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May 16, 2020
05/20
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. >> the caller was this man, john rivers.appened to be a childhood friend of tom waring, watched kate waring grow up. john rivers told the police chief he was worried about kate, too. >> and he told me that, you know, they got a lot of stuff going on. >> sure. >> but that he would assign his best and brightest to the case. and i felt pretty good about that. >> but now almost two months later, kate was still missing. and the investigation such as it was had accomplished nothing. and john rivers couldn't stand what it was doing to his best friend, tom waring. >> i could see that he really was having a hard time functioning. >> so rivers picked up the phone again and told this man, "do what it takes." his name is andy savage, former prosecutor, now famously tenacious criminal defense attorney. savage had heard about kate, too, and how police had no evidence of any crime. really? >> as soon as we scratched the surface just a little bit, we were absolutely convinced that foul play was involved. >> savage was given just two mandate
. >> the caller was this man, john rivers.appened to be a childhood friend of tom waring, watched kate waring grow up. john rivers told the police chief he was worried about kate, too. >> and he told me that, you know, they got a lot of stuff going on. >> sure. >> but that he would assign his best and brightest to the case. and i felt pretty good about that. >> but now almost two months later, kate was still missing. and the investigation such as it was had...
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May 23, 2020
05/20
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caitlyn rivers of johns hopkins university.u for making time on this friday night. >> thanks for having me. >>> coming up, there is one other country in the world using the donald trump playbook to respond to coronavirus. next, bill neely reports live from brazil where the pandemic is getting out of control. ndemic is getting out of control. alright so...oh. i'll start... oh, do you want to go first? no, no i don't...you go. i was just going to say on slide 7, talking about bundling and saving...umm... jamie, you're cutting out. sorry i'm late! hey, whoever's doing that, can you go on mute? oh, my bad! i was just saying there's a typo on slide 7. bundle home & auto for big discosnouts. i think that's supposed to say discounts. you sure about that? hey, can you guys see me? because i trust their quality they were the first to have a vitamin verified by usp... ...an independent organization that sets strict quality and purity standards nature made, the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand [music] [music] especia
caitlyn rivers of johns hopkins university.u for making time on this friday night. >> thanks for having me. >>> coming up, there is one other country in the world using the donald trump playbook to respond to coronavirus. next, bill neely reports live from brazil where the pandemic is getting out of control. ndemic is getting out of control. alright so...oh. i'll start... oh, do you want to go first? no, no i don't...you go. i was just going to say on slide 7, talking about...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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caitlin rivers of johns hopkins university.ch for making time on this friday night. >> thanks for having me is. >>> coming up, there is one other country in the world using to donald trump playbook to respond to the coronavirusle bill neely reported live from brazil where the pandemic is t getting out of control. control home is playground,gym, and concert hall. and cvs health is helping, with free home prescription delivery, telehealth from aetna, and support for caregivers. we're doing all we can to help you stay well, as you stay in. because now more than ever, home is where the heart is. cvs health. truly transformative sleep. so, no more tossing and turning. because only tempur-pedic adapts and responds to your body... ...so you get deep, uninterrupted sleep. during the tempur-pedic summer of sleep, all tempur-pedic mattresses are on sale! during the tempur-pedic summer of sleep, iit's not "acceptable oor nothing." and it's definitely not "close enough or nothing." mercedes-benz suvs were engineered with only one mission i
caitlin rivers of johns hopkins university.ch for making time on this friday night. >> thanks for having me is. >>> coming up, there is one other country in the world using to donald trump playbook to respond to the coronavirusle bill neely reported live from brazil where the pandemic is t getting out of control. control home is playground,gym, and concert hall. and cvs health is helping, with free home prescription delivery, telehealth from aetna, and support for caregivers....
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May 6, 2020
05/20
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caitlin rivers, , senior scholar at the johns hopkins center for health security, and assistant professor in the department of environmental health and engineering at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health. dr. frieden in his testimony will provide a perspective based on 30 years of fighting epidemics including leaving the cdc's response to ebola, where we are and what we need to do to protect americans. dr. rivers makes a case why in the months and years to come will we need additional capacities and diagnostic testing, contact tracing and health systems to combat the virus. i'm also so glad to have my colleagues here. i want to thank them for being here this morning, of the democratic side congresswoman katherine clark, bonnie watson coleman and on the republican side congressman tom cole, congressman andy harris and hope we will have congresswoman jaime herrera butler. we're all disappointed others could not be here because of distance, , reduce flights and health issues raised by the position. chairwoman lodi, kay granger, congresswoman lucille roy blunt outcome barbara l
caitlin rivers, , senior scholar at the johns hopkins center for health security, and assistant professor in the department of environmental health and engineering at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health. dr. frieden in his testimony will provide a perspective based on 30 years of fighting epidemics including leaving the cdc's response to ebola, where we are and what we need to do to protect americans. dr. rivers makes a case why in the months and years to come will we need...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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KRON
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just beginning and that the best way to save the economy is to stop its spread doctor caitlin rivers of johns hopkins says the u.s. still has 25 to 30,000 new cases a day we risk complacency in accepting the preventable deaths of 2000 americans each day, new jersey governor phil murphy is one of the people making the tough decisions state by state non essential retail your morning noon and night. >>i appreciate all that with all due respect this is the fight of our lives every state or locality has its own slightly different version of the things that employees and customers ought to do. bradley says retailers understand the importance of safety when they do reopen, but says businesses need more clear and consistent guidance on safety measures. >>in washington, alexandra le mon. >>where house explosion sends 2 people to the hospital i'll tell you why they are >>8.29 and new this morning has been an explosion at a warehouse in san leandro kron four's rana harvey tells us what happened rana. >>in dari and is now become an active criminal investigation you can see right here that we're holes tha
just beginning and that the best way to save the economy is to stop its spread doctor caitlin rivers of johns hopkins says the u.s. still has 25 to 30,000 new cases a day we risk complacency in accepting the preventable deaths of 2000 americans each day, new jersey governor phil murphy is one of the people making the tough decisions state by state non essential retail your morning noon and night. >>i appreciate all that with all due respect this is the fight of our lives every state or...
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May 12, 2020
05/20
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river, big white bathtub rings around them, left as the water declines. there is' less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: john flack, authorf "water is for fighting over" has spent decades studying the colorado river, a crucial source of water in much of the west. >> the persistence of the drought conditions in the colorado river basin especially is essentially unprecedented in human history. >> reporter: what is happening, a new study says, is not just a drought. it's a megadrought. it's a pretty dramatic term, megadrought. >> if you go back in time 500 years or so, there were these phenomenal droughts in terms of both severity and in terms of length. until recently those droughts have always been spoken about with almost a mythical-type character. >> reporter: park williams is lead scientist on research that uses tree ring evidence going back 1200 years to study megadroughts that lasts as long as 40 years. >> and the drought of the last 20 years has developed the same way the megadroughts did. >> reporter: there is, however, one difference between this long drought and the megadroughts centuries ago. >> what we're seeing
river, big white bathtub rings around them, left as the water declines. there is' less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: john flack, authorf "water is for fighting over" has spent decades studying the colorado river, a crucial source of water in much of the west. >> the persistence of the drought conditions in the colorado river basin especially is essentially unprecedented in human history. >> reporter: what is happening, a new...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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the hearing included testimony from former cdc director tom frieden and caitlin rivers from the johns hopkins center for health security. this is 2.5 hours. >> the hearing will come to order. welcome to thend labor, health, and human services and education appropriations subcommittee. today's hearing is on the nation's ongoing response to the coronavirus. -- on thether supplemental package, it has been bipartisan. let me commend my colleagues on both sides of the aisle clouding my friend and ranking member. before i begin, i want to extend a very warm welcome to our witnesses, dr. tom frieden, president and ceo of resolve to save lives and former director of the centers for disease control and prevention, the cdc. from 2000 9-2016. dr. caitlin rivers, featured scholar at the johns hopkins center for health security and assistant professor in the department of environmental health and engineering at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health. his testimony will provide a perspective based on 30 years of fighting epidemics, including leading the cdc's response to ebola, where w
the hearing included testimony from former cdc director tom frieden and caitlin rivers from the johns hopkins center for health security. this is 2.5 hours. >> the hearing will come to order. welcome to thend labor, health, and human services and education appropriations subcommittee. today's hearing is on the nation's ongoing response to the coronavirus. -- on thether supplemental package, it has been bipartisan. let me commend my colleagues on both sides of the aisle clouding my friend...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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. >> joining me now is kaitlan rivers, the senior associates of johns hospital kinzler for security and assistant professor at the university's department of health and engineering. also joining us is dr. sanjay gupta. professor rivers, no state has met all the criteria at this stage? >> it's true that all states are in different places of their epidemic. there are some states that have begun to see a decline. we heard from governor cuomo in the opening clip that new york has really turned the corner which is great news. but there are other places that are still really seeing an acceleration of their outbreak. we've also seen that some states don't have enough testing capacity to treat -- test everyone with covid-like symptoms and states are still working on expanding their contact tracing capability in order to be able to manage cases and their close contacts, which is quite a labor intensive process. the good news in addition to some states turning the corner is that health care capacity has really been one of the leading indicators. we've had more success treating everybody who needs
. >> joining me now is kaitlan rivers, the senior associates of johns hospital kinzler for security and assistant professor at the university's department of health and engineering. also joining us is dr. sanjay gupta. professor rivers, no state has met all the criteria at this stage? >> it's true that all states are in different places of their epidemic. there are some states that have begun to see a decline. we heard from governor cuomo in the opening clip that new york has really...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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KRON
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way with other health experts former cdc director doctor tom frieden and johns hopkins infectious disease expert doctor caitlin riversons before socially distance house lawmakers today. most doctors say in order to safely reopen the country the u.s. still needs to ramp up testing and contact tracing develop plans to quarantine those who are exposed and isolate those infected doctor fauci is scheduled to testify before a republican controlled senate committee later this week. >>well as states across the country shift toward reopening major pro sports leagues are taking a step closer to resuming operations tonight update surrounding the nfl nba, and major league baseball starting with the mlb we could soon see a formal proposal submitted to the players union that outlines plans to begin the season. a development first reported by espn. this proposal is likely to include a spring training that starts in the middle of next month leading to the opening of the regular season in early july for the last several weeks ideas have emerged about isolating teams and different spring training locations but there is also the possib
way with other health experts former cdc director doctor tom frieden and johns hopkins infectious disease expert doctor caitlin riversons before socially distance house lawmakers today. most doctors say in order to safely reopen the country the u.s. still needs to ramp up testing and contact tracing develop plans to quarantine those who are exposed and isolate those infected doctor fauci is scheduled to testify before a republican controlled senate committee later this week. >>well as...
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May 6, 2020
05/20
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kaitlin rivers, johns hopkins scholar. she co-authored of road map to reopening with dr. scott gottlieb, former head of the fda. and this is what we found which is what we know. and they were very, very forthright, very forthright, which was important because the issue is where is our national plan for testing? where is our national plan for contact surveillance. where is the national plan for providing the protective equipment for workers, front line workers, and the answer is that there is no national plan. when i asked who ought to be putting the plans together, she said the federal government. the direction needs to come from the federal government, and they have abdicated that responsibility. >> i would like to drill down further on this in the federal government, congresswoman. that is the specific role of the cdc, since you had former head of the cdc there, it is odd to a lot of people that the cdc isn't home to the best models, and it is the cdc that can't tell us how many tests are nationwide. what has happened to the capabilities of the cdc that they're not -- t
kaitlin rivers, johns hopkins scholar. she co-authored of road map to reopening with dr. scott gottlieb, former head of the fda. and this is what we found which is what we know. and they were very, very forthright, very forthright, which was important because the issue is where is our national plan for testing? where is our national plan for contact surveillance. where is the national plan for providing the protective equipment for workers, front line workers, and the answer is that there is no...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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caitlin rivers, a professor at the johns hopkins school of public health, said states lack adequate diagnostic testing and the capacity to carry out contact tracing. and she warned many of the states that are reopening have rising rates of coronavirus infections. >> it is clear to me we are in a critical moment of this fight. we risk complacency and accepting the preventable deaths of 2000 americans each day. we risk completely in accepting health care workers do not have what they need to do their jobs safely and recognizing that without continued vigilance, we will again create the conditions that led to us being the worst affected country in the world. amy: not testifying wednesday was dr. anthony fauci, a top infectious disease scientist on the coronavirus task force, who was barred by the white house from appearing before the house appropriations committee. a nenew report finds the u.s. private sector lost more than 20 million jobs in april as coronavirus lockdowns came into effect, by far the worstst one-month surge in job losses ever recorded. the u.s. unemployment rate is now at levels
caitlin rivers, a professor at the johns hopkins school of public health, said states lack adequate diagnostic testing and the capacity to carry out contact tracing. and she warned many of the states that are reopening have rising rates of coronavirus infections. >> it is clear to me we are in a critical moment of this fight. we risk complacency and accepting the preventable deaths of 2000 americans each day. we risk completely in accepting health care workers do not have what they need...
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May 8, 2020
05/20
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prevention 2009 through sc 2016 doctor rivers senior scholar that hell security an assistant professor in the department of environmental health and engineering at the johns hopkins bloomberg schools of health. doctor friedman will do is perspective of fighting epidemics including leading the cdc response of where we are and what we need to do to protect americans doctor rivers makes a case where the months and years to come we will need additional capacity heea with contact tracing to combat the virus. so glad to have my colleagues here this morning and on the republican side congressman andy harris i do hope we have the congresswoman butler we are all disappointed others could not be here due to flight and the health issues raised the chairwoman and ranking member and congresswoman barbara lee and lois frankel and congressman and tom graves. they could not attend but they did send questions which we will ask on their behalf. i want to underscore member should not be blocked from participating all committee members should bers heard that means moving as quickly as possible into the 21st century to conduct virtual hearings every member should be able to p
prevention 2009 through sc 2016 doctor rivers senior scholar that hell security an assistant professor in the department of environmental health and engineering at the johns hopkins bloomberg schools of health. doctor friedman will do is perspective of fighting epidemics including leading the cdc response of where we are and what we need to do to protect americans doctor rivers makes a case where the months and years to come we will need additional capacity heea with contact tracing to combat...
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May 17, 2020
05/20
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. >> lake mead and lake powell, the colorado river, big white bathtub rings around them left as the water declines. >> reporter: johnauthor of "water is for fighting." >> there's less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: what is happening in the west, a new study says, is not just a drought. it's a mega-drought. it's a pretty dramatic term "megadrought." >> if you go back in time 500 years or so, there were these phenomenal droughts in terms of both severity and in terms of length. >> reporter: park williams is lead scientist on research that used tree ring evidence to study megadroughts centuries ago that lasted as long as 40 years. >> until recently, those droughts have always been spoken about with almost a mythical-type character. >> reporter: there is one difference between those megadroughts and this one. >> what we're seeing today is a combination of natural climate variability as well as human-caused climate change. so without human-caused climate change, we would still have a drought but it wouldn't be as serious as the ones we have actually seen. >> reporter: in the moun
. >> lake mead and lake powell, the colorado river, big white bathtub rings around them left as the water declines. >> reporter: johnauthor of "water is for fighting." >> there's less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: what is happening in the west, a new study says, is not just a drought. it's a mega-drought. it's a pretty dramatic term "megadrought." >> if you go back in time 500 years or so, there were...
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May 9, 2020
05/20
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senator john kennedy, a witty guy in the republican caucus from louisiana, he was asked about another round of stimulus checks and he said well, people in hell want ice water, too. like cry me a river. what do you make of that? >> these guys are just appalling, chris. we have 30 million people unemployed. we have people everybody day, losing their jobs, small businesses going out of business, people can't feed their children and themselves, and these guys say that, you know who they remind me of, herbert hoover, when we were on the edge of a potential depression, herbert hoover said, let's do nothing. that's what these guys are saying. and doing nothing could well create the second great depression. we need help and help quickly. where we democrats and the house and senate are working on a big bold strong package that will deal with so many of the problems we face. i mean you know, mitch mcconnell comes up with this idea that we should let state and local governments go bankrupt. this is not an abstract concept, mitch. these are firefighters who protect us. bus drivers who drive the buses. people who work in health care. food safety inspectors. these are the people who would be thr
senator john kennedy, a witty guy in the republican caucus from louisiana, he was asked about another round of stimulus checks and he said well, people in hell want ice water, too. like cry me a river. what do you make of that? >> these guys are just appalling, chris. we have 30 million people unemployed. we have people everybody day, losing their jobs, small businesses going out of business, people can't feed their children and themselves, and these guys say that, you know who they...
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May 11, 2020
05/20
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we heard from caitlyn rivers testified before congress. she is an expert at johns hopkins university. she told congress last week that while the estimates vary, w could be needing 3.5 to 10s of we are nowhere near there. so regardless of what the president says and says how we are putting out a record number of tests, it's still not enoughg anin, the thing that we keep hearing is of course we need to get the onomy open. people want to go back to work. but as a business owner, as someone who runs a restauranor nursing home or meat packk plant or any of the places that we'veu seen suffereaks. how you can edgity matily bring people back work if you can't tell who is sick and who is not. that say recipformore outbreaks. and that is the problem we have. a gap in testing leaves us vulnerable to seeing an increased spike in cases.o >>lliam, to be concrete what do we know about tie administ's record on delivering wide spre testing and how that compares to what ir thident and his team are saying. >> well, we have seen a series of staments put out by the president and by the
we heard from caitlyn rivers testified before congress. she is an expert at johns hopkins university. she told congress last week that while the estimates vary, w could be needing 3.5 to 10s of we are nowhere near there. so regardless of what the president says and says how we are putting out a record number of tests, it's still not enoughg anin, the thing that we keep hearing is of course we need to get the onomy open. people want to go back to work. but as a business owner, as someone who...
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May 9, 2020
05/20
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john blackstone has the story. >> reporter: springtime is when reservoirs across the american west should be full. this year, as in many years past, they are not. >> lake meade and lake powell, the colorado riverned. there's less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: john flack, author of "water is for fighting over," has spent decades studying the colorado river. >> the persistence of the drought conditions in the colorado river basin especially is essentially unprecedented in human history. >> reporter: what is happening, a new study says, is not just a drought, it's a mega drought. it's a dramatic term, mega drought. >> if we can back 500 years or so, there were phenomenal droughts in terms of severity and in terms of length. and until recently those droughts have always been spoken about with almost a mythical-type character. >> reporter: park williams is lead scientist on research that used tree ring evidence going back 1,200 years to study mega droughts that lasted as long as 40 years. >> and the drought of the last 20 years has developed the same way the mega droughts did. >> reporter: there is, however, one difference between this long drought and the
john blackstone has the story. >> reporter: springtime is when reservoirs across the american west should be full. this year, as in many years past, they are not. >> lake meade and lake powell, the colorado riverned. there's less water in the system now than there was 20 and 30 years ago. >> reporter: john flack, author of "water is for fighting over," has spent decades studying the colorado river. >> the persistence of the drought conditions in the colorado...
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May 31, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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johns tokins university in 1965 talk about vietnam. that is what is coming up here on american history tv. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ two rivers joined to make the tennessee where they meet, just above knoxville, tennessee. from this point, it is 622 miles to kentucky, where the tennessee flows into the ohio. a number of major tributaries help to drain the over 400 miles of the watershed, a basin that includes parts of seven states. there's rainfall ranging between 50 and 80 inches a year. these rivers and a myriad of smaller streams tap a richly diversified area. the tennessee valley is a fair cross-section of our country. some problems of other regions are absent here. others are more acute than elsewhere. in the main, the problems of the valley are the problems of america. here comes the outline of the tennessee valley. the area in which president roosevelt asked congress to establish a demonstration of national planning. let us examine some of the conditions the president is determined to correct. of course, such property as this is not universal in the valley, but it exists and all too frequently. not only in the tennessee valley but through the leng
johns tokins university in 1965 talk about vietnam. that is what is coming up here on american history tv. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ two rivers joined to make the tennessee where they meet, just above knoxville, tennessee. from this point, it is 622 miles to kentucky, where the tennessee flows into the ohio. a number of major tributaries help to drain the over 400 miles of the watershed, a basin that includes parts of seven states. there's rainfall ranging between 50 and 80 inches a year. these rivers...
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river still abundant natural commerce. the communist government has big plans to develop the region. to the horrors of environmental indigenous peoples consomme optimist john w. . i mean what do they dream of at night. as cleaners they see the face of horror. their job censoring for the social media industry. in the uk there are thousands of so-called content monitors day for day they screw up terrifying images from online platforms the rich job for starvation wage the strain is enormous. the cleaners are sworn to secrecy interest on their something walk up to. the cleaners social media shadow industry starts joining us on t w. this is deja vu news live from berlin europeans might get their summer vacations after all these years expected to recommend border restrictions be lifted later today allowing millions of people to travel to some 1st destination but the continued spread of the chrono virus means far all countries will be laying out the welcome mat also coming up.
river still abundant natural commerce. the communist government has big plans to develop the region. to the horrors of environmental indigenous peoples consomme optimist john w. . i mean what do they dream of at night. as cleaners they see the face of horror. their job censoring for the social media industry. in the uk there are thousands of so-called content monitors day for day they screw up terrifying images from online platforms the rich job for starvation wage the strain is enormous. the...
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May 14, 2020
05/20
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river, above the 36/30 line. okay? their other daughter lizzy was born in missouri, upon their return. so dred scott v john sanford is not just about dred scott. it's about harriet and dred and eliza and lizzy, it's about a family who in various ways have different claims to freedom, right? i mean eliza is born in a free territory, and lizzy is born upon return to parents who have been effectively under law presumably possibly freed in their residence in a free territory. so first and foremost, i just want it make this clear, this is, the dred scott case is a family freedom suit. and like queen v hepburn, and many of the others that came forward in washington, d.c. the other introductory point here is this. all of these freedom suits aim toward limiting slavery's reach, right? you think about all of the freedom suits are about defining slavery as circumscribed by something. it can exist in a certain state, but not others. it can exist only by law, in this way. if there are wills or contracts, as we're going to see in a minute, then slavery is void in those cases. in other words, almost every freedom suit,
river, above the 36/30 line. okay? their other daughter lizzy was born in missouri, upon their return. so dred scott v john sanford is not just about dred scott. it's about harriet and dred and eliza and lizzy, it's about a family who in various ways have different claims to freedom, right? i mean eliza is born in a free territory, and lizzy is born upon return to parents who have been effectively under law presumably possibly freed in their residence in a free territory. so first and foremost,...
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May 16, 2020
05/20
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john brown and his men will raid. some of the raiders come back to the cumberland valley and tried to catch the river to get out of -- of the railroad to get out of the valley and a number of them will be captured nearly -- near the cumberland valley railroad station, were some of the raiders are captured. one will manage to escape on the railroad and end up in north pennsylvania, where members of the underground railroad will smuggle a free black to toronto in canada at that point. this railroad, the cvrr comp has a -- the cvr are, has a starcrossed background. it gained a lot of national publicity for the role. some of the members are investigated as collaborators. charges are never brought, but it leads to speculation. judge watts tends to be a middle-of-the-road person. as the clouds of four -- war start with the election of abraham lincoln, the secession of states, then war breaks out in april 1861, following the confederate bombardment of fort sumter. judge watts goes to a political rally in carlisle and is in favor of the compromises that are trying to hold the union together, perhaps allowing the south to kee
john brown and his men will raid. some of the raiders come back to the cumberland valley and tried to catch the river to get out of -- of the railroad to get out of the valley and a number of them will be captured nearly -- near the cumberland valley railroad station, were some of the raiders are captured. one will manage to escape on the railroad and end up in north pennsylvania, where members of the underground railroad will smuggle a free black to toronto in canada at that point. this...
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that sort of union by john channel and roosevelt years before but front was an organ though and were the same it was opened up. box or the army had already been. jealous red river fuel us or the us and you'd keep you'd be home in creating great fully the men but women dying in the 2nd world war at the edges and well to feel to get a sense. that the men and women of russia and particularly. of the rain. spirit lead marshall by general. very few people could make an argument as able and as passionately as tommy sheridan well done sir we thank you for that. as you may know some restrictions were lifted this past week in california and a handful of beaches reopened but many did see a tragedy in the making of veteran surfer rides his final wave after getting killed by a shark attack in northern california that everyone is now talking about what happened what kind of shark was it how did this happen or to correspond to the pasha suite has a story. 26 year old ben kelly was an avid surfer for most of his life when he wasn't in the water he was working in his small santa cruz business customising surfboards friends say he liked encouraging others to enjoy the ocean he
that sort of union by john channel and roosevelt years before but front was an organ though and were the same it was opened up. box or the army had already been. jealous red river fuel us or the us and you'd keep you'd be home in creating great fully the men but women dying in the 2nd world war at the edges and well to feel to get a sense. that the men and women of russia and particularly. of the rain. spirit lead marshall by general. very few people could make an argument as able and as...
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May 2, 2020
05/20
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river. february.he first of that is the date. went to third headquarters and john millikan who commanded was still mad at grow because we didn't make the time out of the bulge because of our wide zone he thought we should have made. patton was quite satisfied, which was really more important. then we went on to luxembourg, spent the night with, in luxembourg. before we did, general grow took , hadd we went to patton's dinner. general van fleet was there. maybe gay was there but not caffe, because caffe had taken over the fourth armored division. joking andf laughing. the generals had their cigars and whiskey and we stood around waiting, or we sat around in case they needed something more to take notes. the date was february the second. what happened on february the first as i recall from subsequent history is on the first of february, patton had gone to 12th army headquarters and was told third army would go on the defense in contemplation of the offensive by montgomery to the north. everything had to stop when general montgomery was going to make an offensive i gu
river. february.he first of that is the date. went to third headquarters and john millikan who commanded was still mad at grow because we didn't make the time out of the bulge because of our wide zone he thought we should have made. patton was quite satisfied, which was really more important. then we went on to luxembourg, spent the night with, in luxembourg. before we did, general grow took , hadd we went to patton's dinner. general van fleet was there. maybe gay was there but not caffe,...
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May 20, 2020
05/20
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CNNW
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river floods at times. this, however, is something that would be unprecedented. >> this is "new day" with alisyn camerota and john berman. >>> welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "new day." as of this morning, all 50 states have at least partially reopened. easing some of the stay-at-home restrictio restrictions. whatever noise you might hear, the real debate is not about whether to reopen but how to do it safely. after resistance from the white house, we learned overnight that the cdc has finally released guidance on how workplaces, schools and restaurants should reopen. a seen yoer official says the white house stripped things from the original roadmap. florida and georgia are under scrutiny for nair reporting of coronavirus casings. >>> we're following breaking news. catastrophic flooding in michigan. thousands of people forced to evacuate after two dams fail. a dangerous situation is unfolding there at this hour. we have a live report from the scene for you in moments. >>> we begin with the latest on the pandemic. joining me is dana bash. it's interesting. in the dark of
river floods at times. this, however, is something that would be unprecedented. >> this is "new day" with alisyn camerota and john berman. >>> welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "new day." as of this morning, all 50 states have at least partially reopened. easing some of the stay-at-home restrictio restrictions. whatever noise you might hear, the real debate is not about whether to reopen but how to do it safely. after...
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May 20, 2020
05/20
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CNNW
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river floods at times. this, however, is something that would be unprecedented. >> this is "new day" with alisyn camerota and johnome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "new day." as of this morning, all 50 states have at least partially reopened. easing some of the stay-at-home restrictio restrictions. wh
river floods at times. this, however, is something that would be unprecedented. >> this is "new day" with alisyn camerota and johnome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "new day." as of this morning, all 50 states have at least partially reopened. easing some of the stay-at-home restrictio restrictions. wh
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May 10, 2020
05/20
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>> john, you're not going to get coronavirus from swimming in a lake or a river or a pool. but if there are other people around you and they can breathe on you or cough on you and there are surfaces that you could be touching, then you could get coronavirus that way. >> and dr. wen, does it changing anything if someone is swimming in a pool with chlorinated water. either way it's not the water that's the issue. it's being around other people. >> exactly. and i get really worried when i see these images of people congregating at beaches. and i could imagine that happening in a pool. if there's a public pool and lots of people are touching the same pool tables and benches and other surfaces too. >> sanjay, natasha in hawaii sent in this video. let's watch. >> are there any benefits to wearing gloves while you're grocery shopping? and if so how would someone go about using them properly? i understand using gloves and changing them constantly but it doesn't really seem feasible right now. do you have any other recommendations also besides washing your hands when you come home a
>> john, you're not going to get coronavirus from swimming in a lake or a river or a pool. but if there are other people around you and they can breathe on you or cough on you and there are surfaces that you could be touching, then you could get coronavirus that way. >> and dr. wen, does it changing anything if someone is swimming in a pool with chlorinated water. either way it's not the water that's the issue. it's being around other people. >> exactly. and i get really...
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May 17, 2020
05/20
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according to johns hopkins, brazil now has the fourth highest number of cases and those cases still surging. all this as brazil's president has continued to downplay the covid-19 threat. cnn's matt riversas more from mexico city. >> reporter: as each day passes, the news out of brazil continues to seemingly get worse and worse and it is without question now that what is going on in brazil is truly one of the worst outbreaks in the world. new data released by the brazilian government shows the death toll in that country tops 15,000 after an additional 816 deaths were reported on saturday. the total number of cases also continues to go up. the government there reporting just under 15,000 newly confirmed cases of the virus. those new cases push the total amount to more than 233,000 cases countrywide. that amount is good enough for fourth highest in the world. brazil trails only the united states, russia, and the united kingdom in terms of the total amount of confirmed cases in the country. and because brazil continues to record more daily case total increases than most other countries around the world, it wouldn't be a surprise if at all if brazil passes the united kingdom for number thre
according to johns hopkins, brazil now has the fourth highest number of cases and those cases still surging. all this as brazil's president has continued to downplay the covid-19 threat. cnn's matt riversas more from mexico city. >> reporter: as each day passes, the news out of brazil continues to seemingly get worse and worse and it is without question now that what is going on in brazil is truly one of the worst outbreaks in the world. new data released by the brazilian government shows...