24
24
Jan 6, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 24
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know. it explains everything to me. it makes me feel good. i'm all in the space, you know, it takes me of this in the world and put me somewhere else where i have no worries. i've got nothing worry about. it's just all me no crossing the line, finishing the line it's not about me winning but it's about me just fulfilling, you know that purpose, you know that. and it makes me feel free to an extent where i stop understanding myself. it took to a process where i'll say, he's a healing process, cause even when i'm being told, you know, women enough, you don't belong to the sports, you a cheat, but when i do that, it's like a moonwalk, you know, i feel like a michael jackson seal this that understand and that's what i rock the best is running and while football it makes me you question the little things soccer and in soccer you know i played a like i'm sometimes when i strike if i don't score goals i get blamed you know when i'm in the middle field if this supports me it's a play. if i am a def
know. it explains everything to me. it makes me feel good. i'm all in the space, you know, it takes me of this in the world and put me somewhere else where i have no worries. i've got nothing worry about. it's just all me no crossing the line, finishing the line it's not about me winning but it's about me just fulfilling, you know that purpose, you know that. and it makes me feel free to an extent where i stop understanding myself. it took to a process where i'll say, he's a healing process,...
18
18
Jan 13, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 18
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it's hard to pin it down, you know, whether it was, you know, whether it was ritual, you know, which one it was spider-man, you know, iron man. i mean, some of them were good, actually. the iron man movies are pretty good. and some of the spider-man movies are great. like, you know, any genre, there are good ones and bad ones, but on the whole it just got to be one after another after another, and there wasn't much else on and so that that's really prompted my move to tv. you know, i want to go back for back to the history again in a bit. but first i want to ask you a question about the here and now. so we we just saw in hollywood a pair of pretty bruising labor strikes by by writers and actors that's been resolved. but there was a lot of fallout, a lot of. difficulty met by both sides for the for the talent. certainly. and even you could argue for the companies going through this. you've got big players like disney and warner that are under a lot of financial pressure now. and there's this feeling in hollywood that everyone's trimming costs, reining in production deals. it's it's a
it's hard to pin it down, you know, whether it was, you know, whether it was ritual, you know, which one it was spider-man, you know, iron man. i mean, some of them were good, actually. the iron man movies are pretty good. and some of the spider-man movies are great. like, you know, any genre, there are good ones and bad ones, but on the whole it just got to be one after another after another, and there wasn't much else on and so that that's really prompted my move to tv. you know, i want to go...
46
46
Jan 4, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 46
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know terms of, you know, mask. but he certainly lost the, you know, people a lot of people in this room that question and others that so yeah i think there were there were i think there were other things i think where i almost baked and i think like you know china is becoming a giant partner and is he pretty hard to, you know, stop that opening there and? rubin was, you know where he played a role, which i don't fully understand. but boy, goldman sachs and all the wall street firms, what they really wanted was to be able to to capitalize. and at market ties, the chinese state enterprises, you know, and that was like a and then the chinese government wanted to do that and they wanted to do that. it was a kind of almost overdetermined. so i could, you know, other things as well. and what you had so other yeah, maybe we can take one more of mine and then i want to make sure we get to the audience so, so political institutions so you thinking about the structure of the american state, what really they were to institute
know terms of, you know, mask. but he certainly lost the, you know, people a lot of people in this room that question and others that so yeah i think there were there were i think there were other things i think where i almost baked and i think like you know china is becoming a giant partner and is he pretty hard to, you know, stop that opening there and? rubin was, you know where he played a role, which i don't fully understand. but boy, goldman sachs and all the wall street firms, what they...
19
19
Jan 28, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 19
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you know, if i knew that, i'd be i don't know. i mean. well, i don't know.a tom frieden, the former head of the cdc, was very right when he said, you know, you can surge a lot of things, but trust is the one thing that can't be served. it has to exist beforehand and, you know, we have a long history of no trust in this country in the medical system. i mean, obviously, for black americans, black american men, tuskegee was the classic example of the government doing an unbelievably untrustworthy, horrible thing that is letting hundreds of black american men can men linger and die of syphilis so that it could study how syphilis killed you and that that created great hesitancy to take the vaccine back in the early days, you know, among black men, when when it was created, you know, but in many country, you know, the average american doesn't the health care system in one way in this country, the drugs are ridiculously expensive and they're ridiculously expensive because the pharma companies have congress in their pockets and, you know, nobody can find a way to fo
you know, if i knew that, i'd be i don't know. i mean. well, i don't know.a tom frieden, the former head of the cdc, was very right when he said, you know, you can surge a lot of things, but trust is the one thing that can't be served. it has to exist beforehand and, you know, we have a long history of no trust in this country in the medical system. i mean, obviously, for black americans, black american men, tuskegee was the classic example of the government doing an unbelievably untrustworthy,...
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9.0
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and it, because, you know, it doesn't respect elections as a means for, for, you know, knowing when it's times out. and it's time for the other luck to come back into power. and so, you know, over time it is, will prove a set of failed doctrines. but you know, the difficulty is the risk, you know, a risk that donald trump spoken to in the us. for example, if you're winning an election but then tearing up so many of the sort of soft rules of democracy practices. if democracy, by the time the next election comes around, the media is not flat, is, is less free. quotes have been stuff with, you know, pro trump judges of state rules being rewritten in ways that limit the affective franchise. and so there is a risk that or 3rd period is getting out and then pull the ladder out behind them to make sure nobody can clamber up and replace. so what would be a positive outlook of all the election space been talking about in 2024 looked like for the, the bulk received from your point of view. well, it would be, you know, a set of elections where, you know, popular concerns did come through and it way
and it, because, you know, it doesn't respect elections as a means for, for, you know, knowing when it's times out. and it's time for the other luck to come back into power. and so, you know, over time it is, will prove a set of failed doctrines. but you know, the difficulty is the risk, you know, a risk that donald trump spoken to in the us. for example, if you're winning an election but then tearing up so many of the sort of soft rules of democracy practices. if democracy, by the time the...
18
18
Jan 28, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 18
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you know. and i was sitting in a chair the entire time right, so i was like, okay, something's happening. but was, it was beautiful and complicated like all of this? and meaningful and connected with the people? my family, i mean, i found out things from my family members that they didn't know about, like my our littles or my great grandparents, my a little thing i found that no one knew my grandmother would take it. one step up, my great left her husband when she was pregnant with my grandmother and her abusive husband's name was alfonso. so none of us i mean, no one who connected these dots. my grandmother's first son was named she named him alfonso, and no one did really connected different things that she had named them after her father. that was completely strange. they had no relation ship with and just again just seeing these parts, all of us being like oh, and you know, incidentally, when my mom later left her own abusive husband when she was adpregnant, again, we knew these things that
you know. and i was sitting in a chair the entire time right, so i was like, okay, something's happening. but was, it was beautiful and complicated like all of this? and meaningful and connected with the people? my family, i mean, i found out things from my family members that they didn't know about, like my our littles or my great grandparents, my a little thing i found that no one knew my grandmother would take it. one step up, my great left her husband when she was pregnant with my...
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and then you know, how you had administered, go out and address, you know, even just saying, you know, there's no more money, but just down the street. the next ministry is that we need money for you crate. i mean, that is a love, terrible situation. but anyway, as i always say don't, that's what barbara and stuart you're exactly right. so you do have the, the jo and follows. and then let's remember there's also the farmers in, in poland and hungary is to lock in romania boiler for them as they were being hit by the policy over allowing uh bolen to dump its uh grain in the european markets. the same with the truck as so again, this is a policy completely out adverse to europeans interest, and yet the leads continue to uh, down this path, you know, they go to, um dob was congratulating one another and then wonder what, what else can we do for ukraine, um emmanuel, my call when you have elizabeth a historically on popular use of either shopping. uh, really the, the decks on the uh, the big chairs on the titanic and um, and what's on his mind waiting on it and what we, what, what more ca
and then you know, how you had administered, go out and address, you know, even just saying, you know, there's no more money, but just down the street. the next ministry is that we need money for you crate. i mean, that is a love, terrible situation. but anyway, as i always say don't, that's what barbara and stuart you're exactly right. so you do have the, the jo and follows. and then let's remember there's also the farmers in, in poland and hungary is to lock in romania boiler for them as they...
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know, when something need to know in 1945 something. and that everybody agrees with that . but when it comes to, when things start that, so you know, we can say those type of world war started in 1939. well, the chinese would say, well, the japanese were built in bothering us before that, i mean with these certain discrete moments are very difficult when you're going into accounts like and actually when you think about it since 1945, a lot of complex really don't come to an end with notable exceptions, routing of the americans and, and southeast asia. but, you know, if we look at the architecture of the world, you know, last year and now russia is going to be a heading breaks this year. these are new vehicles here, and it seems to me that when we look at the case of the condemnation of israel around the world for what it's doing in gaza and the us never really couldn't nato named land never really could get the world on fire for ukraine, that's because, you know, the g 7 represents circle interest and it's not the interest, nominally sp
know, when something need to know in 1945 something. and that everybody agrees with that . but when it comes to, when things start that, so you know, we can say those type of world war started in 1939. well, the chinese would say, well, the japanese were built in bothering us before that, i mean with these certain discrete moments are very difficult when you're going into accounts like and actually when you think about it since 1945, a lot of complex really don't come to an end with notable...
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i know he's very good. you know it's heart wrenching. what's going on there, and i don't know, it was worth george blinking or the audience because why didn't this someone stand up and say, stop the war. but no one did. all they did was quite but quite quiet politely for the nonsense that he was safe. what i'm getting at here, of course, is a bill i'd like to present in the united states. joe biden has gotten to the point and now this is getting to the point of observe, well, there are different versions of the two's solution. ok, that's news to me and then meanwhile the same new cycle, the prime minister. ready real benjamin netanyahu says, well, they will never be a 2 stage solution here. it's a game of chicken or who is the biggest full charge? it is great, good question to who really does look the stupid is because the americans have been playing this game for many, many years, where the evidence also of claiming that they favor a 2 state solution the the way we would have to say some of the 2 state solution and never really spreadin
i know he's very good. you know it's heart wrenching. what's going on there, and i don't know, it was worth george blinking or the audience because why didn't this someone stand up and say, stop the war. but no one did. all they did was quite but quite quiet politely for the nonsense that he was safe. what i'm getting at here, of course, is a bill i'd like to present in the united states. joe biden has gotten to the point and now this is getting to the point of observe, well, there are...
15
15
Jan 21, 2024
01/24
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 15
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and you know, i guess maybe it's because, you know, the book is just so much weights into, you know, in a certain direction that, that the waiting would be wrong. if there was more levity, i, i honestly don't know, but i make decisions about, you know, for example, things like they're not being paragraph breaks. these are decisions that are really important. and i think that when you are writing a book and you make you make choices to play with the form and 2 things that are perhaps unconventional though it's not on conventional to have no paragraph mark is not on conventional tough, no quotation marks. there are many writers who have been doing this for quite some time, but you must justified in the meaning of the story. and the justifications are, are there, you know, the reader will find themselves imprisoned in this text in the same way that is in prison within her reality. there's just nowhere to turn. there's no reading space and, and, and at the same time, you know, those long sentences are a way of, of, inhabiting the moment of getting down to the harpies. of, of, of varies j
and you know, i guess maybe it's because, you know, the book is just so much weights into, you know, in a certain direction that, that the waiting would be wrong. if there was more levity, i, i honestly don't know, but i make decisions about, you know, for example, things like they're not being paragraph breaks. these are decisions that are really important. and i think that when you are writing a book and you make you make choices to play with the form and 2 things that are perhaps...
15
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border open, you know, you know, and, you know, george, he gets his own, his own war is uniquely own more. yeah, man. okay, so he'll go down in the history books, cried gentleman, that's all the time we i'm going to take my guess, americans and in budapest, and i want to thank our viewers for watching us here. are to see you next time. remember prospect rolls, the the breaking news, hey, on, on the international. at least 3 people are killed and several injured in the latest do. crating and selling of don't buy panko. boyles, the in the us over the killing of 3 of the soldiers, by drones in the middle east. but president find themselves to explain what he's going to do about that. the number of attacks on american led forces in the region has exceeded 150 seconds. folks. hope of these attacks the direct message to the administration about the level of the middle east towards us policy . and we do as president also sales to explain how we go to deal with the texas with value and what else are sees or distorting ways of one of the stakes that.
border open, you know, you know, and, you know, george, he gets his own, his own war is uniquely own more. yeah, man. okay, so he'll go down in the history books, cried gentleman, that's all the time we i'm going to take my guess, americans and in budapest, and i want to thank our viewers for watching us here. are to see you next time. remember prospect rolls, the the breaking news, hey, on, on the international. at least 3 people are killed and several injured in the latest do. crating and...
28
28
Jan 16, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
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you know. then i started actually giving it traction and, you know, reached to a couple of people and they connected me with my team and. here we are. that's how it. all came together. it was cathartic for me. write the book. i had a coauthor i wrote it with and we bumped heads a lot because i didn't like some the things that were in there. like i wouldn't say this and. i'm a big personality and i need to make sure that always comes to the forefront and you know i don't want to say people expect me to say with this is you know my my words a memoir my life and experiences. so the toughest part about writing the book was how to end it, because the world is still on fire. and i was to use my book as like a fire extinguisher, a but jesus christ, like how? and by the way. if anybody saw me on the view, that's how that's what i got censored on the view several times i said, jesus, that's you said, that's what i said. my parents were in the audience. i wasn't going, i was looking, i that's my word. va
you know. then i started actually giving it traction and, you know, reached to a couple of people and they connected me with my team and. here we are. that's how it. all came together. it was cathartic for me. write the book. i had a coauthor i wrote it with and we bumped heads a lot because i didn't like some the things that were in there. like i wouldn't say this and. i'm a big personality and i need to make sure that always comes to the forefront and you know i don't want to say people...
31
31
Jan 25, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 31
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you know. so so, you know, the ministry continue even in those camps. so if you have a second, maybe give us a sense of first, you know what is the role of the chaplains in this. as the military's put together new chapels are built. you know i occurred i was my wife and i were in one of these temporary world war two chapels up in fort by one of these soldiers who after the became a jesuit, you know, so, you know, his own faith had been increased in that. and so it was the last act of duty world two chaplain. so, you know his book certainly resonates, you know what did the everyday soldiers have contact with these chaplains and how did how did that out? so so contact really interesting some would go to chapel and it was catholics were very faithful about going to mass and protestants particularly were very envious of of of the catholic of the catholic catholic going so so devoutly to the to chapel services. -- tended to go less to chapel and more to high holidays like rosh hashanah pass, you kno
you know. so so, you know, the ministry continue even in those camps. so if you have a second, maybe give us a sense of first, you know what is the role of the chaplains in this. as the military's put together new chapels are built. you know i occurred i was my wife and i were in one of these temporary world war two chapels up in fort by one of these soldiers who after the became a jesuit, you know, so, you know, his own faith had been increased in that. and so it was the last act of duty world...
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you know. so, i mean i, it really is a, with both of our, this, that there is a lot of private interest in both. most people for me, you brokerage, how does bureaucracy work in the west right now? as, uh, he does not reduce the results. you know, the english know to save money will save bias or make people's lives better. they used to make an impression that you make an alpha for us, right? and the 2nd, you know, with the, you will never say anything for each plane. correct is repeat the same price. and you always say, you know, you get your price, salary, things may be going through the dogs. you know what you really do, what you want to be paid. you know, you will keep your call. so we have the same uh, the same all blade years things from them. you know, they compare rush hallmarks, you know, uh by the bad mazda of the same goals. and do you know of the images you did to the, i'm sure you heard this now. good from nikki haley. they'd be on october 7th. what happened because it was hooton's b
you know. so, i mean i, it really is a, with both of our, this, that there is a lot of private interest in both. most people for me, you brokerage, how does bureaucracy work in the west right now? as, uh, he does not reduce the results. you know, the english know to save money will save bias or make people's lives better. they used to make an impression that you make an alpha for us, right? and the 2nd, you know, with the, you will never say anything for each plane. correct is repeat the same...
36
36
Jan 23, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 36
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you know, i we we know we have read some biographers. we know the story. so george washington couldn't have possibly loved martha because it's a new name names in this book, historians that i do. he does. he does i'm not attacking anyone ends as a triangle he is no i don't know. it's attack irbs now attack whatsoever but yes. so the the standard story goes that george washington couldn't have possibly lost martha because she was an attractive but yet again sally. yeah because and then the action is impassioned amy sort of the prose. yeah, the prose of his life. but then when we get trade, when we jetted on all these seemingly common sensical conclusion and, and, and we look at the documents and we look at the context. so for sure, there was no romantic between george and martha, can we say that it's no revelation, but that was perhaps what in the 18th century was considered even more important and deeper, which was love based on happiness, not only romanticism, but on happiness and happiness in the 18th century meant something again, very concrete, very ma
you know, i we we know we have read some biographers. we know the story. so george washington couldn't have possibly loved martha because it's a new name names in this book, historians that i do. he does. he does i'm not attacking anyone ends as a triangle he is no i don't know. it's attack irbs now attack whatsoever but yes. so the the standard story goes that george washington couldn't have possibly lost martha because she was an attractive but yet again sally. yeah because and then the...
31
31
Jan 22, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 31
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you know, i we we know we have read some biographers. we know the story. so george washington couldn't have possibly loved martha because it's a new name names in this book, historians that i do. he does. he does i'm not attacking anyone ends as a triangle he is no i don't know. it's attack irbs now attack whatsoever but yes. so the the standard story goes that george washington couldn't have possibly lost martha because she was an attractive but yet again sally. yeah because and then the action is impassioned amy sort of the prose. yeah, the prose of his life. but then when we get trade, when we jetted on all these seemingly common sensical conclusion and, and, and we look at the documents and we look at the context. so for sure, there was no romantic between george and martha, can we say that it's no revelation, but that was perhaps what in the 18th century was considered even more important and deeper, which was love based on happiness, not only romanticism, but on happiness and happiness in the 18th century meant something again, very concrete, very ma
you know, i we we know we have read some biographers. we know the story. so george washington couldn't have possibly loved martha because it's a new name names in this book, historians that i do. he does. he does i'm not attacking anyone ends as a triangle he is no i don't know. it's attack irbs now attack whatsoever but yes. so the the standard story goes that george washington couldn't have possibly lost martha because she was an attractive but yet again sally. yeah because and then the...
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i mean, you know, as blog, you know, sponsored by around the who these folks, you know, but again, it is martin puts it out. i mean, they, they, they have moral support, all kinds of support, maybe diplomatic support. but i mean, that's kind of support that, that it ran can afford it has the law and, and the who these is not comparable with the united states that is with israel. but it's a way, i mean, again, you know, for, for a make for western public school thing is, well, you know, what do you use? well, what are you talking about? read? oh, i read that always extra, but they want to push george. yes, exactly. and i know without a question, there are many, many people in washington who are itching to have a war with iraq. that is, say they, you know, they, lately, they haven't quite got bad war with russia off the ground. you know, they were busy with that for the past couple of years, or maybe we can get one of the grown up with a wrong year. we have obviously vicky, hey, they isn't far from saying that lindsey graham is a brothers and the assumption on the line. all of this is,
i mean, you know, as blog, you know, sponsored by around the who these folks, you know, but again, it is martin puts it out. i mean, they, they, they have moral support, all kinds of support, maybe diplomatic support. but i mean, that's kind of support that, that it ran can afford it has the law and, and the who these is not comparable with the united states that is with israel. but it's a way, i mean, again, you know, for, for a make for western public school thing is, well, you know, what do...
41
41
Jan 25, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 41
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yeah, lily, i know, i know. i see. i see you there. you know, i am concerned because i don't know that there's a good model, have good models of popular culture presidents. there you can go online and google best fictional presidents and they'll give you a list. and jed bartlet usually wanted to selina meyer never makes it very high. moreover, all of the women who are depicted as presidents in popular culture do not typically rank very high. and in i think that's because of the way they're narratively constructed. so women commander in chief is a great example. she's not a partizan. they are depoliticized. bartlet you always knew he was a democrat, he was a proud democrat. he wore his liberalism on sleeve. that was great. even if you were a republican, presumably you could empathize or at least appreciate the character, right? but when you create these sort of vacuous, non partizan characters and then put them into partizan situations and then subject them all of these sexist bromides, right? and all of these sexist donald sutherland,
yeah, lily, i know, i know. i see. i see you there. you know, i am concerned because i don't know that there's a good model, have good models of popular culture presidents. there you can go online and google best fictional presidents and they'll give you a list. and jed bartlet usually wanted to selina meyer never makes it very high. moreover, all of the women who are depicted as presidents in popular culture do not typically rank very high. and in i think that's because of the way they're...
29
29
Jan 8, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 29
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you know?e taught me-- and back then it was two inch reels, reel to reel and you had to get it right the first take. and there wasn't a lot of money to burn on the studio time so i had to have it together before i even, you know, got in the booth. >> yeah, yeah. >> and you know, i just kind of took to it like a duck to water and you know, i've been doing it ever since. >> when did you really know you're a poet? >> well, i was inspired, you know, by all the people who opened doors for me including dr. yo-yo here. [laughter] >> you know, the first song i remember memorizing that i knew by heart was ll cool j, i'm bad. you know, and then you know, ice cube, nwa, you know, others would come to follow some of them i won't mention. but i stay up and watch -- it was a show, it was a channel called the box and i don't know how many of you are old enough to remember, some of you are old enough to remember. the box, you sit up all night and wait for your favorite video to come on and i'd stay up and watc
you know?e taught me-- and back then it was two inch reels, reel to reel and you had to get it right the first take. and there wasn't a lot of money to burn on the studio time so i had to have it together before i even, you know, got in the booth. >> yeah, yeah. >> and you know, i just kind of took to it like a duck to water and you know, i've been doing it ever since. >> when did you really know you're a poet? >> well, i was inspired, you know, by all the people who...
10
10.0
Jan 31, 2024
01/24
by
GBN
tv
eye 10
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how does she manage it don't know right don't it i don't know right i don't know, maybe go into know, now with what like that there what looks like proof that there are differences men and are differences between men and women. don't earn. get >> men don't just earn. get higher wages, they expect them to mail. students anticipate being paid 15% more than females in first job after in their first job after university study finds. so yeah , university study finds. so yeah, if you ask a young man if he's going to make it big, he goes, yeah, of course i am. and the women say, oh, i don't know. i'm sorry or something like that. so no dodi just like you no one's ever dodi just like you . well, no ever studied it . well, no one's ever studied it before . but have told before. but i could have told you. mean, it's i don't know, you. i mean, it's i don't know, it's that looking it's good that they're looking at gender pay gap at this. uh, the gender pay gap is. in britain. at this. uh, the gender pay gap iswould in britain. at this. uh, the gender pay gap iswould argue in britain. at this. uh,
how does she manage it don't know right don't it i don't know right i don't know, maybe go into know, now with what like that there what looks like proof that there are differences men and are differences between men and women. don't earn. get >> men don't just earn. get higher wages, they expect them to mail. students anticipate being paid 15% more than females in first job after in their first job after university study finds. so yeah , university study finds. so yeah, if you ask a...
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Jan 24, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 38
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i know i did. and compared to other addresses where one of the most prominent moments of his presidency was when he in the east wing of the white house, walked down that hallway with the red carpet in, the big gold doors, and announced to american public that osama laden had just been killed. that was a very powerful moment of his presidency, and that was a where he was very comfortable and. you could tell how important it was, but he did another address, the oval office in 2016, early on that last year. i have to go check the date, you know, late 2015 or early 2016 and to try to compensate for his awkwardness, his team brought in a podium with the president and put it in front of the desk in the oval office and had him stand behind it. so i was watching this live with my son, who was in high school at the time, and we were watching it together. and, you know, my son shushed, me while we were watching it because, i was just so caught off guard by what the team had done. and, you know, my comments w
i know i did. and compared to other addresses where one of the most prominent moments of his presidency was when he in the east wing of the white house, walked down that hallway with the red carpet in, the big gold doors, and announced to american public that osama laden had just been killed. that was a very powerful moment of his presidency, and that was a where he was very comfortable and. you could tell how important it was, but he did another address, the oval office in 2016, early on that...
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10.0
Jan 2, 2024
01/24
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ALJAZ
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somehow, you know, my message was, you know, that became popular. and i'm just kind of going with it. and why do you think that to that particular trace of medium is important for you, or do you think that it is, you have to use all of those platforms to get your message across? i'm using one of them. um, i don't know if they talk, i mean, what has some political thing behind to support? i mean it's supported a lot, but the band also a lot. so it just the funny to see for the patients like nikki haley being so outraged and saying that the one hour of take talk is turning on teenagers. 17 percent more radicals acquire. so scared. i mean, you have all the media, you can fact check everything. we can get the band because we don't have the facts . i just need i can fax them something and they can prove is true. i just, nicole, i is so afraid of me. and the masses are important since the 1st time in a long time. that's a massive group of people, especially how we call it the jersey generation, the, the new generation that they're speaking in the imagine
somehow, you know, my message was, you know, that became popular. and i'm just kind of going with it. and why do you think that to that particular trace of medium is important for you, or do you think that it is, you have to use all of those platforms to get your message across? i'm using one of them. um, i don't know if they talk, i mean, what has some political thing behind to support? i mean it's supported a lot, but the band also a lot. so it just the funny to see for the patients like...
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what do we know? you know? we about know?bout that, it's they're drip that, but it's like they're drip feeding. de beers feeding. it's the de beers diamonds marketing, it? diamonds marketing, isn't it? we're more we're going to get more information but information as we go along. but at moment it's just saying at the moment it's just saying associates , which sounds like associates, which sounds like it's not everybody on this list is wrong'un by any means. is a wrong'un by any means. right. it's going to his right. it's going to have his his, i don't know, pet his, i don't know, his pet sitter and his car cleaner or whatever. it'sjust sitter and his car cleaner or whatever. it's just got sitter and his car cleaner or whatever. it'sjust got load whatever. it's just got a load of people. whatever. it's just got a load of [yeah,. whatever. it's just got a load of teah, i'd have been that whatever. it's just got a load of [yea youj have been that whatever. it's just got a load of [yea you know. been that whatever. it's just got
what do we know? you know? we about know?bout that, it's they're drip that, but it's like they're drip feeding. de beers feeding. it's the de beers diamonds marketing, it? diamonds marketing, isn't it? we're more we're going to get more information but information as we go along. but at moment it's just saying at the moment it's just saying associates , which sounds like associates, which sounds like it's not everybody on this list is wrong'un by any means. is a wrong'un by any means. right....
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Jan 19, 2024
01/24
by
GBN
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eye 33
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so after don't know is after all this we don't know is the answer know. the is the answer we know.ng cambridge the uk, according to cambridge dictionary in britain, scone should scone it's should be pronounced scone. it's there. say it . it there. the more you say it. it sounds the article, it sounds weird. in the article, it all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really . all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really. i right. josh, so i got really. i think there's avoid them . think there's avoid them. they're disgusting things. anyway, going move on anyway, we're going to move on to this next story. now, this is a libraries from the a review on libraries from the government . nick. who? you got government. nick. who? you got this? really? gonna this? really? yeah. we're gonna do you want do the apple woke on. you want to libraries? all right to do the libraries? all right then review finds libraries in england lack of england suffer lack of recognition from government. this to this is a very exciting story to have section. an have in the fun section. it's an independent libr
so after don't know is after all this we don't know is the answer know. the is the answer we know.ng cambridge the uk, according to cambridge dictionary in britain, scone should scone it's should be pronounced scone. it's there. say it . it there. the more you say it. it sounds the article, it sounds weird. in the article, it all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really . all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really. i right. josh, so i got really. i think there's avoid them . think...
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, but i want to know what time the boys went well, when you said, you know what, a guy you know, and then when the to lose this is a lot of one of them. okay. what's the account number? if i'm using this hold on, hold on why i need for the level of the one. the one i went on, i was 6000 and as you know it was i thought some guy was gonna show me the model for the great news. i don't know what i'm getting in the room. you know, not the phone number i get on my google for sure for the why the on the, on a lot of the the the so i'm going to go off and let you know i'm already on the video. i'm with you on the, on the, on off with the offer and of the 6000 i did the 6 on the one. 0 so you i think i'm the of the length of the volume. okay. and most of what a year, almost $7000.00 was the amount of the one hour. okay. and now from the beginning already, now i'm on that financial. i'm sorry. i'm driving but you and be like little little bit of some of the those might, i'm on a monday. you just want to be like, i'm not, i'm not doing a job and that is related to the new, you know, why the wa
, but i want to know what time the boys went well, when you said, you know what, a guy you know, and then when the to lose this is a lot of one of them. okay. what's the account number? if i'm using this hold on, hold on why i need for the level of the one. the one i went on, i was 6000 and as you know it was i thought some guy was gonna show me the model for the great news. i don't know what i'm getting in the room. you know, not the phone number i get on my google for sure for the why the on...
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77
Jan 8, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 77
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that's where i want to go to make friends or to destroy or, you know, knows. so so the point is that we are on the verge of being able to do that to looking at the atmospheres of other worlds, the co the what's in there, what's there to kind of say, yeah, if you want to send a mission to planet, you know, far away to look for life. this is a good bet right. unfortunately, interstellar travel. the is really really hard right just to give you a depressing number if you want to go to the closest planetary system to us right. which is this the three plato planets there, the alpha centauri region, which is about four and a half light years away from us right. so it takes four and a half years for light to travel from us to them them. if you put a mission in our fastest spaceship, you would take about 100,000 years to get there. at about 50,000 miles an hour. you can do the calculation. so interstellar travel, at least way we know it, no good enough. if you want to have a conversation. oh, there is life in alpha centauri. let's say hello. so you say hello, and it's
that's where i want to go to make friends or to destroy or, you know, knows. so so the point is that we are on the verge of being able to do that to looking at the atmospheres of other worlds, the co the what's in there, what's there to kind of say, yeah, if you want to send a mission to planet, you know, far away to look for life. this is a good bet right. unfortunately, interstellar travel. the is really really hard right just to give you a depressing number if you want to go to the closest...
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14
Jan 5, 2024
01/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 14
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you know, it's a creative environment where, you know, it's not about...ckage is, it's how you make people feel. it's the interpretation. it's how you deliver the performance, the character. and that can be done in a variety of bodies, people, wherever they come from. i mean, the characters themselves aren't real. you know, that's a big part of it, too. i mean, of course, there needs to be an evolution i think of a lot of the stories that we're telling in ballet that were created centuries ago that no longer reflect society. they don't reflect what people experience today. a lot of them are really sexist, really racist. so it's something that we're conscious of more so in america than we are in other countries. there are still ballets that are being performed in blackface in russia. you got into a bit of a spat. yes. misty laughs yeah. i mean, i think that it's so necessary to speak up, that... ..you know, we're no longer living in these times where there's no access to seeing what they're doing at the bolshoi or the mariinsky or whatever company, the roya
you know, it's a creative environment where, you know, it's not about...ckage is, it's how you make people feel. it's the interpretation. it's how you deliver the performance, the character. and that can be done in a variety of bodies, people, wherever they come from. i mean, the characters themselves aren't real. you know, that's a big part of it, too. i mean, of course, there needs to be an evolution i think of a lot of the stories that we're telling in ballet that were created centuries ago...
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you know, breaking point. know, i'm at breaking point.ah, that feels a very familiar kind well there was kind of scenario. well there was one suggestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike ggestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike ajestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike a long n why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike a long atonement. ould is like a long atonement. >> like the guy from the >> like like the guy from the profumo scandal just profumo scandal who just got down. charity work for a down. did charity work for a long time, was eventually kind of forgiven, wasn't get of forgiven, wasn't he? so get your work. your head down, do charity work. but problem been but the problem is he's been described displaying described as displaying a fatal mix stupidity . mix of arrogance and stupidity. by mix of arrogance and stupidity. by people who know him. so if the suggestion is he lacks the requisite self—awareness to do that, was in evidence on that, that's was in e
you know, breaking point. know, i'm at breaking point.ah, that feels a very familiar kind well there was kind of scenario. well there was one suggestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike ggestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike ajestion why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike a long n why he should kind of scenario. well there was orlike a long atonement. ould is like a long atonement. >> like the guy from the >> like like the...
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these are, you know, we know the farm, the formalize, the why is it such a surprise, you know, they're, they're reaping mill, you know, millions of dollars just on every transition person. because he think about the amount of money that's spent between all the different drugs. but between the, the surgeries, right. and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course, you know, they're going to say, yeah, it's reversible. you know, if you do use, if you cheat, if you lose your peanuts and you know, replace it with a vagina, you can always come back later and live. i mean, it's just like the cell, you know, this, this kind of stuff and it's the, and you look at the tractor good of the lives of big farm and how much they have done to harm people with their drugs, with their, you know, with everything with their vaccines, it's like, it's just if, if you can't recognize that they are deceptive, you know why. and then you're missing that. they of course, are also deceiving
these are, you know, we know the farm, the formalize, the why is it such a surprise, you know, they're, they're reaping mill, you know, millions of dollars just on every transition person. because he think about the amount of money that's spent between all the different drugs. but between the, the surgeries, right. and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course, you...
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20
Jan 20, 2024
01/24
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GBN
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eye 20
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if know the world i don't know if know the world i don't know if know the world i don't know that you've is a transgender, uh, transgender cover star called kim petras , cover star called kim petras, and this is, uh, yummy new. who is, um , you find her yummy new? is, um, you find her yummy new? >> i find you know what it is in my age, i find them both good looking. and you know what? it's certainly a certain point. you take can get. gay, gay, take what you can get. gay, gay, gay ' gay, gay, take what you can get. gay, gay, gay , gay, gay, and, uh , i just gay, gay, gay, and, uh, i just this is just. i mean , i wish this isjust. i mean, i wish phillip schofield had come out like this. i just outed myself as gay. no. they're pretty. they're pretty girls and boys. at least they're making . okay. at least they're making. okay. yeah, one is fat, but at least these, they're making an effort to look good. the truth is, you're trying to put a spin on it, you're trying to say, it, leo. you're trying to say, oh, they went went woke because it, leo. you're trying to say, oh, thad went went woke be
if know the world i don't know if know the world i don't know if know the world i don't know that you've is a transgender, uh, transgender cover star called kim petras , cover star called kim petras, and this is, uh, yummy new. who is, um , you find her yummy new? is, um, you find her yummy new? >> i find you know what it is in my age, i find them both good looking. and you know what? it's certainly a certain point. you take can get. gay, gay, take what you can get. gay, gay, gay ' gay,...
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and, you know, mean that, you know, in a long as an option of getting things done on years, english or even a percent of them when they, you know, get you to a degree in my area. and i'm gonna just kind of some not use that one and then football mascot had to do that with a lot of as the main audience, especially, was a bit of funding. anyway. like i said, it actually doesn't. that gives us any thought. if the 1st one i had on the video and then vedo saw it on the boy and by my side mothers, cynthia, the sort of it on pacific area. but the soonest i got on peace, i say it was generated from the data hot. what's the latest element or some kind of somebody else and in well that on the team is going to die level those. i don't make it one side of the windows is only the one who know me that go. that is like a significant look at the front that i thought, i think what the soonest was by you said cnn can certainly get back to me the i'm the savvy or to handle the meaningful consent for the next one, somebody. so the c panel way and then on the inside you get a body cent, either or not, or s
and, you know, mean that, you know, in a long as an option of getting things done on years, english or even a percent of them when they, you know, get you to a degree in my area. and i'm gonna just kind of some not use that one and then football mascot had to do that with a lot of as the main audience, especially, was a bit of funding. anyway. like i said, it actually doesn't. that gives us any thought. if the 1st one i had on the video and then vedo saw it on the boy and by my side mothers,...
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so, you know, this, this issue of polarization, you know, is, is, is across politics. what kind of strategies to use? so just as the open society foundations to counter a liberal tendencies, well, we were a foundations set foundations, which grew up in the last 2 years of the cold war where at least grantees and recipients in central europe, particularly. but also in the old soviet union. you know what people who had fought for the right to free speech and potentially right in future to vote. and so, you know, we had a kind of classic human rights and democracy mandate give people a vote secure the human rights under the law. and the rest will take care of itself on the history of the last. a decayed, also as being the rest doesn't take care of itself that people remain in polling allows and others, you know, remain very much committed theoretically to democracy. but in judging their own governments and how they're going to vote, much more understandably, driven by issues around that own and that families security that they go jobs. are those jobs threatened by waves o
so, you know, this, this issue of polarization, you know, is, is, is across politics. what kind of strategies to use? so just as the open society foundations to counter a liberal tendencies, well, we were a foundations set foundations, which grew up in the last 2 years of the cold war where at least grantees and recipients in central europe, particularly. but also in the old soviet union. you know what people who had fought for the right to free speech and potentially right in future to vote....
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31
Jan 29, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 31
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and know. and the irony of course being that the ownership creates the growth innovation to address the of global climate change of these other issues that we're dealing with. one of the things that struck me and looked at to turn our conversation toward is you mentioned this earlier, the obstacles, because one of the things i think your book does excellent, you will own nothing. i'll keep talking by the title. but the the that there's lots of different unrelated obstacles that are out there there actually when you kind of put the picture together and connect the dots you see that there's all of these obstacles. sure. just class, family to gain wealth to have outside ownership. one of those and i'm an economist, go straight for the fiscal policy and, national debt, and you have a whole chapter about this where our national debt for the first time, which about size of our entire economy and this is one of those kind of warning bells that typically go off when you have that much debt. that's the
and know. and the irony of course being that the ownership creates the growth innovation to address the of global climate change of these other issues that we're dealing with. one of the things that struck me and looked at to turn our conversation toward is you mentioned this earlier, the obstacles, because one of the things i think your book does excellent, you will own nothing. i'll keep talking by the title. but the the that there's lots of different unrelated obstacles that are out there...
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15
Jan 20, 2024
01/24
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GBN
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eye 15
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of you know, i don't know made party came to power, they sort of you know, i don't know whye it. blair did it, but it's not been a success, has it? >> it's been a complete failure. it started 2004 under new it started in 2004 under new laboun it started in 2004 under new labour. the door to labour. they opened the door to mass migration. it was then continued under david cameron and later boris johnson, who further liberalised the whole system . new labour the whole system. new labour set the whole thing motion , net thing in motion, took net migration 200,000, and migration to over 200,000, and tony blair, i would argue, was as much an architect of the brexit vote as david cameron because many of those concerns over migration and the pace of change in the country obviously found their expression in the vote for brexit. but boris put it on steroids. i mean, boris was the guy who came in and was the guy who then came in and instead of giving people control and what he promised, which was lower overall numbers, he liberalised system. so liberalised the whole system. so migration of
of you know, i don't know made party came to power, they sort of you know, i don't know whye it. blair did it, but it's not been a success, has it? >> it's been a complete failure. it started 2004 under new it started in 2004 under new laboun it started in 2004 under new labour. the door to labour. they opened the door to mass migration. it was then continued under david cameron and later boris johnson, who further liberalised the whole system . new labour the whole system. new labour set...
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15
Jan 6, 2024
01/24
by
CSPAN3
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eye 15
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so everyone knows her. remember the ladies line and rightfully so, because it's an excellent line and perhaps the line that's less well known is that all men would be tyrants if they could, which i think belongs in that sentence. but what i think people don't appreciate is she wasn't incredible political thinker. she was involved with and on the outskirts of and witnessed some of the greatest political conversations from the beginning of the revolution, all the way up through the revolution of 1800s. she was in all of the rooms when they were having these dinners and talking about things. and she was whip smart and people really respected her opinions and her views and her observe actions. everyone from george washington to thomas jefferson and her her letters and her observations are incredibly incisive. and i think that at times she was criticized of being john adams cabinet of one, which is perhaps one of the more accurate criticisms of john adams, because she was by far and away his most important advis
so everyone knows her. remember the ladies line and rightfully so, because it's an excellent line and perhaps the line that's less well known is that all men would be tyrants if they could, which i think belongs in that sentence. but what i think people don't appreciate is she wasn't incredible political thinker. she was involved with and on the outskirts of and witnessed some of the greatest political conversations from the beginning of the revolution, all the way up through the revolution of...
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18
Jan 8, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 18
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and so when you put that on, you know, in many cases rural america, you know, coming from, you know, atlanta, which is kind of an island of blue and a sea of red, know, you know, what happens outside a big city and so the populist populism and the populist movement happens because of that. i would say that you know what concerns me about populism is what can be the hollowing out of our institutions and our liberals democracy. because if the only argument you have is that i don't like what they're doing, then you've started other people like, well, that's the other side does that. and you know we're the united states of america. and if you're supposed to have actual liberal democracy, see where people believe in institutions, they believe in checks and balances and executive power. and our representatives judicial. and if you start hollowing out those institutions, then you're not left with much. and so i think that's what concerns me most about populism. we see it in europe. i mean, certainly saw it in, you know, in the netherlands. you see people who are just sort of tapping into th
and so when you put that on, you know, in many cases rural america, you know, coming from, you know, atlanta, which is kind of an island of blue and a sea of red, know, you know, what happens outside a big city and so the populist populism and the populist movement happens because of that. i would say that you know what concerns me about populism is what can be the hollowing out of our institutions and our liberals democracy. because if the only argument you have is that i don't like what...
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and i know it's okay, be there a man you got key know get a status. you can always thought of. i mean biased who made it, how does that mean that i'd be? no, no, get a status, but i guess some of his ideas is, has been data sort of some you hopefully going from the venue again, instead of the, i guess the, excuse me because we have different ones here. we got met one with the amazon. so be you a movie, this come all get somebody to get us to buy the didn't get it, is to put it a little difficult for us for getting that. what are that we've seen a couple of that we've been you're looking for that would've been so the thing out is that i'm where yeah. in that feedback from them. yeah. them us, it also says for the, like i said and got on the list though, but who means that if at the moment they think that look completely on a field degree and that itself and the present, i mean, i'm thinking, you know, the best one i can know, so i'm the village of bicycles, i guess i sort of, i'll either successful it out of business for you to buy a step, one of the ceiling. you'll get into tha
and i know it's okay, be there a man you got key know get a status. you can always thought of. i mean biased who made it, how does that mean that i'd be? no, no, get a status, but i guess some of his ideas is, has been data sort of some you hopefully going from the venue again, instead of the, i guess the, excuse me because we have different ones here. we got met one with the amazon. so be you a movie, this come all get somebody to get us to buy the didn't get it, is to put it a little...
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17
Jan 14, 2024
01/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 17
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i don't know. but but kevin mccarthy, what i report is kevin mccarthy told people so he goes, what's let's just let's just remind ourselves of the scene. it's january 28. it's eight days after the end of the trump presidency. trump is a disgraced former president and about to face an impeachment trial in the senate. he's been banished from twitter. fox news is basically pretending he doesn't exist at this point. he's not you're not being interviewed anywhere. he's not a presence anywhere. he's down in mar a lago against dark days at mar a lago and the ray of strong sunlight that comes down is kevin mccarthy, who we all saw that picture you've seen at mar a lago. you know, posted standing next to you, next to trump. it set off a fury. a lot of republicans were outraged. why do you give this guy a lifeline? why didn't you do that? so mccarthy told people private lee, i'm giving you some vision. yeah. yeah, that's the visual. exactly. so mccarthy told people privately that that that he was just down t
i don't know. but but kevin mccarthy, what i report is kevin mccarthy told people so he goes, what's let's just let's just remind ourselves of the scene. it's january 28. it's eight days after the end of the trump presidency. trump is a disgraced former president and about to face an impeachment trial in the senate. he's been banished from twitter. fox news is basically pretending he doesn't exist at this point. he's not you're not being interviewed anywhere. he's not a presence anywhere. he's...
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you know savvy. see why not they want a van line a little bit suffice to so i don't get that accurate and doesn't look in on, you know, i mean if one of us, one i've been, if i will kind of want to be down there for about kind of moon coming in on a total given and if they get and get i'm getting kinda yes my unit, if my media any dotted line is fine and then that is fine. you know, up any sooner the better see got finals here. so 58 that is in process of getting tickets will probably know the easiest warning. you can most of you on both on things or some feedback and idea. but it's, i mean, i'm even a political liberty and we'll have it up. and these are all the less because you sent the notice for the school send without them, especially when they might record and finish the initial view. and i forget what else to come in to show you how much i'm gonna have a conversation that the sort of like in the sam quit is included somebody they've been in the field and will say, i have them, i know put them
you know savvy. see why not they want a van line a little bit suffice to so i don't get that accurate and doesn't look in on, you know, i mean if one of us, one i've been, if i will kind of want to be down there for about kind of moon coming in on a total given and if they get and get i'm getting kinda yes my unit, if my media any dotted line is fine and then that is fine. you know, up any sooner the better see got finals here. so 58 that is in process of getting tickets will probably know the...
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and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course, you know, they're going to say, yeah, it's reversible. you know, if you do use, if you, if you lose your penis and you know, replace it with a vagina, you can always come back later in life. i mean, it's just like the so you are this, this kind of stuff and it's, and you look at the track record of, of the lives of big farm and how much they have done to harm people with their drugs, with their, you know, with everything with their vaccines, it's like, it's just if, if you can't recognize that they are deceptive, you know why. and then you're missing that. they of course, are also deceiving you on the ramifications, the long term effects of what they're selling tickets at this point. exactly. and that surgery, surgery certainly is reversible, but it's never going to be the same, not to mention hormone blockers, especially taking hormone blockers during puberty. that hinders developm
and, and, and who knows what else that you know, comes along with it. but the point is that they're making so much money on every person that's transitioning. and of course, you know, they're going to say, yeah, it's reversible. you know, if you do use, if you, if you lose your penis and you know, replace it with a vagina, you can always come back later in life. i mean, it's just like the so you are this, this kind of stuff and it's, and you look at the track record of, of the lives of big farm...
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that you all know you didn't like you didn't know you didn't you know why? because you were busy and try and make sure that we survived, which we are very grateful. who are it? well, yeah, that's why god should it. was that the really don't we stand up doing what, how we flows. we does what i'm trying to tell you. we found healing from trauma, right, like real life trauma that comes with migrating to a new place at a certain age in a new environment. you know, in a different type of like familial environment where you're working not at home the way you were in guy in a. so it's a different world here. the part that really, really, really hurts is that 13 year the 13 and the 16 isn't why i started smoking when i was 13, was because i was alone. i always felt alone. i was always the middle child and that's always what has been. so i years lead, so it helped me be and myself like it helped me be comfortable with being in my head cuz that's where i was waiting to go. we, we, they had the wrong. that's the problem is used to say that you, even if you were in my l
that you all know you didn't like you didn't know you didn't you know why? because you were busy and try and make sure that we survived, which we are very grateful. who are it? well, yeah, that's why god should it. was that the really don't we stand up doing what, how we flows. we does what i'm trying to tell you. we found healing from trauma, right, like real life trauma that comes with migrating to a new place at a certain age in a new environment. you know, in a different type of like...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 21, 2024
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, that i've you know, thought i knew that maybe i don't know but continuing to learn. >> significant thing. >> i was going to ask linda i'm curious were you always out going or talk to strangers before or is that something at an age i don't care what people think of me anymore (laughter). >> what's the benefits of getting older he grew up she i wouldn't talk to strangers and strangers or whatever but at some point i slipped by certainly i got in any 40s and now, whatever that i want to talk to last night - and you know, you know what that is why i guess part of the essence of life as you get older you're titled to that; right? and people like tony morrison and people you know, just who they are; right? and maybe that came with their age and being elder so i should mention people that are story tellers their life and connect with them and you know, i had those models. >> (multiple voices.) >> and when we approach as elders they sort of see us as harmless. >> right. right (laughter). >> that's true someone is sitting there and- >> (multiple voices). >> coming up to take. >> you're much
, that i've you know, thought i knew that maybe i don't know but continuing to learn. >> significant thing. >> i was going to ask linda i'm curious were you always out going or talk to strangers before or is that something at an age i don't care what people think of me anymore (laughter). >> what's the benefits of getting older he grew up she i wouldn't talk to strangers and strangers or whatever but at some point i slipped by certainly i got in any 40s and now, whatever that...