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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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WJLA
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millennia is an generation y has growup digital. natural behavior would be for baby boomers to sit down and watch television. it is just the way they are wired. tech entrepreneurship is driven by a lot of companieses dririvey those demographics. the truth of the matter is, business do not get sold, they get bough what i mean by that is the best entrepreneurs are people whoo focus every day on lovoving ther customer and focus o on creatina business model to love the customer. >> how do you get those customers if you are not tooting your own horn? >> there is a role for brandg and pr in evy business. what glenn is getting at isis se people mistake pr for building and experience and a brand. the brand is what we use as shorthand. you know the value of what comes from watching "washington buness report." brand is important, but you have to have what the customers value. >> a friend of mine had a brilliant idea, she h has an app ready,y, building a business, a it will be busy as to when she launches. it will not be perfect, but if she wa
millennia is an generation y has growup digital. natural behavior would be for baby boomers to sit down and watch television. it is just the way they are wired. tech entrepreneurship is driven by a lot of companieses dririvey those demographics. the truth of the matter is, business do not get sold, they get bough what i mean by that is the best entrepreneurs are people whoo focus every day on lovoving ther customer and focus o on creatina business model to love the customer. >> how do you...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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LINKTV
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over millennia, this progressively destroyed the region's fertility. when this happens over an area as extensive as the plateau, millions of tons of silt are swept down into the yellow river, which gets its name from the color of the fine loess soil. the mounting quantities of silt clog up the river, impeding its flow, contributing to the floods that give the river another name: china's sorrow. in some areas, creating floating mud mattresses that attract passing tourists, a local problem becomes a national problem. in the dry season, the light unprotected soil is swept up in the winds, causing the dust storms that are blown over china's cities and beyond its borders. on the plateau, the researchers realized that progressive degradation of the environment trapped the local population into a life of subsistence farming. it's a process that has occurred throughout the world where poor agricultural communities find themselves overusing their land in order to survive, depleting its fertility and further impoverishing themselves. one thing that became appare
over millennia, this progressively destroyed the region's fertility. when this happens over an area as extensive as the plateau, millions of tons of silt are swept down into the yellow river, which gets its name from the color of the fine loess soil. the mounting quantities of silt clog up the river, impeding its flow, contributing to the floods that give the river another name: china's sorrow. in some areas, creating floating mud mattresses that attract passing tourists, a local problem...
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Feb 11, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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the millennial generation is america's future, but the millennia millennials appear to be having a hardero of it in today's job market. the u.s. labor department reports that 9.1% of americans in that 20 to 34 age group who want a job couldn't find one in january. it's more stark for those millennials who are first joining the work force out of college. 11.9% of them couldn't find a job in january. pesky as they may seem, we all have some millennials around, at home lounging about or working alongside of you. they get painted with contradictory stereo types like past generations. 70% of those in older generations believe millennials aren't willing to quote pay their dues in order to work their up. yet mr. millennials say they don't expect to stay around long enough to move up the corporate ladder. they don't think that corporate mark hires you for life anymore. and they would be right. the stereo types miss a larger point. today's millennials paid a lot for an education that doesn't necessarily guarantee them a lucrative job. the seismic economic shifts that were occurring just as this gr
the millennial generation is america's future, but the millennia millennials appear to be having a hardero of it in today's job market. the u.s. labor department reports that 9.1% of americans in that 20 to 34 age group who want a job couldn't find one in january. it's more stark for those millennials who are first joining the work force out of college. 11.9% of them couldn't find a job in january. pesky as they may seem, we all have some millennials around, at home lounging about or working...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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it is by the earth has been able to sustain its internal heat all these millennia. this discovery, this question without radiometric dating, how would you view the age of the earthquakes that is akin to the expression if things were any other way, things to be different. this is to say that it's not how the world is. radiometric dating does exist. neutrons to become protons that is their level of understanding today. the universe is accelerating. these are all provable facts that there was a flat 4000 years ago is not provable. the evidence for me at least is a reasonable man is overwhelming that it couldn't possibly have happened. there is no evidence for it. furthermore, mr. ham, you never quite addressed this issue with the schools. there are many, many in what appears to be the creation or the coming into being of you and me and those steps -- >> by this time. >> i just want people to understand, the age of the year thing about four and a half years coming to earth rock was dated. dedicated media rights and because they assumed meteorites, this image of the eart
it is by the earth has been able to sustain its internal heat all these millennia. this discovery, this question without radiometric dating, how would you view the age of the earthquakes that is akin to the expression if things were any other way, things to be different. this is to say that it's not how the world is. radiometric dating does exist. neutrons to become protons that is their level of understanding today. the universe is accelerating. these are all provable facts that there was a...
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who don't remember pre reagan and in particular the millennia old so it looks like are going to be a very activist generation understand that america actually did work at one time or at least did work for many people. your thoughts on this i think americans you know are famous for not knowing history and not caring much about history on the other hand i do believe that generally in our politics. there is a constant sense of nostalgia for the last period the conservatives have it about the fifty's when they think morals were in a different place. than eighty seven about the sixty's and the roads have been about the sixty's and about the period after world war two when we had shared prosperity and that was that was very widely shared so i think those stories and that sense of a last period is a very strong theme in our politics right now i do think that the millennial generation will have to invent its own politics it will have to invent different ways of dealing with problems that will be very different as they grow than the ones faced by those old generations but that sense that ther
who don't remember pre reagan and in particular the millennia old so it looks like are going to be a very activist generation understand that america actually did work at one time or at least did work for many people. your thoughts on this i think americans you know are famous for not knowing history and not caring much about history on the other hand i do believe that generally in our politics. there is a constant sense of nostalgia for the last period the conservatives have it about the...
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a decent economy at least the economy was a center piece of our of our politics i think for this millennia old generation to be very different i think they are and you know one of the worst economy since the great depression and they are the ones that go to college are bearing these huge student debts and their focus on what's going to make this economy work for people again is reflected in the movement i think and it's and it's going to pose a set of very different questions for that generation. you know i was in s.d.s. town and i have to go ahead richard. i was there i was just going to interject here to follow up on bob's thought that you know there was an incident where they put the d.n.a. of the one nine hundred eighteen flu virus on the internet and then took it down because they thought it could be replicated that can be done in a positive way to even though people don't remember the one thousand nine hundred eighteen epidemic or may soon not remember the glory days of the post-war america will have the information will have the d.n.a. we have more information accessible online than
a decent economy at least the economy was a center piece of our of our politics i think for this millennia old generation to be very different i think they are and you know one of the worst economy since the great depression and they are the ones that go to college are bearing these huge student debts and their focus on what's going to make this economy work for people again is reflected in the movement i think and it's and it's going to pose a set of very different questions for that...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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CNNW
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. >> a millennia ago in a period just under 250 years, over 4,000 structures like this were built hereism. he started a new temple every 14 days. over 3,000 pagodas, temples, and monasteries remain today. inside almost every one of them, a buddha figure, each one of them, different. >> and i like how integrated it is with the frieze, postures. >> funny you mention that. people used to live here and the government came along in the '80s and relocated them. it was a mass relocation project. this is tourist bucks here. they relocated the entire population. we're in one of the first mass waves of tourists. european tourists have been coming here in small numbers for a long time but it's the flood gates have opened. they are building hotels like crazy in this area called the tourist triangle. >> what is this here? this is a scarf. >> as myanmar begins the shift to accommodating tourism and the service economy to go with it there will be adjustments. there will be a downside. >> what is that going to mean? how will burmese react to all of the good and evils that come with tourism? it's going
. >> a millennia ago in a period just under 250 years, over 4,000 structures like this were built hereism. he started a new temple every 14 days. over 3,000 pagodas, temples, and monasteries remain today. inside almost every one of them, a buddha figure, each one of them, different. >> and i like how integrated it is with the frieze, postures. >> funny you mention that. people used to live here and the government came along in the '80s and relocated them. it was a mass...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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FBC
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defeating the taliban we could create an afghan government centralized power, and overturn about two millenniaf tribal practice in the region. make no mistake, if taliban gets back into power in afghanistan, the most likely result, al qaeda will come back, be right back to where we were before 9/11. >>ambassador, sort this out for us. we after years there, we now know forces in pakistan are working with the taliban negotiating. we now know that karzai himself has been negotiating with the taliban. this administration doing so as well. the reemergence of taliban is stunning and it is a fact, is it not? >> it is a factnd pakistan has been part of the problem from the get go as on analyst said. pakistan is the only country in the world he knows of where it is composed in the leadership of both arsonist and firefighters because in effect, the pakistani government did set up the taliban, they financed the mujahideen before them, created extremists in cashmere, it is all coming to haunt us. let's be clear if taliban takes afghanistan back, it will strengthen pakistani taliban. if that government goe
defeating the taliban we could create an afghan government centralized power, and overturn about two millenniaf tribal practice in the region. make no mistake, if taliban gets back into power in afghanistan, the most likely result, al qaeda will come back, be right back to where we were before 9/11. >>ambassador, sort this out for us. we after years there, we now know forces in pakistan are working with the taliban negotiating. we now know that karzai himself has been negotiating with the...
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Feb 9, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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demographic of the arab world that's under 30, where does the religious culture that goes back over a millennia intersect with the economic needs of that group, and how would you extrapolate that trend into the future? well, -- >> well, as i said, polls in the arab world show that regardless of whether people are secular and religious and, you know, in many countries of the arab world the overwhelming population is rather conservative and religious. but regardless of that factor, all arabs, secular and religious, worry most about the economy. and worry most about their government being able to provide jobs for them. another alarming statistic related to this, the unemployment rate in the arab world is double the world's average. double. and that shows that economic policies of the arab world today have not been -- and, obvious, i mean -- of course, i'm talking about the arab world as if it's monolithic. but by and large, by and large the economic policies have not succeeded in addressing this issue. in my own view, it is largely because, you know, we with bring up generations that -- of people
demographic of the arab world that's under 30, where does the religious culture that goes back over a millennia intersect with the economic needs of that group, and how would you extrapolate that trend into the future? well, -- >> well, as i said, polls in the arab world show that regardless of whether people are secular and religious and, you know, in many countries of the arab world the overwhelming population is rather conservative and religious. but regardless of that factor, all...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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that means that for centuries, and even millennia, no one knew how to create stuff.o one knew how to create wealth . our member as a kid, i would go to school and i would have 10 marbles that would look at the other kids and they had more marbles than i did and i said to myself, how do i go from having 10 marbles to 12 marbles? i realize there was no way. none of us had any money. we had marbles. me to goway for from 10 to 12 was to take someone else's to marbles. historically, wealth was acquired through theft, through acquisition, and through conquest. how did countries get founded? machiavelli says all great nations are founded in crime. you found a country by invading someone else's country, killing who is running it, and declaring yourself king. that is how wealth was obtained for thousands of years. you can start with 10 marbles and end up with 15 marbles without stealing someone else's marbles, that is the american ideal. that is a very old idea. you can, in a sense, create something out of nothing. it is virtually divine. the reason this one unnoticed for cen
that means that for centuries, and even millennia, no one knew how to create stuff.o one knew how to create wealth . our member as a kid, i would go to school and i would have 10 marbles that would look at the other kids and they had more marbles than i did and i said to myself, how do i go from having 10 marbles to 12 marbles? i realize there was no way. none of us had any money. we had marbles. me to goway for from 10 to 12 was to take someone else's to marbles. historically, wealth was...
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. >> multitasking people have been doing for millennia.ng up on "gma" -- >> what's gotten into victoria beckham. how she was caught flat-footed and what it could mean to all followers of fashion. i had ongoing pain. an intense ache all over. it was hard to do what mattered. my doctor diagnosed it as fibromyalgia... thought to be the result of overactive nerves that cause chronic, widespread pain. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i learned lyrica can significantly relieve fibromyalgia pain. for some, as early as the first week of treatment. now, i can do more with the ones i love. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eyesight including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, or tired feeling. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don'
. >> multitasking people have been doing for millennia.ng up on "gma" -- >> what's gotten into victoria beckham. how she was caught flat-footed and what it could mean to all followers of fashion. i had ongoing pain. an intense ache all over. it was hard to do what mattered. my doctor diagnosed it as fibromyalgia... thought to be the result of overactive nerves that cause chronic, widespread pain. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i learned lyrica can significantly...
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83
Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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eye 83
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that means that for centuries, and even millennia, no one knew how to create stuff. no one knew how to create wealth. i remember as a kid, i would go to school and i would have 10 marbles that would look at the other kids and they had more marbles than i did and i said to myself, how do i go from having 10 marbles to 12 marbles? i realize there was no way. none of us had any money. we had marbles. the only way for me to go from 10 to 12 was to take someone else's to marbles. historically, wealth was cquired through theft, through acquisition, and through conquest. how did countries get founded? machiavelli says all great nations are founded in crime. you found a country by invading someone else's country, killing who is running it, and declaring yourself king. that is how wealth was obtained or thousands of years. the idea that you can start with 10 marbles and end up with 15 marbles without stealing someone else's marbles, that is the merican ideal. that is a very bold idea. that you can, in a sense, create something out of nothing. it is virtually divine. the reaso
that means that for centuries, and even millennia, no one knew how to create stuff. no one knew how to create wealth. i remember as a kid, i would go to school and i would have 10 marbles that would look at the other kids and they had more marbles than i did and i said to myself, how do i go from having 10 marbles to 12 marbles? i realize there was no way. none of us had any money. we had marbles. the only way for me to go from 10 to 12 was to take someone else's to marbles. historically,...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 138
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pretty that's something we've always had with us and people have struggled with her not centuries but millennia. and our generation, we may be within sight of finally dealing with extreme poverty. that's because these technologies are creating so much bounty and so much wealth. the issue is going to be distribution and managing the disruption associated with it. but in terms of material progress we are doing quite impressively. >> i don't want to brag but bono was my warm-up act at it. he gave this not a presentation to give got to watch it about the real potential, the likely trajectory to wipe out extreme poverty in southern africa and by extension than ever of the to echo erik, that is not independent from technological progress at all. there's beautiful research done that shows what happened in the poorest parts of the world when people get mobile phones for the first time that the economic lives go on a completely different and better trajectory. it's critically important. >> starting with the, 3-d printers and a whole lot of other set of technologies that seem to be science fiction a few
pretty that's something we've always had with us and people have struggled with her not centuries but millennia. and our generation, we may be within sight of finally dealing with extreme poverty. that's because these technologies are creating so much bounty and so much wealth. the issue is going to be distribution and managing the disruption associated with it. but in terms of material progress we are doing quite impressively. >> i don't want to brag but bono was my warm-up act at it. he...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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living out of the ground, people who are living in the rest of the world the way they have lived for millenniall of those people can now see that there is a better, more prosperous, more abundant way to live with more possibility and it is nothing short of shameful to go around lecturing those people on what they should want from the benefits of western modernity, privileged enjoying , all these accoutrements and telling other people that they do not deserve modernity is a disgrace and you have no right to do it. now, those are the people who want what we have, and frankly they do not want our generosity. this is probably the greatest insult of globalization. the chinese? we don't need you. we will do it ourselves. we will take over the world economy and become the manufacturing center of the world. send all of your aid workers home. this is powerful stuff. they have learned our recipe. so here is my point -- here we are at dartmouth. what to be in the middle of the 21st century? don't sit around saying, we did civil rights, we did feminist rights, we have done gay rights. whose rights now? yo
living out of the ground, people who are living in the rest of the world the way they have lived for millenniall of those people can now see that there is a better, more prosperous, more abundant way to live with more possibility and it is nothing short of shameful to go around lecturing those people on what they should want from the benefits of western modernity, privileged enjoying , all these accoutrements and telling other people that they do not deserve modernity is a disgrace and you have...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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eye 106
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understand that you take the bible as written in glacier and translate it many times over the last three millennia. it has to be the more accurate, the more reasonable assessment of the natural laws we see. that to me is unsettling, troubling. about the disease thing, have the fish centers done something wrong -- were they centers to get diseases? that is an extra ordinary claim that takes me past where i am come to bowl. as far as you cannot observe the past, i have to stop you right there. that is what we do in astronomy. all we can do is look at the past. by the way, you're looking at the past right now. the speed of light bounces off of me and gets to your eyes. i am delighted to see that people in the back of the room appear that much younger than the people in the front. this idea that you can separate the natural laws of the past from the natural laws that we have now is at the heart of our disagreement. i do not see how we're going to agree with that if you insist that natural laws have changed. it is magical for lack of a better word. i have appreciated magic since i was a kid but it is n
understand that you take the bible as written in glacier and translate it many times over the last three millennia. it has to be the more accurate, the more reasonable assessment of the natural laws we see. that to me is unsettling, troubling. about the disease thing, have the fish centers done something wrong -- were they centers to get diseases? that is an extra ordinary claim that takes me past where i am come to bowl. as far as you cannot observe the past, i have to stop you right there....
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Feb 11, 2014
02/14
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to point in history and if we do not give scotland its independence, we will be denying it those millenniaof destiny. the plain fact is that is a load of emotional tosh. we understand the true history. if you go back further, up to most people owed allegiance to the north side, to the king of norway through the earl of orkney, one of my ancestors, i have to say that were scotland to find itself in the impossible position of being independent, i think i should be joining my good friends in the northern isles in seeking independence and going back to that earldom. really want to say is we need to assess the risks and we need to assess the risks as well as the benefits. i hope the debate will become rational. when i first joined the select committee, we were looking at globalization. you have to look at globalization to see what is happening in business so when we talk about what might happen to business, we do have to look at where best would companies be regulated and the financial services industry in scotland may think it is better off regulated in a different jurisdiction. abouthave to t
to point in history and if we do not give scotland its independence, we will be denying it those millenniaof destiny. the plain fact is that is a load of emotional tosh. we understand the true history. if you go back further, up to most people owed allegiance to the north side, to the king of norway through the earl of orkney, one of my ancestors, i have to say that were scotland to find itself in the impossible position of being independent, i think i should be joining my good friends in the...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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CNNW
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millennia millennials. here's the thing. i know millennials get a bat rap. the entitled thing. young professional with enough courage to reach out someone very senior. is it warranted? >> i don't think so. i was going back and looking at our records and i hired four or five people who approached me by twitter or by facebook. a lot comes down to tone. i don't think that the tone of the approach was off putting even. if she had written to me, i would have started a one on one chat. three weekends ago someone wrote me a cute e-mail. she said i agreed to do a face time with her. it's a brave new world. i am not sure rejecting them that way makes sense, once reject got posted, it made me nervous. >> how do you mean? >> i'm more nervous about that once i found out what she did to the poor boomer who wrote that rejection note. probably the right psyche would have been just lead it go. not let's turn it into the cause. >> i got an e-mail and people reach out to me all the time. young journals. i love it and i get to one out of three each and every time. i appreciate the courage. you wo
millennia millennials. here's the thing. i know millennials get a bat rap. the entitled thing. young professional with enough courage to reach out someone very senior. is it warranted? >> i don't think so. i was going back and looking at our records and i hired four or five people who approached me by twitter or by facebook. a lot comes down to tone. i don't think that the tone of the approach was off putting even. if she had written to me, i would have started a one on one chat. three...
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119
Feb 19, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 119
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so i would say that, you know, if a law professor you're talking about is saying, welcome millennia of$0 settlement you're encouraging people to bring these class actions. now you won't. i was said is a feature, not a bug. >> lester, bob, about? >> as an academic in a very distinct minority, i have taken note in my book about the reliance of most legal scholars on a belief in the deterrence value of class-action. indeed, i regard that from their perspective as a matter of faith that is, it is a conviction that if corporations pay billions of dollars to settle class actions, that must be good. now, when you look behind that to see whether there is any empirical basis for that you find out wisely that there is none. moreover, you begin, as i have done in my research, dca close financial relationship between the legal academy and plane to council. there are tens of millions a year, tens of millions of dollars a year that move from plaintiffs' counsel to members of the legal academy for, among other things, to do with class actions what i call and my book the fee council are law professors
so i would say that, you know, if a law professor you're talking about is saying, welcome millennia of$0 settlement you're encouraging people to bring these class actions. now you won't. i was said is a feature, not a bug. >> lester, bob, about? >> as an academic in a very distinct minority, i have taken note in my book about the reliance of most legal scholars on a belief in the deterrence value of class-action. indeed, i regard that from their perspective as a matter of faith that...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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eye 208
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understand that you take the bible as written in glacier and theslate it many times over last three millennia. it has to be the more accurate, the more reasonable assessment of the natural laws we see. that to me is unsettling, troubling. , havethe disease thing the fish centers done something wrong -- were they centers to get diseases? that is an extra ordinary claim that takes me past where i am come to bowl. as far as you cannot observe the past, i have to stop you right there. that is what we do in astronomy. all we can do is look at the past. by the way, you're looking at the past right now. the speed of light bounces off of me and gets to your eyes. i am delighted to see that people in the back of the room appear that much younger than the people in the front. separate that you can the natural laws of the past from the natural laws that we have now is at the heart of our disagreement. i do not see how we're going to agree with that if you insist that natural laws have changed. it is magical for lack of a better word. i have appreciated magic since i was a kid but it is not what we want
understand that you take the bible as written in glacier and theslate it many times over last three millennia. it has to be the more accurate, the more reasonable assessment of the natural laws we see. that to me is unsettling, troubling. , havethe disease thing the fish centers done something wrong -- were they centers to get diseases? that is an extra ordinary claim that takes me past where i am come to bowl. as far as you cannot observe the past, i have to stop you right there. that is what...