >>> good morning. welcome to our "sportscenter" studio. i'm stan verrett. this is neil everett. the rockets and thunder have some long memories. >> i have on long underwear but that has nothing to do with the highlight. >> let's go. kevin durant there in case you're not familiar with nba players. patrick beverly and russell westbrook. you may remember them. remember beverly went after westbrook that caused a knee injury that knocked him out of the playoffs and oklahoma city responded by knocking them out of the playoffs. james harden has a beard. used to be that okc is the enemy. kevin durant, step-back bobby jack. he's going to get the crossover there. pick it up off the floor. durant had 42 and thunder
"national geographic" believes this cat may be the one that it had tagged and named p-22, but they don'tfor sure. >>> well, moving to sports now, most of the major conference men's basketball tournaments get under way today, and now 12 teams have already booked their place in march madness. >> this morning's highlights though are all from the nba, and we get those from our guys at espn. >>> good morning. welcome to our "sportscenter" studio. i'm stan...
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Mar 1, 2014
03/14
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and you pull out bob atkins book and he thought all humans whatever their size, shape, form or geographic ancestors should be on a high-fat and no-meat diet pip diet. it was 75% fat and 15% protein and they thought all humans should follow the diet jut like the others were -- >> fanatical on their side. >> and you get the mediterranean people who thinks people should be on a balanced diet and eat foods and vegetables and fish and poultry and his diet, he believes everyone on earth whatever their size, shape, form, religious beliefs, geographic origins of their ancestors should follow a balanced diet and you start reading it and get confused. proponents are adamant. when you look at the data, humans adjusted to a variety of niches that provided a variety of different types of food and they range from the eskimos in the arctic, they didn't have fruits and vegetables. >> 80% fat and 20% protein and 99.9% animal sources. the u.s. department of agriculture pyramid seven servings of fruits and vegetables and five servings of grain -- >> toxic to them. >> it doesn't apply to an eskimo. they thri
and you pull out bob atkins book and he thought all humans whatever their size, shape, form or geographic ancestors should be on a high-fat and no-meat diet pip diet. it was 75% fat and 15% protein and they thought all humans should follow the diet jut like the others were -- >> fanatical on their side. >> and you get the mediterranean people who thinks people should be on a balanced diet and eat foods and vegetables and fish and poultry and his diet, he believes everyone on earth...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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-- geographic information regarding cell phones? >> to be honest, this is not an issue i have yet delved deeply into. this is one of those issues i have to be specifically smarter on, to be discussed publicly. that is part of the public discussion. >> if you would look at that and supplement the record in writing, with regard to your thoughts on that, i would appreciate it. that is all that i have. thank you, mr. chairman. , when you arene done -- you have voted on this one. i would turn this over to whoever is next in line. i would appreciate it. >> thank you for your service and testimony today. my questions will primarily be for admiral rogers. i have a little bit of an or not -- unorthodox view of some of these challenges about nsa programs. many of my colleagues talk about these programs as if there is a solution to controversy and fixing the programs themselves. i actually think the bigger challenge is that many of these programs are being carried out pursuant to a vaguely defined moral conflict. twice during your testimony to
-- geographic information regarding cell phones? >> to be honest, this is not an issue i have yet delved deeply into. this is one of those issues i have to be specifically smarter on, to be discussed publicly. that is part of the public discussion. >> if you would look at that and supplement the record in writing, with regard to your thoughts on that, i would appreciate it. that is all that i have. thank you, mr. chairman. , when you arene done -- you have voted on this one. i would...
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Mar 7, 2014
03/14
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it's a west african geographic name. it's english. >> guiness. eas. >> that is your final answer? >> do you want to change anything? >> oh, my gosh. >> guineas. >> whoo. >> you know what we'ring do? we are flying right to vegas after the show. you are amazing! [ applause ] >> west african geographical name, that helped me out. >> search kpix 5 cbs on facebook and "like" our page and test your spelling ability. look for the word of the day in your newsfeed. this is fun. >> tune in at noon. we try to stump the pro. michelle griego. out of the ballpark. >>> the big meat recall linked to a bay area slaughterhouse just exploded. the major retailers now warning their customers that story coming up. >>> and i'm dennis o'donnell. coming up, of the swamp is getting their gators back and why the penguins are so bad when they trade the igloo for the tent straight ahead. ,,,, uncle go one,two,one,two,one [uncle]thistwo,one.cotch,okay? [niece]okay! [uncle]okay? [niece]one,two three,four,five,six,seven,eight! [uncle laughing] okay,we go the other way,okay? [niece]one,two,three,four,five, six,se
it's a west african geographic name. it's english. >> guiness. eas. >> that is your final answer? >> do you want to change anything? >> oh, my gosh. >> guineas. >> whoo. >> you know what we'ring do? we are flying right to vegas after the show. you are amazing! [ applause ] >> west african geographical name, that helped me out. >> search kpix 5 cbs on facebook and "like" our page and test your spelling ability. look for the word of...
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Mar 9, 2014
03/14
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CNNW
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. >> geographically we're next. i think mentally and from a security point of view a lot has changed in the recent 20, 23 years. today we are part of nato. we are part of eu so the security for the baltic states is absolutely different. it is not a problem for the baltics. it is much more global. the world europe is seeing what mr. putin is doing. the international community is following that and of course we're not happy about that. >> of course geographically they're pretty close to the region. very close to russia geographically and also historically our people had experienced something similar back in the second world war time and cold war time, occupation of latvian and baltic states. definitely people remember that. to say tragedy today in ukraine, it worries people. we think that part of western world and part of nato -- >> part of nato which is a mutual defense -- >> exactly. but it doesn't mean that we can become complacent. >> i wouldn't be so romantic. well with all the nice talks and statements from our
. >> geographically we're next. i think mentally and from a security point of view a lot has changed in the recent 20, 23 years. today we are part of nato. we are part of eu so the security for the baltic states is absolutely different. it is not a problem for the baltics. it is much more global. the world europe is seeing what mr. putin is doing. the international community is following that and of course we're not happy about that. >> of course geographically they're pretty close...
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Mar 11, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN
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-- geographic information regarding cell phones? >> to be honest, this is not an issue i have yet delved deeply into. this is one of those issues i have to be specifically smarter on, to be discussed publicly. that is part of the public discussion. >> if you would look at that and supplement the record in writing, with regard to your thoughts on that, i would appreciate it. that is all that i have. thank you, mr. chairman. , when you arene done -- you have voted on this one. i would turn this over to whoever is next in line. i would appreciate it. >> thank you for your service and testimony today. my questions will primarily be for admiral rogers. i have a little bit of an or not -- unorthodox view of some of these challenges about nsa programs. many of my colleagues talk about these programs as if there is a solution to controversy and fixing the programs themselves. i actually think the bigger challenge is that many of these programs are being carried out pursuant to a vaguely defined moral conflict. twice during your testimony to
-- geographic information regarding cell phones? >> to be honest, this is not an issue i have yet delved deeply into. this is one of those issues i have to be specifically smarter on, to be discussed publicly. that is part of the public discussion. >> if you would look at that and supplement the record in writing, with regard to your thoughts on that, i would appreciate it. that is all that i have. thank you, mr. chairman. , when you arene done -- you have voted on this one. i would...
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Mar 30, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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and in canada there is a basic geographical difference. all 13 colonies of the united states to face the seaboard. anyone can trade directly, in canada the best ever cultural lands her in the center of the country in present-day ontario. in order to get out you have to pass along the st. lawrence river. and so we tend to forget it, but at the time that the french pushed them out of canada, canada is over 90% of speaking. and that makes a very difficult problem for the british columnist and government which is trying to create a viable colony out of canada so that it doesn't meet this name state put them in we occupy a key geographic position. because right-winger this, making sure they know how to tell the a canal on the rapids. but all they have to do is block this. and in fact, they have do complain about this repeatedly and that is but central government in canada. it drives it and also drives the decision in canada that all legislation not specifically given to the provinces goes to the central government. which is exactly the opposite
and in canada there is a basic geographical difference. all 13 colonies of the united states to face the seaboard. anyone can trade directly, in canada the best ever cultural lands her in the center of the country in present-day ontario. in order to get out you have to pass along the st. lawrence river. and so we tend to forget it, but at the time that the french pushed them out of canada, canada is over 90% of speaking. and that makes a very difficult problem for the british columnist and...
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Mar 22, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> you can see author portals where you can see the geographic breakdowns. new york, washington, miami, los angeles, and lots of clusters like north dakota. >> miami airport. >> it came on down. >> that was sunday. [inaudible conversations] >> i am laurie hays, a senior executive editor for bloomberg news and i oversee bloomberg washington bureau. thank you so much for coming out here tonight to host jonathen allen and "hrc: state secrets and the rebirth of hillary clinton" one. on their incredible achievement on the book "hrc: state secrets and the rebirth of hillary clinton". jonathen allen and amie parnes are appreciative of your support. thank you for coming out. jonathen allen and amie parnes, make a few comments, probably nobody more interesting in american political life than hillary clinton. she has inspired a great deal of curiosity. presidential candidate, secretary of state. jonathen allen and amie parnes have it all. i don't know how many of you knows this but "hrc: state secrets and the rebirth of hillary clinton" hit the best-seller
inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> you can see author portals where you can see the geographic breakdowns. new york, washington, miami, los angeles, and lots of clusters like north dakota. >> miami airport. >> it came on down. >> that was sunday. [inaudible conversations] >> i am laurie hays, a senior executive editor for bloomberg news and i oversee bloomberg washington bureau. thank you so much for coming out here tonight to host jonathen allen...
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Mar 25, 2014
03/14
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KNTV
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. >>> if you're looking for a fun new show to watch, check out national geographic channel's "none of america to show off cool tricks and experiments using science and challenges the people he meets and the viewers at home to figure them out. >> today he's here to challenge us. >> that shouldn't be a stretch. >> are you ready for this? >> we're ready. >> what are we doing? >> here is the challenge. cork in bottle, you can get cork out of the bottle using a selection of one of these things in front of you. you can use anything. you got the thing -- >> air. >> you got to -- >> i'll try this thing. >> i'm stuffing it. >> i'm trying this thing. you have to get it -- just like fishing. >> what's that? you didn't say a bag? >> i'll show you. so, in goes the bag, okay? look at this. check it out. now, open up the bag and in goes some breath from my mouth. >> breath? >> i like it. >> who wants the cork after that. >> nobody. whatever. do it. >> okay. all right. now this is live. nobody ever does live experiments on television for a reason. >> you do. >> hang on a minute. we're having a few is
. >>> if you're looking for a fun new show to watch, check out national geographic channel's "none of america to show off cool tricks and experiments using science and challenges the people he meets and the viewers at home to figure them out. >> today he's here to challenge us. >> that shouldn't be a stretch. >> are you ready for this? >> we're ready. >> what are we doing? >> here is the challenge. cork in bottle, you can get cork out of the...
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Mar 28, 2014
03/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 108
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they are geographical expressions. when they are suffocating dictatorships collapse, there was nothing there. it is not an accident that tunisia has relatively succeeded compared to some of these other countries. >> let me turn to asia. this is called asia's cauldron. a lot of the world's eyes are focused on the missing plane. >> malaysia is a misunderstood country. i write a long chapter on malaysia in the book. 30 years ago malaysia was poor, downtrodden, barely a country. it wasn't even a british colony. it was federated states controlled by the british. it had ethnic violence between indigenous chinese and indigenous indians, and muslims, and in the last third of the century, it has come together, institutionalized, it has had six percent economic growth rates every year. it has built a strong, stable economy, where there is still ethnic tensions. they are negotiating. there hasn't been any violence there. malaysia is the most prosperous of the major countries in southeast asia. >> including indonesia? >> it is muc
they are geographical expressions. when they are suffocating dictatorships collapse, there was nothing there. it is not an accident that tunisia has relatively succeeded compared to some of these other countries. >> let me turn to asia. this is called asia's cauldron. a lot of the world's eyes are focused on the missing plane. >> malaysia is a misunderstood country. i write a long chapter on malaysia in the book. 30 years ago malaysia was poor, downtrodden, barely a country. it...
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Mar 16, 2014
03/14
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[inaudible conversations] >> you can see the geographic breakdown. hard to tell. new york, washington, miami, los angeles. and then lots of clusters. north dakota. >> the miami airport. >> published this sunday. >> i am , senior executive editor for bloomberg news and they oversee bloomberg washington bureau. thank you all so much for coming out here tonight. they're incredible achievement. the book age arce, the secrets and regret that hillary clinton. very appreciative of your support. thank you for coming out. you can't hear? sorry. [inaudible] -- american political life and hillary clinton. she has inspired a great deal of curiosity. first lady, senator, presidential candidate can the secretary of state. john and amy have an all. i don't know how many of you know this, but hrc hit the best-seller lists. number six for nonfiction. at bank a big hand for that. the book is absolutely terrific. just a few words on john. as many of you know, bloomberg news hired john a couple of weeks before the book came out. it was my fastest and perhaps my smartest higher eve
[inaudible conversations] >> you can see the geographic breakdown. hard to tell. new york, washington, miami, los angeles. and then lots of clusters. north dakota. >> the miami airport. >> published this sunday. >> i am , senior executive editor for bloomberg news and they oversee bloomberg washington bureau. thank you all so much for coming out here tonight. they're incredible achievement. the book age arce, the secrets and regret that hillary clinton. very appreciative...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 18, 2014
03/14
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it's looking at a few divvied alignments if we look at the geographic and it looks like it wouldn't be a feasible option and at a high level it's doing some potential impacts for improvements and economic conditions that would be facilitated by this subway estimation and also looking at construction ability as i said before and the costs and funding options including the fundamental rating criteria which are back of the envelope stated would be fairly competitive and since this initial study feeds into the sfmta relatively past study we will get this study done in short order. it seems like a lot of people money to spend but hopefully it this will get done in july so the capacity study will be studied in conjunction with many options we have people from the mta to comment here if i want them to >> supervisor campos. >> just a capture quick questions he in terms of the money who is going to do the work? who is - how are you planning to spend it. >> the study is led by sfmta we have the project manager and some of the work will be sent out to other agencies so some of the economic develo
it's looking at a few divvied alignments if we look at the geographic and it looks like it wouldn't be a feasible option and at a high level it's doing some potential impacts for improvements and economic conditions that would be facilitated by this subway estimation and also looking at construction ability as i said before and the costs and funding options including the fundamental rating criteria which are back of the envelope stated would be fairly competitive and since this initial study...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 3, 2014
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access to all students through our research we discovered that it's best to divide the city into geographic regions and through those regions we drill down further to the neighborhoods in the schools to see exactly what classes are needed in what area and we provide those classes rather than just a blanket class. at all the schools we look at the needs of the students and provide those classes to the students. once again, online learning which is very exciting with the move through a through g certified through the uc goal ways. we had to go through a rigorous rfp process where 20 online providers submitted for and through a three stage process we decided to go with ingenuity because they had the most uc approved and we offer those courses throughout the district and we have an online coordinator who is in charge of that and responsible as the program administrator and the important thing about that is if you look at the data and they say one of the greatest factors of success in an online learning program is actually having a main point person be able to administer the program, and fortuna
access to all students through our research we discovered that it's best to divide the city into geographic regions and through those regions we drill down further to the neighborhoods in the schools to see exactly what classes are needed in what area and we provide those classes rather than just a blanket class. at all the schools we look at the needs of the students and provide those classes to the students. once again, online learning which is very exciting with the move through a through g...
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Mar 19, 2014
03/14
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BBCAMERICA
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. >> what are the areas geographically? >> geographically it's all in asia ot the moment. the u.s.rting to grow again, particularly in the hotel industry. the shift in our industry is moving towards asia. >> that's a long-term trend, isn't it? >> it's a long-term trend but happening in the short and medium term as well. countries like china, indonesia, thailand are all growing about 7% or 8% each year. >> what about the other bric countries, russia, africa, south america. are those economies, are they attracting the kind of attention that they were attracting in the years leading up to the financial crisis? >> certainly in our industry the bricks are very, very prominent is the best way to describe it i guess. brazil and russia are growing very fast in travel and tourism terms, both inbound and outbound. china in particular, the investment in infrastructure, busy building 69 new airports is one indicator of how fast they're growing. the brics for us are growing very quickly. >>> what about geopolitical' vefrnts, obviously what's happening in ukraine, what's happening in syria and a
. >> what are the areas geographically? >> geographically it's all in asia ot the moment. the u.s.rting to grow again, particularly in the hotel industry. the shift in our industry is moving towards asia. >> that's a long-term trend, isn't it? >> it's a long-term trend but happening in the short and medium term as well. countries like china, indonesia, thailand are all growing about 7% or 8% each year. >> what about the other bric countries, russia, africa, south...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 20, 2014
03/14
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SFGTV
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availability says we have to have geographically points of service with our clinic and consortium partners but they have to be valuable to the public and that is one of our challenges to make it available so it's not 6 weeks down the line to wait for a particular test. everyone is working on this we're not going to get to a end point but remain a goal. our services and programs have to be appropriate thus speaks to the issue of cultural competent. we've said it before for years. we need to continue to integrate cultural competency into all our programs it's got to be part of everybody we've got a diversity that's greater than all it's not only racial and ethnic but a definition of income we have to fit all those people. and lastly we've got to be responsive to the public it's got to be acceptable to them. we have our challenges through the patient surveys we're required to undertake for both regulatory and accreditation purposes. i know with sf general has been working with the program to improve our acceptability the entire system will be doing similarly and i look forward to having that
availability says we have to have geographically points of service with our clinic and consortium partners but they have to be valuable to the public and that is one of our challenges to make it available so it's not 6 weeks down the line to wait for a particular test. everyone is working on this we're not going to get to a end point but remain a goal. our services and programs have to be appropriate thus speaks to the issue of cultural competent. we've said it before for years. we need to...
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Mar 18, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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places are far closer geographically to to beijing than moscow. the regions on distant east in a real sense treated by people in moscow as an economic and a political back water are increasingly transforming and beginning to view themselves as asian, generally, and chinese specifically. that tees up a massive problem for russia because not only is russia not able to pivot to asia economically, if it simply does not have control or increasingly over that territory, it is one in which real territorial conflict can arise and arise soon. for those of you that don't know, this is a territory that accumulatively the russian government and government of china tussled over for centuries. the border was demarcated a couple years ago. demarcated in 2001, by a treaty called, you know, in typical sort of grandiosity, typical friendliness and good neighborly necessary. they tried to make it infinite with no sunset date, and the chinese negotiated, their counterpart said, no, we're good. we'll make it last for 20 years. the 2001 treaty told, what, eight years f
places are far closer geographically to to beijing than moscow. the regions on distant east in a real sense treated by people in moscow as an economic and a political back water are increasingly transforming and beginning to view themselves as asian, generally, and chinese specifically. that tees up a massive problem for russia because not only is russia not able to pivot to asia economically, if it simply does not have control or increasingly over that territory, it is one in which real...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 3, 2014
03/14
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the district is divided into 4 geographical sectors and the folks are assigned sectors. i'll get into more detail a little bit later but as you can see the one park jefferson speaking it the twin peaks and the 3 car is hate street and the fourth is embarcadero area in the eastern part of the district. now a critical component of our success is community engagement. we accomplish this in a number of ways we have a monthly community meeting we host at the station the second tuesday of every month i refer to it as a community meeting slash gala we try to have fun and to encourage attendance we have guest speakers i give a report in the district and open the floor to the public to let me know their concerns and then iowa what everybody is waiting for it is relaying raffle we raffle off door prize which i spare no expense. two of the most were dvdss and one ways entitled moran's from outer spaces and the.com by these we provide refreshments that are mouth warranted delights that help the taste buds of the awe tends if you haven't come the second tuesday of every month 2:00 p.
the district is divided into 4 geographical sectors and the folks are assigned sectors. i'll get into more detail a little bit later but as you can see the one park jefferson speaking it the twin peaks and the 3 car is hate street and the fourth is embarcadero area in the eastern part of the district. now a critical component of our success is community engagement. we accomplish this in a number of ways we have a monthly community meeting we host at the station the second tuesday of every month...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 19, 2014
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. >> i appreciate that and i guess you touched on this in terms of geographically my sense that there is a big focus on certain areas where we have the most extreme challenges and sometimes it's harder to get attention on some of the
. >> i appreciate that and i guess you touched on this in terms of geographically my sense that there is a big focus on certain areas where we have the most extreme challenges and sometimes it's harder to get attention on some of the
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Mar 23, 2014
03/14
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ALJAZAM
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napoleon bonaparte, the 19th century ruler who concurred europe in battles that changed the geographical political landscape. a search stained with blood and a lock of hair are among items in paris. they belonged to him during the final part of his life, when he was exiled, where he died. they were discovered in the home of a distant relative of his horseman in corrsica. >> we arrived and a young lady came with these. we opened the box and inside, you know, we found a lot. this has never been opened for, now, 200 years. it's a shirt. it's a shirt in which he died. >> all of this was in the box? >> everything was in the box. >> a box of treasures. >> a box of treasure, yes. there was no country in the world when napoleon bonaparte is not famous, people like or don't like him - anyway, they know him. we are selling the emotion. >> interest in the napoleon stretches beyond france's borders. there are collectors in russia, australia, the u.s. and china. >> items connected to napoleon bonaparte have a record of selling at a high price, a ring he gave to his future wife josephine sold for $1 m
napoleon bonaparte, the 19th century ruler who concurred europe in battles that changed the geographical political landscape. a search stained with blood and a lock of hair are among items in paris. they belonged to him during the final part of his life, when he was exiled, where he died. they were discovered in the home of a distant relative of his horseman in corrsica. >> we arrived and a young lady came with these. we opened the box and inside, you know, we found a lot. this has never...
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Mar 16, 2014
03/14
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FOXNEWSW
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all contributing intelligence, planes, and vessels to the hunt, which has expanded to a massive geographical area. the huge search effort now focusing on two separate possible flight paths. take a look at them. one as far north as kazakhstan and far south and west out to the indian ocean. streaming live from bangkok, thailand with the very latest. david? >> reporter: hi, eric. yes. as you said, the search operation has become massive, covering large areas of land and sea. 25 nations are involved. but investigators seem to have found? clues as to where the plane has gone. they say from looking at satellite datate plane flew on either a northern or southern arc for several hours after it turned away from its original route to beijing. the area that it covers is colossal as far as kazakhstan to the north and deep into the indian ocean to the south. u.s. and indian ships and planes are taking the lead to search the plane in the sea and they're also look at the possibility it managed to reach land in one of 11 countries. >> malaysian officials are requesting support from these countries as well a
all contributing intelligence, planes, and vessels to the hunt, which has expanded to a massive geographical area. the huge search effort now focusing on two separate possible flight paths. take a look at them. one as far north as kazakhstan and far south and west out to the indian ocean. streaming live from bangkok, thailand with the very latest. david? >> reporter: hi, eric. yes. as you said, the search operation has become massive, covering large areas of land and sea. 25 nations are...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 2, 2014
03/14
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we have characters and geographic representation. that's a our framework for picking the neighborhoods and we'll look at how to assess the neighborhood factors. again, i wanted to show you the upcoming schedule it, it's a good way to remember the schedule is the last thursday of every month. the last time, we held our stakeholders meeting that was in advance of the committee meeting. this time we'll be having the stakeholder meeting after today. this is to unifies we're earlier in the period for today's work. i want to leave you and the public with resources our website is up and running you can look at san francisco planning department from formula retail and it's a category of our work and also a larger resource like the office of the controllers published report on formula control and working with the president and vice president and secretary to bring the controllers before this commission with an update from him. we also have posted the study of the realtors and the older diversity study. so beyond the study there's decision poi
we have characters and geographic representation. that's a our framework for picking the neighborhoods and we'll look at how to assess the neighborhood factors. again, i wanted to show you the upcoming schedule it, it's a good way to remember the schedule is the last thursday of every month. the last time, we held our stakeholders meeting that was in advance of the committee meeting. this time we'll be having the stakeholder meeting after today. this is to unifies we're earlier in the period...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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CNNW
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." >> "w" is the geographic location, in this case williamsburg, virginia.hin williamsburg, virginia, there are multiple lines within the plant and "f" designates which line the bottling took place on. >> but the key piece of the information was the final part of the label, the number 58. at the time, the williamsburg brewery produced 600 cases of beer every 15 minutes, and each of these 15-minute periods was given a number. >> 58 meant the 58th 15-minute period of a 24-hour day, which was 2:15 to 2:30. >> with over a million beers bottled at the brewery every day, only 1% were bottled in any 15-minute period, so only 14,000 bottles would have the same code. so, what would be the chances that roy beck would have three bottles of beer in his apartment with the same code as the bottle found inside virginia russell's car and the two next to virginia's body? >> the probability of that happening was incredibly small. you would have to have all the people involved at the same location at the same time buying the same beer. >> the odds of the beer bottles coming fr
." >> "w" is the geographic location, in this case williamsburg, virginia.hin williamsburg, virginia, there are multiple lines within the plant and "f" designates which line the bottling took place on. >> but the key piece of the information was the final part of the label, the number 58. at the time, the williamsburg brewery produced 600 cases of beer every 15 minutes, and each of these 15-minute periods was given a number. >> 58 meant the 58th...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 1, 2014
03/14
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that are planned by street scapes and paving and look at the ramps and look at the districts for geographic equality and we make priority decisions about where to build curb ramps to fill in the gaps. this year our office did something different wechlt took all of those request in the projects and did a map over lay with the pedestrian high injury corridors and intersection and our intention was to identify locations where curb ramps might be paired with other pedestrian safety improvements to support the pedestrian safety initiative. and other improvements can run the gamete from audible pedestrian signals, new crosswalks and bold outs and other features. we coordinated the safety locations with mta and dpw are planning and took this coordination and made a budget request for an in accrues in the amount of money that could support our curb ramp program. to use a scale here, it cost us around $20,000 to build a curb ram in one corner and $100,000 to build a bulb out. we wanted to be able to build some bulb outs and be able to extend and not subtract. so i will be meeting with both the depar
that are planned by street scapes and paving and look at the ramps and look at the districts for geographic equality and we make priority decisions about where to build curb ramps to fill in the gaps. this year our office did something different wechlt took all of those request in the projects and did a map over lay with the pedestrian high injury corridors and intersection and our intention was to identify locations where curb ramps might be paired with other pedestrian safety improvements to...
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Mar 14, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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so we are currently in a war but it does not have a geographic limitation. it does not have any kind of temporal limitation or expiration date. this committee held a hearing on the military force in may and i asked to be obama administration witnesses when does this end and they said we are not sure it could be 25 or 30 years. i asked the witnesses if someone who is born in 2020 and when they are 15-years-old in 2035 join an organization that is associated with al qaeda that only popped up again and has nobody sign against the united states does the authorization of why wants to take military action against that individual and the answer is yes. there is no reform that we are going to be able to make to any of these programs that i think we'll answer the questionwill ae citizens or civilians if the intelligence gathering operation is done in a significant way pursuant to an open-ended military authorization. and the questions you have received about the dual headed nature you are part of a military command that is executing an authorization with no limitatio
so we are currently in a war but it does not have a geographic limitation. it does not have any kind of temporal limitation or expiration date. this committee held a hearing on the military force in may and i asked to be obama administration witnesses when does this end and they said we are not sure it could be 25 or 30 years. i asked the witnesses if someone who is born in 2020 and when they are 15-years-old in 2035 join an organization that is associated with al qaeda that only popped up...
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Mar 19, 2014
03/14
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in so doing, russia has obviously grown itself geographically.'s taken something away from ukraine and added that something into its own territory. in so doing, it has also removed from ukraine the most pro-russian part of ukraine. one of the ways that russia has tried to retain a sphere of influence in the world is by propping up and rewarding and favoring pro-russian leaders in countries that are nearby to russia. remember that the protests that lit the fire on this tinderbox, right, those protests that started this international crisis, they were about the president of ukraine, the pro-russian president of ukraine, this guy, yanukovych, refusing to sign an economic deal that would bring his country closer to the european union. he rejected that deal and said ukraine would take more money from russia and bind itself economically speaking to russia. the outpouring of outrage against that decision in ukraine in the capital city of kiev started in november with that decision about rejecting europe in favor of russia. those protests went on for wee
in so doing, russia has obviously grown itself geographically.'s taken something away from ukraine and added that something into its own territory. in so doing, it has also removed from ukraine the most pro-russian part of ukraine. one of the ways that russia has tried to retain a sphere of influence in the world is by propping up and rewarding and favoring pro-russian leaders in countries that are nearby to russia. remember that the protests that lit the fire on this tinderbox, right, those...
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Mar 27, 2014
03/14
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KQED
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but libya, syria, iraq, yemen are not states, they're vague geographical expressions. so when they're suffocating dictatorships collapse there was nothing there. so it's not an accident that tunisia has relatively succeeded compared to some of these other arab countries. >> rose: let me turn to asia. this is called asia's cauldron. the stout china sea and the end of a stable pacific a lot of the world's eyes are focused on the pacific and the indian ocean because of the missing airline. you made an interesting point about malaysia in passing which was. >> i said malaysia is a very misunderstood country. i write a long chapter on malaysia in the book. 30 years ago malaysia was poor, down trodden, barely a country. it wasn't even a british colony, it was several federated states controlled by the british. it had ethnic violence between indigenous chinese, indigenous indians, indigenous malay muslims and in the last third of the centuries it's come together, it's institutionalized, it had six or seven percent economic growth rates every year in and out. it's built a stron
but libya, syria, iraq, yemen are not states, they're vague geographical expressions. so when they're suffocating dictatorships collapse there was nothing there. so it's not an accident that tunisia has relatively succeeded compared to some of these other arab countries. >> rose: let me turn to asia. this is called asia's cauldron. the stout china sea and the end of a stable pacific a lot of the world's eyes are focused on the pacific and the indian ocean because of the missing airline....
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Mar 30, 2014
03/14
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it's closer to the west geographically and culturally.still my question is if tunisia is there is a model democracy will that have an influence on others? >> guest: absolutely because we now live in a global world. what happened on facebook for example have been looking at tunisia and many egyptians discussing with them. in egypt we are doing this and then tunisia you're doing that. it is completely change from the lebanon. that was not popular debate. it's a synergy between both. tunisia is going to go fast into the realm of ideas. egypt will go slower but it's going into that direction. they will have to deal with the muslim brotherhood. i have a little bit of good news though. if the islamist in the region talk to each other if nada will reforming move in a good direction this would influence maybe not the entire muslim brotherhood but something among the people in the muslim brotherhood in egypt. not the entire organization is spent on doing what they are doing right now. we need to see one model in the arab world where muslim conserv
it's closer to the west geographically and culturally.still my question is if tunisia is there is a model democracy will that have an influence on others? >> guest: absolutely because we now live in a global world. what happened on facebook for example have been looking at tunisia and many egyptians discussing with them. in egypt we are doing this and then tunisia you're doing that. it is completely change from the lebanon. that was not popular debate. it's a synergy between both. tunisia...
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Mar 18, 2014
03/14
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let's bring geographer. and former ntsb investigator and friend of the show, greg fife. greg, starting with you, interesting theory. of course, at this point, all theories still on the table. chris goodfellow writing, what he thinks is happening, perhaps there was an electrical fire, something extraordinary happening onboard. instead of it being a malfeasance for the turn, the pilot said let's get to the nearest airport so that's why they turned that way. that's how pilots are train to think. where is the nearest airport we can land at in then they're perhaps overcome by smoke and run out of time and the plane keeps going on auto pilot. and so, perhaps, nothing bad -- everybody trying to do the best they could and it just not working out. what do you think about that idea? >> the fact that this theory about electrical fire, electrical fires do not burn fast. they actually burn very slow. with the certification requirements for the insulation on those wires, they are supposed to be self-extinguishing. so you're not going to have the conventional fire where this plastic ma
let's bring geographer. and former ntsb investigator and friend of the show, greg fife. greg, starting with you, interesting theory. of course, at this point, all theories still on the table. chris goodfellow writing, what he thinks is happening, perhaps there was an electrical fire, something extraordinary happening onboard. instead of it being a malfeasance for the turn, the pilot said let's get to the nearest airport so that's why they turned that way. that's how pilots are train to think....
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Mar 4, 2014
03/14
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crimea is not really geographically contiguous with either thing. but the decision about giving crimea to ukraine instead of russia, that is how it became ukrainian in the first place. it was a strange decision then. it has big consequences now. and now vladimir putin has decided to take the gift back. he's decided to take crimea back for russia. the ukrainians concede that there is nothing that they can do militarily to stop the russians. the number of troops that russia has shoved into crimea vastly outnumbers the token military force that the ukrainian government keeps there. although the ukrainian government is calling for help from the international community, they're calling for help from the united states, they're calling for help from the west, they're not actually calling for military help directly. nobody thinks this gets resolved with some sort of land war against russian troops. but if it's not war, what are the other options then? sanctions is the word here, right? but sanctions is not just one thing. sanctions is a whole range of optio
crimea is not really geographically contiguous with either thing. but the decision about giving crimea to ukraine instead of russia, that is how it became ukrainian in the first place. it was a strange decision then. it has big consequences now. and now vladimir putin has decided to take the gift back. he's decided to take crimea back for russia. the ukrainians concede that there is nothing that they can do militarily to stop the russians. the number of troops that russia has shoved into crimea...
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Mar 17, 2014
03/14
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ALJAZAM
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to put geographic coordinates against something and immediately transmit those to us where we can transmitse to a map and make them readily available, invaluable. >> what we're looking at is the video feed from the mq 1. the smoke is masking the fire so it's hard to determine where the fire really is. here he's blended in the infrared, so we can clearly see where the fire line actually is. >> and captain, how do you feel about how this went? >> i think it was a huge success. i've seen some violent things but i'm not sure i've ever seen anything more violent than how strong this fire was, how much it was crowning, how much it was moving and how difficult it was for folks to contain. and i believe 100% that we made a huge difference. >> what has access to this technology brought to the firefighting effort? >> i'd have to give you the primaries, is the life safety, the ability to keep an eye on fire. with regard to firefighting, i think we are scratching the surface as far as its potential. >> what i love is that it actually works. you know, this was kind of a test run but it really helped th
to put geographic coordinates against something and immediately transmit those to us where we can transmitse to a map and make them readily available, invaluable. >> what we're looking at is the video feed from the mq 1. the smoke is masking the fire so it's hard to determine where the fire really is. here he's blended in the infrared, so we can clearly see where the fire line actually is. >> and captain, how do you feel about how this went? >> i think it was a huge success....