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Oct 2, 2022
10/22
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the q1 was founded in reflection of expectations and desire of humankind for wanting to see no more of the scourge of the world words. the present reality calls for the united nations to promote cooperation and reconciliation and unity among its member states at discharge and it riches mandates. -- righteous mandates. achieving overall over the most of the country while overcoming the difficulties and obstacles. i hope that the successes gained will make a positive contribution to the deliberation for overcoming challenges and finding transformative solutions by the international community. the unprecedented crisis caused by the virus presented a very critical problem and served as a location to test the capacity of the country. but the government made a correct analysis of the features of the virus in the circumstances. on this basis, and lost no time in putting forward an anti-epidemic policy in a speedy matter so as to take us to a teaching initiative in preventing infectious disease. this served as a fundamental guarantee for successful implementation of the policy. in terms of pub
the q1 was founded in reflection of expectations and desire of humankind for wanting to see no more of the scourge of the world words. the present reality calls for the united nations to promote cooperation and reconciliation and unity among its member states at discharge and it riches mandates. -- righteous mandates. achieving overall over the most of the country while overcoming the difficulties and obstacles. i hope that the successes gained will make a positive contribution to the...
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Oct 30, 2022
10/22
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BBCNEWS
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painfully, humankind has many a time surpassed the worst case scenario. actually start turning the tide. and i had no... ..imagination that it would be doing as much as it has. in his time studying svalbard, it's transformed dramatically. it's now warming six times quicker than the rest of the world. this area here was covered with ice when i first came here. it is a very obvious, very strong image of change. we're pretty much done with the ice here. kim explains that warm air is carried here by the gulf stream, one of the strongest ocean currents in the world. and where the ice melts, the ocean absorbs even more heat. it has implications for all of us. the glacier melting away behind me is pouring out into the ocean and contributes to sea level rise. and all the glaciers here on svalbard are melting faster than ever. sea level rise influences you in the uk. it influences the netherlands, bangladesh, many a place on the planet. many of us live along the shore. the north—south tension in europe, the north—south tension in the world, will be exacerbated by
painfully, humankind has many a time surpassed the worst case scenario. actually start turning the tide. and i had no... ..imagination that it would be doing as much as it has. in his time studying svalbard, it's transformed dramatically. it's now warming six times quicker than the rest of the world. this area here was covered with ice when i first came here. it is a very obvious, very strong image of change. we're pretty much done with the ice here. kim explains that warm air is carried here...
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Oct 13, 2022
10/22
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KGO
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thank you for coming, thank you for joining us on another inspiring and amazing day for humankind.ke a lot for granted.
thank you for coming, thank you for joining us on another inspiring and amazing day for humankind.ke a lot for granted.
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Oct 5, 2022
10/22
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CNNW
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board the international space station of developing the technology and research to benefit all of humankinder. >> unity has been one of the messages. anna kikina is the first cosmonaut. all of the tensions have been pushed to the side. it's been talking about unity and working together, which of course is the message nasa wants. when we talk about nicole. they're allow to bring their own private mementoes. she was asked what she's bringing. she said it's a gift that she got from her mother long ago, a dream catcher. of course, significant ties to the culture from which she comes, and also it represents the dreams that now are about to come true. pop,? >> how is that for a beautiful story, as she heads up on a history-making mission. that's for sure. martin, thank you so much. >>> thanks to all of you for joining us today. i'm poppy harlow. at this hour with erica hill starts right now. >>> hello, everyone. at this hour, survivors of hurricane ian is returning to their homes as president biden heads to florida to see the devastation firsthand. >>> and the lead for a kidnapped family of four,
board the international space station of developing the technology and research to benefit all of humankinder. >> unity has been one of the messages. anna kikina is the first cosmonaut. all of the tensions have been pushed to the side. it's been talking about unity and working together, which of course is the message nasa wants. when we talk about nicole. they're allow to bring their own private mementoes. she was asked what she's bringing. she said it's a gift that she got from her...
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Oct 28, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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so the cradle of humankind and we found these amazing things so maybe we need to see a something we haven't looked at yet. with a fresh outlook. >> i agree. that is true. there are many great discoveries had already been made. so the last ten years i have been astounded by the number of fossils. it's not like were getting more but we already knew about. that is happening to some degree. but my colleagues are finding things that any of us could not have predicted i cannot have predicted any of them. it has been a wonderful awakening in our field and it goes to humility there is a lot of us out there to discover and a lot of ideas will be wrong and that's okay as long as we follow the evidence then it's okay to have an idea based on the evidence that you have. look at this new fossil that shows that i was wrong. so well. >> i think we can leave it there. we are out of time. thank you so much jeremy and kate this is fantastic thank you for joining us read more about this incredible book is also a link to donate and thank you for
so the cradle of humankind and we found these amazing things so maybe we need to see a something we haven't looked at yet. with a fresh outlook. >> i agree. that is true. there are many great discoveries had already been made. so the last ten years i have been astounded by the number of fossils. it's not like were getting more but we already knew about. that is happening to some degree. but my colleagues are finding things that any of us could not have predicted i cannot have predicted...
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Oct 28, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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. >> also i wonder if there is a bit of a snowball effect like the cradle of humankind which was alreadyupposedly really well explored and found these amazing things so maybe we all need to start going back to places that we thought didn't have any more fossils for it. >> that assumption that many of the great discoveries had already been made. colleagues are finding things i don't think any of us could have predicted. i certainly wouldn't have predicted any of them so it's been this really wonderful awakening in our field and just the humility that there's a lot out there for us to discover, and a lot of ideas are going to end up being wrong and that's okay as long as we are following the evidence, it's okay to have an idea. >> i think we can leave it there. thank you for the fantastic, and thanks to you for joining us. please learn more about thisf incredible book and i posted the link in the chat, harvard.com/macbooks. there's also a link to donate. thank you so much for tuning in. stay safe and have a lovely night. thanks again to both of you.
. >> also i wonder if there is a bit of a snowball effect like the cradle of humankind which was alreadyupposedly really well explored and found these amazing things so maybe we all need to start going back to places that we thought didn't have any more fossils for it. >> that assumption that many of the great discoveries had already been made. colleagues are finding things i don't think any of us could have predicted. i certainly wouldn't have predicted any of them so it's been...
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Oct 30, 2022
10/22
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and lincoln, i think, to the benefit of humankind, decided that, in fact, if we could not bend the arcn could not be made real, then we're in a hobbsian state of nature. >> and lincoln was saying this in a global context which democracy was weakened. he talked famously about the last best hope, and people focus on the "best" part, but he's signaling look, if we go down, things look bad, and we have been living through a decade of democratic backsliding and decay almost everywhere in the world. stlz is no question that lincoln saw democracy and liberty and the american experiment as entwined. that if popular government failed here, then the divine right of kings would reassert itself. or the divine right of aristocracies. in this case, it was an aristocracy of race and property. and had that crisis not been resolved the way it was, then yes, he believed that the revolutions of 1776, 1789, of 1848, the of, for and by the people was a phrase he got from parker, and he also got it from the hungarian, who was a vital figure toward here, sort of like lafayette did late in life. >> you can fi
and lincoln, i think, to the benefit of humankind, decided that, in fact, if we could not bend the arcn could not be made real, then we're in a hobbsian state of nature. >> and lincoln was saying this in a global context which democracy was weakened. he talked famously about the last best hope, and people focus on the "best" part, but he's signaling look, if we go down, things look bad, and we have been living through a decade of democratic backsliding and decay almost...
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Oct 20, 2022
10/22
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take home to kind of understand about the challenges our, what the hopes, the opportunities are for humankind. another big question, how would you some up? >> i go back to some of the things julie said. it is easy to look at this and think of the failures and plenty of things that have not gone well but there has been an extraordinary amount of things that have gone well. the ones i often begin with is the scientific endeavor. what science has produced in 2.5 years is unbelievable stop the variety of vaccines, the variety of therapeutics, the variety of diagnostics, the knowledge about how this virus spreads. incredible amounts of scientific progress. i actually think -- there have been some challenges with our industry -- international institutions but i think, yes, covax has not been perfect but has done a lot of good stuff and think how quickly they came together, how hard what they tried to do was come to actually pull off come how many hundreds of millions not billions of doses they got out. >> most of the doses in low in middle income countries -- >> came from covax. that is extraordina
take home to kind of understand about the challenges our, what the hopes, the opportunities are for humankind. another big question, how would you some up? >> i go back to some of the things julie said. it is easy to look at this and think of the failures and plenty of things that have not gone well but there has been an extraordinary amount of things that have gone well. the ones i often begin with is the scientific endeavor. what science has produced in 2.5 years is unbelievable stop...
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Oct 25, 2022
10/22
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. >> jesse: recently bears have been dropping in on humankind, showing us who's boss.k, when a grizzly attacked them, leaving them blood-soaked. >> it took a big step toward me, knocked me on the ground, pushed me up against the trees, and started chewing on me. i thought i was going to do. i was panicked, when i saw him getting weekend. >> jesse: just this weekend, a 60-year-old washington woman was attacked by a black bear, who knocked her to the ground while walking her dog. she survived by punching it in the nose, and only left with minor injuries. wildlife expert tom wilson knows who to blame for this particular bear attack, the democrats. he says woke state officials put massive restrictions on bear hunting seasons for political reasons so the state's bear population is booming tulle what the policies are that are causing the bear population to boom. >> well, jesse, i take you back a couple years to washington state, which banned the practice of baiting bears and large cats. at the time of this initiative, wildlife biologists expressed great concern over the fact
. >> jesse: recently bears have been dropping in on humankind, showing us who's boss.k, when a grizzly attacked them, leaving them blood-soaked. >> it took a big step toward me, knocked me on the ground, pushed me up against the trees, and started chewing on me. i thought i was going to do. i was panicked, when i saw him getting weekend. >> jesse: just this weekend, a 60-year-old washington woman was attacked by a black bear, who knocked her to the ground while walking her...
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Oct 22, 2022
10/22
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monuments men and women who helped give to culture cultural heritage and help save the spirit of humankind. robert in his book turned into a movie really expert raised tens of millions, even hundreds of millions of people in so many places around world about this mission. and as i noted and i told robert ahead of time that he did not know that story about haiti. here was minister in haiti, charged with rebuilding country after 200,000 people had died and his country lay in ruins and he was inspired by robert ansel's book. robert. thank you much for those comments. richard. exceedingly kind and i'm deeply touched by your story about what took place with the in haiti. that's something else. i want thank general. of course, the teams at the smithsonian cultural rescue initiative and our army civil affairs and psychological psychological operations command, airborne and in particular, corey wagner and colonel scott to jesse for their work in creating this army monuments officer training program. and of course, making this event possible trustees and advisory board members of the foundation are
monuments men and women who helped give to culture cultural heritage and help save the spirit of humankind. robert in his book turned into a movie really expert raised tens of millions, even hundreds of millions of people in so many places around world about this mission. and as i noted and i told robert ahead of time that he did not know that story about haiti. here was minister in haiti, charged with rebuilding country after 200,000 people had died and his country lay in ruins and he was...
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Oct 27, 2022
10/22
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what it is a a little bit of a stowable effect, like all, lee berger went into like the cradle of humankind which is already supposedly really well explored and found these amazing things. and so maybe we all need to kind of like start going back to places that we thought didn't have any more fossils for us, or that we haven't looked at yet. and you know, kind of go in there with a fresh eye and fresh outlook. >> yeah, i agree. i think that's true. yeah, , that assumption that we had already, that many of the great discoveries had already been made. you know, the last ten years i have just been astounded by the number of fossils, not just the number. it's not like we are getting more of what we already knew about. that's happening to some degree, but we are also finding, my colleagues are finding things that i don't think any of us could have predicted. i certainly wouldn't have predicted them. so it's been this really wonderful awakening i think in our field, and it does go to humiliate that there is lot out for us still to discover your a lot of our ideas are going to end up being wrong,
what it is a a little bit of a stowable effect, like all, lee berger went into like the cradle of humankind which is already supposedly really well explored and found these amazing things. and so maybe we all need to kind of like start going back to places that we thought didn't have any more fossils for us, or that we haven't looked at yet. and you know, kind of go in there with a fresh eye and fresh outlook. >> yeah, i agree. i think that's true. yeah, , that assumption that we had...
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Oct 6, 2022
10/22
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KRON
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board the international space station of developing this technology and research to benefit all of humankindly what brings us together. a russian cosmonaut is on board the crew dragon for the first time. >> this is part of a ride share agreement between the russian space agency and nasa. the seat exchange ensures the 2 agencies always have an astronaut on board. the iss for at least the next couple of years. the trip will take about 29 hours. once they arrive, they'll be greeted by the astronauts of crew for who launched in april. >> crew for will hand over the mission to crew 5 reporting from kennedy space center. amanda holly, back to you. >> all right, amanda, president biden in fort myers today assessing damage from hurricane ian after a helicopter tour of the destruction. biden met with florida governor ron desantis and senators marco rubio and rick scott. the men all agreed to put politics aside for now as they collaborate with local and federal officials to help rebuild infrastructure and support that devastated community. the president also met with residents in fort myers and small
board the international space station of developing this technology and research to benefit all of humankindly what brings us together. a russian cosmonaut is on board the crew dragon for the first time. >> this is part of a ride share agreement between the russian space agency and nasa. the seat exchange ensures the 2 agencies always have an astronaut on board. the iss for at least the next couple of years. the trip will take about 29 hours. once they arrive, they'll be greeted by the...
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Oct 13, 2022
10/22
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KGO
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thank you for coming, thank you for joining us on another inspiring and amazing day for humankind.l like we take a lot for granted. remember a couple of weeks ago, nasa rammed a spaceship into an asteroid to to try to knock it off course? well, it worked! it worked even better than they expected. it's off course. if dinosaurs could have figured this out, they'd be alive today. [ laughter ] but they didn't. but it really is hard to believe. we live in a country where scientists, who are smart enough to target and hit an asteroid that is 11 million miles away live right next door to people who are so dim, they think vaccines turn you into a refrigerator magnet. [ laughter ] i guess it keeps us on our toes. the successful test means that in the future, we could probably alter the path of an asteroid to make it miss earth. or we just let the asteroid hit us. depending upon how things keep going from here. [ laughter ] did you get home in time to watch the dodgers game last night, guillermo? i know you were wrorried you might not make it. >> guillermo: yeah, fourth inning, jimmy. winnin
thank you for coming, thank you for joining us on another inspiring and amazing day for humankind.l like we take a lot for granted. remember a couple of weeks ago, nasa rammed a spaceship into an asteroid to to try to knock it off course? well, it worked! it worked even better than they expected. it's off course. if dinosaurs could have figured this out, they'd be alive today. [ laughter ] but they didn't. but it really is hard to believe. we live in a country where scientists, who are smart...
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charles: you know gold has dazzled humankind from 1500.d medium of exchange for interare national trade. on tuesday, september 20 this year "the wall street journal" reported that gold lost its status as a safe haven. interestingly no one told the world central banks. they were busy as heck buying gold. maybe reports of gold's death were a little premature. the article marked a pretty good spot for you to start buying when the article came out in "the wall street journal." golfed and silver have been on fire. we have global strategist peter schiff. you have heard about the death of gold a gazillion times. what is it about gold, going down, flat, not moving, feel it is okay note what it might have been in the past? >> first of all, chars, i didn't get that memo either. had i gotten that memo i would somewhere thrown it in the trash. what people don't realize about gold, gold is money, liquidity. it is everything else that loses value in relationship to gold. gold is a better form of money than anything governments have come up to replace it
charles: you know gold has dazzled humankind from 1500.d medium of exchange for interare national trade. on tuesday, september 20 this year "the wall street journal" reported that gold lost its status as a safe haven. interestingly no one told the world central banks. they were busy as heck buying gold. maybe reports of gold's death were a little premature. the article marked a pretty good spot for you to start buying when the article came out in "the wall street journal."...
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Oct 19, 2022
10/22
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nasa's plan to avoid the annihilation of humankind is basically a reverse "angry birds." [ laughter ]oid, named dimorphos, is part of a binary system with another larger asteroid named didymos, which means twin in greek. neither dimorphos nor didymos posed any threat to earth. but now they know not to get any ideas. [ laughter ] and they're telling their friends. and obviously the folks at nasa were pretty fired up. >> and we have impact! >> jimmy: i feel like half the reason you take a job at nasa is for the control room standing ovation moment. [ laughter ] these people fired at and hit an asteroid more than 7 million miles away and celebrated with a round of the lamest high fives you've ever seen in your life. [ laughter ] this mission cost $325 million, right around the cost of a 3 bed, 2 1/2 bath in williamsburg. [ rim shot ] >> jimmy: thank you. [ cheers and applause ] i wanted to get focused back on brooklyn. you know, the brooklyn public library has a great program going on called "books unbanned" that provides online access to banned books. [ cheers and applause ] anyone betw
nasa's plan to avoid the annihilation of humankind is basically a reverse "angry birds." [ laughter ]oid, named dimorphos, is part of a binary system with another larger asteroid named didymos, which means twin in greek. neither dimorphos nor didymos posed any threat to earth. but now they know not to get any ideas. [ laughter ] and they're telling their friends. and obviously the folks at nasa were pretty fired up. >> and we have impact! >> jimmy: i feel like half the...
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Oct 18, 2022
10/22
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FOXNEWSW
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will decide sometime in the next days that it's wortysha coming back to this because wemd owe it to humankind. suspended. they didn't terminate. when you say back channely outreach, are you texting? outrh >> i hav, e. >> i h are you? i have emailed, so we will . but he is not allowed to answer me. >> it's very complicated.: what servewhat sr is that one o? the pipe dream. china that is china''ss cooperation o over climate is matched only by that of the larger greenback.er greeniavision and more. it turns out that they are the authors of the destructionrg they warn about. as our next guest, michael shellenberger, points out, ns ai apocalyptic greens are in the grip of a bad religion. even carbon emissions globally.n we're going down until climate activists repressed natural gas and increased coal use. g me i joining me now is michael shellenberger, author of apocalypse nevers mil . michael, great to see you tonight. now, you say that behind this push, is this ever greater demand for ultimately socialmaty control movement, free sexpression of people all arou. the world? >> explain tha t. ly >>
will decide sometime in the next days that it's wortysha coming back to this because wemd owe it to humankind. suspended. they didn't terminate. when you say back channely outreach, are you texting? outrh >> i hav, e. >> i h are you? i have emailed, so we will . but he is not allowed to answer me. >> it's very complicated.: what servewhat sr is that one o? the pipe dream. china that is china''ss cooperation o over climate is matched only by that of the larger greenback.er...
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Oct 6, 2022
10/22
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it did not take humankind long to discover that armed men on foot versus armed men on horse, armed men on horse usually wins. horses became an extremely valuable military resource since domestication, right up through the second world war. it has not been that long since horses played a major role both in war and our society in general. indeed, this is recognized at the time of the civil war held a. horses were going to be a valuable war resource both and northern and southern press. there will be occasional comments about how the horse is going to serve its patriotic duty natural, either winning southern independence, or restoring and upholding the union. indeed, questions about horse care during the war will reach all the way to the white house. in fact, the letter i found back in 1996 in the national archives by alonso still is the one who really got me thinking more and more about this topic of horses in the civil war in particular. i think modern readers perhaps those who have no experience with livestock tend to think of rather like vehicles. they can be used when needed, sat asi
it did not take humankind long to discover that armed men on foot versus armed men on horse, armed men on horse usually wins. horses became an extremely valuable military resource since domestication, right up through the second world war. it has not been that long since horses played a major role both in war and our society in general. indeed, this is recognized at the time of the civil war held a. horses were going to be a valuable war resource both and northern and southern press. there will...
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Oct 7, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN3
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to use in military service whether that be for the ancient egyptians or or whoever it didn't take humankind long to discover that armed men on foot versus armed men on horse armed man on horse usually wins. and so horses became an extremely valuable military resource as i said since domestication right up through the second world war. and it's not been that long since horses played a major role. both in war and in our society in general and indeed this was recognized at the time of the civil war that horses were going to be a very valuable war resource and both in northern and southern press. there will be occasional comments about how the horse is going to serve its patriotic duty in either winning southern independence or restoring and upholding. the union and indeed. pardon indeed questions about horse care during the war will reach all the way to the white house. in fact the letter that i found back in 1996 and national archives by alonzo still is the one who really got me thinking more and more about this topic about horses. now in the civil war in particular, i think modern readers pe
to use in military service whether that be for the ancient egyptians or or whoever it didn't take humankind long to discover that armed men on foot versus armed men on horse armed man on horse usually wins. and so horses became an extremely valuable military resource as i said since domestication right up through the second world war. and it's not been that long since horses played a major role. both in war and in our society in general and indeed this was recognized at the time of the civil...
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Oct 4, 2022
10/22
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CNBC
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has been those who have success seem to think their expertise then extends to subjects throughout humankind. i would without a doubt defer to elon musk on so many things, space, electric cars, solar. but stkes anything about -- >> his coin for wanting ukraine to capitulate not popular anywhere other than the kremlin. >> when he owns twitter, what are we going to do is he going -- >> he's going to have his own -- >> mandatory feed. you have to follow me. >>> twitter musk >> would it bring trump back >> still to come, jeff shell is here, discussing streaming, theme parks and a lot more got calls on media names like paramount, berkshire >>> another busy day for autos let's get ford sales >> we have ford down 8.9%, a little bit better than the expectation from edmunds.com, a decline of 12.8% really what you are seeing is the story that we have seen from a number of other automakers they have been able to gradually increase their production in the third quarter. and that's why the sales are coming in just a little bit better than expected but make no mistake, ford, along with other automakers, t
has been those who have success seem to think their expertise then extends to subjects throughout humankind. i would without a doubt defer to elon musk on so many things, space, electric cars, solar. but stkes anything about -- >> his coin for wanting ukraine to capitulate not popular anywhere other than the kremlin. >> when he owns twitter, what are we going to do is he going -- >> he's going to have his own -- >> mandatory feed. you have to follow me. >>>...
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Oct 29, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN
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talent and has the resources and the ability to actually change the way we face these threats that humankindced. we now actually have tools. who makes the tools? the pharmaceutical industry. host: let's look at twitter. budda says my brother just passed. he spent two days in the emergency room. they had no rooms in this brand-new hospital. they were full of covid patients. dr. adalja, your reaction to that? are we still having the issue of overflowing hospitals due to covid? guest: not in my experience. i'm talking to you from a hospital where we are not having that type of issue. i don't know specifically what is going on in bloomington. we have a general problem with hospital capacity that goes beyond covid-19. we have this phenomena where people may wait in the department for a day or two days to go upstairs because there are no beds. it is not necessarily due to covid patients. hospitals are busy places and they don't run with much excess capacity. many health-care workers have quit and left the field. there are staff shortages. even if hospitals have been deep beds, they don't have nurs
talent and has the resources and the ability to actually change the way we face these threats that humankindced. we now actually have tools. who makes the tools? the pharmaceutical industry. host: let's look at twitter. budda says my brother just passed. he spent two days in the emergency room. they had no rooms in this brand-new hospital. they were full of covid patients. dr. adalja, your reaction to that? are we still having the issue of overflowing hospitals due to covid? guest: not in my...
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Oct 29, 2022
10/22
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talent and has the resources and the ability to actually change the way we face these threats that humankindfaced. we now actually have tools. who makes the tools? the pharmaceutical industry. host: let's look at twitter. budda says my brother just passed. he spent two days in the emergency room. they had no rooms in this brand-new hospital. they were full of covid patients. dr. adalja, your reaction to that? are we still having the issue of overflowing hospitals due to covid? guest: not in my experience. i'm talking to you from a hospital where we are not having that type of issue. i don't know specifically what is going on in bloomington. we have a general problem with hospital capacity that goes beyond covid-19. we have this phenomena where people may wait in the department for a day or two days to go upstairs because there are no beds. it is not necessarily due to covid patients. hospitals are busy places and they don't run with much excess capacity. many health-care workers have quit and left the field. there are staff shortages. even if hospitals have been deep beds, they don't have nu
talent and has the resources and the ability to actually change the way we face these threats that humankindfaced. we now actually have tools. who makes the tools? the pharmaceutical industry. host: let's look at twitter. budda says my brother just passed. he spent two days in the emergency room. they had no rooms in this brand-new hospital. they were full of covid patients. dr. adalja, your reaction to that? are we still having the issue of overflowing hospitals due to covid? guest: not in my...
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Oct 19, 2022
10/22
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MSNBCW
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ins history of humankind, and so i guess as a historian, you -- you talk about sorting through, sorting political. i always talk about it. i said, how do we sort through this when we had tom ricks on. how do we sort through this, deplorable even in his own day yet created a political, philosophical document that freed more people than anybody else in the history of the world, and the professor said, well what more do we want from our leaders? i thought a fascinating view. >> whatever he says we agree with, because -- >> exactly. here, here. >> she's both really smart and nice and kind of irritates me and eddie, because we're neither. so that's difficult. no. that's absolutely right. these are human beings and we're human beings and living in this hour through the greatest test of citizenship since the 1850s. we have to decide. people who look like me have to decide, are we, in fact, going to be adherents of the declaration. people of the declaration of independence, or are we going to seek our own power above all? are we willing to try to bring the fullness of that promise to everybody?
ins history of humankind, and so i guess as a historian, you -- you talk about sorting through, sorting political. i always talk about it. i said, how do we sort through this when we had tom ricks on. how do we sort through this, deplorable even in his own day yet created a political, philosophical document that freed more people than anybody else in the history of the world, and the professor said, well what more do we want from our leaders? i thought a fascinating view. >> whatever he...