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Jun 7, 2016
06/16
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this was johns hopkins and they re trying to advance the operations. and this forward-looking people caring institution decided years more harm be doing than good and no one can acows them of trying to make more money, because obviously they would make more money and not make money from stopping the sex-change operations, but apparently those in charge of those in charge of johns hop kins took seriously the idea that doctors should first do know harm. goes on and points a a 2011 at the insfouth statute in sweden produced the results regarding the transgender, evidence that should give advocates pause. the long-term study up to 30 years, followed 324 people, they got hundreds in their data base, following for 0 years, those who surgery and inment after having the surgery, they increasing rience mental difficulties. eir suicide boff the nontransgender population. this rument has no explaining but probably reflects the growing sense of is lation reported by the aging transgender after the surgery. challenges tainly the prescription. there are people on th
this was johns hopkins and they re trying to advance the operations. and this forward-looking people caring institution decided years more harm be doing than good and no one can acows them of trying to make more money, because obviously they would make more money and not make money from stopping the sex-change operations, but apparently those in charge of those in charge of johns hop kins took seriously the idea that doctors should first do know harm. goes on and points a a 2011 at the insfouth...
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Jun 23, 2016
06/16
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paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he's still associated with johns hopkins. these are his professional views. i was hosting "point of view" in the last couple of weeks for kirby anderson. i had dr. mchugh on, i would walt hire on. his article, you can find this in "the wall street journal," may 13th. he says, policymakers and the media are doing no favors either to the public or the transgendered by treating their confusions as a right in need of defending rather than a mental disorder that deserves understanding, treatment, and prevention. this -- yeah. [ applause ] this intensely felt sense of being transgendered constitutes a mental disorder in two respects. the first is that the idea of sex misalignment is simply mistaken. it does not correspond with physical reality. the second is that it can lead to grim psychological outcomes. he says the transgendered, the disorder assumption is that the individual differs from what seems given in nature. namely, one's maleness or femaleness. other kinds of disordered assumptions are held by those who suffer from ano
paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he's still associated with johns hopkins. these are his professional views. i was hosting "point of view" in the last couple of weeks for kirby anderson. i had dr. mchugh on, i would walt hire on. his article, you can find this in "the wall street journal," may 13th. he says, policymakers and the media are doing no favors either to the public or the transgendered by treating their confusions as a right in need of...
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Jun 5, 2016
06/16
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they ended up at johns hopkins and i remember when that boy rolled onto the ward on a stretcher, barely moving, barely breathing, i am thinking what am i supposed to do here and i saw the ugly tumor on the scan and the parents and i was -- we were led here by the lord because we found a christian error surgeon. i said this is a malignant tumor of the brain stem, there is nothing that i or anyone else can do but they said the doctor, the lord is going to heal our son and he is going to use you to do it. and i said, look, mri's are brand-new. maybe it will show something that cat scan does not. i showed it to the neurologists, they said malignant brain tumor nothing to be done. , i said all the experts have looked at this and they said but dr., the lord is going to heal our son, he will use you to do it. i said look, once in a thousand cases the scans are wrong so tell you what, i will take him to the operating room and do a biopsy. maybe it is a fungal reaction or something like that that looks like a tumor. took him to the operating room, the big ugly grayish red mass. it came back heig
they ended up at johns hopkins and i remember when that boy rolled onto the ward on a stretcher, barely moving, barely breathing, i am thinking what am i supposed to do here and i saw the ugly tumor on the scan and the parents and i was -- we were led here by the lord because we found a christian error surgeon. i said this is a malignant tumor of the brain stem, there is nothing that i or anyone else can do but they said the doctor, the lord is going to heal our son and he is going to use you...
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Jun 29, 2016
06/16
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-- johns hopkins university. kellye: is there in easy way to help improve math skills? researchers might be onto something at johns hopkins. >>>> we found a very rapid change in children's math performance. change thatsitive occurred after they developed a five-minute computer game targeting something we are all born with, an intuitive sense of quantity. >> if you give the baby two bowls of food and one has more, they know which one to pick because they have intuition about quantity. kellye: children in the studies used that intuitive sense to determine the number of dots flashing on the screen. they then gave the group of four-year-old to five-year-olds a math test. >> we saw a temporary, click change in math performance after ay game that had nothing to do with numbers are -- or math. kellye: could a game like this help improve math? it will take more research, but this is an encouraging first step. kellye lynn, abc 7 news. jonathan: live picture right now of the brandenburg gate in furling. -- berlin. it is su
-- johns hopkins university. kellye: is there in easy way to help improve math skills? researchers might be onto something at johns hopkins. >>>> we found a very rapid change in children's math performance. change thatsitive occurred after they developed a five-minute computer game targeting something we are all born with, an intuitive sense of quantity. >> if you give the baby two bowls of food and one has more, they know which one to pick because they have intuition about...
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Jun 22, 2016
06/16
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WTTG
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he attended johns hopkins and frauded in 1964. >> all right check this out.say brand new slide oning in los angeles. it comes ouvts side of u.s. banking -- bank build physical you're not afraid of heights it could be for you. visitors just have to pay $8 you see it there slide down the side of it right there. >> that's fun. >> it opens that weekend. >> i would tote it allly do that. >> no i'm afraid of heights. anything above my head. i can't look out window on an airplane i have lots of issue. >> i have to go to la now. >> coming up a congressman moves to prevent half yet tub man from coming the face of the new $20 bill. the new pilots. >> as we head to break let's look live outside. pretty picture of the capital building. we're at 70. 5:41 -- 5:42 is the time now as the clock changes before my eyes we'll have more of "fox5 news morning" after this woman: i have a masurprise for you.are you? man: you have a surprise for me? narrator: at dominion, 1 in 5 new hires is a veteran. and when they're away, they miss out on a lot. but they won't miss out on financia
he attended johns hopkins and frauded in 1964. >> all right check this out.say brand new slide oning in los angeles. it comes ouvts side of u.s. banking -- bank build physical you're not afraid of heights it could be for you. visitors just have to pay $8 you see it there slide down the side of it right there. >> that's fun. >> it opens that weekend. >> i would tote it allly do that. >> no i'm afraid of heights. anything above my head. i can't look out window on an...
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Jun 7, 2016
06/16
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it's closing all lanes after johns hopkins road. so that's a big problem you neen to detour.ou 95 southbound approaching 198hig there was an earlier crash whera car went off the road into the still seeing significant delayst there. bw parkway not much betterh bete because we had earlier crash that was taking out some laneses as you pass 100.s 100 a lot of problems cupping fromup baltimore towards the bell way. give yourself a lot of extraf time to get around that one. t update for you from metro as meo well breaking news we're gettint in. residual delays to shady grovedy on the red line that is in i in addition to the single trackingn we're dealing with for the first safetrack surge between eastackg falls churche and balls stop to morning on the orange and silve line causing delays. more delays on our roads asas well. inner loop bottom side of theto beltway from branch avenue branc across the wilson bridge it'side going to take you 21 minutes. mt that is just because of o congestion slowing us down. d once you pass the springfieldpr
it's closing all lanes after johns hopkins road. so that's a big problem you neen to detour.ou 95 southbound approaching 198hig there was an earlier crash whera car went off the road into the still seeing significant delayst there. bw parkway not much betterh bete because we had earlier crash that was taking out some laneses as you pass 100.s 100 a lot of problems cupping fromup baltimore towards the bell way. give yourself a lot of extraf time to get around that one. t update for you from...
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Jun 11, 2016
06/16
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i vaguely remembered reading somewhere that back in the 1960's, johns hopkins was the first hospital sex change surgery. i read that and maybe you have. i did not read anywhere until walt hier directed me to dr. mccue's article in the wall street journal and they stopped doing this years ago, the sex change. let me tell you what dr. paul retired as the head of psychiatry, but he is still associated with john's hopkins but these are his professional views and i was hosting point of view in the last couple of weeks for kirby anderson and i had dr. but his an walt hyer on article which was in the wall street journal, he says, policymakers and the media are doing no favors either to the public or the transgender by treating their confusions as a right and need of defending rather than a mental disorder that deserves understanding, treatment, and prevention. [applause] this intensely felt sense of being transgender constitutes a mental disorder in 2 respects. the first is that the idea of sex misalignment is mistaken. it does not correspond with physical reality and the second is that it
i vaguely remembered reading somewhere that back in the 1960's, johns hopkins was the first hospital sex change surgery. i read that and maybe you have. i did not read anywhere until walt hier directed me to dr. mccue's article in the wall street journal and they stopped doing this years ago, the sex change. let me tell you what dr. paul retired as the head of psychiatry, but he is still associated with john's hopkins but these are his professional views and i was hosting point of view in the...
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Jun 27, 2016
06/16
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there's a german company that has been developing it and even some graduate students at john hopkinswith very little money were making great progress in developing some prototypes for gun technology. to me it's at least a solution that gets off of the familiar track of trying to predict who might end up being a mass shooter when they have no red flag, when there is absolutely no way that a gun dealer can be expected to read their mind. at least the technology is a little more of a business focus perspective. it could be incentivized as many of you described in its trying something different that would cut into all those secondary markets which i understand our problem. >> the other idea they mentioned to me was to fix our broken mental health system. those mentally ill people with the propensity of violence, even when identified, like the colorado theater and navy yard in tucson and fort hood shooters are being placed into the system to ensure they are not able to purchase firearms. plus i believe some of these mass killers are passing background checks. it seems as though many state
there's a german company that has been developing it and even some graduate students at john hopkinswith very little money were making great progress in developing some prototypes for gun technology. to me it's at least a solution that gets off of the familiar track of trying to predict who might end up being a mass shooter when they have no red flag, when there is absolutely no way that a gun dealer can be expected to read their mind. at least the technology is a little more of a business...
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Jun 21, 2016
06/16
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but he was the head of psychiatry at johns hopkins medical facility.ere that back in the '60s, johns hopkins was the first hospital to start doing sex change surgeries. i read that. maybe you have. but i did not read anywhere until walt hire directed me to dr. mchugh's article in wall street journal. they stopped doing this years ago, the sex change. let me tell you what dr. paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he still associated with johns hopkins. these are his professional views. and i was hosting point of view just in the last couple weeks for kirby anderson and i had dr. mchugh on. i had walt hire on. but anyway, his article, you can find this in "washington journal," may 13th. he said policymakers and the media are doing no favors to the public or transgendered by treating their confusions as a right and need of defending rather than a mental disorder that deserved understanding treatment and prevention. this -- [ applause ] yeah. this intensely felt sense of being transgendered constitutes a mental disorder into respects
but he was the head of psychiatry at johns hopkins medical facility.ere that back in the '60s, johns hopkins was the first hospital to start doing sex change surgeries. i read that. maybe you have. but i did not read anywhere until walt hire directed me to dr. mchugh's article in wall street journal. they stopped doing this years ago, the sex change. let me tell you what dr. paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he still associated with johns hopkins. these are his...
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Jun 20, 2016
06/16
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refer to the extreme form of social isolation by referring to the particular disorder is 1943 john hopkins university a psychiatrist basically the father of child psychiatry wrote a landmark article describing autism as we know it today he looked at a number of children that seem to be socially withdrawn at the same time didn't have that intellectual problems as children may be with down syndrome and what is remarkable the very first person diagnosed with doctors and is still alive a man named to a triplex and it shows you how recent the phenomenon is as we recognize of course, it has probably been throughout the ages but the term in the diagnosis as we know prozac 1943. >> wears triplet today? bernanke grew up in mississippi part of the reason he was diagnosed to came from a well-off family that could get to baltimore in 1943 he ended up having a reasonably good life he worked and has been an african-american in mississippi for his entire life it would have been radically different in worse >> when you talk about spectrum? >> that was much more recently in the '80s and '90s when people st
refer to the extreme form of social isolation by referring to the particular disorder is 1943 john hopkins university a psychiatrist basically the father of child psychiatry wrote a landmark article describing autism as we know it today he looked at a number of children that seem to be socially withdrawn at the same time didn't have that intellectual problems as children may be with down syndrome and what is remarkable the very first person diagnosed with doctors and is still alive a man named...
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Jun 2, 2016
06/16
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johns hopkins administrators say, covered grades my give students a chance to slack off and delay learninghere i went to college at ucla, my fox prayers and my heart are with my bruin family obviously after the tragedy yesterday. and we take academia very, very seriously and that means, if your grades are shaded and not shown, then that's not a fair offering to employers at graduate schools. it gives you in fact unfair advantage because everyone, every freshman in their first semester has tough time. it is part of the process, isn't it. harris: my uc sister, uc-santa barbara, thinking about what happened at ucla yesterday as well. this comes under the guise, gosh i need a safe space what world will think about actually work i did or didn't do in college. can they create a safe space from facts? you we just don't want trigger words but safe places from facts. when employer looks at entire history, he knows more about you, that's why they hire you. what are you embarrassed about? get it done. >> look at improvement over set period of time. arthur? harris: look at trends. >> i have an interes
johns hopkins administrators say, covered grades my give students a chance to slack off and delay learninghere i went to college at ucla, my fox prayers and my heart are with my bruin family obviously after the tragedy yesterday. and we take academia very, very seriously and that means, if your grades are shaded and not shown, then that's not a fair offering to employers at graduate schools. it gives you in fact unfair advantage because everyone, every freshman in their first semester has tough...
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Jun 9, 2016
06/16
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robert freedman is a visiting professor of political science at johns hopkins university and the formerresident of baltimore hebrew university. this is democracy now! go to theme back, we stanford rape case and of the latest. stay with us. ♪ [music break] amy: lady gaga performing "til it happens to you" at the oscars in february, a song from the documentary "the hunting ground." she was joined on stage by dozens of survivors who had phrases like "not alone" and "not your fault" written on their arms. lady gaga herself is a sexual assault survivor. this is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman with juan gonzalez. juan: more than 60,000 people have signed a student petition calling for stanford university to publicly apologize to the woman who was raped on campus last year by a stanford university swimmer. the case made national news this month when a judge sentenced the rapist brock allen turner to just six months in jail despite being caught by two witnesses sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster. efforts are underway to recall
robert freedman is a visiting professor of political science at johns hopkins university and the formerresident of baltimore hebrew university. this is democracy now! go to theme back, we stanford rape case and of the latest. stay with us. ♪ [music break] amy: lady gaga performing "til it happens to you" at the oscars in february, a song from the documentary "the hunting ground." she was joined on stage by dozens of survivors who had phrases like "not alone" and...
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Jun 5, 2016
06/16
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controversial study going on right now at 63 hospitals, including the university of pennsylvania, johns hopkinsand yale university. the test subjects are hundreds of thousands of patients who have no idea they're in a study, and thousands of doctors who have little choice but to take part. dr. michael carome: it's clearly unethical research. it's among the most unethical research i've ever seen, in fact. sharyl: dr. michael carome is a medical ethicist with the watchdog group public citizen. he's talking about the controversial study icompare. funded with millions of your tax dollars, it's testing the endurance of young physicians to see, quite literally, do more patients die when their doctors work longer shifts? dr. carome: there is substantial evidence that residents who are sleep deprived, particularly first-year residents, make more medical errors. and those medical errors can lead to harms and even deaths to patients. sharyl: if it seems like a no-brainer, carome says it is. he should know -- he himself attended medical school and completed a residency. so, right now, there is a limit? dr
controversial study going on right now at 63 hospitals, including the university of pennsylvania, johns hopkinsand yale university. the test subjects are hundreds of thousands of patients who have no idea they're in a study, and thousands of doctors who have little choice but to take part. dr. michael carome: it's clearly unethical research. it's among the most unethical research i've ever seen, in fact. sharyl: dr. michael carome is a medical ethicist with the watchdog group public citizen....
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Jun 14, 2016
06/16
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una encuesta revel que los pacientes e necesin analgsicos muchas veces no se --la cua de sud " johns hopkinsde mil personas que consumieron opiodes durante el aÑo pasado para ver cuntos conocan los programas para deshacerse de los medicamentos para el dolor que les sobran. --y se dieron cuenta de que el 60 por ciento de ellos se quedaron con pldoras adicionales, por lo que uno de cada cinco termin compartiendo las pastillas con otras personas. bump juanfra ---llegamos a la ltima pausa en noticieron telemundo 48 a las diez, pero al regresar... take vo --ser que los warriors podrn repetir la hazaÑa de hace un aÑo?.. los detalles del juego de anoche y lo que tendran que hacer si quieren ganar el campeonato. juanfra/ms --la derrota de los ''warriors'' de oakland anoche no significa el fin --la derrota de los ''warriors'' de oakland anoche no significa el fin del camino para lograr un segundo campeonato de la ''n-b-a''.. take vo --las esperanzas se mantienen y los espiritus continuan altos para el proximo partido.. el numero seis de la serie.. que se jugar ahora en cleveland este sabado.. --hay q
una encuesta revel que los pacientes e necesin analgsicos muchas veces no se --la cua de sud " johns hopkinsde mil personas que consumieron opiodes durante el aÑo pasado para ver cuntos conocan los programas para deshacerse de los medicamentos para el dolor que les sobran. --y se dieron cuenta de que el 60 por ciento de ellos se quedaron con pldoras adicionales, por lo que uno de cada cinco termin compartiendo las pastillas con otras personas. bump juanfra ---llegamos a la ltima pausa en...
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Jun 19, 2016
06/16
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johns hopkins university.the o'connor, psychiatrist said jon hoch in, what a landmark article describing autism as we know it today. he looked at a number of children who seem to be socially withdrawn, but at the same time didn't have the same kind of intellectual problems as children with down syndrome. what is remarkable is that the very first person diagnosed with autism is still alive. a man named donald triplett. it shows you how recent this phenomenon is at least as far as we recognized it. autism of course has probably existed throughout the ages. but the term of the diagnosis we know only goes back to 1943. >> host: where is donald triplett today? >> guest: donald triplett grew up in mississippi. part of the reason he was diagnosed, he came from a fairly well-off family was able to get to baltimore in 1943. he ended up having a reasonably good life. he worked and he had been an african-american in mississippi in 1943 his entire life course, entire trajectory would have been radically different. >> host
johns hopkins university.the o'connor, psychiatrist said jon hoch in, what a landmark article describing autism as we know it today. he looked at a number of children who seem to be socially withdrawn, but at the same time didn't have the same kind of intellectual problems as children with down syndrome. what is remarkable is that the very first person diagnosed with autism is still alive. a man named donald triplett. it shows you how recent this phenomenon is at least as far as we recognized...
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caleb alexander of johns hopkins has studied if doctors are becoming more cautious when prescribing the. >> although there is some evidence that doctors are scaling back a little bit, we have a long way to go. >> reporter: more than 1,000 people are treated in emergency rooms every day for misusing prescription opioids. prince is the most high-profile victim yet. his autopsy revealed he died from an accidental fentanyl overdose, an opioid much more powerful than other painkillers. >> fentanyl is one of the types of prescription opioids that account for a disproportionate number of injuries and deaths. >> reporter: the centers for disease control and prevention released guidelines for doctors earlier this year, discouraging the prescribing of opioids for chronic pain and encouraging patients to try over-the-counter pain meds instead among other methods. >> things such as massage, acupuncture, physical therapy. >> reporter: dr. alexander recommends if patients must take an opioid, they use the lowest dose possible for the shortest period of time. kenneth craig, cbs news, new york. >>> a j
caleb alexander of johns hopkins has studied if doctors are becoming more cautious when prescribing the. >> although there is some evidence that doctors are scaling back a little bit, we have a long way to go. >> reporter: more than 1,000 people are treated in emergency rooms every day for misusing prescription opioids. prince is the most high-profile victim yet. his autopsy revealed he died from an accidental fentanyl overdose, an opioid much more powerful than other painkillers....
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Jun 3, 2016
06/16
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KPIX
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alexander of johns hopkins has studied if doctors are becoming more cautious when prescribing the drugs. >> although there is some evidence that doctors are scaling back a bit, we have a long way to go. >> reporter: more than 1,000 people are treated in emergency rooms every day for misusing prescription opiods. but prince is the most high- profile victim yet. his autopsy revealed he died from an accidental fentanyl overdose, an opiod much more powerful than other painkillers. >> fentanyl is one of the types of prescription opiods that accounts for a disproportionate number of injuries and deaths. >> reporter: the centers for disease control and prevention released guidelines for doctors earlier this year discouraging the prescribing of opiods for chronic pain and encouraging patients to try over-the- counter pain medications instead among other methods. >> things such as massage, ak u puncture, physical therapy. >> reporter: dr. alexander recommends if patients must take an opiod, use the lowest dose possible for the shortest period of time. kenneth craig, cbs news, new york. >> that d
alexander of johns hopkins has studied if doctors are becoming more cautious when prescribing the drugs. >> although there is some evidence that doctors are scaling back a bit, we have a long way to go. >> reporter: more than 1,000 people are treated in emergency rooms every day for misusing prescription opiods. but prince is the most high- profile victim yet. his autopsy revealed he died from an accidental fentanyl overdose, an opiod much more powerful than other painkillers....
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Jun 3, 2016
06/16
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he talked about his experience on the campaign trail in his career as a neurosurgeon at johns hopkins hospital. this is about 15 minutes. [applause] dr. carson: thank you. thank you. i feel like i am at a political rally. want to congratulates the -- i want to congratulate the. my wife and i have a high esteem for dr. ingle and this university. gray happy to be part of it. travelortunate enough to i am alwaysies and welcomed -- happy to give back to this country. some people tend to take that for granted but i do not. that was so important that each one of you developed the tremendous talent that god has provided and are to help maintain as a free country that and it is going to be a fight, it is going to be a struggle. a lot of times people ask me was it really worth getting into the political arena and having people savage her reputation and family, tell lies and do all the things, was it really worth all that and the answer is no. not if you are doing it for yourself. othersare doing it for and answer is a resounding yes. can is him to elevate other people. i had an opportunity ove
he talked about his experience on the campaign trail in his career as a neurosurgeon at johns hopkins hospital. this is about 15 minutes. [applause] dr. carson: thank you. thank you. i feel like i am at a political rally. want to congratulates the -- i want to congratulate the. my wife and i have a high esteem for dr. ingle and this university. gray happy to be part of it. travelortunate enough to i am alwaysies and welcomed -- happy to give back to this country. some people tend to take that...
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Jun 19, 2016
06/16
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he's also adjunct professor of strategic studies in the strategic studies program at johns hopkins university school of advanced international studies. please join me in welcoming ted broman. ted? [applause] >> thanks very much, jon. it's a tremendous pleasure to welcome my friend, david satter, here to the heritage foundation to speak on his latest book published, i believe, just two days ago by university press, "the less you know, the better you sleep." the story that david tells is the story of a double tragedy. for russia, the tragedy of the rise through acts of domestic terrorism and criminality of the dictatorial regime of vladimir putin and the tragedy of the west's failure to understand what was actually happening in russia. in reading the book, i was very struck by a comment that david made on page 18, and ill just read it for you now. critical to the credence given in the west to official russian explanations was an inability to accept the idea that the yeltsin regime would murder hundreds of its own citizens and terrify the nation to hold onto power. this refusal to believe the un
he's also adjunct professor of strategic studies in the strategic studies program at johns hopkins university school of advanced international studies. please join me in welcoming ted broman. ted? [applause] >> thanks very much, jon. it's a tremendous pleasure to welcome my friend, david satter, here to the heritage foundation to speak on his latest book published, i believe, just two days ago by university press, "the less you know, the better you sleep." the story that david...
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Jun 19, 2016
06/16
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news outlets also an adjunct professor of strategic studies in the strategic studies program at john hopkins school of advanced international school of studies. ted? [applause] >> it is the tremendous pleasure to welcome my friend here to speak of his latest book just two days ago from university press, "the less you know, the better you sleep" the story that david tells is the tragedy of russia and the rise tracks of domestic terrorism and criminality the dictatorial regime of vladimir putin -- putin and the failure to understand what is happening in russia. i was struck by comments that were made critical to the credence given in the west the inability to except the idea they would murder of hundreds of their own citizens refusal to believe the unbelievable came at a cost it crippled western policy making in the van into in effectual the minute putin took power there was an image of made by the west the was into a version of the reality it is fair to say they tried harder longer to bring russia back to reality graduating from university in chicago and then went to be a rhodes scholar in 76
news outlets also an adjunct professor of strategic studies in the strategic studies program at john hopkins school of advanced international school of studies. ted? [applause] >> it is the tremendous pleasure to welcome my friend here to speak of his latest book just two days ago from university press, "the less you know, the better you sleep" the story that david tells is the tragedy of russia and the rise tracks of domestic terrorism and criminality the dictatorial regime of...
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Jun 29, 2016
06/16
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researchers at johns hopkins university found an intime when blocked prevent the disease in mice.t hasn't been used for parkinson's. the disease affects movement and symptoms often include tremor and stiff movements. >>> foster city company that dominates the hepatitis c drug market received fda aprofessional today for new treatment. company says it will be priced much lower than previous additions. they say that this is the first drug to treat the all strins of hp c. it will cost 74,000 dollars for a 12 week course of treatment. that's 900 dollars per tablet but 100 dollars less than the previous test drug. >>> crab season here in the bay area ends in two days and whale experts are relieved. there have been a reported 40 whalen tangment off california since january. the whales got caught in fishing gear. here's lee ann with the effort to help stop more whales from getting trapped. >>reporter: jim anderson is a crab fisherman working out of half moon bay. this year the season was delayed because of app algae outbreak. he's the first to admit starting late also harmed some whales.
researchers at johns hopkins university found an intime when blocked prevent the disease in mice.t hasn't been used for parkinson's. the disease affects movement and symptoms often include tremor and stiff movements. >>> foster city company that dominates the hepatitis c drug market received fda aprofessional today for new treatment. company says it will be priced much lower than previous additions. they say that this is the first drug to treat the all strins of hp c. it will cost...
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Jun 8, 2016
06/16
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she holds a bachelors and masters degree from john hopkins university and a masters in national security studies from the naval post graduate school in monterey, california. our third witness is mr. joseph coronato, why he is the chief law enforcement officer in ocean county, new jersey. prior to his appointment, he served as prosecutor in the new jersey state attorney general's os, the atlantic county os, and private practice. he is a graduate of north carolina central law school. our next witness, dr. sullivan smith. dr. smith serves multiple roles as an emergency room physical and medical corrector for cookville tennessee regional medical room department and putnam county medical regional services and putnam county rescue squad and he is a lieutenant in the cookville police department and a fellow of the emergency college of physicians, md, university of tennessee and residency university of tennessee memorial. final witness, dr. jim hall. serves as epidemic for the center of applied research on substance abuse and health disparity at nova southeastern university. he also currently se
she holds a bachelors and masters degree from john hopkins university and a masters in national security studies from the naval post graduate school in monterey, california. our third witness is mr. joseph coronato, why he is the chief law enforcement officer in ocean county, new jersey. prior to his appointment, he served as prosecutor in the new jersey state attorney general's os, the atlantic county os, and private practice. he is a graduate of north carolina central law school. our next...
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Jun 25, 2016
06/16
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go to the largest private employer in maryland, johns hopkins, a good hospital, to state the obvious and the most prolific employer, folks with a criminal history. ron peterson, the soon-to-be retiring president will tell you that it is an act of enlightened self-interest, not an act of charity and he will tell you they have measured this, folks who have a criminal history working at hopkins stay longer. they are up and down and all around the ecosystem. allied health prevention, all around the food chain and it is the right thing to do and the smart thing to do so a big part of what we are doing is lifting up these employers who are doing well and that in turn helps other employers who are thinking about it but they have issues and when they have questions we are always nonjudgmental. we here periodically this person has a conviction. i'm a little worried about hiring him or her. we have a tool in our toolbox in the workforce to help that. a surety box, we will assure you against that risk if something happens. we don't think it will happen. the workforce system itself has built a l
go to the largest private employer in maryland, johns hopkins, a good hospital, to state the obvious and the most prolific employer, folks with a criminal history. ron peterson, the soon-to-be retiring president will tell you that it is an act of enlightened self-interest, not an act of charity and he will tell you they have measured this, folks who have a criminal history working at hopkins stay longer. they are up and down and all around the ecosystem. allied health prevention, all around the...
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Jun 17, 2016
06/16
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paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he stilr associated with johns hopkins.ad dr. mchugh on. his article, you can find this on watt street journal, may 13th. he said policymakers and the media are doing no favors to the public or transgendered by treating their confusions as a right and need of defending rather than a mental disorder e1 that deserved understanding treatment and prevention.e1 this -- i] yeah.w3e1 this intensely felt sense of céing transgendered institutes a mental disorder into respects. the first is that the idea of mistaken. it does not correspond with physical reality.q the second is it can lead to/d grim psychological outcomes. he says the transgender suffer 1 disorder of assumption like other disorders.o7o it's that the individual differs from what seems given in nature. one's maleness or femaleness.okq other kinds of disorder xdxd aukus(tions are held by those who suffer from anorexia or belumia.lp where it's the belief that the dangerously thin or overweight.r he goes on discussing that. for the transgender, one feeling of gender is a c
paul mchugh, he's now retired as the head of psychiatry, but he stilr associated with johns hopkins.ad dr. mchugh on. his article, you can find this on watt street journal, may 13th. he said policymakers and the media are doing no favors to the public or transgendered by treating their confusions as a right and need of defending rather than a mental disorder e1 that deserved understanding treatment and prevention.e1 this -- i] yeah.w3e1 this intensely felt sense of céing transgendered...
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Jun 4, 2016
06/16
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professor watkins is a graduate, has his masters from johns hopkins, and he also teaches a creative writing program at the university of baltimore. so to have both of these gentlemen, both of these scholars and -- with us on thise panel, i think it's a great opportunity for the key school, and we thank you very much for joining us. thd like to start withth dr. kendi, just talking about your book and talking about what led you to this point in terms of the publication and your research. thank you. >> thank you.ch. incredible introduction. it's truly a pleasure and an honor to be here at the key school, to be presenting at the annapolis book festival. as was stated, i went to high school not too far from here in manassas, virginia, and so anytime i can come back to my second home, i certainly take that opportunity. and so i'm actually here talking to you about my new book, and it really is brand new. it actually came out on april s 12th, just a few days ago, stamped from the beginning the definitive history of racist ideas in america. and, actually, on april 12th, 1860, jefferson davis -- who
professor watkins is a graduate, has his masters from johns hopkins, and he also teaches a creative writing program at the university of baltimore. so to have both of these gentlemen, both of these scholars and -- with us on thise panel, i think it's a great opportunity for the key school, and we thank you very much for joining us. thd like to start withth dr. kendi, just talking about your book and talking about what led you to this point in terms of the publication and your research. thank...
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Jun 30, 2016
06/16
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and the dean at the school of advanced international studies at johns hopkins university, also author of "the dispensable nation." and former military attache in syria. i want reaction to what you heard him say there, do you agree? >> absolutely. this has been the problem all along is the target validation process. we have to develop enough targets for the confederate to hit. early on, many aircraft returned to base with order nates unexpended, couldn't get clearance to drop or didn't have enough targets to strike. a lot has to do with restrictive rules of engagement. that appears to be lessening somewhat. over time, increased intelligence that we're gathering has allowed them to develop more targets. i think five might be low, but i wouldn't go above a 7. >> what do you think about this? what do you read on what the general said? >> the military knows better how well they're doing in an air campaign, but the reality is there's very little american troop presence on the ground. the process by which it would gather information, be able to know what to hit. that requires a lot more amer
and the dean at the school of advanced international studies at johns hopkins university, also author of "the dispensable nation." and former military attache in syria. i want reaction to what you heard him say there, do you agree? >> absolutely. this has been the problem all along is the target validation process. we have to develop enough targets for the confederate to hit. early on, many aircraft returned to base with order nates unexpended, couldn't get clearance to drop or...
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Jun 26, 2016
06/16
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even some graduate students at john hopkins with very little money were making great progress in developingrototypes for smartphone technology. to me, it's at least a solution that gets off of the familiar track of trying to predict who might end up, for example, being a mass shooter when have no red flag, when there is absolutely way that a gun dealer can be expected to read their mind. at least the technology is a little more of a distance focus. it could be incentivized it's trying something different that would cut in to all of the secondary markets, straw purchasers, which as i understand it are a problem. host: yeah, the other idea they mentioned to me, the nra did was quote fix our broken mental health system. those mentally ill people with a propensity for violence even one identified like the colorado theater and navy yard, tucson and fort hood shooters aren't being placed into that check system to ensure they are not able to purchase firearms. plus, i believe some of these mass killers are passing background checks. it seems as though many states are not feeding the right informat
even some graduate students at john hopkins with very little money were making great progress in developingrototypes for smartphone technology. to me, it's at least a solution that gets off of the familiar track of trying to predict who might end up, for example, being a mass shooter when have no red flag, when there is absolutely way that a gun dealer can be expected to read their mind. at least the technology is a little more of a distance focus. it could be incentivized it's trying something...
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Jun 24, 2016
06/16
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if you go in marilyn, the largest private employer is john's hopkins. it's very good university and a great hospital to state the obvious. it's the most prolific employer of folks with a criminal history as the soon to be retiring president was here, he would tell you that it is an act of enlightened self interest. it is not an act of charity. he will tell you they have measured this and folks who have a criminal history working at hopkins stay longer and by the way, there up and down and all around the echo system, x-ray test, phlebotomist, health professionals, health professionals, all around the food chain and it is the right thing to do and it's the smart thing to do. a big part of what we are doing is lifting up these employers who are doing well and that in turn helps other employers who are thinking about it. they have issues. when they have those questions, we are always nonjudgmental. we here here periodically, this person has a conviction for theft. i'm a little bit worried about hiring him or her. guess what. we have a toolbox in our workfor
if you go in marilyn, the largest private employer is john's hopkins. it's very good university and a great hospital to state the obvious. it's the most prolific employer of folks with a criminal history as the soon to be retiring president was here, he would tell you that it is an act of enlightened self interest. it is not an act of charity. he will tell you they have measured this and folks who have a criminal history working at hopkins stay longer and by the way, there up and down and all...
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Jun 28, 2016
06/16
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juvenile sex offenders-- she directs the moore center for the prevention of child sexual abuse at john hopkinsniversity. she says civilly committing juvenile sex offenders makes little sense. first because it's incredibly costly: minnesota spends about $125,000 per offender, per year, which is roughly triple the cost of regular prison. but most importantly, she says it doesn't make sense because juvenile offenders are likely not lifetime offenders. >> among youth who are adjudicated for a sexual offense-- so they've been arrested, processed-- 97% to 98% will not reoffend sexually. so truly the vast majority... >> reporter: almost all of them... >> almost all youth, if they are caught committing a sexual offense, will not do it again. >> reporter: emily piper is the commissioner of minnesota's department of human services, which oversees the state's sex offender program. she says only 4% of minnesota's registered sex offenders are currently civilly committed, and she argues the state is rightly incarcerating the most troubling of those. >> the sex offenders in our program have some of the most
juvenile sex offenders-- she directs the moore center for the prevention of child sexual abuse at john hopkinsniversity. she says civilly committing juvenile sex offenders makes little sense. first because it's incredibly costly: minnesota spends about $125,000 per offender, per year, which is roughly triple the cost of regular prison. but most importantly, she says it doesn't make sense because juvenile offenders are likely not lifetime offenders. >> among youth who are adjudicated for a...
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Jun 12, 2016
06/16
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when he was first starting his career, he was a schoolteacher, he returned and that is chd from john hopkins. and then moved to the university of michigan. as a professor of philosophy and later to the university of chicago, which is where he met adams. the pragmatist philosophers, mostly when -- these are the foundational theorists of the school of pragmatism. adams was a group of talented women at whole house quickly became a force for industrial reform, for protection and education of children and advocacy for women's rights. support for the labor unions. was also a center of arts and culture. nearly every well-known person of that era seemed to have either stayed at whole house or spoke at whole house. and many times, stayed for weeks or months. in the early 20th century, adams was revered and beloved nationally and internationally. in 1912 in 1913, it showed her that americans considered her one of history. in one of the most socially useful americans, second only to thomas edison. public opinion changed radically due to her pacifism before entering world war i. she was vilified by the
when he was first starting his career, he was a schoolteacher, he returned and that is chd from john hopkins. and then moved to the university of michigan. as a professor of philosophy and later to the university of chicago, which is where he met adams. the pragmatist philosophers, mostly when -- these are the foundational theorists of the school of pragmatism. adams was a group of talented women at whole house quickly became a force for industrial reform, for protection and education of...
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Jun 13, 2016
06/16
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one transgender man was theh head of psychiatry at johns hopkins medical facility. i vaguely remember reading somewhere that back in the 60's john hopkins was the first hospital to start doing sex change surgery. i have read that, maybe you have. but i did not read anywhere until i was directed to dr. mccue's article in the "wall street journal." they stop doing this years ago, the sex change. mccue tell you what paul has said. these are his professional be as. -- his professional point of views. andersonting for kirby and i had dr. mccue on. anyway,'s article and you can find this in "the wall street journal," may 13. he's of the policymakers and the media are doing no favors to the their by treating confusions as a write in need of defending, rather than a mental disorder that deserves understanding, treatment, and prevention. [applause] this intensely felt sense of being transgendered constitutes a mental disorder. the first, the idea of sex misalignment is mistaken. it does not correspond with physical reality. the second is it can lead to grim psychological out
one transgender man was theh head of psychiatry at johns hopkins medical facility. i vaguely remember reading somewhere that back in the 60's john hopkins was the first hospital to start doing sex change surgery. i have read that, maybe you have. but i did not read anywhere until i was directed to dr. mccue's article in the "wall street journal." they stop doing this years ago, the sex change. mccue tell you what paul has said. these are his professional be as. -- his professional...
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Jun 4, 2016
06/16
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>> ken, johns hopkins, the only mention of republican in the constitution is the guarantee clause. the national government's obligation to guarantee a republican government to the stat states. it seems to me you are suggesting the constitution is a republican guarantee to the national government. of course, we know the republican guarantee clause was rendered irrelevant but justice thomas recently revised it. so i would like you to speculate on how this could all work together for the restoration of national republican government. >> thank you, ken. i actually haven't read justice thomas' opinion yet although i have read about it. i haven't thought through exactly an answer to the question you asked. i don't want to speculate too much on c-span about what i might be thinking about this. but it was almost immediately after our republican constitution was devised to solve a problem they thought needed solving and virtually every state copied it. many were more democrat and as controversial in getting this past, within a few years, every state immolated this form of government. that i
>> ken, johns hopkins, the only mention of republican in the constitution is the guarantee clause. the national government's obligation to guarantee a republican government to the stat states. it seems to me you are suggesting the constitution is a republican guarantee to the national government. of course, we know the republican guarantee clause was rendered irrelevant but justice thomas recently revised it. so i would like you to speculate on how this could all work together for the...
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Jun 18, 2016
06/16
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you are a visiting scholar at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health.ou also blog for the "huffington post." you have been working on this issue a long time. what have you seen since the attack in orlando? has the conversation around gun control changed? guest: i think it changed in a couple important ways. number is the enormous amount of one energy involved. this started, in my view, after the virginia tech shootings. and it has been building. after the disappointing votes in congress, after the sandy hook massacre, people thought this movement would disappear and go away. they were wrong. that was the beginning of the development of a very powerful movement. now, we are millions strong. we have a whole coalition of organizations we work with. those people are incredibly energized. and the other thing that is interesting because of where the , shooting was, in a nightclub, the lgbtq community is incredibly energized. so you're seeing a historic coming together of powerful social movements. that is really changing some of the dynamic we are seeing out
you are a visiting scholar at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health.ou also blog for the "huffington post." you have been working on this issue a long time. what have you seen since the attack in orlando? has the conversation around gun control changed? guest: i think it changed in a couple important ways. number is the enormous amount of one energy involved. this started, in my view, after the virginia tech shootings. and it has been building. after the disappointing...
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Jun 24, 2016
06/16
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marty makary, professor of public health out of johns hopkins in baltimore.ou, doctor. >> great to see you. bill: you led a study some disagree with, however, why do you think this is such a significant problem in america? >> well our study pulls on the best available research from the "new england journal of medicine" and the other top journals and it is an emotional subject. look, it is a little embarrassing our system is so technologically advanced but sometimes fragmented and uncoordinated. unfortunately the problem of medical care gone wrong has gotten so big and affected so many people, it is probably the third leading case of death. bill: i learned so much from this about your job and job of nurseses, pharmacists, and entire industry but ultimately you're a human being. >> we don't blame doctors and clinicians for this. doctors are crushed with lowering pay, consumerist culture and regulatory requirements. health care is more complex than it has ever been. it is not the health care system my dad practiced in. we do more medications. we give out more pr
marty makary, professor of public health out of johns hopkins in baltimore.ou, doctor. >> great to see you. bill: you led a study some disagree with, however, why do you think this is such a significant problem in america? >> well our study pulls on the best available research from the "new england journal of medicine" and the other top journals and it is an emotional subject. look, it is a little embarrassing our system is so technologically advanced but sometimes...
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Jun 12, 2016
06/16
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she holds a bachelors, a masters degree from johns hopkins university, and a masters degree in national security studies from the naval postgraduate school, monterey, california. our third witness is mr. joseph coronato. es served since 2013 as the ocean county prosecutor in ocean county, new jersey. prior to his appointment, he had served as prosecutor in the new jersey state attorney general's office, in the atlantic county's prosecutor office, and in private practice. he is a graduate of north carolina central university law school or it on it witness, her sullivans myth. dr. smith serves multiple roles as an emergency room physician and in the tennessee regional medical center emergency room department. he is also a lieutenant in the cookeville police department and a fellow of the american college of emergency physicians. residency, the university of tennessee. final witness, dr. jim hall services epidemiologist with the center for applied research on substance abuse and health at nova southeastern university. he also serves on the national institutes of health national drug early
she holds a bachelors, a masters degree from johns hopkins university, and a masters degree in national security studies from the naval postgraduate school, monterey, california. our third witness is mr. joseph coronato. es served since 2013 as the ocean county prosecutor in ocean county, new jersey. prior to his appointment, he had served as prosecutor in the new jersey state attorney general's office, in the atlantic county's prosecutor office, and in private practice. he is a graduate of...
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Jun 4, 2016
06/16
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and i will argue in -- just in town here two weeks ago at john hopkins university that he agreed thatit is responsible so curious if you talk about climate chaos in matters in the book. thank you very much for the presentation. i really appreciated it. great point and start with militarism and hand off. you get a lot. you know we talk about militarism and one of the things that's striking and something that fdr talked about -- hello okay. [inaudible] sorry about that. there we go. now i'm in the zone. in the book one of the things that was striking to us when we were looking at the founding of this country we knew it before but in more detail more with frames they have problems and we talk about them in the book but there were a couple of things that were strong on, and one of them was i would say nothing short of a discussion to limit militarism in our society. militarism seen as a cancer that was most fundamental thing to undermine republican own democratic rule and called it warfare germ of problems that destroy democracy, and for that reason, we have two of the amendments in the b
and i will argue in -- just in town here two weeks ago at john hopkins university that he agreed thatit is responsible so curious if you talk about climate chaos in matters in the book. thank you very much for the presentation. i really appreciated it. great point and start with militarism and hand off. you get a lot. you know we talk about militarism and one of the things that's striking and something that fdr talked about -- hello okay. [inaudible] sorry about that. there we go. now i'm in...
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Jun 16, 2016
06/16
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>> i'm a grad student at johns hopkins. host: tell us your thoughts. heard a caller say that his daughter was in college and we need to sit down and talk with our daughters about what they should and should not be doing. i think we need to stop laming the women for what men are doing. theird to sit down with sons and they need to tell their sons that they need to stop touching people who don't want to be touched. there has to be that munication. we cannot continue to blame women for this. it has to stop, otherwise it will continue to happen in colleges around the world. from ok, a little bit more yesterday's reading on the house floor sipping fireball is not your crime. peeling off and discarding my underwear like a candy wrapper to insert your finger into my body is where you went wrong. why am i still explaining this? you said during the trial that i did not want to victimize her at all. that was just my attorney and his way of approaching the case. your attorney is not your skate goat. he represents you. say degradingney things? absolutely. he said
>> i'm a grad student at johns hopkins. host: tell us your thoughts. heard a caller say that his daughter was in college and we need to sit down and talk with our daughters about what they should and should not be doing. i think we need to stop laming the women for what men are doing. theird to sit down with sons and they need to tell their sons that they need to stop touching people who don't want to be touched. there has to be that munication. we cannot continue to blame women for this....
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Jun 16, 2016
06/16
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that study was recently done by researchers at johns hopkins university and the university of california-berkeley, saying to those doubters or skeptics the permit to purchase laws passed in connecticut in 1994 actually were a huge success for public safety. my colleague from connecticut has cited other evidence that shows laws work when they are enforced, and national laws are important because connecticut cannot itself create the kind of protections that our citizens deserve. borders are porous to trap people with guns. guns have no respect for safe boundaries, nor do the traffickers. so we need national laws to protect the citizens of every state. we are here because there is a national consensus in favor of those laws, and we know that we have an obligation and a historic opportunity to be change makers here in this body. the american people want change on both sides of the political aisle. we know that voters want washington to change. they want the political system to change. they want our laws to change, and they want the system of public financing to change so that the public interests, no
that study was recently done by researchers at johns hopkins university and the university of california-berkeley, saying to those doubters or skeptics the permit to purchase laws passed in connecticut in 1994 actually were a huge success for public safety. my colleague from connecticut has cited other evidence that shows laws work when they are enforced, and national laws are important because connecticut cannot itself create the kind of protections that our citizens deserve. borders are...
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Jun 29, 2016
06/16
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initiative and policy analyst at the rand cooperation and doctoral candidate in strategic studies at johns hopkinsonal studies. she has taken numerous research trips to afghanistan, the philippines and mali to study military institutions, bureaucracy and military doctrine and conducted extensive interview s and assisted with civilian operations. welcome, becky. [ applause ] and to moderate, we have defense council member lauren katzenberg. lauren is the co-founder and managing editor of the military publication task and purpose. she is also the editorial board of war on the rocks. she herself is a front line civilian as well, having worked in kabul from 2010 to 2012, and lauren ran a u.s. embassy founded grant to bring together the local media and journalism communities to create afghan television programs and execute awareness campaigns for nonprofits. so with that, i'll turn it over to lauren to start the forum. >> thank you. whether you deploy to a conflict zone as a service member, an aid worker, a government employee, a journalist or a contractor, that experience stays with you forever. it br
initiative and policy analyst at the rand cooperation and doctoral candidate in strategic studies at johns hopkinsonal studies. she has taken numerous research trips to afghanistan, the philippines and mali to study military institutions, bureaucracy and military doctrine and conducted extensive interview s and assisted with civilian operations. welcome, becky. [ applause ] and to moderate, we have defense council member lauren katzenberg. lauren is the co-founder and managing editor of the...
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Jun 21, 2016
06/16
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i didn't read this but it turns out johns hopkins, the first hospital in america to do sex change surgery, quit doing it years ago because they found we're not helping, and we're probably hurting, so we should not, and as they have said, be cutting up normal organs. this is serious and i know it's unpleasant to talk about. that's why so often we lose. people are afraid of being called crazy or phobic of some kind. y'all, i have one phobia. and that's a god phobia. i have a fear of god and we're told that's the beginning of wisdom. i got a long way to go, but that's the beginning. [ applause ] he finishes his article. he says at the heart of the problem is confusion over the nature of the transgender sex change is biologically impossible. you hear that? this is what one transgenders sex surgery victim says is guy who knows more about transgender. he's saying sex change is biologically impossible. people who undergo reassignment surgery do not change from men to women or vice versa. they become feminized men or masculinized women claiming this is civil rights matter and encouraging surgical
i didn't read this but it turns out johns hopkins, the first hospital in america to do sex change surgery, quit doing it years ago because they found we're not helping, and we're probably hurting, so we should not, and as they have said, be cutting up normal organs. this is serious and i know it's unpleasant to talk about. that's why so often we lose. people are afraid of being called crazy or phobic of some kind. y'all, i have one phobia. and that's a god phobia. i have a fear of god and we're...