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Oct 1, 2021
10/21
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LINKTV
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picking up on what lizzy was talking about, michael, people might misperive what michael is about byfocusing on the specter of guantanamo. michael did decades of work on that particular institution and in the context of preventing a legal black hole. guantanamo has become iconic largely -- a negative icon -- largely because of michael's work. we now have seven presidents since that time havesed guantanamo as an offshore prison where they claim the law does not apply to dump all of the people that are causing problems in terms of how they are working the question of border security or national security. what michael was able to do, even back in the 1990's, when a lot of folks were like i don't know what the big deal is, or i see what the deal is but how would you challenge that legally? does in the government have the right to keep a safe from people with hiv my putting them in guantanamo? microsoft that by conceding a blackhole structure in the united states would turn into something like guantanamo. they would be other people put there. i think history has shown, if you look at some
picking up on what lizzy was talking about, michael, people might misperive what michael is about byfocusing on the specter of guantanamo. michael did decades of work on that particular institution and in the context of preventing a legal black hole. guantanamo has become iconic largely -- a negative icon -- largely because of michael's work. we now have seven presidents since that time havesed guantanamo as an offshore prison where they claim the law does not apply to dump all of the people...
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Oct 8, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 20
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michael: -- michael mckee, what matters in six minutes? michael: the total number of jobs created.farm payroll. jonathan: november 3, do we have to prepare to have this conversation about taper on, rate hike? michael: i think ellen zentner made a good point, although i don't think we will not talk about the fed for some time because we always talk about the fed, but the conversation will shift from tapering to tightening, and then we start looking at the inflation numbers in a different way and start parsing out when the fed is going to react to that, who is a hawk and who is a dove. lisa: why is the fed so eager to start tapering? is it because they are not necessarily wanting to raise rates or tighten conditions? michael: you've got one part of it right there. they do not want to get behind inflation, but they have said they would taper first before they tighten, so the sooner they get started, the sooner they can finish and move on to tightening. they are also worried about the financial aspects. the more money they keep dumping into the system, the higher asset prices go and th
michael: -- michael mckee, what matters in six minutes? michael: the total number of jobs created.farm payroll. jonathan: november 3, do we have to prepare to have this conversation about taper on, rate hike? michael: i think ellen zentner made a good point, although i don't think we will not talk about the fed for some time because we always talk about the fed, but the conversation will shift from tapering to tightening, and then we start looking at the inflation numbers in a different way and...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael: i don't know if it is ever too soon.ertainly the success of grayscale etherium, the largest ethereum fund in the world, certainly tells of the story that investors are diversifying away from just bitcoin and even beyond just ethereum. earlier this week, grayscale had its seventh, eighth, and ninth product debut on the market. we are seeing an acceleration amongst our investors that crypto is a thematic part of their portfolios and needs to go beyond just bitcoin and ethereum to other protocols as well. caroline: michael sonnenshein, thank you for joining us hot off the heels of the new grayscale investment announcement. from crypto to a company that is familiar with crypto itself, we hear from amc's ceo on how the company is recovering from the pandemic. that is next. this is bloomberg. ♪ caroline: more from milken. the amc ceo spoke to carol massar earlier. >> this is something much bigger. if all we do is innovate at our theaters, we will bring back post-pandemic the company that existed in 2019. as you said in your bu
michael: i don't know if it is ever too soon.ertainly the success of grayscale etherium, the largest ethereum fund in the world, certainly tells of the story that investors are diversifying away from just bitcoin and even beyond just ethereum. earlier this week, grayscale had its seventh, eighth, and ninth product debut on the market. we are seeing an acceleration amongst our investors that crypto is a thematic part of their portfolios and needs to go beyond just bitcoin and ethereum to other...
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Oct 18, 2021
10/21
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KGO
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michael: the scams totally work on that.n your phone call came in, they spoofed the phone number so that like it was from b.o.a. and there's this emergency and you jump on it. kristen: would the bank actually do something like that? michael: never. they will contact you by text on rare occasions. all you do is not contact them back influence text. look up their phone number online or go online and ask them, did you just contact me? there's never such an emergency that go through a different route to go to your bank. kristen: can people who have fallen victim to this scam get their money back? michael: in starts getting very, have been interesting. those who have come to 7 on your side have received their munch back and here's while -- there's a things -- thing called regulation e in the electronic fund transfer act. i'm says if you're hacked, rimmed off, you can get your money back from the bank. now, the rules get very specific but if consumer product safety commission -- the consumer product safety protection o rendiive an
michael: the scams totally work on that.n your phone call came in, they spoofed the phone number so that like it was from b.o.a. and there's this emergency and you jump on it. kristen: would the bank actually do something like that? michael: never. they will contact you by text on rare occasions. all you do is not contact them back influence text. look up their phone number online or go online and ask them, did you just contact me? there's never such an emergency that go through a different...
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120
Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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maybe it was michael b. phone call, this is the key, this is it. >> that's the first real connection that we had to put beard anything to do with the murder. that kind of just alerted us right off the bat as we need to go talk to michael beard again. >> he denied any type of involvement. he even denied receiving the phone call. the never talked >> that seem ought to? you >> that did seem odd. he denied having any type of conversation. he said he didn't we even remember receiving, it and he would have answered a call that wasn't, that he didn't know the number. >> and when investigators look at beards phone, there was no sign of a call from linda miller cell. >> it had been erased. he explained that away by saying that he, the night before, had to recycle his minutes on his phone. it was a little bit suspicious to me. >> did you start to come down really heard of him? like, we're not buying your story? >> it wasn't hard. it was more like i was trying to say, let's the truth out, because he was having physical
maybe it was michael b. phone call, this is the key, this is it. >> that's the first real connection that we had to put beard anything to do with the murder. that kind of just alerted us right off the bat as we need to go talk to michael beard again. >> he denied any type of involvement. he even denied receiving the phone call. the never talked >> that seem ought to? you >> that did seem odd. he denied having any type of conversation. he said he didn't we even remember...
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Oct 10, 2021
10/21
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could michael garza be the shooter?then she start saying, he wasn't in town, he's a long haul truck driver. so that you are mentioned that. and then you start thinking, who else could that be? >> reporter: meek wasn't sure. >> she was giving me too much information. she was telling me things that ultimately didn't make sense for what we were there for. >> reporter: and he noticed something odd. >> when i wasn't talking to her she would come down, but as soon as i would talk to her, she would get hyper ventilating again. the more i spoke to her, the more signaled like an act. >> reporter: was it all and act? or was there something else going on? only one way to find out. they escorted chacey back to the police station and dug deeper into her story. and that was sometimes hard to follow, as county road 25 95. >> reporter: coming up -- >> so somebody taking the shock, and put it right against your husband said. and you are telling me you see nothing? you see nothing? >> reporter: the fire captain's wife feels the heats. >>
could michael garza be the shooter?then she start saying, he wasn't in town, he's a long haul truck driver. so that you are mentioned that. and then you start thinking, who else could that be? >> reporter: meek wasn't sure. >> she was giving me too much information. she was telling me things that ultimately didn't make sense for what we were there for. >> reporter: and he noticed something odd. >> when i wasn't talking to her she would come down, but as soon as i would...
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Oct 30, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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michael williams _ them? it makes me angry. michael williams was - them?been accused of murder. on may 31 last year, michael decided to take a drive to buy some cigarettes will stop it was a night of protests over the george floyd's murder. there were crowds of people, they were all over the place. �*s what made turn around. someone he recognised from his neighbourhood asked him for a ride back home. he agreed. i stopped at this light. he wasn't even in the car stop two minutes. before another car pulled up and open fired. got him in the head. i was hollering out my passenger, you are right, you ok? he wasn't saying anything that when i glanced up at him from the floor i saw the blood coming down and ijust put the pedal all the way to the floor. michael took the man to hospital where he later died from his wounds. two months later the police knocked on his door stop he was arrested for first degree murder, accused of shooting his passenger in his car. brendan max, michael's lawyer, talks through the case against him. lawyer, talks through the case against
michael williams _ them? it makes me angry. michael williams was - them?been accused of murder. on may 31 last year, michael decided to take a drive to buy some cigarettes will stop it was a night of protests over the george floyd's murder. there were crowds of people, they were all over the place. �*s what made turn around. someone he recognised from his neighbourhood asked him for a ride back home. he agreed. i stopped at this light. he wasn't even in the car stop two minutes. before...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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brendan max, michael's lawyer, talks through the case against him.ss who said that they saw michael shoot anyone. they had no weapon, they had very little evidence in this case other than a shotspotter alert which directly led to him been charged and incarcerated in this case. we had two reports from shotspotter. one was signed by one of their expert witnesses. the shotspotter alert placed the gun shot around the location of michael's car. it was used as evidence in a case against him. to be in a four corner concrete room for 11 months... ..with 39 other people, and you know you haven't done anything. it does a great deal to you, mentally. ijust couldn't function like a normal human being. it got so bad for me in there, i was on several medications. ijust saved them up, i was hoping that it would have put me into a deep enough sleep to stop me from breathing. while michael considered taking his own life, fortunately, he didn't go through with it. after 11 months injail, and despite shotspotter giving the police a detailed forensic report, or dfr, att
brendan max, michael's lawyer, talks through the case against him.ss who said that they saw michael shoot anyone. they had no weapon, they had very little evidence in this case other than a shotspotter alert which directly led to him been charged and incarcerated in this case. we had two reports from shotspotter. one was signed by one of their expert witnesses. the shotspotter alert placed the gun shot around the location of michael's car. it was used as evidence in a case against him. to be in...
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197
Oct 6, 2021
10/21
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KPIX
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it's michael keaton, everybody!hey have their problem, but they improve the lives of so many of us around the glof. >> this is a message from a box that was slotted with facebook incited massacres. the x-rays from your urgent care visit look good. just stay off that leg, okay? what about my rec team? i'm all they got. next season. thanks doc. wow, he already scheduled my pt. i love doctors who work with athletes. does he know you tripped over a basketball? that's a sports injury. at kaiser permanente, we make getting care easy so you can get back on the court quicker. ♪ i see trees of green ♪ s♪ red roses too ♪k ♪ i see them bloom for me and you ♪ (music) ♪ so i think to myself ♪ ♪ oh what a wonderful world ♪ the middle" from their new album, "the comeback," zac brown band! ( applause ) ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ there's an old route two-lane taking out past where ♪ the radio just can't pass a riverbed ♪ with a rope swing and a mailbox painted all ♪ john deere green the end of a bunch of ♪ gravel driveway out here do
it's michael keaton, everybody!hey have their problem, but they improve the lives of so many of us around the glof. >> this is a message from a box that was slotted with facebook incited massacres. the x-rays from your urgent care visit look good. just stay off that leg, okay? what about my rec team? i'm all they got. next season. thanks doc. wow, he already scheduled my pt. i love doctors who work with athletes. does he know you tripped over a basketball? that's a sports injury. at...
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Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael: it is bullish.tatements out of the senate, support from congress, support from regulators, two etf's coming online. you read about etf's coming online in australia. the etf action is bullish for the stock. i think all the regulatory clarity will be really good for bitcoin. emily: there is still no spot etf, and that depends on gary gensler. much does it matter? michael: i think everybody is perplexed that we are late with this, but i think the writing is on the wall. there are 40 different etf applications in place. in time, over the next 12 months, we will see more and more etf's and more options. if a spot etf comes to the market, it will be good for bitcoin in general and everybody involved in the bitcoin ecosystem. emily: you know, looking into robinhood results, there crypto trading dropped almost 80%. it was kind of astonishing. i spoke with the cfo who told me that perhaps crypto trading had normalized. i wonder what you make of that huge change in volume. i know it is just a window into robi
michael: it is bullish.tatements out of the senate, support from congress, support from regulators, two etf's coming online. you read about etf's coming online in australia. the etf action is bullish for the stock. i think all the regulatory clarity will be really good for bitcoin. emily: there is still no spot etf, and that depends on gary gensler. much does it matter? michael: i think everybody is perplexed that we are late with this, but i think the writing is on the wall. there are 40...
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Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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how does michael jordan change the culture of nascar, or can even michael jordan do that?thing about everything he said is that, you know, michael jordan is announcing that he's joining the war against racism. he's doing it in a very public way. he's using his resources. he's using his visibility, and he's doing it through the prism of nascar, which is probably one of the most institutionalized racist, sports organizations in america. and the great thing, craig, about what he -- what he says, he's introduced people to wendal scott. you know, in history, he's the first black man since wendell scott, what i'm encouraging people watching the interview do is go back and check out wendell scott and everything he went through. you know, remember 1963 is when wendell scott became the first african-american to win nascar. you look at 1963, craig, you have the girls murdered in birmingham, the blast of birmingham. you had medgar evers murdered. you had george wallace, said the university of alabama will never be integrated. all you got to do is look at alabama football and see how
how does michael jordan change the culture of nascar, or can even michael jordan do that?thing about everything he said is that, you know, michael jordan is announcing that he's joining the war against racism. he's doing it in a very public way. he's using his resources. he's using his visibility, and he's doing it through the prism of nascar, which is probably one of the most institutionalized racist, sports organizations in america. and the great thing, craig, about what he -- what he says,...
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11
Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 11
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what does it mean to you, michael? karen, tenant, michael, you sound? i think the importance of it is representation representation on its deepest level of what happens when we actually get to see a black stories, black bodies on stage and in see one of the largest platforms possible for opera. and how does that welcome in a new set of people? how does that actually make space at the table for new stories and for stories that are contemporary and, and stories. i mean something to the, to the bodies that are in the seats and who's getting to experience what that story i. i knew there fire was an incredible piece of history. when i read the libretto for the 1st time, i wept and 2, and i already knew terence as music by singing the opera champion, which was here. it's his 1st opera. and i knew it was that he's special. and this to see such a prolific story or by such an incredible musician, it welcomes what opera, what we say we want to be in the 21st century to have the full culture, as we say, for the culture on the stage of a place there is so white i'v
what does it mean to you, michael? karen, tenant, michael, you sound? i think the importance of it is representation representation on its deepest level of what happens when we actually get to see a black stories, black bodies on stage and in see one of the largest platforms possible for opera. and how does that welcome in a new set of people? how does that actually make space at the table for new stories and for stories that are contemporary and, and stories. i mean something to the, to the...
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Oct 18, 2021
10/21
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KPIX
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-- that's a straight line to michael's childhood home. ♪ >> michael myers slayed at the domestic boxis weekend. "halloween kills" scored the number-one spot earning more than $50 million. the latest installment in the horror saga is being shown at more than 3,700 theaters and is also available for streaming. >>> on the cbs "money watch" now, what to expect from today's apple event, and adele is breaking streaming records. diane king hall is at the new york stock exchange with those stories and more. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, anne-marie. third quarter earnings picks up more steam this week with results due from a range of companies including netflix and johnson & johnson along with a slew of new data on the u.s. housing market. meantime, stocks ended higher on friday. the dow industrials rallied 382 points, the nasdaq gained 73, and the s&p 500 added 33. >>> apple is set to hold its second virtual product event today. the tech company is reportedly set to reveal two highly anticipated mac book pro laptops. the computers are ready to get a makeover and will be powered by
-- that's a straight line to michael's childhood home. ♪ >> michael myers slayed at the domestic boxis weekend. "halloween kills" scored the number-one spot earning more than $50 million. the latest installment in the horror saga is being shown at more than 3,700 theaters and is also available for streaming. >>> on the cbs "money watch" now, what to expect from today's apple event, and adele is breaking streaming records. diane king hall is at the new york...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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KDTV
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michael: es algo bien difÍcil.para conseguir esa felicidad. si uno nada consigue no importa quÉ tantas herramientas o recursos o no tenga. al final del dÍa yo creo que es lo que vale. borja: igualmente yo creo que tambiÉn hay muchas personas que piensan que la felicidad es el trabajo pero si no eres feliz en tu interior... yo quiero que te fijes ahora en la pantalla. yo te quiero mostrar una fotografÍa aquÍ de este niÑo lindo. ¿quÉ le dirÍas a este pequeÑito? ¿te acuerdas cuÁntos aÑos tenÍas? [risas] michael: tenÍa 13. me acuerdo que mi papÁ y mi mamÁ... le dirÍa a ese niÑito... que se prepare porque la vida que le va a tocar va a ser una vida bien loca. que se prepare y que la disfrute y que no tenga miedo de ser quiÉn es y disfrutar de la vida. borja: has trabajado en grandes empresas de tecnologÍa importantÍsimas, pero eres muy joven. ¿cuÁles son los siguientes pasos? veo que has publicado un libro. michael: el libro que se trata mÁs o menos de mi vida entera desde mi adolescencia. mÁs que nada se trata de la et
michael: es algo bien difÍcil.para conseguir esa felicidad. si uno nada consigue no importa quÉ tantas herramientas o recursos o no tenga. al final del dÍa yo creo que es lo que vale. borja: igualmente yo creo que tambiÉn hay muchas personas que piensan que la felicidad es el trabajo pero si no eres feliz en tu interior... yo quiero que te fijes ahora en la pantalla. yo te quiero mostrar una fotografÍa aquÍ de este niÑo lindo. ¿quÉ le dirÍas a este pequeÑito? ¿te acuerdas cuÁntos...
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56
Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael: it gives us the latest spending numbers.is point, what we can see his personal income was down by 1%. i'm going to look at the numbers, but i bet can tell you where that is, that will come from government transfer payments. personal spending was up 6/10 of 1%. the headline number, we are up 3/10 of 1% for the month. this is the number that is in the fed's mandate, their target, that is the topline number. but the core stays at 3.6% after a 2/10 percent increase, with expectations, although we thought we would get to 3.7%. so, basically, we have plateaued with the inflation numbers that the fed watches. tom: lisa committed to you have any understanding of what might -- lisa, do you have any understanding of what michael just said? lisa: people are earning less. but what caught my attention is the employment index, how much of the wages are going up or how much expensive it was to get labor. 1.3% versus the expectation from 0.9% underscores that pce index at its highest level since 1991, the idea that labor is driving part of
michael: it gives us the latest spending numbers.is point, what we can see his personal income was down by 1%. i'm going to look at the numbers, but i bet can tell you where that is, that will come from government transfer payments. personal spending was up 6/10 of 1%. the headline number, we are up 3/10 of 1% for the month. this is the number that is in the fed's mandate, their target, that is the topline number. but the core stays at 3.6% after a 2/10 percent increase, with expectations,...
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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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thank you for coming there doctor michaels. i have cold morbidity i got my moderna vaccine mandate for everyone. i am not for that just like you said the most people at risk are elderly and comorbidities. why can't a mandate come out or if you have comorbidities you should wear and 95 mask. why make everyone when it only affects lessn than 1% of the people who can be damaged by it. why can't the mandate go to people who are more at risk? i am wondering, once you start these mandates all the time, do you eventually see a flu mandate coming also for the flute egg the government mandating that? thank you. >> it's so funny everybody's worked up about the covid vaccine mandate. wewe have tons and enteritis vaccinated do not want that spreading. most public schools have mumps, measles, you had to get smallpoxun vaccination to do many things until he finally eliminated smallpox. this idea there's all the sudden a crazy mandate on something that's in this very polarnf it certainly looks like johnson & johnson vaccine is the first shot
thank you for coming there doctor michaels. i have cold morbidity i got my moderna vaccine mandate for everyone. i am not for that just like you said the most people at risk are elderly and comorbidities. why can't a mandate come out or if you have comorbidities you should wear and 95 mask. why make everyone when it only affects lessn than 1% of the people who can be damaged by it. why can't the mandate go to people who are more at risk? i am wondering, once you start these mandates all the...
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Oct 21, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 49
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michael: that is probably two or three steps down the road. we are looking at listing securities and broker atf's. alix: do you have an idea of how many people you need trading and the volume to kind of say, nailed it? michael: we get to an average daily volume of 5 million we would be happy. it is a question of how many people do we need to do that. alix: that was might interview with michael mcguire symbridge owner and ceo. skyrocketing places sending chills to the haunted house industry, causing a lot of moaning and groaning. since 2015, the cost of wood has been $360 for a thousand board. it is 600 and $25. -- $625. a global chip shortage keeping lights dimmed. the only way to navigate this market is to keep calm and pumpkin on. next week, earnings, earnings. friday, exxon and chevron, so don't miss that. catch us every thursday at 1:00 p.m., 6:00 in london. this is bloomberg. ♪ alix: -- matt: welcome to bloomberg markets. we are going to speak to valkyrie investments ceo leah wald ahead of their launch of the second bitcoin in the u.s. an
michael: that is probably two or three steps down the road. we are looking at listing securities and broker atf's. alix: do you have an idea of how many people you need trading and the volume to kind of say, nailed it? michael: we get to an average daily volume of 5 million we would be happy. it is a question of how many people do we need to do that. alix: that was might interview with michael mcguire symbridge owner and ceo. skyrocketing places sending chills to the haunted house industry,...
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12
Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 12
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hello, michael. say good to have you here on the stream at terrace. introduce yourself global audience. well, my name is terrance blanchard, i'm a jazz musician, brad trade from new orleans, louisiana. and now apparently, i'm an oper controls how far a so i was so happy about that. i know karen i room dina entities is al hello, my name is karen sla m a soprano and i i originally originated the roll bill in the original production of our shopping, my bones, the st. louis. ah, i think to have him hallo, mount. lot like a welcome to the street. please introduce yourself to our audience around the world . i am michael mohammed. i am a director and an educator based in san francisco, california, all right, unfiltered 1st thoughts about fire shot up in my bones. what does it mean to you, michael? karen talent, michael, you saw i think the importance of it is representation representation on its deepest level of what happens when we actually get to see a black stories, black bodies on stage and in see one o
hello, michael. say good to have you here on the stream at terrace. introduce yourself global audience. well, my name is terrance blanchard, i'm a jazz musician, brad trade from new orleans, louisiana. and now apparently, i'm an oper controls how far a so i was so happy about that. i know karen i room dina entities is al hello, my name is karen sla m a soprano and i i originally originated the roll bill in the original production of our shopping, my bones, the st. louis. ah, i think to have him...
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13
Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 13
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michael: let's talk about that. some people criticized the roadmap for not having hard that it is built around these questions. and that means that leaves out a certain amount of detail. and just last week at the thomas b. fordham institute we just released a major review of u.s. history. you can check that out. and for some good news, five states did a great job, both red and blue state predict the 20 states in those days, they didn't or they whoever got together decided it would be easier to write, not to get into this and therefore not getting the guidance. and mark daniel and her team have gone further and into all of the details. it would look more like a national curriculum afraid are they damned if they do are damned if they don't, what take what you do on this. mark: i agree in danielle for wise to put this and the more tentative motive, the inquiry approach printed there's probably necessary way of avoiding it accusation of prescriptive sense. i would say that the question the best questions for me are thos
michael: let's talk about that. some people criticized the roadmap for not having hard that it is built around these questions. and that means that leaves out a certain amount of detail. and just last week at the thomas b. fordham institute we just released a major review of u.s. history. you can check that out. and for some good news, five states did a great job, both red and blue state predict the 20 states in those days, they didn't or they whoever got together decided it would be easier to...
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56
Oct 27, 2021
10/21
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KGO
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eye 56
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thank you, michael. ama: it was originally a very contentious neighborhood debate over allowing a navigation center to open in the [ sneeze ] are you ok? oh, it's just a cold. if you have high blood pressure, a cold is not just a cold. unlike other cold medicines, coricidin provides powerful cold relief without raising your blood pressure be there for life's best moments with coricidin. now in sugar free liquid. all denny's pancakes are made to order with fresh buttermilk. but this month's spotlight stack feels like fall. and is the pumpkin-iest pecan pie drizzliest and most gram-worthy of them all. new! pumpkin pecan pancakes. this month's spotlight stack. see you at dennys this month' air wickht stack. air wick scented oils are infused with natural essential oils to create authentic seasonal scents that fill your home with holiday spirit all season long. connect to nature this season. dan: it was once the center of a contentious neighborhood debate. now a center to provide resources and shelter to the
thank you, michael. ama: it was originally a very contentious neighborhood debate over allowing a navigation center to open in the [ sneeze ] are you ok? oh, it's just a cold. if you have high blood pressure, a cold is not just a cold. unlike other cold medicines, coricidin provides powerful cold relief without raising your blood pressure be there for life's best moments with coricidin. now in sugar free liquid. all denny's pancakes are made to order with fresh buttermilk. but this month's...
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Oct 22, 2021
10/21
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michael daily joins me now. >> michael, who is this police officer you talk to the for this piece. >>here is a rough-and-tumble cop, when i was interviewing him, he struggled to his wife and he said when did i get shawn to the head, she said 90 92, goes 1992. he had shot in the head, he he's encouraged to retire for disability, he's determined to go, back he came back, he got in a car jays involving a kidnapping he got banged up badly in that, and that led to a foot chase where he had a massive heart attack. and then he ended up out on the disability in 2000, so he's probably when he wanted to do was keeping a cop, he loved being a cop. and there came a day when he's sitting last november, he was sitting in the kitchen, he's sitting there kitchen he's been in a wheelchair on and off, he's disabled he's feeling pretty down, and all of a sudden he reads newspaper about a vaccine trial for johnson & johnson vaccine. he says, this is it, this is what i've been waiting for, because here is a chance to undergo a little risk, and maybe save thousands of lives. it was better than that, that,
michael daily joins me now. >> michael, who is this police officer you talk to the for this piece. >>here is a rough-and-tumble cop, when i was interviewing him, he struggled to his wife and he said when did i get shawn to the head, she said 90 92, goes 1992. he had shot in the head, he he's encouraged to retire for disability, he's determined to go, back he came back, he got in a car jays involving a kidnapping he got banged up badly in that, and that led to a foot chase where he...
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do you agree with michael at all? well yeah, there was a huge surge of crypto training the 2nd quarter versus the 3rd quarter. and that was pretty much because of 2 things. first off, we had this massive rally in the 1st and 2nd quarter of the year with the coin topping $23.00. 63000 for the 1st time ever. so retail trade or seeing things rise, they get a little fomo and start massively trading. but unfortunately, when the formal dies down and crypto stabilize toward the $50000.00 mark and takes a little bit of a breather, that's when the biggest speculative interest dies down. and that's robin hood's crutch that they rely on of traitors. not long term traitors and hardly so one bitcoin didn't do anything for a couple months and just kind of flopped around the 38000 and support line. people lost a lot of interest. and then of course, there's a 2nd reason which was the death of those coin. as michael just mentioned, a huge portion of robin hood's revenue came from crypto training, specifically don't coin. and i think a
do you agree with michael at all? well yeah, there was a huge surge of crypto training the 2nd quarter versus the 3rd quarter. and that was pretty much because of 2 things. first off, we had this massive rally in the 1st and 2nd quarter of the year with the coin topping $23.00. 63000 for the 1st time ever. so retail trade or seeing things rise, they get a little fomo and start massively trading. but unfortunately, when the formal dies down and crypto stabilize toward the $50000.00 mark and...
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let's go live now to michael maloof. michael is a former senior, a security policy analyst in the office of the secretary of defense in the u. s. and you are very welcome. was this just hypothetical thinking, michael by the us defense secretary, those are marks or is there something more concrete at play here? wouldn't nato make that live? well, i think this is all part of a concerted action by the united states once again to to wrap it up, pressure on, on moscow, basically to contain russia in its own sphere of influence. it's clear that lloyd austin, the us defense secretary, hasn't learned anything from the lessons, going back to 2008 when us was trying to push most georgia and ukraine into into nato. but it was, it was, it was the membership itself, of, of nato, which decided against such a move because of the concerns of moscow reaction. and, and for, for moscow it's clear that such accession of border states would be a red line for moscow of nato. and it's all, and it comes at a very interesting time with under sec
let's go live now to michael maloof. michael is a former senior, a security policy analyst in the office of the secretary of defense in the u. s. and you are very welcome. was this just hypothetical thinking, michael by the us defense secretary, those are marks or is there something more concrete at play here? wouldn't nato make that live? well, i think this is all part of a concerted action by the united states once again to to wrap it up, pressure on, on moscow, basically to contain russia in...
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Oct 28, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael much -- michael mckee joins us. michael: we are looking at jobless claims falling, 281,000.ss claims are continuing to improve and it looks like the economy is absorbing some of the people on the sidelines. the only number that we have yet that i am seeing is the overall headline number of a 2% gain, weaker than the 6.7% on revised in the prior quarter, and lower than the 2.6% forecast. we are looking for the first release, and we are getting it in, as tom says, drips and drab as the internet is a slower way of reporting this. personal per -- personal consumption up 1.6%. it is way down from 12% in the third quarter -- second quarter of the year. the gdp price index, 5.7%. this is interesting, you and i have talked about this before. the difference between nominal and real gdp with inflation rising almost three times the rate of real gdp. tom: if you look at the numbers and let me talk to you while you digest the numbers, i am trying to find domestic final sales to see this spirit of the economy. to me, lawrence summers is looking at the screen and saying this looks very sta
michael much -- michael mckee joins us. michael: we are looking at jobless claims falling, 281,000.ss claims are continuing to improve and it looks like the economy is absorbing some of the people on the sidelines. the only number that we have yet that i am seeing is the overall headline number of a 2% gain, weaker than the 6.7% on revised in the prior quarter, and lower than the 2.6% forecast. we are looking for the first release, and we are getting it in, as tom says, drips and drab as the...
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Oct 21, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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michael: my great-great- grandfather, rachmaiel. gigi: pinky and rocky.scattered around in different places. gigi: they worked hard. simi: and built new lives. michael: but rocky and pinky's families didn't see each other again... all: ...until now. david: more than 100 years later, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner with access to financial advice, tools and a personalized plan that helps you build a future for those you love. vanguard. become an owner. wondering what actually goes into your multi-vitamin. at new chapter. its innovation organic ingredients and fermentation. fermentation? yes, formulated to help your body really truly absorb the natural goodness. new chapter. wellness well done. oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer tool? so you only pay for what you need. sorry? limu, you're an animal! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ in business, setbacks change everything. so get comcast business internet and add
michael: my great-great- grandfather, rachmaiel. gigi: pinky and rocky.scattered around in different places. gigi: they worked hard. simi: and built new lives. michael: but rocky and pinky's families didn't see each other again... all: ...until now. david: more than 100 years later, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner with access to financial advice, tools and a personalized plan that helps you build a...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 3, 2021
10/21
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SFGTV
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i'm san francisco mayor london breed and i'm excited to be here at footprint with michael, the owner. with our captain and our assessor-recorder, the supervisor of the community gordon mar and office of economic and work force development. so many people who work hard to help support our small businesses because we know despite what has happened during the pandemic, so many of our small businesses have been suffering in san francisco. the cost of doing business, the ability to find a storefront and go through the city's bureaucratic process to get open in the first place has changed our city as we know it. often times during the spring time, we're celebrating small businesses in san francisco but we need to do a better job of putting our money where our mouth is when we talk about supporting small businesses. i still go to the same dry cleaner i have been going to since i was a kid. i still go to the same dentist i have been going to since i've had teeth, i go to the same place to get my nails done when i can afford to get them done. it is an important part of the spirit of san franci
i'm san francisco mayor london breed and i'm excited to be here at footprint with michael, the owner. with our captain and our assessor-recorder, the supervisor of the community gordon mar and office of economic and work force development. so many people who work hard to help support our small businesses because we know despite what has happened during the pandemic, so many of our small businesses have been suffering in san francisco. the cost of doing business, the ability to find a storefront...
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Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael: it does include energy.re so many interesting dynamics because there is a political dynamic in the united states as far as the talk about energy and the debt. you are seeing some investors buy stocks and buy commodities because they're worried about the shortages we are seeing now. that scarcity value is making this sector more attractive. from a valuation perspective, relative to other parts of the market, energy does look good. whether it is energy, materials, you want to be in those spaces. tom: i want to focus on what jon ferro brought up, the massive ambiguities of rates and inflation grinding higher. i would suggest the media makes it a simple discussion. it is not. for people exposed to the stock market, list the ambiguities that can happen as we go to a new rate regime. michael: new regime is such an important way to describe it. we have been in the current regime since 2008, where is a low interest rate environment. what investors have talked about is there is no alternative. lower rates, he could a
michael: it does include energy.re so many interesting dynamics because there is a political dynamic in the united states as far as the talk about energy and the debt. you are seeing some investors buy stocks and buy commodities because they're worried about the shortages we are seeing now. that scarcity value is making this sector more attractive. from a valuation perspective, relative to other parts of the market, energy does look good. whether it is energy, materials, you want to be in those...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michael: it is quarters.longer-term, no doubt that pricing of interest rates are low and definitely into the future. if real interest rates are going to be negative into 2024-2025, even the fence projections are suggesting negative real interest rates. we will have to see if that is true. i think it is too pessimistic. but right now, it does look like yields going to be taxed in the short run. we have seen that with the flattening of yield curves. yes, inflation is pushing a central banks to act or sooner, but the cumulative amount of increases is not really changing very much at all, suggesting that long-term interest rates are capped. lisa: we have the bank of america fund manager survey. they showed bond allocations at a record low. isn't that bullish? michael: i think so. everyone is worried about tapering, but the u.s. fiscal deficit should shrink dramatically year. i do not see a supply-side issue on treasuries right now. global demand is still strong. treasuries are the world's risk-free assets. it is
michael: it is quarters.longer-term, no doubt that pricing of interest rates are low and definitely into the future. if real interest rates are going to be negative into 2024-2025, even the fence projections are suggesting negative real interest rates. we will have to see if that is true. i think it is too pessimistic. but right now, it does look like yields going to be taxed in the short run. we have seen that with the flattening of yield curves. yes, inflation is pushing a central banks to...
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Oct 27, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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and i didn't notice some parallels with michael. michael. so of course he, in the situations are quite different. there's less of a nuance with race and attacks within the family compared to make merkle situation . but, you know, they did experience a certain level of trauma because they're always under the public eye and they always have to act a certain way. and as i was listening to the press conferences, she always has to be very proper japanese and has to exert herself and express yourself in a certain way. so i think proportionately women are under pressure to act that way too. if they're in royal families, especially nancy, if you look back at the history of the imperial family in japan, empress the chico impress masako prince, his dark princess yuri. in the past the all how to go through a huge pressure to produce some mail to the rhone, or to readjust to this strict life within the impale household. and those tories will always shrouded in secrecy because it was the royal family. and therefore you have to be careful about those stor
and i didn't notice some parallels with michael. michael. so of course he, in the situations are quite different. there's less of a nuance with race and attacks within the family compared to make merkle situation . but, you know, they did experience a certain level of trauma because they're always under the public eye and they always have to act a certain way. and as i was listening to the press conferences, she always has to be very proper japanese and has to exert herself and express yourself...
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Oct 30, 2021
10/21
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michael: my great-great- grandfather, rachmaiel. gigi: pinky and rocky. in poland. david: and then the family broke apart. michael: they scattered around in different places. gigi: they worked hard. simi: and built new lives. michael: but rocky and pinky's families didn't see each other again... all: ...until now. david: more than 100 years later, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. hi. so you're the scientist here. does my aveeno® daily moisturizer really make my dry skin healthier in one day? it's true jen. this prebiotic oat formula moisturizes to help prevent dry skin. impressive. aveeno® healthy. it's our nature.™ new daily moisture for face. i brought in ensure max protein, with thirty grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! ( sighs wearily ) here, i'll take that! ( excited yell ) woo-hoo! ensure max protein. with thirty grams of protein, one-gram of sugar, and nutrients to support immune health! ( abbot sonic ) don't settle for products that give you a sort-of white smile. try crest whitening
michael: my great-great- grandfather, rachmaiel. gigi: pinky and rocky. in poland. david: and then the family broke apart. michael: they scattered around in different places. gigi: they worked hard. simi: and built new lives. michael: but rocky and pinky's families didn't see each other again... all: ...until now. david: more than 100 years later, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. hi. so you're the scientist here. does my aveeno® daily moisturizer really make my dry...
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wow, michael a while we're in the neighbourhood. let's do an indo pacific lightning round in this order status report. japan. well, japan is going to as going to be tightened up on its own defenses. we're going to see that united states along with japan as well as i was south korea. even india, they're, they're trying to basically contain china and you can see much closer cooperation among those nations. and of course you got north korea that south korea is still worried about you're gonna, you're going to be seen in south korea itself is going to be trying to work with the us much more closely. and it has issues with china. you have the philippines, they have real serious issues with china in terms of our access rights, mineral rights, ah, that, that it is confounding. the problem in the south china sea stand off with, with, with those countries. as john pointed out, that india itself, it has designs for the same area, but it also has a competitor with which is pakistan. pakistan is very close to china and they are competing as wel
wow, michael a while we're in the neighbourhood. let's do an indo pacific lightning round in this order status report. japan. well, japan is going to as going to be tightened up on its own defenses. we're going to see that united states along with japan as well as i was south korea. even india, they're, they're trying to basically contain china and you can see much closer cooperation among those nations. and of course you got north korea that south korea is still worried about you're gonna,...
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Oct 22, 2021
10/21
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michael daly joins me now. who is this police officer you talked to for this piece?e head? she said, 1992. he says, yeah, 1992, i got shot in the head. he could have retired on a disability, he was determined to go back. he came back, got in a car chase involving a kidnapping, and he got banged up badly in that. that led to a foot chase where he had a massive heart attack. and he ended up out on a disability in 2000. so he's -- but all he wanted to do was keep being a cop, he loved being a cop. and there came a day, last november, he's sitting in his kitchen, his wife's out, he's sitting there in the kitchen, he's been in a wheelchair on and off, he's disabled, he's feeling pretty down. all of a sudden he reads a newspaper article about a vaccine trial for johnson & johnson vaccine. and he goes, this is it, this is what i've been waiting for, because in his mind, all of a sudden, here is a chance to undergo a little risk and maybe save thousands of lives, and what's better than that? if you're a real c-o-p. so he figures, i'm going to do this. they're thrilled to hav
michael daly joins me now. who is this police officer you talked to for this piece?e head? she said, 1992. he says, yeah, 1992, i got shot in the head. he could have retired on a disability, he was determined to go back. he came back, got in a car chase involving a kidnapping, and he got banged up badly in that. that led to a foot chase where he had a massive heart attack. and he ended up out on a disability in 2000. so he's -- but all he wanted to do was keep being a cop, he loved being a cop....
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Oct 9, 2021
10/21
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michael, is there evidence to support his conclusion?ll, you know, i don't know exactly what rick was basing his conclusions, on but i guess there is a genuine concern about just how hard this committee is going to press the trump individuals who are subpoenaed, brought forth, or asked to appear. how serious are they going to take this, how much effort are they going to put behind dragging these people into the halls of congress to sit before this committee to testify to what they know their role in it, etc. i think there is a legitimate concern about the level of pressure they are going to bring in that regard. you had, already, those who had been subpoenaed to basically blow it off and so the question now becomes, all right, the deadline is past, what are you going to do? i think that is driving a lot of rick's frustration, the frustration of a lot of folks who do want to this commission, commissions work to be legitimate and to reach the result of finding out exactly what happened. >> and don, you know the history of this, you see why
michael, is there evidence to support his conclusion?ll, you know, i don't know exactly what rick was basing his conclusions, on but i guess there is a genuine concern about just how hard this committee is going to press the trump individuals who are subpoenaed, brought forth, or asked to appear. how serious are they going to take this, how much effort are they going to put behind dragging these people into the halls of congress to sit before this committee to testify to what they know their...
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Oct 25, 2021
10/21
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military command, and with michael morell, former acting director of the c.i.a. >> michael morell: i'm a big admirer. i found dr. saad to be extraordinarily bright. i found him to be incredibly loyal to his country. >> pelley: would you say honorable? >> morell: honorable, yes, absolutely. >> pelley: but in 2017, saad found himself on the wrong side of prince mohammed's coup. the deposed prince nayef was saad's boss. saad fled to canada, where he remains, and refuses to return. now, prince mohammed is making saad's family pay. the very day of the coup, two of his children were barred from leaving the kingdom. this is his daughter, sarah. >> ♪ happy birthday to you ♪ >> pelley: and his son omar. both planned to be in american colleges. they are now in saudi prisons. next, the family says, prince mohammed targeted saad's son-in-law. they claim the son-in-law was kidnapped in a third country and returned to the kingdom. >> khalid aljabri: the first night he was kidnapped, he received more than 100 lashes. he was tortured. he was beaten on his back, on his legs. >> pelley: khalid aljabri i
military command, and with michael morell, former acting director of the c.i.a. >> michael morell: i'm a big admirer. i found dr. saad to be extraordinarily bright. i found him to be incredibly loyal to his country. >> pelley: would you say honorable? >> morell: honorable, yes, absolutely. >> pelley: but in 2017, saad found himself on the wrong side of prince mohammed's coup. the deposed prince nayef was saad's boss. saad fled to canada, where he remains, and refuses to...
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Oct 22, 2021
10/21
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COM
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well, michael kosta, is going to find out.d you. ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ there's my boy! all the delivery. no delivery fees. dashpass. [humming] ♪ i'm paying them no mind ♪ ♪ hands to the sky, all mine and pardon when i shine ♪ ♪ hands to the sky, all mine ♪ ♪ woah, woah no ceiling woah woah good feeling woah woah ♪ ♪ i might send it up ♪ ♪ ♪ alberto and i don't fit into those other family plans. ♪ i might send it up ♪ that's why we love visible. yeah, it's wireless with unlimited data and if you join a group it's as low as $25/mo. just get together and save! we look goooood! visible. wireless that gets better with friends. 80% get genetically meaningful health info from their 23andme dna reports. 80%. that's 8 out of 10 people who can get something enlightening. something empowering. something that could change everything. info that could give you greater control of your own health, and it's right there in your dna. so, if 80% get genetically meaningful health info, the question is, will you be pa
well, michael kosta, is going to find out.d you. ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ [doorbell] ♪ ♪ there's my boy! all the delivery. no delivery fees. dashpass. [humming] ♪ i'm paying them no mind ♪ ♪ hands to the sky, all mine and pardon when i shine ♪ ♪ hands to the sky, all mine ♪ ♪ woah, woah no ceiling woah woah good feeling woah woah ♪ ♪ i might send it up ♪ ♪ ♪ alberto and i don't fit into those other family plans. ♪ i might send it up ♪...
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Oct 22, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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. >> host: david michaels is with us. he served as the director of the occupational safety and health administration from 2009-17 as assistant secretary off labor te longest-serving osha head. he's currently a professor at george washington university school of public health. professor michaels welcome to the program. >> guest: thanks so much red me on a get. >> host: we're going to talk about vaccine mandates in particular about federal vaccine but i won't ask you about osha picu served as mention the longest-serving osha head from 2009 during thehe obama administration to 2017. broadly in terms of what osha does, how do they enforce workplace rules and regulations across the country? >> guest: i'm glad to answer the question because so many people don't understand what osha is andta how it works. osha is a law that is 50 years old which essentially says employers have a responsibility, a requirement provide the workplace free of recognize hazards. 's job is to make sure employers follow the law. the most powerful tool o
. >> host: david michaels is with us. he served as the director of the occupational safety and health administration from 2009-17 as assistant secretary off labor te longest-serving osha head. he's currently a professor at george washington university school of public health. professor michaels welcome to the program. >> guest: thanks so much red me on a get. >> host: we're going to talk about vaccine mandates in particular about federal vaccine but i won't ask you about osha...
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Oct 16, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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this picks up where the last one ended, and you know what, michael myers is still running around.lloween, we went - trick—or—treating, and we got a whole bag of candy. you guys shouldn't be out here right now, ok? it's not safe. are you going to kill me? satan, not today. ooh, i'm so scared. are you guys alone? where are your parents?! no. no, we're waiting for our friend. and, like, there's a creepy man in a white mask, and he keeps, like, trying to play hide and seek with us and he... he whispers. where did you see him? he'sjust hiding behind trees. and he pops out like "peekaboo!" i mean, we're not three years old. come on, man! oh, look, there he is. oh, hello! hello! they laugh. what the hell are you doing? so, the main problem with this is, itjust gets you right back to, you know, the return of michael myers or the revenge of michael myers, whatever part four, part five, it was like, "oh, fine, we arejust back to that stuff again." there is a sort of idea at the centre of this, which is there is a long speech about how, "hey, the real terror of michael myers is that he insti
this picks up where the last one ended, and you know what, michael myers is still running around.lloween, we went - trick—or—treating, and we got a whole bag of candy. you guys shouldn't be out here right now, ok? it's not safe. are you going to kill me? satan, not today. ooh, i'm so scared. are you guys alone? where are your parents?! no. no, we're waiting for our friend. and, like, there's a creepy man in a white mask, and he keeps, like, trying to play hide and seek with us and he... he...
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Oct 14, 2021
10/21
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KGO
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michael? to more money for 70 million americans. the social security administration says seniors will get a 5.9% increase in their checks next year. economic correspondent deidre bolton has all the details. good morning, deidre. >> reporter: good morning, michael. that is right. social security beneficiaries will see checks increase by 5.9% starting in late december or early january. the biggest bump in almost four decades. one analyst told me this year is more about catching people up versus getting people ahead. prices have been rising for gas, groceries, insurance. all of which crunch senior citizens on fixed incomes. this cost of living increase was calculated based on a formula of what we all pay for everyday items. just yesterday, bureau of labor statistics saying prices are up 5.4% over last year. so that's the highest increase since the 2008 financial crisis. but the welcome news with this, the benefit increase will put roughly $90 per month more into about 70 million american senior c
michael? to more money for 70 million americans. the social security administration says seniors will get a 5.9% increase in their checks next year. economic correspondent deidre bolton has all the details. good morning, deidre. >> reporter: good morning, michael. that is right. social security beneficiaries will see checks increase by 5.9% starting in late december or early january. the biggest bump in almost four decades. one analyst told me this year is more about catching people up...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN
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host: david michaels is with us. he served as the director of the occupational safety and health administration and assistant secretary of labor, the lord -- the longest serving osha head. professor michaels, welcome to the program. guest: thanks so much for having me on again. host: we are talking about men deep -- about vaccine mandates, but i wanted to ask you about osha. you are the longest serving osha head, from 2009 to 2017. in terms of what osha does, how do they enforce workplace rules and regulations across the country? guest: i'm glad to answer that question because so many people don't understand what osha is or how it works. osha is more than 50 years old and essentially says employers have a responsibility, a requirement to provide a workplace free of recognized hazards. osha's job is to make sure employers follow the law. the most powerful tool osha has is a standard, a rule that says employers must do certain things to protect workers, and that is powerful because most employers are law-abiding and wh
host: david michaels is with us. he served as the director of the occupational safety and health administration and assistant secretary of labor, the lord -- the longest serving osha head. professor michaels, welcome to the program. guest: thanks so much for having me on again. host: we are talking about men deep -- about vaccine mandates, but i wanted to ask you about osha. you are the longest serving osha head, from 2009 to 2017. in terms of what osha does, how do they enforce workplace rules...
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Oct 13, 2021
10/21
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CNBC
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michael farr, you bought more ross stores?i did ross stores is an off-price treasure hunt retailer they change their inventory all of the time. they've been under some price pressure the store is very well managed they've got almost 1900 stores open and they're going to take that to 3,000 stores over the next eight years or so so i get 6% growth from the store growth i've got a company now trading at around 20 times earnings, growing earnings at 12% with a 1% dividend. the stock pulled back a little bit and i've liked it for a long time so we've added to it. i think that will work out very well for us. >> okay. >> something that has not worked out very well for you, michael farr, nor steve weiss, fedex weiss, it's your core position >> i was going to get on steve now. i'll give you a pass >> you know where -- >> oh, that's very nice. you're not going to upset me, but thank you. people are talking about it on twitter, guys. fedex, you add it to your position it's a dog it's down 25% in the last three months and i'll cut michael
michael farr, you bought more ross stores?i did ross stores is an off-price treasure hunt retailer they change their inventory all of the time. they've been under some price pressure the store is very well managed they've got almost 1900 stores open and they're going to take that to 3,000 stores over the next eight years or so so i get 6% growth from the store growth i've got a company now trading at around 20 times earnings, growing earnings at 12% with a 1% dividend. the stock pulled back a...