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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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henry ford by then already said he would run for president. took himself out of running for president prematurely and he never got the project but he also never got to be president. if he was president my idea he would be up president unlike any we had ever had. he would have been an autocrat. he would've been unable to deal effectively with groups like congress or the press. he just want his own way it would have been a very interesting four years. but it didn't happen. in fairness ford didn't really want to be president. he knew he was lucky to have the job he had as the world's richest one-man band this enormous profitable company and could do what he wanted and tell anybody what he wanted he did not have to make nice and kiss babies and he knew that. he was not built to be a politician. he knew it. especially his wife. she was dead set against ford being president and she was a powerful figure in his life. when she told him she didn't want him to be present - - president that had an effect. >> interesting about the press that he was a publi
henry ford by then already said he would run for president. took himself out of running for president prematurely and he never got the project but he also never got to be president. if he was president my idea he would be up president unlike any we had ever had. he would have been an autocrat. he would've been unable to deal effectively with groups like congress or the press. he just want his own way it would have been a very interesting four years. but it didn't happen. in fairness ford didn't...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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so naturally i went to henry ford. i started learning about ford and that led to the restof the book . it's just picking up a little as writers do sometimes things have a little thread and you follow the thread and you find the whole fabric . >> .. tightens the technology are a new thing but they are really not. for an edison a decade or two earlier would be tightens the technology of their time. i think the parallels are obvious. all of these men have built, elon musk is a legitimate technological innovator. zuckerberg i know less about. let's say elon musk. elon musk has this restless imagination eddies into electric cars and space travel, hyper technology and all kinds of stuff. he reminds meol very much of hey ford and thomas edison. these people found success in one technological field, changed allies for a lot of americans. then there restless minds couldn't stay with what, with the success they had. they moved on and did more. they try to conquer new areas. elon musk is always testing the boundaries of what he ca
so naturally i went to henry ford. i started learning about ford and that led to the restof the book . it's just picking up a little as writers do sometimes things have a little thread and you follow the thread and you find the whole fabric . >> .. tightens the technology are a new thing but they are really not. for an edison a decade or two earlier would be tightens the technology of their time. i think the parallels are obvious. all of these men have built, elon musk is a legitimate...
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Jun 12, 2021
06/21
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he's like henry ford.ny levandowski was involved in the school uber suit, for those who don't know that. when she car better than the driver, it's almost irresponsible, right? and kyle boyd who founded cruise automation which is now part of general motors, part of what's driving him, the backed some 33 million -- 33,000 americans are killed by highway accidents every year. 90% of the time by human error! oh! it makes me so mad. they want to eliminate the driver because we are bad drivers. it's not true. this is the 94% fallacy. they all read this document, which says 94% of accidents are caused -- no, i'm sorry. this is the critical reason for ... the critical reason for crashes investigating a motor vehicle crash causation survey. it doesn't say who causes the crashes. you have to read it. right notes! nobody reads the footnotes. although the critical reason is an important part of the description of events leading up to the crash, it is not intended to be interpreted as the cause of the crash, nor the as
he's like henry ford.ny levandowski was involved in the school uber suit, for those who don't know that. when she car better than the driver, it's almost irresponsible, right? and kyle boyd who founded cruise automation which is now part of general motors, part of what's driving him, the backed some 33 million -- 33,000 americans are killed by highway accidents every year. 90% of the time by human error! oh! it makes me so mad. they want to eliminate the driver because we are bad drivers. it's...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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seeking organizations for use in teens between 12 and 17, moderna is moving to another milestone, now henry fordlth system in michigan is beginning local enrollment for moderna's evaluation of the vaccine in kids from 6 months to 11 years, that study is evaluity with aing the same vac even already in use in adults and for children 6 months through 11 years old. doctors leading the research say right now, the question is what's the best? >> the first phase families will know their child is getting the vaccine and looking at dose efficacy of three different doses. >> to participate in the trial, kids have to be between 6 months and 11 years old. they cannot have a positive covid-19 test or exposure to covid within two weeks before their first vaccination and not received vaccine or treatment for covid-19. >>> the coast guard rescues a bay area man from his kayak roughly 70 miles
seeking organizations for use in teens between 12 and 17, moderna is moving to another milestone, now henry fordlth system in michigan is beginning local enrollment for moderna's evaluation of the vaccine in kids from 6 months to 11 years, that study is evaluity with aing the same vac even already in use in adults and for children 6 months through 11 years old. doctors leading the research say right now, the question is what's the best? >> the first phase families will know their child is...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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KPIX
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nurse at detroit's henry ford hospital. >> i just remember standing in the middle of the department andound like dumfounded. >> good morning. >> reporter: at covid's worst she had a newborn at home in ontario. >> i was considering whether or not i should even keep my job. so we had her sleeping in a pack and play in our room, and i was sleeping in her room in a tent because i wanted to like conceal myself somehow. >> reporter: so why do you continue to come over the international border to work here in detroit with koifd patients? >> i love the hospital i work for. i love the people i work with. >> you like detroiters? >> i like detroiters. yeah. >> it's not -- it's not a border. it's just a line we cross. and i just think it would have been horribly cowardly, yeah, to abandon my american cousins. >> reporter: but in canada there was some resistance. >> there was a call in our local paper to have us stop being allowed to go back and forth across the border. >> how did that feel? >> not good. not good at all. >> reporter: both did contract covid but recovered. and they remain committed a
nurse at detroit's henry ford hospital. >> i just remember standing in the middle of the department andound like dumfounded. >> good morning. >> reporter: at covid's worst she had a newborn at home in ontario. >> i was considering whether or not i should even keep my job. so we had her sleeping in a pack and play in our room, and i was sleeping in her room in a tent because i wanted to like conceal myself somehow. >> reporter: so why do you continue to come over...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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ALJAZ
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to find survivors. 5 bodies have been recovered so far. 156 people remain on, accounted for john henry ford from certified florida. there is a reconciliation center, but very few people have been reconciled. most of the people who are waiting in that center are waiting to hear news about those 156 people who are missing firefighters. say they are continuing to search through the rubble. but of course they've been doing that since thursday, and they.
to find survivors. 5 bodies have been recovered so far. 156 people remain on, accounted for john henry ford from certified florida. there is a reconciliation center, but very few people have been reconciled. most of the people who are waiting in that center are waiting to hear news about those 156 people who are missing firefighters. say they are continuing to search through the rubble. but of course they've been doing that since thursday, and they.
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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june 19th 1865 then steven johnson looks at the advancements that increased the lifespan and then henry ford and thomas edison's failed attempt to build an industrialized city and the tennessee river valley in the 1920s. and breitbart editor-in-chief argues the mainstream media has destroyed its own credibility. find more scheduled information at booktv.org or consult your program guide. now, here is a net gordon reed on the announcement of the end of slavery in texas. the juneteenth national independence day act signed and passed this week has established today as a federal holiday. welcome to the free library of philadelphia i am the director of author events. we are excited to have annette gordon reed with us tonight to discuss her new book on juneteenth. she joined us in 2008 a couple of weeks after the publication of the headings is monticello an american family which went on to win the pulitzer prize and the national book award and she was here for her biography of andrew johnson and later she shared the
june 19th 1865 then steven johnson looks at the advancements that increased the lifespan and then henry ford and thomas edison's failed attempt to build an industrialized city and the tennessee river valley in the 1920s. and breitbart editor-in-chief argues the mainstream media has destroyed its own credibility. find more scheduled information at booktv.org or consult your program guide. now, here is a net gordon reed on the announcement of the end of slavery in texas. the juneteenth national...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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ALJAZ
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john henry ford's, for the relatives of the missing in surfside building collapse the weight is taking its toll. yesterday it was so thrilled you know, all the energy of this acceptance and denial, acceptance and loss. but i know that in my heart there, but most probably in have a note with little news to give local leaders offer sympathy to pain in their face . their expressions, like anything i've seen before, it is, it is very difficult to know that your loved one for sophia live and have the whole to believe that. and at the same time, just sit there and wait for that information to get to you. a bus takes anxious family members from a reunification center were sadly too few have been reunited to the pile of twisted steel and crumbled concrete. rescuers have made progress, searching through the massive mound that was once a home to hundreds, but the news on survivors. his graham, the number of people accounted for now stands at 136 with 150. on the number of confirmed yeah. is 11 family members who have been delivering flowers to this memorial beneath the building where their relat
john henry ford's, for the relatives of the missing in surfside building collapse the weight is taking its toll. yesterday it was so thrilled you know, all the energy of this acceptance and denial, acceptance and loss. but i know that in my heart there, but most probably in have a note with little news to give local leaders offer sympathy to pain in their face . their expressions, like anything i've seen before, it is, it is very difficult to know that your loved one for sophia live and have...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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nurse at henry ford hospital. >> i remember being in the department and looking around dumbfounded. morning! >> diaz: at covid's worst, she had a newborn at home in ontario. >> i was considering whether or ontario. >> i was considering whether or not i should even keep my not i should even keep my job, so we had her sleeping in a pack-and-play in our room. and i was sleeping in her room in a tent because i wanted to, like, conceal myself somehow. >> diaz: so why do you continue to come over the international border to work here in detroit with covid patients? >> i love the hospital they work for. i love the people i work with. >> diaz: you like detroiters. >> i like detroiters, yeah. >> it's not a border. it's a line we cross, and i think it would have been horribly cowardly, yeah, to abandon my american cousins. >> diaz: in canada there was some resistance. >> there was a call in our local paper to stop us being allowed to go back and forth across the border. >> diaz: how did that feel? >> not good, not good at all. >> diaz: both contracted covid and recovered and they remain as co
nurse at henry ford hospital. >> i remember being in the department and looking around dumbfounded. morning! >> diaz: at covid's worst, she had a newborn at home in ontario. >> i was considering whether or ontario. >> i was considering whether or not i should even keep my not i should even keep my job, so we had her sleeping in a pack-and-play in our room. and i was sleeping in her room in a tent because i wanted to, like, conceal myself somehow. >> diaz: so why do...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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you should know i am the global president of the henry ford fan club. i have been so excited and all week i have been looking forward to this. i don't have a chance to see her much these days because she's traveling the world on behalf of humanity. it's such a splendid thing that she is doing. but i will be brief with my introduction. the executive director has the most perfect background and leading unicef at this time. she had served, she is now the 7 -- seventh executive director for unicef, phenomenal organization. from 2007 to 2009, executive director was the ministry or for international development, and the director of the united states foreign systems. that was perfect training for having background in the international community that reaches out to do very good and important things for humanity. she earlier had served as -- under secretary of state for management. so she knows the architecture of internationalism so very well. most important, henry at the only person i know who has made money. she was the director of -- and stamped out money le
you should know i am the global president of the henry ford fan club. i have been so excited and all week i have been looking forward to this. i don't have a chance to see her much these days because she's traveling the world on behalf of humanity. it's such a splendid thing that she is doing. but i will be brief with my introduction. the executive director has the most perfect background and leading unicef at this time. she had served, she is now the 7 -- seventh executive director for unicef,...
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Jun 12, 2021
06/21
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smith works out, with the henry ford hospital, which is they are just hydroxychloroquine study, early in the hospital clearly worked. it reduced mortality and should be used as the standard of care. >> laura: and dr. risch, the only issue that is still a vaccine to me personally as a non-dr., you have addressed this so well over the last year, which is acquired or adaptive immunity. or natural immunity. but if you get exposed to covid, you produce t cells and antibody response. the idea that somehow you are worse off than someone who gets a vaccine that is what they keep pushing to this day. despite this cleveland clinic state that came out. >> you are right. it is irrational. and all these things are designed to sell vaccines. you can predict what people will say when anything comes up because it is always in one direction. and we know that -- the cleveland studies show, 1500 people who had covid who had no risk of subsequent diagnosis or infection and early infection, previous infection worked really "to protect people. we know that, for example, in resource one, that protection las
smith works out, with the henry ford hospital, which is they are just hydroxychloroquine study, early in the hospital clearly worked. it reduced mortality and should be used as the standard of care. >> laura: and dr. risch, the only issue that is still a vaccine to me personally as a non-dr., you have addressed this so well over the last year, which is acquired or adaptive immunity. or natural immunity. but if you get exposed to covid, you produce t cells and antibody response. the idea...
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Jun 3, 2021
06/21
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now we have the henry ford starting at about eight other studies taken early. it can mitigate some of the impact of coronavirus. they had to resend the two most prestigious articles. why is it that if donald trump likes it, nobody, they would politicize even a therapeutic when we had nothing else to offer people? >> yeah, and go try and find hydroxychloroquine. go try and get a prescription for it right now, sean. it is nearly impossible. people are being threatened with losing their medical license for prescribing it. you have to go through such chaos just to get a prescription for it. if you're going to a country and you want to forget malaria, still very hard to get. i think we all know the way that donald trump, anything he does is demonized, even if it is so helpful, even if it would save lives, sean. they don't want to admit it. and you are right. thankfully we have a vaccine now. you just talk about this. thank you, president donald trump. you won't hear him get any credit. you won't hear him get credit that life is finally going back to normal. you go i
now we have the henry ford starting at about eight other studies taken early. it can mitigate some of the impact of coronavirus. they had to resend the two most prestigious articles. why is it that if donald trump likes it, nobody, they would politicize even a therapeutic when we had nothing else to offer people? >> yeah, and go try and find hydroxychloroquine. go try and get a prescription for it right now, sean. it is nearly impossible. people are being threatened with losing their...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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but what happened is we developed a very henry ford like assembly line. tom is -- you could send me into the library of congress or the national archives and i probably would come out with what i'm looking for. you probably have to send out a miner's party with lights on the hats fo find me. but tom is so adapt. i cannot compare. when it comes to lyman draper, it was all tom. writing books about people still alive, i'm good at interviewing them. but tom will point me in the right direction, give me the research, i'll start to write. i'm not going to say i write a chapter and send it to him, but i'll write a hunk, a chunk with a million questions in it, need this, need this, how do we expand on this, too much of this, i'll send it back to tom and he's as good an editor as a researcher and he'll send it back to me, so we have an assembly line going back and forth, so far it's worked for us. >> probably a lot of trust there. >> i don't trust tom at all. >> no. we'd never turn our back on each other. wouldn't do it on screen right now. >> so one of the things
but what happened is we developed a very henry ford like assembly line. tom is -- you could send me into the library of congress or the national archives and i probably would come out with what i'm looking for. you probably have to send out a miner's party with lights on the hats fo find me. but tom is so adapt. i cannot compare. when it comes to lyman draper, it was all tom. writing books about people still alive, i'm good at interviewing them. but tom will point me in the right direction,...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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they include a woman who is an emergency room nurse at detroit's henry ford hospital. >> why do you continueme over the international border to work here in detroit with covid patients? >> i love hospital i work for. i love the people i work with. >> you like detroiters? >> i like them, yeah. >> it is not -- it is not a border, it is just a line we cross. i just think it would have been horribly cowardly to -- yeah, to abandon my american cousins. >> some of the nurses contracted covid-19 were covered and are still continuing to work. >>> coming up after the show, cbs sunday morning will take an in depth look at policing in america. locally john blackstone will profile san francisco's response. we have also created a special policing section on our own website. among reports you find there john on a push to license law enforcement officers. >> that way officers who violate professional standards could be desert if ied by a review panela court verdict. >> it is similar to a disbarring an attorney, taking a license away from a doctor, taking a teaching credential away from a teacher. >> once d
they include a woman who is an emergency room nurse at detroit's henry ford hospital. >> why do you continueme over the international border to work here in detroit with covid patients? >> i love hospital i work for. i love the people i work with. >> you like detroiters? >> i like them, yeah. >> it is not -- it is not a border, it is just a line we cross. i just think it would have been horribly cowardly to -- yeah, to abandon my american cousins. >> some of...
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Jun 12, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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when i talked about henry ford and mass production early in the course. i talked about how mass production just raised the stakes for anybody in the automobile business. to mass-produce cars you have to have huge amounts of money and capital and and financial resources. it involves. a huge factories and supply chains sometimes spread out all over the country or all over the world. it's a very complicated business but above all it requires money fundraising. and this is something preston tucker or any maverick trying to enter the automobile business. this is something that they lack they have real trouble raising money to enter the auto making business. and so preston tucker always struggled with with fundraising. and he tried some unconventional schemes to try to raise money, for example, he sold. well, one of his mistakes was just renting such a big factory. he rented a a former dodge aircraft plant in chicago is covered 93 acres. it was way too big of factory for his needs much too expensive for him to afford and then to try to raise money some of these
when i talked about henry ford and mass production early in the course. i talked about how mass production just raised the stakes for anybody in the automobile business. to mass-produce cars you have to have huge amounts of money and capital and and financial resources. it involves. a huge factories and supply chains sometimes spread out all over the country or all over the world. it's a very complicated business but above all it requires money fundraising. and this is something preston tucker...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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henry ford had a huge following.te and father coughlin, had millions of litters in, and what is different today one major political party is not distancing itself from that kind of nonsense and that's when democracies get in trouble. there's always going to be people who find insane ideas plausible but you now have people advocating for this stuff and remaining silence in the face of it which is just as dangerous. >> we all watched as trump and his supporters, his -- who are in government or in the campaign tried to overturn the election. they did it through the platform of fox and other channels, with just spreading lies. they did it in courtrooms before election boards, ultimately they did it on january -- they tried to -- january 6th. what we kept hearing throughout the trump era was that the guardrails are there. the guardrails are there. it didn't matter what trump was going to say or what he was going to do. the guardrails are there. we now see an effort to change the guardrails, to remove guardrails, to defeat
henry ford had a huge following.te and father coughlin, had millions of litters in, and what is different today one major political party is not distancing itself from that kind of nonsense and that's when democracies get in trouble. there's always going to be people who find insane ideas plausible but you now have people advocating for this stuff and remaining silence in the face of it which is just as dangerous. >> we all watched as trump and his supporters, his -- who are in government...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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henry ford and trey gowdy former congressman from south carolina. that ahead of this meeting on wednesday? >> yeah, bret. he also said if russia continues its harmful activities and i sit here thinking i thought they tried to interfere with our 2016 election? i mean, what can you do worse than interfering with a democracy's elections unless you want to say cyberattacking food supplies and gasoline and other critical infrastructure. you know, bret, it was obama that said he would be more flexible. it was clinton that gave that awkward plastic re-set button. it was obama that gave them nothing more than a stern lecture after they tried to interfere with our election he is. and it was obama that laughed at mitt romney cited russia is the biggest threat we have. so, get tough on russia but you haven't done it in the past, mr. >> bret: yeah, i think it's actions versus words, harold, that critics are saying they haven't seen the actions yet from the biden administration and they are frankly very open and vocal about concerns about this one-on-one meeting
henry ford and trey gowdy former congressman from south carolina. that ahead of this meeting on wednesday? >> yeah, bret. he also said if russia continues its harmful activities and i sit here thinking i thought they tried to interfere with our 2016 election? i mean, what can you do worse than interfering with a democracy's elections unless you want to say cyberattacking food supplies and gasoline and other critical infrastructure. you know, bret, it was obama that said he would be more...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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KNTV
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the henry ford health system in michigan is beginning local enrollment for moderna's evaluation of theto 11 years. the study is evaluating the same vaccine that's already in use for adults, but now for children in that age group. doctors leading the research say right now the question is what is the best dose. >> the first phase, families will know that their child is getting the vaccine. we are looking at dose efficacy, three different doses. >> now, it is a oklahomaal child there so we cannot participate. the children that are enrolled are between six months and 12 years of age. they have not had positive covid tests nor exposure to covid within two weeks before their first vaccination. also they have not received any other vaccine or treatment for covid-19. >>> and as more adults get that vaccine, states are starting to ease restrictions allowing for businesses to start recovering. the cruise ship industry has been really devastated by the pandemic. but now after more than a year, those docked ships are getting ready to sail once again. one passenger aboard the celebrity millennium
the henry ford health system in michigan is beginning local enrollment for moderna's evaluation of theto 11 years. the study is evaluating the same vaccine that's already in use for adults, but now for children in that age group. doctors leading the research say right now the question is what is the best dose. >> the first phase, families will know that their child is getting the vaccine. we are looking at dose efficacy, three different doses. >> now, it is a oklahomaal child there...
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electrification and decarbon ization industries, and so if you go back to the auto industry 1.0, led by henry ford, the river plan and ford had 100,000 people and they were all the way upstream. they mined thes ore that got made into the steel that went into the auto and you've seen some of that from industry leaders but that is the direction that china has gone and moved downstream. liz, look at the new york stock exchange today, whether it's neo they have companies that are worth as much as gm or ford, and so the chinese are great competitors, and i think we need to compete ourselves and it's not just about one industry it's really about understanding the full supply chain, with the trillions of dollars of gdp. it's not just rare earth. liz: i completely agree. where is u.s. 2035. we need to be doing exactly that james litinsky, please come back thank you so much and by the way , while down today, mp materials has seen just an incredible gain over the past couple of months. it's the great american post- pandemic glow-up. masks up, beauty salons flinging their doors open and business is booming,
electrification and decarbon ization industries, and so if you go back to the auto industry 1.0, led by henry ford, the river plan and ford had 100,000 people and they were all the way upstream. they mined thes ore that got made into the steel that went into the auto and you've seen some of that from industry leaders but that is the direction that china has gone and moved downstream. liz, look at the new york stock exchange today, whether it's neo they have companies that are worth as much as...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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MSNBCW
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saw that in the 1930s, white people bash fascist probably because roosevelt was president and not henry ford. i think the thought of this is very disturbing and outcome is very much in doubt. >> you're very much right. let me play to you ron johnson, he demonstrated what it looked like to go all the way over. essentially he cannot bring himself to give trump any responsibility for what happened january 6th. here he is. >> why are you not aggressively looking at what happened that from the perspective of president trump's role? >> because we had an impeachment trial. >> but you don't think he bears any responsibility? >> i'm sorry, i think our hyper partisan politics is driving all of this. go back to the number of articles of impeachment against president trump. go back to the summer riots where you had, for example, vice president harris encouraging people to donate to a fund to bail these rioters out so they could riot again. again, there's plenty of societal blame to go around. >> congressman lieu, he's blaming impeachment, speaker pelosi, everyone else is responsible but trump. in a sens
saw that in the 1930s, white people bash fascist probably because roosevelt was president and not henry ford. i think the thought of this is very disturbing and outcome is very much in doubt. >> you're very much right. let me play to you ron johnson, he demonstrated what it looked like to go all the way over. essentially he cannot bring himself to give trump any responsibility for what happened january 6th. here he is. >> why are you not aggressively looking at what happened that...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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i write the next but what happens is we've developed a very henry ford like assembly line tom is it you could send me into the library of congress of the national archives and i probably come out with what i was looking for. you might have to sending out my party with minors hats and lights to find me but tom is so. adept he was born to be a researcher born to be and i cannot compare like when it comes to lyman draper it was all tom. i'm good if we're writing books about people are still alive. i'm good at interviewing them. but so what tom will will point me in the right direction and give me the research. i'll start to write i'm not going to say i write a chapter and send it back to him right two chapters, but i'll write a hunk a chunk. remember the million questions in it. need this need this. how do we expand on this too much of this? i'll send it back to tom and he's as good an editor as he is a researcher and he'll get it back to me. so we kind of have this assembly line thing going back and forth. and so far it's worked for us. it's probably. i don't trust tom at all. no, no, i w
i write the next but what happens is we've developed a very henry ford like assembly line tom is it you could send me into the library of congress of the national archives and i probably come out with what i was looking for. you might have to sending out my party with minors hats and lights to find me but tom is so. adept he was born to be a researcher born to be and i cannot compare like when it comes to lyman draper it was all tom. i'm good if we're writing books about people are still alive....
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Jun 5, 2021
06/21
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. >> reporter: canadian lindsey lafleur has been an er nurse at henry ford hospital for nearly five years. she says last spring's surge is still vivid. >> i remember standing in the middle of the department and looking around like, dumfounded and sad. >> it must have been pretty overwhelming. >> i cried a lot, yes. >> say good morning. >> reporter: at covid's worst in detroit, she had a newborn at home in canada and considered walking away from nursing. >> how nervous were you about your baby? >> i was really nervous. she was really young, so we had her sleeping in a pack n play in our room. i was sleeping in her room in a tent because i wanted to conceal myself somehow. >> reporter: so why do you do it? why do you continue to come over the international border to work here in detroit with covid patients? >> i love working here, i love detroit. i love the people i work with. >> you like detroiters? >> i love detroiters, yeah. >> it's not a border, just a line we cross. we're the same people. i just think it would have been horribly cowardly to abandon my american cousins. >> reporter: bac
. >> reporter: canadian lindsey lafleur has been an er nurse at henry ford hospital for nearly five years. she says last spring's surge is still vivid. >> i remember standing in the middle of the department and looking around like, dumfounded and sad. >> it must have been pretty overwhelming. >> i cried a lot, yes. >> say good morning. >> reporter: at covid's worst in detroit, she had a newborn at home in canada and considered walking away from nursing....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.o tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today than
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.o tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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24
Jun 23, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
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Jun 23, 2021
06/21
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his doctors at henry form mccomb -- ford mccomb hospital had a 10% survival but true to form, paul pulled through. i'm happy to announce last night paul went home to his family. he has a long road of recovery ahead of him, one that will require things like physical therapy and immunotherapy, but paul is approaching his recovery with the typical can-do approach. and we want to send him all of our love and strength for recovery. for those that spent so much time with him -- here assembled we have members of the michigan delegation, members of the problem solvers caucus, two groups that spent just a ton of time with paul mitchell. and mr. speaker, it is, therefore, my privilege to turn the floor over to some of those friends to recognize him in the place that we know he loved so much. so with that, mr. speaker, it's my privilege to yield a couple minutes of time to another colleague from michigan, mr. andy heaven. -- mr. andy levin. mr. mr. levin: thanks for organizing this special order in honor of our dear friend, paul mitchell. i represent parts of mccomb and oakland counties and during m
his doctors at henry form mccomb -- ford mccomb hospital had a 10% survival but true to form, paul pulled through. i'm happy to announce last night paul went home to his family. he has a long road of recovery ahead of him, one that will require things like physical therapy and immunotherapy, but paul is approaching his recovery with the typical can-do approach. and we want to send him all of our love and strength for recovery. for those that spent so much time with him -- here assembled we have...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 18, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
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Jun 9, 2021
06/21
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a famous actor playing the part of falstaff in henry the fourth probably at the ford theater. and afterwards an actor named hackett and afterwards shakespeare wrote him a letter. complementing him on his performance and suggesting a couple of ways that link in might change things if you were to do it. and hack it. of course that this is cool. i got a letter from the president of the united states and he showed it to his friends and it got published somewhere abraham lincoln complimenting my performance and lincoln actually became a controversy because some in the press criticized him for being so what they considered frivolous. during a time of war. francis carpenter was painted lincoln's portrait in the white house and he wrote. a book about that that he talked about how at one point he was painting lincoln who is sitting there? and lincoln asked if he could rise and he rose and he delivered the opening soliloquy from richard. the third now is the winter of our discontent? from memory and carpenter said he did it as well as any professional actor. lincoln and and and shakespe
a famous actor playing the part of falstaff in henry the fourth probably at the ford theater. and afterwards an actor named hackett and afterwards shakespeare wrote him a letter. complementing him on his performance and suggesting a couple of ways that link in might change things if you were to do it. and hack it. of course that this is cool. i got a letter from the president of the united states and he showed it to his friends and it got published somewhere abraham lincoln complimenting my...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 23, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.ou about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today than we were back then. so here go our demands.
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.ou about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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henry kissinger admired his ruthlessness. >> a strong defense posture gives weight to our values and views. reporter: in 1975, gerald forde him defense secretary. the youngest ever. ronald reagan sent into the middle east. >> i am submitting the name to be secretary of defense. reporter: george w. bush reappointed him. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his pentagon office on september 11 when an airliner hit the building. he helped move the injured and then planned a way to strike back. rumsfeld believed the iraq war would be over in months. the fierce insurrection that followed thousands of lives when no weapons were found, rumsfeld struggled to explain why. >> there are things we know that we know. there are no unknowns, there are things we now know we don't know. there are also unknown unknowns, things we do not know we don't know. reporter: he was prepared to push boundaries. but when these photographs appear, there was a backlash. >> these events occurred on my watch and i take full responsibility. reporter: the scandal damaged him and with his iraq strategy in question, he resigned. donald r
henry kissinger admired his ruthlessness. >> a strong defense posture gives weight to our values and views. reporter: in 1975, gerald forde him defense secretary. the youngest ever. ronald reagan sent into the middle east. >> i am submitting the name to be secretary of defense. reporter: george w. bush reappointed him. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his pentagon office on september 11 when an airliner hit the building. he helped move the injured and then...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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24
Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine. and so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.d so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today th
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.d so tanya is going to come up and speak to you about what our demands are for mega-black budget watchdog group. thank you. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.ou. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called negroes then, from enslaved to free. so i've got one question for y'all -- anybody who is black in san francisco, answer my question. are we free? >> no. >> okay, there you go. so now you know why we had to establish what we've established. the mega-black budget watchdog group demands that the city and the county close the gaps of black san franciscans. and three reports and 55 years of studying black san franciscans found we are worse off today than we were back then. so here go our demands. number one -- we demand that $60 million to be a baseline for the human ri
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.ou. >> there's not enough noise in this audience. i need to hear y'all. i got some questions for y'all. you ready? so on the first of january in 1863, that was 158 years ago, the 16th president of the united states named abraham lincoln signed into effect an emancipation proclamation which changed the legal status under the federal law of more than 3.5 million enslaved african-americans, and let's be serious, we were called...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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bridger with henry frabe frayed died that year and so richard took on a new partner louis vasquez in 1842. they built the second fort bridger in 1843. they built this which is the third ford bridger on the oregon and california trail, and this is from a painting by william henry jackson a noted painter as well as photographer. this is washakie. washakie was a very good friend of jim bridger's washakie was of the shoshone people. he lived a very long long life. there is some rumors that bridgers third wife was a british third wife was a shoshone woman, and she was known as either little fawn or mary family tradition is that she was a daughter of washakie in my book? i don't say that. it's proven to the extent yet. this is a map. it's a little bit unusual to see. but are going to i want to tell you about how actually it came about. and if i don't find the quote, i'll just do it for memory. this map and this is written on the back of the map. it's at the american heritage center in laramie, wyoming. this map was drawn first by jim bridger with a stick drawing in the dirt or sand. then bridger drew the map again. with charcoal on the height of an animal he gave that map then
bridger with henry frabe frayed died that year and so richard took on a new partner louis vasquez in 1842. they built the second fort bridger in 1843. they built this which is the third ford bridger on the oregon and california trail, and this is from a painting by william henry jackson a noted painter as well as photographer. this is washakie. washakie was a very good friend of jim bridger's washakie was of the shoshone people. he lived a very long long life. there is some rumors that bridgers...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 22, 2021
06/21
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ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.or black san franciscans. number two, we demand $40 million to address black disparities in closing educational gaps, mass incarceration gaps, gaps in job training programs, and to reestablish the black workforce and to pay the fines and the fees that are associated with those disparities. number three, we demand culpability, meaning that we want them to be held accountable, all right, for all 54 city and county departments to be held accountable again, so that everybody can hear me, for the disparities that i have deliberately caused to black san franciscans due to a lack of dollars, care, which they have, right, we think -- well, we know they've got the dollars and we don't know about the care, we're still working on that, okay, to this day has failed to address in our community. number four. we demand that the controller's office conduct a 15-year audit of previous moneys given to the black community and compare these dollars to all other ethnicities who received funding in the same
ford. john henry. tina heinz. and there's monique francine.or black san franciscans. number two, we demand $40 million to address black disparities in closing educational gaps, mass incarceration gaps, gaps in job training programs, and to reestablish the black workforce and to pay the fines and the fees that are associated with those disparities. number three, we demand culpability, meaning that we want them to be held accountable, all right, for all 54 city and county departments to be held...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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henry kissinger admired his ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views in international negotiations. in 1975, gerald fordnald reagan sent him to the middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he would one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defense. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defense secretary. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his pentagon office on september 11, 2001 when an airliner hit the building. he helped move the injured and then planned a way to strike back. rumsfeld believed the iraq war would be over in months and the invasion would be vindicated. but the fierce insurrection that followed claimed thousands of lives. when no weapons of mass destruction were found, rumsfeld struggled to explain why. there are known knowns. there are things we know that we know. there are known unknowns. that is to say there are things that we now know we don't know. but there are also unknown unknowns. there are things we do not know we don't know. he was prepared to push boundaries, including with the t
henry kissinger admired his ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views in international negotiations. in 1975, gerald fordnald reagan sent him to the middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he would one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defense. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defense secretary. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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henry safford heard the noise too. he came downstairs and went outside and he saw the commotion too and he heard the shouts that lincoln had been shot safford. couldn't get to ford's theater. there's so many people outside in the street. so he retreated came back to his house and went up these stairs and sit at the top of the staircase and he was up there watching is the soldiers pounded on the door or the house next door, and they couldn't get in and he saw that there was lincoln in the middle of the street being cared by soldiers and they didn't know where to take the president. so stafford went inside got a candle and stood at the top of the staircase and shouted bring him in here bring him in here and dr. leo heard that and shouted to the officers and soldiers take the president to that house. so they crossed the street. and came up these stairs. and so as lincoln was being carried up the staircase. he was still alive unconscious. and the sight of abraham lincoln here at the top of the staircase was the last time the american people saw him alive. so dr. leo came in this door. and he told stafford take us to your best room. now the hallways narrow it was alrea
henry safford heard the noise too. he came downstairs and went outside and he saw the commotion too and he heard the shouts that lincoln had been shot safford. couldn't get to ford's theater. there's so many people outside in the street. so he retreated came back to his house and went up these stairs and sit at the top of the staircase and he was up there watching is the soldiers pounded on the door or the house next door, and they couldn't get in and he saw that there was lincoln in the middle...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
tv
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henry kissinger saw in him a cold ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views and international negotiations. in 1975 under gerald fordgest ever defence secretary. ronald reagan sent him to the middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he would one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defence. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defence secretary. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his pentagon office on september 11, 2001 when an airliner hit the building. he helped move the injured and then planned a way to strike back. rumsfeld believed the iraq war would be over quickly, but there was no plan for building a peace. a fierce insurrection followed that claimed thousands of lives. and the pretext for the invasion — saddam's weapons of mass destruction. but none were ever found. and rumsfeld struggled to explain why. there are no knowns. there are things we know that we know. there are no unknowns. that is to say, there are things that we now know we don't know. but there are also unknown unknowns. there are things we do
henry kissinger saw in him a cold ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views and international negotiations. in 1975 under gerald fordgest ever defence secretary. ronald reagan sent him to the middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he would one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defence. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defence secretary. within...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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eye 50
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henry kissinger saw in him a cold ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views in international negotiations. in 1975 under gerald fordhe middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he'd one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defence. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defence secretary. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his pentagon office on september 11, 2001 when an airliner hit the building. he helped move the injured and then planned a way to strike back. rumsfeld believed the iraq war would be over quickly, but there was no plan for building a peace. a fierce insurrection followed that claimed thousands of lives. and the pretext for the invasion — saddam's weapons of mass destruction. but none were ever found. and rumsfeld struggled to explain why. there are no knowns. there are things we know that we know. there are no unknowns. that is to say, there are things that we now know we don't know. but there are also unknown unknowns. there are things we do not know we don't know. in this so—called war on terror, he
henry kissinger saw in him a cold ruthlessness and gave him a job in cabinet. a strong defence posture gives weight to our values and our views in international negotiations. in 1975 under gerald fordhe middle east, where he met saddam hussein, the leader he'd one day help to overthrow. i'm submitting the name of donald rumsfeld to be secretary of defence. nearly 20 years later, george w bush reappointed him defence secretary. within months, america came under attack. rumsfeld was in his...
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Jun 12, 2021
06/21
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went out of business, the first one went really out of business, the second was taken away from henry ford and eventually adapted into the cadillac motorcar company. so with his third company, ford motor company, he started developing several different models not far from this museum. each one of them had a letter denomination and so he was doing a's and bees and chefs and anne's, and eventually he got to what was the model tee, but it was a long time coming before his business manager said, henry, you've got a good car here, let's market it. let's sell it, and he did. they made most of the model ts up in highland park just north of the museum here, and they were turning it thousands millions of cars, during that decade. there was a point in 1915 to 1920, when half the automobiles on the roads in united states were made by the ford motor company in highland park. so by the time henry ford was making model ts, a lot of other companies were starting up, and decided this was a great idea. some of them were companies that were not necessarily involved initially in automobile manufacturing. the
went out of business, the first one went really out of business, the second was taken away from henry ford and eventually adapted into the cadillac motorcar company. so with his third company, ford motor company, he started developing several different models not far from this museum. each one of them had a letter denomination and so he was doing a's and bees and chefs and anne's, and eventually he got to what was the model tee, but it was a long time coming before his business manager said,...