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Sep 3, 2019
09/19
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and i think that a few things came from that. one, any person who is recognized in their career, which is want to keep striving doing better. it made me very happy but i was in the digital area. privacy ident broadcast and i didn't print and what to digital because i don't watch tv anymore and i don't read newspapers. i get all my content online. that just may maybe to recogni. also i think a company, abc news when i joined, was investing in digital. so the fact that it paid off and abc news was doing the right thing by investing in it, and it was recognized with very cool. i think that's a big changing point for everyone in the organization. >> you're also an adjunct at usc, correct? what are you seeing as far as, assuming you're a student like gen z, so what kind of trains are you saying at stores like their work is concerned? there was a lot of criticism by englander is that they are not engage, they're not involved in politics. what do you see as the future journalists of our trade, like is that true? >> i don't think it's tru
and i think that a few things came from that. one, any person who is recognized in their career, which is want to keep striving doing better. it made me very happy but i was in the digital area. privacy ident broadcast and i didn't print and what to digital because i don't watch tv anymore and i don't read newspapers. i get all my content online. that just may maybe to recogni. also i think a company, abc news when i joined, was investing in digital. so the fact that it paid off and abc news...
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Sep 7, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN
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i think general kelly is a terrific candidate. places like north carolina, iowa, and i hope even texas and georgia. >> we were talking about some of the candidates. can you talk about recruitment and candidates within those states you just identified? there is strong candidates and every one of those races. you talk a little bit about -- recruitment? j.b.: i think candidates will grow, but there are several good candidates across the country that have been excited to see fresh faces, women in many places, veterans. i think some of the new energy so key in the house, where democrats pick up 40 seats, demonstrative in some of the recruiting that's occurred here. as i suggested earlier, i don't think every field is set. that's the case for both seats in georgia. candidates like perhaps teresa greenfield in iowa, mark kelly, who we already talked about, and even john hickenlooper, the former governor, these are all good candidates give us good opportunities to win. ande: you mentioned maine, the senator said he would not camp -- hesita
i think general kelly is a terrific candidate. places like north carolina, iowa, and i hope even texas and georgia. >> we were talking about some of the candidates. can you talk about recruitment and candidates within those states you just identified? there is strong candidates and every one of those races. you talk a little bit about -- recruitment? j.b.: i think candidates will grow, but there are several good candidates across the country that have been excited to see fresh faces,...
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Sep 22, 2019
09/19
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i think you took a step in thinking about who do i know a new guy asked for that support. >> i do think the issue of women and money and asking for money is to see if you bring up a good.around that, we are not trying to do that. first of many of us, it's a really foreign thing to have to thanks somebody to write a check. it's the old i don't know, there's something about it that is very difficult. in cases around it it which is in the book, how to separate yourself from it. i found it really helpful with, you are not writing a check for me, this beautiful person, [laughter] your writing a check for what i believe in and what i want to change. and having that kind of distance i think is the tool that can be really helpful new think about. >> think calling up strangers asking them for money but telling them exactly where you stand and why it's important and what you are fighting for. it's really hard when it comes around to calling again. the same people who have an been generous to you. but i think for women, it's harder for us asking for money. it really is and to make that call into a
i think you took a step in thinking about who do i know a new guy asked for that support. >> i do think the issue of women and money and asking for money is to see if you bring up a good.around that, we are not trying to do that. first of many of us, it's a really foreign thing to have to thanks somebody to write a check. it's the old i don't know, there's something about it that is very difficult. in cases around it it which is in the book, how to separate yourself from it. i found it...
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Sep 6, 2019
09/19
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i think i am roe versus wade.the exception may be in the project of row against wade by finding huge amounts of stuff not to be a huge amount of burden. if i had to guess where the chief justices in this he would likely keep doing that project. i don't think he is eager to overturn roe versus wade. the at-large part of the american public. it only takes four justices to grant an issue. the question really will be whether justice thomas who i think would overturn roe against wade tomorrow if you working of the forest, whether there are four justices do that or whether they would rather just leave row against wade. you have a little bit of a decision in the box case where there were two issues from indiana. one of them was a law about the disposition of fetal remains. the other was a law that for bid abortions for various selective reasons. sexmac, race, disability status of the fetus. if the court overturned the circuit where everybody kindly agreed it was the standard for the fetal remains and then denied on the s
i think i am roe versus wade.the exception may be in the project of row against wade by finding huge amounts of stuff not to be a huge amount of burden. if i had to guess where the chief justices in this he would likely keep doing that project. i don't think he is eager to overturn roe versus wade. the at-large part of the american public. it only takes four justices to grant an issue. the question really will be whether justice thomas who i think would overturn roe against wade tomorrow if you...
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Sep 3, 2019
09/19
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i don't think it's a good indicator to hang your hat on. m looking for anything that leads, to tell me that things are turning around i don't see those signs. any indicator i look at, whether it's core crew ppi or the actual itself, durable goods, all this stuff is going the wrong direction. why hang your hat on this hope trade when there is no data to support a rebound anytime soon. >> everything you're saying music to my ears because i agree with you, but at some point are there companies that you would find, all right, the value is so compelling here, i understand there's all these bearish elements to this story, but at some point valuation is such that -- >> so rbi we are a macro firm, there is a very strong, you know, history of when the profit cycle is slowing defensive higher quality sectors and companies always outperform. you're seeing that, you're seeing that right now and you pretty much always see that. we think there is a good case to be made for continuing for overweight health care, staples, real estate and utilities. obviousl
i don't think it's a good indicator to hang your hat on. m looking for anything that leads, to tell me that things are turning around i don't see those signs. any indicator i look at, whether it's core crew ppi or the actual itself, durable goods, all this stuff is going the wrong direction. why hang your hat on this hope trade when there is no data to support a rebound anytime soon. >> everything you're saying music to my ears because i agree with you, but at some point are there...
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Sep 14, 2019
09/19
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FOXNEWSW
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i don't think that's a bold idea. i think it's a bad idea. paul: let's bring in wall street journal columnist kim strassel, kyle peterson and james freeman. so james, who do you think got the better of that very important health care exchange? >> i think klobuchar and biden raised the right questions for which sanders and warren don't have an answer. this plan as senator klobuchar pointed out is going to get rid of private insurance in america. it's also going to get rid of most of the othe insurance, the government insurance, and he replace it with the new bernie care. traditional medicare goes away. they call it medicare for all. but traditional medicare goes away. bernie care, warren care replaces it and then obviously joe biden raising the right question about the cost of this. over $30 trillion over a decade. most of these plans don't include the funding part. if you tax people in that top 1% at 100%, took every dollar they make every year, it still wouldn't pay for it. paul: we have a shot here of elizabeth warren answering a question ab
i don't think that's a bold idea. i think it's a bad idea. paul: let's bring in wall street journal columnist kim strassel, kyle peterson and james freeman. so james, who do you think got the better of that very important health care exchange? >> i think klobuchar and biden raised the right questions for which sanders and warren don't have an answer. this plan as senator klobuchar pointed out is going to get rid of private insurance in america. it's also going to get rid of most of the...
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Sep 29, 2019
09/19
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BLOOMBERG
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and i think when you think of the two most popular global sports, i don't think it is an accident that both involve round balls, one that you kick and one you shoot with your hands. i think there is almost something evolutionary about it, about round balls, and i think most people, even if you are not a basketball player, whether you are balling up paper and shooting it into a garbage can, or you are a little kid -- i have a young daughter, when she sees a little ball, she kicks it, or she picks it up and she throws it. david: so today, are there any more franchises that might be for sale, by the way? [laughter] adam: not that i'm aware of. david: not that you are aware of, ok. some of these people that have bought these franchises had done extremely well. the 76ers were bought a few years ago for $300 million or $400 million, the bucks for $400 million or $500 million, and when steve ballmer came in and paid $2 billion for the clippers, were all the other owners happy, because it made their team look more valuable or not? adam: yes, they were happy. [laughter] david: ok. adam: and sin
and i think when you think of the two most popular global sports, i don't think it is an accident that both involve round balls, one that you kick and one you shoot with your hands. i think there is almost something evolutionary about it, about round balls, and i think most people, even if you are not a basketball player, whether you are balling up paper and shooting it into a garbage can, or you are a little kid -- i have a young daughter, when she sees a little ball, she kicks it, or she...
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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so as a consequence for me, i think of myself as a seeker. ond to that which rather do resonates within. my spiritual life is kind of promiscuous as my intellectual interests. >> let's say interdisciplinary. [laughter] i like to take whether it's threads from product to statism and catholicism but also hinduism and other traditions that speak to me, i follow that that pathway. >> what strikes me between the time that we spoke in 2014 here in chautauqua, and now, it's not that many years but it's been a really tortuous moment of great shift, culturally and something that strikes me that i don't think i saw in the same way when we spoke before, your mother and grandmother catholic, your mother in fact was a former nun for a little while. your great-grandmother was baptist. your birth father was lutheran, your father who raised he was jewish. and white. what i see at large now is you straddle so many american device. not just black and white but south and north. there's alabama, there chicago, there's princeton, there's the religious and intellec
so as a consequence for me, i think of myself as a seeker. ond to that which rather do resonates within. my spiritual life is kind of promiscuous as my intellectual interests. >> let's say interdisciplinary. [laughter] i like to take whether it's threads from product to statism and catholicism but also hinduism and other traditions that speak to me, i follow that that pathway. >> what strikes me between the time that we spoke in 2014 here in chautauqua, and now, it's not that many...
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Sep 6, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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they'll go over 10, and they will, i think stabboasta starboard -- i don't know jeff smith -- i thinkhey will play a constructive role and he's smart in welcoming them. >> the market agrees with you? >> okay, i have friends. >> and this gets right back to the point you made before about dual class share structures. box is one of those companies that did away with that structure. i wonder when you see a move like this, though, and certainly, levie is very well respected in silicon valley and seen as one of those up and coming, i think, kind of tech start-ups, at least for how outspoken he is. and broader trends and how he talks to them. do you think that when these types of dynamics take place, more founders who are taking companies public continue to adopt this dual class share structure? >> i absolutely hope that that isn't the case because i do believe in shareholder democracy. i have spoken out, and i do believe that having perhaps some control in an early stage growth company, that maybe, you know, two, three, five years old and goes public, there are things they're doing in terms
they'll go over 10, and they will, i think stabboasta starboard -- i don't know jeff smith -- i thinkhey will play a constructive role and he's smart in welcoming them. >> the market agrees with you? >> okay, i have friends. >> and this gets right back to the point you made before about dual class share structures. box is one of those companies that did away with that structure. i wonder when you see a move like this, though, and certainly, levie is very well respected in...
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that it was a mistake i think it was the right thing to do and i think that it was inevitable regardless of who was president at the time we were going to respond to 911 and indeed we should. be very early still it is we're not entirely useless we forget we didn't kill off a large portion of the al qaeda leadership the problem is that right after the how we should have a lot so probably exactly this matching right counterterrorism to nation building we should write in there were about a few months kill the leadership and then got out exactly max because if you look at the events of $911.00 it's a crime a crime was committed a massive one and at that and then the reaction should have been law enforcement go and get these bad actors that did this take to destroy them ok because they were combatants and then leave daniel that what that's what it should have been but no there was too much money to be made and too much hubris to suck up on that was the mistake ok and that the end the further. they went down that path the harder it was to say it was wrong the initial stages of a job
that it was a mistake i think it was the right thing to do and i think that it was inevitable regardless of who was president at the time we were going to respond to 911 and indeed we should. be very early still it is we're not entirely useless we forget we didn't kill off a large portion of the al qaeda leadership the problem is that right after the how we should have a lot so probably exactly this matching right counterterrorism to nation building we should write in there were about a few...
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Sep 26, 2019
09/19
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i think they're going to have a lot of information. n the state department employees that had some window into this and -- >> you start low. you're starting low, right? low to high. >> look, the thing that is different here, there are a bunch of things different. i think republicans are watching this. poll numbers are shifting. rasmussen came out with a poll that showed 44-41 in favor of impeachment. republicans look at those kind of things. republicans look at the fact that you've got witnesses inside the white house and the intelligence agencies that look like they may be willing to talk. that's very different. republicans and others are looking at the fact that, hey, whether there's a quid pro quo or not and i think there certainly was this was an unarguable abuse of power. >> go ahead. finish that thought. >> no, no, no. i just -- so i think -- i think moderate republicans and a lot of voters are looking -- this is a much easier story to tell the public than the mueller report ever was. so -- >> technical question. technical questio
i think they're going to have a lot of information. n the state department employees that had some window into this and -- >> you start low. you're starting low, right? low to high. >> look, the thing that is different here, there are a bunch of things different. i think republicans are watching this. poll numbers are shifting. rasmussen came out with a poll that showed 44-41 in favor of impeachment. republicans look at those kind of things. republicans look at the fact that you've...
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don't think they will i don't think they will go back to where they were trade wise i don't think they will go back to where they were security wise i think on the whole the specter of us china relations there has been a profound change and only a post of art house to do with donald trump on his tariffs it also has to do with china's policy within the eastern nation region i do has to do with developments in saudi you know to states. to basis of this whole development in my view is 1st and foremost the fact that the world is moving from having been off to the end of the cold war predominantly unicode meeting dominated by you know the states and towards a much more multi-polar system in which china is an increasingly important country but one among many powers that are going to have great influence so it's stuck change that is at the bottom of what's now happening in the u.s. china relationship now i think it also has something to do with a new generation of thinkers who gained a lot of influence in and around the white house and giv
don't think they will i don't think they will go back to where they were trade wise i don't think they will go back to where they were security wise i think on the whole the specter of us china relations there has been a profound change and only a post of art house to do with donald trump on his tariffs it also has to do with china's policy within the eastern nation region i do has to do with developments in saudi you know to states. to basis of this whole development in my view is 1st and...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 16, 2019
09/19
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SFGTV
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i think it's right on. ne of the things that i have heard over the years in office now is that there is a lot of good intentions going on between the planning department, oewd, building, but there doesn't seem to be as much as we've strived to do that, there still needs to be more work to coordinate and streamline. we hear great stories, but then we also hear horror stories. there needs to be a general understanding. i like the presentation to have a point person. but not everyone knows to go there first. if i'm a restaurant owner, i'm going to figure out the type of lease i'm going to get. i might not even know if the space is permitted for that when i'm signing my lease. sometimes that happens. i go over to building and planning and i'm working through that and then all of a sudden, i find out that public health wants a whole different set of materials that building was not aware of, because they don't know the certain types of tiles or other things that might prohibit a business from opening. i'm not maki
i think it's right on. ne of the things that i have heard over the years in office now is that there is a lot of good intentions going on between the planning department, oewd, building, but there doesn't seem to be as much as we've strived to do that, there still needs to be more work to coordinate and streamline. we hear great stories, but then we also hear horror stories. there needs to be a general understanding. i like the presentation to have a point person. but not everyone knows to go...
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but i think mr. cally is just dodging and weaving, and i don't think he understands fully what he did was even wrong. and that's a real problem, to realize that the very top guy at the fbi does not acknowledge his problems and that what he did was wrong. he's defending it and he feels he should be apologized to. it was actually audacious in many respects. mike: more reports to come. what are your expectations for inspector general's report on doj's handling of the russia probe that could come any day? >> we anticipate that will come mid september. i anticipate that we will see some very stark revelations of manipulation of the whole system for political purposes. when you see that happen, that's when i think you're going to see references or referrals for indictments, and i think you are going to see some indictments. i hope you do because this is trying to take down a sitting president is absolutely outrageous. it's essentially a coup attempt, and that's what we saw happening here. mike: then there's
but i think mr. cally is just dodging and weaving, and i don't think he understands fully what he did was even wrong. and that's a real problem, to realize that the very top guy at the fbi does not acknowledge his problems and that what he did was wrong. he's defending it and he feels he should be apologized to. it was actually audacious in many respects. mike: more reports to come. what are your expectations for inspector general's report on doj's handling of the russia probe that could come...
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Sep 17, 2019
09/19
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>> i think it does or i think at least, you know, again, kind of in some ways redoubles the pressure on the house democrats to decide what they are doing here i mean, lewandowski's testimony, alone, states that the president asked him to do something that is quite arguably impeachable offense and the mueller report has others so i think, you know, today was step one, but it keeps on begging the question, well, what is step two? what is step three what comes next? >> you know, joyce, let me bring you in on this i mean, donald trump has been found to have committed felony finance crimes by the southern district of new york donald trump has been found, committed ten acts of criminal obstruction of justice by robert mueller and his investigators. and i think what ron was just sort of pulling the curtain back on is his suspicion that that may not be the headline, that corey lewandowski today confirmed at least two of those instances of criminal obstruction of justice >> you know, this hearing got off to a rocky start there's no doubt about that. with corey lewandowski really pulling and so
>> i think it does or i think at least, you know, again, kind of in some ways redoubles the pressure on the house democrats to decide what they are doing here i mean, lewandowski's testimony, alone, states that the president asked him to do something that is quite arguably impeachable offense and the mueller report has others so i think, you know, today was step one, but it keeps on begging the question, well, what is step two? what is step three what comes next? >> you know, joyce,...
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Sep 24, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i think i probably called myself that at a certain point. the reality is i am never going to vote for donald trump. i will never think he is fit to be president of the united states. i may support some things that he does in terms of his policies, but i do think that and country is greater oetter and more decent than t deserve him as the president of the united states. host: this is calvin, a republican. caller: good morning. i was wondering, if a crime was committed there, wouldn't it be right to investigate it, or for donald trump to inquire about it, would that be wrong? and the problem is they do not think that they can beat donald trump, so they want to find a way to take him down without having to beat him in the polls. paul manafort, he keeps backing him up, but he says he supported what does donald trump differ on compared to ted cruz? it is a pretense to give him credibility that he is a republican or conservative. you mentioned his conduct and character, what was wrong with his conduct and character since being in office? what did
i think i probably called myself that at a certain point. the reality is i am never going to vote for donald trump. i will never think he is fit to be president of the united states. i may support some things that he does in terms of his policies, but i do think that and country is greater oetter and more decent than t deserve him as the president of the united states. host: this is calvin, a republican. caller: good morning. i was wondering, if a crime was committed there, wouldn't it be right...
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no i think that. the. your opinion is not in such a bad state you like it or not you know is a really good competitor for dollar it's a very strong currency it's used by everybody is getting stronger and stronger people said 5 or 10 years ago you know will die i don't see the death of you at all you are you are telling us that. europe is not united yes there is fights among you know but not so so such big fights because i remember that the italia in the said funds and on the on the on the sanctions was russia that they would they would they would they would vote against the sanctions and you need only one you would have been a country to say we don't want the sanctions to go on and you have no most european sanctions against russia they the talents did not do that so you still add some kind. of unity and politically i think that the your opinion union is actually in a vegas thing that you like and doing the right reverend gentleman would by running out of time who sparked a run out of town i don't want to
no i think that. the. your opinion is not in such a bad state you like it or not you know is a really good competitor for dollar it's a very strong currency it's used by everybody is getting stronger and stronger people said 5 or 10 years ago you know will die i don't see the death of you at all you are you are telling us that. europe is not united yes there is fights among you know but not so so such big fights because i remember that the italia in the said funds and on the on the on the...
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in saying that china is allowed to regain what it sees its its position within eastern asia and i think that's going to happen i mean china is the most populous country within the region it is seen as the center within the region not these now when in economic terms and i think there is very little over a long period of time that you know to states can do to prevent that the question is how do we get from here to there. being this quite natural great power why bilbrey from moving on to a full scale conflict and eventually war that's the key issue i think at the moment so there will be there will be conflicts connected to the royce of china that's not that's not surprising but the question is how it happens and i think people in beijing also very aware of what is so this is part of the reason why a lot of people know there are very concerned about what's happening and do the rapid deterioration in the u.s. china relationship now another point that you make in your book is how well integrated china is into the global economy and into the american economy much more than any rising power be
in saying that china is allowed to regain what it sees its its position within eastern asia and i think that's going to happen i mean china is the most populous country within the region it is seen as the center within the region not these now when in economic terms and i think there is very little over a long period of time that you know to states can do to prevent that the question is how do we get from here to there. being this quite natural great power why bilbrey from moving on to a full...
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it would be difficult to follow i think also also at the same time there would be certain industries that will thrive media finance particularly i can see trade and hard goods becoming more regional and things like intellectual property will be more and more for over internationally so that's a warning for the blades the 2 of them in if you take mr johnson as. a rebellious backbencher after he was for he criticized for these are moves deal was saying it would leave the u.k. in a client state relationship but your argument seems to be that relationship of people who are not in the big trading bloc is inevitable economically whatever the the political manifestation of the deal yeah i think i think you describe him as a rebel he's now in the seat of power and you can't rebel against detail you can rebel against the hard fact that he doesn't have a coherent plan b. in place and also i think what is coming down the road is britain needs to find a new economic model if you look at productivity in the u.k. it's a multi decade many multi multi century level so this is very important debate up
it would be difficult to follow i think also also at the same time there would be certain industries that will thrive media finance particularly i can see trade and hard goods becoming more regional and things like intellectual property will be more and more for over internationally so that's a warning for the blades the 2 of them in if you take mr johnson as. a rebellious backbencher after he was for he criticized for these are moves deal was saying it would leave the u.k. in a client state...
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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i think it's interesting here. and this 1 in particular is and mike just talked to the valuation and maybe towards 55 billion. i think this is a good examplel off simp lay buy alg caing a cal that's already in the money. it's what you'd risk if you bought the stock but that's it and you don't have an idio sin kratic news so i like the risk/reward. and people will start looking at pharma stocks yielding three and a quarter percent. i think it works out and this is a way to trade this idea >> independent of this particular call. top sectorer on the day. and i just think there's going to be a shift to this area generally. the key is you want to start to work meaning it's not down and down and down it's starting to actually turn >> the final thing i would say is very often you have long declined one of the things is they're going to get higher and higher lower prices cause higher volatility but this has been a steady decline and this is a steady stock. so this is a situation where they're not particularly elevated and
i think it's interesting here. and this 1 in particular is and mike just talked to the valuation and maybe towards 55 billion. i think this is a good examplel off simp lay buy alg caing a cal that's already in the money. it's what you'd risk if you bought the stock but that's it and you don't have an idio sin kratic news so i like the risk/reward. and people will start looking at pharma stocks yielding three and a quarter percent. i think it works out and this is a way to trade this idea...
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and that you now go the way that we're thinking we're seeing this. i had to write it down again think small and x. mart. right because it's about being small now all of a sudden we're the big part was the economies of scale but in the it wasn't being priced in because you have the transportation to bring everything else to the distribution the world basis whereas i go to a restaurant in an island valley i want to get fresh produce from bally and now people are saying that's what they want they don't want they can choose that comes from somewhere else or can joost it really is the same prototype of the same kind of juice that they couldn't get anywhere else in the world and how much of that cost and how much to do so we have a sting in england i think it's called free trade in terms of that we're trying to figure out what products were produced how with the produce what were their employment strategies and once you start now imposing these new rules whether we call them rules or requirements then all of a sudden the distribution process is going to star
and that you now go the way that we're thinking we're seeing this. i had to write it down again think small and x. mart. right because it's about being small now all of a sudden we're the big part was the economies of scale but in the it wasn't being priced in because you have the transportation to bring everything else to the distribution the world basis whereas i go to a restaurant in an island valley i want to get fresh produce from bally and now people are saying that's what they want they...
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i think but this nationalism can get out of control of course and i mean china had traditionally has not been an expansionist country like the united states or britain. so we need to remember that important yeah we need to remember that but of course this us china trade war some people calling it a new cold war is. inflaming these these and nationalistic views not only in china but also in the us and that's something that can get out of control if the politicians inflame it too much you've both been telling us about chinese sensibilities and china is very most adamant to bottom of the message we are a values based society were a values based economy want all the values that china brings to the global table that good values that make the world a better place. but let's not did it when i opened. it was a private. well they may not be the same values that are. traditionally associated with western values i mean you know china is often criticized for criticize for human rights for its human rights record its response is look at all these millions of people that we've taken out of poverty
i think but this nationalism can get out of control of course and i mean china had traditionally has not been an expansionist country like the united states or britain. so we need to remember that important yeah we need to remember that but of course this us china trade war some people calling it a new cold war is. inflaming these these and nationalistic views not only in china but also in the us and that's something that can get out of control if the politicians inflame it too much you've both...
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Sep 16, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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i think we can also suffer and i don't think this is uniquely female. thinking you can put your head down and do the work and be good at it and people will reward you. if you have a nice family that has rewarded you been you think that that's going to continue. i think we need to be proactive and i hope the young women do not believe that all the problems are solved because the men may be more evolved about life balance in the next generation. we need to be understood as wanting these careers and wanting to do this work. and finding those mentors. it was never comfortable to ask anyone for help. i think i harmed myself by doing that and i really encourage people to do exactly like you said build those networks and be proactive about the same what you want, and where you hope to go. >> i think all of the things that have been said really resonate with me. i would turn this around and to say that although it's important to give women and others advice about how to succeed in science. i think it's really important is for us as leaders to focus on changing
i think we can also suffer and i don't think this is uniquely female. thinking you can put your head down and do the work and be good at it and people will reward you. if you have a nice family that has rewarded you been you think that that's going to continue. i think we need to be proactive and i hope the young women do not believe that all the problems are solved because the men may be more evolved about life balance in the next generation. we need to be understood as wanting these careers...
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Sep 30, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i think it unnerved south korea. i don't think they understood the risk they had taken when they challenged the 1965 treaty. and it terminated with the suspension. and the best i can say, they've hit a plateau and things are not deteriorating further. and at this point i'm not sure that the discussions that are going on have any-- the bilateral discussions have any prospect of reversing the conflict as it now standsment -- stands. i think there's an awful lot of work to do to get this back on track and i'm not sure at this point i would know where to begin and that's something people should be thinking about because the longer the split goes on, that i can say, weakens all three of us further. >> thanks. the very last line of your speech you said this is not a time for u.s. disengagement from asia. do you spends that we're disengaging from asia? >> well, i think there's a risk of it. i don't want to make this a partisan comment, i'll just say in our two great political parties, one of them has a ve very-- national sec
i think it unnerved south korea. i don't think they understood the risk they had taken when they challenged the 1965 treaty. and it terminated with the suspension. and the best i can say, they've hit a plateau and things are not deteriorating further. and at this point i'm not sure that the discussions that are going on have any-- the bilateral discussions have any prospect of reversing the conflict as it now standsment -- stands. i think there's an awful lot of work to do to get this back on...
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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i think i would be optimistic. i think that there are ways that -- and i think tina was alluding to that are that the younger folks would be excited about that. ways to tap into, hey, there are opportunities in commercial, but there are opportunities in the space force to do things no one has ever done before and to find new cutting edge things in space. that's a fun job to have. i'm not trying to poll particular for it, by the way. if you agree with me that that probably would be a fun job to have. i think that's optimistic about the talent we could bring in on the space side in the government in the future. >> so, are you actually laying the groundwork to transition to a space force? and are you ready if congress passes this in a couple of weeks? >> so we have 20 minutes left. [laughter] >> the -- so we have definitely been on the air force side been doing some initial planning, assuming there would be a space force, why wouldn't we be? we're pretty sure it's coming we just don't know how aggressive that language
i think i would be optimistic. i think that there are ways that -- and i think tina was alluding to that are that the younger folks would be excited about that. ways to tap into, hey, there are opportunities in commercial, but there are opportunities in the space force to do things no one has ever done before and to find new cutting edge things in space. that's a fun job to have. i'm not trying to poll particular for it, by the way. if you agree with me that that probably would be a fun job to...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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i think that point mab reached so i do think there is more downside to this i would not jump on the firsthe downside i think there are more to come. >> i agree yesterday 62s right number today 58 times i don't know 58 siems high as well i agree maybe let it -- the momentum take it a bit further. >> we should note other names in the fast food we are down, mcdonald's. >> that rotation is more than just coincidence we have talked about this op the show, more segments on food stocks which in and of itself is maybe a ray reason to be selling them because we got to a place where these were very defensive high multiple names, high free cash flow in a difficult market not a big surprise. >> we love a good taste test. >> we do it all the time here. i like the network -- i negligence all the time and you're on all day but you have your own show a designated show from 2:00 to 3:00. i get confused at at my age didn't you have you have the we had bush analyst. >> on yesterday. >> i told you 9807 price target. and he addressed many of the things we are talking about. it's not going to 98 tomorrow. you
i think that point mab reached so i do think there is more downside to this i would not jump on the firsthe downside i think there are more to come. >> i agree yesterday 62s right number today 58 times i don't know 58 siems high as well i agree maybe let it -- the momentum take it a bit further. >> we should note other names in the fast food we are down, mcdonald's. >> that rotation is more than just coincidence we have talked about this op the show, more segments on food...
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don't think so i don't think any of them are that good enough to to accept all or to to think that they guaranteed a place in the top full thinks the likes of shell the likes of the flood of why don't we can still space here hold that face we'll be talking about this again soon we'll be back to match day 7 next week thanks for joining us on the phone as we go see their. literature invites us to see people take your. fine. books on youtube. in libya over 5000 refugees are languishing in detention centers in inhumane conditions hundreds of people are crammed in to gather their hungry have no clean drinking water and many are ill reports of human trafficking torture and random shootings are common. they said you're a slave you're black brown. even woke us up in the middle of the night to torture us when one of the. german diplomats talk about serious human rights abuses so what exactly is going on there and why. our journalist reports from neighboring news there which has taken in 3000 refugees from camps in libya. thes
don't think so i don't think any of them are that good enough to to accept all or to to think that they guaranteed a place in the top full thinks the likes of shell the likes of the flood of why don't we can still space here hold that face we'll be talking about this again soon we'll be back to match day 7 next week thanks for joining us on the phone as we go see their. literature invites us to see people take your. fine. books on youtube. in libya over 5000 refugees are languishing in...
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so i think i mean i don't know all the details of the decision for the united states to withdraw from. intermediate nuclear forces agreement but it's the sort of thing bolton would do like he doesn't believe in arms control agreements generally and he apparently just came up and he had an opportunity to push says. the military who didn't want to leave the agreement don't get russia or voice a new situation and others don't he just he can on certain issues he could because he was close to the president when he was the president agreed and they could run in this run a decision through the minimum consideration tonsils mention that after bolton's firing he and president trump already exchanged some unflattering comments about one another and i gather it from your writing that you don't hold president trump in the very high regard you called him a decidedly america president i wonder if you feel sympathy for both of the now that he joined the camp of president trump's critics are yes i mean i think. one of the persons who is an expert in foreign policy making a comment after reading our b
so i think i mean i don't know all the details of the decision for the united states to withdraw from. intermediate nuclear forces agreement but it's the sort of thing bolton would do like he doesn't believe in arms control agreements generally and he apparently just came up and he had an opportunity to push says. the military who didn't want to leave the agreement don't get russia or voice a new situation and others don't he just he can on certain issues he could because he was close to the...
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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i don't think that's a net positive for silicon valley. i don't think it's a net positive for those companies or soft bank. i look at soft bank and i would luchb -- if you look at the value creation created over the course of the last two decades, the vast majority came from a single bet on alibaba. i think soft bank ought to be investing off of its balance sheet in what they know best. the idea that they will raise 200 billion from the saudis and others in order to continue what i think is a dangerous game of investing in competitor companies and pitting them against one another, i hope they shelf the idea for vision two. >> wouldn't -- if let's say soft bank pulled back out here, wouldn't that have a negative impact i don't know that that would be greeted as a great thing in some circles out here. >> i think you can overcapitalize a company and lose all the constraints. i think the best innovation often comes when you are really under the gun and having to be held really tight because you don't have a massive balance sheet to throw at a p
i don't think that's a net positive for silicon valley. i don't think it's a net positive for those companies or soft bank. i look at soft bank and i would luchb -- if you look at the value creation created over the course of the last two decades, the vast majority came from a single bet on alibaba. i think soft bank ought to be investing off of its balance sheet in what they know best. the idea that they will raise 200 billion from the saudis and others in order to continue what i think is a...
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Sep 4, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN2
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i think when i was 17 that was 16 i think i was 16 and that was just -- i suddenly thought that doesnot explain any of it then. it had been going on for so much longer than that. that was hard. even the night but things happen with charlie i had e-mails and wrote to him that night saying he would never hurt me and not after the head injury that he would never hurt me. i was writing this i had a broken toe in my wrist was in a splint and i was saying that he would never do this thing that he'd obviously done so i think it's hard to underestimate how powerful that reality distortion is. it's not just the person was experiencing it but anyone who's living committee to these relationships to some degree subjects to the reality bending that goes on to justify it. >> you could say enabling in a way. i want to get back to that but i want to talk about memory. the questions you flirt with in the text about memory and putting this book together it seems like it involves interviewing with a lot of people putting different forces together and trying to ferret out the truth. what really happened
i think when i was 17 that was 16 i think i was 16 and that was just -- i suddenly thought that doesnot explain any of it then. it had been going on for so much longer than that. that was hard. even the night but things happen with charlie i had e-mails and wrote to him that night saying he would never hurt me and not after the head injury that he would never hurt me. i was writing this i had a broken toe in my wrist was in a splint and i was saying that he would never do this thing that he'd...
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i think my. special actually that's unusual creates previously i used to leave mostly for myself and now i get the chance you've. given advice to give. my wife. i'm going to be through with you just to get. to help people so i came to this world to be useful. because taking care of her and provided for the family. but the. loss of happiness and lots of fun. there is. much more loft in our house right now when we left at once she's the most precious thing ever and. yes i feel the same. the last of us are a gemini that steve globalization and this came in with thompson 2016 and he the idea of monitor ization the global central banks cooperating to put out a currency unit of accounts that was better than gold is a 6070 year experiment that is now collapsing which is leading to dollars a synaesthete countries like russia move aggressively away from the dollar and buy gold and dig globalization simultaneously. today there are good terrorists and bad the bad news in yemen the united states deems to be t
i think my. special actually that's unusual creates previously i used to leave mostly for myself and now i get the chance you've. given advice to give. my wife. i'm going to be through with you just to get. to help people so i came to this world to be useful. because taking care of her and provided for the family. but the. loss of happiness and lots of fun. there is. much more loft in our house right now when we left at once she's the most precious thing ever and. yes i feel the same. the last...
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Sep 13, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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>> i absolutely think the fed is priced in. i don't think anything to do with the fed does, as long as the fed doesn't dramatically do anything that we're not expecting, it's priced in. >> lots to discuss with michelle over the next hour first, let's focus on the stories we're watching today bob pisani is covering the market moves as we approach new record highs dom chu is watching the surge in bond yields. eamon javers has the latest from the white house and morgan is having a look at pressure on big tech leslie picker has the details on wework's ipo, but bond, let's start with you >> that was the bottom for the stock market and it's the banks and other cyclicals that have led the rally. it's been a great week for jpmorgan this is an historic high today look at that move up for the last couple of weeks in jpmorgan it's up 6% in the last week or so industrials and materials, the other classic groups, have been strong, as well. so 3m is up about 5% in the last week the dow is up about 11%. caterpillar is up 9, almost 10% in the l
>> i absolutely think the fed is priced in. i don't think anything to do with the fed does, as long as the fed doesn't dramatically do anything that we're not expecting, it's priced in. >> lots to discuss with michelle over the next hour first, let's focus on the stories we're watching today bob pisani is covering the market moves as we approach new record highs dom chu is watching the surge in bond yields. eamon javers has the latest from the white house and morgan is having a look...
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don't think there's any prospect of that i don't think the russian people want to revolution they want change but that's a very different thing from a revolution if they are if you are somewhat what i think of revolution i think 1917 they maybe think 991 that's not examples that really commend themselves to them and to be honest the authorities or the moment the coercive power they could me if that is indeed the assessment that was made if it was a well we think we're going to face this that speaks to something that i've been feeling which is actually that one of the problems of the moment is you have an elite i mean how do you define that. this feeling nervous and jumping the doesn't know what the future holds as a whole issue about what happens in 2024 you know whether or not putin remains in power all of these things leaving them feeling particularly nervous and therefore they tend to overreact and i think particularly after we had the. church case and then we also had the case of the journalist people who move but it is a v
don't think there's any prospect of that i don't think the russian people want to revolution they want change but that's a very different thing from a revolution if they are if you are somewhat what i think of revolution i think 1917 they maybe think 991 that's not examples that really commend themselves to them and to be honest the authorities or the moment the coercive power they could me if that is indeed the assessment that was made if it was a well we think we're going to face this that...
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it does i think it's. one thing having talent but what really takes the young player up to the next level into the sort of super stratosphere level of the top top players is whether or not they've got that mentality to back the talent up now as you said he was involved in a traumatic experience last year and then went on to have a hit miss year but it looks like he's over the problems for now he's really fit in far in we saw last week he had the he had the minerals to take a penalty off the he wanted any school at it and he's running the show the shock of this year and he really looks like he's ready to take his chance now that was one thing i notice is that briefly of the world cup last year i interviewed him at the world cup last year for such a young guy he's got a very mature head on his shoulders and i think that will really serve him well i mean he had of course for the penalty as you mentioned last week was a shock and they won last week with sticking with a shocker after starting the season with on
it does i think it's. one thing having talent but what really takes the young player up to the next level into the sort of super stratosphere level of the top top players is whether or not they've got that mentality to back the talent up now as you said he was involved in a traumatic experience last year and then went on to have a hit miss year but it looks like he's over the problems for now he's really fit in far in we saw last week he had the he had the minerals to take a penalty off the he...
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Sep 13, 2019
09/19
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FBC
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i think we should look at mental health. adicalization of people. maria: what about the red flag legislation? i don't know if that could be abused. if you say my next door neighbor is a nut, go check him out, and it's just because you don't like the person, so i don't know -- >> dagen: the red flag laws, the first one was passed by the state of connecticut in 1999. they haven't been around that long. most of them, there were only five before the parkland shooting that five states that had them in place, now i believe it's 17 states and the district of columbia. there's some research that's been done about their effectiveness in preventing suicides, but what lindsey graham and richard blumenthal are trying to do is provide grants to the states that want to implement them but they do vary dramatically from state to state. the new york law actually makes a therapist contact the county official if there's a patient who they think is a danger to him or herself or others and might have a weapon in possession. so that goes to basica
i think we should look at mental health. adicalization of people. maria: what about the red flag legislation? i don't know if that could be abused. if you say my next door neighbor is a nut, go check him out, and it's just because you don't like the person, so i don't know -- >> dagen: the red flag laws, the first one was passed by the state of connecticut in 1999. they haven't been around that long. most of them, there were only five before the parkland shooting that five states that had...
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i think. that's very special actually that's unusual. previously i used to leave mostly for myself and now i get the chance you've. given advice to give. my wife. i'm going to be through with you just to get. to help people so i came to this world to be useful. because taking care of her and provided for the family. because. of a lot of happiness and lots of fun. there is. much more loft in our house right now when we left at once she's the most precious thing ever and. yes i feel the same. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy confront ation let it be an arms race off and spearing dramatic development only closely i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time time to sit down and talk. you know world of big partners. a lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door. and shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's
i think. that's very special actually that's unusual. previously i used to leave mostly for myself and now i get the chance you've. given advice to give. my wife. i'm going to be through with you just to get. to help people so i came to this world to be useful. because taking care of her and provided for the family. because. of a lot of happiness and lots of fun. there is. much more loft in our house right now when we left at once she's the most precious thing ever and. yes i feel the same. so...
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Sep 13, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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eye 69
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because i do not think trend economic growth has changed. i don't think the yield curve is going to steepen to 20 or 30 basis points watch the yield curve as a sign for what's going on as it relates to future growth expectations because i think as long as that remained constrained then rates remain in the trade willing range. sure, up to 250? absolutely but back to 150 and test that yes. >> we're coming back and talk a lot about this in "options action." >> a great show. >> it's a great show. >> when it is it on. >> at 5:30 eastern time. >> great show stay there. >> do you buy bush wsh what jeff's selling here. >> the it's interesting. s&p 500 on the week is up a little less than 1% on the week we saw the massive ramp and yield back going back to the comfortable level. the slowdown in the pace of equities, i don't see see that as particularly bullish. i think you need things to come together the most whatever you call it hawkish cut we have. >> hawkish ease. >> hawkish ease. you need some increasingly i guess dovish commentary about the trade
because i do not think trend economic growth has changed. i don't think the yield curve is going to steepen to 20 or 30 basis points watch the yield curve as a sign for what's going on as it relates to future growth expectations because i think as long as that remained constrained then rates remain in the trade willing range. sure, up to 250? absolutely but back to 150 and test that yes. >> we're coming back and talk a lot about this in "options action." >> a great show....
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what do you think? >> iif they're going to go to the super bowl, even though i hope they start off by beating the patriots. i only wear a couple of colors, and that's cardinal and gold for usc, black and gold for the pittsburgh, i'm squarely on the side of the steelers in the nfl. gerry: thank you very much, lynn swann. up next, the increasing concerns about how the violent nature of football is, in fact, affecting health and what it means for the future of the game. future of the game. stay with us. our 18-year-old was in an accident. when i called usaa, it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. we're the rivera family and we plan to be with usaa for life. see how much you can save with usaa insurance. see how much you can save inalso available in hybridts kind leall wheel drive.sport. lease the 2019 ux 200 for $329 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. to the wait did frowe just win-ners. prouders everyone uses their phone differently. that's
what do you think? >> iif they're going to go to the super bowl, even though i hope they start off by beating the patriots. i only wear a couple of colors, and that's cardinal and gold for usc, black and gold for the pittsburgh, i'm squarely on the side of the steelers in the nfl. gerry: thank you very much, lynn swann. up next, the increasing concerns about how the violent nature of football is, in fact, affecting health and what it means for the future of the game. future of the game....
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Sep 21, 2019
09/19
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KQED
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so i think what i try to assert myself i think my father pushed back, you know, and he would beat met because he felt as if he couldbeat the gay away but it was the gay issue was a gender issue that the world has to understand the difference between sexuality and gender. obviously the gender issue. >> what did you decide to beginr your physicasition? >> i decided at 19. it was a monumental moment because mei a trans mail at my college and i did not know that he was trs until we had a conversation at a college party so he introduced me to his doctor and then i started my transition from there. it was an intense process, lots of erapy, fortunately i went to a sct ol that therapand teacher supported me. but, the boys department had an issue with that and i remember when i decided that i was going to sing soprano my teacher said no, you can't do tha. and i said yes, i will do that. i do not fit lethis w tenor prasanna or visual that they want me to be. that was something i had to fight with. and, i had so manyos friends who pushed me and actually push the teachers allow me to be who i am
so i think what i try to assert myself i think my father pushed back, you know, and he would beat met because he felt as if he couldbeat the gay away but it was the gay issue was a gender issue that the world has to understand the difference between sexuality and gender. obviously the gender issue. >> what did you decide to beginr your physicasition? >> i decided at 19. it was a monumental moment because mei a trans mail at my college and i did not know that he was trs until we had...
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138
Sep 26, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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eye 138
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well, i don't think, i don't think going to be disruptive to earnings, but i think it's going to motivateerve to do what they need to do not so much so give us base i points lower but more ly quiquidity the world is short of dollars. they've got securities that are maturing they need to extend and reinvest those securities not let them mature. >> president doesn't like that stronger dollar. >>> apple lower following call saying the services narrative is largely priced into the stock and apple's valuation no longer appears to be attractive to other large services businesses. we have our guest here is he ready to go? no guest andy hargraves saying that he's saying jim, that so your services company now what. >> i don't think it's fully priced ed we're going to get into a debate of opinions here there's no way to accurately definitively predict the future, but look, the margins and growth rate of sss b b i don't believe are fully priced into the stock right now. now is this a stock that goes from 219 to 350, no, but goes from 219 to its high of around 233 and probably sees 250 in the next si
well, i don't think, i don't think going to be disruptive to earnings, but i think it's going to motivateerve to do what they need to do not so much so give us base i points lower but more ly quiquidity the world is short of dollars. they've got securities that are maturing they need to extend and reinvest those securities not let them mature. >> president doesn't like that stronger dollar. >>> apple lower following call saying the services narrative is largely priced into the...
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Sep 18, 2019
09/19
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BBCNEWS
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eye 59
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don't think it's a mystery what is going on, i don't think iran is testing anything. atter of the usa and cut it out. the situation we are in now is that iran has been waiting for a year for the europeans to offer some meaningful sanction relief to compensate iran for what it is suffering from the usa pulling out of the nuclear deal. the europeans have been unable to deliver. i think therefore iran sees no diplomatic pathway out of its current predicament. therefore, it has chosen a dangerous rout of trying to escalate, does the disrupt, to be able to manoeuvre itself is out of this precarious situation it has been plunged into out of american policy. it has destabilise the whole region. it has no end game we are at the point that the us and iran are at the brink of war suddenly, it doesn't seem to be a way out of it. i think doesn't seem to be a way out of it. ithink iran doesn't seem to be a way out of it. i think iran is acknowledged if the scenario continues, it will be a lose lose for everyone, specifically, us affiliated countries who are vulnerable like saudi ar
don't think it's a mystery what is going on, i don't think iran is testing anything. atter of the usa and cut it out. the situation we are in now is that iran has been waiting for a year for the europeans to offer some meaningful sanction relief to compensate iran for what it is suffering from the usa pulling out of the nuclear deal. the europeans have been unable to deliver. i think therefore iran sees no diplomatic pathway out of its current predicament. therefore, it has chosen a dangerous...
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Sep 22, 2019
09/19
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MSNBCW
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he seemed very concerned and i think out of sorts about it. and later in the meeting, i raised with him these overtures from the trump campaign. he gave me a strong answer. he said they had no intention to get involved in an american election, and i left fairly confident he understood. >> what did the trump administration tell you officially when you were trying to figure out what the hold-up was? >> so, the reason that was given in particular to senator johnson, who i was there with -- >> ron johnson, republican from wisconsin. >> republican from wisconsin who talked with the president shortly before our visit to kiev, was the president was concerned about corruption in ukraine and he thought the europeans should be providing the aid instead of the united states. those are the two reasons that were stated to us as we went. the embassy there didn't seem to have really a read out from the white house at all when we asked them about it. >> do you have any reason to believe the aid was suddenly released in connection with the discovery of this whi
he seemed very concerned and i think out of sorts about it. and later in the meeting, i raised with him these overtures from the trump campaign. he gave me a strong answer. he said they had no intention to get involved in an american election, and i left fairly confident he understood. >> what did the trump administration tell you officially when you were trying to figure out what the hold-up was? >> so, the reason that was given in particular to senator johnson, who i was there...
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i think there's some return all instinct in women because they definitely quince in a while like feel this need to lake. hold a baby bird like you know that baby fever thing i feel like that's a pretty hormonal thing and it's emotional thing it's not super realistic you know there's this feeling that like the only thing you do with your life what you leave behind is your your child and the predecessors and all that and i don't i don't agree with that think. again everything you do has an effect on the planet around you the world the people and not having kids for me i feel like a better suited for that i feel like i bring more george world without having responsibilities that i'm not really feeling fit to take her or fit to deal with i feel. more time to write songs to make music. i do i think it makes a difference and i think there's this community right here among them that if you. have some friends really kind of overwhelming the way that they feel about when we get together on. that that's so worth it to me. that's hurt like 10 months old we were at a canyon lands sort of about a
i think there's some return all instinct in women because they definitely quince in a while like feel this need to lake. hold a baby bird like you know that baby fever thing i feel like that's a pretty hormonal thing and it's emotional thing it's not super realistic you know there's this feeling that like the only thing you do with your life what you leave behind is your your child and the predecessors and all that and i don't i don't agree with that think. again everything you do has an effect...
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yeah well i mean i think it's it's a danger. i mean there are very powerful entities with power with information with data scientists with engineers that are thinking about how to game the system and game countries and game markets. so i think you know we have to be on sort of red alert to be able to protect you know what you want to do put it practically in the industry and in the economy ok and it's not just threats for africa if you look at platform companies mostly in the united states and in china and nowhere else so it is a global challenge and so if you don't act now i think we may be at a point where it may be too late and how do we start acting as individuals not even as government well i think government policy plays a key role in the vigils will not be able to do much on this we have the infrastructure to make it happen on our part we're working with several african governments to open its center here in south africa and one that to accelerate the policymaking and somebody asked me if this was another think tank and i
yeah well i mean i think it's it's a danger. i mean there are very powerful entities with power with information with data scientists with engineers that are thinking about how to game the system and game countries and game markets. so i think you know we have to be on sort of red alert to be able to protect you know what you want to do put it practically in the industry and in the economy ok and it's not just threats for africa if you look at platform companies mostly in the united states and...
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i don't think she gets enough anticipation. rm is ending wasteful regime change wars. the reason i bring that up, talk it from a deficit ankle. she's actually a -- angle. she's actually a soldier, and since 2001 we've spent $6 trillion on wasteful regime changing wars. what else has happened? we've taken the ball off asia. so stopping wasting money and lives on these types of unnecessary wars actually have a massive impact on our domestic economy. i don't think that tie's been made well enough, but tulsi's speaking about it, and it's basically crickets from all the other candidates. maria: yeah. we're not hearing anything about that at all. before you go, omeed, tell us where you see growth right now in the economy. what are you most interested in as you look to invest in these private companies? >> well, yeah. as i suggested, i think the private market is the future. the new ipos, we look for the disrupters. those are companies that have the ability to make things easier and get five, six years ahead of consumer behavior. it's
i don't think she gets enough anticipation. rm is ending wasteful regime change wars. the reason i bring that up, talk it from a deficit ankle. she's actually a -- angle. she's actually a soldier, and since 2001 we've spent $6 trillion on wasteful regime changing wars. what else has happened? we've taken the ball off asia. so stopping wasting money and lives on these types of unnecessary wars actually have a massive impact on our domestic economy. i don't think that tie's been made well enough,...
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so i think we're late as a nation to this subject, but i don't think that we have an option. we have to make sure there are enforceable protections for the children of our country. thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, senator markey. senator young. >> i thank our panel for being here. i thought i'd ask a question about concerns that many have, and i expect concerns will grow about ai becoming a black box where it's unclear exactly how certain platforms make decisions. in recent years, deep learning has proved very powerful at solving problems and has been widely deployed for a task like image captioning, voice recognition and language translation. as the technology advances, there is great hope for ai to diagnose deadly diseases, calculate multimillion-dollar trading decisions and implement successful autonomous innovations for transportation and other sectors. nonetheless, the intellectual power of ai has received public scrutiny and has become unsettling for some futurists. eventually society might cross a threshold in which a -- using ai requires a leap of faith. in other
so i think we're late as a nation to this subject, but i don't think that we have an option. we have to make sure there are enforceable protections for the children of our country. thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, senator markey. senator young. >> i thank our panel for being here. i thought i'd ask a question about concerns that many have, and i expect concerns will grow about ai becoming a black box where it's unclear exactly how certain platforms make decisions. in recent...