99
99
Aug 21, 2014
08/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
the whole epi general itics field.o boil down what you said and make sure i understand it t you were an endocrinologist study different chemicals that influence our brains and immune systems and you start realizing at some point that if we can control these chemicals, we could actually create outcomes? >> that's a good way to say it. our body me between two states, one is inflammation. inflammation is a protective response. if you fall down, you injure yourself, you need the inflammatory response so you don't bleed to death. but, exaggerated inflammation or inappropriate inflammation directly or indirectly contributes to heart disease, cardiovascular accidents, autoimmune illnesses, infections, many ties of cancer. now, the other extreme is what is called homeostasis, which means your body is self regulating and in perfect balance. okay? so we are always moving between these two extremes. homeostasis could be called the healing system which we never learned about in medical school, by the way. >> your father was an imm
the whole epi general itics field.o boil down what you said and make sure i understand it t you were an endocrinologist study different chemicals that influence our brains and immune systems and you start realizing at some point that if we can control these chemicals, we could actually create outcomes? >> that's a good way to say it. our body me between two states, one is inflammation. inflammation is a protective response. if you fall down, you injure yourself, you need the inflammatory...
141
141
Aug 2, 2014
08/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 141
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> 53% up in anti-sem itic attacks in london alone. nice to see you, charles. >> a u.s.ine has been langishing in a mexican president and now heading back to court. his court hearing is on monday. uncertain what will happen, on the record is staying on the case. >> didn't mean to be in mexico, it was an accident. >> a prisoner in peril. >> punched in the stomach a few times to the point where i couldn't breathe. >> marine tahmooressi suffers in prison and on the record has been there from the start taking you to the border. >> bringing you the answers. >> i can tell you what i would be doing, burning up telephone wires. >> and thousands of you giving support. >> you did it, 100,000 of you have officially signed the white house petition to get the sergeant's case in front of the president. now a critical court hearing just days away. will sergeant tahmooressi finally come home? on the record takes you to the trial monday night. >> be sure to join us monday for complete coverage and dr. ben carson has news. he has big news that has to do with 2016. start guessing. that's c
. >> 53% up in anti-sem itic attacks in london alone. nice to see you, charles. >> a u.s.ine has been langishing in a mexican president and now heading back to court. his court hearing is on monday. uncertain what will happen, on the record is staying on the case. >> didn't mean to be in mexico, it was an accident. >> a prisoner in peril. >> punched in the stomach a few times to the point where i couldn't breathe. >> marine tahmooressi suffers in prison and...
51
51
Aug 25, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm still more worried about kin itic attackings, bus that fumes their recruiting. that has visuals. but are they going to engage in cyber, absolutely. if i were to half to take worse case sceb are whys it's the convergees of -- that's what we need to be worrying about going forward. all that said and done, i really don't mean i think it was, i know it was yog i berra who said the future ain't what it used to be. and my version is since the end of the cold war, the threat forecasting has made astroll look respectable. i don't have a crystal ball. what i can tell you though the best pay to predict anything, to s is to shape it. and i feel like we're in react mode, we're tired the. we're reacting the crises. everywhere. we need to be in the business of shaping the environment, and yes, i'm a proud american to our national interest. and then do so in a way that's collectively beneficial for society. i'll leave it at that. i spoke way too long, i want to engage in questions, but thank you. [applause] >> when you were talking about france having citizens and great britai
i'm still more worried about kin itic attackings, bus that fumes their recruiting. that has visuals. but are they going to engage in cyber, absolutely. if i were to half to take worse case sceb are whys it's the convergees of -- that's what we need to be worrying about going forward. all that said and done, i really don't mean i think it was, i know it was yog i berra who said the future ain't what it used to be. and my version is since the end of the cold war, the threat forecasting has made...
87
87
Aug 6, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 1
don't necessarily want all this information flowing because it can end up being used as a tool for --itical organizing, as a tool to criticize the government. maybe we would prefer a system more closed. i think that is a self-defeating attitude. over the long term, because of technology, information, knowledge, transparency is inevitable. that is true here in the u.s. and everywhere. what we should be doing is trying to maintain an open internet. wherebyo keep a process any talented person who has an idea can use the internet to disburse information. there are going to be tensions in terms of monitoring the use of the internet for terrorist that works -- networks or human trafficking. we can do that in ways that are compatible with sustaining an open internet. this raises the broader question i mentioned earlier, which is, -- in somes capital cases, africa needs technical assistance. africa certainly needs access to markets. thing that biggest africa is going to need to potentialen more the that is already there, growth that is already taking place, is laws and regulations and structures th
don't necessarily want all this information flowing because it can end up being used as a tool for --itical organizing, as a tool to criticize the government. maybe we would prefer a system more closed. i think that is a self-defeating attitude. over the long term, because of technology, information, knowledge, transparency is inevitable. that is true here in the u.s. and everywhere. what we should be doing is trying to maintain an open internet. wherebyo keep a process any talented person who...
217
217
Aug 10, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 217
favorite 0
quote 0
many people have contacted my itice to ascertain how safe is to fly perhaps next to somebody who maybe changed flights en route to the united states coming from liberia for example? and are the efforts at the airports, particularly where there is a large population, i don't know if you have enhanced efforts there where there is people from west africa are more likely to go, but are they up to the task of detecting at point of embarkation passengers who might be sick from ebola? >> let me try to quickly give you clear answers to all of those questions. the first is a relative case fatality rate of different groups and in the current outbreak the data is still too foggy for us to give you clear data. there is not the kind of robust data that we will have eventually. there is one intriguing historical fact which i think is worth mentioning. in 1967 there was a laboratory accident in marburg, germany. the marburg virus was then identified. it has a similar fatality rate to ebola. if anything, a little higher, around 80%. outbreaks in the 80% range in a frica. the fatality rate in germany i
many people have contacted my itice to ascertain how safe is to fly perhaps next to somebody who maybe changed flights en route to the united states coming from liberia for example? and are the efforts at the airports, particularly where there is a large population, i don't know if you have enhanced efforts there where there is people from west africa are more likely to go, but are they up to the task of detecting at point of embarkation passengers who might be sick from ebola? >> let me...
59
59
Aug 4, 2014
08/14
by
WPVI
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
itic. as sgracefu a ou of of s.f o seet kerrydu f lar. to andth e wa1quaks aardmenit i2012. >n y f t.reer drugs a n stoma rra b a seba trs oldkendncdeiseat aamd.v press >>> andosson. w rk along >ndet,0 wa thig,u nlts ew s ne alions.a w ou>>>gh day o arryie ow was tsaketr egins chtles.foyes, ngthe haveeate tsaketr t erypeinspher and homere ar ike...howaur , when y you'llet with at momortga bernment-e su reincrs tryaregst alove in and"grdnsf the boo t n from cher thard of th g yi>es mayin one ,timead m yi>es mayin one ,timead m stg. tthloe e se cover we t rid. grai cfincid oenix.ogs of os why ebunc itunlo. le,nugew at wile withthsit isn't andstiny b rst c movg patieabout me w miesou c. ag vcontin shade oi tha ai'iror fsumronculatig theuro race looay chmademe hwnse oap11ars w f in atas a whe-y o. a tthfhosi not wha che do p .they wt wmi able walk. cropft he un at the race t gr w ter cld bcht. ,sinwiunrprint anng>urac o w irbu>> asls inproh, h f owntoucd >>h u. in seot the newdong cre er yhted.whe wadr the of tad? 'm mrspo hat ark, g yooppi wi.sou the of tad? to fo hyk, g ie's y
itic. as sgracefu a ou of of s.f o seet kerrydu f lar. to andth e wa1quaks aardmenit i2012. >n y f t.reer drugs a n stoma rra b a seba trs oldkendncdeiseat aamd.v press >>> andosson. w rk along >ndet,0 wa thig,u nlts ew s ne alions.a w ou>>>gh day o arryie ow was tsaketr egins chtles.foyes, ngthe haveeate tsaketr t erypeinspher and homere ar ike...howaur , when y you'llet with at momortga bernment-e su reincrs tryaregst alove in and"grdnsf the boo t n from cher...
24
24
Aug 16, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
>> well, to write itic takes one or two years, sometimes three. then they are pretty knee deep in copy editing and evaluating suggestions that have been made. some authorities take them -- authors take them, some not so much. that can take several weeks. occasionally a month or two, but we don't always have that long. we also need to keep books in the season they've been slotted, so we have to keep to the schedule, and the authors get some time with them. sometimes not as much time as they would like, but it is quite the process. and it all goes on, of course, behind the scenes so the consumer, the realizer doesn't see it. >> and we've been talking with lissa warren. we are at bookexpo america where all the publishers come annually in new york city to display their wares for the fall season. you're watching booktv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> charles marsh recalls a life of german theologian, pastor and nazi dissident dietrich bonhoeffer up next on booktv. he recounts bonhoeffer's formal and education his constant denunciation of
>> well, to write itic takes one or two years, sometimes three. then they are pretty knee deep in copy editing and evaluating suggestions that have been made. some authorities take them -- authors take them, some not so much. that can take several weeks. occasionally a month or two, but we don't always have that long. we also need to keep books in the season they've been slotted, so we have to keep to the schedule, and the authors get some time with them. sometimes not as much time as...