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Feb 11, 2018
02/18
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would say, a very heated -- i mean, as equally heated, i think. i think she would take a different tone, obviously. i don't think she would try to egg on, i don't think there would be the hashtag fake news terminology, but i i think there would be this visceral reaction to her. we're seeing it still, and she's not even a public official where republicans are kind of -- the one unifying factor that brings them all together is someone who no longer is in public office, hillary clinton. or and you're seeing that, you know, they're still investigating her, and there's still such an interest in what the clinton foundation did. and so i do think that this would have been a very, very heated time regardless. we saw two of the most, i think, hated candidates battling each other, and so i do think concern i don't think it would have changed much. >> and it wouldn't have come from her probably the same way, but it'd be the spirit of the country. >> right, yeah. >> tim, because you sort of came in that door on the republican side. >> yeah. you know, look, i th
would say, a very heated -- i mean, as equally heated, i think. i think she would take a different tone, obviously. i don't think she would try to egg on, i don't think there would be the hashtag fake news terminology, but i i think there would be this visceral reaction to her. we're seeing it still, and she's not even a public official where republicans are kind of -- the one unifying factor that brings them all together is someone who no longer is in public office, hillary clinton. or and...
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Feb 4, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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i mean, i think, sure. i mean, there's h.r. mcmaster, i think, is a, you know, i mean, certainly an experienced person in this job. even, you know, mick mulvaney. you know, there are a lot, there are professional people there. but, you know, one of the things i think is really worth focusing on now which hasn't gotten enough attention is that with all of the initial team leaving -- bannon, priebus, spicer -- you're left with basically the two, the president's two senior most advisers are hope hicks, 28 or 29, a former junior fashion pr person, and steven miller who everybody saw his head explode -- [laughter] on national television. i mean, and these, i mean, whether you agree with them, their politics or not, these are just two people who bring nothing to this -- [laughter] to table. they just have no experience -- [applause] no maturity, and, you know, no reason, no reason under the sun to be doing the jobs that we're paying them to do. >> now, a central focus of the book is, i mean, steve bannon is throughout this book. steve
i mean, i think, sure. i mean, there's h.r. mcmaster, i think, is a, you know, i mean, certainly an experienced person in this job. even, you know, mick mulvaney. you know, there are a lot, there are professional people there. but, you know, one of the things i think is really worth focusing on now which hasn't gotten enough attention is that with all of the initial team leaving -- bannon, priebus, spicer -- you're left with basically the two, the president's two senior most advisers are hope...
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Feb 3, 2018
02/18
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BBCNEWS
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can't say i always knew, no. i think iontrol of himself, and i think probably if i'd analysed that i would have known, but in a way maybe i didn't want to know, just like he doesn't. well, i think to the reader, when you open this book, you do sense that it is going to end rather badly. i mean you don't think he's going to stop doing it. no, i wouldn't have thought so, and i don't think he has the ability to control himself, and i think he makes it clear from the beginning that he is trying to justify his own behaviour, trying to understand what he's done, hopefully make people understand him. there is an intriguing note on the dust cover of the book where you say, this book is an experiment. what exactly do you mean by that? well, to my mind it's an experiment between me and the reader. he is conducting experiments of various kinds on the people that he stalks, but it's also an experiment i think i'm making really to see how people will respond to this book. i won't necessarily know, of course, but i want to take people t
can't say i always knew, no. i think iontrol of himself, and i think probably if i'd analysed that i would have known, but in a way maybe i didn't want to know, just like he doesn't. well, i think to the reader, when you open this book, you do sense that it is going to end rather badly. i mean you don't think he's going to stop doing it. no, i wouldn't have thought so, and i don't think he has the ability to control himself, and i think he makes it clear from the beginning that he is trying to...
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Feb 25, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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he wanted to make that point i think. i think people will latch onto any story they can to confirm their own preconceptions about something. i think that my dad have some irregular ideas. i think the way his mind worked i felt like maybe he have some kind of mental irregularity and in my mind the religious extremism was a vehicle for that. i want people to take the story and say all religious people or mormons are like this. it's really easy for people that are different than you. that is not particular at all. they are taking from the culture that's going on in the news. there is an example of that that you called your first memory that is not a memory that is of that ruby ridge massacre. especially around the time. our family was not so different. we didn't go to school and all of that. that when that happened to them. there was a. of time when it was not able to be there. i was about five and it happened. we were preparing and we got these bags if we need to run and hide in the mountains. from a few years later. i still
he wanted to make that point i think. i think people will latch onto any story they can to confirm their own preconceptions about something. i think that my dad have some irregular ideas. i think the way his mind worked i felt like maybe he have some kind of mental irregularity and in my mind the religious extremism was a vehicle for that. i want people to take the story and say all religious people or mormons are like this. it's really easy for people that are different than you. that is not...
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Feb 4, 2018
02/18
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you can think the senators it is a reason that i am an editorial cartoonist. i think the me to movement will affect the 20 -- the 2022 election. they're really mad. and i hope so. i think it is about time it's funny to hear people talk about and other forms of sexual discrimination. there is all forms. i've dealt with it. my entire career i laugh when i hear people expressed doubt about it. here i'm going to give you a when i was down the at like trump grabs people i'm not a i was floored. into deal with the sent to female policeman and took down everything and some 30 something-year-old guy thinking then the reason i'm smiling is because a lot of my are out thank you so much here's a look at some of michael wolff's exposÉ on dan harris gets his thoughts and then they that's with ulysses s a look at some of in which he recalls how he balances professional the leading half your life. followed after that opera winfrey's insight from her most meaningful conversations. the wisdom of sunday's. and wrapping up i look at some of the books from the los angeles times non
you can think the senators it is a reason that i am an editorial cartoonist. i think the me to movement will affect the 20 -- the 2022 election. they're really mad. and i hope so. i think it is about time it's funny to hear people talk about and other forms of sexual discrimination. there is all forms. i've dealt with it. my entire career i laugh when i hear people expressed doubt about it. here i'm going to give you a when i was down the at like trump grabs people i'm not a i was floored. into...
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Feb 6, 2018
02/18
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CNBC
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>> you know, i think, i personally don't, i do understand it slightly i think it's ridiculous. think the stocks are cheap and you can buy them they're barely managed or have some other hidden jewel. you look for companies with a certain hidden jewel a certain way you can burnish that jewel and i like doing that and i think they're good,great value around in the market today but i think that the market itself is way overleveraged. it's hard to explain what i'm saying it's way overleveraged and you got just too much money flowing into it in these index funds to begin with and much worse than that, these etfs basically, it's a little bit like oh 0 '08 when everybody was buying mortgage-backed securities but i don't like crypto currencies a because i don't understand them you talk b about the block chain and them, but i don't understand how you get, and i talk to regulation again how do you regulate them you've got to block chain and that's been regulated, but how many times have you seen scandals with these things maybe i'm just too old for it. but but i sure wouldn't touch that st
>> you know, i think, i personally don't, i do understand it slightly i think it's ridiculous. think the stocks are cheap and you can buy them they're barely managed or have some other hidden jewel. you look for companies with a certain hidden jewel a certain way you can burnish that jewel and i like doing that and i think they're good,great value around in the market today but i think that the market itself is way overleveraged. it's hard to explain what i'm saying it's way overleveraged...
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Feb 9, 2018
02/18
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i think it's sad for the european union. ithink the european union would be somewhat diminished, we will move on will still be 27 countries and the three largest economies in the world, but i think we lose something by the departure of the night kingdom. in your question, i think when you say is it too late in some respect the second referendum or reversal of the decision, i have no idea. there is a very domestic difficult debate anything there trying to figure out what brexit means to be very frank, i think many people who voted for the leave side had no clear idea of the implications and the complexity of what that would mean, this is now emerging a most every day, the growing complexity of extricating the united kingdom from 45 years of deep involvement with the tissue and fabric of the european union and the business cycle and commercial and other links that are there and unraveling this is a drug entrant task and i think people are waking up to the complexity of that. will it lead to rethink? i have no idea. this is a dom
i think it's sad for the european union. ithink the european union would be somewhat diminished, we will move on will still be 27 countries and the three largest economies in the world, but i think we lose something by the departure of the night kingdom. in your question, i think when you say is it too late in some respect the second referendum or reversal of the decision, i have no idea. there is a very domestic difficult debate anything there trying to figure out what brexit means to be very...
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Feb 28, 2018
02/18
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>> well, i mean, do i think our cultur culture, our country is polarized? i do. i think that there's clear lines than drawn. again, i think to compare billy graham and how he operated so today's standard is different. when you go back to, again, 1950s when as a nation we embraced under god in our pledge, we embraced the full congress, embraced the motto in god we trust. we are not there today. i don't think we can get that passed today. i think you would find a partisan split even on an issue such as that. >> but in terms of where we are today is that a good thing? >> i don't think it's a good thing, but what i'm saying is i don't think that the evangelicals have chosen that. i think they've gravitated toward a party that is more receptive in embracing of the values that they represent. i mean, you go back to the 2012 convention of the democratic party that was in north carolina when essentially god was rejected in their platform. so there has become an increasing hostility and a difference, maybe not -- certainly not everybody is hostile in the democratic party b
>> well, i mean, do i think our cultur culture, our country is polarized? i do. i think that there's clear lines than drawn. again, i think to compare billy graham and how he operated so today's standard is different. when you go back to, again, 1950s when as a nation we embraced under god in our pledge, we embraced the full congress, embraced the motto in god we trust. we are not there today. i don't think we can get that passed today. i think you would find a partisan split even on an...
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Feb 4, 2018
02/18
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>> guest: i think hopefully recognize his humanity. i think i wanted a well-rounded, compelling antagonist for my formidable protagonists and i think you should see your self in the heroes, in the villains , that's what makes them 3-dimensional and recognizable. it makes them live . but he's a terrible person, had a terrible philosophy. but in the same way that when cora is revealing her flaws, you see her as a human being. when you see ridgway's moment of weakness, you recognize some self-deception in how he sees the world and if you can recognize that quality in your self, that's what makes fiction work. that what makes artwork, that recognition. >> host: when you teach a class, you've got several universities, what are two things you want your students to know >> guest: we have three months and so people can write three stories . do something different. if you teach a lot of undergrads, if you only write stories about girls in new jersey because you're an 18-year-old girl from new jersey, why not go crazy and write the story about a 2
>> guest: i think hopefully recognize his humanity. i think i wanted a well-rounded, compelling antagonist for my formidable protagonists and i think you should see your self in the heroes, in the villains , that's what makes them 3-dimensional and recognizable. it makes them live . but he's a terrible person, had a terrible philosophy. but in the same way that when cora is revealing her flaws, you see her as a human being. when you see ridgway's moment of weakness, you recognize some...
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Feb 22, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN3
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but i was -- i had young children and i was -- i was 31 or 32 i think at the time. and i -- i just had a wonderful time. >> mmm-hmm. >> because i didn't think of the cadets as young little boys, so to speak. they were all gentlemen to me. >> mmm-hmm. >> and, i mean, i was not that much older than they were. >> true. >> and i think we just had a -- had a lot of fun together. i went to all of the -- i went to the swimming and the wrestling and track and, you know, and football, of course. >> right. >> and baseball. i loved it all. the kids would go with me sometimes and sometimes they'd say no, but -- >> what were your favorite activities here? >> you know, i loved wrestling, can you believe it? but i loved swimming and -- well, i love football, of course and i loved baseball, but i loved -- i just love sports. >> right. and i imagine that you went to all the formal events, right? >> yes. >> so all the different dances and that sort of thing. >> not all of them, no. >> yeah. tell me about entertaining at quarters 100. >> oh, well, you could seat ten on either side, and
but i was -- i had young children and i was -- i was 31 or 32 i think at the time. and i -- i just had a wonderful time. >> mmm-hmm. >> because i didn't think of the cadets as young little boys, so to speak. they were all gentlemen to me. >> mmm-hmm. >> and, i mean, i was not that much older than they were. >> true. >> and i think we just had a -- had a lot of fun together. i went to all of the -- i went to the swimming and the wrestling and track and, you...
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Feb 18, 2018
02/18
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KPIX
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i think i think that some of it has to do with us not wanting to think about aging and i think -- i think there's a lot of ageism in society. easy -- i know. i see it every day. i think that's because i pay attention to it. i think that we need to figure out ways to get beyond that so it can be more anticipatory into about how we are going to care for ourselves in order age or how we are going to care for each other. >> san francisco is the same in the ways in which it takes a beautiful idea like the need for the rights of the lgbt community or the needs for women's rights or confronting issues on races and about ageism , on and on and on. and how to actually get into the trenches of an issue and to provide services upon money and have a no breath -- robust nonprofit community. and so in this particular way, can you talk just a little bit about the kind of ageism that you see in the kind of ways in which you think the city and county and has been on the forefront of looking at it. even the word dignity fund says a lot about your system in place. dignity is a word that is jampacked with va
i think i think that some of it has to do with us not wanting to think about aging and i think -- i think there's a lot of ageism in society. easy -- i know. i see it every day. i think that's because i pay attention to it. i think that we need to figure out ways to get beyond that so it can be more anticipatory into about how we are going to care for ourselves in order age or how we are going to care for each other. >> san francisco is the same in the ways in which it takes a beautiful...
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Feb 21, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN3
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i don't think then. i think my father was. father was in tails. >> wow. >> but i think wes was just in -- yes, he was just in a regular uniform. >> okay. >> because it was pretty soon after the war. he had just gotten home. >> right. now, one of the interesting things i noticed when i looked at his timeline was that he was a captain, although during world war ii he held the rank of colonel, did he -- when the army downsized they reduced everybody? >> he became a lieutenant colonel for just a little while. >> right. >> and then became a colonel again. >> how much did he discuss his world war ii experiences with you? >> not too much. >> mmm-hmm. >> not too much. >> now, during your early married life, as you already mentioned, at fort bragg he was the commander of the 504th. >> right. >> pretty soon after that, he was the chief of staff for the 82nd airborne division. describe your experiences at fort bragg. >> well, i think i was like a puppy. i just, i wagged my tail and walked in a room. i was so young. i was just 20. >> mmm-hmm. >> and i just thought everybody l
i don't think then. i think my father was. father was in tails. >> wow. >> but i think wes was just in -- yes, he was just in a regular uniform. >> okay. >> because it was pretty soon after the war. he had just gotten home. >> right. now, one of the interesting things i noticed when i looked at his timeline was that he was a captain, although during world war ii he held the rank of colonel, did he -- when the army downsized they reduced everybody? >> he...
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broaden that concept we have to do this in australia too because when i was young australia was basically what i think was sex and now we're i think we're well on the way to being a genuinely multicultural country and in that respect i think russia and australia have a lot in common already well there are as you point out in your book many commonalities between russia and australia being the outsiders being territorially expansive countries perhaps sometimes struggling to defined who they are but i want to bring you back to the question of flooding of putin's and sergey lavrov along political careers because there is now a rumor in moscow that sergey lavrov for example the foreign minister asked for his retirement several times because as much as he i assume lost his job it is quite tiring there was also speculation that put in wasn't planning on coming back to power or running for presidency again in two thousand and twelve but the events in libya and the murder of moammar gadhafi the disintegration of libya afterwards made him change his mind i wonder to what extent western policies are responsible for keeping those perhap
broaden that concept we have to do this in australia too because when i was young australia was basically what i think was sex and now we're i think we're well on the way to being a genuinely multicultural country and in that respect i think russia and australia have a lot in common already well there are as you point out in your book many commonalities between russia and australia being the outsiders being territorially expansive countries perhaps sometimes struggling to defined who they are...
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to talk to north korea i don't think there's anything wrong with that because the alternative is far far worse go ahead. and i think peter you're. it's unfortunate but i don't necessarily think people want to direct conflict however we're getting dangerously close to it one could accidentally happening specially when we've got a radically some place that want their survival or the looking for the political perspective and they back in their own selves in their corner and sometimes things happen that you don't expect but i think when we look at syria. you know the. the u.s. is concerned about the rising role of iran in russia in the middle east and i think i think there's pressure from both from the u.s. side from one of their close allies in the area as well as some of the gulf states and they do not want to see iran raising up so you see these accusations or violating the nuclear accord you see them try and even though they're they're welcome in syria trying to force them to get out of the region. it. it's a dangerous situation there in the u.s. really right now appears they just want to stay present there a
to talk to north korea i don't think there's anything wrong with that because the alternative is far far worse go ahead. and i think peter you're. it's unfortunate but i don't necessarily think people want to direct conflict however we're getting dangerously close to it one could accidentally happening specially when we've got a radically some place that want their survival or the looking for the political perspective and they back in their own selves in their corner and sometimes things happen...
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the justice department and i think i think what he's concerned about here is i personally don't think anything in the memos probably is that embarrassing yes is that again will it threaten national security i don't think so so the classification is probably more because it sensitive information and the president has the authority to release that. and i think he wants to kind of show transparency in and and release it so it's available so what they've found out is actually transparent on what's going on and unfortunately it's it's very disturbing what's what's been going on democrats say that the chairman of the highest intelligence committee devan nunez altered the memo off to the committee voted to release it however as our correspondent just explaining uniphase the changes were minor and indeed some of them were in force or brought abide by suggestions from the democrats yourself your thoughts on not aspect of things yeah there probably and and i'm sure that that is probably the case is that from understanding a request the changes came from the demo the democrats themselves as well
the justice department and i think i think what he's concerned about here is i personally don't think anything in the memos probably is that embarrassing yes is that again will it threaten national security i don't think so so the classification is probably more because it sensitive information and the president has the authority to release that. and i think he wants to kind of show transparency in and and release it so it's available so what they've found out is actually transparent on what's...
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a pile of flames rather but i think that i think that i think that right now what they're doing is enjoying their majority and they're just throwing that i mean they're throwing away the sequester the tea party with the tea party promise the only victory the tea party had was the sequester and they're killing it is mind blowing well let me ask you jonathan that this all sort of deal the whole deal sort of hinges on moderate vulnerable democrats putting having to make the decision about putting government funding before the parties immigration platform mummy i ask you this doesn't this imply that the democrats aren't as unified on immigration and on their platform as we been led to believe. i wouldn't say that they're not unified i think that you always have kind of two bodies in both parties you have you know the conservatives that are supporting this bill the paul ryan arm of the party i guess if you will on the right and then you have the freedom caucus part of the right that is furious about this and seems this is excessive spending i think the democrats are the same i think you have mor
a pile of flames rather but i think that i think that i think that right now what they're doing is enjoying their majority and they're just throwing that i mean they're throwing away the sequester the tea party with the tea party promise the only victory the tea party had was the sequester and they're killing it is mind blowing well let me ask you jonathan that this all sort of deal the whole deal sort of hinges on moderate vulnerable democrats putting having to make the decision about putting...
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Feb 25, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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and so i think that -- that strips and then i think -- and this is the hardest thing, i think some ofus and i put myself here too -- when i was doing the research for e rosa parks bock and this research is what identify done over o past 15 years that encompasses a lot of research projects. is the ways that i think -- even thoatdz of those of us who think we know need to kind of -- remember that there's -- this miseducation goes deep, and -- [applause] and how i got to the rosa parks research was was doing a public piece in my head i'm sure someone written a biography but i need to put in this piece some stuff about who she actually was. and then i'm like oh -- there's no actual footnote biography of rosa parks and then -- that's surprising to me. and then it takes me a couple of more years to decide that really i should do that because -- because it didn't seem that cool and i was -- most of my work up to that point was on the civil rights movement in the north and then it seems like struggle in the north and people would look at me in years i would be like i think i'll did a biograph
and so i think that -- that strips and then i think -- and this is the hardest thing, i think some ofus and i put myself here too -- when i was doing the research for e rosa parks bock and this research is what identify done over o past 15 years that encompasses a lot of research projects. is the ways that i think -- even thoatdz of those of us who think we know need to kind of -- remember that there's -- this miseducation goes deep, and -- [applause] and how i got to the rosa parks research...
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i don't think i would go that far sophia i think it reflects the very sharp political dividing lines right now in our country and not just between the democrats and republicans but between within the parties themselves i think the democrats are struggling to reestablish their identity to decide what hard or wing of the democratic party will move forward into the next election cycles and i think the republican party is there trying to decide how much the president some do some don't it's you know i'm not.
i don't think i would go that far sophia i think it reflects the very sharp political dividing lines right now in our country and not just between the democrats and republicans but between within the parties themselves i think the democrats are struggling to reestablish their identity to decide what hard or wing of the democratic party will move forward into the next election cycles and i think the republican party is there trying to decide how much the president some do some don't it's you...
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Feb 26, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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i knew he would never hurt me but yet i got hurt. i think we experience events in it so easy to internalize gilts. i had to be older before i could look back and not be ashamed. then there is a time i was just angry and now i feel like i have all of the pieces and can put it together and say he would never want me to be hurt but for whatever reason he was not able to understand the risk of what he was doing. >> i'm blown away by the fact that you're not angry. so many are angry at their parents. this is a pretty major thing. you seem to not hold anger towards him. >> guest: i think anger is important. i think it's a mechanism the brain uses program back into a situation. but there is a risk. if it takes over too much of your life you can be consuming. i am a strange from my parents in that circumstance is really hard that led to the outcome. after that happened i was full of rage. every beautiful memory from a childhood turn to ride. i became a person who had no beautiful memories. whose whole life was rage. . . wonderful things about him. s
i knew he would never hurt me but yet i got hurt. i think we experience events in it so easy to internalize gilts. i had to be older before i could look back and not be ashamed. then there is a time i was just angry and now i feel like i have all of the pieces and can put it together and say he would never want me to be hurt but for whatever reason he was not able to understand the risk of what he was doing. >> i'm blown away by the fact that you're not angry. so many are angry at their...
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kind of reaction that they may provoke in russia where they understood and simply didn't care i think the latter i think they didn't care i think it was you know whatever we can do to encourage the build up of of anti russian opinion in ukraine is worth doing whatever the risks because ukraine so important strategically so important economically and if we can prise it away from the russian world to the nato world it would be worth spilling some china breaking some china and spilling lisak on the way so i think they underestimated the seriousness of the nazi elements new crown. and russia had to draw a line somewhere in ukraine as if you get really in georgia what have they done and if that they've helped a very small part of ukraine i mean. it's been done it pretty small amount of territory what five percent of ukraine they they've helped crimea carry out an act of free self-determination and. they did it under enormous provocation if they hadn't been in the mud. they would not have been the warden at least mr kim and i could argue that the west did similar things in other countries but as i have
kind of reaction that they may provoke in russia where they understood and simply didn't care i think the latter i think they didn't care i think it was you know whatever we can do to encourage the build up of of anti russian opinion in ukraine is worth doing whatever the risks because ukraine so important strategically so important economically and if we can prise it away from the russian world to the nato world it would be worth spilling some china breaking some china and spilling lisak on...
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Feb 10, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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so, i think that's a conversation we're having. we don't always agree but ithink it's an important conversation because i think global tax reform and working together to avoid the worst aspects of aggressive tax evasion or avoidance by multimultinational company is a common problem. >> there's more transparency in the pace and understanding where ask how the companies are paying taxes and having the public respond rather than just immediately government's weighing in. sometimes can have an impact on the company's behavior. and i think that certainly the first start is just transparency. so i'm getting the high sign that maybe we have -- need to open it up right now. could sit here and talk to you for a long time. it's been very interesting. open it up for questions to the audience. do you have a mic? yes. >> we'll take some questions off twitter first. >> great. >> you recognize those who might be live streaming in from c-span. >> great. >> so the first question off twitter is in terms of messaging, how do you think professionals that reframe globalization so
so, i think that's a conversation we're having. we don't always agree but ithink it's an important conversation because i think global tax reform and working together to avoid the worst aspects of aggressive tax evasion or avoidance by multimultinational company is a common problem. >> there's more transparency in the pace and understanding where ask how the companies are paying taxes and having the public respond rather than just immediately government's weighing in. sometimes can have...
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kind of reaction that they may provoke in russia where they understood and simply didn't care i think the latter i think they didn't care i think it was you know whatever we can do to encourage the build up of anti russian opinion in ukraine is worth doing whatever the risks because ukraine so important strategically so important economically and if we can prise it away from the russian world to the nato world it would be worth spilling some china breaking some china and spilling the sort of on the way so i think they underestimated the seriousness of the nazi elements new crown. and russia had to draw a line somewhere in ukraine as if you get really in georgia what have they done and if that they've helped a very small part of ukraine i mean. it's been done it pretty small amount of territory what five percent of ukraine they they've helped crimea carry out an act of free self-determination and. they did it under enormous provocation if they hadn't been in the mud and square coup d'etat they would not have been the warden at least mr kim and i could argue that the west did similar things in other
kind of reaction that they may provoke in russia where they understood and simply didn't care i think the latter i think they didn't care i think it was you know whatever we can do to encourage the build up of anti russian opinion in ukraine is worth doing whatever the risks because ukraine so important strategically so important economically and if we can prise it away from the russian world to the nato world it would be worth spilling some china breaking some china and spilling the sort of on...
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again i think it's everyone forgets it's it's a big challenge but also it's a big opportunity to nitty because i think again nobody will have us on the list and say i think going to be eliminated but i say most of all my complete team is with me on that point we're going to say we're going to make it through to the quarter finals to beat whoever whoever comes then if we beat them we will see but of course we want to leave the group saying that the biggest course so far. is an african country when enough or completely is going to win the world cup it's going to be nigeria huge amount of players huge amount of players that have always played in europe and been successful call me culture suppliers do you feel about team spirit now we speak strong enough to carry the expectation of the noise here in ny should always have a lot of noise here in liverpool fans that follow may not all seriously hold on their club teams when they support them and there are always fault of the on the national team as well i think it was one coach we had before the super easy always said we have one hundred seventy millio
again i think it's everyone forgets it's it's a big challenge but also it's a big opportunity to nitty because i think again nobody will have us on the list and say i think going to be eliminated but i say most of all my complete team is with me on that point we're going to say we're going to make it through to the quarter finals to beat whoever whoever comes then if we beat them we will see but of course we want to leave the group saying that the biggest course so far. is an african country...
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Feb 4, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN3
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i relied more on them that other things but i do think it is dicey, the closer you get to the present. i have opinions then, so i have to be more careful plan normally about .eing independent making sure it is not about what i think but about what i can find in sources and what other people have. make they did you decision to make it so contemporary? jane: i think in part of teaching, students always want to get to where they are. disappointed if you teach a modern u.s. history course and you and did say with ronald reagan. that is 15 years before they were born. they want to get to something that remembers say you have to balance their desire to finally get into their lived experience weh the limited resources have, the limited scholarly resources we have for that era. susan: who are your students generally? are they going to go on the history profession or they rounding out scholarship? jane: there are people who want to learn to think critically. if you become historians, a lot of them go to law school, a lot of them work for the government because people who like the american past of
i relied more on them that other things but i do think it is dicey, the closer you get to the present. i have opinions then, so i have to be more careful plan normally about .eing independent making sure it is not about what i think but about what i can find in sources and what other people have. make they did you decision to make it so contemporary? jane: i think in part of teaching, students always want to get to where they are. disappointed if you teach a modern u.s. history course and you...
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Feb 11, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN
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no matter what beat i am doing, or at theher crime white house, i think it is a story of race. when i think of the questions i am asking or the stories i am going to write, i think, what are we learning about our country and about the differences in race continuing to color how people are in real race? i don't believe in. with lindsay's, so i think you can be fair, but you don't have to always -- there is no false equivalency like segregation, so i think if i was writing in 1960's i would not say that charlottesville is something that was bad on both sides. i think as a reporter i am growing into that, being able to say that was not ok. i am haitian-american. when the president was talking about s-hole countries and talking about haitians and questioning what they have been doing for america, i was in to get on tv and say, one, that is wrong for you to say that patients aren't contributing, to two, you should go georgia because free 6lack's came from haiti -- free blacks came from haiti and helped free you from the former britain, so that is what i do to stay balanced in my mind. i wa
no matter what beat i am doing, or at theher crime white house, i think it is a story of race. when i think of the questions i am asking or the stories i am going to write, i think, what are we learning about our country and about the differences in race continuing to color how people are in real race? i don't believe in. with lindsay's, so i think you can be fair, but you don't have to always -- there is no false equivalency like segregation, so i think if i was writing in 1960's i would not...
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but said yes i think he's a real candidate and i think that he should be let to the elections unfortunately that was not made and here we share different ideas because i don't. think the court is affected by thing right caught will play only on putin not against putin because of the less number of people would come and vote out of protest the more percentage of those who will be for poutine this is obvious and i am against this idea that's why i decided to participate to unite those who go and vote on those elections to say how many people are against so that you personally would not get any vote a year earlier accuse the current authorities of trying to downplay the opposition support and russia. i know that i mean everybody everybody knows that there have has been a bit of a falling out between your campaign and the only complaint there has been a number of very public spats yesterday election of only published a column and that was not very complimentary of the post of each you were attacked more than me well i think he accused there was a rumor that you visited him in the detention faci
but said yes i think he's a real candidate and i think that he should be let to the elections unfortunately that was not made and here we share different ideas because i don't. think the court is affected by thing right caught will play only on putin not against putin because of the less number of people would come and vote out of protest the more percentage of those who will be for poutine this is obvious and i am against this idea that's why i decided to participate to unite those who go and...
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think i just want to give them and i want the journalistic example while i was a legal journalistic example well even now i think you are. as a journalist i think this is you don't want to discuss this problem i understand why so legal is because it's illegal so now we know it all because i mean if we just sort of don't require specific degree all consideration for the people at janney an accommodation of their concerns do you think you have it in yourself to show that accommodation to people who live next door to you to people who live across the street or to people who live at the other end of the country of course this is what i'm doing now and this is actually what my complaint is about actually this campaign change will all too because when i go to people when they see how many problems they have and when they see that i cannot solve them all right now i'm trying hard i'm doing my best but i see that sometimes i can only hog them i can only cry with them and that's maximum that i can do of course it touched me very much and it touches manaul and i actually am not a person i used to be when i came to this ca
think i just want to give them and i want the journalistic example while i was a legal journalistic example well even now i think you are. as a journalist i think this is you don't want to discuss this problem i understand why so legal is because it's illegal so now we know it all because i mean if we just sort of don't require specific degree all consideration for the people at janney an accommodation of their concerns do you think you have it in yourself to show that accommodation to people...
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the currency safer fariba the and frankly jake clayton agreed with that perspective i think a couple of things about that i think i agree with you i think you have the right right take on it one mr g. and carlo chairman of the c f.t.c. he's been pretty out there for a couple years actually talking about how. the digital space should be developed and i think he. likened it to how the internet was developed so i mean much more i think even the f.c.c. hasn't to see if d.c. is sort of been out there trying to share information and let people know in this space what they should and should be doing i think that's right i think to see if he took an early view that this is out there there's nothing we can do to stop it really. so we might as well figure out what the problems are they embrace virtual currencies as a commodity and they early on to exercise jurisdiction over derivatives based on commodities as well as using their anti-fraud authority to root out potential bad guys in this area so i think the sea of the sea has taken a very very pragmatic view from the beginning i think it's very careful to say they h
the currency safer fariba the and frankly jake clayton agreed with that perspective i think a couple of things about that i think i agree with you i think you have the right right take on it one mr g. and carlo chairman of the c f.t.c. he's been pretty out there for a couple years actually talking about how. the digital space should be developed and i think he. likened it to how the internet was developed so i mean much more i think even the f.c.c. hasn't to see if d.c. is sort of been out...
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Feb 11, 2018
02/18
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CNNW
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and i think that, i think about that moment and where we are at politically a lot, and i do think that if i could go back in time, and my dad could do it all over again, and he would say build the wall h you know, whatever, praum esident obama i muslim, it would not be worth it. i would still say don't do it. [ applause ] >> let's me tell you something, my dad has glioblastoma cancer stage 4. when you are having the conversations my family has been having, i feel such a relief right now and such a burden that is not on me. because i can't imagine what it's like being president but giving that up. but doing it the way president trump did it. i don't think dealing with cancer and the place i'm at in my life and where my family is at, i think it would be -- i think it would be a burden and i think it would be something that you have a hard time >>ea you are lukey to rely on john mccain as your da to you used to be on fox. now you are on the view. >> yeah, pretty crazy. >> what role did your dad's advice play in make that decision? >> i when i decided to take fox he was imploring me to tak
and i think that, i think about that moment and where we are at politically a lot, and i do think that if i could go back in time, and my dad could do it all over again, and he would say build the wall h you know, whatever, praum esident obama i muslim, it would not be worth it. i would still say don't do it. [ applause ] >> let's me tell you something, my dad has glioblastoma cancer stage 4. when you are having the conversations my family has been having, i feel such a relief right now...
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book it's an experience like nothing else on it because i want to share what i think what i know about the beautiful guy like rates of will transfer. and thinks it's going to. i. knew it was going to be. such. israeli military hits twelve targets in syria after damascus shoots down an israeli fighter jet for the first time in thirty six years. meanwhile turkey's president says one of his country's military helicopters has been downed near the syrian border where entre is carrying out an offensive against a kurdish militia. thank god the far right surge is causing concern in italy ahead of a general election anti-fascist activists rallied in several cities after six african migrants were injured in a shooting. and kim jong sr invites the south korean president to visit north korea and the latest sign of him from relations between the two countries.
book it's an experience like nothing else on it because i want to share what i think what i know about the beautiful guy like rates of will transfer. and thinks it's going to. i. knew it was going to be. such. israeli military hits twelve targets in syria after damascus shoots down an israeli fighter jet for the first time in thirty six years. meanwhile turkey's president says one of his country's military helicopters has been downed near the syrian border where entre is carrying out an...
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Feb 12, 2018
02/18
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CNBC
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still think that, you know, i again, i think with the economy being as strong as it is, you know you investments, stocks bonds, cash alternatives, and if people become less invested in stocks and bonds, just did i pure nature more money into the commodities. we have to bound, there's so much going on, but i appreciate the time you gave us >> you got it. >>> final trades after this quick break. trust #1 doctor recommended dulcolax. use dulcolax tablets for gentle dependable relief. suppositories for relief in minutes. and dulcoease for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax. designed for dependable relief. (sighs) i hate missing out missing out after hours. not anymore, td ameritrade lets you trade select securities 24 hours a day, five days a week. that's amazing. it's a pretty big deal. so i can trade all night long? ♪ ♪ all night long... is that lionel richie? let's reopen the market. mr. richie, would you ring the 24/5 bell? sure can, jim. ♪ trade 24/5, only with td ameritrade. ♪ ♪ build and run apps anywhere you like, w
still think that, you know, i again, i think with the economy being as strong as it is, you know you investments, stocks bonds, cash alternatives, and if people become less invested in stocks and bonds, just did i pure nature more money into the commodities. we have to bound, there's so much going on, but i appreciate the time you gave us >> you got it. >>> final trades after this quick break. trust #1 doctor recommended dulcolax. use dulcolax tablets for gentle dependable...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 25, 2018
02/18
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SFGTV
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i think this is a good report. i think as we move along on it, and we make some adjustments, i think one of the hardest things that i see is seem to be getting staff hired. bureaucracy is tough. i mean, i can't even imagine that, and the commissioners, we come to a commission meeting maybe twice a month, but we're not down in the trenches every day like the port staff and the executive director, so i think there's some great work. i'm speaking just how i see it, and keep on doing what you're doing and take all the commissioners' feedback, what they think, and keep moving forward, but i appreciate the report. >> thank you. >> yeah, i have to say something in response. >> okay. that's fine, but commissioner katz has to speak first. >> commissioner katz: i forgot one issue. you sort of touched on it with commissioner woo ho's questions, but i'd just like to ask executive director forbes to put something on our future calendar to further address what's happening with some of the dip in revenue from the cruise ships, and
i think this is a good report. i think as we move along on it, and we make some adjustments, i think one of the hardest things that i see is seem to be getting staff hired. bureaucracy is tough. i mean, i can't even imagine that, and the commissioners, we come to a commission meeting maybe twice a month, but we're not down in the trenches every day like the port staff and the executive director, so i think there's some great work. i'm speaking just how i see it, and keep on doing what you're...
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time talking about digital currencies what's your take on that hearing well i think it was a pretty interesting hearing and i think you can paraphrase some old philosophers to basically get the bottom line of what he what he individual said i think therefore i am that was descartes but i think christian kawa his view was it's there so therefore i have to deal with it i think jay clayton was the only thing we have to fear is fear itself his message was for main street investors we have to fear everything especially crypto currencies i think you sort of dramatic contrast in the way that both individuals and their agencies are approaching cryptocurrency is right now that i think the most interesting thing from my perspective was christine carlo basically saying there's gaps in federal regulation they need to be filled in to make cryptocurrency safer for everybody and frankly jake layton agreed with that perspective i think a couple of things about that i think i agree with you i think you have the right right take on it one mr g. and carlo chair. of the c f t c he's been pretty out there for a couple years actu
time talking about digital currencies what's your take on that hearing well i think it was a pretty interesting hearing and i think you can paraphrase some old philosophers to basically get the bottom line of what he what he individual said i think therefore i am that was descartes but i think christian kawa his view was it's there so therefore i have to deal with it i think jay clayton was the only thing we have to fear is fear itself his message was for main street investors we have to fear...
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Feb 6, 2018
02/18
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CNNW
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otherwise i think people are pretty dug in. >> the question about the time line is important, i thinkof republicans. i think there are a lot of republicans who want trump not to be on the ballot in the midterm elections, not that they can do that, but the more this is litigated, the more this is a big clash in the legal system between mueller and the president with the president not wanting to do an interview, the worse that is for a lot of republicans. i think it will be interesting in the wake of mag dpi's piece tonight what republicans on the hill say about this. do they nudge him to say, yeah, mr. president, we want you to speak. speak now. get this investigation over with. maybe it will help us in the midterm elections. >> if this did go to the supreme court, jeff, do you have a sense of what would happen? >> i don't think it's a slam dunk for either side. i think by and large, probably mueller would win. in the case of the united states v. nixon, nixon was forced to surrender tapes in response to a subpoena during a trial. the clinton v jones, the paula jones case, bill clinton
otherwise i think people are pretty dug in. >> the question about the time line is important, i thinkof republicans. i think there are a lot of republicans who want trump not to be on the ballot in the midterm elections, not that they can do that, but the more this is litigated, the more this is a big clash in the legal system between mueller and the president with the president not wanting to do an interview, the worse that is for a lot of republicans. i think it will be interesting in...
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Feb 19, 2018
02/18
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FOXNEWSW
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i see more homeless people all over the country than ever. i think that's a lot of mental illness. iill say it's great the young people are willing to march in washington. i think hopefully it will change the tenor of the debate. maybe if young people are saying you've got to do something, it will appeal to people who, as you point outcome are locked into own, you are going to take my guns. gun owners, nra members think background checks can be done better. president trump has said today, or his aides of said, he is interested in doing something to strengthen the background checks. >> greg: these suggestions i made, i think david french wrote a good piece for national review on -- >> dana: gun violence restraining orders. >> greg: from the conservative libertarian side. no one trusted coming from the other side because everybody is so -- we hear the dog whistle that they are coming to the guns away. >> jesse: it is true. a pre9/11 mind-set when it comes to school shootings. after 9/11, everyone realized they were -- the agencies weren't sharing anything with each other. and i have th
i see more homeless people all over the country than ever. i think that's a lot of mental illness. iill say it's great the young people are willing to march in washington. i think hopefully it will change the tenor of the debate. maybe if young people are saying you've got to do something, it will appeal to people who, as you point outcome are locked into own, you are going to take my guns. gun owners, nra members think background checks can be done better. president trump has said today, or...
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Feb 24, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN2
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i think it's great. i was originally skeptical when elon musk said he would land that first one on a barge and i think i said something like he-- i will never say that it began about him. i might say he's ambitious, but i will never doubt him again when he says he's going to do something, but i think it's very exciting. i think we are on the cusp of a real moments in human history where access to space is going to become much more available in the coming years. i was recently on blue origin and those guys are not kidding around. that is a serious business and they are serious about fine in space and i suspect they will have a lot of success, also. time moves on hopefully that will get more people in space. more people have this incredible experience, industries and space, nasa beyond the path of doing great exploration. host: you talk a lot-- or maybe not a lot but you talk frequently about challenges, technical and otherwise during your time and space, can you talk a bit about what you feel are the greate
i think it's great. i was originally skeptical when elon musk said he would land that first one on a barge and i think i said something like he-- i will never say that it began about him. i might say he's ambitious, but i will never doubt him again when he says he's going to do something, but i think it's very exciting. i think we are on the cusp of a real moments in human history where access to space is going to become much more available in the coming years. i was recently on blue origin and...
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Feb 15, 2018
02/18
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CSPAN3
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i think that's -- i think that's a great way to do it. we've been handling them individually by local markets, but think we could -- >> and the republican i ask the question is because i've been involved for decades in brak. i know sometimes people get scared when you use that term but i've been on both sides of that equation whether arguing for the base staying home or for it being repurpd and we've had some good examples on how do it over the course of the last 30 or 40 years. with you it takes an informed partnership between those trying to dispose of the facilities and those within a local community or wherever who might want to use that. so i look forward to you continuing to developing that and also providing that availability for those of us who want to see how it's going, what's the market look like, if you will, what's the fair market. different subject, in your pamphlet here we talked about this yesterday, the addition of full-time equivalents to be handle new tasks, bringing people up and online. is there -- is there an alternat
i think that's -- i think that's a great way to do it. we've been handling them individually by local markets, but think we could -- >> and the republican i ask the question is because i've been involved for decades in brak. i know sometimes people get scared when you use that term but i've been on both sides of that equation whether arguing for the base staying home or for it being repurpd and we've had some good examples on how do it over the course of the last 30 or 40 years. with you...
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guess is what i'm shooting for well i mean that's a tough question but i think you know one again i think the press in the media need to patrol look again that it's not like a point counterpoint issue it's there's not much argument here that this has to be dealt with i think families need to deal with it realistically we need to talk about the fact that you know our kids spend hours and hours of time and video games were the main objective is to shoot people and kill people and we watch movies where that is also the main objective in the movie i mean those things matter i think we have a cultural issue that we need to start. question. yeah well you bring up you know these video games of these shooter games. is there a decent said ten zation i mean we know that we see this on the media we're watching it unfold right now as you and i are talking we see images a split screen of all of the emergency vehicles that have arrived at the school and then also an area aerial view showing swat officials reacting to the scene. we see images on you tube we see images on twitter we have these vide
guess is what i'm shooting for well i mean that's a tough question but i think you know one again i think the press in the media need to patrol look again that it's not like a point counterpoint issue it's there's not much argument here that this has to be dealt with i think families need to deal with it realistically we need to talk about the fact that you know our kids spend hours and hours of time and video games were the main objective is to shoot people and kill people and we watch movies...