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and that check go from the henry kissinger center for global affairs and the johns hopkins school of advanced international studies. thank you for having our president biden may have escaped to criminal charges over his alleged mishandling of classified information, but the case has revive concerns about his age making. it's a central issue in his re election campaign. registered republicans special council brought her advised against pursuing criminal charges against the president because he was concerned a jury would not believe he wilfully held onto classified documents. you wrote this in his report, the whole said considered that at trial missed the bible would likely present himself to a jewelry, as he did during our interview of him as a sympathetic, well meeting elderly man with a full memory of the president to use the hastily cold and celtic, of press conference, the he's out of those claims. i mean, i'm an elderly man and i know what i'm doing. i'm in prison in this country back on the street as you know, initially present mexico, c. c, did not want to open up the gate to a
and that check go from the henry kissinger center for global affairs and the johns hopkins school of advanced international studies. thank you for having our president biden may have escaped to criminal charges over his alleged mishandling of classified information, but the case has revive concerns about his age making. it's a central issue in his re election campaign. registered republicans special council brought her advised against pursuing criminal charges against the president because he...
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okay, let's try and go from the henry kissinger santa, for global affairs and the johns hopkins school of advanced international studies. thank you for having our presence by and may have escaped criminal charges over his election. mishandling of classified information about the case has revive concerns about his age making. it's a central issue in his re election campaign, registered republicans special council robert her advised against pursuing criminal charges against the president because he was concerned a jury would not believe he wilfully held onto classified documents. you wrote this in his report. we've also considered bad at trial, missed the bible, would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him as a sympathetic, well meeting elderly man with a pool of memory. now the president to use the hastily cold and chaotic of press conference, the he's out those claims as well. mean, i'm an elderly man and i know what though i'm doing, i'm present in this country back on the street as you know initially present mexico, c. c, did not want to open up the g
okay, let's try and go from the henry kissinger santa, for global affairs and the johns hopkins school of advanced international studies. thank you for having our presence by and may have escaped criminal charges over his election. mishandling of classified information about the case has revive concerns about his age making. it's a central issue in his re election campaign, registered republicans special council robert her advised against pursuing criminal charges against the president because...
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Feb 15, 2024
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. >> joining us this morning is gerard anderson, johns hopkins louisburg school of public health aic professor there. here too talk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. so how much have prescription drugs cost got up in recent years? >> they're gone up about three e to four times faster than inflation and they just keep rising and we don't seem to have any way to slow it down. >> why do they keep rising? >> there's a number of reasons, but essentially the brand-name drugs which is a once you are about all the time represent about 80% of the spending and they have a patent and of market exclusivity. so they essentially have a government run monopoly so they can charge whatever they want. if a for-profit company can charge whatever they want, they will charge whatever they want and they do. also there's a whole group of people that are trying to buy drugs, and everybody has a different system. so unlike other countries which have one systemou to buy drugs,e have a myriad of systems. the medicare has a system. medicaid has a different system. private insurers have many different
. >> joining us this morning is gerard anderson, johns hopkins louisburg school of public health aic professor there. here too talk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. so how much have prescription drugs cost got up in recent years? >> they're gone up about three e to four times faster than inflation and they just keep rising and we don't seem to have any way to slow it down. >> why do they keep rising? >> there's a number of reasons, but essentially the...
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Feb 4, 2024
02/24
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i'm so thrilled that the gentleman from johns hopkins is there because i know he knows his stuff. would like him to give us a little bit of history to unravel why we are even in this area of the world. because you go over the agreements that the british did and after world war ii how we were elected to take this place in the world but the greatest gain that they had were doing on our dime and our people and how are we no different from israel. i would like him to say why we can take our troops home the way our founding fathers said. thank you very much. guest: well, it is a long history and fascinating one. you are right that particularly with respect to palestine and the area that would become israel, the british had long held -- it wasn't a colony of the british empire but it was called a mandate after world war i. and after the second world war the british pulled back. it was not actually until president eisenhower was in office in the aftermath that the suez war, another fascinating and complicated episode. but then the british and french french will a -- had a mandate over le
i'm so thrilled that the gentleman from johns hopkins is there because i know he knows his stuff. would like him to give us a little bit of history to unravel why we are even in this area of the world. because you go over the agreements that the british did and after world war ii how we were elected to take this place in the world but the greatest gain that they had were doing on our dime and our people and how are we no different from israel. i would like him to say why we can take our troops...
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Feb 4, 2024
02/24
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i'm so thrilled that the gentleman from johns hopkins is there because i know he knows his stuff. would like him to give us a little bit of history to unravel why we are even in this area of the world. because you go over the agreements that the british did and after world war ii how we were elected to take this place in the world but the greatest gain that they had were doing on our dime and our people and how are we no different from israel. i would like him to say why we can take our troops home the way our founding fathers said. thank you very much. guest: well, it is a long history and fascinating one. you are right that particularly with respect to palestine and the area that would become israel, the british had long held -- it wasn't a colony of the british empire but it was called a mandate after world war i. and after the second world war the british pulled back. it was not actually until president eisenhower was in office in the aftermath that the suez war, another fascinating and complicated episode. but then the british and french -- the french will a -- had a mandate
i'm so thrilled that the gentleman from johns hopkins is there because i know he knows his stuff. would like him to give us a little bit of history to unravel why we are even in this area of the world. because you go over the agreements that the british did and after world war ii how we were elected to take this place in the world but the greatest gain that they had were doing on our dime and our people and how are we no different from israel. i would like him to say why we can take our troops...
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Feb 15, 2024
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elizabeth: welcome johns hopkins university professor of public health marty makary.n advisory. what do you think about that? >> look, he's mobbing the fact we're -- mocking the fact we're dropping restrictions now. not every place is doing it. my own employer johns hopkins hospital requires that i wear a mask when i walk into the building. the security guards, half are wearing a mask and half have their nose hanging out and most are making a mockery out of science. i wish dr. fauci and the science officials would say something about this practice since they set it in motion. elizabeth: this is our fourth installment of misleading america. our series this week. former nid director, dr. fauci, is going to release his memoir in june and rand paul said fauci and the government deceived americans on lockdowns, masks, funding and dangerous research to create super viruses in china misleading america about it. >> what's so sad is beyond the finger pointing, the entire covid pandemic was likely avoidable. the entire thing prevented and all the damage and what we know very cl
elizabeth: welcome johns hopkins university professor of public health marty makary.n advisory. what do you think about that? >> look, he's mobbing the fact we're -- mocking the fact we're dropping restrictions now. not every place is doing it. my own employer johns hopkins hospital requires that i wear a mask when i walk into the building. the security guards, half are wearing a mask and half have their nose hanging out and most are making a mockery out of science. i wish dr. fauci and...
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Feb 21, 2024
02/24
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just yesterday, john hopkins university, the london school of hygiene and tropical medicine releasedis which showed that if this conflict continues on the same trajectory, there will be between 50 8000—75,000 additional civilian palestinian deaths in the next six months. —— 50 8000—75,000 so we know categorically what the consequences of an action will be, and no one can in the future claim that they did not know or did not understand the consequences of what they were doing tonight. i’m they were doing tonight. i'm crateful they were doing tonight. i'm grateful for _ they were doing tonight. i'm grateful for him _ they were doing tonight. i�*m grateful for him for they were doing tonight. in grateful for him for giving way. does he agree that while some rules may be more malleable than others, the rules of international law are very clear on self defence and that the use of self defence must be proportionate? and on any view, 30,000 civilians dead, the majority of whom are women and children, is excessive and not proportionate. i think my honourable friend for that, she is absolutel
just yesterday, john hopkins university, the london school of hygiene and tropical medicine releasedis which showed that if this conflict continues on the same trajectory, there will be between 50 8000—75,000 additional civilian palestinian deaths in the next six months. —— 50 8000—75,000 so we know categorically what the consequences of an action will be, and no one can in the future claim that they did not know or did not understand the consequences of what they were doing tonight....
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Feb 27, 2024
02/24
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robert wood, of the johns hopkins children's center. thanks so much for being with us.e should say there is no cure for food allergies, but how much of a game changer is this, especially for children? dr. wood: we have gone from essentially having no treatment for food allergies, literally just telling people to avoid what you are allergic to and carry emergency medicines if you have accidental exposure, so going from there to here is an enormous change. geoff: for people with severe food allergies, there is so much fear and anxiety. i know you say you have teenaged patients who have never been to restaurant, because their families are concerned about exposure. they don't take trips on airplanes for the same reason. how might this improve quality of life for people? dr. wood: reactions happen that can be really dangerous. but a lot of the burden of having a food allergy does relate to that day-to-day fear. is this the day he or she is going to have that accidental exposure at school and is this the day they are going to die? those things are not that common, but the anx
robert wood, of the johns hopkins children's center. thanks so much for being with us.e should say there is no cure for food allergies, but how much of a game changer is this, especially for children? dr. wood: we have gone from essentially having no treatment for food allergies, literally just telling people to avoid what you are allergic to and carry emergency medicines if you have accidental exposure, so going from there to here is an enormous change. geoff: for people with severe food...
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Feb 11, 2024
02/24
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johns hopkins university professor and surgeon marty macari said the following: how would you rate theke mistakes, but we noticed a significant increase in speech inhibition and lapses in memories become more frequent. this is not established as a medical diagnosis at this time, but it is obvious even to the special prosecutor, who essentially made the diagnosis in the report based on age. she is being called in order to be entirely consistent with her attempt to whitewash biden. and several times this week, the president spoke in public appearances about holding conversations in 2021 with european leaders who were already dead. so, can you give us an explanation of why the president is referring to these people in those conversations and what exactly is there? happened. when it comes to names and what he was trying to do, you know what he was trying to say is look, many people are chosen. officials, a lot of people, you know, they tend to, they can sometimes misspoke , right, so he misspoke, and look, let me give you a couple of examples, you know, on sunday speaker johnson said iran,
johns hopkins university professor and surgeon marty macari said the following: how would you rate theke mistakes, but we noticed a significant increase in speech inhibition and lapses in memories become more frequent. this is not established as a medical diagnosis at this time, but it is obvious even to the special prosecutor, who essentially made the diagnosis in the report based on age. she is being called in order to be entirely consistent with her attempt to whitewash biden. and several...
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Feb 5, 2024
02/24
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for more, we are joined by narges bajoghli, professor of middle east studies at johns hopkins universityhe co-authored the new book titled "how sanctions work: iran and the impact of economic warfare" and is also the author of "iran reframed: anxieties of power in the islamic republic." her recent co-authored piece in foreign affairs is headlined "how the war in gaza revived the axis of resistance." welcome back to democracy now! if you could begin by responding to the latest news over the weekend, the u.s. lodging airstrikes in syria, iraq, and yemen, and the biden administration valley more attacks are to come. in particular on friday, the u.s. striking dozens of targets for the first time hitting facilities linked to iran's revolutionary guard? >> with the killing of the three u.s. servicemen in jordan and tower 22, that is one of the u.s. stated red lines in the region. that is something throughout the past 3.5 months as well as the lumber shadow work between iran, hezbollah, u.s., the region, has been a redline that has been observed quite firmly by the forces that are fighting agai
for more, we are joined by narges bajoghli, professor of middle east studies at johns hopkins universityhe co-authored the new book titled "how sanctions work: iran and the impact of economic warfare" and is also the author of "iran reframed: anxieties of power in the islamic republic." her recent co-authored piece in foreign affairs is headlined "how the war in gaza revived the axis of resistance." welcome back to democracy now! if you could begin by responding to...
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Feb 11, 2024
02/24
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lilliana mason is an associate professor of political science at johns hopkins snf agora institute.een studying these trends for years. as doctor mason, it's so nice to have you. let's begin with your research. what did you find in your years of study about political violence? we've been studying levels of political violence, approval of political violence in the electorate since 2017. and what we've seen is that most americans don't approve of political violence. but every once in a while, those those feelings sort of spike. so around donald trump's first impeachment, we saw approval of violence go up. also around viously, january 6th, we saw approval of violence actually increase, which is a common pattern that we actually see, unfortunately, in the electorate was there a reason, something that made you say, hey, we need to start examining political violence? so way before i started studying these attitudes, i had been studying the ways that democrats and republicans feel about each other, not so much whether or not they're deeply disagreeing about matters of policy, which they do
lilliana mason is an associate professor of political science at johns hopkins snf agora institute.een studying these trends for years. as doctor mason, it's so nice to have you. let's begin with your research. what did you find in your years of study about political violence? we've been studying levels of political violence, approval of political violence in the electorate since 2017. and what we've seen is that most americans don't approve of political violence. but every once in a while,...
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Feb 20, 2024
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he had graduated from johns hopkins medical school in, 1925.this young man was recruited in 1942 at age 37 with one child and another on the way specifically to take care of the president. and incidentally, he treated eleanor bruni's disclosures. burns wrote, which are full and authoritative as anything we are likely to have on the matter will force us to revise the most and most interpretation of the significance of roosevelt's condition during his final year. this was surely music. the ears of the three coconspirators. burns book remains the primary for most, most subsequent biographies with respect to fdr, his health, the final years. i call that paper the gospel according to brewin anna never said anything publicly, and she died in 1975. but bruen continued to promote and enhance the deception in interviews and films. and shortly before his death in 19 until and shortly until shortly before his death 1995. at age 90. his last interview was with doris kearns goodwin, who included portions of it in book no ordinary time, which also won the pu
he had graduated from johns hopkins medical school in, 1925.this young man was recruited in 1942 at age 37 with one child and another on the way specifically to take care of the president. and incidentally, he treated eleanor bruni's disclosures. burns wrote, which are full and authoritative as anything we are likely to have on the matter will force us to revise the most and most interpretation of the significance of roosevelt's condition during his final year. this was surely music. the ears...
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Feb 15, 2024
02/24
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later we'll bjoined by a health policy expert at the john hopkins bloomberg school of public health toalk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. stay with us. ♪ >> friday nights, watch c-span's 2024 campaign trail. a weekly roundup of c-span's campaign coverage, providing one-stop shop to see where kids are traveling and what they are saying to voters. this along with first-hand accounts from political reporters, updated poll numbers, and campaign ads. wash the c-span 2024 campaign trail. online at c-span.org, or download as a podcast at c-span now come our free mobile app, or wherever you get your podcasts. c-span, your unfiltered view for politics. >> since 1979, in partnership with the cable industry, c-span has provided complete coverage of the halls of congress. from the house and senate floors to congressional hearings -- c-span gives you a front row seat to how issues are debated and decided, with no commentary, no interruptions, and completely unfiltered. c-span, your unfiltered view of government. if you ever miss any of c-span's coverage, you can find it anytime online
later we'll bjoined by a health policy expert at the john hopkins bloomberg school of public health toalk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. stay with us. ♪ >> friday nights, watch c-span's 2024 campaign trail. a weekly roundup of c-span's campaign coverage, providing one-stop shop to see where kids are traveling and what they are saying to voters. this along with first-hand accounts from political reporters, updated poll numbers, and campaign ads. wash the c-span 2024...
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Feb 4, 2024
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vali nasr is in the region and he's a professor at john hopkins.ina al oraibi is the editor of a state backed newspaper in abu dhabi. vali, you've seen these attacks that the united states has doon in response to the militia attacks from the houthis and the others. do you think that these militias are going to escalator do you think they viewed this as a fairly limited calculated response by the united states? >> i think the killing of the three americans brought a sort of a moment of truth for tehran, hezbollah and the houthis altogether to see whether or not they want to go any further than they have. i think they do not want to he is -- want to escalate with the united states. i think they're happy in a the united states has not hit iran. that it has hit specific targets that it has associated with particular actions of the militias an the iranians have put out in the newspaper and immediate you, that no iranians were there and they're not claiming any casualties that requires escalation. so i would anticipate that the houthis an the iraqi milit
vali nasr is in the region and he's a professor at john hopkins.ina al oraibi is the editor of a state backed newspaper in abu dhabi. vali, you've seen these attacks that the united states has doon in response to the militia attacks from the houthis and the others. do you think that these militias are going to escalator do you think they viewed this as a fairly limited calculated response by the united states? >> i think the killing of the three americans brought a sort of a moment of...
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Feb 10, 2024
02/24
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joining us now, doctor marty makary, fox news contributor and professor of medicine at johns hopkins, the president is slipping from misidentified or transposed egypt and mexico and that statement about opening the border, does that necessarily mean -- just because you are losing bits of your memory or misspeaking, does that mean you're not able to handle office of the president of the united states? >> good evening, it does not appear to be forgiveness of ordinary life, the sort of thing everybody deals with, maybe a little higher when somebody gets older, this is clear progressive dementia. remember what he was like five years ago, he's clearly worsened in dementia in public and the public eye and you can plot it on a graph the frequency of memory lapses, the magnitude of slowed speech, intervals by which he's delayed in responding, this is clear progression and it's not going to stabilize suddenly. it's highly unlikely, it's not a stroke where he can improve from rehabilitation as in the case of john betterment, slightly improved doctor we have an time recovering from a single eve
joining us now, doctor marty makary, fox news contributor and professor of medicine at johns hopkins, the president is slipping from misidentified or transposed egypt and mexico and that statement about opening the border, does that necessarily mean -- just because you are losing bits of your memory or misspeaking, does that mean you're not able to handle office of the president of the united states? >> good evening, it does not appear to be forgiveness of ordinary life, the sort of thing...
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Feb 4, 2024
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maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted as the date based on bishop usher's calculations, which we described last lecture. and judge ralston is going to hear this and said, i've heard enough. and he says, this scientific testimony is inadmissible. first of all, the non-expert mind can comprehend what we mean by descended from a lower order of animals. something more primitive than humans. we don't need experts to dance on the head of a pin. but he also says the question of evolution that's not what's on trial here. the question is, did scopes teach it? that's it. the state is allowed to say what's taught. scopes taught it. that's what's
maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted...
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Feb 21, 2024
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then there was john hopkins, chief diversity officer sherita goldin setting out a mass email blastingues are being white, able-bodied, heterosexual, male, or english-speaking. a doctor used to tell you to turn your head and cough. now she just grabs your stones and squeezes until you say you're sorry. i might ask for that. [laughter] but you got to ask yourself, who's got the privilege these days if all those privileged folks are the ones who sit there and get yelled that? isn't the person wagging their finger at you the one you're not supposed to talk back to you, or else you are racist? isn't she the one with the privilege? last november the american psychiatric association published textbook titled "gender affirming psychiatric care," which noted, "scientific neutrality is a fallacy." the textbook uses the word "oppress" 60 times, "victim," "intersectional," and "queer." that's not a textbook, it's a antifa rally. then you have applications for med schools demanding diversity statements, and calls for schools to remove the admission tests as a requirement. why not remove the requir
then there was john hopkins, chief diversity officer sherita goldin setting out a mass email blastingues are being white, able-bodied, heterosexual, male, or english-speaking. a doctor used to tell you to turn your head and cough. now she just grabs your stones and squeezes until you say you're sorry. i might ask for that. [laughter] but you got to ask yourself, who's got the privilege these days if all those privileged folks are the ones who sit there and get yelled that? isn't the person...
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Feb 2, 2024
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schools in the united states and canada and held them up to the criteria of the gold standard, johns hopkinsime. schools that did not meet that standard were recommended to be closed. and because of the legacy of racism and slavery, historically black medical schools did not have the resources or the wealth or endowments to live up to the standards so this report in 1910 led to the closure of five out of seven of the historically black medical schools which at that point had trained about 1500 students. they report a few years ago estimated those -- if those five medical schools had remained open, they would have traded between 25000 and 35,000 black physicians. howard -- the two that remained open, to this day they still trained the most black physicians out of any medical school in the country. what we think about that number, 25000 and 35,000 black decisions, it is a tremendous loss for our communities. you think of the hundreds of thousands, millions of black patients who could have been cared for, the number of those who could have been men toward and research in black health that could
schools in the united states and canada and held them up to the criteria of the gold standard, johns hopkinsime. schools that did not meet that standard were recommended to be closed. and because of the legacy of racism and slavery, historically black medical schools did not have the resources or the wealth or endowments to live up to the standards so this report in 1910 led to the closure of five out of seven of the historically black medical schools which at that point had trained about 1500...
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Feb 1, 2024
02/24
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. >> we -- getting a call from john hopkins. >> correct, he left me a voice mail, i call them back. >> when you called back mr. hopkins testified that he sent to something, what did he send you. >> he sent me a copy of a math sheets that had scribbled out drawings on it. >> i want to ask you, the night before that scribbled out drying thing came to you, did you have any interactions with your son? >> yes, we did. >> what were those about? >> i saw him on power school that he hadn't even geometry, so we got into an argument again about his grades, we took his phone away and told him that he couldn't go to the shooting range until his grades were brought back up. >> so you guys had this argument the night before, and we saw lots of messages where you thought everything was fined that tuesday morning, is that how you felt? >> yeah. >> when you got that math paper texted to you, do you recall saying to ethan on the phone on speaker? >> i asked him why he did that. >> what were you thinking at that point? >> i was actually kind of angry because i thought he was -- he did that in defiance o
. >> we -- getting a call from john hopkins. >> correct, he left me a voice mail, i call them back. >> when you called back mr. hopkins testified that he sent to something, what did he send you. >> he sent me a copy of a math sheets that had scribbled out drawings on it. >> i want to ask you, the night before that scribbled out drying thing came to you, did you have any interactions with your son? >> yes, we did. >> what were those about? >> i saw...
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Feb 26, 2024
02/24
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robert wood, of the johns hopkins children's center. thanks for being with us.hould say there is no cure for food allergies, but how much of a game changer is this, especially for children? dr. wood: from having no treatment for food allergy, just telling people to avoid what you are allergic to and carry emergency medicines if you have accidental exposure, going from there to here is an enormous change. geoff: for people with severe food allergies there is so much fear and anxiety. you have teenaged patients who have never been to a restaurant, do not take trips on airplanes. how might this improve quality of life for people? dr. wood: reactions happen that can be really dangerous. a lot of the burden of a food allergy is the day-to-day fear. is this the day he or she will have accidental exposure, at school? is this the day they will die? those are not as common, but the anxiety people live with is very real and a daily burden. geoff: how does xolair work for people with severe food allergies? dr. wood: it is blocking the antibodies our immune systems make if
robert wood, of the johns hopkins children's center. thanks for being with us.hould say there is no cure for food allergies, but how much of a game changer is this, especially for children? dr. wood: from having no treatment for food allergy, just telling people to avoid what you are allergic to and carry emergency medicines if you have accidental exposure, going from there to here is an enormous change. geoff: for people with severe food allergies there is so much fear and anxiety. you have...
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Feb 1, 2024
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an advisor at the state department during the obama administration, now a professor at johns hopkinsniversity school of advanced and international studies. -- was a cia operations officer in the middle east in the 1980's and 1990's. now a senior fellow. thank you very much, welcome both of you back to the newshour. how do you believe the united states should respond to the killing of three u.s. soldiers last week? >> the u.s. should take this directly to the islamic revolutionary guard corps. we should have an updated version of operation praying mantis in 1988, where the u.s. navy quickly destroyed the islamic republic navy. something like that, i think anything short of that is likely to be unsuccessful and we will see iran continue its proxy war strategy. >> how do you think the u.s. should respond? >> the united states has stated it does not want a wider war. if it does not want a war, i -- attacking iran directly is not the way to go. even though qatar and has below are backed by iran, there is not evidence iran ordered the attack that killed the three americans. secondly, a dir
an advisor at the state department during the obama administration, now a professor at johns hopkinsniversity school of advanced and international studies. -- was a cia operations officer in the middle east in the 1980's and 1990's. now a senior fellow. thank you very much, welcome both of you back to the newshour. how do you believe the united states should respond to the killing of three u.s. soldiers last week? >> the u.s. should take this directly to the islamic revolutionary guard...
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Feb 25, 2024
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conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers becoming writers. i think that people seem to see it as an anomaly that physicians should also be writers. i often think that given how we are privy to the most moments in people's lives and we're sort of, you know, on in the front row of drama sometimes we're not just in the front row, but on the stage on stage. and you're an often you're a catalyst, some way of improving it or making it worse. and so you wonder why i wonder why more physicians don't write. but yeah, we have a very illustrious core of, you know, well-known physician writers. somerset maugham actually
conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers...
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Feb 15, 2024
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. >> joining us this morning is gerard anderson, johns hopkins louisburg school of public health aicor there. here too talk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. so how much have prescription drugs cost got up in recent years? >> they're gone up about three e to four times faster than inflation and they just keep rising and we don't seem to have any way to slow it down. >> why do they keep rising? >> there's a number of reasons, but essentially the brand-name drugs which is a
. >> joining us this morning is gerard anderson, johns hopkins louisburg school of public health aicor there. here too talk about the rising cost of prescription drugs. so how much have prescription drugs cost got up in recent years? >> they're gone up about three e to four times faster than inflation and they just keep rising and we don't seem to have any way to slow it down. >> why do they keep rising? >> there's a number of reasons, but essentially the brand-name...
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Feb 1, 2024
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being here to this event and my question is -- my name is alice and i am currently a student at johns hopkinss is on power of competition. my question is regarding u.s. andng india relations. he mentioned a lot a achieving a strategy in the region and you also mentioned with the us-backed india to do. my question is for what you think india needs to do to persuade india to become a better partner in the sense that you would like to have, given that both u.s. and india have very different priorities. thank you. >> that's a great question and i will answer it with a couple of examples because not one and not to put dozens of things need to be done. theree are massive amounts of ad americans backed up in the system. if you are british and you have gotten a green card and you'd like to bring a spouse or family member to the united states the weight is six months. if you are it could be 30 years. so finding wayss to normalize or supply demand relationship so that india doesn't find itself simply because so many more, such a large country and so many do come here to school and then become connected
being here to this event and my question is -- my name is alice and i am currently a student at johns hopkinss is on power of competition. my question is regarding u.s. andng india relations. he mentioned a lot a achieving a strategy in the region and you also mentioned with the us-backed india to do. my question is for what you think india needs to do to persuade india to become a better partner in the sense that you would like to have, given that both u.s. and india have very different...
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Feb 27, 2024
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attorney general matthew whitaker, former treasury secretary for public affairs monica crowley and john hopkins professor, dr. marty makary. we're keeping an eye op michigan for you. voter concerns grow about multiple crises like the border and the economy. and jpmorgan's top strategist warns america should brace for 1970s-style stagflation. senator john kennedy weighs in on that. plus, we're taking on a new york times column claiming that inflation will go up under trump. plus, another wild hearing today in the push to disqualify fulton county d.a. fani willis from georgia's trump 2020 case. we've got the details. and dr. phil in a a brand new fight with the hosts of "the view." they really did a smackdown fight there. we're going to show you that. and the white house is now going on the warpath to shut down media stories about president biden's age. but former obama top aides warn this, quote, is a very real issue. we've got that sound. plus, journalist batya ungar-sargon joins us. house gop judiciary chairs, oversight and ways and means subpoenaed special counsel robert hur and the doj to tu
attorney general matthew whitaker, former treasury secretary for public affairs monica crowley and john hopkins professor, dr. marty makary. we're keeping an eye op michigan for you. voter concerns grow about multiple crises like the border and the economy. and jpmorgan's top strategist warns america should brace for 1970s-style stagflation. senator john kennedy weighs in on that. plus, we're taking on a new york times column claiming that inflation will go up under trump. plus, another wild...
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Feb 1, 2024
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daville, medical director of the john hopkins proton center. it's great seeing you.we state that you are not treating secretary austin. he said he had a minimally invasive procedure on the 22nd of december to cure his prostate cancer and went home the following day. he was taken back to the hospital on the 1st of january after feeling severe leg pain as well as pain in his abdomen and hip. doctors diagnosed he had a bladder inspection, abdominal problems. how common is it to experience these complications? >> actually, these can be common complications or side effects of treatment. most men actually will not have suffered these complications or side effects during their treatment, their surgery for prostate cancer. >> black men are more likely to develop prostate cancer. why? >> you know, we really don't know what are the exact reasons. black men have about a one in six for black men and one in eight for white men. we think there's a genetic predisposition but also environmental factors. men in the u.s. have higher rates of prostate cancer than around the world. it's
daville, medical director of the john hopkins proton center. it's great seeing you.we state that you are not treating secretary austin. he said he had a minimally invasive procedure on the 22nd of december to cure his prostate cancer and went home the following day. he was taken back to the hospital on the 1st of january after feeling severe leg pain as well as pain in his abdomen and hip. doctors diagnosed he had a bladder inspection, abdominal problems. how common is it to experience these...
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Feb 27, 2024
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the johns hopkins president has encouraged pluralism. with a view to these more positive efforts that address the problems of the political imbalance, this is thinking about this problem. they will look at what if anything can be done to address it. they have deep knowledge of the life of america's colleges and universities and a deeper appreciation for what our colleges and universities at their best contribute to american life. my guests today are peter berkowitz which is -- who is a senior fellow. they also serve as the director of our policy planning staff. peter also leaves the public interest fellowship here. we are also joined by ethan shrum. he is an associate fellow at the university of virginia. that book sheds essential light on the question here. glad to be joined you have written about the rise over the course of the 20th century in your book. what is the instrumental university? where did it come from? how does the history of the rise of the instrumental university help understand the landscape? >> thank you very much for h
the johns hopkins president has encouraged pluralism. with a view to these more positive efforts that address the problems of the political imbalance, this is thinking about this problem. they will look at what if anything can be done to address it. they have deep knowledge of the life of america's colleges and universities and a deeper appreciation for what our colleges and universities at their best contribute to american life. my guests today are peter berkowitz which is -- who is a senior...
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Feb 3, 2024
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at four national piece, joining, will nassar, international affairs professor emily studies at johns hopkins university, the school of advanced international studies, and former state department senior adviser, couldn't ask for a better pair of people to help us get clarity on what's unfolding now in the middle east. gentlemen, thank you for joining us. ambassador crocker, let me start with you,. please one important point here. the shots last night took place in syria and iraq. geographically, very close to each other, next to the borders of either of them. what are our leadership at both of those countries, it's very different. syria it's a lost country. it's a country in which the administration, the government of that country doesn't control its own country. there are still anti government forces there, but largely, iran and russia run the scene in syria. you rock, as keir points out, it's more complicated. they are american allies? and they are iranian allies. now, how does this all complicate what's unfolding? >> well, it couldn't possibly be more complicated, as you and keir have alre
at four national piece, joining, will nassar, international affairs professor emily studies at johns hopkins university, the school of advanced international studies, and former state department senior adviser, couldn't ask for a better pair of people to help us get clarity on what's unfolding now in the middle east. gentlemen, thank you for joining us. ambassador crocker, let me start with you,. please one important point here. the shots last night took place in syria and iraq. geographically,...
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Feb 23, 2024
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growing movement, one we've been reporting on around the country, including neuroscientists at johns hopkinsct on dementia patients. a hospital at the university of florida incorporating arts into its care. individuals who've suffered traumatic brain injuries, like former congresswoman gabby giffords, playing the french horn to help rewire her brain, and rebuild her ability to speak. our understanding of the brain's connections and responses is still in early stages, francis collins says, with projects like the nih-funded brain initiative helping show how individual circuits connect and respond. we do know some basics, however. >> i think you can say the acoustic cortex, which is where your brain processes incoming sound and particularly musical sound, does have some pretty interesting circuits. it's also plastic -- it responds to training. if you look at the brain of somebody who had intense musical training before age seven, you can actually see that part of the cortex is a little larger than in somebody who did not have that. so, our brains are responding to the environment very clearly i
growing movement, one we've been reporting on around the country, including neuroscientists at johns hopkinsct on dementia patients. a hospital at the university of florida incorporating arts into its care. individuals who've suffered traumatic brain injuries, like former congresswoman gabby giffords, playing the french horn to help rewire her brain, and rebuild her ability to speak. our understanding of the brain's connections and responses is still in early stages, francis collins says, with...
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Feb 20, 2024
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. >> and applebaum, you're also a senior fellow at my elbow monitor, the johns hopkins university school of advanced international studies. thanks for coming in appreciate it very much coming up. russia makes a major advance out there on the battlefield, taking a critical city in eastern ukraine will have a live report from the frontlines. that's coming up plus the ukrainian ambassador, the united states, is standing by live to join us right here in the situation room on how the fight over new us aid to ukraine is actually attacking the war. right now >> vegas, the story of sin city, sunday at ten on now at t professionally installs google nest products, you're all set, so your home is safe and smarter. we're going to ms you can check it on your home >> armed assistance should, go manager >> system from virtually anywhere good intelligent alerts, like what a package has arrived are the most trusted name and home security as the intelligence of google, you have a home with no worries brought to you by adt scout is protected by sympatric, a trio, and he's in it to win it. simply erica trio
. >> and applebaum, you're also a senior fellow at my elbow monitor, the johns hopkins university school of advanced international studies. thanks for coming in appreciate it very much coming up. russia makes a major advance out there on the battlefield, taking a critical city in eastern ukraine will have a live report from the frontlines. that's coming up plus the ukrainian ambassador, the united states, is standing by live to join us right here in the situation room on how the fight...