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welcome to all my life so i louis' house and i will be here with a for the next half an hour taking you through the best of all stories from the previous week as a taste of what's in store.
welcome to all my life so i louis' house and i will be here with a for the next half an hour taking you through the best of all stories from the previous week as a taste of what's in store.
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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, i had my love/hate relationship with st. louis. i have a lot of special memories, thank you people as well. >> we're good? >> okay. >> all right. >> i want to thank people as well. we talk to people all people we interviewed in ferguson, and here, and andy hunter, she is in the book. she was kind, and thank you to her, and maxine bird st. john'sg provided me a lot of informati information. gloria ross, always a huge help. denise who is here. always a resource. all of my friends, st. louis post dispatch, it was a struggle at times but at the end of the day that is one of my best working experiences in terms of a culture of people w.h.o. w.h.- who fought hard. we -- matt and i will talk through the book and how we see it. really making the book different it is told from stand point of a law enforcement person who is black. also blue. he is in law enforcement, he is true to both professions. he is a cop, he is also an african-american male, he has lived both sides of that. a line in book, lived at both sides of the barrel. it has happe
, i had my love/hate relationship with st. louis. i have a lot of special memories, thank you people as well. >> we're good? >> okay. >> all right. >> i want to thank people as well. we talk to people all people we interviewed in ferguson, and here, and andy hunter, she is in the book. she was kind, and thank you to her, and maxine bird st. john'sg provided me a lot of informati information. gloria ross, always a huge help. denise who is here. always a resource. all of...
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i. louis's addiction was at its strongest here it was suffering from chronic psychosis. these moxy are i would actually pick yeah. squeeze the skin thinking that there was stuff crawling on then they for my skin and if i couldn't get it out like that i'll get a knife and all cuts myself if'n yeah and then get the knife and start thinking it's hard to get these bits out mahseer nothing near the hotel is well over my chest same same thing just the written self shreds of oil down my legs just rip my self destructs my. you know one point i thought i was saying this but my face was one big scab. yeah it was just a just a cult that just tear myself to shreds all day. eventually louis was picked up by an outreach team and goes into temporary accommodation is now trying to give back by working with an organization which deals with the homeless that the local authorities can't going to help. but he's refused his mr don't do social he went into withdrawal right in front of my eyes. you. know. you can be a long and painful journey away from homelessness and addiction and lunchtime m
i. louis's addiction was at its strongest here it was suffering from chronic psychosis. these moxy are i would actually pick yeah. squeeze the skin thinking that there was stuff crawling on then they for my skin and if i couldn't get it out like that i'll get a knife and all cuts myself if'n yeah and then get the knife and start thinking it's hard to get these bits out mahseer nothing near the hotel is well over my chest same same thing just the written self shreds of oil down my legs just rip...
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Dec 7, 2018
12/18
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CNBC
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why would i look and say, oh, st. louis those >> i have a pretty strong point of view on this. i think the more high-tech we have gotten in our lives, the more high touch we really need and we have made everything so convenient that people now walk around with this remote controlled life. they want everything whereve they are, wherever they are. but what's getting lost a lot of the times is the human need for deep rooted experience that brings back taste memories whether or not i grew up in st. louis, i want to use my home more often i want to invite friends over more off and i want to show them something maybe they couldn't have gotten. we have this restaurant economy happening. that is or is not good for restaurants. we'll learn that in a few years probably but what we love about goldbelly is this has nothing to do with deciding whether jim wants to have blue smoke at his home or whether he wants to come to blue smoke. it's jim lives in san francisco. he's heard amazing things or hawaii or wichita. he's heard amazing thin
why would i look and say, oh, st. louis those >> i have a pretty strong point of view on this. i think the more high-tech we have gotten in our lives, the more high touch we really need and we have made everything so convenient that people now walk around with this remote controlled life. they want everything whereve they are, wherever they are. but what's getting lost a lot of the times is the human need for deep rooted experience that brings back taste memories whether or not i grew up...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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i remember the day that i decided to go to st. louis. i drove to st. louis in the middle of the night. i'm going to go. and i really was, i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest. i didn't know what it meant to just sort of walking the path because there were all the things, that was how we made it out of there. no plan, no money, no nothing. we did it anyway. and that really stuck with me. >> host: we share mutual friends >> guest: yeah. >> host: she tells me funny story. you tweeted. do you see yourself as a tool through social media or do you see social media as tool for your voice? >> i think what internet allows us to do is pace of impact. i think about st. louis and get 5,000 of people to show up in one place. that was my role. mobilize people. we could have gotten the same result in much slower on the phone. accelerated the pace of impact. i have a complicated with that platform than most platforms. i have seen that part of the platform. i have seen the beauty of people being able to use their voice, so i don't think about it as
i remember the day that i decided to go to st. louis. i drove to st. louis in the middle of the night. i'm going to go. and i really was, i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest. i didn't know what it meant to just sort of walking the path because there were all the things, that was how we made it out of there. no plan, no money, no nothing. we did it anyway. and that really stuck with me. >> host: we share mutual friends >> guest: yeah. >> host: she tells...
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Dec 28, 2018
12/18
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i didn't have any money. louisof money because first off they've never expected me to win and nobody else did either. including people in elroy. my father was the only one, he sometimes i question whether he voted for me. [laughter] but the truth of the matter was, i didn't have everybody supporting me. everybody supported louis ravel. why when the primary everybody wanted to come up and say, who is tommy thompson? they came to elroy to meet me. i got my first donation, back then you could take some cash. i got $50 in cash and a bunch of stamps. i don't know? i wrote it down. somebody down here in madison everybody was trying to find out who tommy thompson was because the republicans thought i would win. i did win but then the republicans won control of the assembly. so the number one position in the assembly of course is the speaker. and there were four candidates running for speaker, paul alfonsi, maybe a name some of you remember. harold clements, who later became secretary of treasury. harold freilich, and curt
i didn't have any money. louisof money because first off they've never expected me to win and nobody else did either. including people in elroy. my father was the only one, he sometimes i question whether he voted for me. [laughter] but the truth of the matter was, i didn't have everybody supporting me. everybody supported louis ravel. why when the primary everybody wanted to come up and say, who is tommy thompson? they came to elroy to meet me. i got my first donation, back then you could take...
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Dec 28, 2018
12/18
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[laughter] but the truth of the matter was i didn't have anybody supporting me. everybody supported louis romero, so when i want the wante primary, everybody wanted of course to come up and ask who is tommy thompson. so they come to elroy to meet me. i got my first donation -- back then you could take cash, $50 in cash and a bunch of stamps. i don't know, i didn't know what to do so i wrote it down somebody down here in madison, so everybody was trying to find out who tommy thompson was because it's a republican area and they thought i was going to win, so i did, but then the republicanss won control of the assembly. wiso, the number one position in the assembly of course is the speaker. there were four candidates runningg for speaker. maybe a name some of you remember and harold clemens who later became secretary of treasure. harold freilich and curtis mccabe. curtis mccabe dropped out and left with freilich. harold clemens was there and paul dropped out and went with harold clemens. socl there were 51 republicans. so 26 is going to win. so freilich comes to meet me. he didn't support me
[laughter] but the truth of the matter was i didn't have anybody supporting me. everybody supported louis romero, so when i want the wante primary, everybody wanted of course to come up and ask who is tommy thompson. so they come to elroy to meet me. i got my first donation -- back then you could take cash, $50 in cash and a bunch of stamps. i don't know, i didn't know what to do so i wrote it down somebody down here in madison, so everybody was trying to find out who tommy thompson was because...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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i want to thank everyone for joining us at st. louis public library. i want to let you know about upcoming programs we have. thursday october 18, library will join with international institute of st. louis to present a u.s. citizenship basics workshop. a step by step break down of the nationalization process, and resources here in st. louis for new americans, thursday november 1, library will be joined by representative
i want to thank everyone for joining us at st. louis public library. i want to let you know about upcoming programs we have. thursday october 18, library will join with international institute of st. louis to present a u.s. citizenship basics workshop. a step by step break down of the nationalization process, and resources here in st. louis for new americans, thursday november 1, library will be joined by representative
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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i remember the day that i started to go to st. louis i got in the car and drove in the middle of the night and ask people to come. i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest because there were all the things that's how we made it out of there and that has stuck with me. >> host: she tells me this funny story we would try to figure out where to go eat. did you see your self as this is a tool for your voice? >> i could get 5,000 people to show up in one place. we could have gotten the same result just much slower. and i have a complicated relationship with a ba with that part of the platform. i don't think about it as a replacement problem but i do think it can do some things quicker. if you think even 30 years ago as a young activist you couldn't talk to people who felt like a tv show or radio show like you think about people. >> host: in your book you point out police kill around 1200 people but injure 50,000 annually and more likely to be unarmed and baltimore going back to 2014 and a man killed by police were a black m
i remember the day that i started to go to st. louis i got in the car and drove in the middle of the night and ask people to come. i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest because there were all the things that's how we made it out of there and that has stuck with me. >> host: she tells me this funny story we would try to figure out where to go eat. did you see your self as this is a tool for your voice? >> i could get 5,000 people to show up in one place. we could...
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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i remember the day that i decided to go to st. louis i got in the car and drove to st. louis in the middle of the night like i'm going to go and i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest because there were all these things so how we made it out of there, no plan, no money or anything we did it anyway and that really stuck with me. >> host: she loves when the two if you get togethe of you gd tells me a funny story. she said we were sitting there trying to figure out where to go eat and she said the food was amazing. do you see yourself through social media or social media as a tool for your voice packs >> guest: ipacksguest co. it accelerates the pace of impact. so i could get 5,000 people to show up in one place. that was my role using twitter to mobilize people. we could have gotten the same result just much slower. i have a complicated relationship enough platform. i've seen different parts of the platform and the beauty of people able to use their voice in a way they happened before but i don't think about it as a replacement. even 30 years ago as a y
i remember the day that i decided to go to st. louis i got in the car and drove to st. louis in the middle of the night like i'm going to go and i didn't know what it meant to be called until the protest because there were all these things so how we made it out of there, no plan, no money or anything we did it anyway and that really stuck with me. >> host: she loves when the two if you get togethe of you gd tells me a funny story. she said we were sitting there trying to figure out where...
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walking one negative zero negative six they wouldn't believe it but i will tell them i did and i meant it. louis. save. me a. leg thanks . i had a great education a good job and a family that loved me. i never had to worry about how i would eat somewhere i would sleep. but i'm facing christmas alone out on the streets of london well enough to be honest because of the lorry load going up. you know just a lot of those still give out food for the store. clerks. because you don't really feel like a human being in that. and then. the guy just came over to me saw me and gave me no change at his bucket. when our mine when the content of our mine he's changed there are fees ico. up the level of the physiology that is at the level of the brain the brain as a form of plasticity can rewire itself and not just the brain but also the rest of the body responsible. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter to us as over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten point colored aren't happy each dish. eighty five percent of global wealth he longs to be old for rich the point six percent market saw
walking one negative zero negative six they wouldn't believe it but i will tell them i did and i meant it. louis. save. me a. leg thanks . i had a great education a good job and a family that loved me. i never had to worry about how i would eat somewhere i would sleep. but i'm facing christmas alone out on the streets of london well enough to be honest because of the lorry load going up. you know just a lot of those still give out food for the store. clerks. because you don't really feel like a...
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Dec 23, 2018
12/18
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so all of a sudden i think st. louis, and get many people to show up in one place. you use twitter to mobilize and move people. we could have got the same result on the phone just slower. i have a splictd relationship with that platform, and the first person banned from twitter was the person banned for raising money to get me killed. the beauty of people being able to raise their voice in ways they couldn't before. i don't think about it as a replacement problem. i think there are things you could do quicker that we can't do offline. you think 30 years ago you're a young activist, you couldn't talk to a million people without a radio show, our a validator. i meet so many people -- you think about people with influence and access all of a sudden we can be in proximity and not have to meet them. >> so in your book, you point out that police kill around -- they three times more likely than whites to be killed and more likely unarmed, and baltimore going back to 2014, every man killed by police was a black man. and 2015, in 14 cities the only people killed by police wer
so all of a sudden i think st. louis, and get many people to show up in one place. you use twitter to mobilize and move people. we could have got the same result on the phone just slower. i have a splictd relationship with that platform, and the first person banned from twitter was the person banned for raising money to get me killed. the beauty of people being able to raise their voice in ways they couldn't before. i don't think about it as a replacement problem. i think there are things you...
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Dec 22, 2018
12/18
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MSNBCW
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. >> i can remember the feeling when he was captured, we were just all like, yes, okay, now where is she? come on, where are you? we're ready to find you. >> as investigators focused on aaron louisked off on beverly's husband as a suspect. now detective allison was keeping carl in the loop. >> he said we got him. i said, well, where's beverly? he said we're still questioning him. we're going to find out. we're going to keep struggling, we're going to keep on until we find her. >> then did you have a little burst of hope? >> just a little bit of hope. that's all i had. >> really your biggest task was to find out where beverly was? >> that was my biggest task and concern at that time. >> did louis know where beverly was? and if he did, would he tell the detective? what was his story? where was beverly? >> he said that he kidnapped beverly and it was because of money. he said that he found her on the internet, searched her out, saw that she was a broker and felt like she had money. >> louis described in detail what he claimed happened. he said when he contacted beverly about the house showing, she told him she didn't feel comfortable meeting just him. so he got his wife, crystal on
. >> i can remember the feeling when he was captured, we were just all like, yes, okay, now where is she? come on, where are you? we're ready to find you. >> as investigators focused on aaron louisked off on beverly's husband as a suspect. now detective allison was keeping carl in the loop. >> he said we got him. i said, well, where's beverly? he said we're still questioning him. we're going to find out. we're going to keep struggling, we're going to keep on until we find her....
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Dec 31, 2018
12/18
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louis said "i don't think you are going back louis", i said "i don't think so either." . did then was a six month moratorium had been in the headlights. he pulled himself out, and one of the reasons, romney was runnings first in the polls, of ad of johnson and ahead nixon, i said is it wise to all that space and time whiler going nowhere. need to id "i think i get out of the public arena for a while. him for a hew on little while", and the press went after romney because he only one out there. by mid 1967. 1st, whered september romney made a famous statement over in vietnam, i was brainwashed. gene mccarthy, i remember, in character with him. in romney's case you wouldn't a brain-washing. >> i want to take you back to period, and a young bukkanan on the campaign trail with nixon. the president. we'll watch this. >> you can't del a republican, independence or a democrat. it's a good cross section of people. how many of ndered these people... know how many are coming in. we hope they are all going out. (video played b. you really thing so in. >> i really think so. as a matt
louis said "i don't think you are going back louis", i said "i don't think so either." . did then was a six month moratorium had been in the headlights. he pulled himself out, and one of the reasons, romney was runnings first in the polls, of ad of johnson and ahead nixon, i said is it wise to all that space and time whiler going nowhere. need to id "i think i get out of the public arena for a while. him for a hew on little while", and the press went after romney...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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i see st. louis, which has undergone decades of decline, facing the same problems it has in terms of the loss of jobs, the loss of civility. life. of erosion of civic we are in this together. unfortunately what is governing is is a gop legislature pummeled outsidemoney, by influencers. it is not serving the public, not looking out for the people. everyone in missouri deserve someone -- something better than that. host: one of the things i've noticed in reading your book is -- letere does not seem me just ask you the question. how much influence do people in flyover country have on the political situation in the country, how much influence do they have in washington, d.c.? guest: that is a great question. on an individual level, people who live where i do tend to be ignored. by also apply that to anybody who does not have a lot of money living in a battered, blue-collar city on the coast as well. overlooka tendency to the big power players that come out of this region. people like the koch brothers an
i see st. louis, which has undergone decades of decline, facing the same problems it has in terms of the loss of jobs, the loss of civility. life. of erosion of civic we are in this together. unfortunately what is governing is is a gop legislature pummeled outsidemoney, by influencers. it is not serving the public, not looking out for the people. everyone in missouri deserve someone -- something better than that. host: one of the things i've noticed in reading your book is -- letere does not...
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Dec 14, 2018
12/18
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WRC
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i-64 st. louis tool no i-75 cincinnati to tampa, o85 atlanta raleigh and roi-95 f d.c. down to daytona beach. so it's a bigmpact storm, but then moves out and next week starts off fairly decently. >> al, don't go gto good morn tow you. details emerging out of west virginia about that harrowing o rescuef three people who spent four terrifying days trapp an underground abandoned mine. nbc's kevin tibbles is learning more. y,vin, good morning. >> reporter: craig. it was a nightmarish ordeal. fo days underground. no food, no water, no light complete darkness. something they are not soon to forget. >> started thanking god. our guardian angels sent from heaven. >> reporter: a dramatic rescue for three people trapped in an abandoned west virginia coal mine. >> it was terrible. >> reporter: reunited with their loved ones after four excruciating days underground. today kayla williams, erica treadway and cody beverly are safe. >> is a whole 'nother world down there. it's dark. it's dangerous. >> there was a couple times i thought, you know, they are not going to fbod our es. they
i-64 st. louis tool no i-75 cincinnati to tampa, o85 atlanta raleigh and roi-95 f d.c. down to daytona beach. so it's a bigmpact storm, but then moves out and next week starts off fairly decently. >> al, don't go gto good morn tow you. details emerging out of west virginia about that harrowing o rescuef three people who spent four terrifying days trapp an underground abandoned mine. nbc's kevin tibbles is learning more. y,vin, good morning. >> reporter: craig. it was a nightmarish...
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progress about two years now ever since i was louis from prison after my four year students involved the student so. from having a investigated some of the same issues that are on the u.k. right now going surveillance of what not. is a framework or what we call process democracy it allows individuals with notice or pretty relationships to congregate online in this ecosystem that we're overseeing and better do since that was the center of things we've been doing in the past ten years in digital activism and transparency activism if make age. has changed things this is the next to extent that it's not yet i think really been realized were understood by even most educated observers and we hope to a change that over the next few years the story of how you ended up in jail is quite a long one just briefly i mean over here that we people have with anonymous mosques on a guy fawkes night in november they raided your place for a document including ones an anonymous many others and you were put in jail what for sharing a link that alone holding those dogs. it was a rather it's a rich tapestry
progress about two years now ever since i was louis from prison after my four year students involved the student so. from having a investigated some of the same issues that are on the u.k. right now going surveillance of what not. is a framework or what we call process democracy it allows individuals with notice or pretty relationships to congregate online in this ecosystem that we're overseeing and better do since that was the center of things we've been doing in the past ten years in digital...
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Dec 16, 2018
12/18
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i get people's right to assemble. the march around gun safety in st. louis. i was there participating. -- i amtainly somebody left of center, not right of center. it is not that i am disavowing my party. you need to reflect that in your behavior i was raised to be polite. not veryo are effective of moving the needle towards the policies that we want to embrace. >> what do you think of president trump? sen. mccaskill: i have been so disciplined. sickof the problem is he -- he controls every news cycle. want to get distracted by his behavior that people in missouri thought my job was fighting him. i want to get things done on infrastructure. i want to get things done for you. ifwill not be as effective all we are doing is bashing president trump. there have been times it was really hard. he is so over-the-top the top with some of the stuff. being never known anybody a true -- a true teller daily, even when everyone knows he is lying. probably the thing that is most disappointing is the fact that so many republican colleagues are acquiescing to this new normal. o
i get people's right to assemble. the march around gun safety in st. louis. i was there participating. -- i amtainly somebody left of center, not right of center. it is not that i am disavowing my party. you need to reflect that in your behavior i was raised to be polite. not veryo are effective of moving the needle towards the policies that we want to embrace. >> what do you think of president trump? sen. mccaskill: i have been so disciplined. sickof the problem is he -- he controls...
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i don't know trump's former national security adviser got a tough reception from the judge at his sentencing hearing on tuesday we'll bring you the full story after a short break this is r.t. international. louis. i. seemed wrong. but. just don't call. me to get to shape out these days become educated and engaged with equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart. she says to look for common ground. welcome back this is our two international i me sentencing of trumps former national security adviser michael flynn has been postponed until march next year despite giving flynn a second chance during of the court hearing the judge pulled no punches. all along you are an unregistered agent of a foreign country while serving as the national security adviser arguably that undermines everything this flag over here stands for arguably you sold your country out. flynn has been under investigation as part of special counsel robert miller's probe into alleged russian interference in the two thousand and sixteen u.s. election he's already pleaded guilty to a charge of lying to the f.b.i. about his conversations with russia's ambassador flynn has also come under fire for attending a dinner with
i don't know trump's former national security adviser got a tough reception from the judge at his sentencing hearing on tuesday we'll bring you the full story after a short break this is r.t. international. louis. i. seemed wrong. but. just don't call. me to get to shape out these days become educated and engaged with equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart. she says to look for common ground. welcome back this is our two international i me sentencing of trumps former...
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when i was in st. louis, i saw a sign that said workers needed and the pay was $1.25 an hour. that's what was advertised. if nafta is going to be renegotiated successfully, it has to face up to this issue. because workers understand what happens when companies chase the very lowest dollars. mexico has the lowest industrial wage of any country on earth except for the philippines. lower than china. and president trump stepped into that vacuum and now it's up to people who believe in international trade to step up and say face up to this issue that was the basic flaw in nafta to begin with. what was the issue in nafta 25 years ago? why did so many of us vote against it? it's because there were not enforceable standards on labor and environment. now 25 years later, we're facing the same situation. if we don't face up to it now, 10, 15, 20 years from now, there will be a deep, deep feeling of letdown. face up to it now. that's what we're saying. reporter: gm says they are going to help relocate some of these workers, help place them in different facilities. is that enough? >> no. >
when i was in st. louis, i saw a sign that said workers needed and the pay was $1.25 an hour. that's what was advertised. if nafta is going to be renegotiated successfully, it has to face up to this issue. because workers understand what happens when companies chase the very lowest dollars. mexico has the lowest industrial wage of any country on earth except for the philippines. lower than china. and president trump stepped into that vacuum and now it's up to people who believe in international...
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Dec 31, 2018
12/18
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and even before that, when i was in saint louis as a journalist in 1965. at washington university out there, the harbor of the middle west. i was a teacher speaking on behalf in favor of johnson and kennedy's policies out there. kennedy's policy. the demonstration, it wasn't violent by then. but hostility on the elite campuses. i remember sds marching and talking in front of the buildings to kids before they became violent. after dr. king was assassinated, riots in 100 cities. my hometown in d.c. was partly burned down. 7th street, 14th street, marine armed troops in the city. the law and order and the war in vietnam became the issues. >> and that's my next question. to try to put it in perspective, you had president johnson who narrowly won the new hampshire primary on march the 12th, and then you had senator kennedy entering the race on march 16th. lbj drops out on march 31st and dr. king assassinated all within a four-week period. >> it is hard to comprehend. to be able to see what was is come -- compacted in a month's time. my dad, who is a lifelong dem
and even before that, when i was in saint louis as a journalist in 1965. at washington university out there, the harbor of the middle west. i was a teacher speaking on behalf in favor of johnson and kennedy's policies out there. kennedy's policy. the demonstration, it wasn't violent by then. but hostility on the elite campuses. i remember sds marching and talking in front of the buildings to kids before they became violent. after dr. king was assassinated, riots in 100 cities. my hometown in...
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Dec 14, 2018
12/18
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KNTV
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and as far as the highways, i-64 st. louis to norfolk. atlanta to raleigh and i-95 from d.c. down to daytona beach. the week next week starts off fairly decent. guys? >> don't go away, al. we will be celebrating you a lotlot tod today. >>> new details emerging about that harrowing rescue of three people that spent four terrifying days trapped in an underground mine. what we're learning this morning about their ordeal and why they were down there in the first place. >> reporter: four days trapped underground, no food, no water, no light. complete darkness. something they're not about to forget. >> we dropped to our knees and started thanking god. >> reporter: a dramatic rescue for three people trapped in an abandon west virginia coal mine. >> it was terrible. >> reporter: reunited with their loved ones after four days underground. today they are safe and revealing new details of their nightmare in the mine. >> it's a whole other world down there. it is dark. it is dangerous. >> there was a couple times where i thought they're not going to find our bodies or know when we passed
and as far as the highways, i-64 st. louis to norfolk. atlanta to raleigh and i-95 from d.c. down to daytona beach. the week next week starts off fairly decent. guys? >> don't go away, al. we will be celebrating you a lotlot tod today. >>> new details emerging about that harrowing rescue of three people that spent four terrifying days trapped in an underground mine. what we're learning this morning about their ordeal and why they were down there in the first place. >>...
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Dec 21, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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i see. that's louis tries to take photographs in the park for a second time. the model of a few that are so so if you're so wrong that the hustle is constantly trying to prevent outsiders knowing what goes on in the citadel i think your points are going to come up when he said he got so much more powerful than for you know she had to get rid of the book takes louise photos if you think that we're going to help those in the movie love as you know the problem is that you know that's what the cable you were previously is the. legal g.i.d. that makes it clear that members have to play by his rooms. twenty five hundred bucks a day was going to take a short change not just any part of the ball game. it's not on somebody's mind hundreds of. it's the night before a planned national protest by generation i den. in paris. received the message. if it's already documented you know. this is an. extreme look at the fact that the whole pick up to date good luck to. the. left wing activists attack a generation identity ball. looks like it let me get let me on a little beyond
i see. that's louis tries to take photographs in the park for a second time. the model of a few that are so so if you're so wrong that the hustle is constantly trying to prevent outsiders knowing what goes on in the citadel i think your points are going to come up when he said he got so much more powerful than for you know she had to get rid of the book takes louise photos if you think that we're going to help those in the movie love as you know the problem is that you know that's what the...
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Dec 17, 2018
12/18
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BBCNEWS
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i think it would be more likely when qualifying for the champions league next season is mathematically impossible, which is when they got rid of louishink it was the same for david moyes as well. that will be when manchester united will have to make the decision. i have to ask you, writing for the new york times, what is the perception globally of manchester united? how much their performances on the pitch or the poor performances on the pitch, are affecting the brand? financially, they do because the commercial contract have a clause written into them that they have to pay less if they are not in the champions league. funnily enough, in terms of exposure and people talking about them, it doesn't make any difference. crisis sells well, your fa ns difference. crisis sells well, your fans are still engaged, you'll see a similar number of interactions on twitter and people wanting manchester united to win so, in a sense, i'm not sure in football anymore, strange as sense, i'm not sure in football anymore, strange as it sounds... if you're as big as manchester united, doesn't matter what happens on the pitch, you asked on manchester uni
i think it would be more likely when qualifying for the champions league next season is mathematically impossible, which is when they got rid of louishink it was the same for david moyes as well. that will be when manchester united will have to make the decision. i have to ask you, writing for the new york times, what is the perception globally of manchester united? how much their performances on the pitch or the poor performances on the pitch, are affecting the brand? financially, they do...
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Dec 25, 2018
12/18
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KQED
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. >> i was gonna ask you about louis c.k... >> okay. >> ...because obviously everybody's talking about you know, and -- >> i don't know about everybody. >> well, a lot of people. all right -- 'cause my mom hasn't mentioned it. >> has she never? she's never said, "jon, would you ever have done that?" >> "is louis c.k. gonna go back onstage?" she really -- she's more -- she's thinking about other things. >> well, you've said that comedy is not particularly a very friendly place for women... >> it's not been, no. >> do you think that might change? >> well, hopefully it changes... >> okay, no, the better question is, "why is it not friendly for women?" >> boy, that's a good question. you know, the roots of it i don't know. i mean, i think it started out as a male-dominated field. it's not a particularly welcoming field. you sort of have to come out there and -- and cut your teeth on it. i think in general most things are not -- i'll tell you a story. so, we had on "the daily show" -- there was an article about us, said, you know, it was a sexist environment. we didn't have women writers. a
. >> i was gonna ask you about louis c.k... >> okay. >> ...because obviously everybody's talking about you know, and -- >> i don't know about everybody. >> well, a lot of people. all right -- 'cause my mom hasn't mentioned it. >> has she never? she's never said, "jon, would you ever have done that?" >> "is louis c.k. gonna go back onstage?" she really -- she's more -- she's thinking about other things. >> well, you've said that...
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Dec 8, 2018
12/18
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KQED
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. >> it very much changes the way you think about college, and i >> brown: louis newman is stanford'sector of undergraduate advising and research, and himself as religious studholar. >> we tell students all the time, "don't think about the job you're looking for. think about the job that hasn't even been created yet, because the skills that you're gaining here may well position you for something that you can't even imagine." >> brown: he says that while enrollment across the nation in history, philosophy, literature and other liberal arts majors has been falling for decades, the skills they provide are still needed in the modern workforce. >> thinking clearly, writing well, working well with other people, understanding diversity, working in groups... these are skills that are useful in virtually any kind of work context. is brown: you can't promise, you can't say to an enmajor or a history major or a classics major, "you'll get a job with that degree," right?ca >> wt promise it, but we have a lot of track record to say th students with those majors he, in fact, gotten jobs. >> brown:
. >> it very much changes the way you think about college, and i >> brown: louis newman is stanford'sector of undergraduate advising and research, and himself as religious studholar. >> we tell students all the time, "don't think about the job you're looking for. think about the job that hasn't even been created yet, because the skills that you're gaining here may well position you for something that you can't even imagine." >> brown: he says that while...
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cars and trucks slipping off i-55 near st. louis. let's get right to rob marciano. >> reporter: another pacific system that will traverse the entire country. by the time it gets to the plains, the cold will create problems for the southern plains and midsouth. likely some ice and snow coming this weekend. david? >> rob, thank you. e' gngowo a family's growing outrage tonight. new video coming in now after a colorado family, the grandfather called police for help. there was an intruder, and police mistakenly shot the grandfather. the d.a. now saying no charges will be filed against the officers. here's clayton sandell. >> he's in the bathroom, drowning my grandson. >> reporter: the scene, chaos and confusion. aurora, colorado, police responding to an unknown trouble call hear gunshots. then see 73-year-old gary black in his bathrobe. >> drop the gun! hey! get your hands in the air! guy in the robe's got the gun. >> reporter: police find out too late, this is black's house. the decorated vietnam veteran had just killed an intruder. his
cars and trucks slipping off i-55 near st. louis. let's get right to rob marciano. >> reporter: another pacific system that will traverse the entire country. by the time it gets to the plains, the cold will create problems for the southern plains and midsouth. likely some ice and snow coming this weekend. david? >> rob, thank you. e' gngowo a family's growing outrage tonight. new video coming in now after a colorado family, the grandfather called police for help. there was an...
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Dec 11, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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i don't suck enough there's british security. over the christmas holidays louis arranges a night out with g.i. activists he's been told that been involved in racist beatings. he meets a generation identity member who proposed driving a vehicle into a crowded market. but will be looking. if you're going to want to fuck up your phone gee i mean if you should swayze david . looking. for still for. joining them is g.i. activist thirty paul. and also several weigh ins but. there was an incident the night before. he makes it up to look at the film which if. it would be about looks like he just was transported to your school so you did you get to see both of you could so much people one. way in the posts about what happened next. it would be good practice for. the she gets it but we live just to live it significantly vs them so. it's good that. the group head to the city's main nightlife strip. they bump into another far right extremist. me out of. town let them go. as it was. for. the roof has just returned from hamburg in germany. on the left but that's just me he hel
i don't suck enough there's british security. over the christmas holidays louis arranges a night out with g.i. activists he's been told that been involved in racist beatings. he meets a generation identity member who proposed driving a vehicle into a crowded market. but will be looking. if you're going to want to fuck up your phone gee i mean if you should swayze david . looking. for still for. joining them is g.i. activist thirty paul. and also several weigh ins but. there was an incident the...
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yeah yeah louis. well i was going to say and even different different states are making a new tax incentives play is to say hey listen if you'll come here if you move here to this state then we would definitely give you tax credits as was all of your student loan payments for moving to the states so there are a lot of new options available in states that will be trying to take good control of this beyond the federal level to you know the downside the opposite would be brain drain joslin to what degree and no pun intended do colleges and universities some of which are very well and dowd share the blame is to wish and cost inflated well it's a really complicated answer there are many parts into this big problem that we're facing to wish in hikes do happen a lot even when i was an undergrad one of the biggest fights that i was dealing with was ensuring that our tuition was not going up at the university of california however again it does have to do with the disinvestment from our state and federal governments
yeah yeah louis. well i was going to say and even different different states are making a new tax incentives play is to say hey listen if you'll come here if you move here to this state then we would definitely give you tax credits as was all of your student loan payments for moving to the states so there are a lot of new options available in states that will be trying to take good control of this beyond the federal level to you know the downside the opposite would be brain drain joslin to what...
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my ex-husband said this guy's a genius he break things over so there's a lot of stuff that i would say and louis basically said oh yes i'd love to come to learn the other thirty two p. in the abbey national and i said are you going to come and live with us and he said no i can. we dragged him down here in the kind of rest is history he came to live with me so i had a grown up child of twenty five and a daughter of two and one of seven and he became my son and a very very handsome impressionist as well is that right yeah yeah yes at the arnold my father was rational i'm obviously shocked was that lee you were using rb national not some marriage of what. it really is where the right i never got it ever so i didn't get only got this as you know it showed that was pretty much what i had in the back. some of the work see just what to do yet which is you know and listen to the national building helpline social media which impacts all of what's happening in politics around the world of course can have quite a negative impact on young people yes i think so and the national body helpline a fantastic i me
my ex-husband said this guy's a genius he break things over so there's a lot of stuff that i would say and louis basically said oh yes i'd love to come to learn the other thirty two p. in the abbey national and i said are you going to come and live with us and he said no i can. we dragged him down here in the kind of rest is history he came to live with me so i had a grown up child of twenty five and a daughter of two and one of seven and he became my son and a very very handsome impressionist...
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Dec 19, 2018
12/18
by
KRON
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so i kind of felt the drive and the desire. >> she was 45 when she adopted louis and laila came fiveer. in the thriller bird box sandra is a mother of two. >> legos was a big thing. when you get to little people, that's basically three things they like to do. >> there's going to be love. >> we all became like a family and me and louis would catch with the ball. i think they were a tiny bit shy. they still were amazing. >> please don't take my children. >> much of the shoot was frightening. sandra fights for survival in a world over run with monsters. >> i feel like every set i work on has to have a family aspect to it. you do better work. >>> still ahead -- >> we were trying to do everything to survive. >> penny marshal memories you never heard. how cindy was the shirley to her laverne to the end. >> we watched tv together. >> here's a behind the scenes look at my video. >> "e.t." with a pregnant carrie underwo underwood. >>> the role emily blunt threw for john krasinski. denny's♪ $6.99 are you out $6.99 of your mind ♪ eggs, hash browns, bacon, sausage and butter buttermilk pancakes.
so i kind of felt the drive and the desire. >> she was 45 when she adopted louis and laila came fiveer. in the thriller bird box sandra is a mother of two. >> legos was a big thing. when you get to little people, that's basically three things they like to do. >> there's going to be love. >> we all became like a family and me and louis would catch with the ball. i think they were a tiny bit shy. they still were amazing. >> please don't take my children. >>...
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156
Dec 16, 2018
12/18
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WRC
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>> i interviewed julia loui dreyfuss for t show. she was laughing. do you still hfre that e? re? >> yes. >> i think thein le was, no ergment of the audience expressed an it in seeing the show again. >> right. >> how did you get through that? how did you power over that? >> no, i figured we were dead at that point. was over. here's the funny part of the story to me. ru know, the whole thing started -- theson i got the series is my manager georg shapiro wrote a note to brandont tardiff, president of nbc. one sentence. call me a crazy guy,ut i think some day jerry seinfeld is going to be doi s aies of nbc. when he wrote that note it was 1988. i hadeeon the "tonight" show for seven years, threeimes a year destroying for seven years king these people laugh and george still has to say tonbc, i know this sounds crazy. what was so crazy aut the idea? >> that was network television in the '80s. there was noiocompet there was the only game in town. >> do you ever think about what your lifen would have like if it hadn't actually been dead? >> i guess it would have been okay. it wouldn't
>> i interviewed julia loui dreyfuss for t show. she was laughing. do you still hfre that e? re? >> yes. >> i think thein le was, no ergment of the audience expressed an it in seeing the show again. >> right. >> how did you get through that? how did you power over that? >> no, i figured we were dead at that point. was over. here's the funny part of the story to me. ru know, the whole thing started -- theson i got the series is my manager georg shapiro wrote a...
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111
Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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i just want to thank one person the man to whom the book is did okayedded. louis, i met million in 1928 covering hi. for national review when he was running for governor against mario cuomo. he lost the race and we're still -- new york is still suffering from that unto the second generation but america hand benefited because lou was freed by that defeat to pursue his great love, american history, and what he has done for american history over the years is stellar with the gilder layerman institute, the exhibition of the new york historical society in 2004, and alexander hamilton. we were for hamilton before he was cool. so, it was great honor for me to be able to dedicate this back to him. now, i'm sorry the supreme court has been so out of the news in the last few month us but i'll trying to make this talk relevant anyway. and the reason that it is in the news is ultimately the fourth chief justice, john john marshall, the man who made the federal judiciary the peer of the legislative and of the executive and this morning i just want to say a few thing but him pe
i just want to thank one person the man to whom the book is did okayedded. louis, i met million in 1928 covering hi. for national review when he was running for governor against mario cuomo. he lost the race and we're still -- new york is still suffering from that unto the second generation but america hand benefited because lou was freed by that defeat to pursue his great love, american history, and what he has done for american history over the years is stellar with the gilder layerman...
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i-40, i-55 in dallas to atlanta on i-20, and finally on sunday atlanta impacted, memphis, jacksonville, rawle durham and on t roads jacksonville to richmond, st. louiso norfolk, i-85 to durham. guys, this could rival the superstorm of 1993 where asheville saw over 22 inches of snow. we are going to be watching this closelyver the nex 72 hours. >> all right, al, we're counting on you. >>> craig is here with another major story this morning. >> good morning. the ceo of general motors back on capitol hill today. she is defending her company's oucision to lay off 15,000 workers and close plants in the u.s. she is being met with anger from both sides of the taxpayers bailed out that company just eight years ago. on capitol hill with more. tom, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you. gm's ceo marry barrae will meeting with michigan's delegation today. demandinnswers. why is the company laying off thousands of employees, plus all the supply change jobs effected when gm is enjoying near record profits? gm's cre mary bar back on the hill. >> taxpayers bailed you out. >> reporter: facing tough questions after announcingcohe any is laying off 15,000 wo
i-40, i-55 in dallas to atlanta on i-20, and finally on sunday atlanta impacted, memphis, jacksonville, rawle durham and on t roads jacksonville to richmond, st. louiso norfolk, i-85 to durham. guys, this could rival the superstorm of 1993 where asheville saw over 22 inches of snow. we are going to be watching this closelyver the nex 72 hours. >> all right, al, we're counting on you. >>> craig is here with another major story this morning. >> good morning. the ceo of...
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Dec 26, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN
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why i ask that is, i'm not hall louis nating. i remember 15 years ago talking to at least four political parties, how effective they are i don't know but they were effective enough in the conversation with with with me to lead me to believe that they wanted good government in their own country. >> take the sawed aies, the emiratesies, the americans and anyone else out of the conflict. what would result? what does one of you -- robert. you returned from the ground, ground zero so to speak. what do you think? there is a i think chance tsh i mean, one of the things that's positive is that i really to think an immensely negative force in that country, is gone. the problem is that among the political forces that are left there's the gpc. that's the old party, general people's conference. it was sort of a secular, broadly, nationalist kind of party. it had some technocrats with who are decent people and some of those i think might form the germ of what could be useful politics afterwards. then there's a diverse political party but its c
why i ask that is, i'm not hall louis nating. i remember 15 years ago talking to at least four political parties, how effective they are i don't know but they were effective enough in the conversation with with with me to lead me to believe that they wanted good government in their own country. >> take the sawed aies, the emiratesies, the americans and anyone else out of the conflict. what would result? what does one of you -- robert. you returned from the ground, ground zero so to speak....
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Dec 13, 2018
12/18
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i grew up across the river in a town of east st. louis, illinois. i feel a familiarity with missouri more than most residents of my state. we have great reminisce about our states. my boyhood hero was stan musial, stan the man. st. louis cardinal hall of famer. he retired in 1963 holding national league career marks for games played at-bats and hits. asked to describe the habits that kept him in baseball so long, he once said, get eight hours of sleep regularly, keep your weight down, run a mile a day, if you schuss smoke, smoke cigars, then cut down on inhaling. make at that point to bat .3000. clean air mis-caskill has always brought the same work ethic to work that stan musial brought to baseball. her batting average is considerably better than .300. five years ago senator mccaskill and i teamed up to suggest a name for a new bridge, a beautiful new bridge that spanned the mighty mississippi river between her state of missouri and mine of illinois. -- near st. louis. thanks to clair's leadership, it is called the stan musial bridge. it is a well-d
i grew up across the river in a town of east st. louis, illinois. i feel a familiarity with missouri more than most residents of my state. we have great reminisce about our states. my boyhood hero was stan musial, stan the man. st. louis cardinal hall of famer. he retired in 1963 holding national league career marks for games played at-bats and hits. asked to describe the habits that kept him in baseball so long, he once said, get eight hours of sleep regularly, keep your weight down, run a...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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the thing that i didn't understand completely -- because i knew her as a friend and i would like to think of us as louis but i didn't know how big a problem alcohol was for her and also i know she suffered from post traumatic stress disorder but the extent of it i didn't know and i think it comes down to this, people often ask journalists like me who do international affairs, how difficult is it to be out there in these situations in syria, come home, it's an adjustment, for marie i don't think that was a real issue. he loved her life in london. circle of friends, mainly female friends. very much invested in the eye patch and then a moment where she didn't feel like that person. she felt vulnerable and she felt shaky and frightened. losing the sight in her eye meant facing body, it took her a long time to face mind. >> you mentioned syria, that's a big part of the book, it's a big part of the film that just came out about her, she went back having gone into homes, she went back, why did she go back? >> this was really why i wrote the book. we were discussing being smuggled into syria with the rebels to
the thing that i didn't understand completely -- because i knew her as a friend and i would like to think of us as louis but i didn't know how big a problem alcohol was for her and also i know she suffered from post traumatic stress disorder but the extent of it i didn't know and i think it comes down to this, people often ask journalists like me who do international affairs, how difficult is it to be out there in these situations in syria, come home, it's an adjustment, for marie i don't think...
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29
Dec 17, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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eye 29
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to me i mean if you are camera captures little value was gone from swap the drone and who worked for a local party in normandy. at the citadel a drone no introduces a list of value to louis. and has never happened so i think i'm going to start with an example that you have not had outside of. that if you thought he's going to have no doubt that will not only . be granted the right you get. the only new young. man you pay has a history of what are. you not going to. be at the let me look. let me say oh yes. what shocks me and what tells your journalist is that many of the national front leaders support generation identity's program and ideas. but what is also telling for me is to see a national front. in an identity tarion bar surrounded by violent openly racist activists. vassal dances with his national front guests. szechuan crawshay. also enjoying the evening. alongside grammy follies and we filmed punching a woman in a race attack. movie us cross a why he's there. i definitely will not let my never let me have it happen. as more prominent national front guests arrive at the citadel basle jokes about the risks they're taking. before you hear of the body of the officer
to me i mean if you are camera captures little value was gone from swap the drone and who worked for a local party in normandy. at the citadel a drone no introduces a list of value to louis. and has never happened so i think i'm going to start with an example that you have not had outside of. that if you thought he's going to have no doubt that will not only . be granted the right you get. the only new young. man you pay has a history of what are. you not going to. be at the let me look. let me...
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Dec 29, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN
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i see st. louisch has undergone decades of decline, facing the same problems it has in terms of the loss of jobs, the loss of civility. life. of erosion of civic we are in this together. unfortunately what is governing is is a gop legislature pummeled outsidemoney, by influencers. it is not serving the public, not looking out for the people. everyone in missouri deserve someone -- something better than that. host: one of the things i've noticed in reading your book is -- letere does not seem me just ask you the question. how much influence do people in flyover country have on the political situation in the country, how much influence do they have in washington, d.c.? guest: that is a great question. on an individual level, people who live where i do tend to be ignored. by also apply that to anybody who does not have a lot of money living in a battered, blue-collar city on the coast as well. overlooka tendency to the big power players that come out of this region. people like the koch brothers and oth
i see st. louisch has undergone decades of decline, facing the same problems it has in terms of the loss of jobs, the loss of civility. life. of erosion of civic we are in this together. unfortunately what is governing is is a gop legislature pummeled outsidemoney, by influencers. it is not serving the public, not looking out for the people. everyone in missouri deserve someone -- something better than that. host: one of the things i've noticed in reading your book is -- letere does not seem me...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 17, 2018
12/18
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SFGTV
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david elliot louis. i first met jane early 2009 when she was one of about ten candidates running for district 6. i guess replacing chris daly. there wasn't a lot of name recognition for her back then, but i was impressed right away before the 2010 d-6 race, and when i look back over her two terms, i'm just really grateful as a tenderloin resident for all she's done for our neighborhood, from vision zero, free city college, increasing the inclusionary housing requirement, help supporting raising the minimum wage, ban the box, providing tenant protections, eviction defense, bike lane on turk street, which has helped many. bedbug legislation or bedbug laundry fund. macaulay park infrastructure funding, state s.f. ordinance, and much more. so the tenderloin d-6 and the city itself is just better, because we had jane kim. and i'm so grateful she was with us for the two terms, and i will miss her. i will miss her. thank you, thank you much for your time and consideration. >> clerk: thank you for your comments. n
david elliot louis. i first met jane early 2009 when she was one of about ten candidates running for district 6. i guess replacing chris daly. there wasn't a lot of name recognition for her back then, but i was impressed right away before the 2010 d-6 race, and when i look back over her two terms, i'm just really grateful as a tenderloin resident for all she's done for our neighborhood, from vision zero, free city college, increasing the inclusionary housing requirement, help supporting raising...