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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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the pretty open spokesman this thanks very much indeed john johnson's begins there from london. on to italy now which is preparing to emerge from the longest coronavirus lockdown in the west the daily death toll in the hardest hit european countries has now fallen to its lowest level in more than a month and italy which has seen the 2nd highest number of deaths in the world after the united states will loosen its not done from early may people will be allowed to visit relatives and some businesses will reopen we'll go to my job at the. from a for the wholesale sector will restart but it is obvious that we'll need a market and therefore from 18 if we expect to reopen the retail sector from then we are also planning to reopen museums exhibitions and libraries and sport teams can resume training we also hope that june 1st will be the date for the reopening of bars restaurants beauty salons and hairdressers basically all personal care activities so let's hear from sabina council franco who's a journalist based in rome and she says that people are eager for the look down to be lifted
the pretty open spokesman this thanks very much indeed john johnson's begins there from london. on to italy now which is preparing to emerge from the longest coronavirus lockdown in the west the daily death toll in the hardest hit european countries has now fallen to its lowest level in more than a month and italy which has seen the 2nd highest number of deaths in the world after the united states will loosen its not done from early may people will be allowed to visit relatives and some...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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. >>> this is just in, boris johns johnson, is facing harsh criticisms from the coronavirus pandemic.n justrecovered himself from covid-19 and he promised he'll reveal his plan to stop the virus. >> i will reveal our plan to get our economy back and how we get children back to school. and how we can travel to work and make life and workplace safe. ensure how we can continue to suppress the disease and at the same time restart the economy. >> let's go straight to ten downing with clarissa ward. what has the response been to the prime minister there? >> reporter: well, you know it is interesting, brooke, i think people really expected boris johnson to gate grilling from press because of several factors and a lot of harsh criticisms that's been levelled at the u.k. government of his happenedndlin this crisis particularly when it comes to ppe and lack of equipment for healthcare workers and issues of testing. today is the last day of april. this is the target that the government had set to be testing 100,000 people a day. earlier this week they were testing 30,000 people a day but the pri
. >>> this is just in, boris johns johnson, is facing harsh criticisms from the coronavirus pandemic.n justrecovered himself from covid-19 and he promised he'll reveal his plan to stop the virus. >> i will reveal our plan to get our economy back and how we get children back to school. and how we can travel to work and make life and workplace safe. ensure how we can continue to suppress the disease and at the same time restart the economy. >> let's go straight to ten downing...
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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MSNBCW
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juror john johnson was skeptical. >> right at the start because i didn't know anything about it, i wasthis is going to be hard to prove. no witnesses, no evidence at that point. so what do you have? >> reporter: but there was all that life insurance. there were the cell phone pings that seemed to show harold scouting out toni's last hike. the prosecution even showed the jury a map found in harold's car with an x marking the spot where toni fell. and there were all those versions of what harold said happened on that mountain. >> this was a case in which the evidence was not so much the physical evidence. the evidence were the lies. and it was lie after lie after lie after lie. >> reporter: the defense said none of the so-called evidence added up to murder. they said the pings on harold's phone didn't show trips to the park, but rather him taking a back route to his weekend cabin. and, as for the life insurance, toni knew all about it. besides, they argued, toni would still be alive if the park service had sent a helicopter to rescue her as harold begged them to do and even offered to pa
juror john johnson was skeptical. >> right at the start because i didn't know anything about it, i wasthis is going to be hard to prove. no witnesses, no evidence at that point. so what do you have? >> reporter: but there was all that life insurance. there were the cell phone pings that seemed to show harold scouting out toni's last hike. the prosecution even showed the jury a map found in harold's car with an x marking the spot where toni fell. and there were all those versions of...
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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johnson. the jury awards them each $25 million, but then they look at these documents that i talk about in the book, and they awarded $4.1 billion against john and johnson because they were so appalled by what johnson & johnson and their company had done. by the way, just as a fun fact, the president of that trade association was a man named ed kavanaugh, brett kavanaugh's father. [laughter] >> you were saying nice things about lawyers. [laughter] okay. let's talk about some of these other contextses though that weren't in the old book. i mean, what i love about this book is out begins with tobacco which you also begin with in that book, but it ends in the story of -- [inaudible] which you name as kind of the before corruption story, even before tobacco. >> yeah. the sugar research foundation actually was doing this stuff in the 40s. and, in fact, the president or the head of the civil research foundation retired, and then 1954 -- [inaudible] announced that they were going to do research into fact, convinced themselves to understanding the health impacts of tobacco. in fact, you've spent decades covering the whole thing up. but when they ann
johnson. the jury awards them each $25 million, but then they look at these documents that i talk about in the book, and they awarded $4.1 billion against john and johnson because they were so appalled by what johnson & johnson and their company had done. by the way, just as a fun fact, the president of that trade association was a man named ed kavanaugh, brett kavanaugh's father. [laughter] >> you were saying nice things about lawyers. [laughter] okay. let's talk about some of these...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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. >> we talk about oxford, we know johns johnson & johnson's -- >> another candidate moving along because we have a lot of shots on goal when it comes to vaccines. >> that's great. >> what is your thought process on states reopening their governments? do you think people should be more comfortable knowing that there is a drug that has proven effective -- >> i think it's a beginning. i thought tony explained it really well. it's a beginning. as a building block, i love that. but certainly it's a positive, it's a very positive event from that standpoint, and we are going to be very careful as we open, a lot of people and governors are opening. i know you're very advanced. you will be very advanced in getting it going. but we're doing it very carefully. we learned a lot over the last couple of months. if there's a fire, we're going to put it out. if there's a little ember burning, we're going to put it out very quickly. i think we've learned how to do that. there have been some areas that have really started up and we put it out very quickly. so we learned a lot. yes, please? >> the yguideli
. >> we talk about oxford, we know johns johnson & johnson's -- >> another candidate moving along because we have a lot of shots on goal when it comes to vaccines. >> that's great. >> what is your thought process on states reopening their governments? do you think people should be more comfortable knowing that there is a drug that has proven effective -- >> i think it's a beginning. i thought tony explained it really well. it's a beginning. as a building block,...
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Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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played a significant role in john glenn, and john glenn said throughout his life, at the end of his life, he would not venture into space if catherine johnson was not checking the calculations on his spaceflight. so the actual flight with john glenn, where he orbited the earth, catherine johnson played a significant role in it. and, we know catherine played a significant role in the moon landing. so, those are three pivotal moments that changed space travel and how we in the united states of america see nasa today. i had the pleasure, on catherine's 99th birthday, to be with her at the green briar. at 99, i was in awe at how sharp she still is. we laughed. we joked. we had a great time. she is as radiant and beautiful at 99 as she was when she walked out of campus in the early 1930's. so when i left that 99th birthday, i started asking myself. as people learn more about catherine johnson, and the university she loved so dearly, and we love her equally, we needed to do something to recognize her and make sure that history never forgets how profound she was in helping nasa win the space race. so i got a team of my staff and students together,
played a significant role in john glenn, and john glenn said throughout his life, at the end of his life, he would not venture into space if catherine johnson was not checking the calculations on his spaceflight. so the actual flight with john glenn, where he orbited the earth, catherine johnson played a significant role in it. and, we know catherine played a significant role in the moon landing. so, those are three pivotal moments that changed space travel and how we in the united states of...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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johnson do? he pins his opinion on natural law, not on what thomas jefferson condemned as john marshall's habit of twistifications and distortion of the constitution. johnson gave an explanation which is not credible. he wanted to talk about the difference between the obligation of contract and the regulation. problems with that -- it is quite frankly they make place quibble. first in a fletcher, marshall expressly said the states may regulate. two years later in a companion case he said it more elaborately, then in 1827 in his only dissent, marshall talked about no inconsistency between the normal regulation of contract and the notion of the contract clause and the extinguishment, the revocation of a contractual agreement. the superficial explanation is a placeholder. the true explanation is his attempt to try and walk this fine line, to find a way to be true to his principles which were a blend of robust marshall nationalism and a respect for states rights. to do it in the light of all sorts of opinions -- given versus ogden, johnson concurs again writing an opinion where he does a couple of thi
johnson do? he pins his opinion on natural law, not on what thomas jefferson condemned as john marshall's habit of twistifications and distortion of the constitution. johnson gave an explanation which is not credible. he wanted to talk about the difference between the obligation of contract and the regulation. problems with that -- it is quite frankly they make place quibble. first in a fletcher, marshall expressly said the states may regulate. two years later in a companion case he said it...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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CNBC
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john john & johnson is a big mover today for good reason the dividend is somewhere well above 2% comparehat to what you can make in the treasury market. don't be greedy. there are some fabulous, procter & gamble there are great companies out there that we know they're doing well now and going to continue to do well they have really good dividend yields you can either go the riskier route or the ones that haven't been beaten down that much, but are still paying out very solid dividend payments. >> it's interesting that j&j raised its dividend when so many other companies are cutting back find those jim, we appreciate that. >> i don't think there's any danger in terms of the big pharmaceuticals and consumer staple companies >> jim stewart of the "new york times. >>> when we come back the ceo of unilever will talk about the coronavirus impact on their business, supply chains and more as the bounce continues to hold here and the nasdaq100 within stone's throw of being flat for 2020 we're back in a minute lan with a gives us confidence. yeah, they help us with achievable steps along the way..
john john & johnson is a big mover today for good reason the dividend is somewhere well above 2% comparehat to what you can make in the treasury market. don't be greedy. there are some fabulous, procter & gamble there are great companies out there that we know they're doing well now and going to continue to do well they have really good dividend yields you can either go the riskier route or the ones that haven't been beaten down that much, but are still paying out very solid dividend...
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Apr 2, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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john f. kennedy and lyndon b. johnson recordings as part of the presidential recordings project at the miller center. ken hughes also with the miller center, who worked extensively and famously in some ways on the lbj and especially the richard nixon recording project. chester pach, a historian whose research, interests, and product has encompassed johnson and ronald reagan. and robert strong. bob strong, who was assistant director when the miller center was conducting its jimmy carter oral histories. i'm mike nelson. i have an affiliation with the miller center, but my day job is at rhodes college in memphis, tennessee. and our format is going to be essentially this, there are no prepared presentations, no prepared remarks. we're going to be flashing over the course of this session 15 cartoons, just a tiny curated but tiny slice of what we could do and probably should do if we were old enough in time. they'll unfold chronologically from the johnson administration through the reagan administration, and then basically, i'm
john f. kennedy and lyndon b. johnson recordings as part of the presidential recordings project at the miller center. ken hughes also with the miller center, who worked extensively and famously in some ways on the lbj and especially the richard nixon recording project. chester pach, a historian whose research, interests, and product has encompassed johnson and ronald reagan. and robert strong. bob strong, who was assistant director when the miller center was conducting its jimmy carter oral...
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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james weldon johnson and john rosemont johnson. >> the author and the composer, they were brothers whoe born in jacksonville, florida, renaissance men and back in the day they were called race men. people who saw every achievement they had as being in service, johnson became the first secretary-general of the naacp, the first black man admitted to the bar in florida, really extraordinary but one of the signature accomplishments of their lives is the composition of this song. >> they were first-generation friedman born in the 1870s. >> yes. there mother's family had been enslaved in virginia but of that generation that emerged from the slavery with all these hopes and dreams and aspirations that were so quickly dashed at the end of reconstruction. >> what was the reception in 1900 when the song was written? >> guest: what was extraordinary was the song caught on like wildfire. it was almost immediately embraced as an and some of black america. the united states did not have a national anthem at this moment. even so early on people were referring to it as an and some, the johnson brother
james weldon johnson and john rosemont johnson. >> the author and the composer, they were brothers whoe born in jacksonville, florida, renaissance men and back in the day they were called race men. people who saw every achievement they had as being in service, johnson became the first secretary-general of the naacp, the first black man admitted to the bar in florida, really extraordinary but one of the signature accomplishments of their lives is the composition of this song. >> they...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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insight and analysis are nbc white house correspondent peter alexander, danielle pletka, and jeh john n johnson. welcome to sunday. it's "meet the press" and our continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. >> announcer: from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history, this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. >>> good sunday morning. a week that began with president trump declaring that this authority was total ended with a death toll in the united states topping 38,000 and mr. trump telling governors it's up to them to decide when to reopen for business. but the president's broad guidelines leave many issues unresolved like a lack of protective gear for health care work workers. plans to handle a likely resurgent in the pandemic, and how to vastly increase the testing needed to restart the economy. mr. trump is being squeezed by depressionlike numbers that prompt some to argue that losing lives may be an acceptable price to pay for getting the economy going. he's encouraging anti-social distancing protests by tweeting states need to be liberated from his very o
insight and analysis are nbc white house correspondent peter alexander, danielle pletka, and jeh john n johnson. welcome to sunday. it's "meet the press" and our continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. >> announcer: from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history, this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. >>> good sunday morning. a week that began with president trump declaring that this authority was total ended with a...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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one of the very first opinions that johnson participated was a case where anticipating fletcher john marshall held that a state statute could in fact create a contract and could in fact be subject to contract clause interpretation. one year before fletcher, united states versus peters. john marshall again. a state law is un-constitutional. the first two myths about fletcher, been there, done that. they're simply not true. what is true is that johnson wrote an opinion within which he said, i whole heartedly agree with the court. this measure is un-constitutional. now, the parameters of fletcher i won't go into detail. they are vaguely familiar to most of us. fletcher as war horse. it's in every common law case book albeit only brief mention. i'm unaware of any case book that actually extracts the whole opinion. johnson said, i agree that this measure is un-constitutional. georgia legislature had done all sorts of hideous things, the land fraud, they passed a measure in 1807. the next year after the public found out about it they repealed it. it was a vast controversy that consumed the
one of the very first opinions that johnson participated was a case where anticipating fletcher john marshall held that a state statute could in fact create a contract and could in fact be subject to contract clause interpretation. one year before fletcher, united states versus peters. john marshall again. a state law is un-constitutional. the first two myths about fletcher, been there, done that. they're simply not true. what is true is that johnson wrote an opinion within which he said, i...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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and james johnson and john rosamond johnson. >> they were composers, brothers in jacksonville, floridaack in the day they were called race men, people who saw every achievement as they had as being in service of the race. james johnson the first secretary-general of the naacp, first man admitted to the bar in florida, really extraordinary, but, you know, one is the signature accomplishments of both of their lives was the composition of this song. >> and they were first generation free men, born in the 1870's? >> yes, and so-- well, their mother's family hadn't been -- been enslaved bahamian and their father enslaved in virginia and they were the first generation with hopes and aspirations so quickly dashed with the end of reconstruction. >> what was the reception in 1900 when the song was written? >> so, what was extraordinary is that the song caught on like wildfire. it was almost immediately embraced as an anthem of black america and i think one of the things i try to detail this in the book is that the united states does not have a national anthem at the moment and even so early on,
and james johnson and john rosamond johnson. >> they were composers, brothers in jacksonville, floridaack in the day they were called race men, people who saw every achievement as they had as being in service of the race. james johnson the first secretary-general of the naacp, first man admitted to the bar in florida, really extraordinary, but, you know, one is the signature accomplishments of both of their lives was the composition of this song. >> and they were first generation...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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life. >>> critics are hammering the british prime minister boris johnson over his handling, early delays of the coronavirus pandemic. >> john -- johnson is working as he's recovering from covid-19. he missed five meetings in january and february. clarissa ward joins from us london. >> reporter: these were key emergency could be net meetings, five according to "the sunday times" in january and february that prime minister boris johnson did not attend, this part of a blistering critique of the prime minister's performance that came out yesterday in britain's newspaper "the times" on sunday. ten downing street firing back on multiple fronts, firstly to the accusation of him missing those c.o.b.r.a. meetings. ten downing street's response is this is normal, that the prime minister does not always preside over c.o.b.r.a. meetings. whoever is the relevant departmental head may in fact preside over them. so they are really trying to fight back against this. other accusations he was preoccupied with brexit, too slow to recognize the serious threat that covid-19 posed and perhaps most importantly that he was too focused on the polit
life. >>> critics are hammering the british prime minister boris johnson over his handling, early delays of the coronavirus pandemic. >> john -- johnson is working as he's recovering from covid-19. he missed five meetings in january and february. clarissa ward joins from us london. >> reporter: these were key emergency could be net meetings, five according to "the sunday times" in january and february that prime minister boris johnson did not attend, this part of...
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Apr 1, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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from the coronavirus in the weeks to come than presidents harry truman, dwight eisenhower, lyndon johnson, johnnedy, richard nixon saw combined. here is the u.s. surgeon general. he's going to speak of that prediction, 150,000 to 250,000 deaths, best case, on the "today" show. >> right now there have been just under 4,000 deaths. are we looking at 96,000 people dying in the next few weeks? >> here is what i want you and america to know. those projections are definitely sobering, but they don't have to be our reality. if we really do our part, stay at home, social distance, then we can flatten our curve even below those projections. >> reporter: you can watch that coming up at 7:00 and follow me on twitter. i'm @scottmestions that we've h talk about online and we want to take them to experts. joining us is dr. alexei wagner at stanford hospital. good morning to you, dr. wagner. >> good morning. >> thank you so much for joining us. last time we spoke with you it was about a week ago. what have you seen the difference at the hospital that you've seen over that week? we've seen a big growth within
from the coronavirus in the weeks to come than presidents harry truman, dwight eisenhower, lyndon johnson, johnnedy, richard nixon saw combined. here is the u.s. surgeon general. he's going to speak of that prediction, 150,000 to 250,000 deaths, best case, on the "today" show. >> right now there have been just under 4,000 deaths. are we looking at 96,000 people dying in the next few weeks? >> here is what i want you and america to know. those projections are definitely...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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the europeans says john marshall for the court in johnson versus mcintosh, determined that the way it should work is as follows -- upon discovery, the underlying title to all discovered lands becomes the property of the discovering european sovereign. that's the king of england, fine. if it's the king of france, fine. that european sovereign owns the title to all discovered lands. the tribes retain an occupancy right, which more or less meant a right to occupy in that formulation, and, so, they could stay there and they could sell the occupancy right, if they wanted to, or the legal term is alienate, sell or give away the occupancy right, but only to the same discovering sovereign. and we call that a preemptive right, so a right of first purchase. so only the sovereign can buy it. that portion of the discovery doctrine is still the law, and it's enshrined in the trade and intercourse act that kevin discussed, which says that only the united states -- now successor to the british crown -- can buy indian lands. that's still the law today. so, the only way you can buy cherokee land, if y
the europeans says john marshall for the court in johnson versus mcintosh, determined that the way it should work is as follows -- upon discovery, the underlying title to all discovered lands becomes the property of the discovering european sovereign. that's the king of england, fine. if it's the king of france, fine. that european sovereign owns the title to all discovered lands. the tribes retain an occupancy right, which more or less meant a right to occupy in that formulation, and, so, they...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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MSNBCW
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john paulson. citadel, ken griffin; elliott management, paul singer; vista equity partners, robert smith; fidelity investments, abigail johnson; mastercard, visa, chubb, sequoia, stevens, great. charles schwab, chuck schwab will be here by phone. food and beverage, national restaurant association, mcdonald's, garden restaurants, coca-cola, pepsi-cola, chick-fil-a, subway, bloomin' brands, yum brarngsds papa john's wendy's, wolfgang puck, starbucks, thomas keller john george, my friend john george, and danielle. you know them. from the transportation world, fed ex, fred smith, united
john paulson. citadel, ken griffin; elliott management, paul singer; vista equity partners, robert smith; fidelity investments, abigail johnson; mastercard, visa, chubb, sequoia, stevens, great. charles schwab, chuck schwab will be here by phone. food and beverage, national restaurant association, mcdonald's, garden restaurants, coca-cola, pepsi-cola, chick-fil-a, subway, bloomin' brands, yum brarngsds papa john's wendy's, wolfgang puck, starbucks, thomas keller john george, my friend john...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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johnson had a hard job. he did it poorly, but it was a really hard job. john: as susan explained, there were 10 leadership qualities that the survey is based on. i am wondering as we sit here in the newseum, if there was a category of relation with the press. who had ranked near the top? they had interviewed some of the historians. >> there are stories about each president and how they related to the media. one of my favorites is calvin coolidge. it was during his time that radio came into being, and he did 22 speeches into the radio microphone. for people who remember his image, it was not terrific for television, but it was terrific for radio. it was during the time that he was on radio, the audience built, it grew. just like how c-span started out with 3 million homes and then we went up 100 million homes. he's started out with very few radio stations and went up to several hundred more. those stories exist with each president. john: right, right. any thoughts on press relations, presidents that you know of? >> i think kennedy was brilliant at it. he charme
johnson had a hard job. he did it poorly, but it was a really hard job. john: as susan explained, there were 10 leadership qualities that the survey is based on. i am wondering as we sit here in the newseum, if there was a category of relation with the press. who had ranked near the top? they had interviewed some of the historians. >> there are stories about each president and how they related to the media. one of my favorites is calvin coolidge. it was during his time that radio came...
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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john, alisyn. >> that confusion only today by the question who's actually in charge right now or going forward if boris johnson is incapacitated. >> reporter: right, john. because what they did, which was sort of confusing, is that they released a statement saying that dominic raab, the foreign secretary, has been deputy pew advertised deputized or deputize where necessary, and those crucial words where necessary, what does that seen in that indicates that prime minister boris johnson is -- we know she's conscious, but is still making some sorts of decisions. the question a lot of people will be asking themselves is who is really in charge? who is in the driver's seat right now in the uk is very different to the u.s. the cabinet is where the seat of power really is, but a lot of people, as i said before were wanting that sense of certainty and direction. >> the constitution ends up being a nice thing right now, something to liean back on. thanks very much for being with us this morning. alisyn. >>> okay, john, as you know louisiana has been one of the coronavirus hot spots but there are new signs that they may
john, alisyn. >> that confusion only today by the question who's actually in charge right now or going forward if boris johnson is incapacitated. >> reporter: right, john. because what they did, which was sort of confusing, is that they released a statement saying that dominic raab, the foreign secretary, has been deputy pew advertised deputized or deputize where necessary, and those crucial words where necessary, what does that seen in that indicates that prime minister boris...
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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just the resulting fallout we have seen, john harwood, i appreciate that reporting, thanks very much. let's talk about the british prime minister, boris johnson is in stable condition but remains in the intensive care unit at a hospital in london after his symptoms suddenly and rapidly worsened overnight. >> yeah, listen, it is a reminder that everyone is potentially at risk from this. clarissa ward joins us now live from london. do we know more about the prime minister's condition right now because there have been real questions about how widely information has been shared by the british government including with members of his own cabinet. >> that's right. you heard from michael gove, one
just the resulting fallout we have seen, john harwood, i appreciate that reporting, thanks very much. let's talk about the british prime minister, boris johnson is in stable condition but remains in the intensive care unit at a hospital in london after his symptoms suddenly and rapidly worsened overnight. >> yeah, listen, it is a reminder that everyone is potentially at risk from this. clarissa ward joins us now live from london. do we know more about the prime minister's condition right...
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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john normand is going to stay with us. tv is the function on your bloomberg. this is bloomberg. ♪ guy: guy johnsonlondon, tom keene in new york. this is "surveillance." let's get back to our conversation with john morgan of that john normand of jp morgan -- john normand of jp morgan. we are wondering what type of shape we will be in in terms of coronavirus and have -- and the impact it will have on the economy. will it be a that are you or v? my best guess is a sharp incline out. give me what you are using to model what kind of recovery we are likely to see here. john: the historical precedent but that the economy, response to a markets do, meaning six out of the last seven recessions, the recovery has been as sharp as the move down into recession. but looking how equities, credit, commodities, currencies, bonds paved after that, there is so much variance that i don't think you can use as a starting point. what will the economy do and therefore what will the markets do? you have to keep taking these on its own merit. we know that pretty much every country except china is going to go for a very gra
john normand is going to stay with us. tv is the function on your bloomberg. this is bloomberg. ♪ guy: guy johnsonlondon, tom keene in new york. this is "surveillance." let's get back to our conversation with john morgan of that john normand of jp morgan -- john normand of jp morgan. we are wondering what type of shape we will be in in terms of coronavirus and have -- and the impact it will have on the economy. will it be a that are you or v? my best guess is a sharp incline out....
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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john f. kennedy and johnson avoided it because medicare would only cover those people that private insurance could or would not the elderly. l.bj returned a theme of freedom and medicare he said older citizens no longer have to fear that illness will wipe out their savings and eat up their income and destroy lifelong hope of dignity and independence. medicare did take a page from truman's book because it was built on social security's administrative structure that was popular and made it harder to attack. although the ama did try one more time. famously they hired ronald reagan to record a speech that medicare would lead to full-blown socialism and the ends of freedom in america. this time around, the ama lost. but as nancy told us, the fear of socialized medicine and the power of the medical profession, hospitals and the insurance industry shaped how medicare program was designed. providers could charge whatever they wanted. because fear of a provider backlash led to the absence of any cost controls or budgeting in medicare. alongside the growing cost of health care in general, unrestrained
john f. kennedy and johnson avoided it because medicare would only cover those people that private insurance could or would not the elderly. l.bj returned a theme of freedom and medicare he said older citizens no longer have to fear that illness will wipe out their savings and eat up their income and destroy lifelong hope of dignity and independence. medicare did take a page from truman's book because it was built on social security's administrative structure that was popular and made it harder...
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Apr 1, 2020
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john f. kennedy, lyndon johnson, and richard nixon saw die in the korean and vietnam wars combined. the lowest estimate would claim nearly as many americans as world war i under president woodrow wilson and 14 times as many americans as iraq and afghanistan together under presidents george w. bush and barack obama. joining me now from the white house where we could see the coronavirus task force at any moment is my nbc news colleague, and digital senior white house reporter shannon pettipiece. vice president pence comparing us to italy. a week ago that would have drawn a rebuke from president trump. it would have been seen as, whoa, whoa, way too pessimistic. that is quite the acknowledgment when you consider what we heard yesterday and then today where vice president pence admitting, yes. we're like italy. >> yeah. that is not the trajectory we want to be on. we want to be a south korea and that is what we were promised we would be on a trajectory like south korea where there would be testing, there would be plenty of protective equipment for health care providers. south korea wher
john f. kennedy, lyndon johnson, and richard nixon saw die in the korean and vietnam wars combined. the lowest estimate would claim nearly as many americans as world war i under president woodrow wilson and 14 times as many americans as iraq and afghanistan together under presidents george w. bush and barack obama. joining me now from the white house where we could see the coronavirus task force at any moment is my nbc news colleague, and digital senior white house reporter shannon pettipiece....
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Apr 27, 2020
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johnson had a hard job. he did it poorly, but it was a really hard job. brian: as susan johnjohn: explained, there were 10 leadership qualities that the survey is based on. i am wondering as we sit here in the newseum, if there was a category of relation with the press. who had ranked near the top? they had interviewed some of the historians. brian: there are stories about each president and how they related to the media. one of my favorites is calvin coolidge. it was during his time that radio came into being, and he did 22 speeches into the radio microphone. for people who remember his image, it was not terrific for television, but it was terrific for radio. it was during the time that he was on radio, the audience built -- it grew. just like how c-span started out with 3 million homes and then we went up 100 million homes. he's started out with very few radio stations and went up to several hundred more. those stories exist with each president. john: right, right. any thoughts on press relations, presidents that you know of? brian: i think kennedy was brilliant at it. he c
johnson had a hard job. he did it poorly, but it was a really hard job. brian: as susan johnjohn: explained, there were 10 leadership qualities that the survey is based on. i am wondering as we sit here in the newseum, if there was a category of relation with the press. who had ranked near the top? they had interviewed some of the historians. brian: there are stories about each president and how they related to the media. one of my favorites is calvin coolidge. it was during his time that radio...
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Apr 2, 2020
04/20
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john f. kennedy, lyndon b. johnson, and richard m. nixon saw die in the korean and vietnam wars combined. the lowest estimate would claim nearly as many americans as world war i under president woodrow wilson and 14 times as many americans as iraq and afghanistan together under presidents george w. bush and barack obama." to all of that, here's how new york's governor is advising americans to look toward the future. >> we're never going to be the same again. we're not going to forget what happened here. the fear that we have, the anxiety that we have, that's not just going to go away. when do we get back to normal? i don't think we get back to normal. i think we get back -- or we get to a new normal. >> from governor cuomo let's get to our lead-off discussion here on a wednesday night. peter baker, chief white house correspondent for "the new york times." anita kumar, white house correspondent and associate editor over at politico. and robert costa, national political reporter for "the washington post" and moderator of "washington week" on pbs. peter, since you were last quoted, i'm going
john f. kennedy, lyndon b. johnson, and richard m. nixon saw die in the korean and vietnam wars combined. the lowest estimate would claim nearly as many americans as world war i under president woodrow wilson and 14 times as many americans as iraq and afghanistan together under presidents george w. bush and barack obama." to all of that, here's how new york's governor is advising americans to look toward the future. >> we're never going to be the same again. we're not going to forget...
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Apr 1, 2020
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john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson and richard nixon. we look at how presidents conducted day-to-day business and hear candid assessments. the university of miller hosted this event. >>> good afternoon, everyone. i'm mark silverstone. associate professor in presidential studies at the university of virginia's miller center. and as chair of the center's presidential recordings program, i'd like to welcome you to a special panel echoes of the past, featuring my colleag
john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson and richard nixon. we look at how presidents conducted day-to-day business and hear candid assessments. the university of miller hosted this event. >>> good afternoon, everyone. i'm mark silverstone. associate professor in presidential studies at the university of virginia's miller center. and as chair of the center's presidential recordings program, i'd like to welcome you to a special panel echoes of the past, featuring my colleag
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Apr 1, 2020
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john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson and richard nixon. we look at how presidents conducted day-to-day business and hear candid assessments. the university of miller hosted this event. >>> good afternoon, everyone. i'm mark silverstone. associate professor in presidential studies at the university of virginia's miller center. and as chair of the center's presidential recordings program, i'd like to welcome you to a special panel echoes of the past, featuring my colleagues on the recordings program. it is quite wonderful actually to be here with everybody. it is something of a reunion in fact since kent was with us for years and years and spending his time at university of south carolina. for the next 75 minutes, we'll share with you insights from the secret white house tapes. and we'll look to explore the dynamics therein and to relate them to see what kind of questions they prompt us to ask about contemporary dynamics about the history they contain, about parallels to today's events, about the practice of democracy itself. just a word abo
john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson and richard nixon. we look at how presidents conducted day-to-day business and hear candid assessments. the university of miller hosted this event. >>> good afternoon, everyone. i'm mark silverstone. associate professor in presidential studies at the university of virginia's miller center. and as chair of the center's presidential recordings program, i'd like to welcome you to a special panel echoes of the past, featuring my colleagues on the...
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Apr 5, 2020
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james johnson and john rosa monde >> they are the author and composer. they were brothers born in jacksonville florida. renaissance men and of course back in the day they were called race man. people who thought every achievement they had as being in the service of the race. he became the first secretary general of the naacp. really extraordinary. one of the signature accomplishments was the accomplishment of the song. >> they were first-generation freemen. born in the 1870s? yes, they were of that generation that emerged from slavery with these hopes and dreams and aspirations that were so quickly dashed with the end of reconstruction. what was extraordinary is that the song caught on like wildfire. it was the most immediately embraced as an anthem of black america. the united states did not have a national anthem at this moment. even this really on, people were referring to it as an anthem. they left florida and moved to new york to work as songwriters in part because there had been a terrible fire. so they actually weren't there as the song caught on.
james johnson and john rosa monde >> they are the author and composer. they were brothers born in jacksonville florida. renaissance men and of course back in the day they were called race man. people who thought every achievement they had as being in the service of the race. he became the first secretary general of the naacp. really extraordinary. one of the signature accomplishments was the accomplishment of the song. >> they were first-generation freemen. born in the 1870s? yes,...
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Apr 7, 2020
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johnson. one thing we are considering is at johns hopkins university and the dovetail of their public health programy do in engineering and economics. alessandro rebucci is with their , with aing department tour of duty with the international monetary fund. how close are we within this exact in a shock, to an em acrossas we have seen the 1990's and 2000's? alessandro: we are very close. emerging markets have been hit very hard by the initial phase of the crisis and we have seen a massive outflow of capital in most emerging markets. is just picking up in emerging markets. as we know, it lasts for about four months and the peak is about two months, and emerging markets are much less capable to absorb the crisis. we expect to see unprecedented declines in economic activity and possibly widespread financial damages. tom: professor, you are a world authority in real estate. diffused outbe there that we cannot touch, how is the leverage in the global real estate system? are they exposed as other asset classes were exposed in 1998? level,dro: at the global leverage in real estate is not that diffuse and de
johnson. one thing we are considering is at johns hopkins university and the dovetail of their public health programy do in engineering and economics. alessandro rebucci is with their , with aing department tour of duty with the international monetary fund. how close are we within this exact in a shock, to an em acrossas we have seen the 1990's and 2000's? alessandro: we are very close. emerging markets have been hit very hard by the initial phase of the crisis and we have seen a massive...
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Apr 13, 2020
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>>british prime minister boris johnson has been discharge from the hospital john sandra lee's this deo message on itter toay thanking health care workers for saving his fe. johnson was first diagsed with the coronavirus on march, the 27th he was admitted to thintensive care unit after suffering from. but severe symptoms of the copa 19 virus lot of people are asking this question what does toilet paper have to do with the glol. >>conavirus pandemic in the answer as you know is nothing yet store shelves had been ptied and online sellers are often out of stock the good news things are beginning to me down at least in the united states afer a buying spree that people went crazy for in mid-march kron four's kate rooney reports. some people were stockpiling last month in advance of city and state lockdown orders. it's a common reactn in times of a crisis according to consulting firm alixpartners and see ta and consulting fi said online and in-store us toilet paper sales rose 51% between february 24thand march 10th as yer started getting unea about the growing number of virus cases, 845% on m
>>british prime minister boris johnson has been discharge from the hospital john sandra lee's this deo message on itter toay thanking health care workers for saving his fe. johnson was first diagsed with the coronavirus on march, the 27th he was admitted to thintensive care unit after suffering from. but severe symptoms of the copa 19 virus lot of people are asking this question what does toilet paper have to do with the glol. >>conavirus pandemic in the answer as you know is...
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Apr 29, 2020
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john is or. even 80 year old al johnson a legendary musician and a mardi gras icon the. has downsized to his porch. but in a city that normally loses with music these notes still find their appreciation. all we have noted is. these louisiana music. when the epidemic finally passes the 1st thing they'll do is play to a live audience that needs healing how do you know castro al-jazeera. this is our jazeera these are your top stories more lives have now been lost to the coronavirus pandemic on u.s. soil than all of the americans killed during the vietnam war a tally by johns hopkins university shows the death toll beyond 58300 and more than a 1000000 have been infected mike hanna has more from washington president trump once again weighing the issues up at feeding the nation against the individual lives at risk within these meat packing plants so that is something that is going to roll out in coming hours or indeed the coming days but certainly health officials are looking very closely at where the virus hits most fiercely and so far it is in these contests that areas such
john is or. even 80 year old al johnson a legendary musician and a mardi gras icon the. has downsized to his porch. but in a city that normally loses with music these notes still find their appreciation. all we have noted is. these louisiana music. when the epidemic finally passes the 1st thing they'll do is play to a live audience that needs healing how do you know castro al-jazeera. this is our jazeera these are your top stories more lives have now been lost to the coronavirus pandemic on...
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Apr 28, 2020
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john was or. even 80 year old al johnson a legendary musician and a mardi gras icon the. has downsized to his porch ready. but in a city that normally loses with music these notes still find their appreciation. all we have noted is. these louisiana music. when the epidemic finally passes the 1st thing we'll do is play to live audience healing. castro al-jazeera. and fitting in with you here in doha the headlines and i was 0 soldiers patrolling the streets of lebanon's 2nd biggest city tripoli but it's been another day of violent protests against the deepening financial crisis security forces used rubber bullets to clear demonstrators who said banks on fire so to hold reports. here are. just the banking sector and they're also blaming the political class for . years of corruption and now. it's close to bankruptcy. ok. so for now we're just going to come back and. this is. our economic hardships. in the united states the number of confirmed coronavirus cases is almost hit a 1000000 far more than any other country in the world but daily hospital admissions in new york of hit
john was or. even 80 year old al johnson a legendary musician and a mardi gras icon the. has downsized to his porch ready. but in a city that normally loses with music these notes still find their appreciation. all we have noted is. these louisiana music. when the epidemic finally passes the 1st thing we'll do is play to live audience healing. castro al-jazeera. and fitting in with you here in doha the headlines and i was 0 soldiers patrolling the streets of lebanon's 2nd biggest city tripoli...
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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prime minister boris johnson is back in london london and due back at work on monday 2 weeks after being discharged from hospital john holl is outside westminster with a look at johnson's week ahead. well he returns here to westminster to downing street with a pretty full in box there's no doubt about that he returns to the helm of a country. is currently in its 2nd 3 week period of severe restricted measures that has reached the peak of its epidemic but not yet seen a steep decline still posting perilously high numbers of new infections and fatalities there is still persistent shortages of personal protective equipment for frontline health care workers a government target to hit 100000 tests a day by the end of this month looks a long long way away still and there are louder and louder calls on the prime minister on the government to give greater transparency about its plans for a timetable for an exit strategy because a lot of things that he's got to work out presumably the most important priority will be to try and figure out how to communicate to the british public quite what is going to happen next and in order
prime minister boris johnson is back in london london and due back at work on monday 2 weeks after being discharged from hospital john holl is outside westminster with a look at johnson's week ahead. well he returns here to westminster to downing street with a pretty full in box there's no doubt about that he returns to the helm of a country. is currently in its 2nd 3 week period of severe restricted measures that has reached the peak of its epidemic but not yet seen a steep decline still...
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Apr 2, 2020
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john f. kennedy would have never done that. a day later it keep out that kennedy did it, as well as johnson and eisenhower. the president is going back to fdr. the difference is that in nixon's case the videotapes became criminal evidence. our troubled cox wanted to subpoena them. he did that. he thought the subpoena to the nail to the extent of firing cox. before that, it's like a westerns showdown. i love the eyeballs pointing out nixon's habitual shifty eyed venus. >> i'm guessing the devil at the bottom is not cox. >> the reference seems to me even if it's not intended, during the un missile crisis, in that sense it elevates a conflict, a domestic conflict at the level of the confrontation, one could read into it that the integrity of the public is at risk at this time in the same way it was during a human missile crisis, although in different ways. the analogy is very interesting, and we're thinking about. >> this is a kennedy washington, >> one thing that strikes me. it also looks like mexit is holding a tape, but it looks like a discuss. looks like a weapon. it's going to hurl. >> all of this was pu
john f. kennedy would have never done that. a day later it keep out that kennedy did it, as well as johnson and eisenhower. the president is going back to fdr. the difference is that in nixon's case the videotapes became criminal evidence. our troubled cox wanted to subpoena them. he did that. he thought the subpoena to the nail to the extent of firing cox. before that, it's like a westerns showdown. i love the eyeballs pointing out nixon's habitual shifty eyed venus. >> i'm guessing the...
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Apr 7, 2020
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johnson in the icu with coronavirus. we're live in london for the latest, next. at papa john's, we want you to know that from our 450-degree oven, to box, to you, it's our policy that your pizza is never touched once it comes out of the oven. and we're taking extra steps, like no contact delivery, to ensure it. - [announcer] at custom ink, we believe community is about having a common bond wherever you are. now, when we need to stay apart to stand together, we've built new tools to make and individually ship custom gear to group members, and soon, we'll stand together, together again. visit customink.com today. i don't have to worry about that, do i?are irritated. harmful bacteria lurk just below the gum line. crest gum detoxify, voted product of the year. it works below the gum line to neutralize harmful plaque bacteria and help reverse early gum damage. gum detoxify, from crest. alice loves the scent of gain so much, she wished there was a way to make it last longer. say hello to your fairy godmother alice. and long-lasting gain scent beads. part of the irresistible scent col
johnson in the icu with coronavirus. we're live in london for the latest, next. at papa john's, we want you to know that from our 450-degree oven, to box, to you, it's our policy that your pizza is never touched once it comes out of the oven. and we're taking extra steps, like no contact delivery, to ensure it. - [announcer] at custom ink, we believe community is about having a common bond wherever you are. now, when we need to stay apart to stand together, we've built new tools to make and...
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Apr 25, 2020
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say lyndo johnson would carry texas fo john kennedy. > and he's to conservative. > and once he takes office he really does rely on them. > but these guys, cheney powell, and rumsfeld, wh cheney has brought in a defense secretary, who ar supposed to know how all thi works. > powell and, excuse me cheney and rumsfeld are ver much in support of and chene is pushing the idea of th war with iraq.
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Apr 18, 2020
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he's not going to bring votes the way say lyndon johnson would carry texas for john kennedy.nd he's too conservative. and bush wants cheney mostly because of his experience. i mean he's choosing his father's advisors and that goes all the way up to and including his own vice president. and once he takes office, he really does rely on them. he has kind of a bridging figure -- the bridging figure of condoleezza rice who was a friend of his to be national security advisor. but these guys, cheney, powell, and rumsfeld, who cheney has brought in as defense secretary, who are supposed to know how all this works. and he relies on them. he relies on them before september 11. then, he has this problem as he -- in the run up to the war in iraq that actually his advisors don't agree with each other. powell and, excuse me, cheney and rumsfeld are very much in support of and cheney is pushing the idea of the war with iraq. powell very much the contrary, disagrees with, particularly, with cheney. but in that case he's still relying on cheney and powell. and all the way through that first t
he's not going to bring votes the way say lyndon johnson would carry texas for john kennedy.nd he's too conservative. and bush wants cheney mostly because of his experience. i mean he's choosing his father's advisors and that goes all the way up to and including his own vice president. and once he takes office, he really does rely on them. he has kind of a bridging figure -- the bridging figure of condoleezza rice who was a friend of his to be national security advisor. but these guys, cheney,...
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Apr 13, 2020
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he won't bring votes the way lyndon johnson would carry texas for john kennedy.nd he is too conservative. bush wants cheney, mostly because of this. he is choosing his father's advisers and echoes all the way up to and including his own vice president. once he takes office, he really does rely on them. he has kind of a bridging figure of condoleezza rice, a friend of his, as national security adviser. but these guys, cheney, colin powell, and rumsfeld, who cheney brought in as the press secretary, who are supposed to know how all this works and he relies on them. he relies on them before september 11, then he has this problem in the run-up to the war in iraq that actually, his advisers don't agree with each other. powell, excuse me, cheney and rumsfeld are very much in support and cheney is pushing the idea of the war with iraq, how very much the contrary this agrees with cheney. but in that case, he is still relying on cheney and powell. all the way through that first term, he tends to support cheney, what cheney wants. you get to the end of the first term, the
he won't bring votes the way lyndon johnson would carry texas for john kennedy.nd he is too conservative. bush wants cheney, mostly because of this. he is choosing his father's advisers and echoes all the way up to and including his own vice president. once he takes office, he really does rely on them. he has kind of a bridging figure of condoleezza rice, a friend of his, as national security adviser. but these guys, cheney, colin powell, and rumsfeld, who cheney brought in as the press...
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Apr 1, 2020
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john kennedy. then when johnson came in, he tried way too hard to sell the agency on somebody who didn't know muchabout it. and joks finally -- johnson finally just shut him out of the oval office. and it didn't help that mccone was routinely bringing him bad news about vietnam, which johnson didn't want to hear. it was up to richard helms in effect to repair the relationship, which he was able to do during the six-day war between the arabs and israelis in 1967. as i mentioned earlier, a couple of times, it doesn't matter what the law says. politics often trumps law in reality. not that politics is illegal, but nonetheless, in the environment of washington, if you get into disputes with other bureaucracies, you better have the white house behind you, regardless of what the national security act or the erpa happen to say. a very fine line to avoid is the appearance of partisanship or policy advocacy, because as we noted, some presidents draw you into it. if they want you as a key advisor, if they are using the agency aggressively in covert action to implement foreign policy, you become de facto a p
john kennedy. then when johnson came in, he tried way too hard to sell the agency on somebody who didn't know muchabout it. and joks finally -- johnson finally just shut him out of the oval office. and it didn't help that mccone was routinely bringing him bad news about vietnam, which johnson didn't want to hear. it was up to richard helms in effect to repair the relationship, which he was able to do during the six-day war between the arabs and israelis in 1967. as i mentioned earlier, a couple...
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Apr 27, 2020
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johnson. did you know john f. kennedy. >> no. i met him once. but i knew the family. >> did you know jacqueline kennedy? >> yes. >> what is the closest you got to the roosevelt. >> i never saw franklin or eleanor personally. the closest i got were two sons who i interviewed before they died. and then all of the children of those children who were really very helpful to me. >> of the three books and all of the thinking about these politicians, who is your favorite? >> well, i think i'll probably always be most grateful to lyndon johnson but not for the reasons you might think. i think watching him in the last years of his life on the ranch helping him on his memoirs was a searing experience to see a man who had no other resources in his life but politics. he didn't know how to get through the day without politics. he would have mock meetings to figure out which to do and which cows were given the itch med sit -- medicine. medicine and he had to have mostings like in the white house but no longer as it bills on the hill, it is the ranch. like a cr
johnson. did you know john f. kennedy. >> no. i met him once. but i knew the family. >> did you know jacqueline kennedy? >> yes. >> what is the closest you got to the roosevelt. >> i never saw franklin or eleanor personally. the closest i got were two sons who i interviewed before they died. and then all of the children of those children who were really very helpful to me. >> of the three books and all of the thinking about these politicians, who is your...
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. >> singer songwriter john prine who died last night, tom hanks and rita witness won recovered and boris johnson. they're all public figures and proof that covid-19 can attack notable people even locally. >> i underestimated how serious my illness would be. >> today a video from marin county public health. he's finally fever free after weeks. >> i'm relatively healthy, but i needed help for almost everything at home. >> which leads us to another clash of victims. the home caregivers. carmen can tell us all about it. >> i had shortness of breath, fatigue. very tired. >> and in all 10 of 12 family members became sick. carmen's husband had it the west. he's a retired police chief who remains too weak to talk after a week on a ventilator. carmen had been caring for him until she said good-bye outside the hospital. >> you know he's getting intubated. you can't talk to him. you're at home fearing the worst. knowing your partner is sick and you can't be by his side. and knowing that other people have died from this. >> her husband of 29 years had been relatively healthy. in three weeks he's lost 20 pou
. >> singer songwriter john prine who died last night, tom hanks and rita witness won recovered and boris johnson. they're all public figures and proof that covid-19 can attack notable people even locally. >> i underestimated how serious my illness would be. >> today a video from marin county public health. he's finally fever free after weeks. >> i'm relatively healthy, but i needed help for almost everything at home. >> which leads us to another clash of victims....
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Apr 9, 2020
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lincoln assassinated, johnson takes over. after john came in, u.s.me in, hey, we aren't going to take that any more, you have a warrior as the head of the executive branch. through force of personality was he able to dig into that more than just the presence of republican congress but not only having the grand strategist there, but the warrior as well? >> that's an interesting question. i didn't go far enough to focus on grant as president, however, above and beyond what i'm talking about dueling culture, back to our first president, there is military men as presidents and that matters. jefferson when he runs for president, that's held against him. he was never a military man. he was governor of virginia, he ran from the british, he is bad, it comes up in all of these contests. it's an issue because it supposedly said something about character and being able to defend the nation and that's, i mean, in a way, that's a long thread in american leadership and in particular what people look for in presidents. so jackson is part of that same tradition, not
lincoln assassinated, johnson takes over. after john came in, u.s.me in, hey, we aren't going to take that any more, you have a warrior as the head of the executive branch. through force of personality was he able to dig into that more than just the presence of republican congress but not only having the grand strategist there, but the warrior as well? >> that's an interesting question. i didn't go far enough to focus on grant as president, however, above and beyond what i'm talking about...