88
88
Jul 9, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
that's what i found out kind of the layers of the lies. that's actually in the book my editor and i decided that the structure of the book is the three phases that every undocumented person goes through. so lying, passing, in hiding, right? eli, right? -- we lie. even if we don't know what the light is. being brighter illegally is some part of a lie. it was on how to pass, and that means for me the first thing was get rid of my thick accent. i had a thick filipino accent so i i thought i need to talk like pbs and c-span, right? like talk white and talk black. so like hip-hop, pbs was my thing, so that was passing for me. and then you hide, right? for me this book, like in the trump era, it's a very dangerous time to be a public, to be publicly acknowledging your undocumented status. but i want to be as public about as i can. >> host: you came out as undocumented in 2011? >> guest: when obama was president. that era and this era, in many ways president trump is a culmination of everything we've done wrong with immigration since the clinton y
that's what i found out kind of the layers of the lies. that's actually in the book my editor and i decided that the structure of the book is the three phases that every undocumented person goes through. so lying, passing, in hiding, right? eli, right? -- we lie. even if we don't know what the light is. being brighter illegally is some part of a lie. it was on how to pass, and that means for me the first thing was get rid of my thick accent. i had a thick filipino accent so i i thought i need...
46
46
Jul 8, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
i found it on a sale. and i bought it in an auction. and my wife picked it up to keep it together, and it's the account of what's happened here all through this area. and it's fascinating. if you'd like to take a look at it later. it's not for sale, but it has a lot of the details on it. and i read this. but in the end, they had a statement that i think is worth reading right now. and it appears in the after word of what this book was that was written in 1794, which you're free to check. and it was written by the author of this 416-page history of vermont that was hand printed and published in 1794. and it's no less relevant today. and it talks -- ye people of the united states of america, behold here the precarious foundation upon which you hold your liberties. they rest not upon things written upon paper nor upon the virtues of vices or the designs of other men, but they depend upon yourselves, upon your maintaining your property, your knowledge and your virtue. and it goes on, you're now in full possession over your natural and civil
i found it on a sale. and i bought it in an auction. and my wife picked it up to keep it together, and it's the account of what's happened here all through this area. and it's fascinating. if you'd like to take a look at it later. it's not for sale, but it has a lot of the details on it. and i read this. but in the end, they had a statement that i think is worth reading right now. and it appears in the after word of what this book was that was written in 1794, which you're free to check. and it...
74
74
Jul 2, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
there is no official proof i have found to confirm that. but that is what my father believed and i wanted to show -- share that with you today. after lockheed he is on the lecture circuit. some might remember the soupy sales show. johnny carson show. late-night talk shows of the era. then in he gets a job working 1972 for kgio radio station. in the san fernando valley, flying a cessna. reporting news, weather and traffic for the rush-hour commutes. he gets a job with nbc television flying their helicopters reporting on news, weather and traffic for the evening news. a year and a half into those assignments, august first, 1977, helicopter runs out of gas and it crashes. he and the cameramen were killed in the accident. passages from the soviet prison and what my father had gone through. before i opened this up for questions i want to mention one thing about the cold war museum that i found it in 1996 to honor cold war veterans, preserve cold war history and educate kids about this time period. i moved to virginia in 1992 to continue my resear
there is no official proof i have found to confirm that. but that is what my father believed and i wanted to show -- share that with you today. after lockheed he is on the lecture circuit. some might remember the soupy sales show. johnny carson show. late-night talk shows of the era. then in he gets a job working 1972 for kgio radio station. in the san fernando valley, flying a cessna. reporting news, weather and traffic for the rush-hour commutes. he gets a job with nbc television flying their...
82
82
Jul 9, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
and i found that curious. >> so that invites the next question of where i was going to start but a change my mind. [laughter] because i found the part that you chose to read is very interesting so you will talk about that but i'm saying that based on the conversation that we have already had. so writing the book is a big project we know you wrote the article for national geographic and this turned into a larger book project prompting you to write the book? >> i did do a brief online story with my vacation on the outer banks but then it did really well and the editor said this is popular would you want to do a print story? i said sure. i hung out with the archaeologist and then spend some time at hatteras and as interesting as it was it was the year the archaeologists were overreaching and making claims we have strong hard evidence but then frankly i wasn't convinced of the data and those colleagues weren't convinced either. so i frankly i was doing an article for a major magazine, already decided i had enough material to do a book and well into it and i thought i don't have a story becaus
and i found that curious. >> so that invites the next question of where i was going to start but a change my mind. [laughter] because i found the part that you chose to read is very interesting so you will talk about that but i'm saying that based on the conversation that we have already had. so writing the book is a big project we know you wrote the article for national geographic and this turned into a larger book project prompting you to write the book? >> i did do a brief online...
591
591
Jul 18, 2018
07/18
by
KGO
quote
eye 591
favorite 0
quote 1
67
67
Jul 5, 2018
07/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
that the are there i found that it was i will never let it out till i was out not heard about from a little right after what friday. was. that i get up every day after i get off of a family that. is when i found an. introduction to the men and. sadly allegations of sexual abuse and not on common. at this newspaper everyone knows the slums and what living there is like. actually you know but you know it's just other development in going to how could we not only on the globe story other but just get this to be we were not wanting some deeper going to get on with look at him. until the good. news and then i mean it. wasn't that well how many good. but reversing the fortunes of street children's lives isn't easy. you know it takes time. the sun isn't up yet and he's already at work but not for the paper yeah. you know. this isn't the life he saw for himself. family a migrant they arrive from rule india in search of work after floods destroyed their livelihood that city life was tough. joe miller's but tar was way above to. hold on i don't. want to do someone better than what we just have
that the are there i found that it was i will never let it out till i was out not heard about from a little right after what friday. was. that i get up every day after i get off of a family that. is when i found an. introduction to the men and. sadly allegations of sexual abuse and not on common. at this newspaper everyone knows the slums and what living there is like. actually you know but you know it's just other development in going to how could we not only on the globe story other but just...
34
34
Jul 7, 2018
07/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 34
favorite 0
quote 0
i thought i would i make em boys and i fought them and i found. that jody on us all i'm allowed that i had made. to mrs dallas on. the ball you check as well as for you know the ball i want to see what it's. called no more than i want to swell he sang in by the thought of all i want to swell e he. now saw. i thought was what he not a sort of was. that i don't need to. win the pot or do it almost let him. part of the additional years q muslim they want you they don't want them or your mission. yet another. part a lot of snow do soonly has. bought a good one hundred year da da da da . if. you give any one of them. no less than a mother but it was. even. though there was a bend in the battle. the. news the gun. being mean the amount was certainly sound a long time. to . think. it. should. make sure if you bottled water through just a little bit but also usually a bottle of good will because all of them are going to. have to how do you. think. it was funny. to. see. but it's up to the to. start. to come up with a lot of. stuff. for that are we doing th
i thought i would i make em boys and i fought them and i found. that jody on us all i'm allowed that i had made. to mrs dallas on. the ball you check as well as for you know the ball i want to see what it's. called no more than i want to swell he sang in by the thought of all i want to swell e he. now saw. i thought was what he not a sort of was. that i don't need to. win the pot or do it almost let him. part of the additional years q muslim they want you they don't want them or your mission....
38
38
Jul 29, 2018
07/18
by
MSNBCW
quote
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 1
after my daughter's first birthday, i found out she has food allergies. i walked through store shelves feeling frustrated. she is not alone. two kids in every classroom in america has a life-threatening food allergy. that is up 50%. so, i took a leap of faith, left my career in coca-cola and launched partake foods. they are free offal allergins. we started with cookies, but we want to go to multiple things. it is critical to a small company. thank you. >> awesome. awesome.
after my daughter's first birthday, i found out she has food allergies. i walked through store shelves feeling frustrated. she is not alone. two kids in every classroom in america has a life-threatening food allergy. that is up 50%. so, i took a leap of faith, left my career in coca-cola and launched partake foods. they are free offal allergins. we started with cookies, but we want to go to multiple things. it is critical to a small company. thank you. >> awesome. awesome.
52
52
Jul 9, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
i was thinking i want to say my book is better than this book that i found similarities between the book and that brings the problem why do we fight and hate each other if we have the same message if i have the same meaning if you just translate it so i was thinking if they have such an amazing book why do we fight each other so i wanted to ask why do we hate each other and that's when i started thinking about interfaith. my disability played a big role in my interfaith work. when i was a kid i was jealous of other kids because they could play football or ride a bicycle but i was told i shouldn't be jealous i have a talent an talet was to learn english but more and more i was thinking i need to find a purpose and then i found similarities and i felt in myself maybe that is the purpose of the day because of that i had the chance to read so i started doing this work and posting about similarities. i started thinking i need to do something and that's when i decided i could do some work with them. they are very few and they are afraid of to cover their lives. the extreme groups needed to hid
i was thinking i want to say my book is better than this book that i found similarities between the book and that brings the problem why do we fight and hate each other if we have the same message if i have the same meaning if you just translate it so i was thinking if they have such an amazing book why do we fight each other so i wanted to ask why do we hate each other and that's when i started thinking about interfaith. my disability played a big role in my interfaith work. when i was a kid i...
264
264
Jul 23, 2018
07/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 264
favorite 0
quote 0
and i found that interesting because you had a real family. e lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed? let's say it in a really low voice. carl? lowest price, guaranteed. just stick with badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com (burke) so we know how to seen cover almost anything. even a "cactus calamity". (man 1) i read that the saguaro can live to be two hundred years old. (woman) how old do you think that one is? (man 1) my guess would be, about... (man 2) i'd say about two hundred. (man 1) yeah... (burke) gives houseplant a whole new meaning. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ okay, these are the feet of my daughter's son. his name is ax. - harvey: ax? - he's ax. yeah. he's the cutest little thing on the planet. mia had him may 10th, 2017, at 5:45. hence the lollipop and why i cry a lot. i remember you once said, and it struck me so, that "the front row is my family," when you were at concerts. and i found that interesting be
and i found that interesting because you had a real family. e lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed? let's say it in a really low voice. carl? lowest price, guaranteed. just stick with badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com (burke) so we know how to seen cover almost anything. even a "cactus calamity". (man 1) i read that the saguaro can live to be two hundred years old. (woman) how old do you think that one is? (man 1) my guess would be, about... (man 2) i'd say about...
24
24
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
it is hard to understand i agree somebody told me a story during the research which i found helpful i don't know if if you will. talking about the kinds of guy that young british muslim women were looking for. course in my day it was a sort of biker type you know type that your mother wouldn't like really but what i was told. from a pretty reliable source was that what a lot of young british muslim women are looking for now is the devout guy the guy who prays five times a day and that it seemed to be an almost disneyesque quality to some of the attitudes that we were reading expressed online from women who are contemplating going out there is this phrase which kept cropping up of wanting to be a lioness amongst lions. remend to size view of the muslim warrior extremely devout praying five times a day going into battle risking his own life for his faith. the idea of wanting to be associated with a figure like that in a quite wide died way that a lot of modern british women you know for hard for equality would find very hard to understand i'm not saying that's the case in every case and
it is hard to understand i agree somebody told me a story during the research which i found helpful i don't know if if you will. talking about the kinds of guy that young british muslim women were looking for. course in my day it was a sort of biker type you know type that your mother wouldn't like really but what i was told. from a pretty reliable source was that what a lot of young british muslim women are looking for now is the devout guy the guy who prays five times a day and that it seemed...
43
43
Jul 9, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
>> guest: i found e-mails from people and i was losing hope every time. i was in a very hard situation and every time i knew people were trying to help me out and one time we were waiting for the fishing boats and i felt should i go back to the hotel or just stay in the park but i had to have faith in these people. they helped me in a lot of different ways and helped religion. i wanted to say something that without them and without having faith in humanity, there is no hope. he told me my grandmother and my grandfather were trapped in the holocaust and they wanted anyone to say yes. i remember your story like should i say no or should i say yes and that is an amazing thing in this human story. >> host: they were christians and jews. and the people who rescued you come in several of them did it because of their very deep jewish faith. >> guest: others were christians and muslims who would help me out along the way. i feel like that is an amazing thing. that is when you understand more and more who cares about human beings and that is the end single way we
>> guest: i found e-mails from people and i was losing hope every time. i was in a very hard situation and every time i knew people were trying to help me out and one time we were waiting for the fishing boats and i felt should i go back to the hotel or just stay in the park but i had to have faith in these people. they helped me in a lot of different ways and helped religion. i wanted to say something that without them and without having faith in humanity, there is no hope. he told me my...
23
23
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
very historic event for russia and such an amazing for the whole world i think the main difference i found has really been an atmosphere i mean as much as we jawed you were twenty sixteen. that atmosphere of real camaraderie internationalism fans coming over from all over the world and even supporting you know totally different teams work a file sharing russia russia russia found supporting brazil that just wasn't there in terms of you know just russian transporting the construction yeah absolutely. that vibe has really been here at this world cup and you need someone it's been such an amazing covering it always. has been sort of predictable as well as lots of attention across the big media social media platforms as well this is one english blogger spence wrote he's been garnering many followers with his coverage of the tournament and his adventures in russia. i. was. a stone's throw and clearly that clash between russia and spain we caught up with him shortly after the game to get his take on the tournament. i've done everything often flying up in trains of stayed in hotels i've stayed in
very historic event for russia and such an amazing for the whole world i think the main difference i found has really been an atmosphere i mean as much as we jawed you were twenty sixteen. that atmosphere of real camaraderie internationalism fans coming over from all over the world and even supporting you know totally different teams work a file sharing russia russia russia found supporting brazil that just wasn't there in terms of you know just russian transporting the construction yeah...
92
92
Jul 23, 2018
07/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i found it to be shocking. i found it to be one of the most disgraceful, remarkable moments of kowtowing to a foreign leader that anyone has ever witnessed. >> we should not that the doj's inspector general already agreed to investigate how the warrants object carter page were approved to make sure proper procedures had been followed. >> any us sign this administration is taking a harder line against russia in the wake of this? >> et yes, but only slightly. secretary of state mike pompeo in a call with russia's foreign minister did call out russia for breaking its cease-fire agreement in syria launching airstrikes that killed civilians in the southwest of the country. >> thank you. >>> a tornado touched down saturday evening in alabama. it damaged mobile homes and knocked down trees and power lines. no serious injuries were report ed. severe storms are expected tonight across the southeast and up the coast in several midatlantic and northeast states. >>> the a sketch is released of a man accused of killing a ca
. >> i found it to be shocking. i found it to be one of the most disgraceful, remarkable moments of kowtowing to a foreign leader that anyone has ever witnessed. >> we should not that the doj's inspector general already agreed to investigate how the warrants object carter page were approved to make sure proper procedures had been followed. >> any us sign this administration is taking a harder line against russia in the wake of this? >> et yes, but only slightly....
109
109
Jul 8, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
i was able to include what i found in the boston university collection in the book. and then i also interviewed a number of harvey's relatives, his extended family. i was able to find out a good deal about his immigrant grandfather, and his father and his mother. and so there's a lot of material in the book about how harvey's jewish background influenced him and his politics and the person that he became. and, of course, randy shilts in that wonderful book couldn't know what would happen with harvey in subsequent years. he has been more honored that any gay person in modern history. i first found out about the "time" magazine 1999 article of the 100 most important individuals of the 20th century. not 20th century america, all of, everyone, the whole world and 20th century. harvey was included in the section called heroes and icons, together with anne frank, shake rivera, the kennedys, and mother teresa. [applause] >> the only out gay person to be included in the list of 100 most influential individuals of the 20th century. as you all know there's a wonderful documenta
i was able to include what i found in the boston university collection in the book. and then i also interviewed a number of harvey's relatives, his extended family. i was able to find out a good deal about his immigrant grandfather, and his father and his mother. and so there's a lot of material in the book about how harvey's jewish background influenced him and his politics and the person that he became. and, of course, randy shilts in that wonderful book couldn't know what would happen with...
25
25
Jul 6, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
another thing i found intriguing is the role of class. on one hand of people, to avoid the bad class, discrimination, we should really focus on helping all people. all disadvantaged people, disregarding the racial background. then, the push back of this idea is that minorities especially, african americans, suffer extra injustice. so if you go to class-based, you for not be able to correct that extra important in balance. often get caught up in different combinations. race and class and so on. finally, one idea i found particularly intriguing is a phrase which is controversial but i find it actually surprisingly helpful as a conversation trigger, and that is check your privilege. now, some people take that to mean that white people should shut up because they have been privileged so long it is not time for them to speak, and just said in a book by the author so you want to talk about race, she explained that is not at all what the phrase means. when whitemeans people feel they did better because they worked harder, save more, and such. th
another thing i found intriguing is the role of class. on one hand of people, to avoid the bad class, discrimination, we should really focus on helping all people. all disadvantaged people, disregarding the racial background. then, the push back of this idea is that minorities especially, african americans, suffer extra injustice. so if you go to class-based, you for not be able to correct that extra important in balance. often get caught up in different combinations. race and class and so on....
80
80
Jul 16, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
i read about how someone took up your case and found her. do you remember her name? ory: i always remembered her name. her name is sharon waite. she is still around. but she is no longer in the teaching profession. it was a professor frantzich, not far from here at the u.s. naval academy in annapolis, who did track her down. she telephoned me in 1996. she did not remember me, but we had an amicable chat. more recently, a professor elkins at the university of texas, at austin, tracked her down again within the past year or so and conferred with her about the proposition of elevating my overall course grade from a c to an a. not only did i get a c on the paper, i got a c overall in the course. [laughter] brian: back again, so for people who did not follow every part of this thing, when you had nine states, how many did you need to pass this? gregory: with 50 states currently in the union, you have to have a minimum of 38 states. the following year, 1984, i shifted gears a little bit. i decided i was going to target certain states that i thought would be fertile soil for
i read about how someone took up your case and found her. do you remember her name? ory: i always remembered her name. her name is sharon waite. she is still around. but she is no longer in the teaching profession. it was a professor frantzich, not far from here at the u.s. naval academy in annapolis, who did track her down. she telephoned me in 1996. she did not remember me, but we had an amicable chat. more recently, a professor elkins at the university of texas, at austin, tracked her down...
85
85
Jul 23, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
i found that interesting. i was very scared about what i was facing and felt it was very difficult because i was already starting to change before my arrest. the u.s. government came on a private plane to fly me home where i found out that i was facing life imprisonment but i also found out that the united states over time, the u.s. government was not waging a war against islam that i once promoted. they were primarily interested in stopping terrorist attacks. when they returned me to alexandria, virginia, across the bridge, i was held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day, but there was a guard that felt solitary confinement was rather oppressive, and she would take me four hours a day for her ten-hour shifts to the law library which also has the jailhouse library. that's where i interacted with philosophers, read encyclopedias and read great books. that played my significant role in my going back to the cell for the day she wasn't at work and re-read the quran through a enlightening perspective. i took a
i found that interesting. i was very scared about what i was facing and felt it was very difficult because i was already starting to change before my arrest. the u.s. government came on a private plane to fly me home where i found out that i was facing life imprisonment but i also found out that the united states over time, the u.s. government was not waging a war against islam that i once promoted. they were primarily interested in stopping terrorist attacks. when they returned me to...
92
92
Jul 9, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
i found excuses to write about the american plan in pretty much every class i took.some very generous professors were very understanding including the professor of the history of pollution. he compared the rhetoric of anti- -- activists with antipollution activists. i was really obsessed with it. i wanted to learn more so i decided to take two and a half years off after college and moved back home to my childhood bedroom with no salary and no job and write about it the whole time. thanks again to my incredibly understanding parents. so what i discovered after all these years of research for something called the american plan. it was something i'd never heard of and very few people i have spoken with had ever heard of it either. a government program under which government officials locked up hundreds of thousands of women in what some women woman did call concentration camps for months at a time. the program lasted from 1910 into the 1950s and in some places it lasted until the 60s and 70s. the way that it worked was government agents would walk around and any woman w
i found excuses to write about the american plan in pretty much every class i took.some very generous professors were very understanding including the professor of the history of pollution. he compared the rhetoric of anti- -- activists with antipollution activists. i was really obsessed with it. i wanted to learn more so i decided to take two and a half years off after college and moved back home to my childhood bedroom with no salary and no job and write about it the whole time. thanks again...
41
41
Jul 2, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
what i found poignant about this whole story -- this is after i spoke to him, obviously, but he died in 2006 and among his pallbearers were smith and carlos which i found to be an interesting coda to the whole protest incident. in terms of ali, looking at how he was received in the american media, it was sort of shocking, and for some in the media, embarrassing. in 1964, he wins the heavyweight championship. he's already sort of another species of athlete that no one had ever encountered. he's outspoken, he's just so colorful in a way, and he's a black athlete not afraid to speak out, which at the time was rather rare. immediately after winning the championship in '64, he comes out that he's going to convert to islam and he's adopting a new name, muhammad ali. well, you might have thought he was saying something treasonous or something because for the next four or five years major american newspapers refused to refer to him as ali. he said i'm not going to be what you want me to be. he wanted to be muhammad ali, and the americans in sporting media, which -- you know, you talk about t
what i found poignant about this whole story -- this is after i spoke to him, obviously, but he died in 2006 and among his pallbearers were smith and carlos which i found to be an interesting coda to the whole protest incident. in terms of ali, looking at how he was received in the american media, it was sort of shocking, and for some in the media, embarrassing. in 1964, he wins the heavyweight championship. he's already sort of another species of athlete that no one had ever encountered. he's...
147
147
Jul 24, 2018
07/18
by
WRC
tv
eye 147
favorite 0
quote 0
then i found aleve pm.ombine a safe sleep aid, plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. for travel throughout november and december. so you can fill the rest of your year with all the fun. book now at southwest.com low fares. no hidden fees. that's transfarency. no hidden fees. [stomach gurgles] ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea... girl, pepto ultra coating will treat your stomach right. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea.♪ try new pepto with ultra coating. alicewhich is breast canceratic that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections
then i found aleve pm.ombine a safe sleep aid, plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. for travel throughout november and december. so you can fill the rest of your year with all the fun. book now at southwest.com low fares. no hidden fees. that's transfarency. no hidden fees. [stomach gurgles] ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea... girl, pepto ultra coating will treat your stomach right. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach,...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
30
30
Jul 31, 2018
07/18
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
when i became a cop, i found i turned off parts of my brain.ad to learn to conform, which was not anything i'd really been taught but felt very safe to me. i think i was drawn to police work because after coming from such chaos, it seemed like a very organized, but stable environment. and even though things happening, it felt like putting order on chaos and that felt very safe to me. my girlfriend and i were sitting in ve 150d uvio's bar, and i looked out the window and i saw a police car, and there was a woman who looked like me driving the car. for a moment, i thought i was me. and i turned to my friend and i said, i think i'm supposed to do this. i saw myself driving in this car. as a child, we never thought of police work as a possibility for women because there weren't any until the mid70's, so i had only even begun to notice there were women doing this job. when i saw here, it seemed like this is what i was meant to do. one of my bosses as ben johnson's had been a cop, and he -- i said, i have this weird idea that i should do this. he sai
when i became a cop, i found i turned off parts of my brain.ad to learn to conform, which was not anything i'd really been taught but felt very safe to me. i think i was drawn to police work because after coming from such chaos, it seemed like a very organized, but stable environment. and even though things happening, it felt like putting order on chaos and that felt very safe to me. my girlfriend and i were sitting in ve 150d uvio's bar, and i looked out the window and i saw a police car, and...
64
64
Jul 15, 2018
07/18
by
FBC
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
when i found you in my dna, i learned where my strength comes from.e is courtney mckinney, and this is my ancestrydna story. now with 2 times more geographic detail than other dna tests. order your kit at ancestrydna.com. boy: this is the story of a boy who didn't talk for a long time. the boy liked things to always be the same. any changes would scare and upset him. the unknown was an unfriendly place. the boy was very sensitive to lights and sounds. so he built secret hiding places where they couldn't get in. the boy didn't like looking people in the eye. he wasn't trying to be mean, it just made him feel uncomfortable. sometimes he would flap his arms again and again. second boy: one day, i found out i had something called autism. my family got me help. slowly i found my voice and learned all the ways i could live with it better. announcer: early intervention can make a lifetime of difference. learn the signs at autismspeaks.org. so, howell...going? we had a vacation early in our marriage that kinda put us in a hole. go someplace exotic? yeah, berm
when i found you in my dna, i learned where my strength comes from.e is courtney mckinney, and this is my ancestrydna story. now with 2 times more geographic detail than other dna tests. order your kit at ancestrydna.com. boy: this is the story of a boy who didn't talk for a long time. the boy liked things to always be the same. any changes would scare and upset him. the unknown was an unfriendly place. the boy was very sensitive to lights and sounds. so he built secret hiding places where they...
47
47
Jul 2, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
i know that's kind of a loaded question, so feel free to skirt around it. >> i always found it incredibly naive to think that the real world would stop at the walls of the sports arena. i mean, you know, these are people living with the same problems and in the same conditions as the fans and everyone else, and to think that they ought to just shut up and dribble strikes me as a ridiculous notion then and now. i mean, that was what mohammad ali was told, and i keep referring back to ali, because i think even in '68, he was the most transcendent character out there in the sports world. you know, he still -- he changed the world forever, really. he certainly changed the sports scene, changed the way the relationship between the media and athletes took place. you know, just changed how athletes could be themselves. i think before there was always this concept that athletes had to fit into this role, this role that was established for them by others. and i think ali said, no, i can be who i want to be and you can't -- you know, you can't tell me i can't. so for me that's the most lasting aspe
i know that's kind of a loaded question, so feel free to skirt around it. >> i always found it incredibly naive to think that the real world would stop at the walls of the sports arena. i mean, you know, these are people living with the same problems and in the same conditions as the fans and everyone else, and to think that they ought to just shut up and dribble strikes me as a ridiculous notion then and now. i mean, that was what mohammad ali was told, and i keep referring back to ali,...
44
44
Jul 15, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
what i found, , i found a similr piece between the books and that brings about is that why do we fight each other? why do we hate each other if we had the same message? a lot of phrases in the bible have the same meaning of quran. i was thinking like if christians and jews have such an amazing book as is on, , why doe fight each other? i wanted to ask christians and jews why do we hate each other? that's when you start thinking about interfaith. i have a disability, and my disability played a big role in my interfaith work. when i was a kid i was feeling jealous of the kids. they can play football or ride bicycle, but have -- i should be jealous, and a sieve that i should have tell in my count was to learn english. but more and more, i was always thinking i need to find the purpose. why god gave me such disability. and i found interfaith and i found the similarities between the torah, the bible and the quran, i thought maybe that's a purpose of my life. maybe that's why god gave me such disability. because i learned how to read english and because of the eye the chance to read the tora
what i found, , i found a similr piece between the books and that brings about is that why do we fight each other? why do we hate each other if we had the same message? a lot of phrases in the bible have the same meaning of quran. i was thinking like if christians and jews have such an amazing book as is on, , why doe fight each other? i wanted to ask christians and jews why do we hate each other? that's when you start thinking about interfaith. i have a disability, and my disability played a...
94
94
Jul 29, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
i found excuses to writeabout the american plan in every class i took . some very generous professors were understanding including the professor of history of pollution . who let me compare the rhetoric of anti- fbi activists without collusion activists. and even after i finished college i still didn't feel like i understood the program. and i was really obsessed with it. i wanted to learn more. so i decided to take 2 and a half years off after college. and moved back home to my childhood bedroom. with no salary and no job and write about this wholetime. thank you again to my understanding parents . so what i discovered after all these years of research was something called the american plan. it was something i never heard of and few peoplehad ever heard of it either . the american plan was a government program under which government officials locked up tens, probably hundreds of thousands of women and with someone would call concentration camps for months at a time. this program lasted from the 1910s into the 1950s and in some places lasted into the 1960
i found excuses to writeabout the american plan in every class i took . some very generous professors were understanding including the professor of history of pollution . who let me compare the rhetoric of anti- fbi activists without collusion activists. and even after i finished college i still didn't feel like i understood the program. and i was really obsessed with it. i wanted to learn more. so i decided to take 2 and a half years off after college. and moved back home to my childhood...
24
24
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
i found a few people who could perform some for me though. i can't remember a good little war is do you know what it is though. or we leave you still. not that. this building is just breathtaking and for centuries the slopes have been used for winemaking. i have a bit of a climb right through the vineyards and. i've got a date well kind of with a wine queen of the middle right yes she really exists. germany eastlink is world famous and they draw the wind here in the rhine region to be saddled with this pretty familiar with their business. thanks. how do you become a white queen. you've got to know a lot about wine growing. up on the judges will want to find out whether you can think on your feet and have an outgoing personality you've got to have both because you'll be representing the community and dealing with a lot of people. invited what's special about the local wines is that the flavor thanks mark. but i'm a little hide in the middle and wine growing region is very small just four hundred seventy hectare side of a fine but we produce so
i found a few people who could perform some for me though. i can't remember a good little war is do you know what it is though. or we leave you still. not that. this building is just breathtaking and for centuries the slopes have been used for winemaking. i have a bit of a climb right through the vineyards and. i've got a date well kind of with a wine queen of the middle right yes she really exists. germany eastlink is world famous and they draw the wind here in the rhine region to be saddled...
53
53
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
i found that in germany i found out in brazil and now in russia. his own country mexico were kicked out of the world cup almost two weeks ago but one is still having fun i'm here remember this journey for a long time. our minder of our headlines this hour on. the u.s. president and having tea with the queen on the latest stage of his trip to britain earlier him back pedal as criticism of british prime minister tourism night and her strategy for leaving the european union. and pakistan's former prime minister nawaz sharif and his daughter have been arrested minutes are wanting back in the country called option charges on this flight home sharif told supporters he was making a sacrifice for the future of pakistan. and that's to have one preview at the top of the hour in the meantime you can find the latest on our web site that address for you. i'm sorry harmon and glenn thanks for watching us explain. such subjects such. as a lullaby elaborate lipstick on a window to. live every single blow up live like fifty w's.
i found that in germany i found out in brazil and now in russia. his own country mexico were kicked out of the world cup almost two weeks ago but one is still having fun i'm here remember this journey for a long time. our minder of our headlines this hour on. the u.s. president and having tea with the queen on the latest stage of his trip to britain earlier him back pedal as criticism of british prime minister tourism night and her strategy for leaving the european union. and pakistan's former...
71
71
Jul 1, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
as soon as i got to -- through with high school, i found a junior college in sacramento. i lived on a farm near newcastle. newcastle was my point of -- it was my official address. as soon as i could, i went to the sacramento junior college and took the technical course that qualified me to be an aircraft mechanic. that was my plan b. if i cannot fly, at least i could work on airplanes. i just have a love for them. it was a passion. something really good happened to me on my second year, my last year, i got into a program of pilot training. for the price of $9.50, i think it was, it was an insurance policy for my parents. i got a private pilot's license. that was at the age of 19 in the spring of 1941. we flew the hyper code. piper cub. i do not have a picture, but i am pretty sure most of you know what it looks like. being a youngster, flying and with all the speed. most of you know that it doesn't fly very fast. i can remember looking down and seeing cars passing me. [laughter] colonel anderson: but i was flying and it was fun. i got my pilots license right on the money.
as soon as i got to -- through with high school, i found a junior college in sacramento. i lived on a farm near newcastle. newcastle was my point of -- it was my official address. as soon as i could, i went to the sacramento junior college and took the technical course that qualified me to be an aircraft mechanic. that was my plan b. if i cannot fly, at least i could work on airplanes. i just have a love for them. it was a passion. something really good happened to me on my second year, my last...
92
92
Jul 23, 2018
07/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
and i found that interesting because you had a real family. on to my family, the products i've tried just didn't fit right. they were very saggy. it's getting in the way of our camping trips. but with new sizes, depend fit-flex is made for me. introducing more sizes for better comfort. new depend fit-flex underwear is guaranteed to be your best fit. a peaceful night sleep without only imagine... frequent heartburn waking him up. now that dream is a reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? booking a flight doesn't have to be expensive. just go to priceline. it's the best place to book a flight a few days before my trip and still save up to 40%. just tap and go... for the best savings on flights, go to priceline. well, esurance makes it simple and affordable. in fact, drivers who switched from geico to esurance saved an average of $412. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. okay, these are the feet of
and i found that interesting because you had a real family. on to my family, the products i've tried just didn't fit right. they were very saggy. it's getting in the way of our camping trips. but with new sizes, depend fit-flex is made for me. introducing more sizes for better comfort. new depend fit-flex underwear is guaranteed to be your best fit. a peaceful night sleep without only imagine... frequent heartburn waking him up. now that dream is a reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it...
101
101
Jul 29, 2018
07/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
then i found aleve pm.e only one to combine a safe sleep aid, plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am. howie: the fcc sidelined and derailed a merger that would have created a tv giant that would have led to national conservative programming that would have competed with fox news. trump said the decision was disgraceful. he said it would have been a great and much-needed conservative voice of and for the people. the fcc said the news was misleading. roseanne barr got an apology do-over after the racist tweet about jal are you jarrett. reeseian who said she thought jarett was white. said this. if you are watching i'm so sorry you thought it was racist and you thought my tweet was racist because it wasn't. it was political. i'm sorry for the misunderstanding that causedy ill-worded tweet. and i'm sorry that you feel harmed and hurt. but she has got to get a new haircut, seriously. howie: that's better than the youtube video she posted where she called jarett the b
then i found aleve pm.e only one to combine a safe sleep aid, plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am. howie: the fcc sidelined and derailed a merger that would have created a tv giant that would have led to national conservative programming that would have competed with fox news. trump said the decision was disgraceful. he said it would have been a great and much-needed conservative voice of and for the people. the fcc said the news was misleading....
53
53
Jul 8, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
you can get four or five different accounts from the same event from different angles, and i found that so valuable. thanks to some of the digitization of newspapers, it makes it so much easier for journalists to pull out and radel -- journalist doing research, that was the primary source i think you could get for a lot of those events. they were not in other ways recorded. i cannot have done it without that. four those of you who do not use proquest, it has every word in certain newspapers searchable, so you can throw out anything and find out exactly when it appeared in the new york times, chicago tribune, the washington post. it is a godsend to historians. i will say also for those of us trying to figure out the balance of things, you can read the same story in the new york times and then in the chicago tribune and get very different takes on the same event. very good reporters, but different attitudes, different views and different editors. john: words that would take one hour in a microfilm machine, you can do in a minute and a half. donald: exactly. before we opened it up for ques
you can get four or five different accounts from the same event from different angles, and i found that so valuable. thanks to some of the digitization of newspapers, it makes it so much easier for journalists to pull out and radel -- journalist doing research, that was the primary source i think you could get for a lot of those events. they were not in other ways recorded. i cannot have done it without that. four those of you who do not use proquest, it has every word in certain newspapers...
145
145
Jul 4, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
maybe they could fool around with your mind but, but i found that there's a ethic of humility and that it's your mind and this medicines together you will go where you need to go and i will not interfere with that. >> okay. well, i am, evil eyes are telling me i'm out of time and you're out of time, but thank you, so, so much. >> thank you very much. [applause] >> really, really appreciate it. appreciate all of your work. and i guess what -- oh, there will be a reading, i mean a signing. >> thank you. [applause] >> thank you so much to alix and michael. saying for the signing please be seated. those not staying for the signing you can exit in the corner lobby. [inaudible conversations]. >> booktv recently visited capitol hill to ask members of congress what they're reading this summer. >> the things which i once dealt deal with two of my passions. i'm a old history teacher, obviously history and government are important to me and i love baseball. the first one i did, drive into the gap is really short book but my kid recommended to me. deals with roberto clement tee, which bat in the h
maybe they could fool around with your mind but, but i found that there's a ethic of humility and that it's your mind and this medicines together you will go where you need to go and i will not interfere with that. >> okay. well, i am, evil eyes are telling me i'm out of time and you're out of time, but thank you, so, so much. >> thank you very much. [applause] >> really, really appreciate it. appreciate all of your work. and i guess what -- oh, there will be a reading, i mean...
26
26
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
but again i roamed the city trying to find the belgian fans could not really find any but i found one very famous brazilian fan he's the captain of the fan of the brazilian fan movement here in gaza and he's been very famous in russia let's take a look at what i managed to do with him in the streets of gaza and it's almost an impossible task to find belgian fans because on overtaken by the men and women and yellow and blue you know i found one brazilian fan who is very famous in russia now . in the. i don't. see i think it. really having the father on the ball a lot more possession but you know we've been we've seen a few replays of the ball. it's not particularly powerful it's not moving or swelling a lot in the you know what's going through the keep in mind. hopefully it's a pretty small to want to us it's hard to say that he's sort of going down to get your foot into the goal later but it's bizarrely he's gone down on one knee and should have gone off to the right instead of sort of. catching it and as a result was just loops over the back of his right shoulder looped into the net
but again i roamed the city trying to find the belgian fans could not really find any but i found one very famous brazilian fan he's the captain of the fan of the brazilian fan movement here in gaza and he's been very famous in russia let's take a look at what i managed to do with him in the streets of gaza and it's almost an impossible task to find belgian fans because on overtaken by the men and women and yellow and blue you know i found one brazilian fan who is very famous in russia now . in...
84
84
Jul 21, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
that is where i found no, they are not doing that. it's not that -- i think the difference with the texas brigade is that they came from families that tended to be wealthier and could sustain their men being gone. her other families could sustain them. but also, there is a certain filtering factor going on here. if you are not incredibly devoted to this cause, you will not go a thousand miles from home. there is a filtering going on likelyat made them less to desert. thank you. >> jack reardon, new york. you mentioned in your talk that the desertion rate was about 6%, how does the desertion rate of other southern brigades compared to the number? susannah: not favorably. again, there are a couple factors. there is the filtering factor i described, but also the factor that, if i am worried about my family, and i am a north carolinians and i'm in northern virginia, they are not that far away. if my family is in austin, texas, how am i even going to get there? so come i don't want to turn these guys into super troopers, but they were incre
that is where i found no, they are not doing that. it's not that -- i think the difference with the texas brigade is that they came from families that tended to be wealthier and could sustain their men being gone. her other families could sustain them. but also, there is a certain filtering factor going on here. if you are not incredibly devoted to this cause, you will not go a thousand miles from home. there is a filtering going on likelyat made them less to desert. thank you. >> jack...
26
26
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
but again i roamed the city trying to find the belgian fans could not really found any but i found one very famous brazilian fan he's the captain of the of the brazilian fan movement here in the zone and he's been very famous in russia let's take a look at what i managed to do with him in the streets of his on it's almost an impossible task to find belgian fans and can sign over. taken by the man and women and yellow and blue well you know i found one brazilian fan who is very famous in russia now. believe. me. for the moment. i was the resident don't feel that i see how to get i'm. now as you just saw in that report and let's see perhaps not so many belgians in the crowd which is out by the brazilians but back home tens of thousands watching this day live on the big screens in the city senselessness and i would see some of that but see now one of them gathering together and hoping for what will be a belgian victory yeah absolutely certainly. to be a very close game just at the for. the first dive of the game from a more actually just five five minutes a night is one of the free kicks
but again i roamed the city trying to find the belgian fans could not really found any but i found one very famous brazilian fan he's the captain of the of the brazilian fan movement here in the zone and he's been very famous in russia let's take a look at what i managed to do with him in the streets of his on it's almost an impossible task to find belgian fans and can sign over. taken by the man and women and yellow and blue well you know i found one brazilian fan who is very famous in russia...
221
221
Jul 30, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
i found a good -- this is a metaphor for how i worked it out for myself. rick is an unusual man, i don't know if he was combative with me or whether i could do it there was at i think at dinner after bork was turned down for supreme court, and everyone stood, gave him a standing ovation, my problem, what do i do? do i stand up? that i could not. should i sit down and make -- make a statement? i didn't top d' to do, that i sp and didn't clap. that is a metaphor for how you work this out. and you have to understand what is underneath, no political fight that goes on and on like these do that i read about. none are just about politics, they are about unfinished finish in the relationship. they are unfinished business from childhood, and siblings, you should think what comes out, you think that mom liked you best, what if you agree with mom and our mom doesn't. it is really remarkable. but one thing that is positive for people to know, that if they think about it if they rel think about it and understand what is going on, beneath, they can change how they talk
i found a good -- this is a metaphor for how i worked it out for myself. rick is an unusual man, i don't know if he was combative with me or whether i could do it there was at i think at dinner after bork was turned down for supreme court, and everyone stood, gave him a standing ovation, my problem, what do i do? do i stand up? that i could not. should i sit down and make -- make a statement? i didn't top d' to do, that i sp and didn't clap. that is a metaphor for how you work this out. and you...
31
31
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
i thought wow this is this this is not a great place you know i would never come back again what i found out later when i went to leningrad and met bourse is that behind closed doors russian people were exactly like people all over the world and they were full of color and they were full of expression and full of creativity i was in off by the whole art scene the arts and the music scene in leningrad because nobody in america was aware this could possibly be happening in russia we were so afraid of the soviet union at that time and that's why it just opened up my eyes and that's what led to me deciding that i needed to bring this music and photos and videos of these bands to the u.s. to open up the eyes of all of the other people the united states because it really was something we we were not aware at all that was taking place there now rock musicians all over the world are pretty rowdy bunch i wonder how they react to you and your interest in them you know i think there were europeans that had come in and had met boris before so he had met foreigners but i think what was different was
i thought wow this is this this is not a great place you know i would never come back again what i found out later when i went to leningrad and met bourse is that behind closed doors russian people were exactly like people all over the world and they were full of color and they were full of expression and full of creativity i was in off by the whole art scene the arts and the music scene in leningrad because nobody in america was aware this could possibly be happening in russia we were so...
37
37
Jul 6, 2018
07/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
decided if the number but i found the but you know we've got the home but just. this is a neck of the world thank you but don't want to because that is because you'd rather go home. but what you can do in the job as busy is sort of putting me in bollywood to get you covered by the force. excited she's never seen you thank you thank you. you. know. about how much money you can get some and some yeah some of them on the grass now or some out of a few soviet ships down. india's street kids of the poorest of the pool. nicknamed the invisible children because they live in cities shadows. these can be sixteen year old junkies. she's the paper's most senior porsche. have just enough for tonight. that. i'm not. mad lad who is in the game and they're taking them up in the car but it's a minute let me get out you may have a point that may not have all been decided then that it didn't come i cannot be a man i didn't. even without any of that. he managed to do a ministry said everybody when we decided to make you mean that. his home is a slum next to this major bus stop. the
decided if the number but i found the but you know we've got the home but just. this is a neck of the world thank you but don't want to because that is because you'd rather go home. but what you can do in the job as busy is sort of putting me in bollywood to get you covered by the force. excited she's never seen you thank you thank you. you. know. about how much money you can get some and some yeah some of them on the grass now or some out of a few soviet ships down. india's street kids of the...
35
35
Jul 6, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
as we found out. but i want to talk a little bit about another part of robert kennedy and his dealings with us, the press. he on the one hand he enjoyed our pulling his chain a little bit. but he was not, not very approachable, at least at the beginning. one of my first encounters with robert kennedy when he was on the labor rackets committee as a staff person. i covered those hearings occasionally, because people from his state, new york, were involved in the rackets. and i was then working for an obscure newspaper chain and whenever i tried to ask a question, he would say -- he was the only one who would say to me at that time was -- and you are? you're with what? so i came away from that feeling a little agitated about kennedy and a little put off. but what -- when john kennedy ran here in west virginia, i had an experience that changed, that made me realize the difficulty of dealing with the kennedy. the headquarters of the john kennedy campaign, charleston, and the dining room served as a press room. o
as we found out. but i want to talk a little bit about another part of robert kennedy and his dealings with us, the press. he on the one hand he enjoyed our pulling his chain a little bit. but he was not, not very approachable, at least at the beginning. one of my first encounters with robert kennedy when he was on the labor rackets committee as a staff person. i covered those hearings occasionally, because people from his state, new york, were involved in the rackets. and i was then working...
108
108
Jul 26, 2018
07/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 108
favorite 0
quote 0
i found something that worked. and keeps on working. they seee. cenx ke a diffence for you- cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate eve plaqsorias......finclear skt can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease, tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. never give up. see me. see me. clear skin can last. don't hold back... ...ask your dermatologist if cosentyx can help you find clear skin that lasts. only tylenol® rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast, for fast pain relief. tylenol® alcohol based mouthwash burns. and that could leave you with... burn face! but colgate total mouthwash is different. ghout the try colgate total mouthwash today! what's the #1 new skincare product in
i found something that worked. and keeps on working. they seee. cenx ke a diffence for you- cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate eve plaqsorias......finclear skt can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel...