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Nov 5, 2017
11/17
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mexico -- mexican. or that we cannot be seen on the beachfront, or that we cannot wear draped pants, or have our haircut the way we want to." think about malcolm little's zoot suit story juxtaposed to alfred story. malcolm used his zoot suit to alienate himself from the mainstream united states, to evade the draft, to evade having to enlist in the armed forces. comments suggest that , differentit styled from outcomes, did not preclude him from willingly joining the surface in an effort to assimilate and eventually fight for american democracy overseas. ,y point is that zoot suiters mexican-americans, african-americans, along with increasing numbers of white students who wore zoot suit's, thought differently about their style and fashion and the suit suits meantthe zoot different things to all of them. wide variety of political views during wartime. some of them were heavily critical of the war, heavily critical of the kind of hypocrisy that the contradictions in american forcracy meant mexican-americans
mexico -- mexican. or that we cannot be seen on the beachfront, or that we cannot wear draped pants, or have our haircut the way we want to." think about malcolm little's zoot suit story juxtaposed to alfred story. malcolm used his zoot suit to alienate himself from the mainstream united states, to evade the draft, to evade having to enlist in the armed forces. comments suggest that , differentit styled from outcomes, did not preclude him from willingly joining the surface in an effort to...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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a lot of sectors of mexican society, so that's why the mexican government believes by having an energy chapter in nafta, we lock up that energy reforms. >> you know, on behalf of my nation, i have been to a variety of places around the world. and there's -- you know, everyone has different life lessons they learn from wars or peacekeeping. one of the things which i better appreciate now that i'm slightly older and more experienced is it's not a good way to improve something by blowing it up or destroying it. it's a pretty simple lesson. especially something that's complicated as taking years to reach a certain degree of maturation and has resulted in benefits, of course. but when you have those benefits which are the product of very closely integrated supply systems which provide value added, just think through the consequences of, you know, the desire to make a bold statement and what that means. and what's your plan "b"? what's plan "b" by the way? what we're focused on as a nation is seeing the good in nafta, seeing what has to be -- what should be changed, what should be modernized
a lot of sectors of mexican society, so that's why the mexican government believes by having an energy chapter in nafta, we lock up that energy reforms. >> you know, on behalf of my nation, i have been to a variety of places around the world. and there's -- you know, everyone has different life lessons they learn from wars or peacekeeping. one of the things which i better appreciate now that i'm slightly older and more experienced is it's not a good way to improve something by blowing it...
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Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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for a year which as you know is the premier think tank for all things mexican. finally, we have hipolito acosta, whose book "in the deep shadows is actually the second book at the festival. the third book, excuse me. i'm totally misinformed here. a son of mexican migrant workers he rose to be one of the most highly decorated officers in the u.s. immigration and naturalization service. he's a u.s. agent mexico crime cartels and with aj irwin, the hunt for a man team. so the three books are really while select it for this panel, really excited at the opportunity to be the moderator. there's so many linkages between these two works. i thought we would start with asking each of you to give us a short summary of the book and what brought you to this topic. >> sure. well, i have been writing about the border of mexico for seven years and it's hard to get people to care about it i guess it feels like it there so much going on in the world and our own government, you know. one hour news cycle right now. so we have this big trial here in austin in 2013. it was the fbi an
for a year which as you know is the premier think tank for all things mexican. finally, we have hipolito acosta, whose book "in the deep shadows is actually the second book at the festival. the third book, excuse me. i'm totally misinformed here. a son of mexican migrant workers he rose to be one of the most highly decorated officers in the u.s. immigration and naturalization service. he's a u.s. agent mexico crime cartels and with aj irwin, the hunt for a man team. so the three books are...
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Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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>> yes, since nafta is a treaty, the mexican constitution, it ranks just below the mexican constitution in terms of hierarchy of laws. so it needs to be agreed by the executive branch, of course, and then has to be ratified by the senate who has exclusive authority to ratify treaties. and we have seen now the negotiations that some of the senators are not just playing a back seat role. they actively are making statements about the cause of the negotiations. so yes, it further complicates the approval from the mexican point of view. >> thank you, it doesn't need a two-thirds vote, though, with the constitutional amendment. >> no. >> straight up and down. general leslie, welcome. >> thank you. >> hope all your meetings are going well here in washington. would you care to tell us how they're going? >> i think personally i'm learning a great deal. full disclosure, the main reason i'm here is i just do whatever scotty says. >> we all do. we're all nodding. okay. fine. yes. the pm is here, obviously, with key advisers on the nafta file. it's been a great morning. and we had really good intera
>> yes, since nafta is a treaty, the mexican constitution, it ranks just below the mexican constitution in terms of hierarchy of laws. so it needs to be agreed by the executive branch, of course, and then has to be ratified by the senate who has exclusive authority to ratify treaties. and we have seen now the negotiations that some of the senators are not just playing a back seat role. they actively are making statements about the cause of the negotiations. so yes, it further complicates...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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i'm curious from the mexican perspective, how you see the priorities for mexico and how the mexican business community is working to advance those priorities through these renegotiations. >> thank you. yohai, and thank you, ron and andrea, first, to be here with me in chairing this panel. and my friend whom i was invited, and my colleagues here from mexico. precisely, i was just hearing a little bit of what my colleague said and what each of the countries have felt about it. if i were to tell you that before the nafta negotiation, 12 years ago, which i was able to be part of it, it's been 25 years old, the pin, i'm proud i found it and i'm wearing it. hopefully it's a good luck charm for a successful renegotiation. i remember that private sector really getting together, organizing as we are right now. i'll explain a little bit what we have done, but in the sense that we were -- if i may use a word, in an opposite side of a table in putting a lot of arguments to keep mexico close to the world, a lot of different industries that have grown in mexico and have been successful just because of the
i'm curious from the mexican perspective, how you see the priorities for mexico and how the mexican business community is working to advance those priorities through these renegotiations. >> thank you. yohai, and thank you, ron and andrea, first, to be here with me in chairing this panel. and my friend whom i was invited, and my colleagues here from mexico. precisely, i was just hearing a little bit of what my colleague said and what each of the countries have felt about it. if i were to...
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Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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not necessarily mexican or canadian. ultimately we're going to want to figure out how do you maximize our capacity as an economy to get back to growing faster than china, to be guaranteeing that we are bigger than china and frankly to bringing back various national security capabilities that we have very sloppily over the last 20 years allowed the chinese to get by clever medicaling or by pure theft. i think you're going to see this administration become dramatically more aggressive about china. if you're an american, if you're in washington, d.c. and you're thinking through a grand strategy as it relates to china, all of a sudden having canadian and mexican allies economically is creating a better supply chain, creating a larger market, suddenly becomes dramatically more desirable than if you're simply looking at china -- looking at mexico and canada within an american context. i think both at a job creation level and in terms of our geopolitical capacity to deal over the next 40 or 50 years with china, you may see a sh
not necessarily mexican or canadian. ultimately we're going to want to figure out how do you maximize our capacity as an economy to get back to growing faster than china, to be guaranteeing that we are bigger than china and frankly to bringing back various national security capabilities that we have very sloppily over the last 20 years allowed the chinese to get by clever medicaling or by pure theft. i think you're going to see this administration become dramatically more aggressive about...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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KPIX
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duringthe mexican national anthem this is what folks saw, he was standing for the mexican anthem and sitting for the u.s. national anthem. president trump has called for players to be punished. this morning he againweighed in on the controversial protests tweeting lynch stands for the mexican anthem and sits down for our national anthem. great disrespect. next time nflshould suspend him. he claimsattendance and ratings way down. it's become waist signature issues. it's unclear if the team will address the president's tweets. tant -- with . >>> the mayor is under fire this morning accused of using the city's pr consultant without authorization to share her message about her battles with the san francisco 49ers and the stadium. records show that sheused $50,000 to hire a city contractor to help draft newspaper articles and setup tv interviews. critics say sheshouldn't use the city's employers for her personal agenda. she says she was quotedoing our duty as mayor to speak for residents. >>> in the early morning hours of the wine country wildfires the counties have not have gotten enough
duringthe mexican national anthem this is what folks saw, he was standing for the mexican anthem and sitting for the u.s. national anthem. president trump has called for players to be punished. this morning he againweighed in on the controversial protests tweeting lynch stands for the mexican anthem and sits down for our national anthem. great disrespect. next time nflshould suspend him. he claimsattendance and ratings way down. it's become waist signature issues. it's unclear if the team will...
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Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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LINKTV
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this hits them hardest. >> for mexicans this means higher prices. >> something nice in the culturur.speaking foreign language] >> hunter isis n not the real problem here. it has massive impact. we've found that where food prices have risen, families have less frfruit and berry and have far less healthy die.. taking out loans just to be able to afford food, cutting back on expenditures like health care and education, all of which has a much longer-term impact. >> the impact of higher prices is felt throughout the expenditures of mexico and in terms of lower demand for other things. the mexican economy is the real concern because we do not see demand growing fast enough and we c could be e next. >> food speculationon is rampant because ofof deregulation o of e markets. it was seen as big investments, banks moving into commodity markets, w with $100 billion pouring into these markets. markets were overwhelmed, that is why it has become such a problem. >> the mexican government itself has begun to speculate on the market in an effort to counter the volatility. but many believe the only a
this hits them hardest. >> for mexicans this means higher prices. >> something nice in the culturur.speaking foreign language] >> hunter isis n not the real problem here. it has massive impact. we've found that where food prices have risen, families have less frfruit and berry and have far less healthy die.. taking out loans just to be able to afford food, cutting back on expenditures like health care and education, all of which has a much longer-term impact. >> the...
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Nov 24, 2017
11/17
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KOFY
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i do believe that in the minds of many mexicans, all the mexicans that are living here, they have bothries inside them. >> one of the things that you've heard, and i've heard too, is people are just so angry. it doesn't matter which side you're on. they're just angry, and they can't get past that. so how do we help people calm down? >> yeah, i will say that we have to look forward. i will say that we have to understand, be very measured, be very mature, and understand that these issues have nothing to do with the american people. these issues have nothing to do with the american goods. these issues have nothing to do with the american companies. quite the opposite. this is a moment where we have to be closer. this is a moment, an opportunity to show that together, we are better, that together we are more competitive, that together we have better creativity. so let's not be angry. let's be measured, let's be mature, and let's look at the positive side of all this. our thanks to all of our international friends, the consuls general of mexico, israel, and russia for taking their time to s
i do believe that in the minds of many mexicans, all the mexicans that are living here, they have bothries inside them. >> one of the things that you've heard, and i've heard too, is people are just so angry. it doesn't matter which side you're on. they're just angry, and they can't get past that. so how do we help people calm down? >> yeah, i will say that we have to look forward. i will say that we have to understand, be very measured, be very mature, and understand that these...
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Nov 5, 2017
11/17
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i had an encounter with a zetas that i didn't understand and as many other mexicans i was borned andmÉxico, born and raised in mÉxico city but my family comes from another state of mÉxico and my father was -- was threatened by them and was asked to pay extortion fees in the year 2006 and he and my brother had to leave their land at the time and i didn't know how to -- how to understand that, but it was not the time that i was interested in -- in writing about this. it was when i went to brownsville and when the war started, i just arrived there when the war between the zetas and the gulf cartel started in the year 2010. i arrived in 2009 and my students start today come to my classroom, some of them saying that they were not going to attend class again because their participants were kidnapped or paying extortion fees and that connected me and to their stories. in 2010 to listen about what was happening, the violence elevated to levels we never imagined, we started knowing about heads being thrown or bodies, corpses, and 72 migrants that were found killed in a ranch just some miles f
i had an encounter with a zetas that i didn't understand and as many other mexicans i was borned andmÉxico, born and raised in mÉxico city but my family comes from another state of mÉxico and my father was -- was threatened by them and was asked to pay extortion fees in the year 2006 and he and my brother had to leave their land at the time and i didn't know how to -- how to understand that, but it was not the time that i was interested in -- in writing about this. it was when i went to...
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but more importantly is the basic food staples things like corn which is a maze it's a you it's a mexican product and it's now they import so much of it the last twenty two years since nafta was launched mexico has become unhealthily dependent on heavily subsidized food imports from the u.s. the u.n. food and agricultural organization f.a.o. estimates that the threshold at which a country becomes what it calls food vulnerable is when as much as twenty five percent of his food supply comes from abroad in two thousand and sixteen mexico imported forty six percent of all its food and imported about thirty seven percent of his food from the u.s. or some seventeen billion dollars. autocracy versus entropy autocracy would be the medieval kings ruling over us before the enlightenment and the idea of market economy and democracy entropy is obviously the nature of the universe spinning out of control seeking chaos. and try having a fine line between these two is a civil society mexico enough the deal is entropy you're allowing things to spend out of control to be the lowest common denominator and
but more importantly is the basic food staples things like corn which is a maze it's a you it's a mexican product and it's now they import so much of it the last twenty two years since nafta was launched mexico has become unhealthily dependent on heavily subsidized food imports from the u.s. the u.n. food and agricultural organization f.a.o. estimates that the threshold at which a country becomes what it calls food vulnerable is when as much as twenty five percent of his food supply comes from...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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how would afro-mexicans do? does he have any idea? let's be real.ather be black in america than mexico any waif the week. -- any day of the week. >> well, i think marshawn lynch and a lot of black people might differ with you. they might say it's worse in america than being in mexico. >> tucker: really. why would they say that? >> a lot of the athletes, a lot of these athletes that travel around the world, get treated better in their perspective than they do in america. that's why they say that. >> tucker: i don't think marshawn lynch -- >> we're not talking about afro here. >> tucker: let's be real, okay? barack obama could not have been elected president of mexico. they have major race problems in mexico. we pretend that mexico is a unified hispanic country. that's not reality. anyone who says that knows nothing about mexico. i'm note attacking mexico, it's true. i guess i wonder, like, does he know anything about mexico? and by the way, how badly is marshawn lynch treated when he goes to dinner, do people yell at him at dinner? can we be real for
how would afro-mexicans do? does he have any idea? let's be real.ather be black in america than mexico any waif the week. -- any day of the week. >> well, i think marshawn lynch and a lot of black people might differ with you. they might say it's worse in america than being in mexico. >> tucker: really. why would they say that? >> a lot of the athletes, a lot of these athletes that travel around the world, get treated better in their perspective than they do in america. that's...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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. >> i am mexican myself, talker.ker: there has been a civil war in effect going on in mexico, over 110,000 people have been murdered in mexico, one of the most violent countries in the world. if it were any countries but mexico and there wasn't this weird politics hovering over it we would say holy smokes, one of the most dangerous places in the world right on our border. we need to make certain we know the identity of every single person who comes in or out, but we don't because of advocacy by people like you, because we somehow can't, i don't understand. >> in 2013 we had the opportunity to fund over $43.6 billion, a good portion of that that would go to border security, the bill that would legalize a large portion of the undocumented exploration so mike dubke population. if you want to be mad at someone you should be metal republicans in the house. >> tucker: hold on, wait a second. why should we legalize anybody? it's our country. we have a moral right to secure our borders. again, i'm not impugning the character
. >> i am mexican myself, talker.ker: there has been a civil war in effect going on in mexico, over 110,000 people have been murdered in mexico, one of the most violent countries in the world. if it were any countries but mexico and there wasn't this weird politics hovering over it we would say holy smokes, one of the most dangerous places in the world right on our border. we need to make certain we know the identity of every single person who comes in or out, but we don't because of...
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Nov 18, 2017
11/17
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ALJAZ
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younger mexicans are less interested in consuming traditional varieties of mexican corn and new generations of farmers are less interested in planting them opting for simpler more profitable varieties instead but our north shore is convinced that with government support to small scale farmers like himself mexicans will claim their national crops and remove the need to import any from abroad. it's difficult to overstate just how important this crop is to mexican life and identity not just from a practical standpoint as a basic food staple but also culturally speaking and that's why an increasing number of people here feel the need to defend its survival from what they say are growing threats. and chief among those threats is the gradual disappearance of several varieties of traditional maize something this activist says is already happening at an alarming rate. these are specialized watches of coal but talking about it over thousands of years they each have their own history and flavor. have nothing to do with what's grown in the u.s. or elsewhere in the world the possible break up of the no
younger mexicans are less interested in consuming traditional varieties of mexican corn and new generations of farmers are less interested in planting them opting for simpler more profitable varieties instead but our north shore is convinced that with government support to small scale farmers like himself mexicans will claim their national crops and remove the need to import any from abroad. it's difficult to overstate just how important this crop is to mexican life and identity not just from a...
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Nov 22, 2017
11/17
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from a mexican perspective, does that in any way limit the flexibility of the government of mexico to negotiate? do they have to demonstrate that they are strong and can stand up to the american rhetoric number one and number two, is there a reason to be concerned about the dynamic of the negotiations as it might effect the presidential elections in mexico next year? >> one of the beauties of no longer being -- that i'm a recovering diplomat that you could say stuff, but look, there's no issue out there that is mexican public opinion such as the whole wool issue. it has irritated profoundly. you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out why in a research poll that came out in july and then an update in september looking at positive perceptions of the u.s. around the world, the country where positive perceptions of the u.s. has fallen the most is mexico. it's nose dived. one of the things that happened this parallel to nafta and a very different engagement is that it started to create between mexicans and americans. one of the historical reasons they have never been able to get
from a mexican perspective, does that in any way limit the flexibility of the government of mexico to negotiate? do they have to demonstrate that they are strong and can stand up to the american rhetoric number one and number two, is there a reason to be concerned about the dynamic of the negotiations as it might effect the presidential elections in mexico next year? >> one of the beauties of no longer being -- that i'm a recovering diplomat that you could say stuff, but look, there's no...
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Nov 29, 2017
11/17
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he must have taken out 30 mexicans with his big knife.he reality is, he had come down with a case of tuberculosis, and jim bowie was shot on his deathbed. mexican soldiers breached the wall of the alamo, and the alamo defenders realize they have to retreat to the long barracks. so the mexicans enter the barracks and do away with all of the alamo defenders in the barracks. and general santa anna takes his breakfast inside the walls of the alamo. and davy crockett is captured. [dramatic music] ♪ davy crockett, great american [stammers] mythological leven--legend is executed that morning. ♪ because of this, "remember the alamo" is used as a rally-- rallying cry and texas becomes a state. and the thing that we can take from it academically, historically-- how does davy crockett like his pie? - how? - "a la mode." - i gotta go. - yeah, me too. [patriotic music] ♪ >> from comedy central's world news headquarters in new york, this is "the daily show" with trevor noah. ( cheers and applause ) ♪ >> trevor: welcome, everybody! welcome, welcome, wel
he must have taken out 30 mexicans with his big knife.he reality is, he had come down with a case of tuberculosis, and jim bowie was shot on his deathbed. mexican soldiers breached the wall of the alamo, and the alamo defenders realize they have to retreat to the long barracks. so the mexicans enter the barracks and do away with all of the alamo defenders in the barracks. and general santa anna takes his breakfast inside the walls of the alamo. and davy crockett is captured. [dramatic music]...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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i'm not sure what the mexican culture was trying to accomplish my doing that.maybe the larger question is, what do latin americans and south americans think when they know,e whitewash, you cortez disappears. umbusization of conquistadors. making them look like good guys rather than you know, cookies to doors. conquerors. conquistadors, conquerors. >> all countries grapple with this notion of national identity , right? --t kind of terror docs paradox. engendering anyone of patriotism. in the course of doing the, you are distorting and rewriting history and teaching your children lies, right? been a particularly interesting and well-studied story along those lines in euros.in the last 200 i think mexicans have been very open and transparent and how they have tackled that. they left a superb trail of art and literature that has allowed historians to pursue it. i am kind of wildly guessing but i imagine if we were to sort of been thousands of nationals from mexico into the old america, can see that now, have them look at that and tell them about that, they would ha
i'm not sure what the mexican culture was trying to accomplish my doing that.maybe the larger question is, what do latin americans and south americans think when they know,e whitewash, you cortez disappears. umbusization of conquistadors. making them look like good guys rather than you know, cookies to doors. conquerors. conquistadors, conquerors. >> all countries grapple with this notion of national identity , right? --t kind of terror docs paradox. engendering anyone of patriotism. in...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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KTVU
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but he did stand up for the mexican anthem. he went and stood up during the mexican anthem and the nfl should suspend them -- him. several bay area will have come to his defense. >> i am tired of the bully and chief not doing his job and taking on people. he is supposed to act as the president and he should lead every person in this country. >> we are on the brink of world war iii and you are worried about someone not standing for the national anthem? ? there are so many ways for you to participate and animate use and engage them.>> reporter: with further criticizing players, it bothered the head coach, the head coaches wife. she sent out a tweet of her own. we have more from the mayor who has been in the twitter war with the president before and we also saw a tweet from martians -- marshawn lynch's mother. ? thank you. he is live at -- >> he is live at the raiders headquarters. >> how this twitter feud could affect the raiders on the field? >> the coach tries to avoid distraction. but marshawn lynch does not talk to the media
but he did stand up for the mexican anthem. he went and stood up during the mexican anthem and the nfl should suspend them -- him. several bay area will have come to his defense. >> i am tired of the bully and chief not doing his job and taking on people. he is supposed to act as the president and he should lead every person in this country. >> we are on the brink of world war iii and you are worried about someone not standing for the national anthem? ? there are so many ways for...
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a mexican conductor. to. come with me and the great musicians and friends from all over the world. another is always in motion. it's always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn all the insides of the world for example the timpani some here with my friend very fast dimple list of the time holly orchestra sake and i asked him to give me a show much very short for question time and lesson so that if i ever need to play and we do that perfect we do it ok. what do we do let's turn for if you're playing tonight ok we're conducting a flame but now we've changed the rules. you're playing the game of knowing. ok ok. so it's ok let's pretend it's a premiss conduct it's very simple no matter what it is going to tell you a little much. i'm ready so what's the hardest part teach me the hardest part was the hardest part . they are.
a mexican conductor. to. come with me and the great musicians and friends from all over the world. another is always in motion. it's always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn all the insides of the world for example the timpani...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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national anthem at yesterday's game but stood during the mexican national anthem.re live in oakland with more on this controversy. . >> reporter: well, lynch has not been standing for the anthem the entire season, but what's different about this one is president trump is now attacking him. he went on twitter andcalled for the nfl to suspend him after his actions in mexico city yesterday. they weretaking on the patriots during the mexican national anthem this is what folks saw in the photo he was standing and sitting for the u.s. national anthem. nflmembers have been sitting or kneeling to protest for past year. now, president trump hascalled for players to be punished for the protests. thismorning the president again weighed in on the controversial protest tweeting lynch of the raiders stands for the mexican anthem and sits down for our national anthem. greatdisrespect. next time nflshould suspend. the presidenthas tweeted about the protests more than 3-dozen times. it'sunclear from the raiders or lynch will address the president's tweet. so far he'slet his protest
national anthem at yesterday's game but stood during the mexican national anthem.re live in oakland with more on this controversy. . >> reporter: well, lynch has not been standing for the anthem the entire season, but what's different about this one is president trump is now attacking him. he went on twitter andcalled for the nfl to suspend him after his actions in mexico city yesterday. they weretaking on the patriots during the mexican national anthem this is what folks saw in the photo...
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am a mexican conductor. come with me and great musicians and friends from all over the world. a conductor is always in motion is always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn all the insights of the world for example the timpani some here with my friend benny for. the time highly orchestrated and i'm asked him to give me a short very short. lesson so that if i ever need to write and read that perfect ok. what do we do let's start of what he's playing tonight ok we're conducting i play but now we change. your place your hand over their oil. i think it's a free country safe. when . the room the. i'm ready so what was the hardest part teach me the hardest part i want to know the hardest part the hardest part from this. is maybe i'm thinking mind i there when you're always changing when you're always late. late now that
am a mexican conductor. come with me and great musicians and friends from all over the world. a conductor is always in motion is always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn all the insights of the world for example the timpani some...
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i love mexican people. guys are the best business people we have. ( cheers and applause ) you took four ingredients and turned it into 40,000 restaurants. ( laughter ) and guacamole is extra! i love the mexicans! i roast the ones i love, trevor. and it wasn't all jokes. this was a very emotional special. i went to a refuge shelter in texas and i talked to women from aritria, a country i never heard of before, and they were escaping oppression and political violence in aritria, these women are very bright, they speak multiple languages, they're not rapists and murderers like the president wants you to think. they come from africa, europe, central south america, central america, get to the fence and climb the fence and we throw them in jay. >> trevor: first they get roasted. >> it's like running the new york city marathon and when you get to the finish line the mayor punches you in the balls. ( laughter ) >> trevor: that's how the marathon ends. that's new york. that's what we do out here. ( laughter ) it's f
i love mexican people. guys are the best business people we have. ( cheers and applause ) you took four ingredients and turned it into 40,000 restaurants. ( laughter ) and guacamole is extra! i love the mexicans! i roast the ones i love, trevor. and it wasn't all jokes. this was a very emotional special. i went to a refuge shelter in texas and i talked to women from aritria, a country i never heard of before, and they were escaping oppression and political violence in aritria, these women are...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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mexican industry have stood up. multiple -- hundreds of millions of dollars of bailouts to mexico that were common in the 1990s no longer have to happen. and we have the most successful trading agreement on the planet. >> the bailouts, if i'm not mistaken the main one was the one that bob rubin did when he was treasury secretary. and unless my memory is faulty, we got every penny back with interest. that was hardly an expense, it was favor to a friendly neighbor. >> my point is it's what you don't see, what you don't see are the recurring cyclical downward sectors. the worst recession since the second world war because we have an integrated north american platform that allows all three countries to trade to the global marketplace. accumulated trade deficits is the growth of the whole that far surpasses i think a simple by father approach to scoring a trading relationship like it is a fiscal formula. >> well, let's just agree to disagree. >> perfect. perfect. ladies and gentlemen, secretary ross has been extraordinar
mexican industry have stood up. multiple -- hundreds of millions of dollars of bailouts to mexico that were common in the 1990s no longer have to happen. and we have the most successful trading agreement on the planet. >> the bailouts, if i'm not mistaken the main one was the one that bob rubin did when he was treasury secretary. and unless my memory is faulty, we got every penny back with interest. that was hardly an expense, it was favor to a friendly neighbor. >> my point is it's...
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Nov 4, 2017
11/17
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KQEH
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these mexicans who live on the rails, you know, they make $1.00 or $2.00 a day. they're very poor; they can barely feed their own kids, but they're giving to total strangers from other countries who they're never going to see again, and they say... they told me they did this because it's the christian thing to do. this is the right thing to do; this is what jesus would do if he were in their shoes. and a lot of them has seen the suffering up close of these migrants. when i was on the train, i was with kids who hadn't eaten in one or two days, and they would cry with gratefulness for receiving this. and i think one of the best parts of this journey for me, i met this woman in veracruz. she claimed to be over 100 years old-- maria-- and she said that during the mexican revolution she had been so hungry that she would eat the bark of a plantain tree in her front yard. and her hands were narled with age, but she would force them to make these little bags with tortillas, a little salsa, a little beans. >> hinojosa: oh, god, you're kidding. >> and when she heard that w
these mexicans who live on the rails, you know, they make $1.00 or $2.00 a day. they're very poor; they can barely feed their own kids, but they're giving to total strangers from other countries who they're never going to see again, and they say... they told me they did this because it's the christian thing to do. this is the right thing to do; this is what jesus would do if he were in their shoes. and a lot of them has seen the suffering up close of these migrants. when i was on the train, i...
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a mexican conductor. come with me and meet great musicians and friends from all over the world. a conductor is always in motion is always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn on the inside. of the world for example the timpani some here with my friend benny forster dimple list of a ton holly orchestra strake and i asked him to give me a show much very short. lesson so that if i ever need to play and we do that perfect we do it ok. what do we do let's term for your playing tonight ok we're conducting i fled but now we change the rules. you're playing the game of your way . ok ok. ok let me have it supremely misconduct to save him from you know my head is going to it's own little guy. i'm ready so what's the hardest part teach me the hardest part was the hardest part hardest part. there. can be. out of. this time i ge
a mexican conductor. come with me and meet great musicians and friends from all over the world. a conductor is always in motion is always learning and growing until the end of his or her years and one of the things i love about this profession is that i get to me the best art is the best musicians of each instrument and i always try to get close to them and learn from them and take the opportunity to get closer to the instrument and learn on the inside. of the world for example the timpani some...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
by
KTVU
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but then he stood during the mexican national anthem. this morning president trump tweeted marshawn lynch stands for the national anthem for mexico and sits down for hours. great disrespect. next time the nfl should suspend him for the remainder of the season. >>> the oakland mayor libby schaaf tweeted a response saying that oakland loves marshawn lynch. let's suspend donald trump instead. question of the day, what do you think about marshawn lynch standing during the mexican anthem and sitting during the american anthem. 34% consider it to disrespectful and 66% support it. so many tweets. one viewer says absolutely disrespectful and unacceptable whether he stands for the mexican or not. i will never watch an nfl game. >> another viewer says i support his right to protest. marshawn lynch is a smart guy and i'm sure he has a reason. >> another viewer says the president should have greater things to worry about. let marshawn lynch be himself. >> we will take your responses through the day and share some of them with you throughout the day.
but then he stood during the mexican national anthem. this morning president trump tweeted marshawn lynch stands for the national anthem for mexico and sits down for hours. great disrespect. next time the nfl should suspend him for the remainder of the season. >>> the oakland mayor libby schaaf tweeted a response saying that oakland loves marshawn lynch. let's suspend donald trump instead. question of the day, what do you think about marshawn lynch standing during the mexican anthem...
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Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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he was a mexican living in texas.re is a lot of noise around this issue, and maybe it's easier just to sort of adapt and fit in. because i don't know. on a personal level i noticed that maybe he wasn't such a supporter. he wouldn't say that on camera but i had a feeling. >> you get the sense that everybody in these border states, even the ones, no matter which side of the issue they're on, the minute it gets personal, it's suddenly more nuanced? >> that's right. >> for everybody? >> yeah, yeah. it's a good way to put it and what we discovered. the nuance. we suspected there wasn't a black and white. >> "ferryman at the wall." thanks for doing it and hope to see you as the next "meet the press" festival. >> you can't make it tonight, don't worry. a digital film festival online and on demand. /mtpfilm or watch on apple tv, fire tv, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. and we will be right back. stay with us. ole thing still dragging on? no, i took some pics with the app and... filed a claim, but... you know how they send yo
he was a mexican living in texas.re is a lot of noise around this issue, and maybe it's easier just to sort of adapt and fit in. because i don't know. on a personal level i noticed that maybe he wasn't such a supporter. he wouldn't say that on camera but i had a feeling. >> you get the sense that everybody in these border states, even the ones, no matter which side of the issue they're on, the minute it gets personal, it's suddenly more nuanced? >> that's right. >> for...
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Nov 4, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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i had an encounter with a zetas that i didn't understand and as many other mexicans i was borned andmÉxico, born and raised in mÉxico city but my family comes from another state of mÉxico and my father was -- was threatened by them and was asked to pay extortion fees in the year 2006 and he and my brother had to leave their land at the time and i didn't know how to -- how to understand that, but it was not the time that i was interested in -- in writing about this. it was when i went to brownsville and when the war started, i just arrived there when the war between the zetas and the gulf cartel started in the year 2010. i arrived in 2009 and my students start today come to my classroom, some of them saying that they were not going to attend class again because their participants were kidnapped or paying extortion fees and that connected me and to their stories. in 2010 to listen about what was happening, the violence elevated to levels we never imagined, we started knowing about heads being thrown or bodies, corpses, and 72 migrants that were found killed in a ranch just some miles f
i had an encounter with a zetas that i didn't understand and as many other mexicans i was borned andmÉxico, born and raised in mÉxico city but my family comes from another state of mÉxico and my father was -- was threatened by them and was asked to pay extortion fees in the year 2006 and he and my brother had to leave their land at the time and i didn't know how to -- how to understand that, but it was not the time that i was interested in -- in writing about this. it was when i went to...
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Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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for example, in 1831 a new mexican trading party arrived at mission san gabriel, just outside of los angeles, loaded down with wool and blankets. again, cloth being central to the trade. an american fur trapper reported the party returned to sante fe later that year with many mules, in his words, in fine form. the cost of those mules brought in barter for blankets, caused quite a sensation in new mexico. the same mules, which were purchased with blankets, were then resold in sante fe at these trade fairs for between $6 and $10 a piece in cash. you can see turning blankets into cash in these remote outposts would have been immensely valuable. so not surprisingly, the following year, 1832, sante fe traders returned to california and came back home to sante fe with about 600 mules and 100 horses. so that was opportunity too good to pass up. some of these animals were purchased through legitimate trade. meaning they were purchased from the actual owners of the animals, but much of the stock that new mexican traders bought off of indians was just stolen. in february of 1833, one priest re
for example, in 1831 a new mexican trading party arrived at mission san gabriel, just outside of los angeles, loaded down with wool and blankets. again, cloth being central to the trade. an american fur trapper reported the party returned to sante fe later that year with many mules, in his words, in fine form. the cost of those mules brought in barter for blankets, caused quite a sensation in new mexico. the same mules, which were purchased with blankets, were then resold in sante fe at these...
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Nov 28, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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for one thing, it would be devastating to the mexican economy. because it's such a big part. we are 80 some odd percent of all of their exports, and i think the amount of their exports to us is something like 30% of their economy. so you're talking about a big, big time problem for mexico. and it's also a big time problem for canada. canada's economy and mexico's are sort of one ninth, one tenth the amount of ours. and they have trade surpluses. so for both of those reasons, it would be far more damaging to them than to us. >> but i can't assume that you would enjoy, as the american commerce secretary, economic damage in two of our biggest trading partners and neighbors. that certainly wouldn't help us. >> i would certainly prefer them to come to their senses and make a sensible deal. >> but it sounds like you're holding that as a dais eczema keena coming to their head saying come to the table or you're going to get whacked. you're going to suffer more than we do and we're willing to endure the consequences. >> if any negotiation if you have one party that is not in fact prep
for one thing, it would be devastating to the mexican economy. because it's such a big part. we are 80 some odd percent of all of their exports, and i think the amount of their exports to us is something like 30% of their economy. so you're talking about a big, big time problem for mexico. and it's also a big time problem for canada. canada's economy and mexico's are sort of one ninth, one tenth the amount of ours. and they have trade surpluses. so for both of those reasons, it would be far...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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for one thing, it would be devastating to the mexican economy because it's such a big part. we are 80-some odd percent of all of their exports and i think the amount of their exports to us, there's something like 30% of their economy, so, you're talking about a big, big time problem for mexico and it's also a big time problem for canada. and canada's economy's and mexico's are 1/9, 1/10 of ours and they have trade surpluses. so it would be far more damaging for them than for us. >> host: i can't assume that you would enjoy, as the american commerce secretary, economic damage in two of our biggest trading partners and neighbors. that certainly wouldn't help us. >> no, i would certainly prefer them to come to their senses and make a sensible deal. >> host: but it sounds like you're holding that over their heads. come to the table and you're going to get whacked more than we do and-- >> in any negotiation if you have a party that's not prepared to walk away over whatever are the threshold issues, that party is going to lose. >> host: message delivered to, i think, the mexicans
for one thing, it would be devastating to the mexican economy because it's such a big part. we are 80-some odd percent of all of their exports and i think the amount of their exports to us, there's something like 30% of their economy, so, you're talking about a big, big time problem for mexico and it's also a big time problem for canada. and canada's economy's and mexico's are 1/9, 1/10 of ours and they have trade surpluses. so it would be far more damaging for them than for us. >> host:...
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Nov 24, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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he was a mexican living in texas.ing in a time when there is a lot of noise around this issue, and maybe it's easier just to sort of adapt and fit in, because i don't know. on personal level i noticed that maybe he wasn't such a supporter. he wouldn't say that on camera, but i hadfeeling. >> you get the sense everybody in the border states, no matter which side of the issue they're on, the minute it's personal, it's suddenly more nuanced by everybody? >> yeah. yeah. a good way to put it and what we discovered. the nuance. we wanted to find. pe suspected can't be just black and white. >> any thoughts about going to a more dangerous part of the border and doing a story? i mean it. what's fair, media focuses on the dangerous part of the border and you're going, hey, that's -- don't -- don't do the whole border that way. do you feel like we need to tell both stories better? >> i think the media's doing a great job and if people listen to what the media is doing, they're working their butts off. you guys, everybody's doing
he was a mexican living in texas.ing in a time when there is a lot of noise around this issue, and maybe it's easier just to sort of adapt and fit in, because i don't know. on personal level i noticed that maybe he wasn't such a supporter. he wouldn't say that on camera, but i hadfeeling. >> you get the sense everybody in the border states, no matter which side of the issue they're on, the minute it's personal, it's suddenly more nuanced by everybody? >> yeah. yeah. a good way to...
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Nov 17, 2017
11/17
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ALJAZ
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younger mexicans are less interested in consuming traditional varieties of mexican corn and new generations of farmers are less interest. and planting them opting for simpler more profitable varieties instead but our north shore is convinced that with government support to small scale farmers like himself mexicans will claim their national pride and remove the need to import any from abroad it's difficult to overstate just how important this crop is to mexican life and identity not just from a practical standpoint as a basic food staple but also culturally speaking and that's why an increasing number of people here feel the need to defend its survival from what they say are growing threats. and chief among those threats is the gradual disappearance of several varieties of traditional maize something this activist says is already happening at an alarming rate. in the family well these are specialized arantes of coal but talking about over thousands of years they each have their own history of a color flavor. nothing to do with what's grown in the u.s. or elsewhere in the world the possible b
younger mexicans are less interested in consuming traditional varieties of mexican corn and new generations of farmers are less interest. and planting them opting for simpler more profitable varieties instead but our north shore is convinced that with government support to small scale farmers like himself mexicans will claim their national pride and remove the need to import any from abroad it's difficult to overstate just how important this crop is to mexican life and identity not just from a...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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KRON
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his call comes after these photographs showing lynch standing during the mexican national anthem....d sitting during the u-s national anthem .. at a game against the new england patriots in mexico city. (steve) here is the tweet..."marshawn lynch of the n-f-l's oakland raiders stands for the mexican anthem and sits down to boos for our national anthem. great disrespect! next time n-f-l should suspend him for remainder of season. attendance and ratings way down." tonight we are tracking reaction...(pam) kron4 talked to the raiders coach jack del rio -- and the mayor of oakland.. grant lodes is standing by with more... (grant) the oakland mayor tweeted this today.. oakland loves our own" money lynch"... let's suspend "real-donald- trump" instead.... tonight, libby schaaf stopped by the kron4 studio.. we asked her about the tweet...
his call comes after these photographs showing lynch standing during the mexican national anthem....d sitting during the u-s national anthem .. at a game against the new england patriots in mexico city. (steve) here is the tweet..."marshawn lynch of the n-f-l's oakland raiders stands for the mexican anthem and sits down to boos for our national anthem. great disrespect! next time n-f-l should suspend him for remainder of season. attendance and ratings way down." tonight we are...
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Nov 15, 2017
11/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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the mexican election.o make progress on the 30 chapters in the nafta treaty. this gives them time to do it under the radar and make some progress on things. the trump administration would like knono negative headlines about other subjects, . the congress is out next week. they would like to keep taxes in the news and not have headlines about u.s.-mexico-canada squaring off. david: we just kicking the can down the road. what does it mean for your election in mexico if there is not a new nafta deal? certainly this complicates the political timing of this. once we found out the negotiations were going to last until potentially march, that began to mix the scenario with the beginnings of the campaign here with the election in the beginning of july. in campaigns begin earnest in january and february. at the same time, it offers an opportunity for debate within mexico about the benefits and costs of nafta over the past 20 years. it does mix factors that negotiators wanted to keep separate. this.was no avoiding s
the mexican election.o make progress on the 30 chapters in the nafta treaty. this gives them time to do it under the radar and make some progress on things. the trump administration would like knono negative headlines about other subjects, . the congress is out next week. they would like to keep taxes in the news and not have headlines about u.s.-mexico-canada squaring off. david: we just kicking the can down the road. what does it mean for your election in mexico if there is not a new nafta...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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KTVU
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anthem and standing during the mexican anthem. the mayor of oakland has come to his defense. >> is a war of words because his picture. monday morning the president was back on social media. he says that he is seated during the american national anthem, but he stood up for the mexican anthem. president trump said that he stanforth the mexican anthem. the next time the nfl should suspend them for the remainder of the season. >> i am tired of the bully and chief not doing his job and picking up people. he is supposed to act as the president and lead everybody in this country. >> we are on the brink of world war iii, and you're worrying about this. >> reporter: us boats -- a spokesperson defended them. >> there are ways to get involved, there are more than five seconds before a game, there are many ways he could engage them. she put up pictures of players involvement and tweeted out, president trump, i voted for you which i now regret, football is a powerful platform. this is the work we did in nfl -- in mexico city. ? i think the pre
anthem and standing during the mexican anthem. the mayor of oakland has come to his defense. >> is a war of words because his picture. monday morning the president was back on social media. he says that he is seated during the american national anthem, but he stood up for the mexican anthem. president trump said that he stanforth the mexican anthem. the next time the nfl should suspend them for the remainder of the season. >> i am tired of the bully and chief not doing his job and...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
by
KRON
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but then he stood up for the mexican anthem.arlier this morning, president trump called the move a sign of 'great disrespect! and that, the n-f-l should suspend him for the remainder of the season.' during today's press conference, raiders head coach, jack del rio was asked to comment on the matter... but said, he didn't really want to get into the politics of it all. gary will have more in sports. (pam) almost 60-thousand haitians will have to leave the u-s and return home next july.(steve) that's because the trump administration is ending a temporary residency program that allowed earthquake victims to live and work in the country. homeland security says they are extending the program for one more year...to give haitians time to prepare. officials say conditions in haiti have improved significantly since the 20-10 disaster... however haitian advocates say the conditions have not improved enough for people to be deported. (steve) those who lost their homes in the north bay wildfires have up to 24 months to collect their insuran
but then he stood up for the mexican anthem.arlier this morning, president trump called the move a sign of 'great disrespect! and that, the n-f-l should suspend him for the remainder of the season.' during today's press conference, raiders head coach, jack del rio was asked to comment on the matter... but said, he didn't really want to get into the politics of it all. gary will have more in sports. (pam) almost 60-thousand haitians will have to leave the u-s and return home next july.(steve)...