SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 12, 2012
06/12
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SFGTV
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i wanted to thank jessica laymen, up from the senior action network, and karen bass or putting effort into the report as well. >> thank you. is the overhead working? srsupervisor mar: there it goes. >> thank you for the opportunity of addressing the subject of seniors in sro hotels. it has been important to our society for quite some time. 30 years ago, they work -- an article was run in which they were called he lists hotels. supervisor lenny passed emergency legislation. they were written by warren in cold. despite the good intentions, this is our apartment, in terms of housing code violations. in the late 1990's, a rash of fires on of -- in sro's came along. two years ago, the board of supervisors along with the health department asked our department to work more collaborative meet and assume more funding. this decision has been fruitful. working together closely, housing inspection services has found an additional 250,000, 75% have been corrected. >> i believe that we have copies of this -- of this for each member of the community. -- kennedy. the violations we had found, since we
i wanted to thank jessica laymen, up from the senior action network, and karen bass or putting effort into the report as well. >> thank you. is the overhead working? srsupervisor mar: there it goes. >> thank you for the opportunity of addressing the subject of seniors in sro hotels. it has been important to our society for quite some time. 30 years ago, they work -- an article was run in which they were called he lists hotels. supervisor lenny passed emergency legislation. they were...
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Jun 23, 2012
06/12
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WTTG
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. >> is that just really -- i think in laymen's terms you hear they will appeal, is that essentially prolonging the inevitable? >> i think it's pretty clear that sandusky got a very fair trial here. there was an overwhelming amount of evidence. and i'm not aware of any prosecutorial misconduct. i think the likelihood of reversal in this case is pretty low. >> and what happens to jerry sandusky now? a serial child predator, who is famous, are they put in general population? >> well, i think, you know, i think that will be determined by the people that run the prisons in pennsylvania. sometimes judges have a little influence over that. but i think the key step will be determining the sentence. i assume he's going to get a very long sentence. i don't know if it will be up to 400 years. but i think he'll probably die in prison. and given the testimony we heard, that's probably appropriate here. >> what do you make of this, and i'm not sure if you caught it or not, but matt sandusky, jerry sandusky's grown son, 33 years old, has three kids, was going to testify against his father and accu
. >> is that just really -- i think in laymen's terms you hear they will appeal, is that essentially prolonging the inevitable? >> i think it's pretty clear that sandusky got a very fair trial here. there was an overwhelming amount of evidence. and i'm not aware of any prosecutorial misconduct. i think the likelihood of reversal in this case is pretty low. >> and what happens to jerry sandusky now? a serial child predator, who is famous, are they put in general population?...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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WUSA
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so what i've come to do is when i'm speaking to laymen, even when i'm speaking to people in government, i say what we do in the coast guard, we protect the nation from threats in the sea, we protect the sea itself. we are responsible for the safety, security and stewardship of america's waters. america's waters are vast, 3.3 million square miles in our exclusive economic zone which may grow if we acede to the law of sea treaty because it will extend the outer continental shelf. right at the 14 it charges u.s. coast guard of enforcing laws on our u.s. waters for foreign vessels and u.s. vessels. so that's a pretty broad job and what we do is we tykify night resources and apply them to the priority of resources everyday. >> given where the spending patterns are going and given where the size of the force has been going, obviously you can live with a smaller force as you get better command and control, you're aiming your resources better in order to do that, some of the assets themselves are actually better and superior assets, but at the end of the day, it is a numbers game given the amo
so what i've come to do is when i'm speaking to laymen, even when i'm speaking to people in government, i say what we do in the coast guard, we protect the nation from threats in the sea, we protect the sea itself. we are responsible for the safety, security and stewardship of america's waters. america's waters are vast, 3.3 million square miles in our exclusive economic zone which may grow if we acede to the law of sea treaty because it will extend the outer continental shelf. right at the 14...
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Jun 1, 2012
06/12
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FOXNEWS
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when you look at this jury of laymen and lay women who are not experts, in campaign finance law, you can imagine just how complicated it was deliver these six counts of edwards. >> kimberly: remain live. we'll come back to you in the program if we have press statements from the prosecutors, defense, perhaps john edwards speaking himself or any members of the jury. thank you for the update. brian, take it around the table. he is making a great point. there was a lot of confusion even among the prosecution team how to proceed and the nature of the charges. pretty novel to try to bring this forward. it seems to have been something confusing with respect to the charges of is it a gift? or was it something used to further his campaign? the campaign contribution. >> brian: jury is the one tasked with this obligation. they have been unable to come up with anything. they have been a bizarre group to begin with. five of them were dressing alike for a while. one evidently flirting with john edwards, that was the accusation for a while. when you tell them to go back and come up with a decision,
when you look at this jury of laymen and lay women who are not experts, in campaign finance law, you can imagine just how complicated it was deliver these six counts of edwards. >> kimberly: remain live. we'll come back to you in the program if we have press statements from the prosecutors, defense, perhaps john edwards speaking himself or any members of the jury. thank you for the update. brian, take it around the table. he is making a great point. there was a lot of confusion even among...
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Jun 9, 2012
06/12
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CNNW
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under a microscope, and what they have been seeing is i'd can mow lek car fingerprint, which in laymen's terms mean they all look the same, and if they all look the same, then that means likely that it came from the same source. and so now what they need do is interview these people and figure out what did they eat, where did they eat it? did they all buy the same ground beef from the same supermarket. so what did they do. >> this is going back and tracing it. >> it's southern california, back east. it's not one mom and pop restaurant, but maybe it's a beef that was sold in a certain chain or lettuce. that's the even deem logical work that needs to go on. >> and figuring out where it come from. >> and tracing it back to the company and saying, hey, there may be a problem. >> we put out the warnings. people may be barbecuing. can we give them a couple tips to stay healthy? >> yes. these are for any time. it releases terrible toxins and shuts down organs. cook your beef thoroughly. dmot eat medium ground hamburger. avoid unpasturized milk and juice and also look out for the symptoms. the s
under a microscope, and what they have been seeing is i'd can mow lek car fingerprint, which in laymen's terms mean they all look the same, and if they all look the same, then that means likely that it came from the same source. and so now what they need do is interview these people and figure out what did they eat, where did they eat it? did they all buy the same ground beef from the same supermarket. so what did they do. >> this is going back and tracing it. >> it's southern...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN2
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a catholic church -- getting off to the next virtue of justice -- the nuns, yes, priests and the laymen as well,7 but without the work of the nuns hospit who founded the first hospitals and schools the asylum is the founding homes the hospitals ths hospices -- we have so many mother teresa's inner church's history that we don't discuss - they found her and she didn't want to be known for the work that she f did. we did find her. we did need heroes. she certainly has to be one of the greatest heroes of our age. mr. christopher hitchens said she would take money from rich people -- and i said christopher, did you expect her po take it from the poor? on the middle class that battle wouldn't make sense to taketo money from the rich and give it to the poor? i don't quite understand that. what are we back to this again? we are going to play mr. clean? is everybody snow white at the table? mother theresa knew what she was doing. she founded the first hospicey. for aids patients in new york city. 27% of the entire world's funding for aids comes from one institution in the catholic church. we do
a catholic church -- getting off to the next virtue of justice -- the nuns, yes, priests and the laymen as well,7 but without the work of the nuns hospit who founded the first hospitals and schools the asylum is the founding homes the hospitals ths hospices -- we have so many mother teresa's inner church's history that we don't discuss - they found her and she didn't want to be known for the work that she f did. we did find her. we did need heroes. she certainly has to be one of the greatest...
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Jun 19, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN
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a board of laymen should not decide what treatment i can get. this is between me and my doctor, not some committee with -- without any medical experience. one of their largest fears is ipab, the independent payment advisory board, labeled by critics as the death pam. they will be empowered to find cost savings in medicare by rationing health care services to senior citizens. like the president's czars this board will be hand picked by the president and will not be accountable to the american people or any person that they elected to the congress to represent them. one montgomery, alabama, physician claims that the cut tots -- cuts in payments to doctors will be devastating to his ability to stay in business. we've heard testimonies about how difficult it will be to then rere-crute family practitioners and internal medicine doctors into the community. ipab's recommendations to reduce health care costs will unfairly and disproportionately fall on physicians just like him since the law prohibits any reductions in payments to hospitals and hossties
a board of laymen should not decide what treatment i can get. this is between me and my doctor, not some committee with -- without any medical experience. one of their largest fears is ipab, the independent payment advisory board, labeled by critics as the death pam. they will be empowered to find cost savings in medicare by rationing health care services to senior citizens. like the president's czars this board will be hand picked by the president and will not be accountable to the american...
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Jun 21, 2012
06/12
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CNBC
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i think it was more for the laymen. where is the pressure on the president and congress versus this man? he holds the most open press conferences. he holds himself out in a way that nobody else does. and, frankly, he has done more to save this economy than anybody. i know that that's somewhat controversial. but, wow, this guy -- they haven't even cut the second rate cut. remember, they put two rate increases through in europe. they've only cut once. this guy's done everything he can. >> explaining on operation twist, of course, because he was asked many times, well, aren't mortgage rates extraordinarily low already? bernanke did make the point, part of the process is also trying to crowd out other buyers. and that market pushed them into other risk assets. >> didn't you like that? that was so smart. >> try to lower borrowing costs. by the way, borrowing costs for corporate america are also extremely low. cash is plentiful on the balance sheets. multiples are fairly low. dividend yields are high. all of which goes, perha
i think it was more for the laymen. where is the pressure on the president and congress versus this man? he holds the most open press conferences. he holds himself out in a way that nobody else does. and, frankly, he has done more to save this economy than anybody. i know that that's somewhat controversial. but, wow, this guy -- they haven't even cut the second rate cut. remember, they put two rate increases through in europe. they've only cut once. this guy's done everything he can. >>...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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FOXNEWS
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. >> clayton: you're mentioning the scalds, to the laymen, i don't know what that is scoff fold. >> doctorsout the dead tissue and stealing up the spinal cord, and 90% of patients arrive in the emergency rooms do not have to go through paralyzing for life. they will go through bloogd and we'll put in a scaffold and mitigating the bleeding. repair the tausch. surgeons would have a-- >> and we were talking about christopher reeve, if he were alive today and he had donated enormous amount of money and involved in the process and aware of the technology. were he alive today. would he be able to walk possibly. >> we still have to develop the technology, but a patient at the time the technology was on the market. he possibly could have intervened and reduced his scarring and possibly bladder and bowel functioning could have been normally. >> and progressing where he could have walked again? >> we could take this and there's a range of stem cells and christopher reeve foundation is behind a the lot of them and combining those and the monkey you saw walking did have stem cells and scaffolds, exactl
. >> clayton: you're mentioning the scalds, to the laymen, i don't know what that is scoff fold. >> doctorsout the dead tissue and stealing up the spinal cord, and 90% of patients arrive in the emergency rooms do not have to go through paralyzing for life. they will go through bloogd and we'll put in a scaffold and mitigating the bleeding. repair the tausch. surgeons would have a-- >> and we were talking about christopher reeve, if he were alive today and he had donated...
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Jun 11, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN2
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and the ambassador, a fellow named laymen who had replaced joseph kennedy, president kennedy's father. he was of course partial to the germans any suspect that the reason roosevelt brought him home. so it's a marvelous book about the three of them and their interaction with churchill and their advocacy. the advocacy of united states breaking out of this isolationist mode again it to war on england behalf. the author had previously written a wonderful book, which i highly recommend called troublesome young men about the members of parliament to rally behind winston churchill who was throughout the 30s and orchestrated his rise to the prime minister's job when chamberlain felt. so these two books i'm particularly interesting in reading them back to back our great books that the early stages of world war ii and i highly recommend them. >> for more information on this and other summer reading books, visit booktv.org. >> here's the book list of books being published this week: >> many of you may not have even been born in 1973 and four. put richard nixon and one of the biggest landslides o
and the ambassador, a fellow named laymen who had replaced joseph kennedy, president kennedy's father. he was of course partial to the germans any suspect that the reason roosevelt brought him home. so it's a marvelous book about the three of them and their interaction with churchill and their advocacy. the advocacy of united states breaking out of this isolationist mode again it to war on england behalf. the author had previously written a wonderful book, which i highly recommend called...