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Apr 9, 2021
04/21
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malcolm: only one crematorium remains.e destroyed by the nazis as they fled from the serbian red army. the other one was blown up by the co-conspirators of anna. she helped to steal gunpowder from and munitions and smuggled it back. judy: it was an elaborate system where the people who worked in the room where they packed the powder would take little bits and put it in the wastebasket on the side. another round of women would collect that waste, go to the bathroom, take out the gunpowder, and hide it in fabric. malcolm: here is anna and her own words, in canada in 1996. anna: they used the gunpowder and manufactured little hand grenades made out of metal around boxes of shoe polish, and filled with the gunpowder, and when you let -- lit it, it exploded. malcolm: jews forced by the nazis to dispose of bodies from the gas chambers -- ana: all of the commander people were killed, but the crematorium was destroyed as well. malcolm: in retribution, her sister was executed. >> i heard this collective groan, and i knew what happe
malcolm: only one crematorium remains.e destroyed by the nazis as they fled from the serbian red army. the other one was blown up by the co-conspirators of anna. she helped to steal gunpowder from and munitions and smuggled it back. judy: it was an elaborate system where the people who worked in the room where they packed the powder would take little bits and put it in the wastebasket on the side. another round of women would collect that waste, go to the bathroom, take out the gunpowder, and...
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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KGO
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thanks for joining us, malcolm, good to see you.s all your trash all under control ♪ (intense music) ♪ (cat meows) even when your kitchen isn't... ♪ ♪ and when it's all under control... it's all clean it's all glad like many people with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's disease, i was there. be right back. but my symptoms were keeping me from where i needed to be. ♪ so i talked to my doctor and learned humira is for people who have uc... ...or crohn's disease. and humira helps people achieve remission that can last, so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections. serious and sometimes fatal infections, including tuberculosis, and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start
thanks for joining us, malcolm, good to see you.s all your trash all under control ♪ (intense music) ♪ (cat meows) even when your kitchen isn't... ♪ ♪ and when it's all under control... it's all clean it's all glad like many people with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's disease, i was there. be right back. but my symptoms were keeping me from where i needed to be. ♪ so i talked to my doctor and learned humira is for people who have uc... ...or crohn's disease. and...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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is malcolm right? >> malcolm is right.hink you will see division, if you look at it historically, but what is new now is what people are divided on. if you look, for example, at the reuters poll that came out earlier this month, it showed that six out of ten republicans still believe the false claim that the election was stolen. and so if you believe that, or if you, for example, are a qanon believer and believe there's a cabal of people harming children running our government, it's really hard, right, to find something in the middle. i think the question now is what are the systems in place that are allowing these extreme views to control the levers of power. >> gene, president biden has his big speech this week. i think he's focused on the big issues earlier, which has gotten him this good approval rating. what does he need to focus on in the next couple of days? >> the biggest thing in the positive word cloud is "not trump." he will continue to be not trump. he will continue to be normal, empathetic joe biden, laying ou
is malcolm right? >> malcolm is right.hink you will see division, if you look at it historically, but what is new now is what people are divided on. if you look, for example, at the reuters poll that came out earlier this month, it showed that six out of ten republicans still believe the false claim that the election was stolen. and so if you believe that, or if you, for example, are a qanon believer and believe there's a cabal of people harming children running our government, it's...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 5, 2021
04/21
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SFGTV
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i support medmen and teaming up with malcolm white, and i support malcolm white and his endeavour to make the city just a better place for our kids to come, yeah. >> [indiscernible] one of them is actually in doing community work and -- >> if you could mute your television or computer, caller, you have one minute. caller, did you want to submit your public testimony? >> yes. >> okay, your time is running. >> i would like to oppose the location of this particular establishment. there is a public school just several hundred feet away, and i'm a resident of the area. my family and i with young children, and we personally do not think that this is an establishment that young children in this particular neighborhood should be exposed to, both from a clientele perspective and also the idea of it. thank you. >> thank you. members of the public, last call for public comment on this matter. you need to press star then 3 to be added to the queue. you have one minute. when you hear your line has been unmuted, that's your indication to begin speaking. >> hi, my name is diane. i am the former pre
i support medmen and teaming up with malcolm white, and i support malcolm white and his endeavour to make the city just a better place for our kids to come, yeah. >> [indiscernible] one of them is actually in doing community work and -- >> if you could mute your television or computer, caller, you have one minute. caller, did you want to submit your public testimony? >> yes. >> okay, your time is running. >> i would like to oppose the location of this particular...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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so even malcolm x. who had some problematic scenes with the way he has women but he credits his mom that she was the first to teach this discipline he found in the nation of islam and before he even met mohammed. so why is it if we have this evidence that we just erased it over time? it's an understanding of sexism in society and racism and the intersectional oppression that black women are facing we don't think our lives are worthy of documentation and not worthy of celebrating >> welcome everyone. >> welcome everybody i am the owner of the bookshop here in usas people are joining from all over the country or even beyond i am thrilled tonight to be here to introducest an icon of our staff we are so thrilled he will be joining us tonight so i'd like to introduce our guest author and his conversational partner.
so even malcolm x. who had some problematic scenes with the way he has women but he credits his mom that she was the first to teach this discipline he found in the nation of islam and before he even met mohammed. so why is it if we have this evidence that we just erased it over time? it's an understanding of sexism in society and racism and the intersectional oppression that black women are facing we don't think our lives are worthy of documentation and not worthy of celebrating >>...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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what's the pentagon's plan, malcolm, to prevent other soldiers from being radicalized like this?well, you know, a lot of people who join the armed forces are already radicalized. one of the most famous terrorists timothy mcveigh was radicalized by his platoon sergeants. one of the things you can't stop is small talk and scuttlebutt they may pass in the privacy of their own rooms. what we can do is we monitor phone communications and cell phone communications when out on exercises, and we can find out from their chain of command people who are now talking about this. we had that case just recently of a navy department employee who wore his mustache like hitler and talked about the genocide as being fake all the time in his space around members of the armed forces. he wasn't found out until much later. so now that we have a top-down effort to do that, to root these people out, it's going to be a little easier to find out who's radical on all sides. >> there's a story we're following today. a florida nurse just arrested for making death threats against vice president kamala harris.
what's the pentagon's plan, malcolm, to prevent other soldiers from being radicalized like this?well, you know, a lot of people who join the armed forces are already radicalized. one of the most famous terrorists timothy mcveigh was radicalized by his platoon sergeants. one of the things you can't stop is small talk and scuttlebutt they may pass in the privacy of their own rooms. what we can do is we monitor phone communications and cell phone communications when out on exercises, and we can...
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Apr 3, 2021
04/21
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. >> the autobiography of malcolm x. audiobook so special. >> in a nutshell it is a way of escape and departure and away from ordinary life. >> i grew up in vietnam my mother used to tell me stories about the village. and had to leave home for studies i missed being pampered by her voice so i went listen to cassette tape of recorded stories. >> there are things you may have interpreted completely differently and you say it that way. okay i see what you are coming from. >> during the pandemic i escaped the city and spent a lot of time driving which means i got to spend our time listening to audiobooks which is the absolute single best thing that has happened to me during the pandemic. >> it is one of the heartbeats of humans and how we communicate. audiobooks are just another way of taking that to the next level. [applause] >> it is my great pleasure to hand things over to best-selling author david said areas known for his brilliant observations. david is kind enough to demonstrate the audiobook experience for us by not h
. >> the autobiography of malcolm x. audiobook so special. >> in a nutshell it is a way of escape and departure and away from ordinary life. >> i grew up in vietnam my mother used to tell me stories about the village. and had to leave home for studies i missed being pampered by her voice so i went listen to cassette tape of recorded stories. >> there are things you may have interpreted completely differently and you say it that way. okay i see what you are coming from....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 10, 2021
04/21
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SFGTV
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i support medmen and teaming up with malcolm white, and i support malcolm white and his endeavour to make the city just a better place for our kids to come, yeah. >> [indiscernible] one of them is actually in doing community work and -- >> if you could mute your television or computer, caller, you have one minute. caller, did you want to submit your public testimony? >> yes. >> okay, your time is running. >> i would like to oppose the location of this particular establishment. there is a public school just several hundred feet away, and i'm a resident of the area. my family and i with young children, and we personally do not think that this is an establishment that young children in this particular neighborhood should be exposed to, both from a clientele perspective and also the idea of it. thank you. >> thank you. members of the public, last call for public comment on this matter. you need to press star then 3 to be added to the queue. you have one minute. when you hear your line has been unmuted, that's your indication to begin speaking. >> hi, my name is diane. i am the former pre
i support medmen and teaming up with malcolm white, and i support malcolm white and his endeavour to make the city just a better place for our kids to come, yeah. >> [indiscernible] one of them is actually in doing community work and -- >> if you could mute your television or computer, caller, you have one minute. caller, did you want to submit your public testimony? >> yes. >> okay, your time is running. >> i would like to oppose the location of this particular...
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Apr 20, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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malcolm: i'm quite certain that in the u.k.hat the premier league in the football league and uefa will look seriously at whatever measures they can take. these clubs should be banned from the rest of competition, and i am sure there is wide support from the fans for that. the world being what it is, i am sure these lawyers will get involved soon. these owners are not used to not getting their own way, i suspect. some of this may end up in the courts. any action taken by the domestic authorities or uefa will have strong support from the fans. anna: thank you, malcolm clarke, chairman, football supporters association. coming up, another shakeup at the top. the executives in charge of the unit behind the archegos blow up. we have the details, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ anna: a come back to the european market open, 16 minutes until the start of the cash equity session, and u.s. futures positive. credit suisse is prime brokerage business, the co-heads are leaving. the departures are the latest among executive exits. joining us is d
malcolm: i'm quite certain that in the u.k.hat the premier league in the football league and uefa will look seriously at whatever measures they can take. these clubs should be banned from the rest of competition, and i am sure there is wide support from the fans for that. the world being what it is, i am sure these lawyers will get involved soon. these owners are not used to not getting their own way, i suspect. some of this may end up in the courts. any action taken by the domestic authorities...
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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KPIX
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>> sam dies in december, and malcolm dies, i believe, in-- malcolm was assassinated in february. >> stephen i never thought i'd hear anything like that again. and while you still sound like leslie odom, you have captured this extraordinary tone and style and soul of sam cooke. what was that process like to become-- to embody that voice? because i never thought i'd hear it again. and i got chills every time you would start singing in that movie. what was the process? did you go all the way back to the soulsters? what did you do to get accustomed to him? >> yes, i went in chronological order. i'm a fan, too. and in many ways, sam is one of my teachers. singing is an oral tradition. it's passed down from generation to generation. we learn the way we're supposed to approach a song and what is required of us as storytellers. so-- but i went back to the beginning, and i really kind of tried to understand the evolution of his sound, and try to understand-- you know, kind of like the psychology of it, you know, for maybe why he was making the choices that he was making. i have to tell you, i did no
>> sam dies in december, and malcolm dies, i believe, in-- malcolm was assassinated in february. >> stephen i never thought i'd hear anything like that again. and while you still sound like leslie odom, you have captured this extraordinary tone and style and soul of sam cooke. what was that process like to become-- to embody that voice? because i never thought i'd hear it again. and i got chills every time you would start singing in that movie. what was the process? did you go all...
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Apr 27, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN3
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so what we did do is that we invited malcolm x to to come up, and he talked to us at elliott house. and that was a really mind-blowing for all of us in the sense that we were starting to think at that point that maybe integration was not going to work and maybe we should be more separatists and get into the black power thing and that that changed a lot of minds and then we decided that we wanted to set up a black student organization and and again, we didn't have any particular radical ideas. we just wanted a place where we could all club where we could meet together and invite speakers up and talk and maybe publish a magazine or something and it would be called the the african the association of african and afro-american students and membership would be limited to people who are of african or african or african-american heritage. and we assume that it would be find that the university would agree. but when we propose it to them, they said no because they felt it was reverse discrimination and we claimed we were really upset about that because harvard has these things called final c
so what we did do is that we invited malcolm x to to come up, and he talked to us at elliott house. and that was a really mind-blowing for all of us in the sense that we were starting to think at that point that maybe integration was not going to work and maybe we should be more separatists and get into the black power thing and that that changed a lot of minds and then we decided that we wanted to set up a black student organization and and again, we didn't have any particular radical ideas....
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kendrick he's a doctor from the case national health service and we appreciate you coming on malcolm we just talked about the figures there the thing i feel is that when you put it into context it doesn't sound like a big number but when you read the tragic stories of people who are perfectly healthy who are no longer with this it makes you think twice and i just wondered how what what your thoughts were and whether stories like this and i'm sure we will see more no matter how small how much that were damaged the astra zeneca job and people actually wanting to take it. well it doesn't seem to. be. cruel you know quite a lot of. months ago i was writing about. one of the primary problems that it causes blood clots and probably the majority of dying blood clots around the body when they go. and that seems to be driven by. the. big immune reaction so it's never been surprising. i don't think it's just you know. the vaccines are are showing signs that this. would be. regional so people are going to be sure to see which will trigger blood clots around the body now when they're talking abo
kendrick he's a doctor from the case national health service and we appreciate you coming on malcolm we just talked about the figures there the thing i feel is that when you put it into context it doesn't sound like a big number but when you read the tragic stories of people who are perfectly healthy who are no longer with this it makes you think twice and i just wondered how what what your thoughts were and whether stories like this and i'm sure we will see more no matter how small how much...
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Apr 2, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> and malcolm, just from a computer point of view it is a public space. it is meant to be accessed by the public, but at the same time we know now that there are a great number of vulnerabilities. do you think it is, in a sense, almost too complicated? because it is not a statement are there limits to what the dc leadership can do and there has to be so much coordination for any response. >> there are certainly limits for dc, but the real issue is in the hands of the capital police. that site where the incident occurred, just a few weeks ago that was not accessible. it was pushed all of the way down to new jersey avenue and there was jersey barrier run ins that a speeding car could not get through. so by raising that profile it gave whoever decided he would carry out an incident a slightly easier path way. we don't know what intent of this driver was today. he had some motivation to have himself killed, and he did want to injury people in a place that was very high profile. so this is going to give us another reevaluation as to how we allow pedestrians an
. >> and malcolm, just from a computer point of view it is a public space. it is meant to be accessed by the public, but at the same time we know now that there are a great number of vulnerabilities. do you think it is, in a sense, almost too complicated? because it is not a statement are there limits to what the dc leadership can do and there has to be so much coordination for any response. >> there are certainly limits for dc, but the real issue is in the hands of the capital...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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KPIX
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what a th movie d problems but performance was shear business. >> malcolm is extraordinary. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. come back. >> i would love to. thank you. >> thank you for being with us. you have been listening to donald e lacey, jr. look him up. i know you will be pleased with anything he is in, anything he has produced. he is also a great comedian. thank you for being with us. >>> in oakland father and his one-year-old daughter died in a house fire. stomach a bizarre crime, pigs had and the blood splattered across tone. the links to the george floyd murder trial. stomach demonstrate his protest, injured as a call for justice over the recent killings by police. >>> good morning. this morning we have a check of our weather. >>>
what a th movie d problems but performance was shear business. >> malcolm is extraordinary. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. come back. >> i would love to. thank you. >> thank you for being with us. you have been listening to donald e lacey, jr. look him up. i know you will be pleased with anything he is in, anything he has produced. he is also a great comedian. thank you for being with us. >>> in oakland father and his one-year-old daughter died in a...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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malcolm, thank you for joining us so bright and early over here.ion that we are starting to see over the last couple of years, with people who are involved with conspiracy theories. miss phelps was actually an african american who lived down in florida. and she had been increasingly buying into some of the themes we see from the extreme right, the far right. kamala harris is an african america, she is not, she is faking it. and all of these other troops, related to how the trump campaign and some of the more extremist groups view democrats and the democratic leadership. and apparently, she was willing to verbalized that in these videos to her husband, which were monitored by the government. and she stated pretty clearly, she was going to kill kamala harris in a matter of months, and started taking proactive measures, like buying a gun and practicing, to effect that. >> malcolm, do you think all of the rhetoric that we have had over the last few years, especially over the last six months or so has kind of made this current president, vice president
malcolm, thank you for joining us so bright and early over here.ion that we are starting to see over the last couple of years, with people who are involved with conspiracy theories. miss phelps was actually an african american who lived down in florida. and she had been increasingly buying into some of the themes we see from the extreme right, the far right. kamala harris is an african america, she is not, she is faking it. and all of these other troops, related to how the trump campaign and...
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Apr 11, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN3
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ed malcolm scott carpenter -- and now come scott carpenter. -- and malcolm scott carpenter. ♪ and whiley were being trained, several monkeys took rides in the new mercury spacecraft. . ♪ meanwhile, the orbiting of unmanned satellites became more commonplace. weather watchers found a permanent place in daily lives by improving weather forecasting. on august 12, 19 60, president eisenhower took first in the first transmission of the echo one communication satellite. >> this is president eisenhower speaking. it gives me satisfaction to participate in this experiment in communication involving the use of the satellite known as echo. ♪ on may 5, 19 61, astronaut alan b sheppard made america's first suborbital flight. project mercury was underway. >> 3, 2, 1, 0. lift off. read you loud and clear. 14 psi oxygen is go. cabin pressure holding at 5.5. ♪ soon after freedom seven landed, president john kennedy gave nasa an ambitious new space goal. >> we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do other things not because they are easy because they are hard. that goal will serve to organize and
ed malcolm scott carpenter -- and now come scott carpenter. -- and malcolm scott carpenter. ♪ and whiley were being trained, several monkeys took rides in the new mercury spacecraft. . ♪ meanwhile, the orbiting of unmanned satellites became more commonplace. weather watchers found a permanent place in daily lives by improving weather forecasting. on august 12, 19 60, president eisenhower took first in the first transmission of the echo one communication satellite. >> this is president...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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KNTV
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and malcolm gladwell, the author of "the bomber wall."ugene robinson, you heard keith mayes say he doesn't see this as a selma moment. what say you? >> it's too soon to tell. too soon to tell. and frankly, if this isn't a selma moment, what's going to be one? this is a murder that was videotaped for 9 1/2 not only from experts but from the police, from the chief of the department involved, the minneapolis police chief, saying that what derek chauvin did was completely beyond the pale. you had everything. yet, you know, there was this enormous feeling, at least on my part, of relief. i could breathe, when we finally got the verdict, because so many of these verdicts have gone the other way. and so we'll see if we can actually get some systemic change this time. i think we've got a better shot than we've had in the past. but we'll see. >> you know, morgan, on one hand you look at it and it seems obvious that change is going to happen. too much has happened, too much is available for all of us to see. but you know what, we thought that about
and malcolm gladwell, the author of "the bomber wall."ugene robinson, you heard keith mayes say he doesn't see this as a selma moment. what say you? >> it's too soon to tell. too soon to tell. and frankly, if this isn't a selma moment, what's going to be one? this is a murder that was videotaped for 9 1/2 not only from experts but from the police, from the chief of the department involved, the minneapolis police chief, saying that what derek chauvin did was completely beyond the...
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Apr 19, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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malcolm turnbull is a conservative.tralia that are saying this guy is dangerous. so, the murdoch family, when they're saying these people are a danger to democracy, that's what i think people have to understand. when it's not fox in america, it's oann. >> thank you guys both very much. that is "the reidout." "all in with chris hayes" starts right now. >>> tonight on "all in" -- >> you can believe your own eyes. this case is exactly what you thought when you saw it. >> the prosecution closes its case. >> it's exactly what you knew. it's what you felt in your gut. it's what you now know in your heart. >> and the defense makes one last stand. >> you have to be
malcolm turnbull is a conservative.tralia that are saying this guy is dangerous. so, the murdoch family, when they're saying these people are a danger to democracy, that's what i think people have to understand. when it's not fox in america, it's oann. >> thank you guys both very much. that is "the reidout." "all in with chris hayes" starts right now. >>> tonight on "all in" -- >> you can believe your own eyes. this case is exactly what you...
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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not been paid for even longer they rely on handouts for food clothing and medicine al-jazeera as malcolm webb has been to visit them. it's moses' mooney's job to look after the crews of abandoned ships he took us to one the m.v.t. none it's more doc can use coast one and a half years ago it on loaded a cargo of construction materials here at the port of mombasa and it's been in this channel ever since waiting for instructions from its lebanese owners that the syrian crew has never came the only way to meet them has by climbing on board. since they can't leave the ship so i will get. this into action that was the last of the missions and dozens. more my. many many situation like this i was. the ship's crew haven't been paid since months before it was abandoned the port city of mombassa is just there it's only about a kilometer away so close but yet so far for the sailors stuck on board coated restrictions in immigration rules when they can't go on the land plus if they abandon the ship they risk losing the wages that they're owed in some cases up to 3 years and so they're confined within
not been paid for even longer they rely on handouts for food clothing and medicine al-jazeera as malcolm webb has been to visit them. it's moses' mooney's job to look after the crews of abandoned ships he took us to one the m.v.t. none it's more doc can use coast one and a half years ago it on loaded a cargo of construction materials here at the port of mombasa and it's been in this channel ever since waiting for instructions from its lebanese owners that the syrian crew has never came the only...
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and all young malcolm x. was doing was you know hanging out with white people and he didn't show you know the true. history but as anthony said earlier this is a fictional character who never said in this in his character description that he was so called black so i think that we should continue thinking about luther as the celebration of an exceptional you know acting career that has been heralded and as mr who is also a fellow serially only in a whole bunch of accolades we have to be extremely careful they were characters like benson back in the early eighty's you know that apparently weren't black enough and again black people are are not monolithic in the united can and can definitely attest to and this idea that we're going to let hollywood or anyone else determine what blackness is and what blackness isn't is very pernicious incredible in the wire as well as nic. what's your thoughts maybe that's why not the conversation here what's your thoughts in having a diversity chief at all in fact there's 2 at t
and all young malcolm x. was doing was you know hanging out with white people and he didn't show you know the true. history but as anthony said earlier this is a fictional character who never said in this in his character description that he was so called black so i think that we should continue thinking about luther as the celebration of an exceptional you know acting career that has been heralded and as mr who is also a fellow serially only in a whole bunch of accolades we have to be...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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scotland will be without captain rachel malcolm for their six nations match against italy this weekendith evie gallagher coming in to make herfirst start in place of malcolm. the winners on sunday will go on to meet either france or ireland in a third—fourth place play—off. and ben stokes has been named leading cricketer in the world for the second year in a row by wisden. he's currently injured with a broken finger, ruling him out of the ipl. but there was also a surprise inclusion in the bible of cricket. kent's darren stevens has become the oldest person since 1933 to be named as one of wisden's five cricketers of the year, and the fourth oldest recipient of all time at 44 years old. that is it from me for now. i'll have more for you in the next hour. thanks, john. good afternoon. you are watching bbc news. i'm jane thanks, john. good afternoon. you are watching bbc news. i'mjane hill to take you through the next few hours of our coverage. we are talking a lot about the pandemic and impact on nhs waiting times. we will have more on that end other stories besides. let's start with th
scotland will be without captain rachel malcolm for their six nations match against italy this weekendith evie gallagher coming in to make herfirst start in place of malcolm. the winners on sunday will go on to meet either france or ireland in a third—fourth place play—off. and ben stokes has been named leading cricketer in the world for the second year in a row by wisden. he's currently injured with a broken finger, ruling him out of the ipl. but there was also a surprise inclusion in the...
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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says if they lose the last years they'll lose everything malcolm webb al-jazeera kenya. leading british football clubs and players will begin a 4 day boycott of social media from 14 g.m.t. as part of an effort to fight back against online abuse cricket rugby and tennis have also joined in players want social media companies to do more to stop this current ory abuse being sent or seen many of the organisations involved will be posting this message just before the boycott begins it says we want to demonstrate our collective anger at the constant abuse on social media received by footballers and people in the game as well as others across the world which goes without any real world consequences for perpetrators while we've been speaking to john of the english football association about the global support the campaign has received. it's not that we are saying that social media has a mechanism in and of itself is bad what we are sighing is that there are not enough safety margin says not enough monitoring not enough in force men on social media platforms at the moment and tha
says if they lose the last years they'll lose everything malcolm webb al-jazeera kenya. leading british football clubs and players will begin a 4 day boycott of social media from 14 g.m.t. as part of an effort to fight back against online abuse cricket rugby and tennis have also joined in players want social media companies to do more to stop this current ory abuse being sent or seen many of the organisations involved will be posting this message just before the boycott begins it says we want...
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Apr 11, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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our former prime minister malcolm turnbull who has been a leading republican has been a leading republicanbed australians as elizabeth downs rather than monarchists and what he means by that as there is a great affection and understanding and knowledge of the queen. most people have known no other monarch in their lifetime so i think that is very much how the queen is looked at and again at lens i think currency to the view that, with that passage of that generation will come a time where we think very seriously about attempts to move away from a monarchy to a republic, of course malcolm turnbull lead such an attempt in 1999 without success but it's an ongoing discussion here. it is not something that is really driven by any one of these things, it is a desire to have a final sense of independence and autonomy in australia that has been a project really since federation itself.- been a project really since federation itself. really good to talk to you, _ federation itself. really good to talk to you, thanks - federation itself. really good to talk to you, thanks for - to talk to you, thank
our former prime minister malcolm turnbull who has been a leading republican has been a leading republicanbed australians as elizabeth downs rather than monarchists and what he means by that as there is a great affection and understanding and knowledge of the queen. most people have known no other monarch in their lifetime so i think that is very much how the queen is looked at and again at lens i think currency to the view that, with that passage of that generation will come a time where we...
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Apr 3, 2021
04/21
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we will bring in malcolm nats, msnbc terror analyst and author of the plot to betray america and malcolm, welcome. sorry we are talking under these circumstances again. >> we're finding out a little bit more about the suspect, 25-year-old noah green and green had reportedly posted on his now deactivated social media a few weeks ago, a week ago, rather, about fearing the fbi, fearing the cia, and he also wrote that the past few years have been tough, the past few months even tougher, he also referenced the teachings of the nation of islam, that has been classified as a hate group. what are all of these details right now telling bus a possible motive here or his state of mind? >> well, the first thing it tells us is his state of mind was that he intended to commit suicide by cop. you know, we have this saying in the counter-terrorism community, you know, the target determines the tactics. his tactic was, because it was a very hard target, a lot of security up until that point, until about a week ago, that entry control point was about a block away and had jersey barriers he wouldn't be abl
we will bring in malcolm nats, msnbc terror analyst and author of the plot to betray america and malcolm, welcome. sorry we are talking under these circumstances again. >> we're finding out a little bit more about the suspect, 25-year-old noah green and green had reportedly posted on his now deactivated social media a few weeks ago, a week ago, rather, about fearing the fbi, fearing the cia, and he also wrote that the past few years have been tough, the past few months even tougher, he...
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Apr 7, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN
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published by a task force cochaired by secretary hagel and former secretary, minister of defense, malcolm rifkin. in the former australian prime minister. kevin serves on our advisory board for secretary hagel. and the ambassador was the director. it argues that alliances and the changing security environment have shaken american security decrees and shaken the nonproliferation regime. we will consider things from the paper today at the front end of the panel you will hear evo give a nice summary of the key points in that paper. america's more than 30 formal treaty allies depend on a strong nuclear deterrent for security. last week the scope -- last week the atlantic council's practice area issued a brief arguing in favor of continuing on the bipartisan plans to modernize the u.s. nuclear tree had including intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarines and bombers. today's event will consist of a panel discussion moderated by washington post national security correspondent missy ryan. to our viewers, if you would like to have a question considered during today's event, please tweet it u
published by a task force cochaired by secretary hagel and former secretary, minister of defense, malcolm rifkin. in the former australian prime minister. kevin serves on our advisory board for secretary hagel. and the ambassador was the director. it argues that alliances and the changing security environment have shaken american security decrees and shaken the nonproliferation regime. we will consider things from the paper today at the front end of the panel you will hear evo give a nice...
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Apr 24, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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it didn't come out of nowhere anymore then malcolm x and baldwin came out of nowhere. there were precursors and traditions soul city emerged from. >> thank you for sharing that. in your book, and need for economic empowerment and we are still wear we have a large collection it's difficult for this representation of racial minorities. we just want -- three years ago kern county, not l.a. county because up until then, i just want to tell you now, eight out of ten council members are ethnic or racial minorities and six of ten are women so we are very proud for that learning and understanding our history better so we can make some progress. we begin to, it is interesting and thank you for your time, i'd like to begin opportunity to come and talk about final statements and wrap up this discussion so with that, let's start with you, thomas with some final words. >> sure, i'd be glad. i'm going to take the opportunity to read a little package because i want to make clear what the vision was behind soul city and i talked about these traditions soul city emerged out of, this ut
it didn't come out of nowhere anymore then malcolm x and baldwin came out of nowhere. there were precursors and traditions soul city emerged from. >> thank you for sharing that. in your book, and need for economic empowerment and we are still wear we have a large collection it's difficult for this representation of racial minorities. we just want -- three years ago kern county, not l.a. county because up until then, i just want to tell you now, eight out of ten council members are ethnic...
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Apr 25, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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spike lee is a black man who has reached the top of white culture and he's done it his way. >> malcolmement in terms of not being one of these small independent emergent new voices connected to hip-hop, but instead a big budget, three-hour 20 minute epic about an african-american figure. >> i asked if he was ever worried the movie would not appeal to a broad audience? >> people come but the minute you start thinking about crossover, start diluting the work, watering it down and the work suffers. >> when we look at the john singletons and the spice, all the way across the board, this became the era where we took charge of our own culture, our own cultural icons and telling our own stories, express even music or theater or in cinema. >> in los angeles, one woman is stirring memories and trying to bring about an understanding of the events that tore that city apart a little more than a year ago. her name is anna devere smith and she's taken the riot and turned it into theater. >> twilight, that's my name. >> this is a one woman tour de force. >> that wasn't us over there. >> i thought of
spike lee is a black man who has reached the top of white culture and he's done it his way. >> malcolmement in terms of not being one of these small independent emergent new voices connected to hip-hop, but instead a big budget, three-hour 20 minute epic about an african-american figure. >> i asked if he was ever worried the movie would not appeal to a broad audience? >> people come but the minute you start thinking about crossover, start diluting the work, watering it down...
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Apr 24, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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one day i brought a copy of the autobiography of malcolm x to class. he said i don't want that book in my class he said he is a racist. i said have you ever read it? he said now i said how do you know he is a racist? i said you should read the book before you make a judgment. don't you teach us that? he said okay so he challenge me to write a book report which i did and present that about malcolm x. what i admired about him that i did think he was a very good teacher was his w willingness to admit he had taken an action that he taught us don't judge a book by its cover and don't just react but he was doing that. so to me that model the kind of teaching and thinking i think we should encourage don't judge ad book by its cover don't be so quick to react. try to understand another person's perspective it just means you understand where they are coming from. our society would be a lot better off if there were more of that. >> that's great. i didn't realize you are both social studies teachers. had some questions from the audience and we covered a lot in th
one day i brought a copy of the autobiography of malcolm x to class. he said i don't want that book in my class he said he is a racist. i said have you ever read it? he said now i said how do you know he is a racist? i said you should read the book before you make a judgment. don't you teach us that? he said okay so he challenge me to write a book report which i did and present that about malcolm x. what i admired about him that i did think he was a very good teacher was his w willingness to...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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SFGTV
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my name is malcolm joshua waitz. i've known since i was young that i wanted to be a cannabis entrepreneur. it's a path that's granted me the skills. -- my personal experience within sf cannabis program and within the criminal justice system for the need for anning teal program to start with. i know what it's like to have multiple charges. sitting in a cell not knowing how many years it will be before you see your family. then i watched my father go through the same struggle. i've experienced what it's like to fight for equity in cannabis. that recognized the damage for the prison pipelines and the fact that local sf cannabis entrepreneurs play a nationwide role in the cannabis business. i know the difficulty equity candidates have looking for property in sf. i found three viable locations and signed three leases. i've experienced what it's like to negotiate deals and the right decisions are critical utilizing the equity cannabis present as my backbone. i've worked on getting three separate retail applications through
my name is malcolm joshua waitz. i've known since i was young that i wanted to be a cannabis entrepreneur. it's a path that's granted me the skills. -- my personal experience within sf cannabis program and within the criminal justice system for the need for anning teal program to start with. i know what it's like to have multiple charges. sitting in a cell not knowing how many years it will be before you see your family. then i watched my father go through the same struggle. i've experienced...
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Apr 27, 2021
04/21
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>> that was all malcolm spellman our writer. the comic book and now in the movie. he was recontextualized every time he was brought back into the economic book universe. so with this, malcolm wanted to make it more of my experience, more of my voice so i could relate to the character more, since he had basically a blank canvas to play with. so he gave me, like, little nuggets of my, like, personal experience and put it in there to make me more comfortable with the character. >> stephen: well, i've got something that i have been told you have not seen yet, but it's pretty awesome. this is your action figure -- >> no! shut up! >> stephen: there is -- there you are. i'm leaving this one in the box to keep it cherry, but here we go. >> where did you get that? >> stephen: i don't know, i work in tv. they give me things. the wings are foldable. the wings are foldable like this. >> that's dope. >> stephen: the arms, you can whack somebody like that. i think this comes off. let's get a good shot here. >> let me see. looks more like jami
>> that was all malcolm spellman our writer. the comic book and now in the movie. he was recontextualized every time he was brought back into the economic book universe. so with this, malcolm wanted to make it more of my experience, more of my voice so i could relate to the character more, since he had basically a blank canvas to play with. so he gave me, like, little nuggets of my, like, personal experience and put it in there to make me more comfortable with the character. >>...
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Apr 19, 2021
04/21
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we all know what happened to malcolm. we know what happened to martin.> that's a little bit of the history as we watch more history unfold tonight. and this admittedly incomplete report has thus far briefly touched on the economy and the pandemic. now as for the police conduct that set off these wider protests, that history has been with us a long time. the repeated use of excessive force and killing, which begins as incidents but then, worse, becomes formally legitimized in a u.s. criminal justice system that allows and defends it. now we can report that to you tonight as a fact because the facts show a vast majority of the allegations against police in these instances result in no firings let alone criminal charges. in the few cases that do lead to a charge, take roughly 15 per year over ten riots in the uconn text of injustice. >> i will continue to condemn riots. continue to say to my brothers and sisters that this is not the way. in the final analysis, a riot is the language of the unheard. 'cause i do things a bit differently. wet teddy bears! wet
we all know what happened to malcolm. we know what happened to martin.> that's a little bit of the history as we watch more history unfold tonight. and this admittedly incomplete report has thus far briefly touched on the economy and the pandemic. now as for the police conduct that set off these wider protests, that history has been with us a long time. the repeated use of excessive force and killing, which begins as incidents but then, worse, becomes formally legitimized in a u.s. criminal...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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hear malcolm turnbull's unique perspective coming up. >>> but first, another mass shooting. actually two of them overnight. in kenosha, wisconsin, overnight, three dead and two injured at a confrontation at a bar and in columbus, ohio, one dead and five others wounded at the vigil for a victim of a previous shooting. rather than feeling numb to this, let's break the cycle. try to imagine the pain. the hot lead of a bullet tearing through tissue. shattering bones. cutting through blood vessels, pulverizing organs. it is heinous devastation to human bodies, all too common in america. somehow accepted at normal, unacceptable pain and devastation. so i want to ask how could the press impress the coverage of gun violence? how could we bring it home? let me try a few suggestions and then bring in three reporters who have more to add. number one, for me, this subject is covered shooting by shooting, episode by episode, when it needs to be covered wholistically. think about it, most coverage happens when we know the least. think about the first hour after an attack. when the tv cove
hear malcolm turnbull's unique perspective coming up. >>> but first, another mass shooting. actually two of them overnight. in kenosha, wisconsin, overnight, three dead and two injured at a confrontation at a bar and in columbus, ohio, one dead and five others wounded at the vigil for a victim of a previous shooting. rather than feeling numb to this, let's break the cycle. try to imagine the pain. the hot lead of a bullet tearing through tissue. shattering bones. cutting through blood...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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scotland will be without captain rachel malcolm for their six nations match against italy this weekendfour changes by the scots. the winners on sunday will go on to meet either france or ireland in a third—place play—off. and that's all the sport for now. have a very good night. hello there. it's turning chilly quickly this evening, but it was a fine spring day for much of the country. the sun was certainly out across western scotland, and it was in the west of scotland that we saw highest the temperatures, around 15 celsius. quite a bit cooler, though, in the north easterly breeze for the southeast of england and east anglia, where we saw more cloud and some showers. those showers having drifted down towards hampshire will fade away overnight, and it's going to turn dry and clear in most areas. there will be some mist and fog patches forming across parts of the southeast later on in the night. quite a widespread frost again, temperatures similar to where we had them last night, maybe a little bit milder, though across northern ireland and the northwest of scotland, where we've got tha
scotland will be without captain rachel malcolm for their six nations match against italy this weekendfour changes by the scots. the winners on sunday will go on to meet either france or ireland in a third—place play—off. and that's all the sport for now. have a very good night. hello there. it's turning chilly quickly this evening, but it was a fine spring day for much of the country. the sun was certainly out across western scotland, and it was in the west of scotland that we saw highest...
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Apr 1, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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captain rachel malcolm starts at six while another forward, evie gallagher, is in line to win her firstdown, because the way it's been going to the pandemic, we've been able to train with a larger squad and been able to bring in players that we think are close enough to selection and because of that, they've been able to train over the past few months with, really push themselves into the frame and so if you are good enough, you'll get in. it's not about reputation, it's how you are performing. meanwhile for england — helena rowland will start at ten. centre emily scarratt captains the side as regular skipper sarah hunter continues her return from injury. delighted to say we are joined by one of those starters let's have a look at some other stories making headline today, and staying with rugby. worcester warriors wing chris ashton has been banned for six weeks after his red card for dangerous play against northampton on saturday. that means the former england international will miss all but the last two premiership games... worcester are seven points adrift at the bottom of the table u
captain rachel malcolm starts at six while another forward, evie gallagher, is in line to win her firstdown, because the way it's been going to the pandemic, we've been able to train with a larger squad and been able to bring in players that we think are close enough to selection and because of that, they've been able to train over the past few months with, really push themselves into the frame and so if you are good enough, you'll get in. it's not about reputation, it's how you are performing....
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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we all know what happened to malcolm. we all know what happened to malcolm.ark. and so many more. >> that's a little bit of the history as we watch more history unfold tonight, and this admittedly incomplete report has thus far briefly touched on the economy and the pandemic. now, as for the police conduct that set off the wider protests, that history has been with us a long time. the repeated use of excessive force and killing, which begins as incidents but then worse becomes formally legitimized in a u.s. criminal justice system that allows and defends it. now, we can report that to you tonight as a fact because the facts show a vast majority of the allegations against police in these incidents result in no firings, let alone criminal charges. in the few cases that do lead to a charge, take roughly 15 per year over ten years, that's about ten per year of charges of manslaughter or higher, and the convictions for those very rare charges i can tell you are even more rare. as a a bowling green professor, phillip stenson, that tracks all these incidents, and he
we all know what happened to malcolm. we all know what happened to malcolm.ark. and so many more. >> that's a little bit of the history as we watch more history unfold tonight, and this admittedly incomplete report has thus far briefly touched on the economy and the pandemic. now, as for the police conduct that set off the wider protests, that history has been with us a long time. the repeated use of excessive force and killing, which begins as incidents but then worse becomes formally...
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Apr 1, 2021
04/21
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king and malcolm and others didn't live to 40.neration behind him and others that could mentor us and we learned how to get old. we used to fight the old saying get off the stage. we have learned how to get old and understand young people have to have their space and have to have their deals the way they see it just like we did. i used to give reverend jackson and jones a fit when i was young. i think it's a learning process because of that. so i'm glad, as i stand with a family of george floyd, that i can also embrace the fact that young activists in minneapolis that are going to do things whether i'm there or not and whether the national action network is to exist, those young people that follow alicia garza as much or more than they do me are going to be there or not, that's the maturity of the movement. one of the proudest things i have seen is when president obama had the task force on policing that he put brittney on the task force. those of us older supported that because if there is no continuity of movement from generatio
king and malcolm and others didn't live to 40.neration behind him and others that could mentor us and we learned how to get old. we used to fight the old saying get off the stage. we have learned how to get old and understand young people have to have their space and have to have their deals the way they see it just like we did. i used to give reverend jackson and jones a fit when i was young. i think it's a learning process because of that. so i'm glad, as i stand with a family of george...
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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KQED
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here's special correspondent malcolm brabant. >> reporter: 76 years since the auschwitz birkenau death camp was liberated and its rail head of industrial slaughter neutralized, ghosts of the holocaust are coming to life in new uplifting stories. one of the wartime heroines portrayed in this book is bela hazan, seen here with her son yoel on the right. yoel, a brain scientist in jerusalem, wants the world to know what his mother did in the war to compensate for the torrid reception she received in israel after surviving auschwitz birkenau. >> they used to say she went like sheep to the slaughter and she was treated as such. why didn't you resist? i mean, this was a question. what did you do that meant you weren't killed? did you collaborate with the nazis? were you bartering sex for food? were you a prostitute? i mean, these were questions that were put to her. >> reporter: how angry does that make you that your mother's first period in israel was so awful? >> i'm extremely angry. and this is, of course, one of the reasons why i'm trying to tell her story. >> reporter: this picture test
here's special correspondent malcolm brabant. >> reporter: 76 years since the auschwitz birkenau death camp was liberated and its rail head of industrial slaughter neutralized, ghosts of the holocaust are coming to life in new uplifting stories. one of the wartime heroines portrayed in this book is bela hazan, seen here with her son yoel on the right. yoel, a brain scientist in jerusalem, wants the world to know what his mother did in the war to compensate for the torrid reception she...
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Apr 29, 2021
04/21
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KGO
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tomorrow night, maya rudolph and malcolm gladwell, with music from kings of leon.ech unlike anything you've ever seen before. big plans for helping american problems. gun control. solving the immigration issue. and two women making history. >> madam speaker, madam vice president. no president has ever said those words and it's about time. >> our powerhouse political
tomorrow night, maya rudolph and malcolm gladwell, with music from kings of leon.ech unlike anything you've ever seen before. big plans for helping american problems. gun control. solving the immigration issue. and two women making history. >> madam speaker, madam vice president. no president has ever said those words and it's about time. >> our powerhouse political
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Apr 17, 2021
04/21
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KGO
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eye 50
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malcolm brogdon. jaylen brown. would also be a good one. steph curry, would also be a good one. have a job for klay thompson. price is right. clay is funny without trying. price is right. you think about bidding on items. a lot of money involved. stuff like that. he will tell them in a nice way that it was a dumb answer. he will be like watch the replay. >> fun with jaelyn. do you see the spring college football? daniel smith gets tripped up, throws it up and it is a touchdown. what just happened? as he is falling, he finds it up there and sometimes, miracles are answered. his team lost the game 27-20. i want to go back to the warriors. klay thompson, price is right, is that not spot on? >> that's what i was saying. i could totally see it. let's make it happen. wrong network. >> clay is our guy. warriors, celtics, we have a pregame at 5:00. 5:30 pregame. all of us are here after thomonwas so fuyour own run-ins with him. >> he is really, really funny. jaelyn, he outlined it right there. he doesn't even try and he makes people laugh. he has a great sense of humor. price is right,
malcolm brogdon. jaylen brown. would also be a good one. steph curry, would also be a good one. have a job for klay thompson. price is right. clay is funny without trying. price is right. you think about bidding on items. a lot of money involved. stuff like that. he will tell them in a nice way that it was a dumb answer. he will be like watch the replay. >> fun with jaelyn. do you see the spring college football? daniel smith gets tripped up, throws it up and it is a touchdown. what just...
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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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says if they lose the last rep asked is to lose everything malcolm webb al-jazeera kenya. again i'm fully back to go with the headlines on al-jazeera at least 44 people have been killed and more than 150 injured in a stampede at a religious festival in northern israel it happened in mount meron where up 220-0000 outer orthodox jews had gathered at foster has more from there. the prime minister's spokesman has been tweeting about it saying that it was the overcrowding that led to a stampede which in turn led to the partial collapse of a structure that people were standing on so that is the closest thing we've had to sort of an official proximate cause of what took place but of course there are much wider questions being asked about the nature of all this as well. the 1st shipment of emergency supplies from the u.s. has arrived in india to help it fattal's fight spiralling coronavirus infections and deaths the number of infections reached another record high in the last 24 hours with more than 386000 cases and 3500 deaths brazil is marking another bleak milestone in the coro
says if they lose the last rep asked is to lose everything malcolm webb al-jazeera kenya. again i'm fully back to go with the headlines on al-jazeera at least 44 people have been killed and more than 150 injured in a stampede at a religious festival in northern israel it happened in mount meron where up 220-0000 outer orthodox jews had gathered at foster has more from there. the prime minister's spokesman has been tweeting about it saying that it was the overcrowding that led to a stampede...
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drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of micro plastics says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the region pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bombs waiting to break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking marine foreigner and flora plastic production has risen sharply over the past 50 years there are now over $400000000.00 tonnes worldwide per year smaller and smaller particles are created by wind and waves friction and sunlight does so small that they could be absorbed into our blood through the stomach researchers see this as a danger to humans experiments with cell. culture has already shown that large amounts of particles can be toxic. what we can so i think with some certainty is if we carry on at the moment as we're going producing more and more plastic not managing the waste very well eventually where
drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of micro plastics says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the region pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bombs waiting to break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking marine...
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drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of my kreplach dick says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the rain pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bomb waiting to break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking marine foreigner and flora plastic production has risen sharply over the past 50 years there are now over $400000000.00 tonnes worldwide per year and smaller and smaller particles are created by wind and waves friction and sunlight does so small that they could be absorbed into our blood through the stomach researchers see this as a danger to humans experiments with. has already shown that large amounts of numbing particles can be toxic. what we can say i think with some certainty is if we carry on at the moment as we're going producing more and more plastic not managing the waste very well eventually levels wh
drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of my kreplach dick says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the rain pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bomb waiting to break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking marine...
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drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of my crap lastic says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the marine pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bombs way things are break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking marine for now i'm flora plastic production has risen sharply over the past 50 years there are now over $400000000.00 tons worldwide per year smaller and smaller particles are created by wind and waves friction and sunlight does so small that they could be absorbed into our blood through the stomach researchers see this as a danger to humans experiments with celko. has already shown that large amounts of numbing particles can be toxic. what we can so i think with some certainty is if we carry on at the moment as we're going producing more and more plastic not managing the waste very well eventually where
drinking water and eating fish the oceans and rivers in particular are full of my crap lastic says malcolm hudson a professor of environmental science he conducts research on the marine pollution from plastic particles those plastic particles if you like a little time bombs way things are break down smaller after brain absorbed by wildlife or by people and then potentially have harmful consequences. because plastic does not biodegrade it turns up everywhere flooding the beaches and choking...