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in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art but perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and provenance and working with source communities and wanted from the beginning to make that the topic of the exhibition. over. so this is the pedestal where we're going to be putting. the throne from the bottom kingdom. remarkable object it brings to a point a lot of this sort of questions that people have about the colonial era. the man do you knew throne was a birthday present from the king joy in cameroon to kaiser vilhelm the 2nd a genuine royal gift or a payment of tribute to the colonial power i always thought it was a gift to the kaiser is that not the story well it is that it's
in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art but perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and...
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jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of the man to gain a throne. how did people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who reigns during the german colonial era. of. the german colonial system income was violent and characterized by deceit trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because king joy offered an alliance to the drums the situation in the bottom kingdom was comparatively peaceful. was one of the most skilled political actors that i've had the chance to study he tirelessly sought to preserve his own autonomy within the very difficult political situation that was presented by the colonial era. the palace administrator a staff member close to the sultan is involved in preserving the cultural heritage of the body. the men do you know that is missing here in the throne room is a thorny issue. shockley's we keep us use every day that goes by we are obliged to talk about this throne ya
jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of the man to gain a throne. how did people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who reigns during the german colonial era. of. the german colonial system income was violent and characterized by deceit trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because king joy offered an alliance to the drums...
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jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of amanda yang thrown. how do people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who range during the german colonial era. the german colonial system income was violent and characterized by deceit trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because king offered an alliance to the drums the situation in the bomb kingdom was comparatively peaceful. was one of the most skilled political actors that i've had the chance to study he tirelessly sought to preserve his own autonomy within the very difficult political situation that was presented by the colonial era. the palace administrator a staff member close to the sultan is involved in preserving the cultural heritage of the. men do you know that is missing here in the throne room is a thorny issue. shockley should we keep us he was every day that goes by we are obliged to talk about this throne yadi the touris
jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of amanda yang thrown. how do people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who range during the german colonial era. the german colonial system income was violent and characterized by deceit trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because king offered an alliance to the drums the situation in...
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in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and provenance and working with source communities and wanted from the beginning to make that the topic of the exhibition. so this is the pedestal we're going to be putting. the throne from the kingdom. of mark boal object it brings to a point a lot of the sort of questions that people have about the colonial era. the man do yet a new throne was a birthday present from the king joy in cameroon to kaiser vilhelm the 2nd a genuine royal gift or a payment of tribute to the colonial power i always thought it was a gift to the kaiser is that not the story well it is but it's gifts are complicated
in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and...
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jonathan fine has headed the ethnological museum since 2020 we've had the opportunity to follow some of his. over the last 5 years in this ring how will the humble forum deal with the burden of its colonial legacy. in 2021 we accompanied jonathan fine on a tour of the almost complete but largely empty exhibition rooms together with the exhibition designer tim ventimiglia. these collections or things that when we look at them today are very difficult i want to cite a colleague who said if we looked at these museums today we would probably never build them and if we looked at these collections today we would probably never assemble them but they're here they exist and we now have to decide what to do with them. the museum complex and dolma the location of west berlin ethnological museum for almost 50 years began preparing in 2016 for the move to the humbled forum. we 1st met jonathan fine during this transition period at the time he was the curator for west africa cameroon. as well as the coordinator of providence research at the museum and the world around us is the product of 500 yea
jonathan fine has headed the ethnological museum since 2020 we've had the opportunity to follow some of his. over the last 5 years in this ring how will the humble forum deal with the burden of its colonial legacy. in 2021 we accompanied jonathan fine on a tour of the almost complete but largely empty exhibition rooms together with the exhibition designer tim ventimiglia. these collections or things that when we look at them today are very difficult i want to cite a colleague who said if we...
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in 2017 we a company jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of the man to gain a throne. how do people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who reigns during the german colonial era. in the case. of. the german colonial system in cameroon was violent and characterized back to seat trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because king joy offered an alliance to the drums the situation in the bottom kingdom was comparatively peaceful. was one of the most skilled political actors that i've had the chance to study he tirelessly sought to preserve his own autonomy within the very difficult political situation that was presented by the colonial era. the palace administrator a staff member close to the sultan is involved in preserving the cultural heritage of the. men do you know that is missing here in the throne room is a thorny issue. question we keep press use every day that goes by we are obliged to talk about th
in 2017 we a company jonathan fine to cameroon on the traces of the man to gain a throne. how do people here feel about their colonial history. if the throne had not ended up in berlin it would belong today to this man. joya the sultan of them and grandson of king joy who reigns during the german colonial era. in the case. of. the german colonial system in cameroon was violent and characterized back to seat trickery and manipulation as well as the use of military and political force because...
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in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art but perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and provenance and working with source communities and wanted from the beginning to make that the topic of the exhibition. over. so this is the pedestal we're going to be putting. the throne from the bottom kingdom for a mark of all objective brings to a point a lot of this sort of questions that people have about the colonial era. the man do you thrown was a birthday present from the king joy in cameroon to kaiser vilhelm the 2nd a genuine royal gift or a payment of tribute to the colonial power i always thought it was a gift to the kaiser is that not the story well it is but it's gifts
in 2017 jonathan fine curated the exhibition beyond compare and berlin's botha museum. it juxtaposed to european mostly christian influenced art with works of art from africa posing a fundamental question are we still seeing the world through a colonial lens when for instance we regard christian cult object as art but perceive african art as cult objects. can the humble form question and change such perceptions. many curators have spent decades working on these topics of social justice and...
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and that history does need to be told in the humbled forum while preparing the move to the forum jonathan fine joined conservators from the museum to inspect some of the collections most controversial exhibits that the name brands of. these masterpieces from the former kingdom of the nina in what is now nigeria were looted by british forces in 1907 the artifacts were later sold on the art market. these brands and ivory sculptures have become an acid test of whether the humbled forum is genuinely prepared to take a new approach and enter a dialogue with former colonies as equals for decades nigeria has called for the return of these treasures only now in 2021 are things beginning to happen how does the process of restitution work and why are museums so reluctant to proceed with it . just for fun better competition as a rule the 1st and most important step in returning artworks is making recommendations as to what we want to give back that has to be decided by the board of the prussian cultural heritage foundation is used to that's not something that the president or the museum director can desi
and that history does need to be told in the humbled forum while preparing the move to the forum jonathan fine joined conservators from the museum to inspect some of the collections most controversial exhibits that the name brands of. these masterpieces from the former kingdom of the nina in what is now nigeria were looted by british forces in 1907 the artifacts were later sold on the art market. these brands and ivory sculptures have become an acid test of whether the humbled forum is...
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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jonathan: i believe that story. tom: go have a six pack. you will be fine. jonathan: good morning to you all.is "bloomberg." ♪ >> the white house is considering to double u.s. previous commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions stop the biting administration may propose to reduce emissions by 50% or more by the end of the decade. that would require dramatic changes in the power, transportation, and other sectors. potential boycott of next year's winter a liv-ex in beijing could be the next big idle between the u.s. and china. the white house as they not discussing any joint boycott with potential allies but china has gone on the offensive and says any attacks by the u.s. to criticize china over human rights would flop. in recent months, twitters held talks about buying clubhouse. bloomberg going the companies discussed potential valuation of roughly $4 billion. discussions are no longer going on and it is unclear why they stalled. indonesian president is backing a push to expand the central bank in an exclusive interview with bloomberg saying should not just manage the currency but should als
jonathan: i believe that story. tom: go have a six pack. you will be fine. jonathan: good morning to you all.is "bloomberg." ♪ >> the white house is considering to double u.s. previous commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions stop the biting administration may propose to reduce emissions by 50% or more by the end of the decade. that would require dramatic changes in the power, transportation, and other sectors. potential boycott of next year's winter a liv-ex in beijing...
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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jonathan: what am i talking about? she'll be fine. lisa: you didn't say that to me. i got the second dose, i came into work and felt absolutely terrible. lisa was given the second dose the day of, when i felt terrible, and lisa walks in and says, i'm a mother. i can take it on. i'm like come all right. then 24 hours later, how did you feel? lisa: actually, during the show i started getting a chill and shrinking down. [laughter] jonathan: mark mccormick joining us now, td global head of fx strategy. ultimately, what are you looking for now? mark: it's an interesting story where the euro peaked to start. it is u.s. exceptionalism, the vaccine story. although things were not in the price when we came through, looking too short euro trade in december. what we see now is quite interesting. april was a reversal of some of these themes. it was very good for commodities and the story that the fed is still going to experiment with average inflation targeting, which means they want to keep the expansion moving stronger and inflation rates at bay. i think where we are now is ve
jonathan: what am i talking about? she'll be fine. lisa: you didn't say that to me. i got the second dose, i came into work and felt absolutely terrible. lisa was given the second dose the day of, when i felt terrible, and lisa walks in and says, i'm a mother. i can take it on. i'm like come all right. then 24 hours later, how did you feel? lisa: actually, during the show i started getting a chill and shrinking down. [laughter] jonathan: mark mccormick joining us now, td global head of fx...
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Apr 21, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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jonathan: i don't think so. but if these fines how much do they have to pay to unravel this? are they the ones that have to pay, or does everyone have to pay? tom: at the apple show last night, romaine bostick and i were talking about it, i think remain looks good with a pink imac. jonathan: i'll stick with blue. romaine, take the floor. it's yours. romaine: apple shares not doing a lot this morning. netflix down 8.5%. we've been talking about it all morning, about lower subscriber growth in q1 and the forecast for q2. you have a growth stock that is not quite growing, but a balance sheet that is improving. keep in mind, net income did double year-over-year. furthermore, the company did say it is going to spend about $17 billion this year on new programming, and it won't actually have to borrow any of that money to spend on that. that should be relatively good news to investors, but keep in mind, you're talking about a company that, five or six quarters ago, we weren't talking about paramount+ or discovery or any of these others.
jonathan: i don't think so. but if these fines how much do they have to pay to unravel this? are they the ones that have to pay, or does everyone have to pay? tom: at the apple show last night, romaine bostick and i were talking about it, i think remain looks good with a pink imac. jonathan: i'll stick with blue. romaine, take the floor. it's yours. romaine: apple shares not doing a lot this morning. netflix down 8.5%. we've been talking about it all morning, about lower subscriber growth in q1...
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Apr 12, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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jonathan: did you see the response to alibaba to the record fine received? compare and contrast how a u.s. tech company might. [laughter] after receiving a record antitrust fine from china, alibaba said we would not have achieved our growth without sound government regulation and oversight. for this, we are full of gratitude and respect. that is how you deal with regulatory issues in china, lisa. [laughter] and here in the united states, you anticipate a very different response, wouldn't you? tom: i think it is a new world. the same with the changes in hong kong we have seen and all the politics involved. over the weekend, all of the discussions and tensions between taiwan and china. and i am sorry, i will the financial to be into the political debate. jonathan: can you imagine mark zuckerberg? lisa: please, can we have another, and do more? that is what i was laughing at, thinking about that quote and how much the pboc has their hands in big tech in china. jonathan: coming up in the 8:00 hour, looking forward to catching up with bill dudley. from new york,
jonathan: did you see the response to alibaba to the record fine received? compare and contrast how a u.s. tech company might. [laughter] after receiving a record antitrust fine from china, alibaba said we would not have achieved our growth without sound government regulation and oversight. for this, we are full of gratitude and respect. that is how you deal with regulatory issues in china, lisa. [laughter] and here in the united states, you anticipate a very different response, wouldn't you?...
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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finely balanced. yesterday, the deputy chief medical officer for england, jonathan van tam, said the decision to offer the astrazeneca vaccine was a course correction, but not about stopping or delaying jabs. vaccines continue to be the way out for the uk. they continue to be the way in which we can get our lives back to normal, and our economy opened up again in the shortest time possible. so the message remains clear — everybody who has already had a first dose of the astrazeneca vaccine should receive a second dose of the same brand, except for the very small number who experienced blood clots after their first vaccination. those who advise the government on vaccines want us all to understand the subtleties of risk in medicine. even aspirin, for example, has an incredibly rare condition — which is fatal in children — occasionally associated with it. so these things... they're not unusual. the risk balance is something we have to communicate because it is a little... sometimes a little difficult to get that concept across accurately. questions remain, however, about what this modified advice will do
finely balanced. yesterday, the deputy chief medical officer for england, jonathan van tam, said the decision to offer the astrazeneca vaccine was a course correction, but not about stopping or delaying jabs. vaccines continue to be the way out for the uk. they continue to be the way in which we can get our lives back to normal, and our economy opened up again in the shortest time possible. so the message remains clear — everybody who has already had a first dose of the astrazeneca vaccine...
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Apr 12, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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jonathan: i think they got the message, looking at the letter from the head of the company following that record fine not have achieved our growth without the critical oversight and support for their constituents that there have that have been -- that have been crucial. for that we are full of gratitude and respect." are they just at the mercy of whatever they want? enda: no doubt, it is an all power administration in china. when the regulators crackdown on the sector, that is what goes. the fintech giants have been pushing this campaign for a while now. it is taken more than half of alibaba's valuation since mid-october. i think they will turn the course and engage in an even tougher crackdown. it is now going to be treated more like a financial company vented tech company, and that is an example of trying to bring things into line. they've got to make sure they are marching all towards the same national goal. jonathan: for many of the big players, they can't get in. do you think there's a message here for how they operate internationally as well? enda: i think there is. as you mentioned, the market
jonathan: i think they got the message, looking at the letter from the head of the company following that record fine not have achieved our growth without the critical oversight and support for their constituents that there have that have been -- that have been crucial. for that we are full of gratitude and respect." are they just at the mercy of whatever they want? enda: no doubt, it is an all power administration in china. when the regulators crackdown on the sector, that is what goes....
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Apr 4, 2021
04/21
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jonathan capehart on the emotional testimony. >> i can tell you this, that my brother was walking just fine, he was laughing, talking, before derek chauvin put his knee on his neck for nine minutes. that was sad. we don't want that for any other family across america. we will protest. we will do everything we can to try to stop more george floyds. >>> also new today, a shocking investigation from "the new york times" finding that donald trump's supporters who thought they were donating only once to his 2021 campaign were actually charged repeatedly. the campaign was forced to issue $122 million in refunds. "the times"' peter baker will join me with that in just a moment. >>> also at 12:15, something remarkable is happening at the trial of derek chauvin and the question we will pose to a former police officer is this: will it be enough to deliver what the people of minnesota consider to be justice? >>> at 1:30 p.m., nbc's mehdi hasan will tackle the gop matt gaetz problem. he'll react to something scathing the congressman told me yesterday about gaetz. >>> and many are taking 36 minutes as a small sign of hope for post-pandemic li
jonathan capehart on the emotional testimony. >> i can tell you this, that my brother was walking just fine, he was laughing, talking, before derek chauvin put his knee on his neck for nine minutes. that was sad. we don't want that for any other family across america. we will protest. we will do everything we can to try to stop more george floyds. >>> also new today, a shocking investigation from "the new york times" finding that donald trump's supporters who thought...
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Apr 29, 2021
04/21
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KQED
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fine. sure, i would have preferred to walk on the moon. but that really seemed a trivial distinction at the time. i was very pleased with my responsibilities on the flight. jonathans responsibilities included making sure armstrong and aldrin could get home. if something had gone wrong during the ascent from the lunar surface, collins would be there only help. when the three returned to earth, they had to deal with the adulation in their own way. like armstrong, collins didn't like the limelight and rejected the idea they were celebrities. he saw the moon missions as a great collective effort. >> i remember so vividly the trip that the three of us took after the flight of apollo 11. we wereurprised that every city we visited, we were not greeted with, well, you americans finally did it. we were greeted with, we did it, we, humanity, human beings have put our talents together and done it. jonathan: michael collins left nasa soon after coming home, though he continued in public service. 's death comes as the u.s. space agency plans a return to the lunar surface with new rockets and space capsules. a new generation of astronauts will soon walk in apollo's footsteps.
fine. sure, i would have preferred to walk on the moon. but that really seemed a trivial distinction at the time. i was very pleased with my responsibilities on the flight. jonathans responsibilities included making sure armstrong and aldrin could get home. if something had gone wrong during the ascent from the lunar surface, collins would be there only help. when the three returned to earth, they had to deal with the adulation in their own way. like armstrong, collins didn't like the limelight...
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jonathan, don't wander too far, my friend. we'll be tapping your finenvestment brain a little later in the show and some other developments. including what is going on in the baseball front today. of course in texas it will be a packed stadium, 40,000 plus at arlington, as baseball returns certainly in a very big way. the first of a jam-packed stadium to do so. but here is what is interesting about all of this. it comes in the middle of major league baseball boycotting atlanta. now turn it around. what if people started boycotting major league baseball? ♪. seeing blood when you brush or floss can be a sign of early gum damage. new parodontax active gum repair kills plaque bacteria at the gum line to help keep the gum seal tight. new parodontax active gum repair toothpaste. i really hope that this vaccine can get me one step closer to him. to a huge wedding. to give high fives to our patients. to hug my students. with every vaccine, cvs is working to bring you one step closer to a better tomorrow. these are the people who work on the front lines. they ne
jonathan, don't wander too far, my friend. we'll be tapping your finenvestment brain a little later in the show and some other developments. including what is going on in the baseball front today. of course in texas it will be a packed stadium, 40,000 plus at arlington, as baseball returns certainly in a very big way. the first of a jam-packed stadium to do so. but here is what is interesting about all of this. it comes in the middle of major league baseball boycotting atlanta. now turn it...
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Apr 23, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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fine or whatever the case may be. and it hurts me. so at this moment, you know, the reality is we have a lot of work to do in minnesota. >> jonathan masonpreciate you coming to us. >>> now to columbus, ohio. police identified the officer involved and he's been taken off the street as is normal in a situation like this. the president of the local palacio union offered condolences to the family. cnn's jason carroll is in columbus tonight. you spoke with his mother tonight? what did she say? >> reporter: as you can imagine, it was a painful and emotional interview. bryant's mother made it clear to us that the reason she sat down with us is she doesn't want the narrative going forward to be about the altercation or about the officer who fired the fatal shots. in fact, she made it clear that she did not want to focus on that. what she does want to focus on at this point is the memory of her daughter. >> she was taken from me. she was taken from me. >> what would you like people to know about your daughter? >> i want the world to know that ma'khia was beautiful. she was humble. she loved to look after people. she loved her brothers and sister
fine or whatever the case may be. and it hurts me. so at this moment, you know, the reality is we have a lot of work to do in minnesota. >> jonathan masonpreciate you coming to us. >>> now to columbus, ohio. police identified the officer involved and he's been taken off the street as is normal in a situation like this. the president of the local palacio union offered condolences to the family. cnn's jason carroll is in columbus tonight. you spoke with his mother tonight? what did...
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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finely balanced. yesterday, the deputy chief medical officer for england, jonathan van—tam, said the decision to offerative to the astrazeneca vaccine was a course correction, but not about stopping or delaying. vaccines continue to be the way out for the uk. they continue to be the way in which we can get our lives back to normal, and our economy opened up again in the shortest time possible. so the message remains clear — everybody who has already had a first dose of the astrazeneca vaccine should receive a second dose of the same brand, except for the very small number who experience blood clots after their first vaccination. those who advise the government on vaccines want us all to understand the subtleties of risk in medicine. even aspirin, for example, has an incredibly rare condition — which is fatal in children — occasionally associated with it. so these things are... they're not unusual. the risk balance is something we have to communicate because it is a little... sometimes a little difficult to get that concept across accurately. questions remain, however, about what this modified advice w
finely balanced. yesterday, the deputy chief medical officer for england, jonathan van—tam, said the decision to offerative to the astrazeneca vaccine was a course correction, but not about stopping or delaying. vaccines continue to be the way out for the uk. they continue to be the way in which we can get our lives back to normal, and our economy opened up again in the shortest time possible. so the message remains clear — everybody who has already had a first dose of the astrazeneca...
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Apr 23, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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fine. and or whatever the case may be. and, you know, and it hurts me. so at this moment, you know, the reality is, we have a lot of work to do in minnesota. >> jonathan masonappreciate you joining us on this difficult day. thank you. >>> now, to columbus, ohio, and the killing of 16-year-old ma'khia bryant as she seemed to lunge at another young woman with a knife in her hand. as you know, police quickly released body-cam video of the incident. nicholas reardon. he was hired in december, 2019. he's been taken off street duty pen pending further investigation, as is normal in a situation like this. the president of the local police union has offered condolences to the family. cnn's jason carroll is in columbus for us, tonight. so, jason, you spoke with ma'khia bryant's mother today, paula bryant, what did she say? >> well, anderson, as you can imagine, it was very painful. very emotional interview. bryant's mother made it very clear, to us, that the reason why she sat down with us is because she doesn't want the narrative, going forward, to be about the altercation or about the officer who fired the fatal shots. in fact, she made it clear that she did not w
fine. and or whatever the case may be. and, you know, and it hurts me. so at this moment, you know, the reality is, we have a lot of work to do in minnesota. >> jonathan masonappreciate you joining us on this difficult day. thank you. >>> now, to columbus, ohio, and the killing of 16-year-old ma'khia bryant as she seemed to lunge at another young woman with a knife in her hand. as you know, police quickly released body-cam video of the incident. nicholas reardon. he was hired in...
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Apr 12, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> jonathan lemire is here and has a question -- >> oh, i'm so sorry. go ahead. >> that's fine.art of this moment that we're seeing. it is one of the most striking features of january 6th, when you look at combing through the videos, looking at the tally of arrestees from the 6th, is that there are prominent groups there. there's a dozen proud boys, a handful of militia members, oathkeepers, 3 percenters, members of other extremist groups we've been tracking for a while. but far more people who have no obvious ties to any explicitly extremist organization. so what you're seeing, and people who we've talked to from dhs and the fbi and elsewhere, they have kind of a simple framework that they use for understanding how radicalization happens. and they talk about different kind of pools of people. so a vulnerable population who's been radicalized by political forces and political actors who find that to be useful, which we have with trump, and then small groups of extremists who are recruiting them into violence. you can see proud boys breaking a window, leading a charge through the
. >> jonathan lemire is here and has a question -- >> oh, i'm so sorry. go ahead. >> that's fine.art of this moment that we're seeing. it is one of the most striking features of january 6th, when you look at combing through the videos, looking at the tally of arrestees from the 6th, is that there are prominent groups there. there's a dozen proud boys, a handful of militia members, oathkeepers, 3 percenters, members of other extremist groups we've been tracking for a while. but...
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Apr 23, 2021
04/21
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jonathan, you're all right. thanks for joining us. >> take care. stuart: now, you had -- susan: microsoft is reporting on tuesday, and analysts are expecting a killer quarter. i think you're fineorks, up 4%, silicon laboratories, up 10%. susan: yeah. one of the leading performers, today, the infrastructure and automotive -- $2.75 billion in cash, which i was surprised for. makes chips. i think they supply apple, from my recent memory. now, this also mean that skyworks will get into 5g and electric cars as well. win/win for both. check out harley davidson getting a downgrade from morgan stanley to underweight, only worth $38 so you're going to lose $10 from here. it's expensive after it hit a three-year high, and investors are underappreciating the challenges ahead. sketchers, you know what they are, right? have you ever bought a pair? am i asking the wrong -- stuart: oh, that's a type of shoe. it's not a shoe store -- susan: it's a brand. mostly for teenagers and high schoolers, but they beat on top and bottom lines. strong overseas sales helping. and finally, honeywell, better sales, better profit. aerospace sales were down, strength and productivity in safety, but here's a p
jonathan, you're all right. thanks for joining us. >> take care. stuart: now, you had -- susan: microsoft is reporting on tuesday, and analysts are expecting a killer quarter. i think you're fineorks, up 4%, silicon laboratories, up 10%. susan: yeah. one of the leading performers, today, the infrastructure and automotive -- $2.75 billion in cash, which i was surprised for. makes chips. i think they supply apple, from my recent memory. now, this also mean that skyworks will get into 5g and...