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Apr 5, 2020
04/20
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james coleman did i get sick from -- james: did i get sick of it? no. interviewer: you eat a lot. james: yeah. interviewer: going back to taking out the japanese who were targeting the anderson airfield, how many missions, the remember? was it several missions that you took? james: well, they weren't missions. you know, we would find them in different places, and that is how that came about. interviewer: do you recall, how would you operate? would you split up and try to surround them? james: no, we didn't. we didn't do that. interviewer: ok, we're good. ok, i was asking about how you would come if you came across japanese on your patrols, how would you take them out? can you describe the techniques? james: just dropping down to the floor, dirt, and shooting. interviewer: ok, we're whatever you saw, you shot. there was no set thing, you know? you say, there goes one, and you shoot at them, stuff like that. because don't forget, you were behind the enemy lines. and there weren't that many japs behind the enemy lines, but the ones that were there were nuisances, firing on innocent people.
james coleman did i get sick from -- james: did i get sick of it? no. interviewer: you eat a lot. james: yeah. interviewer: going back to taking out the japanese who were targeting the anderson airfield, how many missions, the remember? was it several missions that you took? james: well, they weren't missions. you know, we would find them in different places, and that is how that came about. interviewer: do you recall, how would you operate? would you split up and try to surround them? james:...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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james: maybe not because i was there for 19 days. there were only a few more days after that that it was over. interviewer: you might've missed that. james: and i am glad i did. interviewer: you were wounded. james: yes. bonsaitell you about the -- interviewer: i just read about it. james: i don't remember that. interviewer: you probably pulled out. i think it was over a month, roughly. so you might have missed that. luckily. james: it could be. the night before i got hit -- , we were like in this one section where you could see the ocean. you know when you hit that, it was over. because we went through the whole island. we did not know a lot of them were in the caves though. it could have been after i got hit when they went to go to the end. maybe that is when that happens. interviewer: did you ever explore any of the caves? james: yes, i did. one. i did not go too far in because i got jittery. i remember one time -- because they told us to stop there. we were getting hit with all kind of mortar fire and grenades and so on. and i said -- you know, we cannot stay here. we either have to go forward or go back to where we were before. so they said -- well i cannot tell you to do that. why don't yo
james: maybe not because i was there for 19 days. there were only a few more days after that that it was over. interviewer: you might've missed that. james: and i am glad i did. interviewer: you were wounded. james: yes. bonsaitell you about the -- interviewer: i just read about it. james: i don't remember that. interviewer: you probably pulled out. i think it was over a month, roughly. so you might have missed that. luckily. james: it could be. the night before i got hit -- , we were like in...
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as i mentioned james james vitamins the person who established. parchment and he used to actually incarcerated people on the grounds of parchment with bloodhounds for sport so if you think about that kind of context in which this place is born there's really no some training white supremacy. initially. after the timeline of so there were about 4 or 5 it's within 3 or 4 days between december 29th and january 2nd either on january 2nd in the o.c. issued a statement stating that everything was under control however on january 3rd 2 more people died as a result of the incidents that occurred with. one of the indio see it was still a tease throughout the state we did a timeline breakdown of everything that was occurring once we did that time last week we deployed the article on twitter facebook all of our platforms and certainly it began to go really viral we posted a video image of that was sent of several mean being housed in unit 32 of parchment unit 32 a question that has been condemned and closed down since 2000 and i says 2000 i suffered for over
as i mentioned james james vitamins the person who established. parchment and he used to actually incarcerated people on the grounds of parchment with bloodhounds for sport so if you think about that kind of context in which this place is born there's really no some training white supremacy. initially. after the timeline of so there were about 4 or 5 it's within 3 or 4 days between december 29th and january 2nd either on january 2nd in the o.c. issued a statement stating that everything was...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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james. james: thanks, chair powell. you didn't firm up your guidance on -- this is james from "the financial times". your guidancem up on interest rates. iven the things you outlined, under what circumstances would you strengthen the fed's commitment to keep rates at the bound? is there any danger to delaying that pledge? what credit facility, kind of demand are you expecting for the programs that were set under the cares act and are you expecting them to rapidly like the p.p.p. did? chair powell: first, as i mentioned, we moved very quickly, very aggressively. first to return to effective lower bound, where we are now. there essentially right away. we think that's the right place to be. if you look atsur vase. if you -- if you look at if you look at market prices, they expect us to be while.or a it's not as though the market is offering a lift off that. to me say, we are not going e any hurry to wait and lift off. we'll wait until we're confident the economy is well on the road to recovery. see our current stance, our current guidance, and i would thing with asset purchases. we see them as appropri
james. james: thanks, chair powell. you didn't firm up your guidance on -- this is james from "the financial times". your guidancem up on interest rates. iven the things you outlined, under what circumstances would you strengthen the fed's commitment to keep rates at the bound? is there any danger to delaying that pledge? what credit facility, kind of demand are you expecting for the programs that were set under the cares act and are you expecting them to rapidly like the p.p.p. did?...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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over towill turn it james. james: thank you, governor.hese are unprecedented times, but us texans have proven time and time again, we are a resilient state, and with your leadership, i know we will make it through this together. i am honored to join you and all of the outstanding members of this task force to serve the people of texas, and to help lead our state through this challenge. as a governor said, this team exists to inform him on the best strategies to revitalize the texas economy and get texas back to work. while protecting, and i will repeat, while protecting the health and safety of all texans. and we have already begun working around-the-clock the clock to accomplish this mission. it is clear that all texans are hurting economically, and are ready to get back to work so that they can begin to earn a paycheck again. but i want to reiterate what the governor said. his main point is that slowing the spread of this virus and keeping texans safe remains our top priority. every recommendation, every action by the governor, will be
over towill turn it james. james: thank you, governor.hese are unprecedented times, but us texans have proven time and time again, we are a resilient state, and with your leadership, i know we will make it through this together. i am honored to join you and all of the outstanding members of this task force to serve the people of texas, and to help lead our state through this challenge. as a governor said, this team exists to inform him on the best strategies to revitalize the texas economy and...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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new draft for a global ceasefire to give the world time to overcome covert 19 diplomatic editor james james bays explains it follows disagreements between states about what role the u.n. should play in the pandemic. as the g. 7 group of countries prepare to meet on the pandemic one part of the international community the u.n. security council has been paralyzed by inaction it still hasn't come up with a resolution that has been able to pass all new coded 19 that symposium because initially some countries said it wasn't a matter for the security council and there was an unseemly rao between the u.s. and china the u.s. wanted to call the virus the womb hand virus now although progress is being made from its has been pushing a new draft and the french ambassador interim ote interview with me told me that he thought it was possible they could have a resolution in the next few days everybody know that they are different views on the pandemic i think we are doing really really good try to race now i really hope that to reach out and be in a position to take action in a coming days in a security c
new draft for a global ceasefire to give the world time to overcome covert 19 diplomatic editor james james bays explains it follows disagreements between states about what role the u.n. should play in the pandemic. as the g. 7 group of countries prepare to meet on the pandemic one part of the international community the u.n. security council has been paralyzed by inaction it still hasn't come up with a resolution that has been able to pass all new coded 19 that symposium because initially some...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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james mustich. [applause]. james: thank you. thank you very much. [applause]. nancy: so james, tell us how does this book all take place. james: about 15 years ago now, i was approached by this book. workman had published quite successfully, the thousand places to see before you die. some of you may know this and it was very successful. and one evening, as i recall, we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut, however the owner of book and publishing is with us tonight. [applause]. and peter said, you know i think we should do one of those books about the thousand things to do. about books and would you like to write it. i without hesitation, yes. ... ... ... ... peter used to take u me out for lunch at least every year if not twice a year and he would always talk about you in the book. he died five years ago soi a pat of me, i know he was so fond of you, part of me thinks he must be very proud of this moment that we are all together. >> i hope that is the case, i'm pretty sure it is. i think you would be very pleased to see all these people here and to know that so many people are talking about the boo
james mustich. [applause]. james: thank you. thank you very much. [applause]. nancy: so james, tell us how does this book all take place. james: about 15 years ago now, i was approached by this book. workman had published quite successfully, the thousand places to see before you die. some of you may know this and it was very successful. and one evening, as i recall, we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut, however the owner of book and publishing is with us tonight....
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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james mustic. >> james: thank you nancy. >> so james how did this book take place? >> james: about 15 years ago now, the late peter workman approached me about the book. he had published quite successfully a book called 1,000 places to see before you die, and that was very successful, and one evening as i recall we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut, carol ann, the publisher of workman publishing is here with us tonight. and peter said, i think we should do one of those books about thousand things books about books, would you like to write it? and i without hesitation said yes. and then i hefted for 14 years to deliver the manuscript. in addition to being visionary workman has been extraordinarily patient. >> peter user friendly to take me out for lunch at least every year if not twice a year and talk about you and talk about the books so i think he died five years ago so part of me i know he was fond of you so part of me thinks he must be very proud of this moment that we're all together. >> >> james: i hope that's the case, i'm sure it is. i
james mustic. >> james: thank you nancy. >> so james how did this book take place? >> james: about 15 years ago now, the late peter workman approached me about the book. he had published quite successfully a book called 1,000 places to see before you die, and that was very successful, and one evening as i recall we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut, carol ann, the publisher of workman publishing is here with us tonight. and peter said, i think we...
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Apr 18, 2020
04/20
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james: was it? ok. brian: paid $2 million to make two speeches. james: yes. and just the idea of a president speaking was unusual at that point. brian: were you able to talk to george bush on -- during this period at all? jamesi was not. i did not interview george w. brian: did you want to and were turned down? james: yes. i actually -- i think i can say i went through james glassman who was working for him, but i couldn't persuade bush to do it. brian: you think that would have made a difference? james: well, we have to go back to the word limit here. i'm not sure how much of a difference it would have made. and you mentioned decision points. he wrote a book much larger than, longer rather, than this. so, i think i got his point of view on most things. brian: when you did the vulcans book, did people talk to you? james: yes. yes, they did. brian: so of all the sources that you had for this and you do -- you have the notes in the back, which would be the most valuable for the george bush presidency, george w. bush presidency? james: you mean which -- brian: which book that he read would be the biggest help if somebody wanted to study it, besides your short biography? james: well, i -- brian: what's, more to
james: was it? ok. brian: paid $2 million to make two speeches. james: yes. and just the idea of a president speaking was unusual at that point. brian: were you able to talk to george bush on -- during this period at all? jamesi was not. i did not interview george w. brian: did you want to and were turned down? james: yes. i actually -- i think i can say i went through james glassman who was working for him, but i couldn't persuade bush to do it. brian: you think that would have made a...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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james and not just his cheatin' ways. it went back to the day james told her about doug carlile's death. >> he just walked into the room and was like, doug's dead, straight-faced, nothing. it was the strangest thing ever. >> did you think at the time, i wonder if james with this? >> it seemed fishy, it did. but again, your life's already crumbling. you don't want to think that your husband could be doing anything like that. >> why didn't you get out of that marriage? >> i was scared of him. so. everyone wants the fairy tale. everyone wants to be married with a good life of kids and it came crashing quickly. >> so finally, sarah started talking about divorce. >> i told him and he'd be like, how are you going to feel if you divorce me and find out all this isn't true and the kid's not mine? you'll be a horrible person and i'm going to destroy you and he was very threatening. >> was he serious? a month after the murder of doug carlile, january 2014, sarah got a call from her local sheriff. >> he said you need to come to my office right this second. >>> coming up -- sarah gets some frightening news. >> homeland security was waiting for me. and they were like, your husband is trying to have you killed today. >> what was that moment like for you? >> doesn
james and not just his cheatin' ways. it went back to the day james told her about doug carlile's death. >> he just walked into the room and was like, doug's dead, straight-faced, nothing. it was the strangest thing ever. >> did you think at the time, i wonder if james with this? >> it seemed fishy, it did. but again, your life's already crumbling. you don't want to think that your husband could be doing anything like that. >> why didn't you get out of that marriage?...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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FBC
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james. >> they were never anything but southerners. >> legend has it that, when jesse's 16 years old, the james farm is attacked by union soldiers, looking for his rebel brother, frank. >> from that point on, jesse jameshe takes up with these guerrilla fighters and basically terrorized the western part of the state. >> when the south surrenders in 1865 and slavery is outlawed, the james boys return home. >> their farm had been decimated. they couldn't get a job. >> seething with resentment, the brothers figure they can still attack the yankees -- by stealing from them. james and his gang of ex-confederates plot a bold bank robbery in broad daylight, the first of its kind on american soil. on february 13, 1866, they enter clay county savings. >> everyone on the ground! >> now! >> get down! >> they seize 60,000 bucks. that would be 800 grand today. as they're fleeing, one of the gang guns down a witness in cold blood. there are more bank and train robberies, just as violent. today, we'd call him a terrorist. >> that's a northern term. >> they killed a lot of people. >> today, he would have been a good soldier, if he was on the right side, a terrorist if he wasn't. >> so we should feel sorry for him? >>
james. >> they were never anything but southerners. >> legend has it that, when jesse's 16 years old, the james farm is attacked by union soldiers, looking for his rebel brother, frank. >> from that point on, jesse jameshe takes up with these guerrilla fighters and basically terrorized the western part of the state. >> when the south surrenders in 1865 and slavery is outlawed, the james boys return home. >> their farm had been decimated. they couldn't get a job....
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Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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. >> jim acosta, i remember james -- james comey wrote, in his book, about the dinner he had with the president, of course before he was fired. and he writes about, you know, and my memory of this, i read it a long time ago. but i just remember him writing about his concern about does he nod? because if he's nodding, does it -- or if he remains silent, does the president view that as acquiescence? and people around the president have to think about do you respond? if you stay silent, are you then co-opted? and that's something these scientists probably have to figure out every single day. >> anderson, that is one of the sad lessons we have seen throughout the trump presidency. as he attacks different segments of american society, whether it be the press, the intelligence community, now he's going after the scientists. who are the people that speak out and say, no, this will not stand? there is a real concern among scientists if they speak out publicly against what the president's saying, that they'll be thrown out of the ball game and then you lose that expertise. the american people
. >> jim acosta, i remember james -- james comey wrote, in his book, about the dinner he had with the president, of course before he was fired. and he writes about, you know, and my memory of this, i read it a long time ago. but i just remember him writing about his concern about does he nod? because if he's nodding, does it -- or if he remains silent, does the president view that as acquiescence? and people around the president have to think about do you respond? if you stay silent, are...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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james: the idea of a president speaking was unusual at that point. brian: were you able to talk to george bush during this time at all? james: i was not. i did not interview him. brian: did you want to and were turned down? jamesyes. i went for james glassman who was working through him. i couldn't persuade bush to do it. brian: would that have made a difference? james: we have to go back to the word limit. i am not sure how much of a difference it would have made. you mentioned "decision point." he wrote a book much longer than this so i think i got his point of view on most things. brian: when you did "vulcans" book, did people talk to you? james: yes, they did. brian: of all the sources you had for this, you have the notes in the back, which would be the most valuable for the george bush presidency? george w. bush presidency? james: you mean which -- brian: which book you read would be the biggest help? if some but to study at the sides your short -- if somebody wanted to study it decides your short biography. james: my own book "the vulcans," i consider for foreign policy a pretty good book. then there are the memoirs. i think bush-cheney-rice wrote an interesting memoir. rumsfeld has a memoir. the memoirs
james: the idea of a president speaking was unusual at that point. brian: were you able to talk to george bush during this time at all? james: i was not. i did not interview him. brian: did you want to and were turned down? jamesyes. i went for james glassman who was working through him. i couldn't persuade bush to do it. brian: would that have made a difference? james: we have to go back to the word limit. i am not sure how much of a difference it would have made. you mentioned "decision...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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james athey. james, what do you do with emerging markets right now? jamesly tough one, to be honest. i think they really -- a number of the countries that make up that sort of sector of the market really have got some serious challenges ahead. again, what the virus has done, is it has exposed existing ies.ilit time formost the ideal these economies to get their houses in order. you had strong growth coming from china via commodities and commodity prices. we know a lot of these are resourced in intensive economies, and what we have seen is fragility increasing, lots of dollar debt, dollar borrowing without necessarily the assets being used on the other. we have seen a lot of the deficits getting bigger with external deficits, so right here, right now, it is going to be a huge challenge. i think what is fortunate for a lot of these economies is at the moment they do not have a huge amount of inflation. there is more traditional monetary policy response, which is to say cut rates. so i don't think necessarily the bond markets are -- we have seen them outflow a
james athey. james, what do you do with emerging markets right now? jamesly tough one, to be honest. i think they really -- a number of the countries that make up that sort of sector of the market really have got some serious challenges ahead. again, what the virus has done, is it has exposed existing ies.ilit time formost the ideal these economies to get their houses in order. you had strong growth coming from china via commodities and commodity prices. we know a lot of these are resourced in...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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james mustick. [applause]. james: thank you nancy. thank you everybody. [applause]. nancy: so james, tell us how does this book take place. james: about 15 years ago now. the late peter workman, personally about this book. workman is published quite successfully ♪ ♪ 1000 places to see before you die which some of you may know. i was very successful. one evening as i recall, we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut. and the owner of workman's publishing is here tonight. [applause]. and peterd said, i think we should do one of those books about thousand things books babout books. when you like to write it denied without hesitation, i said yes. then i hesitated for 14 years to deliver the manuscript. so in addition to being visionary, workman has been extraordinarily patient. nancy: agrees to take me out for lunch. a week every year if not spicier. humanoids talk about you in the book. so i think, while he died five years ago. i know he was so on abusive part of me thinks he must be proud of this very moment that world together. james: i hope this a case i'm pretty
james mustick. [applause]. james: thank you nancy. thank you everybody. [applause]. nancy: so james, tell us how does this book take place. james: about 15 years ago now. the late peter workman, personally about this book. workman is published quite successfully ♪ ♪ 1000 places to see before you die which some of you may know. i was very successful. one evening as i recall, we were having cocktails at the workman's home in connecticut. and the owner of workman's publishing is here tonight....
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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KPIX
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person actually taking the coronavirus seriously is bond, james bond. ( james bond theme song ) ( cheers and applause ) yesterday, the new jamese was postponed over oducerof the farre shaken and stirred. ( laughter ) ironically, the film is named "no time to die." ( laughter ) it didn't help that the bond girl is named pam demic. ( laughter ) i applaud the producers for putting public health ahead of their marketing schedule, but i think they can do more. that's why i'm calling on them to release a new version of one of their classic songs. ♪ wash fingers ♪ ♪ ( laughter ) ( cheers and applause ) seriously, wash your fingers. we've got a great show for you tonight. keith urban is here. but when we come back, it's "meanwhile" time, y'all. it's "meanwhile." ( cheers and applause ) (band playing) [car engine failing to start] [clicking of ignition] uh-- wha-- woof! eeh-- woof! wuh-- [silence] [engine roars to life] [dog howls] ♪ dramatic opera music swells from radio ♪ [howling continues] way more than you think. check out this game. yes... galaxy 5g means you will beat your friends- what if i want to show my friend this little gu
person actually taking the coronavirus seriously is bond, james bond. ( james bond theme song ) ( cheers and applause ) yesterday, the new jamese was postponed over oducerof the farre shaken and stirred. ( laughter ) ironically, the film is named "no time to die." ( laughter ) it didn't help that the bond girl is named pam demic. ( laughter ) i applaud the producers for putting public health ahead of their marketing schedule, but i think they can do more. that's why i'm calling on...
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Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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KGO
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. >> reporter: james lylie jamesn james lin closed the the a small amount were occupied. >> it's sadness and fear and what will happen in the next few months. >> reporter: hotel occupancy rates dropped from 85% to 6%, weeks before mandatory shelter in place orders. even when those orders are lifted, evan carroll, ceo of the san francisco hotel council says it will take months, even a year, for those percentages to climb back. >> we know we will recover and people will start to come back to the city. but how will that look? will there be differences how we can hold meetings and differences how guests can can n interact? >> definitive questions that can change day-to-day hotel operations. how about cleaning hotel rooms, how do you expect it to change? >> we are looking at half a day to fully clean and sanitizer. >> dedicate half a day to clean a room will be really tough without adding new staff. >> it really changed how we operate. >> they're setting new guidelines for cleaning guest rooms. it'sin' clear if a wait room between guests will be required or just recommended. abc7 news. >> tha
. >> reporter: james lylie jamesn james lin closed the the a small amount were occupied. >> it's sadness and fear and what will happen in the next few months. >> reporter: hotel occupancy rates dropped from 85% to 6%, weeks before mandatory shelter in place orders. even when those orders are lifted, evan carroll, ceo of the san francisco hotel council says it will take months, even a year, for those percentages to climb back. >> we know we will recover and people will...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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recent survey of presidential leadership. ♪ >> this week on "q&a," james mann talks about his biography of president george w. bush. brian: jamesann, author of the biography on george w. bush, if a friend of yours who had never met george wbu
recent survey of presidential leadership. ♪ >> this week on "q&a," james mann talks about his biography of president george w. bush. brian: jamesann, author of the biography on george w. bush, if a friend of yours who had never met george wbu
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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MSNBCW
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james' stories begin the same way. february 20th, 2008, night of heavy drinking at dawn's house, a heated conversation about ben oxley. james asking dawn if she wants to have him killed. but that's where the stories diverge. dawn remember, says she told jamesnd fell asleep on the couch. but that's not james' story. >> she was ecstatic about what happened. she was happy i was going to kill somebody. >> it was after midnight. dawn drew him a diagram of ben's house so he could find his way to the bedroom. then he went to the 7-eleven, with dawn's bank card, drew $40 out of the atm and then they went to the walmart. dawn waited in the car while james did the shopping, shotgun shells, gloves, a flashlight. >> she was just very happy about it like you would imagine a kid going to disneyland, you know? >> but there was a problem. they'd forgotten to bring the diagram of ben's house with them. >> the plan wasn't for dawn to go in the house. the plan was just for me to go in the house. i didn't know how to get in. >> or where the bedroom was? >> or where the bedroom was. so dawn had to go inside. >> the front door was locked so dawn took him around back where a sliding glass door was unlocked and they eased their way in and walked down the hall. th
james' stories begin the same way. february 20th, 2008, night of heavy drinking at dawn's house, a heated conversation about ben oxley. james asking dawn if she wants to have him killed. but that's where the stories diverge. dawn remember, says she told jamesnd fell asleep on the couch. but that's not james' story. >> she was ecstatic about what happened. she was happy i was going to kill somebody. >> it was after midnight. dawn drew him a diagram of ben's house so he could find his...
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Apr 5, 2020
04/20
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james admitted it. he had been sleeping with two women, in the same house. but then, youth pastor jason told the detectives, in that cloistered setting, james kept talking, and told a terrible story. >> him and marie had had a physical altercation before she went missing. and she had scratched him on his arms. >> reporter: jamessted marie was still alive the last time he saw her. >> i was just so in shock of everything. >> reporter: that was it. he could not continue as pastor. james would have to resign. he announced that he and tanya were leaving town. >> they were supposed to leave the following morning to say goodbye to some church members. and lo and behold, around 12:00 or 12:30 they'd gotten in that truck and they hauled butt. they went to arizona. >> they fled. >> reporter: like thieves in the night. with baby grace. it was a few days after they left when jason went to the police to tell his disturbing story. >> that they had a physical run-in the day that she went missing. >> reporter: then a piece of luck. before they left, marie's friend kay had asked the pastor and his wife for marie's belongings. they gave her marie's computer. the bad news was it had been erased but -- >> i brought it into the sheriff's department for them to take a look. >> we had our forensic tech reanalyze the computer, and i
james admitted it. he had been sleeping with two women, in the same house. but then, youth pastor jason told the detectives, in that cloistered setting, james kept talking, and told a terrible story. >> him and marie had had a physical altercation before she went missing. and she had scratched him on his arms. >> reporter: jamessted marie was still alive the last time he saw her. >> i was just so in shock of everything. >> reporter: that was it. he could not continue as...
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james madison and james monroe. that is the third fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] there is a variety of reasons why that happened and there is a personal reason behind the collapse but you get an idea all founding fathers were not friends. >>. >> nowadays presidents leaving office can be less partisan course those who defeated them. and almost all the presidents with a variety of causes. but you suggest leaving office made washington more partisan. >> that's true i do think he did after he left the presidency and have a perception day that is up the partisan feud but he involves himself and congressional engineering and he supported the alien and sedition act those that were associated with the opposition party to be locked up and also favorite excluding members of the opposition party from the new army being formed but this is just so surprising to us if you look back at the farewell address and it says we are all reminded to the political parties but during last years of washington's life he wrote a letter to basically say they had no choice but to be one party or the other that was between federalist and a republican and he was a federalist.t so there is a point there is a conservative effort as it becomes clear adams will lose the presidency in the election of 1800. and to seek a third term as president and t there are influential people with members of john adams cabinet and one of the arguments that hehe makes is more than any other federalist because the country was so polarized that nobody could run for presidents so ever republican so the father of the country loses the presidency to the final months of your life. >> so washington has no biological children and yet you pointed out a little known fact that he parented martha's grandchildren from the first marriage so the father of our country. >> so he found that kind of fatherhood particularly challenging and we know this because we have the letters that washington sent so there are variety of schools they went to because they kept dropping out and then washington had to find a new school and constantly filled letters with more and more advice which is don't trust yourself and listen to your teachers. but for me, many years later or decades later another virginian would find that to be very similar and that turned out to be his son amar robert easy and in some way another connection leading to his last years. >> so to survive between george and martha washington and with those post presidency years. >> we do think of what they exchange but what they might have said because washington described them during the last years that's a good way to think about their marriage and describe it as aer partnership and to give advice to other people and then to have and we also do know during the last years of sally fairfax. and we know that sally fairfax was a woman at the washington fell in love with and we know he was still thinking about her during these last years because he wrote a letter to her that all the things he is done afterwards in his life with the two terms as president did not mean as much as the time of sally fairfax. >> martha didn't see that i take it. [laughter] martha sent a separate letter that she actually drafted herself d. >> how did the marriage complicate the clause he wrote into his will to emancipate the slaves? >> because most of the slaves at mount vernon were not george washington's so martha's first husband was not in the power for nor was it in martha's power. and had abandoned her power. and then to acknowledge what that emancipation and with those marriages to his place and those slaves that belong to the estate that those will be broken up as a result. so essentially mount vernon shares as the united states as a whole to be half slave and half free. >> did we talk about collecting questions? we are supposed to ask you to send questions down. there are several more questions to reach the time of the audience participation and those that will washington dies really a tough and excruciating death. >> certainly the medical care he received his epiglottis swells and he can't breathe and to slowly suffocate and choke to death. and there was a younger doctor for the idea of a tracheotomy which basically tried to obstruct his windpipe and saying we should not be bleeding him quite as much as we are but it's important to say that then' bleeding practice waking up on the day of his death somebody that worked at the estate the person was tentative and martha was worried that too much blood was taken and george washington said more. and the doctors what a lot more blood in the younger doctor said i don't think bleeding is the right thing to do he needs his strength. so that was for the normal circumstances where the tracheotomy have worked? maybe but probably not with 18th century medicine surely he would have died because of complications. >> those finally wishes that he was very conscious of his place in history. how conscious was he in particularar with these final years? >> he was very conscious and he was very worried and actually spending some of his time so you might be thinking but really is trying to fix of his grandmother - - grammar he was worried about the way he talked because there is a lot of people back then that felt that george washington waske illiterate that he wasn't writing his own letters and people writing them for him. washington is an extremely good writer he's in a very effective lever writer so he is very conscious of his place in history but long before most of us got the idea so anything you say can live on forever george washington already understood that reality for a long time so after you have dinner with george washington you at home to send a letter or put in your diary and then to work their way into what they said what they wrote that they would be reading the letters. >> churchill said he knew history can see intended to write it did washington have that idea? >> so there was not the intent of the official george washington biography actually. a very small part was published but that opportunity was blown and that didn't turn into much. because you can see you put space to the biographer. so if they write biographies for a living it is very upsetting. >> so you need a speechwriter like you. >> and hamilton for one and then to move to the city can you talk about the relationship between the man and the city of washington. >> this was not lost on people but months later a new capital city opens with the name washington it's very fitting the city of washington was called washington george washington had chosen the spot. george washington spent his presidency overseeing the construction of the city so he hopes the city could do what he no longer could. so with those feuding infections and of course there is some irony today at a time they would say with a force that is held together but it is almost synonymous and to attract the need of the story of washington's last year is also the beginning of the city of washington. >> and this completely changes the way we view washington's last year. so what lessons should the former presidents today offer in the last years? >> actually washington struggle and retirement. but just the opposite fornk me. coming to understand how difficult it was made me all the more appreciation only by understanding how many forces and personalities and a check for him to surrender power and of course the way that diverges from the way former presidents should act but in some sense former presidents get their perception of power on the idea and of course the that second you reenter that is gone so in some sense that gives the perception of power it also makes them powerless. >>. >> just a few weeks ago it was his birthday. >> we would be surprised how many people call the holiday presidents' day. the most surprising is washington's birthday but that the presidents who succeeded him in office don't like the day at all i told you story about adam's refused to attend thee ball of washington was a scandal. james madison 1796 celebrated at the house of representatives refusing to adjourn for 30 minutes for his birthday. and james monroe and thomas jefferson the only way he would ever celebrate was july 4h and that was convenient for jefferson and with that declaration of independence spent so that makes you feel better about today. >> you discuss the parallels george c marshall is with cincinnatus or anyes other statesman can you see those parallels? >> so it so interesting because. [laughter] >> so to have that modern equivalent but it's really tough question and partt of it is the reason it is so difficult it is in the roles of the cincinnatus. that is the case washington has to go to that struggle that we don't even appreciate and that is a testament and then to make that normal. and then to become a cincinnatus. and with that beautiful building across from the club and then to look into the history of his final years? >> but everything cause controversy. >> i'm not sure of the modern crite
james madison and james monroe. that is the third fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] there is a variety of reasons why that happened and there is a personal reason behind the collapse but you get an idea all founding fathers were not friends. >>. >> nowadays presidents leaving office can be less partisan course those who defeated them. and almost all the presidents with a variety of causes. but you suggest leaving office made washington more partisan....
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james. superintendent james, thank you so much. appreciate it. what schools in your county closed due to coronavirus, what were you seeing? what were some of the issues students and families were having? >> well, of course, any time we close schools, it weighs heavily on school superintendents about how we feed students who would not otherwise get a meal unless it were for the school system. well provide a whole lot more than just education. so it is our decision when we have to decide to shut schools down, of course, our governor roy cooper decided to close our schools on monday, march 16th. we actually had had a precursor meeting that friday and talked about possibility. and my leadership team, believe it or not, was so concerned that we met on sunday afternoon for about eight hours and put a plan together, and we were able to roll o monday morning serving breakfast and lunch to a tune of 6,000 meals. and before the week had ended, weer up to over 210,000eals a day. the first week we actually served approximately 45,000 meals. a lot lunch and a breakfast for the following morning. >> this is called here comes the, but right? >> yes. now we have an app that we purchased over two years ago when school violence had escalated. offer community was concerned and of course my school board, we invested in several different protocols to help us. so here comes the bus is an app that is free to parents and students. and one of the things we wanted to make sure was, mr. lemon, that students were not standing on a porch stop or a bus stop. we realized that safety began as soon as that student left their front door or back door to go to the bus. an unintended consequence of purchasing the app for parents and students, it actually notifies the student or parent when the bus is in a perimeter range of their house. so students do not have to wait at a corner or bus stop on their meals. so the app also lets us send short messages out, and it's been a great tool for us to use for safety all the way around. of course, it proved to be a great tool for making sure we're feeding students. we have approximately 8400 students in our district. about 60% free lunch. again, this first week, we served 45,000 meals and followed up the second week with 43,000. so to a tune of 88,000 meals weeks to our students.d of two >> well, you are doing god's work, and we appreciate you joining us for our taking care segment. listen, you take care. you be safe. continue to do great work. jeff james is the superintendent of stanly county school district in south carolina. north carolina. we appreciate you. thank you so much, sir. okay. be sure you tune in tomorrow night. dr. sanjay gupta, anderson cooper is going to host a town hall coronavirus facts and fears tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. right here on cnn. and i'll see you after at 10:00 p.m. thanks for watching, everyone. our coverage continues. achoo! ...do your sneezes turn heads? try zyrtec... ...it starts working hard at hour one... and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. zyrtec muddle no more. there are times when our need to connect really matters. to keep customers and employees in the know. to keep business moving. comcast business is prepared for times like these. powered by the nation's largest gig-speed network. to help give you the speed, reliability, and security you need. tools to manage your business from any device, anywhere. and a team of experts - here for you 24/7. we've always believed in the p
james. superintendent james, thank you so much. appreciate it. what schools in your county closed due to coronavirus, what were you seeing? what were some of the issues students and families were having? >> well, of course, any time we close schools, it weighs heavily on school superintendents about how we feed students who would not otherwise get a meal unless it were for the school system. well provide a whole lot more than just education. so it is our decision when we have to decide to...
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james. superintendent james, appreciate it. what schools -- what were you seeing? what were issues some students and families were having? >> well, of course, mr. lemon, anytime we close schools, it weighs heavily on school superintendents about how we feed students who would not, otherwise, get a meal unless it was for the school system. we provide a whole lot more than just education. so it is a hard decision when we have to decide to shut schools down. of course, our governor decided to close our schools on monday, march the 16th. we, actually, had a precursor meeting that friday, and talked about the possibility. and my leadership team, believe it or not, was so concerned that we met on sunday afternoon for about eight hours. and put a plan together, and we were able to roll out, monday morning, serving breakfast and lunch to a tune of 6,000 meals. and before the week had ended, we were up to over 10,100 meals a day. the first week, we served approximately 45,000 meals. and provided a lunch and breakfast for the following morning. >> this is called here comes the bus, right? >> yes. now, we have an app that we purchased over two years ago when school violence had escalated. our community was concerned and, of course, my school board. we invested in several different protocols to help us. so here comes the bus is actually an app that's free to our parents and students. and one of the things we wanted to make sure of, mr. lemon, was that students were not standing at a bus stop or on a porch. so this app actually helped us during this time. so an unintended consequence of purchasing the app for parents and students. it actually notifies the student or parent when the bus is in a perimeter range of their house. so students do not have to wait at a corner or bus stop on their meals. so the app also lets us send short messages out. and it's been a great tool for us to use for safety all the way around. of course, it proved to be a great tool for making sure we're feeding students. we have approximately 8,400 students in our district. about 62% free and reduced lunch. and, again, the first week, we served 45,000 meals. and followed up the second week with 43,000. so to the tune of 88,000 meals, we served in a period of two weeks to our students. >> well, you are doing god's work. and we appreciate you joining us for our taking care segment. listen. you take care. be safe. continue to do great work. jeff jamesthe superintendent of the stanley county school district in south carolina -- north carolina. we appreciate you. thank you so much, sir. okay. and be sure you tune in tomorrow night. dr. sanjay gupta, anderson cooper going to host a cnn town hall coronavirus facts and fears. tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. right here on cnn. and i'll see you right after at 10:00 p.m. thanks for watching, everyone, our coverage continues. >>> and good evening, everybody. just a short time ago, president trump and his task force wrapped up another coronavirus briefing. the nation's stockpile of much-needed equipment, gloves, and other medical supplies, is near depletion. ppe. quoting president trump, it is because we're sending it directly to hospitals. earlier today, new york city's mayor said they need millions of specialized masks by
james. superintendent james, appreciate it. what schools -- what were you seeing? what were issues some students and families were having? >> well, of course, mr. lemon, anytime we close schools, it weighs heavily on school superintendents about how we feed students who would not, otherwise, get a meal unless it was for the school system. we provide a whole lot more than just education. so it is a hard decision when we have to decide to shut schools down. of course, our governor decided...
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james k. polk defends sam houston and they give him a slap on the wrist. ill tell you, everybody -- anybody who was anybody in history intersects with the life of james k. polk. >> let me do this quickly, because we are running out of time. go back to north carolina. did you go to mecklenburg county? >> i did not. >> you did not. >> i did not. >> but just go quickly through jamesk. polks life, up to the time he became president so we can get it on the record. >> he was born in mecklenburg county. >> near charlotte? >> yeah. a little sugar creek. he had a very agrarian upbringing. he went to -- he went to sort of seasonal schools. when he was 8, his grandfather has moved to middleton, tennessee and founded really, a paradise, and so sam, his father, and sarah, his mother, go over the mountains and settle in middleton, tennessee, and there he goes up. again, very sickly child. so sickly that hes not able to do all the work in the fields that other children are expected to do. at one point, his father wants to make him a merchant, young boy, puts him in a store. it doesnt work. what he really wants is an education. and after the operation, his father finally sends him to a formal education. first, a little seminary school near where they lived in columbia, tennessee, then to murfesboro, where there was an academy, and finally the university of north carolina, whe
james k. polk defends sam houston and they give him a slap on the wrist. ill tell you, everybody -- anybody who was anybody in history intersects with the life of james k. polk. >> let me do this quickly, because we are running out of time. go back to north carolina. did you go to mecklenburg county? >> i did not. >> you did not. >> i did not. >> but just go quickly through jamesk. polks life, up to the time he became president so we can get it on the record....
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singer james fowler -- >> james fowler.my question really is what about hacking expertise for higher. north korea hires out to nation-state actors and people who have expertise for sale. how does that impact? >> this is a remarkable trend. i think iran is come on the cyber the cyber seen before that was available in the home grow a lot of their capability but you are certainly right to say a lot of nations look around the world and say hey we need cyber space as well as how can we get on board quickly? there companies that essentially higher up hacking expertise and you can go down the list of nations that have done this that have worked with companies to essentially level up there hacking capabilities and how to use those capabilities. what's remarkable is that they use them not just to protect power against adversaries but to repress the hacking capabilities as a tool of maintaining control the population coupled with traditional physical policing. i think that's something, this is a book about nations but if you want to
singer james fowler -- >> james fowler.my question really is what about hacking expertise for higher. north korea hires out to nation-state actors and people who have expertise for sale. how does that impact? >> this is a remarkable trend. i think iran is come on the cyber the cyber seen before that was available in the home grow a lot of their capability but you are certainly right to say a lot of nations look around the world and say hey we need cyber space as well as how can we...
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james madison and james monroe. that is the third and fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] he was no longer on speaking terms with them when he died. there is a variety of reasons why that happened and serious personal reasons behind the collapse of each of those relationships but you get the idea that all founding fathers were not friends. >> or just like egos in the oval office. [laughter] so nowadays the presidents leaving office do you think about george h.w. bush who defeated him for a variety of good causes almost all the presidents have come together to begin a variety of causes. that you suggest to make washington more partisan how does this transpire? >> i think that's true he did become more partisan after he left the presidency. we do have a perception leaving office lifts the president above partisan views. but actually it was the exact opposite. he involved himself in congressional hearings and the way he never did as president. he supported the alien and sedition act that led to printers associated with the opposition party to be propped up. and also favored excluding members of the opposition party from high rank in the new army. and this was a partisan army and with washington's farewell address to say we are all reminded but during the last years of washington's life wrote letters to say they all had choice at this point to be a member of one party or the other and that was between the federalist and george washington was federalist and that there was a concerted effort it became clear that adams will lose the presidency in the election of 1800 as if washington seeks the third term as president so there are influential people who are impressed with members of john adams cabinet trying to make the case for george washington and of course he tries to convince him that he could command no more votes than any other federalist at this point because the country was so polarized and republicans actually would line up behind anyone that a broomstick could run for president and then every republican would vote for the broomstick here is the father of our country pondering losing the presidency to a broomstick. [laughter] >> so to take the safer ground. [laughter] the quip potential was just too great. washington had no biological children but yet you point out as a little known fact he did raise eight children he parented martha's grandchildren from her first marriage. what type of father was he? >> i think he found that type of fatherhood to be particularly challenging especially dealing with martha's grandson. we know this because we have the letters that washington sent that were sent at school and a variety of schools because then he would drop out and then washington would have to find a new school and constantly had letters full of advice and a lot of times the advices don't trust yourself. listen to your teachers. [laughter] and why it is interesting to that, for me is that many years later, many decades later another virginia would find that to be very similar that all the things that caused washington to worry and that was his son-in-law robert e-lee and that in some ways had another connection to rod one - - washington's last years. >> only a few letters survived with martha washington what was there relationship like in the post- presidency? >> tragically martha burned the letters that they exchange but we do have a sense what they might have said because washington described them and said if they read them they would get the sense of friendship. so that's probably a good way of thinking about their marriage. rarely were they alone but they always like to be together. i thank you would describe as a kinship or a partnership he like to give plenty of advice and said when passions die you need to something firmer to underpin the marriage. but we do know he was still thinking about sally fairfax in the last years and we know that she was a married woman i thank you can safely say washington fell in love with as a young man before he married mother one - - martha because he wrote a letter to her that says all the things he has done afterwards of life from the american revolution and two terms as president did not mean as much him as a time he spent with sally fairfax. >> i take it martha did not see that one. [laughter] >> actually it was drafted and re- copied. [laughter] >> how did the marriage complicate. >> that was a major complication be between his the the of martha's first husband it was not in george washington's power to emancipate the slaves or in martha's power for fear that she would have supported to emancipate the slaves even if it was in her power. 's you can see this in his will to acknowledge the painful consequences for eventual emancipation. but it acknowledges there have been many marriages formed between his slaves and those that share fate very similar to the united states as a whole to be half slave and half free. >> by the way, we are supposed to ask you to send questions down. there are several more than we will reach the time for audience participation which comes by you submitting questions to me. washington ultimately dies that's a great question. the medical help he received did not help. he essentially died because of the infection that he can't breathe so he is slowly suffocating and choking to deat death. and there is one doctor a three doctor has the idea for a tracheotomy which would basically try to bypass what is obstructing his windpipe and that doctor says maybe we shouldn't be bleeding him quite as much as we are it's important to say but we know that when he woke up on the day of his death he had somebody on the estate do the first bleeding and the person was tentative and martha was worried too much blood was being taken and he said more. and the doctor took a lot more blood and the younger doctor said we should take his blood he needs his strength. maybe not under normal circumstances. 's with a tracheotomy have worked? maybe but probably not what the stage of 18th century medicine he probably would've died of complications of that. >> what were his final wishes with care of his personal papers? he was very conscious of his place in history. how conscious was he in particular during these final years? >> he was very worried about his papers he wanted to get them in order and he wanted to spend his time making edits to the letters and what kind one - - type of edits and changing history not really just fixing his grammar. [laughter] he was worried about the way he wrote certain things it's important to say because in my book a lot of people like then like george washington was illiterate and george washington was an extremely good writer and a very effective letter writer. and so much so long before most of us got the idea that anything you say if somebody writes a down and then to know after you have dinner with george washington you put in your diary and then it will be found by historians and know that people like me would be reading these letters. >> churchill famously observed that history would be kind to him because he tended to write it. [laughter] did washington ever have that idea? >> there was the attempt at the official george washington biography actually a small part was published but the opportunity it didn't turn into much because you can see washington's edits so it is interesting for us to look at somebody writes biographies for living he needed a speechwriter like you. [laughter] >> but just months after washington died the official that moved to the city can you talk about the relationship between the man in the city of washington? >> this is not lost on people that washington dies and months later a new capital city opens named washington it is very fitting the city of washington calls washington washington had chosen the spot on the potomac river in washington who spent a good deal of his presidency overseeing the construction of the city and gave name to the place he started calling it washington himself but he holds that the city could do what he no longer could which is the feuding and that factions to tear apart the country and there is some irony today that george washington during that time in his life when most look forward all together that it's almost synonymous with political division and then made me realize the spirit of washington last year is actually the story of the beginning. >> to all of us who are at the back of the book for what a great book it is the changes the way that we view washington's last years how did it change your view what lessons should they draw from the last years? >> does it make you think less of a man? and to understand how difficult it was and for what it check for washington with those forces and personalities and then you understand for him to surrender power and with the former presidents today in serious ways they have recovered from the way they should act but some sense former presidents get their perception of power on the idea that they are above party views and of course that is gone and then you are open to attack again so in some sense that gives that perception of power and also is powerless. >> just a few weeks ago celebrating his birthday what really surprised the most? >> we be pretty surprised how many people call the holiday presidents day. that would surprise him the official name is washington's birthday. it would surprise them that so many people generally call presidents' day those who succeeded him in office didn't like celebrating at all and those refusing to attend the ball james madison 1796 refusing to adjourn for 30 minutes for washington's birthday but james monroe derided the idea and thomas jefferson that the only birthday he would ever celebrate would be july 4th and of course that is convenient for thomas jefferson also the adoption of the document he had written as the declaration of independence. >> it makes you feel better about today. you discuss the parallels of washington can you discuss any similarities that you can see those parallels? >> it is so interesting because i did not have a farm to go back to. [laughter] but it is a tough question and the reason it so difficult and the reason is because george washington had to go through the struggle that he did so the world's former president it sounds so clichÉ is a testament that he made it normal and to become that figure. >> i am sure you are well aware of that beautiful building having its headquarters and i assume you visited that during the history of washington's final days? >> of course tha
james madison and james monroe. that is the third and fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] he was no longer on speaking terms with them when he died. there is a variety of reasons why that happened and serious personal reasons behind the collapse of each of those relationships but you get the idea that all founding fathers were not friends. >> or just like egos in the oval office. [laughter] so nowadays the presidents leaving office do you think about george h.w....
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james in kansas, we're going to kansas again james? >> caller: hi, jim thanks for taking my call. >> of course >> caller: with all the speculation that many energy sector companies will not survive this downturn, do you believe occidental petroleum will survive >> i saw that they issued stock to dividend to warren buffett. not in this form, i don't think they will survive, no. i'm jimmy chill now. i'm just going to say their recrennel acquisition was ill advised. if you want to know what companies are weathering the storm, look at the companies raising dividending. u.s. auto sales are expected to crater 80% this month compared with expectations before the pandemic what does that mean for carvana? i've got the ceo and covid-19 isn't invisible i'll tell you which stocks you should consider once we make it to the other side. and rapid fire in tonight's edition of "the lightning round. so stay with j and j and proctor and stay with cramer >>> you understand the scale of the damage of the lockdown what we need to hear from companies that are right in the blast zone, companies like carvana. these guys were using the web to disrupt the used car business. they let you buy a car online, free delivery with a seven-day return policy. when the virus hit, stock plummeted from $115 to $22 investors sold first and asked questions later. since then, carvana has come roaring back, because the company raised capital via a secondary offering and rolled out a new program. some investors will hear the bright side. carvana is the safest way to buy a car right now. and maybe it will make us less willing to rely on public transportation it's easy to get the virus and public transportation in your own car. that's maybe why the stock is back up over $71, even after it got hammered today so let's check in with the ceo of carvana mr. garcia, welcome back to "mad money. >> hey, mr. cramer, thanks for having me. >> ernie, the commerce department gave some numbers today, talking about spending on cars and car parts fell by 25% in march the st. louis fed is talking about dramatic declines from -- by auto dealers. how are you guys holding up? >> this has been a tough situation on everyone. this came on incredibly fast, and as people went in and started worrying about their health and locked down, volume slowed down a lot. so across the industry, depending on the numbers you look at, i think in the second half of march, many companies were down up to 85%. companies that were selling cars we've held up significantly better than that, but there's no doubt this has had a big impact across our industry and other industries, as well. >> how about the discounts tha you're giving right now, because it's a pretty substantial leap of faith to give people credit when we see from wells fargo, et al, that credit is hard to come by and not everybody is paying back >> no doubt about that we just started rolling out a promotion that allows customers to take up to 90 days to make the first payment. many people are going through a difficult financial time and try to have an offering that works in this difficult moment at the same time, we have to worry about credit as you pointed out. the good news there is credit is the toughest when you head into a difficult time once you're in a difficult time and we've seen 16 million layoffs, which is a horrible number, those that have a job today are stronger than months before so we're making those offers to customers today. we feel confident about those offers >> do you think the checks, the $1200 check, could help carvana? >> i think it could. i hope it helps all the people out there going through a difficult time this just came on so quick and strong, people are worried about their financial health this money is going to help people bridge through this difficult time i do think in jgeneral, when people get big sums of money from the government, that generally does drive some large ticket purchases so i think there is a chance that will be a positive for us >> let me tell you a story, maybe you can help me here i'm about to tell you a story, but the conclusion, is i want to know how you really can get profitable somebody i know tried it, they brought the car to her, and she says the car's too big, i don't want it. and you said okay, and they took it back. and i'm like, holy cow they took it back. i couldn't believe it. but then i said, oh, i feel bad. he just got beat by lisa what do you do it's such a good service >> well, please tell lisa she owes us a couple hundred bucks for that pickup. that's part of the offering, we have to make the car is very easy to return it. that cost is very low, compared to the cost of running a dealership or having all the people that go through the transaction. so all we ask is that she tells that story, it was that easy and we think that will work out. >> but they found where we lived and dropped the car there. maybe this is the way of the future because we were like, wow, they really did it. >> yeah. i think what our business is about is building an interface with a customer can buy a car on their own, saving all the money that comes along that and passing those savings along. and then building a different supply chain that enables us to drop the car off at your door. when a customer is buying something that costs $20,000, we need to make sure they have the opportunity to return it back to us if it doesn't fit their life. that's all built into the math >> i did feel like that, wow, aren't the other guys going to catch on the other dealers, this is such a great feature. aren't you afraid they're going to come in under you or do something like this and make it so you're not as special >> well, i think something we tried to do from the beginning is think about what our customers need, build the solutions that our customers are seeking. and then worry less about what the competition is doing there's 40,000 dealers in this market as long as we stay focused on customers, we'll stay ahead of the curve. so far, i think that is our goal forward. >> with the $600 million raise you did, i shouldn't be worried you will run out of money if this pandemic lasts forever. >> as long as lisa doesn't keep returning those cars, we'll be okay tell her she owes us a couple hundred bucks. >> any way, ernie garcia, ceo of carvana, thank you for coming on great business model, sir. >> thank you >>> there's a wild one if you're getting bored, that might be a good one to buy "mad money" is back after the break. >>> it is time it is time for the lightning round. [ indiscernible and then the lightning round is over are you ready, skedaddy. rob? >> caller: hey, jim, how we doing? >> doing good, how about you >> caller: good. i've got to tell you, you pick us up every day. the way the world is going, and we've been down and out. >> ahhh, one of my buddies called me this morning and said jim, you look tired. that hurts i'm back >> caller: i'll tell you what, we watch you, and you bring us back to life >> thank you i needed that. it's lonely. my wife left in the first week of march i'm by myself reading books. what's going on? >> caller: can you let me know about tsm? >> i think it's going to be okay, but that's in that cohort of semis that i like to think includes nvidia and amd. bring it, bring it james in florida, james. >> caller: boo-yah, jim. how is it going? >> good, how about you >> caller: doing great go god mess to all the health care workers out there. sn >> caller: amrn. >> that thing is crazy it is -- look, i'm not -- it's been too much of a dice. every time i say i want to like it, it goes down if i say i hate it, it goes up maurice in new jersey. what's up? maurice? >> caller: i'm here, i'm here. >> what's up if. >> caller: how are you doing i have a question for you about if i was going to take a stock and buy a stock that's been -- like norwegian cruise line >> let's be honest i happen to like cruise, i do. i like a cruise. so does my wife. but the problem is, now it's become a public health issue, and it's a public health issue in the time of the coronavirus, i have to say sell, period let's go to lee in texas lee. >> caller: hey, jim, boo-yah to ya how about ex >> i haven't looked at that in a bit. i thought the ceo told a very good story i want to buy that stock i t
james in kansas, we're going to kansas again james? >> caller: hi, jim thanks for taking my call. >> of course >> caller: with all the speculation that many energy sector companies will not survive this downturn, do you believe occidental petroleum will survive >> i saw that they issued stock to dividend to warren buffett. not in this form, i don't think they will survive, no. i'm jimmy chill now. i'm just going to say their recrennel acquisition was ill advised. if you...
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Apr 29, 2020
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we can now speak to san diego lifeguard chief james gartland. jamesions on the beaches of san diego? we have to change the way we are using the beach right now, so we have closed down the boardwalk. it is still closed. the beaches are being closed. the beaches are being closed for quite some time now. you are allowed to come to the beach now but you can run, swim, walk, surf but you need to get your exercise and then leave, so there is no seating, no sitting on the seawall, no loitering, so you cannot stop when you come to the beach and these other changes we have made to keep people moving. they are required to continue to have that 6—foot distancing and then starting friday you will be required to wear a facial cover. to expect people to to those rules? there seems to to those rules? there seems to be confusion given the pictures we saw from the weekend? our beach just opened on monday and we are getting very good compliance in san diego. we started early in the week. we started on a weekday so we could build up, educate people and get the signage o
we can now speak to san diego lifeguard chief james gartland. jamesions on the beaches of san diego? we have to change the way we are using the beach right now, so we have closed down the boardwalk. it is still closed. the beaches are being closed. the beaches are being closed for quite some time now. you are allowed to come to the beach now but you can run, swim, walk, surf but you need to get your exercise and then leave, so there is no seating, no sitting on the seawall, no loitering, so you...
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Apr 8, 2020
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james madison and james monroe those are third fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] in washington is no longer on speaking terms with them when he dies. [laughter] there is a variety of reasons why that happened and there are serious personal reasons but that should give you an idea and to remind us all the eafounding fathers. s>> i'm glad there's no were egos in the oval office anymore. [laughter] >> but nowadays we think presidents leaving office are less partisan i do think that is the model if you think george h.w. bush coming together with clinton and defeated him for the second term for a variety of good causes almost all the presidents have most recently gotten together through a variety of causes. that you suggest leavingat office made washington more partisan how does that transpire? >> i think george washington did become more partisan after he left the presidency we do have that perception today that it's above partisan feuds but really it is the exact opposite. involved himself in congressional elections in a way he never would have as presiden president. he supported the alien and sedition act that led to printers with the opposition party being locked up and also favored excluding members of the opposition party from the new army being formed in this was a partisan army. the reason this is so surprising today is that we are all reminded of the political party but to remember during the last years of washington's life that all americans have the choice to be a member of one party or the other and that was either a federalist or republican and george washington was a federalist. there is actually a concerted effort as it becomes clear that john adams will lose the presidency in the election of 1800 to convince george washington to seek a third term as president. and there are influential people that are impressed with the members of the cabinet to make the case to washington and he tried to silence all idea and one of the arguments heo makes he could command no more votes than any other federalist would at that point because the country is so polarized. but a broomstick could run for president in the united states because here is the father of our country pondering losing the presidency to a broomstick. >> [laughter] let's ponder that for a moment but washington of course had no biological children but yet you point out as a little known fact he did raise children he would raise martha's children so what kind of father was he from the father of our country? >> he back down to find that challenging especially with his grandson. because we have the letters that washington sent and there are variety of schools that he went to because he kept dropping out in washington would have to find a new school to send him to. constantly with letters for advice like don't trust yourself listen to your teachers. [laughter] so what is interesting to that for me was that many years late later, another virginian was very similar to all the things washington learned that he turned out to be that was his son-in-law robert e-lee and that in some ways was another connection that led me to washington's last years. >> those that survived the letters that survived it was that relationship like during the post- t presidency. >> tragically martha we think burned the letters that george and martha exchange. but we do have a sense of what they might have said because washington inscribed them during his last years and said if anyone read them they would get the sense of friendship and that's a good way of thinking about their marriage. rarely were they alone but they always like to be together he would describe it as a friendship or a partnership and that passion to underpin a marriage. but he was still thinking during these last years of sally fairfax. we know that she was a married woman i think we can safely say washington fell in love with as a young man before martha. and we know he's thinking aboutan her because he wrote a letter to her where he said all the things he had done afterwards in his life the revolution in the two terms as president had not meant as much to him that the time he spent with sally fairfax as a young man. >> i guess martha did not see that. [laughter] >> he wrote a separate letter she drafted the markup. [laughter] >> how did the marriage complicate the clause he wrote into the will to emancipate the slaves? >> most of the slaves them out vernon were not washington's the plurality of them belong to martha's first husband and it was not in washington's power to emancipate the slaves it is in martha's power but is not clear that would have been her choice if it was in her power because he acknowledges consequences will result because for the eventual emancipation for his slaves to acknowledge mary marriages have been formed between his slaves and the estate of the first husband would be broken up. so essentially mount vernon shares that as a whole to be half slave and half free. >> by the way did we talk about collecting questions? you are supposed to send questions down. you are collecting them? good. there are several more questions then we will reach the time of audience participation that comes by you submitting questions to me which then i will ask of jonathan. washington dies a really tough and excruciating death in 1799. was there any hope to save him? >> certainly the medical care he received did not help matters. essentially he dies the epiglottis swells because of his infection and he can't breathe. so he is slowly suffocating and choking to death. there is one doctor, a young doctor who have the idea for a tracheotomy which would basically try to bypass what is obstructing his airway and that doctor said maybe we shouldn't be bleeding him as much as we are. but back then it's important to say it was a practice because when he woke up on the day of his death somebody who worked at the estate and martha was worried that too much was being taken and george washington saysak more. the doctors who followed took a lot more blood. the younger doctor said at some point i don't think leading is the right thing to do. he needs his strength. but under normal circumstances so would the tracheotomy have worked? maybe but probably not considering 18th century medicine he surely would have died of complications. >> is fine law wishes with the care of his personal papers he was very conscious of his place in history. how conscious was he in particular during the final years? >> he is very conscious and he was very worried about his papers he wanted to get them in order he was spending so much time during this period editing his all letters so what kind of edits are it is he making try to change history? really he's just trying to fix up his grammar. [laughter] he was worried about the way he wrote certain things back then so it is important to say because a lot of people back then they said he was a literate and other one - - illiterate and had other people write his letters for him he was extremely good writer and a very effective letter writer. so he is very conscious of his place in history and so much so that long before most of us got the idea of the social media world that anything you say can live on forever george washington already understood that duality he knew after you had dinner with george washington you went home with a letter and you put it in your diary and that was for historians so he always has to be careful about what he said and what he wrote he knew that people would be reading his letters. >> churchill observed history would be kind to him because he intended to writend it. [laughter] did washington ever have that idea? >> there was the attempt at the official george washington biography actually and that it actually was published before the official biography didn't turn into much because you can see with washington it is interesting to look at but at the same time for someone to write biographies for a living to write the official george washington biography. >> he needed a speechwriter like you. >> just months after washington died they moved into the city can you talk about the relationship between the man in the city of washington?ty >> this is not lost on people that washington dies a month later a new capital city opens with the name washington. it's very fitting the city of washington was called washington washington had chosen the spot on the potomac river it is washington who spent a good deal to oversee the construction and ultimately he gave his name and it started to call washington himself by the end of the presidency but he thought the city could do what he no longer could to pull together that factions and of course there is some irony today that george washington held together america to say look at the city of washington is almost synonymous with political division so that is the irony that attracted me to the story that in some ways the story of his last years is actually the story of the beginning of the city of washington. >> to all of us on the back of the book writing about what a great book it is and the changes of the way that we view washington's last years how to learning this history change your view overall and what lessons should former presidents draw today from his last years? >> you might say he watches struggle retirement does that make you think less of the man but actually i come to understand how difficult it was to surrender power gave me all the more appreciation for what it took for george washington to do it. and then to load back into power and what it took for him to surrender power as for former p presidents today is the way from which should act but one lesson is that in some sense former presidents get their perception of power from the idea they are above politics and above partisanship so the second you reenter that is gone. so in some sense that gives that perception of power in these them powerless. >> just a few weeks ago we celebrated his birthday. what would surprise him the most? >> you would be surprised how many people called the holiday presidents' day. first of all the official name is washington's birthday of course everybody in mount vernon knows that. but it would surprise him that so many people that the president succeeded him in office didn't like to celebrate the day at all i tell you the story about john adams refusing to attend the ball. james madison 1796 celebrated the representatives refusing to adjourn he thought this was a great feat. and james monroe don't want - - to write of the idea of washington's birthday and thomas jefferson the only one he would celebrate was july 4th so that is can particularly convenient for jefferson because of the document that he had written the declaration of independence. >> that makes you feel a lot better about today. so you discuss thet parallels of washington cincinnatus and george c marshall can you discuss any similarities or mention any other states and those parallels? >> it is so interesting. >> i didn't have a farm to go back to. [laughter] i think there is a modern equivalent of a farm today but that is a tough question. part of that is the reason it is so difficult so many former presidents fall in the morals of americans cincinnatus. the reason that's the case is washington has to go through the struggles that he did and not even to appreciate how revolutionary that the word
james madison and james monroe those are third fourth and fifth president of the united states. [laughter] in washington is no longer on speaking terms with them when he dies. [laughter] there is a variety of reasons why that happened and there are serious personal reasons but that should give you an idea and to remind us all the eafounding fathers. s>> i'm glad there's no were egos in the oval office anymore. [laughter] >> but nowadays we think presidents leaving office are less...
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Apr 26, 2020
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james bond is walking out the door. will i see you again, james? [laughter] and breitbart after party will be crazy. it will not be good. but it will be crazy. [laughter] on a side note i met james o'keefe last night. at least i think it was james o'keefe. he may have just been a regular pimp who hated organize labor. i'mis having a party but sure it will be pretty sedate. how well can a party get when it is held in accordance with sharia law? [laughter] it is what i was told. [laughter] this is been the year of sweeping changes happening in tv news. katie couric is leaving cbs. she was known for asking tough questions like, name a newspaper? [applause] years of hard-hitting questions and she is going to be remembered for the one that could have doubled as a category on family feud. [laughter] question, name something you keep in your attic? [laughter] katie is one of the many departures we have seen this year. npr fired juan williams after he said muslims make him nervous. so he is black and afraid of muslims making him the least likely man to get it cap in new york city. [laughter] [applause] cab in the art city. olbermann was suspended for donating money to three democratic c
james bond is walking out the door. will i see you again, james? [laughter] and breitbart after party will be crazy. it will not be good. but it will be crazy. [laughter] on a side note i met james o'keefe last night. at least i think it was james o'keefe. he may have just been a regular pimp who hated organize labor. i'mis having a party but sure it will be pretty sedate. how well can a party get when it is held in accordance with sharia law? [laughter] it is what i was told. [laughter] this...
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Apr 5, 2020
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james salerno. for the record, sir, please tell me your full name. >> james anthony salerno. interviewer: when and where were you born? james: i was born in summit, new jersey, in 1918.
james salerno. for the record, sir, please tell me your full name. >> james anthony salerno. interviewer: when and where were you born? james: i was born in summit, new jersey, in 1918.
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Apr 17, 2020
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clix. -- thanks to james suffered to james seyfert of bloomberg intelligence. markets continuing to make gains in the u.s. just off their highs now, in fact. the s&p down to 1.7% of a gain right now. this is bloomberg. ♪ guy: from london, i'm guy johnson, with vonnie quinn in new york. this is "bloomberg markets." the u.k. government response obviously under a great deal of criticism right now. jeremy hunt, former health is also in the u.k., the current chair of the cummins health committee -- the commons health committee. this morning, that committee heard comments from the current health secretary. jeremy hunt joins us now. isof today, the latest data that in the united kingdom, the number of deaths related to covid-19, 14,576. how accurate do you think that data is? how useful do you think it is? does it under represent the true cost? mr. hunt: i think it almost certainly under represents the situation because it is per merely hospital data. there is a big time delay in the data from care homes. that suggests that about 2% of eft's in the u.k. are in care ho
clix. -- thanks to james suffered to james seyfert of bloomberg intelligence. markets continuing to make gains in the u.s. just off their highs now, in fact. the s&p down to 1.7% of a gain right now. this is bloomberg. ♪ guy: from london, i'm guy johnson, with vonnie quinn in new york. this is "bloomberg markets." the u.k. government response obviously under a great deal of criticism right now. jeremy hunt, former health is also in the u.k., the current chair of the cummins...
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Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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james crocker, that fist bump not their first connection james was kevin's donor. doctors cain say conclusively if it did the trick, but kevin asks, what else? >> amazing, i can't believe it they gave me 20% chance left to survive, and within 12 hours of james showing up >> reporter: kevin's family found james through social media he was 14 days clear, tested negative and had a compatible blood type >> it's great to actually meet him in person and to see this picture i think is all we could have hoped for. >> yeah, you're my blood brother now. >> reporter: at children's hospital of philadelphia a similar story. a child is improving after receiving plasma >> we're cautiously optimistic this is an approach that will help with this particular infection, but right now we do not know that. >> reporter: tonight there's an urgent nationwide call for coronavirus survivors to donate plasma tens of thousands more are needed >> families are anxious. what should they know? >> there is no magic bullet nothing is perfect plasma will almost surely not work in everyone it may work in some people it may work in some people better than others >> reporter: tonight kevin with his wife and three kids celebrating but also with a plan to donate his plasma to a fi
james crocker, that fist bump not their first connection james was kevin's donor. doctors cain say conclusively if it did the trick, but kevin asks, what else? >> amazing, i can't believe it they gave me 20% chance left to survive, and within 12 hours of james showing up >> reporter: kevin's family found james through social media he was 14 days clear, tested negative and had a compatible blood type >> it's great to actually meet him in person and to see this picture i think...
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Apr 8, 2020
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james bays joining us live from the united nations and james investigators now have come out with more specifics to tell us all about it. well as you know nic it's been a very long and horrific saga the use of chemical weapons in syria it goes back to 2013 and throughout this time lots of people including the obama administration to trumpet ministration so they believe that the assad regime was responsible but getting an international body to actually look at this has been difficult russia in particular a close ally of the assad regime has blocked some of those attempts finally we have this report just released and it looks at this stage we can look at other attacks later but it looks at 3 attacks in march 27th t. in and it finds that in those 3 attacks which were all on the same town in ad lib that 2 of them were sarin being dropped by the syrian air force in bombs and one of them was chlorine but being dropped but by a barrel bomb so showing that they believe after a great deal of detailed analysis although they weren't allowed into the into the country by the syrian government they believe the assad regime was responsible according to this report the next stage is that this report is sent here where i am u.n. headquarters to the u.n. secretary general antonio terrace so i asked his spokesman can we now have following the results of this report a plant condemnation from the secretary general about the use of chemical weapons by the assad regime 1st so i will say that the report is been done by the o p c w they are responsible for any questions regarding the report is that is is very should be directed to. anyone it is an a.p.b. o.p.c. there is no very we're by identifying and by the by by with this report. the secretary general his position is unchanged that any it is. intolerable that anyone anywhere. in impunity for use of. equally and exert their will and it's imperative to identify and hold those accountable who are used. chemical weapons so he says it's intolerable he said people should be held accountable this report holds the assad regime accountable and the secretary general won't mention the name of the syrian government and president assad why well i think the main factor is that a permanent member of the u.n. security council is russia it is the closest supporter of the assad regime and that also explains sadly why the information in this report is unlikely to little lead to any justice for these crimes the only way you could do something like that or the only available route is to the international criminal court and that needs a referral of the un security council russia is a permanent member of that council and it's proven in the past that whenever syria comes up the idea of referring syria to the international criminal court as a permanent member they have their veto and that prepared to use it james thanks very much indeed james bays there from the united nations. now in the united states u.s. senator bernie sanders has dropped out of the race to become the democratic presidential nominee that leaves a former vice president joe biden as the presumptive challenger to president on a trump in november sundered says it was a tough choice. i know that there may be some in our movement who disagree with this decision who would like us to fight on for the last ballot cast at the democratic convention i understand the opposition but as i see the crisis gripping the nation exacerbated by a president unwilling or unable to provide any kind of credible leadership and the work that needs to be done to protect people in this most desperate hour i cannot in good conscience continue to mount a campaign that cannot win and which would interfere with the important work required of all of us in this difficult hour and that ben is on is let's speak to alan fischer he's been listening in he joins us
james bays joining us live from the united nations and james investigators now have come out with more specifics to tell us all about it. well as you know nic it's been a very long and horrific saga the use of chemical weapons in syria it goes back to 2013 and throughout this time lots of people including the obama administration to trumpet ministration so they believe that the assad regime was responsible but getting an international body to actually look at this has been difficult russia in...
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Apr 3, 2020
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james bays who's been listening in our diplomatic editor diplomatic editor of course at the united nations and james what about this war chess a one trillion dollars has been a month thank you much question. well that's what she said is going to be needed to solve the problem and she is a very sober economist and stateswoman been in charge of the international monetary fund for only 5 months she took over from the french woman christine lagarde 5 months ago but she has a great deal of experience she's a bold garion who previously was a european commissioner now she is showing i think the enormity of this crisis remember that her organization the international monetary fund was set up along with the world bank the so-called bretton woods organization set up the brushwood conference at the end of world war 2 to try and get the world's economy out of world war 2 well she's saying this is an even tougher task certainly much greater than the recession of 20082009 so she's i think showing the scale of the problem and in that last stance i think she's showing where she's most worried which is the developing economies of the world particularly in the end in our stance are focusing on africa a place she said economically that showed so much momentum in the last few years but momentum that could be seriously set back. what we're seeing from this virus what we see at these world health organization press conference is a daily update of the situation with coronavirus but regularly they have guests in from other parts of the world community to focus on the various impacts christina's georgieva making it clear that in her view you have to deal with the lives saving the lives and saving the livelihoods simle tenuously right and to tenderize the chief talking of the knock on effect of this terrible crisis and and how it's affecting other diseases like polio. yeah well it clearly if you got all this medical attention focusing on the virus then all the other attention that would normally be there people who would normally go to a hospital in developing countries you say things like polio the efforts of the public information campaigns all of these are affected because of the the efforts going that's going on to deal with the virus and clearly what is most worrying and worrying here at the united nations we heard the u.n. secretary general antonio terrace couple of hours here at u.n. headquarters in new york remember the world health organization is part of the u.n. they are worried that the most vulnerable communities of the world are the ones that probably don't travel the most and so it's actually been developing world with the most sophisticated medical systems that's been hit 1st but they're worried that the more vulnerable areas the developing world conflict zones and the like they may be down the line and that's why the u.n. is trying to mobilize a major effort to try and protect those communities are james thanks very much ed james bays of the united nations well let's just dip in again and listen to christina georgieva the i.m.f. chief who's speaking right now actually is going back to dr ted ross's net at the pentagon s.s. and in any way to that's a quote and so we will try don't pass yes to me me yes go ahead ok so can i ask your words what that you actually a stance on antibodies testing if you already approved some of them and is that a good practice we widely used for antibodies need for the lock out is actually all were and of course the when you get past were also is that a good. idea that comes from germany is that is that feasible or can do such as the thank you. thank you for the testing there's there's a very large number of molecular tests and serologic tests that are now available for use some of which have gone through approvals in their in their countries regulatory approvals we are working with a number of countries right now that are looking at the use of sera logic as
james bays who's been listening in our diplomatic editor diplomatic editor of course at the united nations and james what about this war chess a one trillion dollars has been a month thank you much question. well that's what she said is going to be needed to solve the problem and she is a very sober economist and stateswoman been in charge of the international monetary fund for only 5 months she took over from the french woman christine lagarde 5 months ago but she has a great deal of...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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james k polk, who conducted the 1846-1848 war against mexico. this interview was included in -span's 2019 book, the presidents, with historians. mr. polk ranked 14th in presidential leadership. brian: john seigenthaler, author of "james k. polk," how'd they talk you into doing a biography on this president? john: arthur schlesinger called me on the phone and said, you're a tennessean. james k. polk was a tennessean. why don't you write a biography for this series that times books is doing on the presidents? and i said, arthur, i don't have time. i'm retired. he said, i want you to do one thing. he said alan nevins has done a paperback that excerpts his diary, his presidential diary. just take the weekend and read it and tell me no. and i read the excerpts from the diary, and i couldn't say no. i was fascinated by the man. brian: did you know much about him before you started on this? john: you know, i knew he was a tennessean. 'm a tennessean. i knew that his grave is behind the capitol. there is no marker in nashville, except a plaque on the side of a dirty motel wall. his old home place in columbia is preserved, and i'd been there many times and have been there since. but i knew virtually nothing about him and almost nothing that was good. mean, his reputation as a result of what was done to him during his presidency over the mexican-american war left him a bad reputat
james k polk, who conducted the 1846-1848 war against mexico. this interview was included in -span's 2019 book, the presidents, with historians. mr. polk ranked 14th in presidential leadership. brian: john seigenthaler, author of "james k. polk," how'd they talk you into doing a biography on this president? john: arthur schlesinger called me on the phone and said, you're a tennessean. james k. polk was a tennessean. why don't you write a biography for this series that times books is...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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he's a small forward from the same school ass lebron james's son played. jamess considered a potential top five pick for next year's nba draft. another player, jalen grand prix, will announce his decision on friday. he's the top rated shooting guard in the country. he played his senior year at they were a travel team. he led his team to a cham31-3 record. basketball play is getting back on the court. well, sort of. the nba putting on a h.o.r.s.e. tournament, each player shooting on an isolated court. a big pair of upsets. billups beats trea young and quickly knocks out chris paul. what a weekend on the track. the better turned 50 cents into 500 k that happened sunday in florida. the gamblers correctly picked the winners of the first five races. the winning ticket kashtd out at more than $524,000. it's the fifth highest 50 crept pick five pay 30u9 in north memp history. the racetrack is closed to the public but they're still taking bets. what we do now will forever change our tomorrow. so let's do the right thing, today. let's stay at home. let's wash up. let's a
he's a small forward from the same school ass lebron james's son played. jamess considered a potential top five pick for next year's nba draft. another player, jalen grand prix, will announce his decision on friday. he's the top rated shooting guard in the country. he played his senior year at they were a travel team. he led his team to a cham31-3 record. basketball play is getting back on the court. well, sort of. the nba putting on a h.o.r.s.e. tournament, each player shooting on an isolated...
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well for more let's bring in journalist james right now in new york james we are seeing a death's mounting in new york what can you tell us about where you are now. i think you can say that the mood in new york city is becoming increasingly concerned i think that goes nationwide as well in the last 24 hours there's been a discernible shift in the emphasis on the scale of this crisis for example previously president donald trump he was talking about you know the possibility of the big cure being found coronavirus saying that the crisis was going to be long lasting. and was going to tank the economy for such a long time now that has changed in the last 24 hours we've just had president trump speaking to the nation again and he said it's going to be vicious the predictions the projections for the total death toll from the crisis that are come out of the white house. suggest as many as 100000 or up 224-0000 people could die and that even if we still bang the social distancing rules that everybody does they shut up in their apartment not just here in the worst part of the country the tri state
well for more let's bring in journalist james right now in new york james we are seeing a death's mounting in new york what can you tell us about where you are now. i think you can say that the mood in new york city is becoming increasingly concerned i think that goes nationwide as well in the last 24 hours there's been a discernible shift in the emphasis on the scale of this crisis for example previously president donald trump he was talking about you know the possibility of the big cure being...
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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justice ginsburg: james makes exquisite compact discs. jamesw up with a passion for music but no talent as a performer. so when he went to the university of chicago, he was a classical disc jockey on the student radio station. then in the year he was dropping in and out of law school, he was also making recordings. one day he told us he liked what he was doing much more than his law classes. so we said, fine. that's what you want to do. and today, he labeled a cd, and his recordings are gems. david: do you have any grandchildren? justice ginsburg: i have four grandchildren, two step grandchildren, and one great grandchild. [applause] david: ok, and do your grandchildren call you rbg? or what do they call you? [laughter] justice ginsburg: i am a jewish grandmother, so i am called "bubbe." david: ok. in the harvard law review and the columbia law review, you were flooded with job offers from the major law firms? [laughter] justice ginsburg: there wasn't a single firm in the entire city of new york that would take a chance on me. ♪ david: from the
justice ginsburg: james makes exquisite compact discs. jamesw up with a passion for music but no talent as a performer. so when he went to the university of chicago, he was a classical disc jockey on the student radio station. then in the year he was dropping in and out of law school, he was also making recordings. one day he told us he liked what he was doing much more than his law classes. so we said, fine. that's what you want to do. and today, he labeled a cd, and his recordings are gems....