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i had a 100 miles on it that is for michelle. michelle h a in london. has any father? i think the weight over here. i think with them as i thought. okay, you got this yesterday over the phone is the heart of it show that your mother meaning to mention eat like hot water and one lunch officers a ha my dad about a thought of and i got this woman speak. i was saying it was me and my mom handy was riding riley. why the law school brad and mississippi left. god guy. gary. i said i me to live the hey ah, part of what was already doing here. what is stephanie joseph enough to read all of the new head the following. the middle of the lithia have been of the final i lose the initial still near with them . listen pulling the column on top of your head. see roughly, hey, we will more stuff than that model. follow, you know me, you were student by the name i said body mark or the bali zacharon split the valley but she would do syria and now when i 1st met lays i only heard his story. it took 5 years for his grandmother to be ready to share her memories of that day. but that's what
i had a 100 miles on it that is for michelle. michelle h a in london. has any father? i think the weight over here. i think with them as i thought. okay, you got this yesterday over the phone is the heart of it show that your mother meaning to mention eat like hot water and one lunch officers a ha my dad about a thought of and i got this woman speak. i was saying it was me and my mom handy was riding riley. why the law school brad and mississippi left. god guy. gary. i said i me to live the hey...
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12
May 31, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 12
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michelle michelle, the past has been diluted. madam madame la, clear market done. village covered. hum, methodist. so on moms how the, the puzzle had the fun home can to the found out that i need to get how monday i do my the, i don't have our belong to machine after not vision with the thought of it was only, i did the jimmy modest and then for getting them for couldn't talk with them figure to be when 1st getting there's going to be within mythology for level road one to 10, a group of them as well. no, we don't do group all the we have a lot that will let me know what's happened of us. i know he that long maybe was thomas if you put it on by the last liquid green. ah ah i, i and the from the the old are i'm going to just name there's a pin and the last name of the can keep i think they would have been released, but it's not so little much cheaper that you had too much trouble with a mock maybe and malaria has it. if you would do something that technically mom will go ahead anyway. seems better shipment, hockey, mom. okay. my how do you want to keep it after the migration is even something that seems to come in a hole in the data from the amount of this and i get the most a going to be able to get them away. my little record for me is that i'm going to go on some stuff that i see is much better and i want to go to a taxi with with me in the hallway and get all the keys. it reminded me that nice the me who was but i get my been a little was what when i them with them for me or the recommend them all up years of the new woman into we sort of in the market. now look, and when i can, and i really need to be there have been, this is, was montezuma. when was want to be the one was one, what we'll really kinda guess is from just the clear from, from missouri and i'm sure i'm honest that the home i hope and rigid i didn't got home she minute plus i did buy the stuff and get a low jacket, chain of thumb, how did it go? my name much. i'm and i had him. did you not get them to from a 100? nationally he give her school gave of him she, he, me and husband battered it and we should equity, and i was hardly shaven and how she would get a lot longer and also because hubble must keep in eczema. and that i could do, i had the we had, if you would call me or we didn't get a lot of it was can, must last. i mean at large lot they can put to layer mac. wonderful. if it started like, you know, last week you will, over, they will say, if i see engine middle colors and fis on the 3rd or not been hospital and i because the last minute placement. why do you mean with i'm going to be in the near facility in my baton, dallas from again bless i did it on the had to go under the money. no luck with them. of do of them is going to be sure because of do is will shannon no question, can i can i'm from a bit of shadow maybe up to it and then we'll do. like i mentioned, this is going to have the guy machine at the moment i'm, i'm going to wait for it to kick, gosh, to kick him how machine eggs. she got her phone, but she said she doesn't want that. i give him the final animal. national animal, you've been shipping from the whole sigma down the middle of all my point and i know what to me as good for me that he didn't feel for sure. okay. the only one he hadn't had to shift lobby volume shift shape because he's someone who is the medical card they've been previously. how's it going on with what was in my food to mean somebody in the house? and before i got somebody, lots of customers want me to look at the content with me. i guess when i'm a 3 cousin and probably one of them for you to you who do want to know that the me when the mckenzie can you will and the, and the one thing we do know getting the plane game tree, when he said that some of the came in with them and i'll see you meticulous, you know, without us and the fees need the little is mateusz and you have to do i have to well i'm not going to like my out there just not wait for the day. none of a few minutes for us to get it on the marble weighs more more that much of the solid solid we can do that. i should tell them initial product missions or the lot of money has or the more money to be mentioned occasion it not as a has offering can i'm a $100.00 men where have that in my michel total vision. mr. wilson, who again, which has my little guy with a, has a house management should do on it on what i heard about that 100 to be what i will let them in the tensor doctors symptom, stephanie bernard as well. i'm not sure if that's when you thought i meant to, because i don't know how to be in. i don't, don't, don't, was in a kid a gentleman. so they came with the come as, excuse with that would open them. don't look better. we're not going on that again, i'm so one of the go to our middle who i'm going to sit them in, which was at the company. i finished and i wasn't doing it. kevin, what don't you know happening with the ownership in the debate? wanted to know how you had to love that i'm already were so sorry, but madame i said it was my modem. i always had to have the dimensions. i don't think it would fit care of it. i mean she's like that. sure, sure, sure. i mean, is it not? yeah, i think, you know, i mean that's an agenda. they were bill finish was mentioned. le
michelle michelle, the past has been diluted. madam madame la, clear market done. village covered. hum, methodist. so on moms how the, the puzzle had the fun home can to the found out that i need to get how monday i do my the, i don't have our belong to machine after not vision with the thought of it was only, i did the jimmy modest and then for getting them for couldn't talk with them figure to be when 1st getting there's going to be within mythology for level road one to 10, a group of them...
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32
May 30, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 32
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them in the do you mean that is from the highest but from i thought i was a thought as a much michelle michelle the best as madame de la clear market dunaway village colored hum method. this is so, and mom's how the, the puzzle had the home can to the found out that i need to get how much i do. but i love the i don't have our back in but from the machine after not vision with the thought of it was only i did the jimmy modest and forgetting them for couldn't talk with them figure to be when 1st getting there when the vehicle is in mythology for level road one to 10, a group of them as well? no, we don't do group all the we have a lot that will let me know what's happened of us and he that long maybe was thomas if you put it on by the last liquid green. ah ah i i the from the the old are i'm going to me the pin i and the last name of the can keep i think they would have been released. but if not so much cheaper that you had too much trouble with a mac, maybe. and melinda, have it a few to help with something that technical mom will go ahead anyway. seems better shift my mom. okay. mom and i didn'
them in the do you mean that is from the highest but from i thought i was a thought as a much michelle michelle the best as madame de la clear market dunaway village colored hum method. this is so, and mom's how the, the puzzle had the home can to the found out that i need to get how much i do. but i love the i don't have our back in but from the machine after not vision with the thought of it was only i did the jimmy modest and forgetting them for couldn't talk with them figure to be when 1st...
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25
May 25, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
meant to go by michelle, but that isn't let me buy another month on those job on on the hard market might get up on the quote for you if you could just send me the model name. michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my face and i could, i could, i couldn't even what i've done. it took me more than that. then i gave up cuz then my most kids and they gave me i can and i never can. the men homeland went on with how much was done calon show and show and when you get them in the. ringback get the order again and they go sorry for the follow up and so this will be better than the. 6 i don't know, so they never really to get that over to me. but the other thing i most that's going to look on the phone is going to be like usually the. 6 the medium i'm not sure i got some good me who all the the same with the stuff the one yes. yes. the 5 my mother my phone number so then i will call him let me check the news. mm mm. yeah i with mm mm mm. the i that i thought there was none of them here. now, i see the refugee means starting again. building a new life in a new country is no easy to drive. the witness follows one of the last refugee families from syria
meant to go by michelle, but that isn't let me buy another month on those job on on the hard market might get up on the quote for you if you could just send me the model name. michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my face and i could, i could, i couldn't even what i've done. it took me more than that. then i gave up cuz then my most kids and they gave me i can and i never can. the men homeland went on with how much was done calon show and show and when you get...
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35
May 22, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 35
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quote 0
michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my if i can, i could i could i'm gonna leave him what i've done. it's a little bit below me more than that. i gave up, you know, cuz then my most me you don't get it and they gave me i am today's i never can home and i just went on with my daughter, my grandson was cook alonzo and show on bush. and when you get me. ringback get the order in and they go to follow up on this the. 6 ones, you know, so they go read it again, but i never really that over to the other thing. so i know that's going to look on. you can be at the yes, the me the me, i'm not sure she no good me who all the news they went to the what the, the reason that was stuck even yet my my days my phone, my name is donna from number. so then i will call them, let me check the news. mm mm, yeah, i with the mm mm mm. the i would like to send that i thought there was none of them here. let me i see the refugee mean starting again. but building a new life in a new country is no easy to let him
michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my if i can, i could i could i'm gonna leave him what i've done. it's a little bit below me more than that. i gave up, you know, cuz then my most me you don't get it and they gave me i am today's i never can home and i just went on with my daughter, my grandson was cook alonzo and show on bush. and when you get me. ringback get the order in and they go to follow up on this the. 6 ones, you know, so they go read it again,...
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34
May 26, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 34
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quote 0
michelle michelle. just me one moment. okay, telling my coming to my coming to me if i can i could i could i'm going to leave him back. what i've done. it's a little bit below me more than that. i'm on the team and i gave up, cuz then my, most me, you don't mean to me they gave, you know, i gotta go to the emergency room. mm. mm mm. ah, i plan and i never can the home and i went on with my daughter, i'm done with this in the cook alonzo and she'll show and when i get back to me and i can go 1st to follow what was going on this facts and. 6 i was, you know, they never read it again, but i never really upset over the other limited thing. so i assume that's going to look on the info on the landline usually the me the media i'm not sure she's going to me who all the the. ready same for the with the the reason for them to that stuff. even yes. yes. my mother, my phone, my number, it's on a number for that overland model. make or send me me me. yeah, i use me. ah, i would like to on that i thought there was none of them hit me i
michelle michelle. just me one moment. okay, telling my coming to my coming to me if i can i could i could i'm going to leave him back. what i've done. it's a little bit below me more than that. i'm on the team and i gave up, cuz then my, most me, you don't mean to me they gave, you know, i gotta go to the emergency room. mm. mm mm. ah, i plan and i never can the home and i went on with my daughter, i'm done with this in the cook alonzo and she'll show and when i get back to me and i can go 1st...
71
71
May 23, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 71
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michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my face and i could, i could, i couldn't even what i but then it took me more than that. then i gave up cuz then my kids and they gave me i can and i never can the men home and i just went on with my daughter, my grandson was cook alonzo and show on bush. and when you get me. ringback get you over to me and kinda hello to the next guy. 6 i don't know, they never read it again, but i never that over the job. but the other thing i most going to look on the phone is going to be like usually the me. i mean i'm not sure she should be good. me who the the to the with the, the reason for the stuff even yet. got this. yes. my mondays. my phone, my name is donna. i'm number for that matter. make sure that they go along with the i i with the me me me the i would like to i thought there was none of them here. let me i mean, stuffing again, but building a new life in a new country is no easy to drive. the witness follows one of the last refugee families from syria
michelle. michelle. just me one moment. okay, i'm coming to my coming to my face and i could, i could, i couldn't even what i but then it took me more than that. then i gave up cuz then my kids and they gave me i can and i never can the men home and i just went on with my daughter, my grandson was cook alonzo and show on bush. and when you get me. ringback get you over to me and kinda hello to the next guy. 6 i don't know, they never read it again, but i never that over the job. but the other...
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43
May 1, 2021
05/21
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 43
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british media have not picked up the story of christian michel— picked up the story of christian michel so — picked up the story of christian micheldia on this matter of christian— has slammed india on this matter of christian michel and asked india to release _ christian michel and asked india to release christian michel immediately.— release christian michel immediately. release christian michel immediatel. . ~' , release christian michel immediatel . ., ,, , . immediately. thank you very much, ashis ra . immediately. thank you very much, ashis ray- very _ immediately. thank you very much, ashis ray. very briefly, _ immediately. thank you very much, ashis ray. very briefly, lyse - ashis ray. very briefly, lyse doucet. y ., , ., ashis ray. very briefly, lyse doucet. g ., , ., , doucet. my colleagues have been ureat, doucet. my colleagues have been treat, the doucet. my colleagues have been great, the history _ doucet. my colleagues have been great, the history in _ doucet. my colleagues have been great, the history in afghanistan, j great, the history in afghanistan, 20 years— great, the history in afghanistan, 20 years after— gr
british media have not picked up the story of christian michel— picked up the story of christian michel so — picked up the story of christian micheldia on this matter of christian— has slammed india on this matter of christian michel and asked india to release _ christian michel and asked india to release christian michel immediately.— release christian michel immediately. release christian michel immediatel. . ~' , release christian michel immediatel . ., ,, , . immediately. thank you...
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148
May 10, 2021
05/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 148
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michel valdez, but they hadn't made an idea yet. >> michelle valdez. after years of having only her rhapsody and her father is bittersweet memories to go on, ida lopez was now sure she knew where michelle>> did you know michelle was pregnant when she disappeared? >> i did. >> a few days later, lab work confirmed ida's hunt. jane doane number eight was michelle valdez. >> and i had to tell dan. the hardest part of this whole thing is having to go to somebody's house and say we found her and she's not alive. >> i see her pull up out front and i go out and stand on the sidewalk. she gets out of her car and comes up to me and i just says, dan. she says, i have some bad news for you. >> then, she was ided and it was her and they found, you know, she was pregnant. and the baby. it was -- it was just very difficult. >> i looked at her in disbelief. but i knew it was reality. i just could feel all the strength and my body just kind of drain all of a sudden. and i kind of was wobbling a little bit and ida consoled me a little bit and said it's okay, you know, it's okay. and then she says is there anything that we can do? do you need anything? i said no. i said just the information you gave me w
michel valdez, but they hadn't made an idea yet. >> michelle valdez. after years of having only her rhapsody and her father is bittersweet memories to go on, ida lopez was now sure she knew where michelle>> did you know michelle was pregnant when she disappeared? >> i did. >> a few days later, lab work confirmed ida's hunt. jane doane number eight was michelle valdez. >> and i had to tell dan. the hardest part of this whole thing is having to go to somebody's house...
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49
May 26, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 49
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quote 0
michelle michelle, the boxes be more than likely it's mac, it doesn't cover. hum methodist. so moms how the, the facade and they had the fun home can to the found out that i need to get how monday i do my medicine, but i don't have our back in the machine after not vision with it. i thought it was only i did the jimmy, modesty for getting them for couldn't talk with them. figure to be funny because there's going to be within my $34.00 level route one little bit of them as well. no, we don't do group all the we have a lot that will it was a bit of us and he that long maybe was done for you for your own by the last liquid green i i, i and the from the the old are i'm going to just name there's a pin i and the last name of the can keep i think they would have been released, but if not, i will see you tomorrow with a mac, maybe and malaria has it. if it was something that taken her mom will they had any williams smith, i'm sure how came out. okay. i didn't say whether ricky for half a minute, disease from the clear the females or the manager that oh yeah, that if you might have this, when i get the model, say are going to be able to keep getting them away. my little record for that amount of nicole. my name is martha. and i wanted to go to kathy with with 1000000. how did those who are and i get the i think you just reminded me that these are the me who was but i get been a little was what when my, than with them for me or the recommend to me as a woman into we often lot of, you know, like, and when i can, and i really need to be there been, this is, was montezuma. when was want more love me. the one was what was really, really nice news from the just me and me from from was out of shame. honest that the ha ha and rigid, hadn't got home, she had money less than i did buy the stuff and could get a lo, jacqueline chain of health. did it by now much it was hidden. did you not get them to from a 100, nationally give her school like a but you think she, it's him a 100 passion with underneath them we should equity and miles hardly shape and how she would get a lot longer and also got hubble must keep in eczema, and that i could do, i had that we had, if you would call me or we are, the only amount of it was can must last. i mean, at large lot they can put a layer mckenna. wonderful. if it's sort of like a, you know, law michelle went over the bully, say if i seemed to like allison fis on the 3rd and i'd be in the hospital because like the last minute placement. why do you mean with i'm going to be in the near facility? mean my madame dallas from again bless a lot that you would like eliot under had to go under the money. i know we do have to make sure because we do is china and kind of shows up from a bit of shadow and we have to do it from a garbage. and this is what the guy machine at the moment on my way to kick, gosh to get them how machine eggs she got her phone. but she said, we should know that i get the family panel animal national animal to be shippers the whole, unless offense, sigma down the middle of all my point is not what me looking for me that he didn't feel for sure. okay. the only one he had had to shift volume, shift and shape because it could be someone who i wanna visit the medical colleagues that quoted ventilate italy. jose going on with what he had made for me. several emails before go
michelle michelle, the boxes be more than likely it's mac, it doesn't cover. hum methodist. so moms how the, the facade and they had the fun home can to the found out that i need to get how monday i do my medicine, but i don't have our back in the machine after not vision with it. i thought it was only i did the jimmy, modesty for getting them for couldn't talk with them. figure to be funny because there's going to be within my $34.00 level route one little bit of them as well. no, we don't do...
18
18
May 27, 2021
05/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 18
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quote 0
michelle michelle, the best as be madam o dot lock leon mckee, dunaway village covered. um make a decision. want to get a moms how the the personal and the had the son home can find out that i need to get her back monday. i do my but i just don't have the hour back in the machine after that visual with it. i thought it was when i did the jimmy modest and then for getting them for couldn't talk with them. figure to be funny because there's one of the vehicle to think mythology for level road one little bit of them as well. no, we don't do group all the we have a lot that will it was a few of us know that long maybe was done for you for your own by the last liquid green. ah, [000:00:00;00] i, i the from the the old are i'm going to just name their the finance and the last name of the can keep i think they would have been released. but if not, i will see you tomorrow with a i'm not going to be and malaria has a few to hold with something that technical mom will go ahead and submit um shipment. how come out? okay. my favorite weather for half a minute. disease something shit cleared. the symbols are the common manager that ho, how much does that come out of this? and i get what i say are gonna be able to help you get the modem away. a little mcwhorter for that amount of nicole. my name is martha, and i wanted to get in touch with with me in the hallway and get the keys yet for my loan, which is nice. the me who was but i get a little what when i get them with them for me or the recommend to limit up years, the new woman into full went off in the market. now look at him when i can, and i only need the entire market to be to be in this was montezuma. when was want to be the one was what was really, really need my father news from the just me and me from from was out of shame. honest that the hello rigid pendant got home. she had money less than i did buy the stuff and could get a lo jacqueline chain. and how did it go? money much. it was hidden. did you not get them from a 100 nationally give her school like a but you seem she, it's him 810-0000 with underneath them we should equity and miles hard to say how much she would did a lot longer and also got hovel must be in eczema, and i had the we had, if you would call me or we are, the only amount of it was can eggs was large. i mean, at large lot, they could put to layer mac. wonderful. if it started like, you know, law michelle went over the bully. say if i seemed to luck, allison professor on the 3rd. and i'd be in the hospital because i could hear blood case, mina placement, windy meaning it to me to be in the near facility to clean my baton dialogue from again bless a lot. the engine it under had to go under the money. i know some of them can be sure because of do is will shannon from a bit of shadow and follow up to it and we will do the garbage. and this is what the guy machine at the moment on my way to kick. gosh, to get them how machine eggs, she got her phone, but she said, we should know that i get the family panel animal national animal to be shippers, from the whole sigma down the middle of all my point. and that is not what me looking for me that he didn't feel for sure. okay. the only one he wanted him to shift volume, shift and shape because it could be someone who visited the medical colleagues that voted ventilate italy. how's it going on with, what does it look for to mean somebody before s
michelle michelle, the best as be madam o dot lock leon mckee, dunaway village covered. um make a decision. want to get a moms how the the personal and the had the son home can find out that i need to get her back monday. i do my but i just don't have the hour back in the machine after that visual with it. i thought it was when i did the jimmy modest and then for getting them for couldn't talk with them. figure to be funny because there's one of the vehicle to think mythology for level road one...
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35
May 26, 2021
05/21
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 35
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hearing on the department of home security budget, we are joined by immigration reporter, michelle hackman and michellekman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he
hearing on the department of home security budget, we are joined by immigration reporter, michelle hackman and michellekman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he
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33
May 5, 2021
05/21
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 33
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michel barnier is going to be publishing _ this one. michel barnier is going to be publishing his _ this one. micheldiaries in frenchl be publishing his diaries in french tomorrow and in english and later on and he basically has been pretty critical about boris johnson�*s strategy in terms of how he negotiated brexit and his approach with it. as you say he describes it as a "madman strategy" and michel barnier says that he came close to losing faith in the uk�*s ability to keep it�*s word. i think that is something the uk is coming with as well because truth source —— seems to be a loose term at the moment. it is very interesting because the book is very interesting because the book is called the grand illusion, a secret diary of brexit. and it will be fascinated to hear his take on things, it will make a lot of people very angry, i am sure chris is going to have lots of things to say about michel barnier and all of this but it is going to be fascinating and it is going to flare the whole thing up again because we literally, it seems like we have fallen in love with talking about brexit again. igrat
michel barnier is going to be publishing _ this one. michel barnier is going to be publishing his _ this one. micheldiaries in frenchl be publishing his diaries in french tomorrow and in english and later on and he basically has been pretty critical about boris johnson�*s strategy in terms of how he negotiated brexit and his approach with it. as you say he describes it as a "madman strategy" and michel barnier says that he came close to losing faith in the uk�*s ability to keep...
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53
May 24, 2021
05/21
by
KPIX
tv
eye 53
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michelle griego. >> it's not just ned monday. it's michelle birthday monday. happy birthday. >> is it my birthday? thank you so much. >> it is. good morning on this michelle monday. >> i like it. michelle monday. happy birthday. we love you. it's going to be a beautiful day as we look to our afternoon. we're going to have sunshine and warmer temperatures. we are starting gray, had marine stratus along the coast, around the bay, and inland locations. we are going to warm up. we are talking low 80s for napa, santa rosa, concord, aft we g to catch clearing as we head through the day today. let's check with gianna for a look at traffic. how are the roadways on this michelle monday? >> i like the michelle monday. happy birthday. taking a look at the roads, let's jump to altamont pass. once you are on 580 towards dublin interchange, things are looking okay. you've got a few brake lights because of an accident but it's making traffic easier for the rest of the way through the altamont. if taking north 680 from west 580 that ramp is closed for emergency road repair. they're hoping to have things opened in the next half hour. the rest of the freeways are off to a
michelle griego. >> it's not just ned monday. it's michelle birthday monday. happy birthday. >> is it my birthday? thank you so much. >> it is. good morning on this michelle monday. >> i like it. michelle monday. happy birthday. we love you. it's going to be a beautiful day as we look to our afternoon. we're going to have sunshine and warmer temperatures. we are starting gray, had marine stratus along the coast, around the bay, and inland locations. we are going to warm...
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May 12, 2021
05/21
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ALJAZ
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and dumb tubby not to just kind of mop up from some of your high numbers to michelle michelle i'm dealt with much more of our time was a stink of a woman is awesome. in that region others also missing and often have to get back in the water just of us just as john knows us and. in our gov live augusta any guff the kind of shit as a day in the movie gives non-ego of the country which often are done been ish even thought much more i not have i know i'm devon even a flick on i don't think you're not one damn you should you just monday are for continental instrumental time to dish was not was an argument in the part of the one who think of one half his act as i was a study there. was no i don't have you on i'm going to try to 2 weeks in the budget issue and one of the kind of sweet music. one. does is not to consumers use. mcclung blast. does not seem. as music exactly. it showed up it was the only far beyond dispute topped a single one time. i was able national artemov stuff. on and. i'm going to the minute you can to get. to. sleep it's massive i call it we do it and. then there's your re
and dumb tubby not to just kind of mop up from some of your high numbers to michelle michelle i'm dealt with much more of our time was a stink of a woman is awesome. in that region others also missing and often have to get back in the water just of us just as john knows us and. in our gov live augusta any guff the kind of shit as a day in the movie gives non-ego of the country which often are done been ish even thought much more i not have i know i'm devon even a flick on i don't think you're...
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May 8, 2021
05/21
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ALJAZ
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porto she was taking part via video conference just like several other leaders we've heard from michelle michelle the head of the european council over the bloc would in fact be willing to discuss any concrete proposals on waiving pater's so not ruling it out entirely but the thrust of the argument really that's winning the day there in the european union is that it needs to be speeding up exports and helping poor relations to actually produce locally and so they've been giving some examples of where they've been looking into cooperation for example those who have on their law and the head of the european commission saying that the e.u. is now working closely with african nations to try to boost capacity locally and then they the indian prime minister narendra modi is joined in virtually how significant was that meeting. i think it was seen as a very big signal firstly of course because india is the country greatest crisis if you like from the covered 19 pandemic right now and e.u. leaders were were very quick to point out that many of their own member states are supplying things like ventilators
porto she was taking part via video conference just like several other leaders we've heard from michelle michelle the head of the european council over the bloc would in fact be willing to discuss any concrete proposals on waiving pater's so not ruling it out entirely but the thrust of the argument really that's winning the day there in the european union is that it needs to be speeding up exports and helping poor relations to actually produce locally and so they've been giving some examples of...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michelle's light -- michelle seitz, russell investments ceo, on the 85th investment for -- 85th anniversary for russell investments. you're the first in studio guest i've had in a year. what do you think? michelleour portfolios are exposed to the ultimate outcomes of the clients, so we have been managing risk within the portfolios fairly consistently over time, but we have been constructive. fortunately, fundamentals are catching up with valuations, which is great. where we see opportunity in the market is in global value, so we have seen a rotation. i think katie was talking earlier about the breadth of the market, and we are seeing fundamentals catch up, which we are very encouraged by. guy: does that mean europe? michelle: it does mean europe as well. non-us certainly has some room to run. the u.k. is behind the rest of the market. but we are constructive globally , and we are constructive specifically around value rotation, which is seeing a nice rebound of her earnings up 70% or so when the indices are up 50% overall with the recent earnings releases. but we do see fundamentals again catching up across the board, and you are seeing a cyclical rebound. alix: how hard is it to deal with the
michelle's light -- michelle seitz, russell investments ceo, on the 85th investment for -- 85th anniversary for russell investments. you're the first in studio guest i've had in a year. what do you think? michelleour portfolios are exposed to the ultimate outcomes of the clients, so we have been managing risk within the portfolios fairly consistently over time, but we have been constructive. fortunately, fundamentals are catching up with valuations, which is great. where we see opportunity in...
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May 14, 2021
05/21
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KGO
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michelle, what are you up >>> michelle, what are you up to? >> oh, okay. >> i invented post-its. >> you're kidding. you must have made a fortune. >> well, yeah. >> that is a classic scene from "romy and michelle's high school reunion." but one of the true inventors of post-it notes was actually silver spencer. >> he created the adhesive formula. he was working for a chemist in 1968 when he stumbled upon the formula. he searched for years for a practical use for it, he called it a solution waiting for a problem to solve and several years later, post-it notes were put on the market. silver died may 8 at his home in st. paul, minnesota. he was 80 years old. >>> starting today, target is temporarily suspending the sale of sports and pokemon trading cards. this after a man pulled a gun when he was assaulted by four others during a fight over trading cards at a wisconsin store last week. the value of the cards has jumped dramatically during the pandemic. >>> here's a story you need to hear to believe. an australian woman says she woke up with an irish accent ten days after surgery to remove her tonsils. >> so get this. doctors say angie yen may have foreign accent syndrome. she has lived in australia
michelle, what are you up >>> michelle, what are you up to? >> oh, okay. >> i invented post-its. >> you're kidding. you must have made a fortune. >> well, yeah. >> that is a classic scene from "romy and michelle's high school reunion." but one of the true inventors of post-it notes was actually silver spencer. >> he created the adhesive formula. he was working for a chemist in 1968 when he stumbled upon the formula. he searched for years...
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May 7, 2021
05/21
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KRON
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we're going to go to michelle kingston and michelle has a report on a fire at a senior facility. michelle. >> that's right. this road was closed for hours this afternoon. it has sensory opened fire crews have also left restoration crews are now here working. you can see that senior care facility right behind me. completely charred. >> a month and the snow. black smoke. i looked out my window. i saw fire starting immediately neighbors describe hearing loud explosions this afternoon on castle hill road then fire and smoke. >> all coming out of this senior care facility off south main street in walnut creek all 5 residents and all the staff made it out safely. thanks to the help of the few young good samaritans and fire crews were on scene with >> news. and >> embers from the fire started several spot fires in the back of the care facility and even across 6.80, scott dickey lives on the other side of 6.80 and took this video of the fire. >> i could. i heard the explosion heard huge crack like a gunshot. heard the explosion and felt it so it was actually a wave, a bit of a ways i ran to the w
we're going to go to michelle kingston and michelle has a report on a fire at a senior facility. michelle. >> that's right. this road was closed for hours this afternoon. it has sensory opened fire crews have also left restoration crews are now here working. you can see that senior care facility right behind me. completely charred. >> a month and the snow. black smoke. i looked out my window. i saw fire starting immediately neighbors describe hearing loud explosions this afternoon...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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KNTV
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michelle grossman hey, michelle, good morning. good to see you. >> hey, guys so good to see you i know such a dreary start for so many. felt like winter in a lot of spots. temperatures in the 40s in the northeast. a lot of fireplaces going this weekend. but luckily, a warmup in the midatlantic today. we are watching storms in the central plains, especially heavy in oklahoma city, down to san angelo, san antonio. seeing the chance future some flooding, even some flash flooding in spots. also watching a chance for severe storms in parts of texas, also new mexico. so we're looking for hail. some damaging winds are likely as well. even a few tornadoes are possible we're going to keep an eye on that this afternoon. that moves to the east as we go throughout monday, also tuesday. still some strong storms in parts of texas and then by wednesday we're looking at storms in the're loo, even the chance for flash flooding 71 in oklahoma city. all right. rainy for many of us but we'll talk about the week ahead. we're warming up for many spots even triple-digits in the midwest. >>> another fan presses the nba play-offs after the nets gained victory over the celtics a boston fan throws a water bottle at kyrie irving the bottle comes close to hitting irving in the head boston police soon identify the fan in the bleacher, took him away in schandcuffs. the fan is subject to a lifetime ban from the arena >>> coming up, how you can bag a big prize at kroger by getting your vaccine >>> a new push in tulsa 100s years in making. ng-lasting gaint beads. part of the irresistible scent collection from gain! you love rich, delicious ice cream. but your stomach doesn't. well, that disagreement ends right now. lactaid ice cream is the creamy, real ice cream you love that doesn't have lactose. it'll mess with every sense you have. but it'll never mess with your stomach. lactaid ice cream. available in eight epic flavors. lactaid. real ice cream that treats you right. if your dry eye symptoms keep coming back, inflammation in your eye might be to blame. looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes! over-the-counter eye drops typically work by lubricating your eyes and may provide temporary relief. ha! these drops probably won't touch me. xiidra works differently, targeting inflammation that can cause dry eye disease. what is that? xiidra, noooo! it can provide lasting relief. xiidra is the only fda-approved non-steroid treatment specifically for the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. one drop in each eye, twice a day. don't use if you're allergic to xiidra. common side effects include eye irritation, discomfort or blurred vision when applied to the eye, and unusual taste sensation. don't touch container tip to your eye or any surface. after using xiidra, wait 15 minutes before reinserting contacts. got any room in your eye? talk to an eye doctor about twice-daily xiidra. i prefer you didn't! xiidra. not today, dry eye. start your day with crest 3d white and from mochaccinos to merlot, your smile will always be brilliant. crest 3d white brilliance. 100% stain removal, 24 hour stain resistance to lock in your whitest smile. crest. the #1 toothpaste brand in america. >>> we're remembering a dark chapter in our nation's history, one you don't hear much about. the tulsa massacre that happened 100 years ago. a large community of black people was attacked and hundreds were killed by white mobs. this weekend tulsa residents gathered to remember and celebrate the levees of those who were lost. but there is also a new effort to get restitution for the survivors of that deadly attack. our morgan radford has more from tulsa. >> yes >> reporter: for viola fletcher and her brother hues van ellis, one of the darkest days in american history is more than a. it's something you don't forget. >> reporter: it happened years ago when both were children on the night of june 1st, 1921, a white mob stormed a successful area of town known as black wall street they killed nearly 300 black residents and burned down more than 30 square blocks of black-owned businesses and homes, loving more than 8,000 homeless what do you remember from that night? >> shooting, people running and screaming, and noise from the air like an airplane and just so many things that was disturbing, you know and fires burning and smelling smoke. >> reporter: did you see black bodies in the street >> black bodies in the street, that's right. >> reporter: no one was ever held responsible for the massacre at the time, black wall street was the largest collection of black-owned businesses in the country. now just a few black-owned businesses remain. >> my grandfather had a dry-clean owners greenwood. >> reporter: for don horner jr., whose insurance office sits in the heart of the greenwood district, the legacy of that night is still very much alive what would all this have looked like if the massacre had not happened >> it would mirror some of the cities like atlanta, the carolinas where families, professionals and generations of people maintaining that professional business, being able to maintain that wealth. >> reporter: today the unemployment rate for black tulsans is more than twice the rate of white residents, and more than a third of black tulsans live below the poverty line a new lawsuit is trying to change, that estimating property damage at more than $50 million in today's currency. hoping to deliver restitution to survivors like miss fletcher, who is now 107 years old >> we're looking for so much more than money. money is very important, but we're also looking for scholarships for descendants and the community. we're looking for business grants for the descendants in the community. we are looking for tax abatements. >> reporter: all in hopes of healing generational wounds that still linger today. >> every evening i kind of have the feeling it's time to run no telling what might happen >> reporter: even today? you have that nervous feeling? >> oh, yes sure that's something i've been thinking about for the last 110 years. >> reporter: 100 years and counting morgan radford, nbc news, tulsa, oklahoma >> what an important piece especially on this day >>> still to come, dancing for a cause. thousands pack into a paris concert to help prepare for life after the pandemic >>> and a ocgrery giant offers a cart load of prizes for covid vaccinations for sure. seriously? one up the power of liquid, one up the toughest stains. any further questions? uh uh! one up the power of liquid with tide pods ultra oxi. frank is a fan of fast. he's a fast talker. a fast walker. thanks, gary. and for unexpected heartburn... frank is a fan of pepcid. it works in minutes. nexium 24 hour and prilosec otc can take one to four days to fully work. pepcid. strong relief for fans of fast. ♪♪ mix up a treat and a little fun with kellogg's rice krispies. pain doesn't care how old you are. or what color you are. pain doesn't care if you live in a small town or in the spotlight. pain has no limits. that means we need care without limits. care like a parent with a newborn. care like we took an oath. care that's strong, fast and safe. that's care without limits. i was totally stranded. care that's strong, fastno tp?afe. so what happened? well... we started buying charmin super mega roll. charmin super mega roll is 6 rolls in 1 enjoy the go with charmin. guaranteed to fit or your money back. ♪ >>> 5,000 fans were crowded together in paris for an indoor rock concert it was also a covid experiment attendees were required to wear masks and take covid tests before and after the event 2500 people stayed at home as part of the control group to test if the virus spreads among concertgoers the results are set to be released at the end of june. >>> a group of female cyclists recreated black history over the weekend. the women kicked off the 1928 legacy tour. a three-day bike ride from harlem, new york, to washington, d.c. the group completed ondespite w and cold weather the ride played homage to a group of black women who made a similar ride in 1928 and served as a fundraising opportunity for gearrin up bicycles. >>> kroger health is offering a shot at winning $1 million for free groceries for a year, just for receiving the covid vaccine at its locations the company is launching its community immunity campaign in collaboration with the biden administration's push to have at least 70% of u.s. adults vaccinated with one dose by july 4th. the stakes will run for fife weeks beginning on thursday. there will be five $1 million cash prize winners and 50 free grocery recipients >>> on the last di of may, when is it going to feel like summer again? michelleman is up next with the answers. >>> and a very special memorial day run in honor of loved ones who made the ultimate sacrifice. still fresh unstopables in-wash scent booster downy unstopables how did kellogg's combine crunchy oat clusters with a touch of honey... plump, juicy raisins and tasty fiber into one delicious cereal? it took a lot of bran-storming. get it? kellogg's raisin bran crunch. two scoops of delicious. brushing only reaches 25% of your mouth. get it? listerine® cleans virtually 100%. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. bring out the bold™ ♪♪ [music and sound effects played in reverse] this...is our shot. the covid-19 vaccines are ready. and so is walgreens, with pharmacy experts ready to make it easy for you to get it safely, for free. because this is our shot... ...at getting back together. your heart is at the heart of everything you do. because this is our shot... and if you have heart failure, there's entresto. e
michelle grossman hey, michelle, good morning. good to see you. >> hey, guys so good to see you i know such a dreary start for so many. felt like winter in a lot of spots. temperatures in the 40s in the northeast. a lot of fireplaces going this weekend. but luckily, a warmup in the midatlantic today. we are watching storms in the central plains, especially heavy in oklahoma city, down to san angelo, san antonio. seeing the chance future some flooding, even some flash flooding in spots....
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May 26, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN
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michelle hackman and michelle hackman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he has a tough line of question ahead of him. host: a hearing at the house, the senate later this afternoon, what members are you particularly going to be focusing on and watching as you do your reporting on the hearings? guest: oh, probably the chairman. i find value in all of the members because often, democrats ask for a fresh friendlier questions, so they asked detailed information -- because often, democrats ask friendlier questions. i would say both sides actually i think are somewhat unhappy with the current administration's border policy, so i will pay attention to discussion around issues like how the administration is handling the asylum seekers at the border. host: there is the issue of child detention, likely an issue that will come up today. what is the status right now for dhs in terms of numbers of detentions and the numbers of unaccompanied minors coming across the border? guest: the numbers have been roughly study for the last month or so. it is several hundred kids coming across the board every day. the number hovers between 300 to 500 and dhs have been doing a much better job as you know when children crossed the border. it is first dhs, but cut jones and border protection's job to process the kids and move them on to shelters run by that point -- the department of health and human services. while they are having trouble doing that, there was way markets coming in and going out of the system and they really improved the process, but right now they have about something like 700 kids in their custody, but they are moving them through. we hear numbers pretty frequently within about 24 hours, now they are moving to hhs shelters, which is good. host: immigration and border questions, now's your time to call in. she covers for the wall street journal, (202) 748-8000 for democrats, (202) 748-8001 for republicans, independents, (202) 748-8002. a busy week for others who cover congress with the budget coming out at the end of the week. when you finally get your hands on that document, what are you going to be looking for in it? guest: one of the big questions i have is, how this administration is going to be handling ice, immigrations and custom enforcement. one of the big calls of the democratic primary what does the ice abolished or significantly scaled down. we saw comments yesterday from secretary mayorkas that they will put the ice budget at the same like the previous year. i'm curious of how they will manage that. are they going to shift money around so that they have more money going into what they have alternatives to the attention, so rather than detaining an immigrant, you are free to go, we will track you with an ankle bracelet, that has been the obama administration's approach, that is what we are thinking will be the biden's administration approach. there are many other question, how much more money will receive go into the domestic terrorist efforts to work with nonprofit organizations to combat domestic terrorism. will we see more positions and intelligence to fight domestic terrorist groups. host: do you think we will see an uptick for pipeline security in this budget? guest: i would imagine so. the department announced this week that they are coming out with a new set of rules, to actually regulate pipelines after the colonial pipeline attack earlier this month. you know, oil pipelines, -- very few critical infrastructure in industries that have requirements to report cybersecurity attacks and to fortify themselves against attacks. oil pipelines have not been one of those. the electric grid, nuclear power plants are some of the only few that actually have rules like that, so they are expanding that to the pipelines. host: on fortification, the idea of the wall between the united states and mexico, one of the first actions of the biden administration was atop the building of new walls. as the money in the budget each year toward a wall up code -- upkeep and what can we determine about that issue from the budget numbers that we are going to see this week? guest: that is a great question. the biden administration is grappling with this issue where in their first budget document that they put out, i forgot one, a couple of months ago, they suggested that they want to give back all of the leftover money, but the trump administration had a lot -- allotted to the wall. when congress gives you money, it is against the law to not do that. i think they are grappling with, can they use that money to fix up sections of the wall that trump early started building, do they need to build more sections of the wall, can they use money that congress gave them to do other border technologies like adding radar and drones, lighting, things like that to the sections of the walls, and i think we will see how we handle -- how they handle that in the budget. host: there's a question from our text messages and service on california -- text messaging service in california. i will mayorkas respond to and complete border questions and wants you to drill down on high tech solutions at the border. guest: sure. as i said, he is in a tough spot because one -- one of president biden to campaign practices -- promises was that he would not build the wall. a billion dollars or possibly more that he put toward wall construction and they have not really determined or they have not announced how they are going to use that money. they suggested they wanted to give it back, but it is a legal problem, they need to use the money as -- if congress does not take it back quickly. and so, i heard that it is possible they can use it to build roads, to ease the task of the border patrol to patrol the walls. they could use it potentially to actually mitigate some of the environmental effects of the walls, particularly in areas -- areas in arizona, california, they have built wildlife preserves for endangered species act and so they can use that money to mitigate some other damage that was done through the construction. they can use it toward drones and other technology that can detect things like drug smuggling or human smuggling across the wall. host: plenty of colors already this morning. democrats (202) 748-8000. republicans (202) 748-8001. independents, (202) 748-8002. iris out of michigan, independent, good morning. caller: good morning and good morning. it is so nice to see a jewish girl working for the wall street journal. i have a question regarding the kids released from foster care, they are on the street, wouldn't that be a great report to make? they lose a home at 18 and have to go on the streets, i think it is important because we are bringing somebody young people in from down south of the border. it is a good story. i would go for it if i were you. guest: i agree. that is a problem. i know -- it is actually a problem there as well because there are laws that required to care for the kids until their 18th birthday but after that, they are on their own and out and often actually get turned over to ice and that is an issue that immigration advocates frequently flag. host: from fox news op-ed from earlier this week, this is congressman andy biggs on the border crisis saying, mayorkas deceived american by claiming that the border is closed, but 178,000 illegal aliens were counted -- encountered at the southern border in april alone. in the meantime, it had the lowest number of deportations in decades. the record number entering the country and the record low in deportations show both ends of the biden administration's efforts to drive up the number of people in the country illegally. there are more than 3 million individuals, many of whom are expect -- suspected criminals living in our communities who have received a due process and have been ordered by hr to leave the country but the biden administration is doing nothing about it. a question on the deportation issue number two, will secretary mayorkas talk to andy biggs today? guest: sorry about that. host: will mayorkas be questioned by andy biggs today and if he is, what you think he will say on this deportation issue? guest: what he will say is that the department is looking at its deportation strategy. they have really shifted years he and the biden administration where trump said, anyone in the country illegally as a target for deportation. we do not care who you are, if you are here and breaking our laws, we are going to target you. where the biden administration has said, our resources are very limited. we have about 6000 officers in total across the country charged with carrying out their partitions and we will concentrate our resources -- out deportations and we will concentrate our resources on the serious criminals and they also say, it is not about numbers, it is about the quality of the people we are catching and deporting. and they have been criticized for that because they are allowing a lot of people with criminal convictions, may less serious criminal convictions, to sort of be free from the fear of deportation. host: broadway, virginia, democrats, good morning. caller: good morning. yes, i think we should cut off all of the border control funding there. the money they are wasting -- putting them in hotel rooms, line them all over the country, lying to the american people about it. i think you should cut up all of the funding until they straighten things out. host: how would you like it straightened out? what is straightened out in your mind? caller: put back some of the things like remain in mexico and deport the illegals who should be deported. host: michelleackman, remain in mexico policy, something we have not talked about yet. guest: that was a big trump administration policy toward the end of his administration where what essentially they did was they said, if someone came across the border, asked for asylum, they trump administration would say, great, they would go to court in six months and you have to wait in mexico and come back to a port of entry and take you to your court date. it had the effect of driving many migrants away. the places in mexico where they were required to wait are the most dangerous places in the western hemisphere. and so people often abandoned their claim, they were ordered deported in abstention. they were banned from coming to the united states and it was a big issue for human rights advocates. a lot of those people were getting targeted, kidnapped, and were getting killed. and the biden administration made this promise that they would end that program because it is one of the issues around humid -- humid -
michelle hackman and michelle hackman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he has a tough line of question ahead of him. host: a hearing at the house, the senate later this...
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May 10, 2021
05/21
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michelle obama talks with gayle. michelle o obama talksks with g. allergrgies don't have to o e scarary. sprayiying flonasese daily sts yourur body fromom overreactcg to allllergens allll season lo. psst! psstst! all goodod (vo) new single-serve fancy feast petites are just for her. just the right size. just the right gourmet flavor. no artificial preservatives or colors. just what she needs. just what you want. new fancy feast petites. love is in the details. i thought i was s getting myy floorsrs clean. and thenen i learneded my mop cd be l loaded withth bacteria.a. so, i gogot a swiffefer wetjeto get t a cleaner.r... clean the spspray breaksks down dirtrd the e pad absorbrbs it deep p i. bubuh bye. try wetjetet with a momoney-k guaranantee. lalactaid is 1 100% real m m, jujust withoutut the lactoto. soso you can e enjoy it even if y you're sensnsitive to d d. so anyone who says lactaid isn't real milk is also saying mabel herere isn't a r real c. and shshe really h hates tha. >>> our top stories this morning -- 17 states and the district of columbia are under an emergency order after hackers targeted one of the most critical oil pipelines in the u.s. the measure eases restrictions on the transport of petroleum on highways. the pipeline remains shut down. it delivers about 45% of fuel consumed on the east coast. >>> and this week congressional republicans are set to vote on whether to oust liz cheney from her leadership position. some are furious over her criticism of former president trump after the deadly attack on the nation's capitol. cheney survived a previous secret ballot vote to hold on to her position. >>> the mystery is now over about that chinese rocket that tumbled back down to earth. wreckage crashed down in the ocean over the weekend. up until then, no one knew exactly where it would land. danya bacchus reports. >> reporter: remnants of a 20-ton chinese rocket rained down sunday local time, around 10:30 saturday night eastern time. chinese state-run media is reporting the bulk of its largest rocket burned upon re-entry into the earth's atmosphere near the maldives. the long march 5b rocket carried components of china's planned space station, harmony of the heavens. the chinese space agency lost control of the rocket as it continued its 70,000 mile-an-hour orbit of the earth. it edged closer and closer with each pass. sky watchers caught glimpses of it as it tracked as far north as new york and as far south as new zealand. >> this is the second largest uncontrolled re-entry in the last -- the last couple of decades. >> reporter: there were fears it would send objects weighing hundreds of pounds slamming into the earth as it reentered the atmosphere. >> about nine tons we estimate will survive. and of that, that's kind of equivalent to dropping three pickup trucks on somebody's head. or crashing a small airplane. >> reporter: the military tracked the trajectory but had no plans to shoot it down. china insisted its remnants were unlikely to cause harm. >> what you have to remember is the world is 75% covered in water. the land area, while it's very vast, there's a lot more empty land for debris to flow on than there are populated areas. >> reporter: still, the suspense as to exactly where pieces of thatat rocket would land had ma on the edge of their seats. danya bacchus, cbs news. >>> coming up only on "cbs this morning," former first lady michelle gayle king about her newest initiative to give families access to healthy food. >>> plus, cnn anchor jake tapper tells us about his novel "the devil may dance," and we speak with oscar winning actress angelina jolie and her co-star about "those who wish me dead." for this monday. thanks for watching. i'm anne-marie green. have a great day. ♪ ♪
michelle obama talks with gayle. michelle o obama talksks with g. allergrgies don't have to o e scarary. sprayiying flonasese daily sts yourur body fromom overreactcg to allllergens allll season lo. psst! psstst! all goodod (vo) new single-serve fancy feast petites are just for her. just the right size. just the right gourmet flavor. no artificial preservatives or colors. just what she needs. just what you want. new fancy feast petites. love is in the details. i thought i was s getting myy...
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michelle. >> jimmy: hi, michelle. dr. fauci is with us, go ahead. >> they're both the same type of vaccines, both mrna vaccines. we recommend you get the same type. but if one is not available, we feel that there really isn't a major difference, as long as it's within the same type. so if you started off with one and got the other, you should be in good shape and get a good response. >> jimmy: oh, that's great. i had no idea. i feel like i know everything about this stuff, and it turns out i don't. [ laughter ] well, that's interesting. all right. who else is out there on the boulevard? we have? >> hi. >> jimmy: what's your name? >> rockish. >> jimmy: hi, there. >> yeah, i was wondering, if my dog gets covid and i kiss my dog, can i get covid? >> jimmy: that's a great question. [ laughter ] >> yeah, well, it's unlikely that your dog is going to get covid. it's unlikely if you kiss your dog, you're going to get covid from your dog. so you have two really unlikely things. >> that's great news. >> jimmy: animals do get covid, right? >> they do. they do
michelle. >> jimmy: hi, michelle. dr. fauci is with us, go ahead. >> they're both the same type of vaccines, both mrna vaccines. we recommend you get the same type. but if one is not available, we feel that there really isn't a major difference, as long as it's within the same type. so if you started off with one and got the other, you should be in good shape and get a good response. >> jimmy: oh, that's great. i had no idea. i feel like i know everything about this stuff, and...
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May 27, 2021
05/21
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michelle: y recordar que entre todos podemos cambiar vidas. carolina: te agradecemos por estar aquÍ en la "ediciÓn digital", michelle galvÁn.e pregunto.. en que momento de tu vida estabas cuando viste por primera vez la conocida serie "friends" y conoiste a su elenco, monica, rachel, ross, chandler, joey y phoebe? el elenco de la iconica serie friends... pues por si no lo sabes, finalmente el se reencontro... jossette rivera, editora de "la insider", nos tiene los pdetalles!...... borja: tenemos los detalles, cuÉntanos. por favor quÉ momento. periodista: definitivamente el momento que estÁbamos esperando los que por ahÍ afrontamos los 40 aÑos. seguro los que tienen esa edad saben quÉ significa. o si le tienen miedo a las personas con cabeza de pavo. puede ser que hayan visto la serie friends durante su transmisiÓn original hace mÁs de 20 aÑos. si eres mÁs joven puede que la estÉs viendo en este mini. friends iniciÓ en 1994 y contaba la historia de 6 amigos jÓvenes y solteros en una Época que la vida giraba alrededor de las redes sociales o el celular. fue la comedia mÁs vista durante 6 aÑos y los convirtiÓ en los mejores ac
michelle: y recordar que entre todos podemos cambiar vidas. carolina: te agradecemos por estar aquÍ en la "ediciÓn digital", michelle galvÁn.e pregunto.. en que momento de tu vida estabas cuando viste por primera vez la conocida serie "friends" y conoiste a su elenco, monica, rachel, ross, chandler, joey y phoebe? el elenco de la iconica serie friends... pues por si no lo sabes, finalmente el se reencontro... jossette rivera, editora de "la insider", nos tiene...
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May 12, 2021
05/21
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KRON
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michelle kingston is live in braga with more on this possible merger and michelle, lot of people just don't want this to happen. >> no, but it is the talk of the town here in moraga. but nobody is a fan of it and mostly everybody i spoke to said they don't believe that it's going to happen. >> literally haven't found a single person that was in favor of president of the orinda fire district board of directors. craig jordan's calls the idea to console a day with the contra costa county fire protection district a bad idea. he says there are no high-risk fire zone in need. a local fire department and that they'd lose control over their own funding. if this went through. it's an idea many in town are happy about people writing emails ahead of wednesday's town council meeting saying that it seems crucially important to us in an area with high fire danger and many older citizens to have local resources controlled locally, quick responses are especially crucial in times of drought and the lefty was formed because of frustration with the combined county fire and emergency response calling. and bill line dad, that is 54 year residents of moraga. we find it absolutely incomprehensible that it could even be suggested that the fire department should be dissolved and that we should revert back to having our fabulous department under county control braga mayor mike mcclure wrote in a draft version of the letter the town plans to send to them going to fire district board of directors that we strongly oppose mlf the spending resources studying a process for consolidation with khan fire resources should continue to be spent on the delivery of high quality fire protection, fire safety. an emergency response services. we reached out to contra, costa county fire protection district. they said they are not interested in the idea either. contra costa county supervisor candice anderson says she thinks this idea will be squashed fast. from my perspective when you have a really well-run fire district. >> it's well funded and supported by the community has an excellent that's doing what they need to do they're meeting their%emergency medical response times. they're dressing fire safety particular wildland fire. there really would be no reason for a sick on fire to even think that seen them have. >> that vote. no votes are going to be taking place any time soon. tomorrow moraga town council will discuss this issue and next week or into city council and mls d. we'll talk about it at their meetings live in morocco. michelle kingston, kron 4 news. michelle, thank you. the fire season will officially start next week for the folks living in santa rosa. living in santa rosa. >> the fire department say will declare this coming monday may 17th as the start of the fire season. there. it comes earlier than previous years because of the ongoing severe drought conditions that we're seeing in the recent hot and dry weather. the fire department, though no asking folks to prepare right now in anticipation of what is expected to be a busy wildfire season and we'll weed abatement. inspections will also get under way after the season starts. we have a special section on our website at kron 4 dot com dedicated specifically for wildfire resources. just get your phone right now. scan the qr code on your screen and it will take you directly to the page from there. you can find tips on how to create a defensible space around your home along with evacuation checklists along with other wildfire preparedness tips again, just sc
michelle kingston is live in braga with more on this possible merger and michelle, lot of people just don't want this to happen. >> no, but it is the talk of the town here in moraga. but nobody is a fan of it and mostly everybody i spoke to said they don't believe that it's going to happen. >> literally haven't found a single person that was in favor of president of the orinda fire district board of directors. craig jordan's calls the idea to console a day with the contra costa...
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May 28, 2021
05/21
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michelle fell for and later became engaged to chad johnson, a young, charismatic pastor. despite her reservations, they signed on to a tv gig. >> michelle, will you marry me? >> yes! >> reporter: a reality show "chad loves michelle> yes, i will! >> reporter: soon enough, the show's public glare left her feeling vulnerable. leading to dangerous, even suicidal thoughts. >> i was not feeling safe with myself. i called my therapist and said -- i think we better look into some help. i got in the truck and drove somewhere that we suggested that i should go. i had no clothes, not a toothbrush, nothing. >> it was a real break, wasn't it? >> it was. it was. and i had to sit there, and during the intake, answer all these questions -- thinking, is someone going to know who i am? but i was so desperate that i didn't care. >> what did you learn about yourself in treatment? >> there's resilience. the bravery. that i'm brave. guess what? i'm here today in 2021. i'm alive to tell the story. because it could have went another way. >> reporter: today, michelle remains steadfast in her daily road to healing. >> it's been taking the weekly therapy sessions, working out, eating good, surrounding myself with loving people. >> reporte
michelle fell for and later became engaged to chad johnson, a young, charismatic pastor. despite her reservations, they signed on to a tv gig. >> michelle, will you marry me? >> yes! >> reporter: a reality show "chad loves michelle> yes, i will! >> reporter: soon enough, the show's public glare left her feeling vulnerable. leading to dangerous, even suicidal thoughts. >> i was not feeling safe with myself. i called my therapist and said -- i think we better...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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michelle grossman joining us now hey, michelle, germany good to see you. >> so good to see you guys and unfortunately, we are looking at some soggy weather in parts of the central and southern plains. we're looking at the potential for some flash flooding as well. so from oklahoma city down to san angelo and san antonio so we're just going to watch out for that as we go throughout the day. flood alerts are in effect we could see some flash flooding with up to 3 inches of rain in some spots so a soggy start for the workweek and a social distancing memorial day also looking at a severe storm threat that includes parts of texas. also parts of new mexico look likes hail will be one of the possibilities, also damaging winds and a few tornadoes as well we're going to see this storm system move off to the east. today that heavy rain in oklahoma, also through texas off to the east by tuesday still have a chance for strong storms in texas. and then look what happens as we go towards wednesday and thursday it's off to the east so the midwest seeg somein n central and southern plains san antonio 86 degrees all right, guys. we'll look at the week ahead we're looking at a big warm-up for many of us, and triple-digits in the west. we'll talk about that coming up. >> we'll need to make for the weekend for some of us thank you, michelle. >>> a weekend race, the longest of the season. it was the kyle larson show at the coca-cola 600. winning the first two stages and walking away with the checkered flag it's larson's first coca-cola 600 victory and his second win of the season. >>> next here on "early today," turbulent times. why airlines are banning booze on flights >>> and alexa, share my internet the controversial new feature coming to amazon devices and long-lasting gain scent beads. part of the irresistible scent collection from gain! you love rich, delicious ice cream. but your stomach doesn't. well, that disagreement ends right now. lactaid ice cream is the creamy, real ice cream you love that doesn't have lactose. it'll mess with every sense you have. but it'll never mess with your stomach. lactaid ice cream. available in eight epic flavors. if your dry eye symptoms keep coming back, inflammation in your eye might be to blame. looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes! over-the-counter eye drops typically w
michelle grossman joining us now hey, michelle, germany good to see you. >> so good to see you guys and unfortunately, we are looking at some soggy weather in parts of the central and southern plains. we're looking at the potential for some flash flooding as well. so from oklahoma city down to san angelo and san antonio so we're just going to watch out for that as we go throughout the day. flood alerts are in effect we could see some flash flooding with up to 3 inches of rain in some...
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May 29, 2021
05/21
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michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a citizens' advisory committees, or community-driven advisory committee. one thing i think would be helpful would be to understand how prop "k" was spent citywide. if you're looking at it from the perspective of communities that would be impacted, it would also be good to know how prop "k" dollars have been spent, and in what districts since 2003? it is a general feeling in my district, when it comes to these dollars, that we're not getting the fair share that other parts of the city are getting. i understand there are larger infrastructure projects that are in other districts, but we have needs as well. when it comes to some of the things you're talking about, bicycle safety, pedestrian safety, signals, and some of the other infrastructure projects. so i think from the perspective of districts, it would be really helpful. if you don't have that information, then i would ask our t.a. chair to come back and present to this body how prop "k" dollars have been spent in the last 18 years and by district. i think that would give us an example of how things have been spread around the city, what projects have been prioritized, and what communities have been benefited the most from these dollars. thank you. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. that seems like a reasonable request for future presentation on a kind of a lookback on prop "k." commissioner melgar? >> mr. chair, before you go to commissioner melgar, can we get a commitment from our t.a. chair that we can have that in a reasonable amount of time? >> chairman: yes. >> it wasn't from you. i meant more -- >> chairman: yes. >> -- from the t.a. director. [simultaneous talking] >> chairman: whatever you need. >> i'm directing it at the director. >> commissioner safai, of course. we have actually already received a similar request from our advisory committee, and our deputy for policy and programming may be able to shed some light on it. >> thank you. >> yes. we're working on the analysis. it is nearly completed, and we have district-level information. and also there are projects that benefit that have system-wide or citywide benefits as well. we're calling out all of those projects, and have listed the projects funded since 2003. and, actually, not just for prop "k," but also for other sources that we administer as well. like the upper registration fee and the transportation fund for clean air, as examples. >> but you will isolate out prop "k"? >> yes. we'll do it by fund source. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. commissioner melgar? >> thank you so much, chair mandelman. my question was similar to supervisor safai, for ms. boyer, and also for director tang forgoing forward. so i'm wondering to what extent does our expenditure plan reflect the plans that are put out by m.t.c., and our own planning department in terms of the housing element, that also reflects clean operations and also the monies that we are thinking of funding. to what extend do we think about not exacerbating patterns of segregation and trying to spend transportation money to build housing. >> sure. michelle, do you want me to go ahead? thank you, commissioner melgar, for that excellent question. we always start our planning with coordination on the land-use site. transportation, of course, reflects the land use and the travel demand for land use. working with our planning department and sfmta, and with a-vac, as you noted, we have a forecast for 2050, which is consistent with the planned bay area. the region provides a target number for the city, and the planning department actually distributes it. so even though we have had issues and are really challenging some of the latest transferable distributions that place inappropriate development in vulnerable neighborhoods, and actually (indiscernable), which is unacceptable to the city, the planning department has placed that elsewhere. we need to stay in 1% of the regional total before our local county-wide planning through s.f., that has been placed in other parts of the city. your other question related to the funding extensions. m.t.c., t
michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a...
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May 30, 2021
05/21
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michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a citizens' advisory committees, or community-driven advisory committee. one thing i think would be helpful would be to understand how prop "k" was spent citywide. if you're looking at it from the perspective of communities that would be impacted, it would also be good to know how prop "k" dollars have been spent, and in what districts since 2003? it is a general feeling in my district, when it comes to these dollars, that we're not getting the fair share that other parts of the city are getting. i understand there are larger infrastructure projects that are in other districts, but we have needs as well. when it comes to some of the things you're talking about, bicycle safety, pedestrian safety, signals, and some of the other infrastructure projects. so i think from the perspective of districts, it would be really helpful. if you don't have that information, then i would ask our t.a. chair to come back and present to this body how prop "k" dollars have been spent in the last 18 years and by district. i think that would give us an example of how things have been spread around the city, what projects have been prioritized, and what communities have been benefited the most from these dollars. thank you. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. that seems like a reasonable request for future presentation on a kind of a lookback on prop "k." commissioner melgar? >> mr. chair, before you go to commissioner melgar, can we get a commitment from our t.a. chair that we can have that in a reasonable amount of time? >> chairman: yes. >> it wasn't from you. i meant more -- >> chairman: yes. >> -- from the t.a. director. [simultaneous talking] >> chairman: whatever you need. >> i'm directing it at the director. >> commissioner safai, of course. we have actually already received a similar request from our advisory committee, and our deputy for policy and programming may be able to shed some light on it. >> thank you. >> yes. we're working on the analysis. it is nearly completed, and we have district-level information. and also there are projects that benefit that have system-wide or citywide benefits as well. we're calling out all of those projects, and have listed the projects funded since 2003. and, actually, not just for prop "k," but also for other sources that we administer as well. like the upper registration fee and the transportation fund for clean air, as examples. >> but you will isolate out prop "k"? >> yes. we'll do it by fund source. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. commissioner melgar? >> thank you so much, chair mandelman. my question was similar to supervisor safai, for ms. boyer, and also for director tang forgoing forward. so i'm wondering to what extent does our expenditure plan reflect the plans that are put out by m.t.c., and our own planning department in terms of the housing element, that also reflects clean operations and also the monies that we are thinking of funding. to what extend do we think about not exacerbating patterns of segregation and trying to spend transportation money to build housing. >> sure. michelle, do you want me to go ahead? thank you, commissioner melgar, for that excellent question. we always start our planning with coordination on the land-use site. transportation, of course, reflects the land use and the travel demand for land use. working with our planning department and sfmta, and with a-vac, as you noted, we have a forecast for 2050, which is consistent with the planned bay area. the region provides a target number for the city, and the planning department actually distributes it. so even though we have had issues and are really challenging some of the latest transferable distributions that place inappropriate development in vulnerable neighborhoods, and actually (indiscernable), which is unacceptable to the city, the planning department has placed that elsewhere. we need to stay in 1% of the regional total before our local county-wide planning through s.f., that has been placed in other parts of the city. your other question related to the funding extensions. m.t.c., t
michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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michelle grossman for the forecast. michelle, this is not the weekend everybody was hoping for. >> i know. we needed the gloves and fine place and hot cocoa in spots. we had 40s in the northeast. luckily we are moderating today. i know, it was terrible. we are moderating today in the northeast. the mid-atlantic and into new england. some of us are seeing rain today. especially in the central and southern plains. heavy rain. we could see flooding rains in oklahoma city and san antonio. we will watch that today. that will move to the east as we head throughout the next couple days. flood alerts have been issued. we could see 1 to 3 inches of rain. even heavy at times with flash flooding. severe storm in texas and new mexico. watch for hail and damaging winds. tornadoes are also possible. the storm system is moving off to the east. still storms in texas on tuesday. then look what happens. it expands and picks up as we move toward wednesday into parts of the mid-atlantic. also the ohio valley. and the rain returns to the northeast and the eastern seaboard along friday. for the week ahead, the heavy rain today. not as cool in the mid-atlantic. enjoy that today. new england with the damp weather. you moderate on tuesday. really warm in the west. triple digits throughout the next couple days. record highs in many, many spots. it will stay stormy in the southern plains and again that moves off to the east as we head to thursday and friday. look at the green. that means rain from new england to the south central states. get ready for that. temperatures back to the 70s today. it was a rough start to the weekend with a miserable day with the puffer jackets. >> michellessman, thank you so much. >>> still ahead, transportation secretary buttigieg warns that congress is running out of time for a deal. he is laying out a timline for a clear direction. we're back in a moment. ion. we're back in a moment what happens to your body language when your underarms are cared for? ♪ ♪ it shows! our new dove advanced care formula is effective... and kind to skin, leaving underarms cared for and you... more confident and carefree. ♪ welcome back ♪ ♪ to that same old place that you laughed about ♪ ♪ well, the names have all changed ♪ ♪ since you hung around ♪ ♪ but those dreams have remained ♪ ♪ and they've turned around ♪ ♪ who'd have thought they'd lead you ♪ ♪ (who'd have thought they'd lead you) ♪ ♪ back here where we need you ♪ ♪ (back here where we need you) ♪ ♪ yeah, we tease him a lot... ♪ welcome back, america. it sure is good to see you. i was totally stranded. no tp? so what happened? well... we started buying charmin super mega roll. charmin super mega r
michelle grossman for the forecast. michelle, this is not the weekend everybody was hoping for. >> i know. we needed the gloves and fine place and hot cocoa in spots. we had 40s in the northeast. luckily we are moderating today. i know, it was terrible. we are moderating today in the northeast. the mid-atlantic and into new england. some of us are seeing rain today. especially in the central and southern plains. heavy rain. we could see flooding rains in oklahoma city and san antonio. we...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 25, 2021
05/21
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michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a citizens' advisory committees, or community-driven advisory committee. one thing i think would be helpful would be to understand how prop "k" was spent citywide. if you're looking at it from the perspective of communities that would be impacted, it would also be good to know how prop "k" dollars have been spent, and in what districts since 2003? it is a general feeling in my district, when it comes to these dollars, that we're not getting the fair share that other parts of the city are getting. i understand there are larger infrastructure projects that are in other districts, but we have needs as well. when it comes to some of the things you're talking about, bicycle safety, pedestrian safety, signals, and some of the other infrastructure projects. so i think from the perspective of districts, it would be really helpful. if you don't have that information, then i would ask our t.a. chair to come back and present to this body how prop "k" dollars have been spent in the last 18 years and by district. i think that would give us an example of how things have been spread around the city, what projects have been prioritized, and what communities have been benefited the most from these dollars. thank you. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. that seems like a reasonable request for future presentation on a kind of a lookback on prop "k." commissioner melgar? >> mr. chair, before you go to commissioner melgar, can we get a commitment from our t.a. chair that we can have that in a reasonable amount of time? >> chairman: yes. >> it wasn't from you. i meant more -- >> chairman: yes. >> -- from the t.a. director. [simultaneous talking] >> chairman: whatever you need. >> i'm directing it at the director. >> commissioner safai, of course. we have actually already received a similar request from our advisory committee, and our deputy for policy and programming may be able to shed some light on it. >> thank you. >> yes. we're working on the analysis. it is nearly completed, and we have district-level information. and also there are projects that benefit that have system-wide or citywide benefits as well. we're calling out all of those projects, and have listed the projects funded since 2003. and, actually, not just for prop "k," but also for other sources that we administer as well. like the upper registration fee and the transportation fund for clean air, as examples. >> but you will isolate out prop "k"? >> yes. we'll do it by fund source. >> chairman: thank you, commissioner safai. commissioner melgar? >> thank you so much, chair mandelman. my question was similar to supervisor safai, for ms. boyer, and also for director tang forgoing forward. so i'm wondering to what extent does our expenditure plan reflect the plans that are put out by m.t.c., and our own planning department in terms of the housing element, that also reflects clean operations and also the monies that we are thinking of funding. to what extend do we think about not exacerbating patterns of segregation and trying to spend transportation money to build housing. >> sure. michelle, do you want me to go ahead? thank you, commissioner melgar, for that excellent question. we always start our planning with coordination on the land-use site. transportation, of course, reflects the land use and the travel demand for land use. working with our planning department and sfmta, and with a-vac, as you noted, we have a forecast for 2050, which is consistent with the planned bay area. the region provides a target number for the city, and the planning department actually distributes it. so even though we have had issues and are really challenging some of the latest transferable distributions that place inappropriate development in vulnerable neighborhoods, and actually (indiscernable), which is unacceptable to the city, the planning department has placed that elsewhere. we need to stay in 1% of the regional total before our local county-wide planning through s.f., that has been placed in other parts of the city. your other question related to the funding extensions. m.t.c., t
michelle boyer. >> michelle. one of the questions i have, and one of the things i think would be helpful, when was the last time prop "k" was instituted? what year does that go back to that we're reauthorizing? >> sure. so the voters approved prop "k" in november of 2003. >> okay. so this is 18 years later. >> that's right. >> okay. so my question would be, and i think would it be helpful -- i'm glad that you guys are putting together a...
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May 28, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN2
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michelle found herself in the famous million-dollar cowboy bar in jackson hole, wyoming. i have been there myself. but michelle met the man who would be her husband. the rest, as they say, is history. michelle and jack became married a year later, and their adventurous spirit continued. they moved north. they moved to sitka, alaska, where jack would serve as the park ranger for the state of alaska department of natural resources. they spent four years there in sitka, and michelle was very active in the community, not surprisingly, but she served as the director of the local visitors and tourism bureau, a key industry to our state and certainly to that region. in 2002, jack was transferred to kenai, alaska, to serve as the district ranger for alaska state parks for the region, and that is when michelle found her way to the alaska congressional delegation, or we found her. and again, i wish that i could take the credit for finding michelle, but she came to work for the entire alaska congressional delegation. this was at the time when the late senator ted stevens was our senior senator. this was just when i was beginning my time in this office. and back then, the rules of this chamber allowed
michelle found herself in the famous million-dollar cowboy bar in jackson hole, wyoming. i have been there myself. but michelle met the man who would be her husband. the rest, as they say, is history. michelle and jack became married a year later, and their adventurous spirit continued. they moved north. they moved to sitka, alaska, where jack would serve as the park ranger for the state of alaska department of natural resources. they spent four years there in sitka, and michelle was very...
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May 14, 2021
05/21
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michelle. wayne: hey, michelle. - hi, wayne. wayne: nice to meet you.
michelle. wayne: hey, michelle. - hi, wayne. wayne: nice to meet you.
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May 26, 2021
05/21
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KDTV
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michelle: tambiÉn les saluda michelle galvÁn. muchas gracias por estar con nosotros.tiene cuÁntas horas de preparaciÓn. alan: y un equipo extraordinario. esto tambiÉn va a pasar en todos los programas de univisiÓn. un abrazo, pao. paola: allÍ estoy. mÁs adelante nos vemos con el "minuto saludable". alan: un abrazo. mÁs adelante, una televidente preocupada. no vacunÓ a su hija por miedo a que la vacuna la dejara estÉril. hoy los doctores tienen algo que decirle. francisca: tambiÉn, ivy queen responde con furia ante unos memes. esta conversaciÓn la tendremos en "sin rollo". alan: y en exclusiva, tendremos las primeras imÁgenes de chiquis rivera con su nuevo amor. francisca: quÉdate con nosotros en "despierta amÉrica". prometemos hacer de tus maÑanas mÁs felices. ♪ muchos dicen que estamos en la línea de salida. y es precisamente donde queremos estar. ♪ porque j.d. power nos ha nombrado la marca número uno en calidad inicial y experiencia de manejo. un premio de j.d. power, es un premio en potencia. somos la hermandad del poder, y estamos de vuelta en marcha. con tantos
michelle: tambiÉn les saluda michelle galvÁn. muchas gracias por estar con nosotros.tiene cuÁntas horas de preparaciÓn. alan: y un equipo extraordinario. esto tambiÉn va a pasar en todos los programas de univisiÓn. un abrazo, pao. paola: allÍ estoy. mÁs adelante nos vemos con el "minuto saludable". alan: un abrazo. mÁs adelante, una televidente preocupada. no vacunÓ a su hija por miedo a que la vacuna la dejara estÉril. hoy los doctores tienen algo que decirle. francisca:...
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May 23, 2021
05/21
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host: i think michelle had a follow-up. michelle, do you want to finish your question?aller: i just finished reading heather mcgee's book "the sum of us," and she addresses this, where she's talking about the fact that when there is low white literacy, it's usually an area that is highly segregated and it's usually also an area where corporatists have fashioned the education system to keep even white workers at a low literacy, so they have unskilled labor. so i think i have to agree with ms. wilson that the economics of it doesn't just affect black people, but it started with black people, excluding them economically and socially, and then it also filters over into practices that corporatists can use as well. host: mr. roe, do you want to respond? guest: if we could come to an agreement that the issues is more common than the focus on racial disparity between immediate miker outcomes of all groups, then i think we actually made progress in this discussion, because scommecks certainly part of the issue, family structure, you see an explosion in nonmarital birth rates in
host: i think michelle had a follow-up. michelle, do you want to finish your question?aller: i just finished reading heather mcgee's book "the sum of us," and she addresses this, where she's talking about the fact that when there is low white literacy, it's usually an area that is highly segregated and it's usually also an area where corporatists have fashioned the education system to keep even white workers at a low literacy, so they have unskilled labor. so i think i have to agree...
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life that is it looks like it's going to much like a crisis our correspondent michelle does well in delhi thank you michelle. i mean while germany has sent its 2nd shipment of emergency aid to india and have forced plane is carrying an oxygen generator and other medical equipment to delhi a team of german technicians and medical staff will also remain in india for 2 weeks the 1st consignment included 120 ventilators and medicines several you countries as well as the us and taiwan have also joined the aid effort. from delhi i'm now joined by the german ambassador to india. germany joins more than 40 countries who have pledged assistance a does the germany's help make any real difference there on the ground. well you know i think in a country where you have 1300000000 people his question is always a rhetorical question because it's just so many people but yes it makes a difference. the health situation in the countries of bridges john martinkus your program has shown it already so it's john mattick and intellect. spittal best of luck oath oxygen dellec oath sometimes of all close the person though there is is
life that is it looks like it's going to much like a crisis our correspondent michelle does well in delhi thank you michelle. i mean while germany has sent its 2nd shipment of emergency aid to india and have forced plane is carrying an oxygen generator and other medical equipment to delhi a team of german technicians and medical staff will also remain in india for 2 weeks the 1st consignment included 120 ventilators and medicines several you countries as well as the us and taiwan have also...
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May 11, 2021
05/21
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BLOOMBERG
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michelle in a moment and we will have that. michelle with us from bank of america securities. we are waiting for the queen to make her entrance in london for the queen's speech at any moment. we will show you some images of that. it is very much adjusted queen's speech. it's also our speech with michellealways adjusted off the data. you have picked up the pieces off of friday. how does the jobs report on friday affect your view of wednesday inflation and this coming friday retail. michelle: one of the clear takeaways is there is at the moment real wage pressure. overall wages were up and when you dig into the details you see a pretty remarkable increase in wages in categories a transportation and warehousing, leisure and hospitality, all sectors that should be seeing a boom in terms of demand and hiring and there's obviously some friction with there is a lot of demand for workers but there's not enough of us apply the moment and that's created upward pressure in wages. that sets up for some greater price pressure in the economy. jonathan: do you think it's worth talking up at payrolls report? is there any signal in it for you. >> it is one report as always, but it's a report this comprehensive. it tells us about the economy, where there is demand and where their supply which you can g
michelle in a moment and we will have that. michelle with us from bank of america securities. we are waiting for the queen to make her entrance in london for the queen's speech at any moment. we will show you some images of that. it is very much adjusted queen's speech. it's also our speech with michellealways adjusted off the data. you have picked up the pieces off of friday. how does the jobs report on friday affect your view of wednesday inflation and this coming friday retail. michelle: one...
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May 20, 2021
05/21
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michelle galvÁn con mÁs detalles de esta historia, bienvenida. cuÉntanos quÉ pasÓ. michelle: muchÍsimas gracias. asÍ es, hoy tenemos esta conmovedora historia. ¿quÉ no harÍa una madre o un padre por sus hijos? la madre de un niÑo sordo que naciÓ prematura con muy pocas probabilidades de sobrevivir se ha convertido en los oÍdos del amor. >> me dediquÉ 100% a sacar adelante este bebÉ. busquÉ muchas terapias. allÁ estÁbamos nosotros. nunca bajÉ las manos. michelleichelle: es una historia especial, precisamente de nuestro compaÑero borja voces, que usted no se puede perder. entre todos podemos cambiar vidas. ademÁs les traigo un anuncio que a muchos les va a gustar. la famosa actriz gaby spanic, ¡regresa a las telenovelas! asÍ como lo escucha. aunque intentaron acabar con su carrera, no lo lograron. ahora viene con mÁs fuerza. los esperamos con esto y mucho mÁs esta tarde en "primer impacto" a las 5:00, 4:00 centro, univision. borja: como todos los dÍas. gracias, mich. carolina: hoy se cumple ocho aÑos de una de las mascotas mÁs famosos de internet. tiene mÁs de 17 millones de seguidores en redes sociales y mÁs de 2 millones estÁn en twitter, 3,9 en instagram y casi 6 millones en facebook y tiktok. el perro famoso ha sido visto con estrellas como justin bieber y shakira. ¿quiÉn de regalar likes a quiÉn? borja: yo lo que me pregunto es cÓmo un perro puede tener mÁs seguidores que tÚ y que yo juntos. nos despedimos con esto. la llegada de un perro
michelle galvÁn con mÁs detalles de esta historia, bienvenida. cuÉntanos quÉ pasÓ. michelle: muchÍsimas gracias. asÍ es, hoy tenemos esta conmovedora historia. ¿quÉ no harÍa una madre o un padre por sus hijos? la madre de un niÑo sordo que naciÓ prematura con muy pocas probabilidades de sobrevivir se ha convertido en los oÍdos del amor. >> me dediquÉ 100% a sacar adelante este bebÉ. busquÉ muchas terapias. allÁ estÁbamos nosotros. nunca bajÉ las manos. michelleichelle:...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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LINKTV
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michelle, thanks so much for sharing your views with us today. michelle: thank you for having me. steve: now to get more perspective on patent waivers, were joined by the u.s. national editor and columnist for the financial times here in washington, d.c. he was also the india bureau chief for the financial times, and we know what they are going through at this moment on the subject. you have been positive about president biden's commitment to join those nations that want to waive intellectual property rights with regards to coronavirus vaccine, particularly with regards to helping india and other nations in trouble. do you think this is the solution? ed: no, no single act the biden administration or its western partners takes will be the solution. this is part of the solution, which we can get into in a moment. i think it is a very important, politically-symbolic, and geopolitically-symbolic gesture from the biden administration to the world to expect american leadership on this. it is extremely rare, if ever meant that you see an american president take on big pharma. it just does not happen. this is not something you get up in the morning as president think, that is easy. i would do that. it just doesn't happen. the fact he is prepared to take on big pharma and do something they don't want, it will be noticed and sends a signal that the seriousness of his intent. steve: right. you applauded that intent, and in an article this week in the financial times, you swatted the president for not coordinating better with our european allies, so what are you trying to hit and criticize on that element? ed: the announcement last week was followed very quickly by irritation from angela merkel, from emmanuel macron, and from the european commission, from brussels. with this indicated is not just that they have a more conventional stance on ip protection, which angela merkel does in particular, but in consultation with america's allies in europe on this, there has been a huge internal debate. you mentioned in your introduction the joe biden promise in the campaign to waive ip on these vaccines so it should not be a surprise, but the devil will always be in the detail, and this is a global back, not -- act. it has to be approved by consensus at the wto, meaning america's partners will need to be on the side, so i think there was a little bit of an absence of diplomacy and ground preparation by the biden administration. steve: there has been a lot of focus on big pharma. there is also little pharma, as we just heard, little firms involved in some oncology approaches, which it has found useful in attacking the coronavirus in various efforts they are taking. one company is working on platforms for hpv virus, others on cancer issues, also finding a way to attack the coronavirus vaccine across a wide spectrum, so when small companies are hearing that their intellectual property rights might be waived, they might be waived across other efforts they are making, and these are not government-funded companies. how do you feel about that dimension? i worry that these little firms are having the rug ripped out from underneath him, after years of investment and work to help mankind. it is not run by the government. these are private firms. ed: there should be no position on intellectual property protection. those who do not think, they are living in a dinner third universe, and it should always be robust, most of us don't want to live in that, so in the real world, we will have trade-offs between the incentives to innovate and the rewards you get from innovation, but also on occasion such as this one, and overriding public interest in waving intellectual property protection. the details of what joe biden is proposing are not clear. if you look at the original demand from india and south africa, that is a sweeping proposal, not just pfizer, not just mrna, astrazeneca's traditional vaccine, but sweeping, across-the-board of all the equipment and ecosystems around it. i don't think joe biden is proposing that. even if he were, i don't think that is what would come through a wto consensus-building process. so i think the companies that ought to be most concerned about whether this will hit the bottom line, probably moderna, pfizer, and the big suppliers. steve: i think part of the framing of this is that some of those who advocate waving property rights see this as big companies trying to keep profits , while lives are being lost, and i think that framing is working for a lot of people in the world. why do you think the alternative argument is not as compelling, that these companies, this ecosystem, private-public partnerships, in less than a year, came up with miraculous vaccines, many options, and a short time, and that is never happened before in history, so that is the alternative, but that is not to be selling as much as the other side. ed: it is a good argument. i would quibble with some of the details. this is built on a lot of public research in private-sector innovation. as is often the case, the national institutes and departments, many science bodies have been part of this giant effort to develop these vaccines. then of course there was operation warp speed, which had generous advanced contract purchases, regardless of whether the vaccines pass regulatory approval, giving huge commercial confidence for these companies to ramp up, and of course, liability waivers. the idea this is the pharmaceutical equivalent of the genius in his garage having a lightbulb go off in his head and now he is a genius, that is not how the process works. there are brilliant people in the private and public sector, funded by taxpayer money, and taxpayers don't claim patents. the nih had this famous by protein that is a key part of the moderna vaccine. it gave it to moderna. it did not patented. the taxpayer is not getting dividends. shareholders of moderna. -- moderna r, and i don't think that is particularly balanced in the global health emergency. steve: you are one of the best observers of global affairs and america's place in the world that i know. as it looks like now, we will have a sism with germany, france on one side and the maybe the americans and who knows on the other. the wto is a consensus-based organization, that this may fall flat on its face while people die in india and elsewhere around the world. what should we do if, in fact, that intellectual property waiver effort by joe biden get stuck in a logjam? what should we put on the table if that goes nowhere? ed: even if it does go somewhere, we have to put everything on the table. i agree with michellethe biden administration should be putting a lot more into covax, as should the europeans. it shod be an all hands on deck approach to this pandemic that involves taking it a lot more seriously globally than we have seen so far, and if the biden administration stop at the $3 billion from $4 billion it has pledged for covax, and the pledge to argue for the waiver at the wto for vaccines, then this would be an empty gesture, diplomacy. it has to be part of a much broader set of emergency measures on most of which we have yet to see, so i would agree strongly on that point. steve: edward, u.s. editor for the financial times, thank you for sharing your thoughts with us today. so what is the bottom line? it is easy to see the issues of faxing patents in black and white. you are either on the side of angels and want to give away intellectual property for the sake of humankind, or on the side of the devils who value cold, hard cash over human rights, even in the middle of a pandemic they keep
michelle, thanks so much for sharing your views with us today. michelle: thank you for having me. steve: now to get more perspective on patent waivers, were joined by the u.s. national editor and columnist for the financial times here in washington, d.c. he was also the india bureau chief for the financial times, and we know what they are going through at this moment on the subject. you have been positive about president biden's commitment to join those nations that want to waive intellectual...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 16, 2021
05/21
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both michelle and lita for the hard work they've put into the presentation and, michelle for her leadership of the committee. the reason you've had the documents you've had is the work that michelle has done. so the rest of us are working behind the scenes, but not as hard as michelle. so thank you, michelle. >> president lopez: great. well, thank you everyone. again, thank you to the committee for all of your work for bringing this to us and we look forward to more meetings in the future. speaking of vacancies, i've encouraged my colleagues to make any appointments for this committee and now's an opportunity if there are any advisory committees by the board. okay. i just wanted to bring up there's a couple of changes to tonight's meeting as i'm sure you already noticed. we did begin at 4:00 to sort of begin this transition back to regular meetings of course, our board meeting is set up and we've been meeting in february and we can start doing that work as well. we did begin our work at 4:00, the board has already gone over a few changes in the way we will operate to help us be more efficient and direct. we've also moved back the public comment section, so we haven't had the oppo
both michelle and lita for the hard work they've put into the presentation and, michelle for her leadership of the committee. the reason you've had the documents you've had is the work that michelle has done. so the rest of us are working behind the scenes, but not as hard as michelle. so thank you, michelle. >> president lopez: great. well, thank you everyone. again, thank you to the committee for all of your work for bringing this to us and we look forward to more meetings in the...
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May 4, 2021
05/21
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michelle ballantyne, thank ou ve economy. michellecola sturgeon — announced he'd be leading a new party, alba. and as you can see he is in the studio this evening. good evening. the independence campaign seems to be going fairly well at the moment according to the opinion polls with record levels of support. i according to the opinion polls with record levels of support.— according to the opinion polls with record levels of support. i think we have helped _ record levels of support. i think we have helped that _ record levels of support. i think we have helped that in _ record levels of support. i think we have helped that in alba _ record levels of support. i think we have helped that in alba because l record levels of support. i think we i have helped that in alba because one of the consequences of the alba intervention is to put the independence front and centre of this election campaign and people have had no choice because of the bigger we brought to this complaint so i'm pleased that that has happened and hopefully we will get t
michelle ballantyne, thank ou ve economy. michellecola sturgeon — announced he'd be leading a new party, alba. and as you can see he is in the studio this evening. good evening. the independence campaign seems to be going fairly well at the moment according to the opinion polls with record levels of support. i according to the opinion polls with record levels of support.— according to the opinion polls with record levels of support. i think we have helped _ record levels of support. i think...
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May 25, 2021
05/21
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michelle had been shot three times shot three times? my daughter? it was as if she was speaking a foreign language because the words did not immediately register. how could michelle have been shot? and then in our own communities seem to be incomprehensible. but i snapped out of it and immediately jumped in the car with my son the neighborhood shopping center looked like a war zone you'd see in the evening news desperately searching for michelle while fearing the worst finally we came upon my wife and michelle who was shot three times she was rushed to the hospital thank god she survived she is strong and resilient as anyone that she still walks with a cane and every day she deals with the trauma of that experience unfortunately 23 others did not make it when i think about that day in the aftermath i think about choices and the shooters choices his choice to buy a gun and getin in a car and murder people because of the color of their skin and country of origin and all the chances he had to turn around but he chose not to so now i think about theer uplifting choices others have made since that day with my work as the local chapter of safety and justice through my ministry i have met countless people affected by a gun violence they have chosen to share their stories and we live their trauma in hopes it will compel officials to take action so to survive in the nation. thirteen hours later another mass shooting occurred in day in
michelle had been shot three times shot three times? my daughter? it was as if she was speaking a foreign language because the words did not immediately register. how could michelle have been shot? and then in our own communities seem to be incomprehensible. but i snapped out of it and immediately jumped in the car with my son the neighborhood shopping center looked like a war zone you'd see in the evening news desperately searching for michelle while fearing the worst finally we came upon my...
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May 27, 2021
05/21
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KRON
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were surprised to hear what happened this morning live in san jose tonight, michelle kingston kron 4 news. thank you, michelle. >> right now on kron 4 dot com. we have a section with everything you need to know about today's mass shooting. you can use your phone to scan the qr code you see here you'll find a live blog with the latest updates. details on the reunification center and today's news conference is also information on other mass shootings that have happened in the bay area. >> coming up, what will it take to stop this cycle of gun violence after the break. a bay area lawmaker will join us live with his proposal. and i'm dan thorn at the santa clara valley medical center where we're learning more about about the victims tonight and also but the victim that remains in critical it's time for sleep number's memorial day sale on the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, body-sensing, automatically-responding, energy-building, dually-adjustable, dad-powering, wellness-boosting, foot-warming, temperature-balancing, recovery-assisting, effortlessly life-changing... proven quality night
were surprised to hear what happened this morning live in san jose tonight, michelle kingston kron 4 news. thank you, michelle. >> right now on kron 4 dot com. we have a section with everything you need to know about today's mass shooting. you can use your phone to scan the qr code you see here you'll find a live blog with the latest updates. details on the reunification center and today's news conference is also information on other mass shootings that have happened in the bay area....
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May 21, 2021
05/21
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michelle, are middle daughter, had been shot three times. shot three times, my daughter? it was as if my wife was speaking a foreign language. because the words did not immediately registered. how could michelle have been shot? serving over 20 years in the army only to find my daughter to be shot in her own community seem to be incomprehensible. but i snapped out of disbelief and he made a jump in the car with my daughter jackie. when we arrived, our neighborhood shopping center look more like a war zone you would see on the evening news. we ran past people who would already lost their lives. desperately searching for michelle while fearing the worst. finally we came upon my wife and michelle, who was shot three times and in critical condition. she was rushed to the hospital. thank god she survived. my daughter is a strong and resilient as anyone, but she still walks with a cane, and everyday she deals with the trauma of that experience. unfortunately though, 23 of the people did not make it. when i think about that day in the aftermath, i think about choices initially. about the shooters choices, his choice to buy a gun. his choice to get in a in k his choice to murder people because of the color of their skin and the country of origin. and all the chances he had to turn around, but he chose not to. but now i think about the uplifting choices that others have made since that day. to my work, countless people affected by gun violence, most incidents of never make headlines. they share their stories and relive their trauma in folks that will compel our elected officials to take action. what i endured, surviv
michelle, are middle daughter, had been shot three times. shot three times, my daughter? it was as if my wife was speaking a foreign language. because the words did not immediately registered. how could michelle have been shot? serving over 20 years in the army only to find my daughter to be shot in her own community seem to be incomprehensible. but i snapped out of disbelief and he made a jump in the car with my daughter jackie. when we arrived, our neighborhood shopping center look more like...
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michelle was shot multiple times during the horrific el paso terror attack in august 2019. michelle survived, thank god, and spent 55 days in the hospital recovering. since the incident pastor grady has met with several people in his congregation who is also been affected by gun violence, and he has been an important voice on this and number of other significant national issues. pastor grady, thank you for being you. madam chair, i yield back. >> thank you so very much. may i remind that gentleman, congressman massa, industry and you must what your mask, i thank you so very much for your courtesy of doing that. we appreciate that very much. anyone else, you could remove your mask when you're speaking. thank you so very much. i will berate you speak so i will remove this mask as i'm putting it back on. we have post having adam skaggs, and he has been just an established expert on billy the responses to all of those who say why? he has been able to give us a credible and detailed response of why not pick events that i know because he is associated with our beloved colleagues law center, the giffords law center and his chief counsel and policy director. previously he was senior counsel at every comfort and safety and that the brennan center for justice where he worked on election law issues. mr. skaggs, if you don't mind the least taking note of gabby giffords and water giant store has been able to do in setting up this law center, of being a truth teller on gun violence in guns in america. you yourself were also litigation associate at paul weitz, rifkind wharton and gerson, and law clerk at the 11th circuit in the us district court for the eastern district of new york. we welcome you. please note that each of your written testimony statements will be entered into the record in its entirety, and let me say that votes have been called but the arc two we're going to take one or two witnesses and then recess members so that we can vote and recess and book for the second button come back as quickly as possible. we make it through two witnesses. staff is now trying to determine. accordingly i ask that you summarize your testimony in five minutes. there is a timer in the zoom view that should be viable on your screen, and representative goodwin, you may begin, thank you again for being here. welcome. >> thank you, chairwoman jackson lee, ranking member biggs, -- >> you can turn your sound up please. can you turn your sound up? >> is that better? >> a little better, thank you. >> okay. thank you, chairwoman jackson lee, ranking member biggs, chairman nadler and ranking member jordan. thank you for the opportunity to testify before the crime, terrorism, and homeland security sub -- >> would you suspend, just suspend. return to work, work on your sound here for a minute. >> okay. >> thank you. just a moment. [inaudible conversations] >> we will just do one witness, members, so please -- are we turning her back -- hard me? [inaudible] all right. can you continue please, and thank you. apologize for the technical. >> no problem. thank you again. my name is vikki goodwin, i represent texas house district 47. 47. firearm safety issues are deeply personal to me and our focus a legislative work. i am a gun violence survivor get when i was in my early 20s my father was shot and killed in her home in dallas. my father's death profoundly impacted me and gives me tremendous empathy for others have lost loved ones to gun violence. over the years my sense of grief and sorrow has turned to a personal passion to work for my community and state on gun safety issues. i believe the voices of gun violence victims and their families must be heard in the halls of power. i join the texas house homeland security and public safety committee which hears legislation on gun laws like and amplify the voices of victims and promote change. as a committee member i've had the opportunity in recent months to weigh in on a dangerous piece of legislation in texas, house bill 1927. the bill would permit people to carry concealed loaded weapons in public spaces without passing any background or training requirement. passage of this bill will significantly weaken protections and safeguards that are currently in place to protect communities from gun violence. texas firearms safety laws are already some of the weakest in the country. texas existing framework is already full of loopholes and encourages gun trafficking across state lines and into mexico. at present existing state law requires people to pass a background check and complete a basic safety training course to be licensed to carry loaded handguns in public places. house bill 1927 will do away with that requirement. alarmingly, texas does not universally require people to pass a background check to purchase firearms. legislation i filed this session attempted to close the loopholes in the background check system, whether someone is purchasing guns at gun shows, online, or through other means. my background check bills did not make it out of committee. on the other hand, house bill making 27 is on its way to becoming law, and it will make it impossible for our law enforcement to know people carrying guns on our streets are in legal possession or not. it will make it easier for people who can't currently pass background checks to carry a firearm, including those with violent criminal histories or those suffering from chemical dependencies. the research is clear that flooding public spaces with more hidden loaded guns in more hands makes our communities less safe. a good guy with the gun rarely saves the day. more often, the gun that is intended to protect one from danger in step doing just the opposite. contrary to the notion that flooding our committees with guns will somehow reduce gun violence, a considerable body of study of research shows that states that have enacted permit less carry legislation are experiencing significant increases in gun violence. states that we can law enforcement authority to deny permits to people who might pose a danger to the public has seen an 11% increase in homicide rates, and 13-15% increase in violent crime rates. in 2003 alaska became the first state to enact permit less carry legislation pics and send the status thing the rate of aggravated assault with a current increase by 65%. in arizona where the legislature enacted unless kerry in 2010 rate of aggravated assault with a gun is increased by 8%. translating to 921 gun related agri- assaults per year. here in texas with experience numerous horrific gun related tragedies. most recently that was a shooting in the midland odessa came into the witchy gunmen drove through those two towns shooting innocent victims. we heard testimony about one of the victims, a man and his early 20s, was shot in his car with a 70. then watched as he was gunned down by a man with previously failed a background check but was later able to obtain again. prior to that a gunmen drove across the state from alan to el paso to shoot innocent victims in the walmart store. immediately following the el paso shooting a governor held a roundtable discussion bring together stakeholders to discuss safety measures and yet here we are in texas, this legislative session, not passing laws to make a safer but instead passing a law that will allow people to carry guns with any safety training or permit. like all of you, i am responsible for protecting my constituents and ensuring the safety of my community which is what brings me here today. house bill 1927 poses a significant threat to the lives of well-being, well-being of texas. if enacted we can expect more gun violence not less. i hope today's hearing puts us one step closer to fulfilling that goal. thank you. >> gentle ladies testament was powerful. i'm going to ask members to indulge us i want to ask the members of the recess let me just thank members karen bass, madeleine dean, cori bush, ted lieu, veronica escobar, steven cohen who i hope will return and we were recess for the votes. to the panelists come if you can reserve and will call to order in just a few minutes. this is in recess. committee is in recess. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> we will call this hearing to order again. it is entitled an end in the crisis, essential steps to reducing gun violence and mass shootings. as i began to call on the other witnesses, just want to take note of the fact of the introductions that many of these witnesses have experienced their own personal stories of gun violence. i want to say to them that they have our concern and our hearts focus on their loss. the next witness knows that loss all to personally, and that indicated earlier as i introduced him, that he is taken that to serve america. mr. guttenberg, you are eulogy at this time for five minutes. thank you. >> thank you. chairwoman jackson lee, ranking member biggs, and distinguished members of the committee, thank you finding me to testify today. i name is fred guttenberg. i'm a father of two amazing chili, jessie and jimmy. on february 14, 2018, my daughter jaime was murdered alongside 13 other children and three adults at margaret stoneman douglas high school in berkeley for the my son jesse now 20 lives with a permanent scars of having heard his sister shot. i am a father who lives with the sound of a single shot severing my daughter spinal cord. i'm a father who hopes his daughter died instantly. otherwise, it means she suffered. my daughter will be 14 forever. my wife and i watched all the other kids post pictures of going to prom and college acceptance is this year. we're happy for them but we break down and cry because jaime should be with them. i have been told even by some here this morning that i hate the second amendment and that i may gun grabber. nothing could be further from the truth. i simply want to save lives. my daughter was killed in the mass shooting. the kind with seen over and over again in elementary schools, middle schools, high schools, colleges, conscious, movie theaters, grocery stores, bars, businesses. the list goes on. where issued is one with an assault weapon and a large capacity magazine. these are weapons of war designed to kill as many people as possible as fast as possible, and that's why they become the weapon of choice for mass murderers. congress must take action to ban assault weapons and large capacity magazines which is killed thousands of innocent americans. mass shootings at the one where my daughter was murdered got a lot of attention but they kept for just a small percentage of american gun violence. 40,000 people die every year, that's over 100 a day in incidents of domestic committee findings come hate crimes, suicide and unintentional shootings all across the country. in fact, in the time to take me to read the statement, somebody is getting shot right now. my friends, know all too well the tragic consequences of what happens when a firearm is not safely stored. in 2018 their son ethan just 15 was unintentionally shot and killed after accessing unsecured gun in a neighbors house. this is not an anomaly in america. every day eight children and teenagers are unintentionally shot by unsecured loaded firearm so if you know. it's that 4.6 million children in homes with at least one unsecured gun. that which it know the pain of losing a child to a gun. we can and we must do better. i have been partnering with brady, what are the nation's oldest gun violence prevention organizations, and they led the family farm program of national education campaign by gun owners for gun owners on the importance of safe storage. family fire is a shooting involving an improperly stored or misuse god out in a home and it's one of the biggest contributors to gun deaths every year. safe firearm storage provides a life-saving barrier between children or those in crisis from accessing guns, singularly decreasing the risk of family fire. congress does have policy options for increasing safe storage. something which the vast majority of responsible gun owners already agree is important. research has found even a modest intervention that motivates gun owners to safety stored guns could reduce use firearm deaths by a third. for instance, congress could pass legislation creating incentives to promote safe storage like the family fire act which has broad bipartisan support last year congress can also take steps to educate the public more broadly about the benefits and best practices of safe storage and could even require gun dealers to post that information when they sell guns. e-sims law would create the legal obligation to safely store a firearm if a man might have an it. this, , if this commonsense law had been in place his leica depends spirit ungrateful for different christian and mike but it truly wish i never knew them. these policies have a measurable impact on people's lies but there is more the card to do to protect public safety. this body has that twice passed legislation to expand and strengthen background checks for gun sale. also and very new to my heart congress should expand grant checks to cover ammunition sales. jaime is law would do just that. it's not acceptable that so many lives are lost to gun violence in this country and it doesn't have to be this way. i urge you all to take action to save lives. ungrateful for the opportunity to testify today before you, and i look forward to your questions. thank you. >> thank you so very much for being willing to be a today. >> thank you. >> are simply seeking to you and your friends. now happy to yield five minutes to ms. muller. you are recognized for five minutes. thank you. >> thank you, chairwoman jackson lee, ranking member biggs and committee members. i am honored to be a today to discuss this important topic and brainstorm on strategies to save lives. for decades now the conversation seems to only lead to gun control advocates pushing for more laws a more restrictions. it's time to look at the evidence, acknowledged the truth, and consider alternatives. the truth is we all want the same thing. we all want to be safe and we want our families to be safe. the difference is how we believe that is achieved. for over 30 30 years the strt gun-control policies have been adopted by several major cities across the country. based on decades of evidence in cities like st. louis and chicago, and many more, it is apparent these policies do not work. the results are the same. when average citizens are left capable of defending themselves, criminals are emboldened, crying sores, and communities are less safe. as a retired police officer i saw firsthand the effects of violence on communities. i can tell you buzzwords like epidemic, ghost guns, weapons of war or assault weapons are designed to push false narratives and are designed to scare the public. we hear about, since gun-control. commonsense is that cities plagued with violence should adopt the laws of cities that are not plagued with violence. commonsense is not making more rules come or laws,, registrations and fees and they protecting yourself a rich man's game. gun-control laws disproportionately affects low income minority communities, gun-control is steeped in racism. commonsense is making mental health a priority when 55% of deaths are suicide. commonsense is holding criminals accountable for breaking the law instead of releasing them from jail, raising bail for them, or encouraging them to be more confrontational. many americans are exhausted by attacks on our second amendment rights. i found the d.c. project because we were tired of listening to women who do not represent us, women who are not experts in firearms or in violence, and yet they demand that legislators restrict our constitutional and civil rights. i am honored to speak on behalf of the members of the d.c. project a mothers, daughters, young and old, black, white, latino, asian, hunters, competitors. hashtag me to come hashtag not me on the political left and right. the second amendment wins on the intersectionality scale. there are women in a group that have endured unspeakable violence. the creation lost son to gang violence. melissa was stabbed 17 times, raped, beat, and left for dead in her parents home. in a stranger invasion. nikki saw her husband shot and killed by her stocker in a gun-free zone which it were 95% of mass killings occur. all of these women are intimately familiar with the failures of gun control. 2020 protestant pandemic, rights, looting and killing an effort to defund the police. crime is soaring in those cities. americans are realizing they are their own first responders which is why we think record gun sales in an estimate 8.4 million first time purchasers. i i will also add the second amendment wasn't written about hunting. it was written about we the people in a tyrannical government. the question before us is how do we reduce violence in our country? there are details and links in my written testimony but these are a few programs that it had successful results the hunters education program has exponentially lower firearms related incidents and for counties. the kids safe condition takes a target audience a step further focuses on all children not just hunters. zero firearms accidents is only acceptable goal. hold my guns against busina prevention program that respects civil rights. all of these are community-based grassroots programs that are geared toward safety. instead of exploiting tragedy and pushing pain to push agenda, a gun-control agenda let's work in a nonpartisan way to expand programs and deliver measurable results. the d.c. project women are available to resource to all of you. we will meet, talk, train, what if we can do to achieve safety in our communities to education, not legislation. thank you for the opportunity to speak and i look forward to your questions. >> thank you for your testimony and now i am delighted to yield five minutes to you today. my name is michael grady and over the course of my life i have been blessed to hold several titles. i'm the pastor of the prince of peace christian fellowship in el paso, texas, and over two decades have served in the chaplains of united states army. for the past 40 years plus i been married to my wife and we have three wonderful daughters. i am here today both because of what happened on august 3, 2019. on that morning i was at home while my wife and daughter were at a shopping center just a few minutes away from my home. at 10:45 a.m. time seemly came to a halt when i received a panicked call from my wife telling me to come to walmart because my daughter michelle, are middle daughter, had been shot three times. shot three times, my daughter? it was as if my wife was speaking a foreign language. because the words did not immediately registered. how could michelle have been shot? serving over 20 years in the army only to find my daughter to be shot in her own community seem to be incomprehensible. but i snapped out of disbelief and he made a jump in the car with my daughter jackie. when we arrived, our neighborhood shopping center look more like a war zone you would see on the evening news. we ran past people who would already lost their lives. desperately searching for michelle while fearing the worst. finally we came upon my wife and michelle, who was shot three times and in critical condition. she was rushed to the hospital. thank god she survived. my daughter is a strong and resilient as anyone, but she still walks with a cane, and everyday she deals with the trauma of that experience. unfortunately though, 23 of the people did not make it.
michelle was shot multiple times during the horrific el paso terror attack in august 2019. michelle survived, thank god, and spent 55 days in the hospital recovering. since the incident pastor grady has met with several people in his congregation who is also been affected by gun violence, and he has been an important voice on this and number of other significant national issues. pastor grady, thank you for being you. madam chair, i yield back. >> thank you so very much. may i remind that...
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May 26, 2021
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michelle hackman and michelle hackman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he has a tough line of question ahead of him. host: a hearing at the house, the senate later this afternoon, what members are you particularly going to be focusing on and watching as you do your reporting on the hearings? guest: oh, probably the chairman. i find value in all of the members because often, democrats ask for a fresh friendlier questions, so they asked detailed information -- because often, democrats ask friendlier questions. i would say both sides actually i think are somewhat unhappy with the current administration's border policy, so i will pay attention to discussion around issues like how the administration is handling the asylum seekers at the border. host: there is the issue of child detention, likely an issue that will come up today. what is the status right now for dhs in terms of numbers of detentions and the numbers of unaccompanied minors coming across the border? guest: the numbers have been roughly study for the last month or so. it is several hundred kids coming across the board every day. the number hovers between 300 to 500 and dhs have been doing a much better job as you know when children crossed the border. it is first dhs, but cut jones and border protection's job to process the kids and move them on to shelters run by that point -- the department of health and human services. while they are having trouble doing that, there was way markets coming in and going out of the system and they really improved the process, but right now they have about something like 700 kids in their custody, but they are moving them through. we hear numbers pretty frequently within about 24 hours, now they are moving to hhs shelters, which is good. host: immigration and border questions, now's your time to call in. she covers for the wall street journal, (202) 748-8000 for democrats, (202) 748-8001 for republicans, independents, (202) 748-8002. a busy week for others who cover congress with the budget coming out at the end of the week. when you finally get your hands on that document, what are you going to be looking for in it? guest: one of the big questions i have is, how this administration is going to be handling ice, immigrations and custom enforcement. one of the big calls of the democratic primary what does the ice abolished or significantly scaled down. we saw comments yesterday from secretary mayorkas that they will put the ice budget at the same like the previous year. i'm curious of how they will manage that. are they going to shift money around so that they have more money going into what they have alternatives to the attention, so rather than detaining an immigrant, you are free to go, we will track you with an ankle bracelet, that has been the obama administration's approach, that is what we are thinking will be the biden's administration approach. there are many other question, how much more money will receive go into the domestic terrorist efforts to work with nonprofit organizations to combat domestic terrorism. will we see more positions and intelligence to fight domestic terrorist groups. host: do you think we will see an uptick for pipeline security in this budget? guest: i would imagine so. the department announced this week that they are coming out with a new set of rules, to actually regulate pipelines after the colonial pipeline attack earlier this month. you know, oil pipelines, -- very few critical infrastructure in industries that have requirements to report cybersecurity attacks and to fortify themselves against attacks. oil pipelines have not been one of those. the electric grid, nuclear power plants are some of the only few that actually have rules like that, so they are expanding that to the pipelines. host: on fortification, the idea of the wall between the united states and mexico, one of the first actions of the biden administration was atop the building of new walls. as the money in the budget each year toward a wall up code -- upkeep and what can we determine about that issue from the budget numbers that we are going to see this week? guest: that is a great question. the biden administration is grappling with this issue where in their first budget document that they put out, i forgot one, a couple of months ago, they suggested that they want to give back all of the leftover money, but the trump administration had a lot -- allotted to the wall. when congress gives you money, it is against the law to not do that. i think they are grappling with, can they use that money to fix up sections of the wall that trump early started building, do they need to build more sections of the wall, can they use money that congress gave them to do other border technologies like adding radar and drones, lighting, things like that to the sections of the walls, and i think we will see how we handle -- how they handle that in the budget. host: there's a question from our text messages and service on california -- text messaging service in california. i will mayorkas respond to and complete border questions and wants you to drill down on high tech solutions at the border. guest: sure. as i said, he is in a tough spot because one -- one of president biden to campaign practices -- promises was that he would not build the wall. a billion dollars or possibly more that he put toward wall construction and they have not really determined or they have not announced how they are going to use that money. they suggested they wanted to give it back, but it is a legal problem, they need to use the money as -- if congress does not take it back quickly. and so, i heard that it is possible they can use it to build roads, to ease the task of the border patrol to patrol the walls. they could use it potentially to actually mitigate some of the environmental effects of the walls, particularly in areas -- areas in arizona, california, they have built wildlife preserves for endangered species act and so they can use that money to mitigate some other damage that was done through the construction. they can use it toward drones and other technology that can detect things like drug smuggling or human smuggling across the wall. host: plenty of colors already this morning. democrats (202) 748-8000. republicans (202) 748-8001. independents, (202) 748-8002. iris out of michigan, independent, good morning. caller: good morning and good morning. it is so nice to see a jewish girl working for the wall street journal. i have a question regarding the kids released from foster care, they are on the street, wouldn't that be a great report to make? they lose a home at 18 and have to go on the streets, i think it is important because we are bringing somebody young people in from down south of the border. it is a good story. i would go for it if i were you. guest: i agree. that is a problem. i know -- it is actually a problem there as well because there are laws that required to care for the kids until their 18th birthday but after that, they are on their own and out and often actually get turned over to ice and that is an issue that immigration advocates frequently flag. host: from fox news op-ed from earlier this week, this is congressman andy biggs on the border crisis saying, mayorkas deceived american by claiming that the border is closed, but 178,000 illegal aliens were counted -- encountered at the southern border in april alone. in the meantime, it had the lowest number of deportations in decades. the record number entering the country and the record low in deportations show both ends of the biden administration's efforts to drive up the number of people in the country illegally. there are more than 3 million individuals, many of whom are expect -- suspected criminals living in our communities who have received a due process and have been ordered by hr to leave the country but the biden administration is doing nothing about it. a question on the deportation issue number two, will secretary mayorkas talk to andy biggs today? guest: sorry about that. host: will mayorkas be questioned by andy biggs today and if he is, what you think he will say on this deportation issue? guest: what he will say is that the department is looking at its deportation strategy. they have really shifted years he and the biden administration where trump said, anyone in the country illegally as a target for deportation. we do not care who you are, if you are here and breaking our laws, we are going to target you. where the biden administration has said, our resources are very limited. we have about 6000 officers in total across the country charged with carrying out their partitions and we will concentrate our resources -- out deportations and we will concentrate our resources on the serious criminals and they also say, it is not about numbers, it is about the quality of the people we are catching and deporting. and they have been criticized for that because they are allowing a lot of people with criminal convictions, may less serious criminal convictions, to sort of be free from the fear of deportation. host: broadway, virginia, democrats, good morning. caller: good morning. yes, i think we should cut off all of the border control funding there. the money they are wasting -- putting them in hotel rooms, line them all over the country, lying to the american people about it. i think you should cut up all of the funding until they straighten things out. host: how would you like it straightened out? what is straightened out in your mind? caller: put back some of the things like remain in mexico and deport the illegals who should be deported. host: michelle hackman, remain in mexico policy, something we have not talked about yet. guest: that was a big trump administration policy toward the end of his administration where what essentially they did was they said, if someone came across the border, asked for asylum, they trump administration would say, great, they would go to court in six months and you have to wait in mexico and come back to a port of entry and take you to your court date. it had the effect of driving many migrants away. the places in mexico where they were required to wait are the most dangerous places in the western hemisphere. and so people often abandoned their claim, they were ordered deported in abstention. they were banned from coming to the united states and it was a big issue for human rights advocates. a lot of those people were getting targeted, kidnapped, and were getting killed. and the biden administration made this promise that they would end that program because it is one of the issues around humid -- humid
michelle hackman and michelle hackman, how tough of a grilling is dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas -- going before legislators today? guest: it will not be has first time, but he has a tough portfolio of issues to discuss from the southern border to immigration legislation, domestic terrorism, the colonial pipeline, anti-semitism attacks around the country and that is all under his purview and he has a tough line of question ahead of him. host: a hearing at the house, the senate later this...
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michelle obama are still oppressed. yeah, on cbs this morning, michelle obama said that she was sick and tired of being sick and tired. >> many of us still live in fear as we go to the grocery store, walking our dogs, allowing our children to get a license. just imagine, they are driving, but every time they get in a car by themselves, i worry about what assumption is being made by somebody who doesn't know everything about them? the fact that they are good students, polite girls, but maybe they're playing their music a little loud. maybe they make an assumption. i like so many parents with black kids, the innocent act of getting a license puts fear in our hearts. >> tucker: she's more oppressed even more than meghan markle is. will somebody liberate the obama's? question -- we can't elect them again. candace owens may do that, she joins us tonight and thank you so much for coming on. michelleobama, they live in fear, this country is so bad that even the obama's being elected twice, can't live here and is there a future and should we leave? >> i think we need to launch a investigation, i need to know which person is oppressing michelle obama, barack obama, the children and i think we need to get to the bottom of it at this point. it looks like her net worth is $47 million, barack obama combined for $135 million. if that's oppression, where can i get some? the fact that people can look at the back of their head -- you mean the secret service agents that are constantly around your children and they probably have not touched their own doorhandle in years and we're believing that you're oppressed like the rest of the country that's actually suffering? please, michelle obama, give that oppression to the rest of america because we sure could use it. >> tucker: haven't touched their door handles in years. i'm stealing that. i noticed a theme here, there's a lot of extremely rich p
michelle obama are still oppressed. yeah, on cbs this morning, michelle obama said that she was sick and tired of being sick and tired. >> many of us still live in fear as we go to the grocery store, walking our dogs, allowing our children to get a license. just imagine, they are driving, but every time they get in a car by themselves, i worry about what assumption is being made by somebody who doesn't know everything about them? the fact that they are good students, polite girls, but...
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May 25, 2021
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paso at the prince of peace fellowship church his daughter michelle shot multiple times during the horrific terror attack in 2019 and michelle survived, thing god and spent 55 days in the hospital recovering since the incident pastor grady has met with several people in his congregation have also been affected by gun violence and he has been an important voice on thism in a number of other significant national issues. thank you for being here madame chair i yield back. >> may a reminder gentleman you must wear your mask thank you for your courtesy anyone else youn can remove your mask when you are speaking thank you. we have the privilege our next witness is an established expert on the responses to all of those say why and can give us a credible and detailed response of why not because he is associate with our beloved colleagues loss center and chief counsel and policy director. previously senior counsel for gun safety at the brennan center for justice where he works on election law issues if you don't mind taking note of gabby giffords and what her giant story has been able to do about being a truth teller on gun violence
paso at the prince of peace fellowship church his daughter michelle shot multiple times during the horrific terror attack in 2019 and michelle survived, thing god and spent 55 days in the hospital recovering since the incident pastor grady has met with several people in his congregation have also been affected by gun violence and he has been an important voice on thism in a number of other significant national issues. thank you for being here madame chair i yield back. >> may a reminder...
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May 24, 2021
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michelle galvÁn se une con toda la informaciÓn. quÉ gusto nos da recibirte en la "ediciÓn digital". michelle: el gusto es mÍo. muchas gracias, muy buenas tardes a todos y los invitamos a ver el dÍa de hoy "primer impacto". cynthia barajas corriÓ para salvar a sus hijos. mientras intentaban aplacar el fuego. >> ya estaba saliendo el smog. hay una puerta en ese cuarto que va al garage, ya estaba negro todos. ya estaba el smog. el niÑo dormido. michelleo con Ésta y muchas mÁs historias de impacto para todos ustedes y tambiÉn ademÁs vamos estar pendientes porque es la primera vez que tanto pamela como tÚ volvÉis al set, vamos estar muy pendientes. michelle: iba a hacer una sorpresa. una exclusiva de "ediciÓn digital". [risas] estaremos de regreso a la normalidad, como todo esta volviendo al paÍs. carolina: cuando volvimos fue emocionante asÍ que me imagino que os vais a pasar muy bien. michelle: gracias a ustedes, que tengan un excelente dÍa. carolina: hablando de gente que la pasÓ bien hubo una fiesta y la noticia del momento es la boda de saÚl "el canelo" Álvarez y fernanda gÓmez, la madre de su pequeÑa de 3 aÑos, la boda fue en guadalajara y la fiesta fue todo por alto. todos cantaron en este evento. el rancho de las reinas fue cubierto por miles de flores. ¿quÉ cenaron? tÁrtara de res, crema de alcachofa, purÉ de papÁ, verdura. yo fui a la fiesta, por eso sÉ todo. champaÑa y tequila. se estima que la fiesta podrÍa haber pasado el
michelle galvÁn se une con toda la informaciÓn. quÉ gusto nos da recibirte en la "ediciÓn digital". michelle: el gusto es mÍo. muchas gracias, muy buenas tardes a todos y los invitamos a ver el dÍa de hoy "primer impacto". cynthia barajas corriÓ para salvar a sus hijos. mientras intentaban aplacar el fuego. >> ya estaba saliendo el smog. hay una puerta en ese cuarto que va al garage, ya estaba negro todos. ya estaba el smog. el niÑo dormido. michelleo con Ésta...