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Mar 16, 2013
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. >> jesus came before marx. marx is 19th-century. marx may have imitated jesus.d not imitate marx. >> but the thing is, they are scared of marxism. >> the reason you have the military was partly because of what they perceived as a threat. >> absolutely. >> there's a consciousness which they shared with the church hierarchy. >> this is what the cia did. they condemned liberation theology when father roy discovered the cia torture manuals right in them is talking to the contras in nicaragua go after them. they are a threat. >> cardinal jorge mario bergoglio issued on behalf of the church for its complicity. let's focus on that moment in history and we'll talk more about the church's role right after this. they don't? [ male announcer ] nope, but alka seltzer plus severe sinus does it treats your worst sinus symptoms, plus that annoying cough. [ breathes deeply ] ♪ oh, what a relief it is! [ angry gibberish ] mommy's having a french fry. yes she is, yes she is. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. 100% vegetable juice, with three of your daily vegetable ser
. >> jesus came before marx. marx is 19th-century. marx may have imitated jesus.d not imitate marx. >> but the thing is, they are scared of marxism. >> the reason you have the military was partly because of what they perceived as a threat. >> absolutely. >> there's a consciousness which they shared with the church hierarchy. >> this is what the cia did. they condemned liberation theology when father roy discovered the cia torture manuals right in them is...
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Mar 30, 2013
03/13
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when i tell people, 'no, i don't like marx because marx has a dictatorship with the proletariat.' 'no, i don't like plato because he has a dictatorship of the educated elite,' you know. a lot of--of, you know, republicans, conservative thinkers, are--are very excited about that. but i find some people who are--who are--who are caught up in that notion of science, that notion, 'well, what is the answer'--you know, the--it's a christian notion. it's a scientific notion. i--i don't know the answer. we can sit together, we can work out this answer. let's start talking about it. because the talking about it, the believing that i can impact the nation, that my power can say something, is the most important thing. so when my friend randall robinson writes his book, "the debt," and he talks about reparations, he agrees that the most important thing about reparations is to understand and realize what you've lost. then you know what it is you need to repair. c-span: one of the other things you talk about is looking in the mirror. >> guest: yeah. c-span: well, now when you stand and look at
when i tell people, 'no, i don't like marx because marx has a dictatorship with the proletariat.' 'no, i don't like plato because he has a dictatorship of the educated elite,' you know. a lot of--of, you know, republicans, conservative thinkers, are--are very excited about that. but i find some people who are--who are--who are caught up in that notion of science, that notion, 'well, what is the answer'--you know, the--it's a christian notion. it's a scientific notion. i--i don't know the...
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Mar 30, 2013
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then studied as a psychologist and social worker and inspired by john do we, she and a partner, louis marx, ran a series of model classes and schools in the public education system, based on the progressive series of john dewey. she and her compatriots railed against the role of rote memorization, and strict memorization. she believed children should read and write and do things on their own timetable and it was harmful to force them to do it faster. she believed their emotional development was as important as their intellectual development. he said the most important thing the school could do was get children into the habit of being happy. most importantly she believed, and her fellow progressive educators believed that a school must instill in children's minds the ability to think independently so that they could participate fully in the american democracy. in 1932 elizabeth ehrlan's classes were c.s. 41, still in the village. the city at that point was due its funding from the experiment and the parents were so upset that their children would not be able to take classes with elizabeth e
then studied as a psychologist and social worker and inspired by john do we, she and a partner, louis marx, ran a series of model classes and schools in the public education system, based on the progressive series of john dewey. she and her compatriots railed against the role of rote memorization, and strict memorization. she believed children should read and write and do things on their own timetable and it was harmful to force them to do it faster. she believed their emotional development was...
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Mar 30, 2013
03/13
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letters from george washington, jefferson, eisenhower, edison, marx and darwin. but two letters in particular from popular culture figures are getting a lot of attention. in one, marilyn monroe writes to her acting coach and friend lee strasburg, quote, "i still am lost. i mean, i can't get myself together. my will is weak. i can't stand anything. i sound crazy, but i think i'm going crazy. i feel like i'm not existing in the human race at all." in another letter, john lennon writes a scorcher to paul and linda mccartney in 1971 after reading some questionable comments they made about himself and yoko. he writes to mccartney, "i hope you realize what [ expletive ] you and the rest of your kind and unselfish friends laid on yoko and me since we've been together." he goes on, "do you really think most of today's art came about because of the beatles? i don't believe you're that insane. paul, do you believe that? when you stop believing it, you might wake up. didn't we always say we were part of the movement, not all of it? of course we changed the world, but try an
letters from george washington, jefferson, eisenhower, edison, marx and darwin. but two letters in particular from popular culture figures are getting a lot of attention. in one, marilyn monroe writes to her acting coach and friend lee strasburg, quote, "i still am lost. i mean, i can't get myself together. my will is weak. i can't stand anything. i sound crazy, but i think i'm going crazy. i feel like i'm not existing in the human race at all." in another letter, john lennon writes a...
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Mar 31, 2013
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and what he does is he takes concepts, it feels like schaller, freud, marx and makes them clear, notimplified the clear so people all over the world can understand them. and for that role, pope john xxiii said you are a global teacher. he was right. had one good pope. now in addition to being a global communicator, here's something i want to bring amnesty right into. everywhere since 1956, the hungarian revolt under attack and dictatorship, said to his red. every single time, especially "escape from freedom." prop 67, poland early 80s, soviet collapse the 89, 91. and thanks to josh erik sprague, what we're able to do here through representatives in the field of amnesty and transnational biscuit reports. a real single thing i asked. go into a bookstore and see if they are reading him now. tunisia, to nice. a crest and the national police force. after the revolt was filled with books. and this goes on and so forth. they are certainly not in syria now. but even arab spring are still getting that cycle. finally in the last point in terms of legacy, said she was part of the generation of
and what he does is he takes concepts, it feels like schaller, freud, marx and makes them clear, notimplified the clear so people all over the world can understand them. and for that role, pope john xxiii said you are a global teacher. he was right. had one good pope. now in addition to being a global communicator, here's something i want to bring amnesty right into. everywhere since 1956, the hungarian revolt under attack and dictatorship, said to his red. every single time, especially...
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Mar 13, 2013
03/13
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scene with a phone cord and someone yanking the stuff and on that level it's part three stooges, part marxrothers, part completely surrealistic. it's sloppy, it's smelly. it's disreputable. what's nice about film noir, it's disreputable filmmaking. the last scene in "detour," didn't have a seal of approval. it was all made. (martin goldsmith) there is somebody who actually killed somebody and what is he doing? he's hitchhiking around. (man's thoughts) someday a car will pick me up that i never thumbed. (martin goldsmith) so i put in just a few lines. (man's thoughts) yes, fate, or some mysterious force, can put the finger on you or me for no good reason at all. i think noir hit people so hard it's because essentially at the core of it all they're tales of survival, in a completely naked fashion. a certain kind of hard film, full of difficulty and emotion. and explosions of -- of emotional drama and anxiety was popular in the sense that people went to the movies to see that kind of thing. if you go back and look over the plots of film noir, you discover that more than a quarter of the total
scene with a phone cord and someone yanking the stuff and on that level it's part three stooges, part marxrothers, part completely surrealistic. it's sloppy, it's smelly. it's disreputable. what's nice about film noir, it's disreputable filmmaking. the last scene in "detour," didn't have a seal of approval. it was all made. (martin goldsmith) there is somebody who actually killed somebody and what is he doing? he's hitchhiking around. (man's thoughts) someday a car will pick me up...
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one who wants to sit idly by marx and stacy delve into the cypriot crisis in the late edition of the kaiser report bit later this hour the share the lack of optimism too over britain's latest plan for a miracle comeback. what i told you about gold that is to say told you to buy gold four years ago right here in the kaiser report many of you asked but what if the government confiscates our gold maybe the more intelligent question you should have been asking was what if they seize your bank account when i talk to you about bitcoin that is to say i told you to buy a bit coin of five dollars per bitcoin you screeched what if they shut down the internet or maybe you should have been asking what if they shut down all the banks well it's too late now the template has been set and while europe melts down let's see what the template holds for the united kingdom oh right here in old britannia where over my shoulder you can see the plank above the mayor's office where boris johnson the mayor may very well commit suicide. situation the america's most notorious attention come speak of the increas
one who wants to sit idly by marx and stacy delve into the cypriot crisis in the late edition of the kaiser report bit later this hour the share the lack of optimism too over britain's latest plan for a miracle comeback. what i told you about gold that is to say told you to buy gold four years ago right here in the kaiser report many of you asked but what if the government confiscates our gold maybe the more intelligent question you should have been asking was what if they seize your bank...
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up with one person winning and everybody else losing that's the inevitable basis of capitalism call marx identified and while i disagree with his suggestions for solving the problem i think is a balance as was accurate what do we do with this this flaw that's built into capitalism of the tendency toward monopolies ok well first off i wouldn't say having over fifty percent of market shares. so it's because of an op would be one hundred percent so yeah but how could how can any new entrant any small entrant into a market compete with somebody else fifty percent of market share easy because there's another fifty percent out there to grab you could look at this in the sense that you know people like you said this was a poor service is being offered there was lot of complaints against the company competition should be springing up left and right to compete against they haven't had these is because these because it's people like this monopolists dominate markets the question of what it is like it was a monopoly it's just it just wasn't monopoly we're talking of a company that did not have one
up with one person winning and everybody else losing that's the inevitable basis of capitalism call marx identified and while i disagree with his suggestions for solving the problem i think is a balance as was accurate what do we do with this this flaw that's built into capitalism of the tendency toward monopolies ok well first off i wouldn't say having over fifty percent of market shares. so it's because of an op would be one hundred percent so yeah but how could how can any new entrant any...
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Mar 11, 2013
03/13
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aside from returns, 80 billion returns, marx has also made a killing buying and selling homes.is malibu mansion on 10 acres for $75 million. doesn't that look nice? originally bought the estate for $31 million in 2002. the billionaire scooped up a 30 room apartment in manhattan. the ink is barely dry on that one but he could flip it for a profit. 740 park avenue, one of the most prestigious addresses in the world. >> it sure is beautiful. america's pension system may be on the shakeyest ground it has ever been on before. find out why and what happens for you, next. revolutionizing an industry can be a tough act to follow, but at xerox we've embraced a new role. working behind the scenes to provide companies with services... like helping hr departments manage benefits and pensions for over 11 million employees. reducing document costs by up to 30%... and processing $421 billion dollars in accounts payables each year. helping thousands of companies simplify how work gets done. how's that for an encore? with xerox, you're ready for real business. a talking car. but i'll tell you w
aside from returns, 80 billion returns, marx has also made a killing buying and selling homes.is malibu mansion on 10 acres for $75 million. doesn't that look nice? originally bought the estate for $31 million in 2002. the billionaire scooped up a 30 room apartment in manhattan. the ink is barely dry on that one but he could flip it for a profit. 740 park avenue, one of the most prestigious addresses in the world. >> it sure is beautiful. america's pension system may be on the shakeyest...
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Mar 21, 2013
03/13
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i quote chico marx, who are you going to believe me or your own eyes.pantries in america. most run by faith-based agencies. they would be the first to tell you hunger is real. tens of millions--we're not starving like somalia because we do have some safety net but they are going hungry and lack sufficient food. >> john: they have money money to save other countries lives but they don't have enough money to save americans' lives. thank you. >> thank you. >> john: apologize for the iraq war but only from liberals. that's ahead. are you encouraged by what you heard the president say the other night? is this personal or is it political? a lot of my work happens by doing the things that i am given to doing anyway. staying in tough with everything that is going on politically and putting my own nuance on it. not only does senator rubio just care about rich people but somehow he thinks raising the minimum wage is a bad idea for the middle class. but we do care about them, right? vo: the war room monday to thursday at 6 eastern >> john: welcomer back to tsunami
i quote chico marx, who are you going to believe me or your own eyes.pantries in america. most run by faith-based agencies. they would be the first to tell you hunger is real. tens of millions--we're not starving like somalia because we do have some safety net but they are going hungry and lack sufficient food. >> john: they have money money to save other countries lives but they don't have enough money to save americans' lives. thank you. >> thank you. >> john: apologize for...
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Mar 11, 2013
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. >>> marx may be at record levels, but for dennis gartman, here's what he said on february 26th. bad he doesn't still love them. the s&p 500 since that call. let's get a trade update. dennis joins us now. always good to see you. >> you know, it's not like we know the verdict on this trade yet. where do you go from here? >> i trade -- i trade goal against yen, again the canadian dollar, so i'm always looking for other places. i love stocks at one time, and i'm going to stay up on the sidelines. there's no reason having been wrong. i have more interests going on if i missed the stock market by 3%,ic go up against without me. i will say -- i only trade for my own account. this afternoon for the first time in a long while i bought some appear the. i bought sum, so it's not an outright position. it's just a bet on apple. >>> if you wanted a hedge on apple why use s&p instead of nasdaq? >> probably after tonight i'll go back, take a look and realize probably go over and sell nasdaq futures, but the first thing i did, i because apple. that's not unusual. i eet check and probably move my
. >>> marx may be at record levels, but for dennis gartman, here's what he said on february 26th. bad he doesn't still love them. the s&p 500 since that call. let's get a trade update. dennis joins us now. always good to see you. >> you know, it's not like we know the verdict on this trade yet. where do you go from here? >> i trade -- i trade goal against yen, again the canadian dollar, so i'm always looking for other places. i love stocks at one time, and i'm going to...
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Mar 11, 2013
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howard marx. he's a good friend. a real money pro at the street.com and will be grilling warren buffett at the big annual festival. let's go to frank in new york. frank? >> caller: boo-yah from nanuet, new york. >> i pass right by you on my way to work. so i hi to you all the time. what's up? >> i've had chesapeake in the portfolio and it's been red all year. it finally turned to green over the last two days. so i'm wondering if chesapeake has enough gas to keep going or should i take a modest profit and do something else. >> natural gas price is going up. this is not the nat gas stock i want you in. i think you wait until 23 and then sayonara! and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round! >> the lightning round is sponsored by td ameritrade. >> caller: hi, jim. this is bill from state college, pennsylvania. >> yes, nittany lions! >> how's pops? >> how's pops? we had the best time this weekend. went to dollar tree. it was just terrific. went to morning glory for brunch. got a lot of candy.
howard marx. he's a good friend. a real money pro at the street.com and will be grilling warren buffett at the big annual festival. let's go to frank in new york. frank? >> caller: boo-yah from nanuet, new york. >> i pass right by you on my way to work. so i hi to you all the time. what's up? >> i've had chesapeake in the portfolio and it's been red all year. it finally turned to green over the last two days. so i'm wondering if chesapeake has enough gas to keep going or...
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Mar 19, 2013
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our own people marx yourty of americans think they think it was a mistake.emise of the war will a be questioned, so will the results. >> bret: charles? >> the future of iraq today is indeterminant. in a large part because of the botched occupation, where we tried not just to change the government but the army, the police, the coinal, currency, everything. the model was nazi germany. but that was leveled. so we had our way. ironically, the initial toppling of the saddam government was so economical, so efficient, historically so discriminating that it left iraq intact. we did not have our way. but then there was another turning point, which was the surge. which was the finest moment of the bush administration. democrats opposed it. it defeated the insurgency and decimateed al-qaeda in iraq. it created conditions for stability. the worst irony is that obama was handed one task. one task alone, the war ended on the ground to preserve the gains by negotiating that agreement to leave behind residual force to mediate between the sects, train a army and exert influ
our own people marx yourty of americans think they think it was a mistake.emise of the war will a be questioned, so will the results. >> bret: charles? >> the future of iraq today is indeterminant. in a large part because of the botched occupation, where we tried not just to change the government but the army, the police, the coinal, currency, everything. the model was nazi germany. but that was leveled. so we had our way. ironically, the initial toppling of the saddam government...
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Mar 1, 2013
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i was going to do the groucho marx line, but i can't fit it in here.e on the right don't agree with the decision not to invite christie to speak. here is charles krauthammer, a pretty conservative guy, on fox on tuesday. >> i think this is a vast overreaction, it's a mistake. he's a leading republican. he's obviously presidential timbre. he's got the highest popularity of any governor, and he's in a blue state. look, i wasn't very happy with what he did at sandy. i thought he deserved three months in quarantine. the three months is up. and i let him out. i have him at cpac. we should have a wide tent. >> good old charles. i thought he was going to be kind for a second. but he said after you have put him in the stocks for three months and whipped him a few times, then you can let him show up at your little meeting over at harbor place. what do you think of that? your last thought from michelle? isn't that amazing the way charles gives his knife kisses? >> that's about as nice as they're going to get. what i think is that the republican party is still ki
i was going to do the groucho marx line, but i can't fit it in here.e on the right don't agree with the decision not to invite christie to speak. here is charles krauthammer, a pretty conservative guy, on fox on tuesday. >> i think this is a vast overreaction, it's a mistake. he's a leading republican. he's obviously presidential timbre. he's got the highest popularity of any governor, and he's in a blue state. look, i wasn't very happy with what he did at sandy. i thought he deserved...
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Mar 14, 2013
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over-leaning government, which one could manage about debt, drones and taxts are punctuated with remarks of marx or mao. is it a problem that the people that go to cpac, thatib ilk of e party is too loud in their crazy messaging. >> i coined jane's law, when i was blogging und a pseudonym. people that are devoted to to the party that has the white house are smug and arrogant. and people devoted to the party that's out of the white house are insane. this is an irregularity you can observe in politics, when bush was in office, it wasn't enough thaw didn't like the iraq war or that -- he actually had to be hitler, right? he actually had to be just the dark knight of fascism was about three minutes from descending on to the united states throughout the entire bush administration. and you've got some of that here at cpac now, right? this is what's on display. now obviously there's the question of how does a party manage those people? because they're in both parties, they're always quite loud among themselves. what's interesting about cpac is that this is seen as being an influential movement that act
over-leaning government, which one could manage about debt, drones and taxts are punctuated with remarks of marx or mao. is it a problem that the people that go to cpac, thatib ilk of e party is too loud in their crazy messaging. >> i coined jane's law, when i was blogging und a pseudonym. people that are devoted to to the party that has the white house are smug and arrogant. and people devoted to the party that's out of the white house are insane. this is an irregularity you can observe...
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industry doowop believes this is this is this is how capitalism destroys itself this is what karl marx described scapa to i would have to disagree with you that i believe in private contracts but i think the real problem even when they see evil and they harm the consumers that's why you need more competition in the market but you can't have competition the marketplace when there are natural monopolies there's only so many airwaves but what is only solving some euro is the government has never really allowed for the unlocking technology to be lawful that's one of those pro-competition technology not in lawful up until this last year yes or no so i wrote the made all the calls on this issue it was lawful for personal use but the technology has actually never been lawful to sell or to create or to traffic and so once you legalize these technologies then you're going to have more competition overall there are going to wrap it up thank you for being here and it's interesting and i appreciate your perspective thing. coming up president obama is taking advice from one of america's most secret
industry doowop believes this is this is this is how capitalism destroys itself this is what karl marx described scapa to i would have to disagree with you that i believe in private contracts but i think the real problem even when they see evil and they harm the consumers that's why you need more competition in the market but you can't have competition the marketplace when there are natural monopolies there's only so many airwaves but what is only solving some euro is the government has never...
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Mar 16, 2013
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it went from, as karl marx said of lincoln when he passed the emancipation proclamation he turned it from a civil war to a revolution. and lincoln sort of knew that himself. this horrible war ended with slavery has a great deal to do in terms of its legislative history with lincoln. but i think that there's, there's a dialectic here. the country is, perhaps, unimaginable without lincoln, and lincoln is also unimaginable without the country. had the house of representatives failed to pass the amendment, his effort to get it through would have, you know, and it was as we show in the film a mixture of some self-interest and greed and also some dawning of moral principle. and all through his tenure-in con's faith in the people -- one of the most moving things that i know of in civil war history is the percentage of the soldiers', was it 80%? >> 80%. >> 80% in '64, and you think of these guys, a lot of them kids, having a choice between a famous military general and a civilian -- >> who doesn't -- >> exactly. a general who doesn't make them fight, who's basically running as the candidate
it went from, as karl marx said of lincoln when he passed the emancipation proclamation he turned it from a civil war to a revolution. and lincoln sort of knew that himself. this horrible war ended with slavery has a great deal to do in terms of its legislative history with lincoln. but i think that there's, there's a dialectic here. the country is, perhaps, unimaginable without lincoln, and lincoln is also unimaginable without the country. had the house of representatives failed to pass the...
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Mar 14, 2013
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james marx joins me via skype. >> this isn't a formal threat but it sounds serious. how much more risk do u.s. troops face? >> it's very serious. general dunford clearly has to communicate with his force and immediate leaders. certainly e-mail isn't a very effective way to do it. you know you're transparent when you do that. this isn't a threat advisory or his team getting together saying in a specific area we have to have indicators that there is an enhanced vulnerability based on x, y or z. what this tells you is that the linkages between strategy, what president karzai said to secretary hagel and how that affects tactics has always grown closer and closer. you have the president of a country where we are a guest indicating he's got trouble with our president. so the senior u.s. nato commander is indicating, we have to stay vigilant. the mission continues. no changes to the mission. we just need to lean forward. i think at the lowest levels that means the composition of patrols, some of the missions might change
james marx joins me via skype. >> this isn't a formal threat but it sounds serious. how much more risk do u.s. troops face? >> it's very serious. general dunford clearly has to communicate with his force and immediate leaders. certainly e-mail isn't a very effective way to do it. you know you're transparent when you do that. this isn't a threat advisory or his team getting together saying in a specific area we have to have indicators that there is an enhanced vulnerability based on...
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the marx brothers and three stooges they really influenced him. >> wow.d the merv griffin show and george was one of the guests at that show, and he was still wearing a suit and tie, and this was in the 60s now, and i still remember him talking about -- doing a takeoff on a toothpaste commercial and with a goofy voice he would said their side has 37% fewer cavities but three of our girls got pregnant. [ laughter ] >> caller: and that was the first of many times i got to see him. >> that's beautiful. >> stephanie: even people with really bad delivery really could sell that joke. [ laughter ] >> caller: i don't claim to be a -- >> you did great. >> stephanie: you did great. dad would be proud. >> he would. even during those straight-laced days, you see his work, and it was still always -- you know questioning the status quo and trying to poke holes in it in a most wholesome way when he was on the tv there. >> stephanie: yeah. yeah. did your dad ever have any thoughts on religion? >> no he had no opinion. >> stephanie: my favorite when will jesus bring the p
the marx brothers and three stooges they really influenced him. >> wow.d the merv griffin show and george was one of the guests at that show, and he was still wearing a suit and tie, and this was in the 60s now, and i still remember him talking about -- doing a takeoff on a toothpaste commercial and with a goofy voice he would said their side has 37% fewer cavities but three of our girls got pregnant. [ laughter ] >> caller: and that was the first of many times i got to see him....
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where do liberals get their code of ethics in morality -- >> stephanie: karl marx. >> caller: they don't that everything is an individual decision of what is right or what is wrong, and there is no real sense of any right and wrong? >> stephanie: really? no liberal actually believes in right and wrong? is that what you are saying? >> caller: yes. you believe in your own personal way, but there's no real right or wrong -- [ overlapping speakers ] >> any specifics at all, stacey? anything specific from you? or just the insults. >> caller: i can give you this whole show where you basically make fun of all of the -- >> specifics. hang on, pal, where did i make fun of anything in the bible. you tell me one specifically -- >> caller: i'm listening to all of you talk about it like it's a joke -- >> specifically? >> what did he say specifically? >> you bore me man. you bore me. i mock hypocrites, i did not mock the bible. >> stephanie: all right. >> stephanie can you upgrade to some trolls who can actually make pint once in a while. >> stephanie: you would think that was wrong of me to take that
where do liberals get their code of ethics in morality -- >> stephanie: karl marx. >> caller: they don't that everything is an individual decision of what is right or what is wrong, and there is no real sense of any right and wrong? >> stephanie: really? no liberal actually believes in right and wrong? is that what you are saying? >> caller: yes. you believe in your own personal way, but there's no real right or wrong -- [ overlapping speakers ] >> any specifics at...
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Mar 27, 2013
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. >> hilary rosen and gary marx to be continued this debate. no doubt about that.to both of you for joining us. >>> when we come back mitt romney opens up about what it's like to be out of the campaign bubble. and she could be the first female openly gay mayor of new york city. but could christine quinn's temper get in the way? find out what she is telling us in a brand new interview. ♪ (train horn) vo: wherever our trains go, the economy comes to life. norfolk southern. one line, infinite possibilities. [ male announcer ] when you wear dentures you may not know it, but your mouth is under attack. food particles infiltrate and bacteria proliferate. ♪ protect your mouth, with fixodent. the adhesive helps create a food seal defense for a clean mouth and kills bacteria for fresh breath. ♪ fixodent, and forget it. >>> it's been called the biggest cyber attack in history. lisa sylvester is monitoring that and some of the other top stories right now. what happened? >> wolf, the prolonged denial of service attack targeted a spam preventing group causing servers to crash a
. >> hilary rosen and gary marx to be continued this debate. no doubt about that.to both of you for joining us. >>> when we come back mitt romney opens up about what it's like to be out of the campaign bubble. and she could be the first female openly gay mayor of new york city. but could christine quinn's temper get in the way? find out what she is telling us in a brand new interview. ♪ (train horn) vo: wherever our trains go, the economy comes to life. norfolk southern. one...
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Mar 5, 2013
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of course, anybody knows marx brothers history knows fedonia is the fictional country in animal crackersody a question, you act like you know what you're doing, they'll almost always give you some kind of an answer. the sequester nobody understands it. i cover it and i barely understand exactly where can and can't go, whether or not they have any kind of flexibility for parts of it. they say they do. other people say they don't. >> peter: when we were watching this as it was building up and brewing, there was -- i personally was watching -- they'll come up with something last minute. they'll avoid this. that seems to be the way we get business done these days. it is a last-minute deal. the last-minute deal didn't happen. oh, crap! we actually hit the wall on this one. and so now here we are. nobody seems to be really freaking out yet. >> the problem with the sequester honestly is that the vast majority of people that are going to be hurt by it are federal workers. even beyond just -- they'll be affected pretty hard in the military side. but around here in d.c., maryland virginia, any pla
of course, anybody knows marx brothers history knows fedonia is the fictional country in animal crackersody a question, you act like you know what you're doing, they'll almost always give you some kind of an answer. the sequester nobody understands it. i cover it and i barely understand exactly where can and can't go, whether or not they have any kind of flexibility for parts of it. they say they do. other people say they don't. >> peter: when we were watching this as it was building up...
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today marx the u.s. release of his first album in nearly a decade. it's called "next day."me to "squawk on the street" i'm carl quintanilla with melissa lee and david faber. >> and nfib is curious today and not a lot of directional action and a long way to go, still. the big story is the conclave which begins in rome today in the vatican. we'll keep an eye on that. we might get a vote later on this afternoon and in asia, shanghai down four straight and mostly red arrows across the continent and within a stone's throw of the all-time high. the dow going for eight straight games. that's the longest streak in more than two years. everybody seemed ready for a sell-off so where is it it? >> yet another target price cut for apple and a 25% chance of a miss on guidance. it's a big week for samsung and blackberry. >> those membership fees continue to provide stability against walmart and target. >> and are yum's troubles in china starting to stabilize? february shows signs of progress there. >> we will begin with the markets. the dow coming off of a fifth consecutive day of new all
today marx the u.s. release of his first album in nearly a decade. it's called "next day."me to "squawk on the street" i'm carl quintanilla with melissa lee and david faber. >> and nfib is curious today and not a lot of directional action and a long way to go, still. the big story is the conclave which begins in rome today in the vatican. we'll keep an eye on that. we might get a vote later on this afternoon and in asia, shanghai down four straight and mostly red...