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Aug 16, 2015
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proves that you have minds whether you have minds american minds proves to be seen. i want to thank the templeton press for commissioning mike kollek mark powerline and myself to edit and compile this volume. i want to say a special note of thanks to mark the passing of our good friend dr. jack templeton, whose whose friend who's idea was to do this book. as you may know he died recently, he was the head of the templeton foundation and a person who i knew somewhat, and it was my great pleasure to know him. he was a person of deep and serious interest in this book came out of a very deep concern that he had about the state of america as a cognitive and intellectual enterprise. he understood, as many of us do that america's is a nation founded on ideas, that the citizenship depends upon intellectual clarity and engagement and in a sense a grasp of the nation's founding principles. we are born americans but in a sense we become americans through our education and experience, and through the way which we seek to embody the principles of the founding and of the american h
proves that you have minds whether you have minds american minds proves to be seen. i want to thank the templeton press for commissioning mike kollek mark powerline and myself to edit and compile this volume. i want to say a special note of thanks to mark the passing of our good friend dr. jack templeton, whose whose friend who's idea was to do this book. as you may know he died recently, he was the head of the templeton foundation and a person who i knew somewhat, and it was my great pleasure...
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Aug 2, 2015
08/15
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>> yeah i would argue with that. >> okay. >> i think that everybody can be mindful. and that what the employer needs to do is look at the policies that are in place that actually foster mindlessness. >> according to ellen, mindfulness or lack of it can have real world consequences. like when a public comment is made without thinking about the perspective of the audience. >> there's no one who want this is thing over more than i do. i would love my life back. >> former ceo of british petroleum, tony heyward, talking about cleaning up the 2010 deep horizon water spill. >> i'm sorry for inconveniencing him. maybe he would be on a summer vacation. >> bobby jindal's reaction was shared by many. >> yesterday, hayward post this had apology for what he called his hurtful and thoughtless comment. >> had he been more mindful, ellen says he might not needed to have apologized for he his comment. >> since everything wases always change changing, that thing you thought you new is now different. >> if you're mindful there's no absolutes? >> absolutely. >> thank you so much for joi
>> yeah i would argue with that. >> okay. >> i think that everybody can be mindful. and that what the employer needs to do is look at the policies that are in place that actually foster mindlessness. >> according to ellen, mindfulness or lack of it can have real world consequences. like when a public comment is made without thinking about the perspective of the audience. >> there's no one who want this is thing over more than i do. i would love my life back....
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Aug 8, 2015
08/15
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i think that everybody can be mindful. and that what the employer needs to do is look at the policies in place that force your mindlessly. >> mindfulness or lack of it can have real world consequences. like when a public comment is made without considering the audience. >> the former ceo of british petroleum talking about cleaning up the 2010 deep water horizon in the gulf of mexico. >> i am sorry for inconveniencing him. >> yesterday, heyward posted this apology for the hurtful comment. >> had he been more mindful he would not have needed to apologize for his comment. >> that thing you thought you new is now something different. >> there are no absolutes. >> if you're mindful there are no absolutes? >> absolutely. >>> thank you for joining us today. if you want to learn more about the show, go to our website. we'll have all of today's segments posted an web exclusive pieces. also follow us on twitter, facebook, and instagram as well. next time we kick off our tenth season of "your business" as go to the u.s./mexican borde
i think that everybody can be mindful. and that what the employer needs to do is look at the policies in place that force your mindlessly. >> mindfulness or lack of it can have real world consequences. like when a public comment is made without considering the audience. >> the former ceo of british petroleum talking about cleaning up the 2010 deep water horizon in the gulf of mexico. >> i am sorry for inconveniencing him. >> yesterday, heyward posted this apology for the...
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Aug 20, 2015
08/15
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for other women who have that goal in mind, keep that goal in mind and just koent lose sight of it andminding yourself of why you are there and they will be fine. >> jim miklaszewski with nbc news and also for the two women, no surprise, i guess, first of all, what made you pursue the army ranger course? what made you come here to do that? second, at any time during the training, did either one of you think about quitting? did you ever reach that low point where you actually thought about quitting? and then, the third part -- well, do those two and then i'll do a follow up. >> sir, i definitely wanted to come to ranger school for the last couple of years since i learned about it at west point. i had a lot of mentors and peers that were training to go so they really just motivated me to get in that mindset and try to improve myself as a leader and try to be the best officer i could be. that's been about four or five years now. as far as -- sorry, what was the second question? >> did you ever think about quitting at any point? >> i never seriously considered it. i definitely had low poin
for other women who have that goal in mind, keep that goal in mind and just koent lose sight of it andminding yourself of why you are there and they will be fine. >> jim miklaszewski with nbc news and also for the two women, no surprise, i guess, first of all, what made you pursue the army ranger course? what made you come here to do that? second, at any time during the training, did either one of you think about quitting? did you ever reach that low point where you actually thought about...
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Aug 19, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
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and someone else can take control of your mind. >> jen ger's o.c.d. -- jennifer's o.c.d. is so severe she insisted keeping on the gloves she wears everywhere, even in the operating room. they provide a unique way for doctors to measure whether the electrodes in the brain tart the . >> are you able to take your glove off. >> i could take them off, but i wouldn't want to touch anything. >> a different contact in the brain, and voltage, and jennifer's move changes. >> if someone takes the gloves, i'd probably start crying. >> you would not expect someone to turn off a switch saying "i have no o.c.d., i'm cured itself. the effect is cumulative. you get a little bitter until function. >> reporter: the highs and lows are an emotional roller-coaster for jennifer. >> you're not going to let me be happy and smiley. >> reporter: minutes later... >> this feels bad. >> it makes be depressed. i just want to curl up in a ball and die. >> reporter: is there an unlimited realm as to what we could look at. >> it's modifying the brain circumstanceatery. any function the brain has, we have
and someone else can take control of your mind. >> jen ger's o.c.d. -- jennifer's o.c.d. is so severe she insisted keeping on the gloves she wears everywhere, even in the operating room. they provide a unique way for doctors to measure whether the electrodes in the brain tart the . >> are you able to take your glove off. >> i could take them off, but i wouldn't want to touch anything. >> a different contact in the brain, and voltage, and jennifer's move changes. >>...
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Aug 29, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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voters do change their mind.said all that, i think his bigger problem is the groups, the american electorate he has almost gone out of his way to alienate and offend. most republican strategists frankly believe that a strategy of running hardcore immigration campaign is not going to help you win the president as a general election nominee. >> i was listening to a pollster this morning saying you need like 64% of the white vote if donald trump wants to win a general election. that's sort of unattainable right now for any candidate so you need to broaden the tent and that tent needs to encompass minority voters. let me ask you this. i want to turn to hillary clinton. top five words people use to describe her. liar, dishonest, untrust worthy, experienced and strong. the top three words, troubling. the latter two, helpful. >> its's interesting, two sides of the coin there. with hillary clinton, she has had this problem, this perception of her going back to her years frankly in arkansas, in the white house, when she r
voters do change their mind.said all that, i think his bigger problem is the groups, the american electorate he has almost gone out of his way to alienate and offend. most republican strategists frankly believe that a strategy of running hardcore immigration campaign is not going to help you win the president as a general election nominee. >> i was listening to a pollster this morning saying you need like 64% of the white vote if donald trump wants to win a general election. that's sort...
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Aug 12, 2015
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FOXNEWSW
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it's great. >> for free. >> i don't mind. let him play. have a good time but you know what? at '16 he'll be playing golf and somebody will be saddled with a huge problem. >> let me ask you. you talked about planned pare parenthood. y women, you said you would have shut down the government to defund them and talked about good things they do. >> they do good things they aren't having to do with the abortion. >> with the debt we have, $128 trillion in unfunded liabilities should we give them a penny? >> look, let's say there is two planned parenthoods in a way. you have it as an abortion clinic. now that's actually a fairly small part of what they do but it's a brutal part and i'm totally against it and i wouldn't do that. they also, however, servicewoman men and one of the things that i thought was so terrible when jeb bush and as we said when he talked about women's health issues, he was so bad. like what is he doing? we have to help women. a lot of women are helped. we have to look at the positives, also, for planned parenthood. even a guy
it's great. >> for free. >> i don't mind. let him play. have a good time but you know what? at '16 he'll be playing golf and somebody will be saddled with a huge problem. >> let me ask you. you talked about planned pare parenthood. y women, you said you would have shut down the government to defund them and talked about good things they do. >> they do good things they aren't having to do with the abortion. >> with the debt we have, $128 trillion in unfunded...
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Aug 5, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
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keep in mind, unilateral u.s. sanctions against iran had been in place for decades, but had failed to pressure iran to the negotiating table. what made our new approach more effective was our ability to draw upon new u.n. security council resolutions, combining strong enforcement from volunteer agreements from nations like china, india, japan, and south korea to reduce their purchases of iranian oil, as well as a total oil embargo from our european allies. winning this global buy-in was not easy. i know. i was there. in some caseings our partners lost billions of dollars in trade because of their decision to cooperate. but we were able to convince them that absent a diplomatic resolution, the result could be war. with major disruptions to the global economy, and even greater instability in the middle east. in other words it was diplomacy, hard, painstaking diplomacy, not saber rattling, not tough talk, that ratcheted up the pressure on iran. with the world now unified beside us, iran's economy contracted severely,
keep in mind, unilateral u.s. sanctions against iran had been in place for decades, but had failed to pressure iran to the negotiating table. what made our new approach more effective was our ability to draw upon new u.n. security council resolutions, combining strong enforcement from volunteer agreements from nations like china, india, japan, and south korea to reduce their purchases of iranian oil, as well as a total oil embargo from our european allies. winning this global buy-in was not...
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Aug 15, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN
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there is -- there is one big mind. there is the red and blue need a mind to gold king. then the mogul mine owned by todd headedness -- henness. without a lot of funding to do these cleanups, with which ,equire water treatment plants one method short of that that the state favored is using bulkheads, concrete structures put inside mines that plug them. that creates backup of wastewater in mines. area, visualize the mining going back a century, there is an underground maze full of tunnels up to 100 miles long. the legacy of human effort to take out minerals in those areas. connectivity in that maze is a mystery. natural faults and fishers as well in those tunnels. one theory for what happened is that the creation of bulkheads in the sunnyside mine has acted bepools of water that may willing up in the other mines. in looking at some of the epa's documents on the sites, they noticed the increase in discharge in recent years from the mogul, the red and bonita, and the gold king mine following the installation of bulkheads in the sunnyside mine. that is a lot of complicated d
there is -- there is one big mind. there is the red and blue need a mind to gold king. then the mogul mine owned by todd headedness -- henness. without a lot of funding to do these cleanups, with which ,equire water treatment plants one method short of that that the state favored is using bulkheads, concrete structures put inside mines that plug them. that creates backup of wastewater in mines. area, visualize the mining going back a century, there is an underground maze full of tunnels up to...
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Aug 5, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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>> it keeps my mind busy.emories start flooding my mind. >> for ariel soccer is his savior. >> translator: two days after i was released from the hospital i went to go play with my neighborhood soccer team. >> and his little hope is a big sister. ariel alejandro ticona segovia is welcomed into the world on july 9th. this new child also comes during a very trying time. but ariel refuses to let his struggles get the best of him. >> translator: every time i come here i remember the happy moments i shared with the other miners. >> does that help you keep living? >> it gives me strength. we have to learn from the bad things in life. sometimes in life you smile. sometimes you cry. but from those tears you have to find happiness. >> a symbol of that resilience, the cross designed to memorialize dead miners now stands where 33 men got a second chance at life. where some believe god created a where some believe god created a miner miracle. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> the stage is set. the crowded field of
>> it keeps my mind busy.emories start flooding my mind. >> for ariel soccer is his savior. >> translator: two days after i was released from the hospital i went to go play with my neighborhood soccer team. >> and his little hope is a big sister. ariel alejandro ticona segovia is welcomed into the world on july 9th. this new child also comes during a very trying time. but ariel refuses to let his struggles get the best of him. >> translator: every time i come here...
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Aug 12, 2015
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we always have the safety of our customers and the community in mind. my family is in oakland, my wife's family is in oakland so this is home to us. being able to work in the community that i grew up in, customers feel like friends, neighbors and it makes it a little bit more special. together, we're building a better california. >>> live from america's news headquarters, i'm jackie ibanez. hillary clinton agreeing to turn over her private computer server to the justice department. this as fox learned two of the e-mails on the nonsecure server were deemed top secret. mrs. clinton has been criticized for using the nonsecure server during her tenure as secretary of state. clinton has maintained none of the e-mails were classified when transmitted. a smaller group of protesters gathering on the streets of ferguson, missouri tuesday night. they're continuing to mark the one-year anniversary of michael brown's death. so far there has been a couple of scuffles, but no word of any violence. it's a stark difference from sunday night when there was gunfire in th
we always have the safety of our customers and the community in mind. my family is in oakland, my wife's family is in oakland so this is home to us. being able to work in the community that i grew up in, customers feel like friends, neighbors and it makes it a little bit more special. together, we're building a better california. >>> live from america's news headquarters, i'm jackie ibanez. hillary clinton agreeing to turn over her private computer server to the justice department....
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Aug 5, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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keep in mind, unilateral u.s. sanctions against iran had been in place for decades but failed to pressure iran to the negotiating table. what made it more effective was our ability to draw on new u.n. security council resolutions combining strong enforcement with voluntary agreements from nations like china, india, japan and south korea, to reduce their purchases of iranian oil as well as the imposition of our european allies of a total oim embargo. winning this global buy-in was not easy. i know. i was there. [ laughter ] in some cases, our partners lost billions of dollars in trade because of their decision to cooperate. but we were able to convince them that absent a diplomatic resolution the result could be war with major disruptions to the global economy and even greater instability in the middle east. in other words, it was diplomacy -- hard, painstaking diplomacy -- not sabre rattling, not tough talk that ratcheted up the pressure on iran. with the world now unified beside us, iran's economy contracted seve
keep in mind, unilateral u.s. sanctions against iran had been in place for decades but failed to pressure iran to the negotiating table. what made it more effective was our ability to draw on new u.n. security council resolutions combining strong enforcement with voluntary agreements from nations like china, india, japan and south korea, to reduce their purchases of iranian oil as well as the imposition of our european allies of a total oim embargo. winning this global buy-in was not easy. i...
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Aug 23, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN3
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you want to engrave these in our mind. as you well know, american women had taken over the elementary school teaching by the end of the 19th century. they dominate the school teaching force by the end of the 19th century. in the 1950's, the famous baby-boom that began in the 1940's, i am one of those babies , the cause of those babies, the increase in fertility among american women, because of the baby boom, new schools were being built all over america and those schools needed schoolteachers. ,he cause of the baby-boom there is this huge expansion in the demand for schoolteachers. those are jobs that were already categorized. the demand for women workers as teachers expand dramatically in the 1950's. so dramatically the demand was so great, in the 1950's the marriage bars to teachers finally dropped. in the 1930's we talked about this. that most american school districts in the 1930's but not higher woman to teach if she were married. many of them would fire her if she got married when she was on the job. those are called
you want to engrave these in our mind. as you well know, american women had taken over the elementary school teaching by the end of the 19th century. they dominate the school teaching force by the end of the 19th century. in the 1950's, the famous baby-boom that began in the 1940's, i am one of those babies , the cause of those babies, the increase in fertility among american women, because of the baby boom, new schools were being built all over america and those schools needed schoolteachers....
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Aug 7, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
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they have woken up with the same thought in their mind and gone to bed with the same thought in mind - what happened to loved ones. until, of course we find the flight recorders, we will not know the answers to the questions, whether it was an accident or indeed something more sinister. >> some of the families are not dubious, they are angry. >> they are angry, but also i think, it's fair to say that they are, you know in denial. i mean when you speak to them the psychological strain has clearly taken its toll. there was a group of people we saw this morning who essentially packed up their lives, and live in a shabby apartment close to where i'm standing and devote themselves to badgering malaysia airlines. it's fair to say that what really underpins the anger that you mentioned is the feeling that the government in beijing, and malaysia is not showing enough sensitivity and sympathy to their flight. >> and a flight it is. sad. a year later. adrian brown, thank you for joining us from beijing. >> turning to the italian coast where hundreds of migrants are recovering after being saved
they have woken up with the same thought in their mind and gone to bed with the same thought in mind - what happened to loved ones. until, of course we find the flight recorders, we will not know the answers to the questions, whether it was an accident or indeed something more sinister. >> some of the families are not dubious, they are angry. >> they are angry, but also i think, it's fair to say that they are, you know in denial. i mean when you speak to them the psychological...
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Aug 29, 2015
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>> i think people are keeping an open mind.e to do with hillary clinton than joe biden. there are reasons why joe biden did not move to enter the race initially. he is beloved as vice president, very successful senator, but older than ronald reagan on inaugural day in 2017, ran for president twice before without great impact. i think his course in the race is determined more by what happens to hillary clinton than it does by what happened to joe biden, so keeping an open mind is the precise message, precisely right message. democrats with a biden candidacy will be shaped by a large extent what happens to hillary clinton, particularly over the e-mail controversy. >> want to play something that former governor martin o'malley said and talk about it. let's play it. >> think about it. the republicans stand before the nation, they malign our president's record of achievement. they denigrate women and immigrant families, double down on trickle down and tell their false story. and we respond with crickets. tumble weeds. cynical move t
>> i think people are keeping an open mind.e to do with hillary clinton than joe biden. there are reasons why joe biden did not move to enter the race initially. he is beloved as vice president, very successful senator, but older than ronald reagan on inaugural day in 2017, ran for president twice before without great impact. i think his course in the race is determined more by what happens to hillary clinton than it does by what happened to joe biden, so keeping an open mind is the...
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Aug 31, 2015
08/15
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but no point were active reflection is far away from my mind as they always think about it but i could do it pretty easily. so that gave me a sense of of power meant but i realized it is difficult for some people to understand or appreciate this. some said this is neat and they would play the game with me. i had college friends who were very fascinated but then there is another dimension those that focus on that aspect that i realize also posted -- posed some challenges of the shoals of identity. so what would that mean to me? would that bother me that i felt so singular and distinctive? that for anybody else would talk about how appropriate? >> their realization at the level and of the sensibilities i was approaching. with the identities that i thought it meant but other people have different reasons and i had to a knowledge. >> host: when you got to oxford did you divert your british trend to call people boilers? you were using the slang? [laughter] >> even on the one hand i thought that average sharing something with them to learn these words or the terms to use them very playfully
but no point were active reflection is far away from my mind as they always think about it but i could do it pretty easily. so that gave me a sense of of power meant but i realized it is difficult for some people to understand or appreciate this. some said this is neat and they would play the game with me. i had college friends who were very fascinated but then there is another dimension those that focus on that aspect that i realize also posted -- posed some challenges of the shoals of...
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Aug 7, 2015
08/15
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>> i thought are they out of their minds?rter: septa remain us this was always a no parking bus stop zone and that the newly painted lines simply followed a repaving of richmond street. but for folks at richmond and ontario the lengthy zone represents a loss of precious street parking already in short supply. >> it's going to be horrible. i don't know what we're supposed to do with five spots we just loft. >> reporter: to make matters worse, she and her neighbors say this bus stop is rarely ever used. no surprise. since it sits just two blocks from the septa bus terminal at richmond and west more land. >> i see a fellow there maybe once or twice a week, and i see a lady get off once in blue moon. >> reporter: there's more. by policy septa bus drivers are supposed to pull out of their driving lane and into the painted bus zone to pick up and discharge passengers. but if you've ever gotten stuck behind a septa bus, you know they rarely pull over. they have to fight their way to get back into the traffic lane. sure enough the bu
>> i thought are they out of their minds?rter: septa remain us this was always a no parking bus stop zone and that the newly painted lines simply followed a repaving of richmond street. but for folks at richmond and ontario the lengthy zone represents a loss of precious street parking already in short supply. >> it's going to be horrible. i don't know what we're supposed to do with five spots we just loft. >> reporter: to make matters worse, she and her neighbors say this bus...
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Aug 8, 2015
08/15
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and adversary drug cartels in my mind and in expert's minds, cannot be beaten. and this accompanied by the rising tide of criminality and violence that the war has produced. so i go to my second i, which is impunity. a month ago, a respected academic published a report called anatomy of corruption in mexico where she examined that it is present in almost all transactions. there are 4 million acts of corruption in mexico committed on a yearly basis. corruption is ever-present in everyday life from the bribe you have to pay the person who collects the trash who works for the city government at the gasoline pumps where you're -- you pay more than what you get for. corruption present in the escape of el chapo and public goods whether it be spectrum or a high-speed train. corruption present in tax breaks for mexican companies. with increasingly negative consequences. i'm sure there are people here who would argue, that can't be the issue that's holding mexico back. look at china. there are countries that are extremely corruption and they're growing. the problem is it
and adversary drug cartels in my mind and in expert's minds, cannot be beaten. and this accompanied by the rising tide of criminality and violence that the war has produced. so i go to my second i, which is impunity. a month ago, a respected academic published a report called anatomy of corruption in mexico where she examined that it is present in almost all transactions. there are 4 million acts of corruption in mexico committed on a yearly basis. corruption is ever-present in everyday life...
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Aug 2, 2015
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we need to keep the creation in mind.nt or a lot of other things. >> the way that i started drifting towards the way that i ended up going to art school was through working on sojourner truth. she didn't read and write but have her pictures taken. you know that photograph of sojourner truth. sitting there very nicely and then before i knew anything there was this verbal sojourner truth with all this sort of thing which was the very fierce kind of person. it was a controlled self fashioning and she showed herself as a respectable well-dressed matron. she didn't show herself as an angry woman or freedom fighter. she was a person of the mid-19th century. part of the self fashioning all of our self fashioning his individuals. this is very hard to do in our society which wants to make us units of race or units of sexuality but each of us is an individual or a particular past or particular family. of those relatives were he to me and one of the things wasn't that she wasn't ripping it open in front of people and talking about a
we need to keep the creation in mind.nt or a lot of other things. >> the way that i started drifting towards the way that i ended up going to art school was through working on sojourner truth. she didn't read and write but have her pictures taken. you know that photograph of sojourner truth. sitting there very nicely and then before i knew anything there was this verbal sojourner truth with all this sort of thing which was the very fierce kind of person. it was a controlled self...
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Aug 23, 2015
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sense of humor but open mind, astonished by what she was discovering. i thought i should write a book about her because i thought she was me. that feeling -- frustration of not quite being able to be part of entirely but as great section for the culture that you have learning intim -- >> the roots are completely different from the last. you can go to a modern city like tokyo and feel like you're in a foreign country. >> very much. >> lets talk a little bit about the world that these girls came from because it's so completely than what they went into. a passage that talks about the education, what the education would have been at the start of the -- >> right, right. let me find it. >> you can imagine what that world would have looked like. >> the oldest of the three girls grew up as a world as it had been, a girl would include the 18th century, learning for women the only quality that fit a women are obedience to parents, husband and in-laws above all. a girl of this culture received a dagger and her mother made sure she knew how to use it not only in se
sense of humor but open mind, astonished by what she was discovering. i thought i should write a book about her because i thought she was me. that feeling -- frustration of not quite being able to be part of entirely but as great section for the culture that you have learning intim -- >> the roots are completely different from the last. you can go to a modern city like tokyo and feel like you're in a foreign country. >> very much. >> lets talk a little bit about the world that...
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Aug 3, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
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in and the sun came up and we were in the hotel and had a good view of tehran the city that came to mindlos angeles. there are cities and mountains and it's relatively flat otherwise and it's spread out and there are freeways everywhere and they are heavily trafficked, high rises, apartment buildings and commercial areas with low slum buildings for shopping. we sort of rolled with a team of five. there was our photographer, my producer, our handler who is a representative of the agencies who handle you on behalf of the government and mostly they help you because it's a state when you are shooting for t.v. you get stopped all the time by various levels of police all the time. we had little i.d. cards we carried they made for us and the papers that said we had permission to shoot but it didn't really matter. this is a society where they check your papers and asked their friend if they think it's okay so the handler helps you out and went with us morning and night. there are a few levels of different story you get, one with the cameras on with the government minder there with his phone reco
in and the sun came up and we were in the hotel and had a good view of tehran the city that came to mindlos angeles. there are cities and mountains and it's relatively flat otherwise and it's spread out and there are freeways everywhere and they are heavily trafficked, high rises, apartment buildings and commercial areas with low slum buildings for shopping. we sort of rolled with a team of five. there was our photographer, my producer, our handler who is a representative of the agencies who...
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Aug 22, 2015
08/15
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FBC
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jamie: that was always in the back of your mind. >> always in the back of my mind. jamie: in the back of his mind already away back there whether it gets to fronts of dave's mind, his "strange inheritance" muddies the water. >> i think in that process, it opened up a lot of resentment. >> next. and later -- >> when what are you saying? >> where is my mama? >> but first our "strange inheritance" quiz question, how many teeth does the typical at alligator go through in a lifetime? the answer in a moment. >> how many teeth does the typical alligator lose in a lifetime? c. 2 thousand to 3,000. >> in 1986. retired army major dave buys gatorama. a alligator form. it is an exciting time to be in the gator game, they are about to come off the endangered species list. >> it was aparent after a little bit of time there was some money to be made here. >> after her initial reluctance. his wife mayor yet i marietta jd brings her business sense. >> i could note have done it bought her. jamie: they turn it into an attractive attraction, by 1990, gatorama is making a profit. but it
jamie: that was always in the back of your mind. >> always in the back of my mind. jamie: in the back of his mind already away back there whether it gets to fronts of dave's mind, his "strange inheritance" muddies the water. >> i think in that process, it opened up a lot of resentment. >> next. and later -- >> when what are you saying? >> where is my mama? >> but first our "strange inheritance" quiz question, how many teeth does the...
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141
Aug 1, 2015
08/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 141
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>> a british professor believes it is because they are closed minded. he says the other explanation is that they are mentally ill. >> interesting tom. who is funding the study. >> i don't know. >> what if i told you it is the government and by the government i mean the group in conjunction with the council on foreign relations. >> i assume you have proof on that? >> i am working on it. >> let's welcome our guests. these days every kid gets a tree fee and so will her future husband. joanne nosuchunsky. he is the founder of kelkoiq. camille foster. when sonny gets blue her eyes get gray and cloudy and she takes you out with a left hook. bright bart news contribute i -- contributor sonny johnson. and he is a man's man a chauvinist. and okay let's start the show. >> ain't no party like a better fee sanders party. on wednesday night the candidate hosted a nationwide house party for over a hundred thousand supporters. sanders came to a small apartment in washington d.c. and spoke live to the would be foot soldiers who were hosting their own events around the
>> a british professor believes it is because they are closed minded. he says the other explanation is that they are mentally ill. >> interesting tom. who is funding the study. >> i don't know. >> what if i told you it is the government and by the government i mean the group in conjunction with the council on foreign relations. >> i assume you have proof on that? >> i am working on it. >> let's welcome our guests. these days every kid gets a tree fee...
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Aug 18, 2015
08/15
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WJLA
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eye 59
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it's all about the mind-set.roach anything, stress or otherwise. >> that's very true. i agree with you. that's why we meditate every commercial break we can. >> yeah, put a tie on for it. it helps. >> i put my david copperfield out fit on. >> we take it very, very seriously. >> oh. >> that will do it for the news this half hour. >> follow us on facebook wnnfans.com. >>> this morning on "world news now," send in the military. >> that's the plea from firefighters in the northwest battling wildfires raging out of control. get the latest on their struggle and a coast to coast heat wave. >>> demanding specifics from donald trump about his idea to deport 11 million undocumented immigrants. the swarm of attention the republican front-runner gets just about anywhere. >>> amazon anxiety. the scathing report on the company's culture and how workers are treated. response from the top. >>> and later, a health alert on hidden dangers in the swimming pool. the tests on public pools and what they reveal as america tries to stay
it's all about the mind-set.roach anything, stress or otherwise. >> that's very true. i agree with you. that's why we meditate every commercial break we can. >> yeah, put a tie on for it. it helps. >> i put my david copperfield out fit on. >> we take it very, very seriously. >> oh. >> that will do it for the news this half hour. >> follow us on facebook wnnfans.com. >>> this morning on "world news now," send in the military. >>...
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Aug 26, 2015
08/15
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WPVI
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eye 174
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you won't mind if i purele. >> that's okay. jimmy: you're supposed to rub it for like a half hour to get it in there. do you think this stuff works? >> who the hell knows? it makes you feel good. >> jimmy: i do want to mention that i saw blunt talk, and it is very, very funny. patrick stewart is very funny. >> he's fantastic. >> jimmy: that's got to be a thrill for you, because i know you're a big star trek fan and to have captain pickard in a situation where you get to not just work with him but probably hang out with him must be a real thrill for you. >> yeah, it's, i remember going to the tower bar one time after meeting with him and he brought the whole crew there. and i was like, oh, my god. >> jimmy: the crew of the enterprise? >> yeah. they were all having drinks. >> jimmy: really? they're still traveling together? >> apparently, they are still fulfilling missions. i don't know who they're getting their assignments from. but they hang out. >> jimmy: when you get sick, because you do so many voices on your shows, it's lik
you won't mind if i purele. >> that's okay. jimmy: you're supposed to rub it for like a half hour to get it in there. do you think this stuff works? >> who the hell knows? it makes you feel good. >> jimmy: i do want to mention that i saw blunt talk, and it is very, very funny. patrick stewart is very funny. >> he's fantastic. >> jimmy: that's got to be a thrill for you, because i know you're a big star trek fan and to have captain pickard in a situation where you...
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Aug 4, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN
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eye 56
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mind having hillary on their. -- there. jack: i appreciate the feedback and there is no one better than the c-span viewers out there who pay attention to the important stuff to get some validation that we tried to do and it reflects the early states and the voters and what they feel is important. i appreciate the feedback. host: what is the mood it with the voters. you have seen the electorate in different states of mind. how are they this time around? jack: it is interesting. that is a good question. this time around, with no incumbent, both major parties avenue factions within them. on the -- have factions within them. on the republican side, we have the libertarian side of the aisle and a more conservative, outright conservative, and a moderate side. a story the national media is missing is the big difference with the democrats. bernie sanders is shooting from the hip and drawing a crowd. i am hearing he is drawing a lot of younger voters. obama did better and im not sure that hillary is drawing. -- i am not sure that hi
mind having hillary on their. -- there. jack: i appreciate the feedback and there is no one better than the c-span viewers out there who pay attention to the important stuff to get some validation that we tried to do and it reflects the early states and the voters and what they feel is important. i appreciate the feedback. host: what is the mood it with the voters. you have seen the electorate in different states of mind. how are they this time around? jack: it is interesting. that is a good...
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Aug 4, 2015
08/15
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WNYW
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it can affect your mind, your body or both. there's no cure. for the ms patient, the challenges are tough to describe, especially for someone like this who's symptoms aren't physical. >> you can't tell what's going to happen. there's nothing you do. it just happens. >> reporter: she has someone who understands exactly what she he is going through because the same year she was diagnosed with ms, so was her doctor, vince. >> i remember after being diagnosed, i went to the basement of my parents of house and watched tv and started thinking about things. i said i should be able to figure out how to cure this. then after i became a neurologist, i said you can't. >> he was 22-year-old, a graduate of cornell and facing an uncertain future. without a known cure, he followed every development and every treatment there was. >> my mother said you can't treat yourself. you have to see other doctors. after i made the discoveries, i realized the other doctors didn't have the knowledge i have. then i said i have to pull the trump card and started treating mys
it can affect your mind, your body or both. there's no cure. for the ms patient, the challenges are tough to describe, especially for someone like this who's symptoms aren't physical. >> you can't tell what's going to happen. there's nothing you do. it just happens. >> reporter: she has someone who understands exactly what she he is going through because the same year she was diagnosed with ms, so was her doctor, vince. >> i remember after being diagnosed, i went to the...
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135
Aug 30, 2015
08/15
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WCBS
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oliver saches discussed much of his lies exploring the human mind. he turned that into best selling books that inspired millions. today saches died at the age of 82. here's confessa brewer -- contessa brewer. >> in 197 dr. oliver saches came to fame with his book "awakening" documenting how he had freed patients in a brorntion hospital from a catonic state. >> what i believe, what i know, is these people are alive inside. >> the book inspired a 1990 movie. robin williams playing the doctor. in 1996 morley safer sat down with the actor and the scientist for "60 minutes". >> i find this incredible-- combination of incredible gentleness combined with this voracious curiosity. >> that curiosity drove saches to explore the outer limits of the human mind. >> i sometimes feel more at home with my patients than with my neighbors, say. >> reporter: he wrote about his patients helping readers understand and empathize with those whose disorders made them oddities. neurologist orrin daffinski was a close friend. >> scientifically he was able to uncover different
oliver saches discussed much of his lies exploring the human mind. he turned that into best selling books that inspired millions. today saches died at the age of 82. here's confessa brewer -- contessa brewer. >> in 197 dr. oliver saches came to fame with his book "awakening" documenting how he had freed patients in a brorntion hospital from a catonic state. >> what i believe, what i know, is these people are alive inside. >> the book inspired a 1990 movie. robin...
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111
Aug 19, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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eye 111
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. >> a master mind of one of the most horrific killing sprees in u.s. history. >>> the following is a cnn special report. >>> a monster -- >> my world! >> a madman. >> i run with a pack of wolves and i got to be a wolf. >> a master mind of one of the most horrific killing sprees in u.s. history. >> what do you think will happen when i get out? >> the savagery that went on that night. it is income pre hencible. >> charles manson transformed a group of young women into vicious killers. >> he was the dictatorial ruler of the family, the king. >> a man who redefined evil and violently ended seven innocent lives. >> charles manson is one of the worst human beings that ever walked the planet. >> now 45 years after his trial, exclusive interviews with family friends, the prosecutor, the jury, the manson followers. >> he just seemed on fire. >> i'm terrible. i'm a terrible guy. >> face of evil. the charles manson murders. august 9, 1969. it was an unusually hot night when hollywood's prestigious cielo drive. >> it was peaceful and very isolated. it curved aroun
. >> a master mind of one of the most horrific killing sprees in u.s. history. >>> the following is a cnn special report. >>> a monster -- >> my world! >> a madman. >> i run with a pack of wolves and i got to be a wolf. >> a master mind of one of the most horrific killing sprees in u.s. history. >> what do you think will happen when i get out? >> the savagery that went on that night. it is income pre hencible. >> charles manson...
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105
Aug 6, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
eye 105
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what comes to mind? >> the devil, that comes to mind. evil. you know, if -- he is somebody's son, so getting a peek into his life with miss mother is something i would like to know. he hurt my child. he hurt him bad. >> he may be someone's son, but he doesn't think much of your son. >> uh-uh. >> even to this day. >> even to today. how was every raised? >> there was a new interview that i don't even think you're aware of with darren wilson in new yorker magazine. here's what he's saying. do i think about who he was as a person? not really, because it doesn't matter at this point. do i think he had the best upbringing? no. not at all. take that in for a second. >> uh-huh. what do you think? just what i said, that he's evil. he's devilish and he didn't have the right upbringing, because those are words you don't use after taking someone's life and you know you had no reason to. you had no reason to do that, what i did last year hurt me really bad, so his words mean nothing to me. >> have you forgiven him? >> never. never. >> why not? >> why? he w
what comes to mind? >> the devil, that comes to mind. evil. you know, if -- he is somebody's son, so getting a peek into his life with miss mother is something i would like to know. he hurt my child. he hurt him bad. >> he may be someone's son, but he doesn't think much of your son. >> uh-uh. >> even to this day. >> even to today. how was every raised? >> there was a new interview that i don't even think you're aware of with darren wilson in new yorker...
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Aug 16, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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>> no. >> never mind. aisle close with this.ersation on joe biden's deliberations about whether or not to run in 2016. even though he's not sure what he's going to decide. he may return to washington and say, never mind, i thought about it, i'm not going to run. or he may mull it over. as he does, these are some calculations. the vch has been told it will be hard but not imfob pull together a solid campaign team. he's been told he should think first of an iowa to nevada strategy figuring after the first four, he would know whether he could topple hillary clinton from a front-runner strategy or whether it would end in disappointment like the first two and that a campaign through nevada would cause 25, 30, to 100. as in roughly $25 million to $30 million in hard money for the smaller donations and then another $100 million for a super pac. he's been told october 1st is considered by most of his top advisers is the latest to wait to decide whether to get in. there is a joke among close biden providers that he should wait until the
>> no. >> never mind. aisle close with this.ersation on joe biden's deliberations about whether or not to run in 2016. even though he's not sure what he's going to decide. he may return to washington and say, never mind, i thought about it, i'm not going to run. or he may mull it over. as he does, these are some calculations. the vch has been told it will be hard but not imfob pull together a solid campaign team. he's been told he should think first of an iowa to nevada strategy...
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127
Aug 26, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN
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eye 127
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if you have something on your mind, a sheet of a printed carriage, you will finish it. that is one thing he did well. there are not many unfinished pieces. finished pieces had multiple endings. there is only one person he would invite to edit his pieces and that was gertrude stein. he trusted her immensely. one of my favorite stories is when his publisher wrote him back about a book where he used the "f" word. max bergen wrote back and said the world is not ready for this. hemingway said this is the word that describes the character best, so it stays in. they write back and forth about the "f" word being used in the book. hemingway is working on another book. let's just print, publish, and get the money rolling. max perkins thanked him for removing the word. hemingway wrote him back and said, thank you. go fornicate yourself. hemingway's characters are big. he is a hunter. he is a fisherman. he has an ego larger then his own life. that is what people believe, what you tell people about yourself. if he was to sit here and talk about himself, you would think you are with
if you have something on your mind, a sheet of a printed carriage, you will finish it. that is one thing he did well. there are not many unfinished pieces. finished pieces had multiple endings. there is only one person he would invite to edit his pieces and that was gertrude stein. he trusted her immensely. one of my favorite stories is when his publisher wrote him back about a book where he used the "f" word. max bergen wrote back and said the world is not ready for this. hemingway...
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200
Aug 28, 2015
08/15
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CNNW
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eye 200
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that was not in my mind at all.s time went on, as people in the control room for trying we get in touch with them through texting, the longer it was that we didn't get a response from either of them, the more it was very, very clear that something had happened, that something was very wrong. each moment i got more and more worried. and it was toward the end of the newscast, came back and we addressed the sounds to our viewers. we said we know you heard a sound during alison's live shot. we don't know exactly what it is. we will let you know when we do. it was after we were off the air that we found out. >> and it would be later still before she and others would realize it was a former coworker who who pulled that trigger. vester flanagan had long raised red flags in the workplace. and vinrtually every place he hd worked before. you know, this week a lot of people are wondering how could this happen, i think, for a lot of journalists it feels so close to home. >> absolutely. >> when you look at the mind set of someon
that was not in my mind at all.s time went on, as people in the control room for trying we get in touch with them through texting, the longer it was that we didn't get a response from either of them, the more it was very, very clear that something had happened, that something was very wrong. each moment i got more and more worried. and it was toward the end of the newscast, came back and we addressed the sounds to our viewers. we said we know you heard a sound during alison's live shot. we...
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64
Aug 6, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
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eye 64
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what comes to mind? >> the devil. that's what comes to mind. evil.ou know it's -- he is somebody's son, so getting a peak into his life with his mother is something i would like to know. he hurt my child. he -- he hurt him bad. >> he may be someone's son, but he doesn't think much of your son -- >> uh-huh. >> even to this day. >> even to this day. so how was he raised? >> there was a new interview. >> uh-huh. >> that i don't even think you are aware of with darren wilson in the new yorker magazine. here is what he said. do i think about who he was as a person? not really. because it doesn't matter at this point. do i think he had the best upbringing? no. >> hum. >> not at all. take that in for a second. >> uh-huh. >> what do you think? >> just what i said that he's evil. his acts were devilish. and we definitely know he didn't have the right upbringing because those are words that you just don't use especially after you took somebody's life. and you know you had no reason to -- you had no reason to do that. what he did last year hurt me really bad, s
what comes to mind? >> the devil. that's what comes to mind. evil.ou know it's -- he is somebody's son, so getting a peak into his life with his mother is something i would like to know. he hurt my child. he -- he hurt him bad. >> he may be someone's son, but he doesn't think much of your son -- >> uh-huh. >> even to this day. >> even to this day. so how was he raised? >> there was a new interview. >> uh-huh. >> that i don't even think you are...
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50
Aug 30, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 50
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minds you are taking the job of citizens of this country. does that bother you? >> guest: it used to bother me a great deal. when i was a senior at princeton i was being interviewed not long after the profile of my life and i was asked specifically how do you feel about your being at henson being at perfectly a deserving american citizen did not get a chance to my answer was, because princeton is an institution that draws international is perfectly conceivable taste of some of the applications people submit fairly comprehensible that i was an international student as much as i was an american student. but the argument at the level of my replacement of a american citizen falls flat on its face but there's a broader argument to be made and this is the one that there are more general questions of how we understand this job situation. and how we understand what it means for immigrants to pick up an opportunity and what it means for people living here in terms of the opportunities that they are provisioned with and again i would say this is not a
minds you are taking the job of citizens of this country. does that bother you? >> guest: it used to bother me a great deal. when i was a senior at princeton i was being interviewed not long after the profile of my life and i was asked specifically how do you feel about your being at henson being at perfectly a deserving american citizen did not get a chance to my answer was, because princeton is an institution that draws international is perfectly conceivable taste of some of the...
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lou: are you out of your mind? >> am i? lou: an equal?potentially i've been called out of my mind, for sure. >> the idea that trump does not think of anyone as equal. that's not criticizing him, he just has a very good opinion. >> i wish i had a little more donald trump in me. lou: you got to pick the right parts. hillary, do you want any hillary parts? this is a woman who is -- i can't believe what she's doing. she says the e-mails, no problem, it's her server, it's her deal. what's going? >> right, it's very obvious that her defense that she never sent or received classified information on her server, it was untrue. now seeing dozens of e-mails today classified in the batch that fell short of what the state department was supposed to publish. so burned by redacting out the classified and sensitive information from the e-mails from the server that they violated a court order because they failed to produce the e-mails. >> they were retroactively classified. i want to make that clear. when hillary clinton received the e-mails. we don't kno
lou: are you out of your mind? >> am i? lou: an equal?potentially i've been called out of my mind, for sure. >> the idea that trump does not think of anyone as equal. that's not criticizing him, he just has a very good opinion. >> i wish i had a little more donald trump in me. lou: you got to pick the right parts. hillary, do you want any hillary parts? this is a woman who is -- i can't believe what she's doing. she says the e-mails, no problem, it's her server, it's her deal....
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53
Aug 13, 2015
08/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 53
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questions blared across her mind am i safe? is this a good place? she could not have justified in rational terms but it seemed like there was something wrong, something malignant that a store that sold 25 kinds of toilet paper. how could this level of abundance be morally acceptable given the poverty she had seen on the other side of the globe. now this piece of reality had been peeled back she could look under the surface of things and she could see she was utterly abandoned and surrounded by a nameless person. she became crying uncontrollably. by the time pete found her she could barely function. i'm having a panic panic attack she managed to say. get me out of here. that's one of the big issues that helen addresses in the book. >> the book tackles generally, women in combat, but it's also their changing roles in war and the ever present danger of sexual assault and harassment and the stress on daily lives, families and relationships, when they come back home. but the overall take away from the book is much greater than that. i was wondering what
questions blared across her mind am i safe? is this a good place? she could not have justified in rational terms but it seemed like there was something wrong, something malignant that a store that sold 25 kinds of toilet paper. how could this level of abundance be morally acceptable given the poverty she had seen on the other side of the globe. now this piece of reality had been peeled back she could look under the surface of things and she could see she was utterly abandoned and surrounded by...
137
137
Aug 17, 2015
08/15
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 137
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blowing my mind right now.ntially, they're going to a multiple of the previous pages they had full -- stages they had. they can go as high as 30 to 40. cory: this is me pertaining to know about drilling oil. angel down and they drill horizontally. they would have different stages that they would frack. initially was one, then five, then 10. you are saying they are doing 30 now? peter: and it could be even more than 30. the lateral links are getting longer. and the completion techniques are getting more robust. they are pumping more sand down the wells and getting more output. for the same well, they are getting more production. olivia: what about the demand side of things? in particular, china, how much pressure is that putting on the price of oil? peter: china is not going to bailout, is doesn't seem to me. demand will be robust years from now. plus, supply coming online from iran. peter: that is additional pressure in the market that people in your ago were not even thinking of. olivia: they say they can put
blowing my mind right now.ntially, they're going to a multiple of the previous pages they had full -- stages they had. they can go as high as 30 to 40. cory: this is me pertaining to know about drilling oil. angel down and they drill horizontally. they would have different stages that they would frack. initially was one, then five, then 10. you are saying they are doing 30 now? peter: and it could be even more than 30. the lateral links are getting longer. and the completion techniques are...
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77
Aug 6, 2015
08/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 77
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we have this report. >> for years he kept the images trapped inside his mind. he saw a baby. >> the baby had its arms like this. for me, this baby represented the a bomb. i remember it as if somebody had placed it there. such cruelty. >> the bomb that pulverized, poisoned and burned the city, 70 years on to the minute, a minute's silence. >> he hoped the one country to be attacked by an atomic bomb would renew efforts to bring about a world without nuclear weapons. with the cooperation of both nuclear and non-nuclear powers. >> the aircraft that delivered barely imaginable destruction was named after the pilot's mother the bomb it was carrying little boy. for the u.s., it was a strike that saved lives shortening the second world war. for the people, it was a visitation of hell. tens of thousands died in the blast. the figure would rise to 140,000 by the end of the year. hiroshima didn't cease to exist. life went on in the waste land and the city was rebuilt. it's current mayor used his speech to call nuclear weapons evil and inhuman and praise japan's constitut
we have this report. >> for years he kept the images trapped inside his mind. he saw a baby. >> the baby had its arms like this. for me, this baby represented the a bomb. i remember it as if somebody had placed it there. such cruelty. >> the bomb that pulverized, poisoned and burned the city, 70 years on to the minute, a minute's silence. >> he hoped the one country to be attacked by an atomic bomb would renew efforts to bring about a world without nuclear weapons. with...
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47
Aug 2, 2015
08/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
eye 47
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in the hearts and minds in the shia population.t's like the vatican. voices inside iran say it's willing to use its influence in cooperation to solve the myriad problems consuming the middle east today. >> today iran merged as a major player. the islamic revolution has a lot of influence. there's a lot of areas where iran can play a prominent role. >> sol we were really interested -- so we were really friday in talking to government officials, business owners and regular working people about politics and the economy. i hadn't scheduled to do a lot of cultural things. everyone tells me we have to go to the area on thursday nights, thursday night in the muslim world is like friday night in the western world. we went into one area, a few windy little streets. everyone cruising. people have their cars, they were shiny or nice, driving windows open, music playing. young guys on motorcycles, 2-3 to a motorcycle are, for lack of a better word, cruising for girls. women will be together. walking, they were showing the exhibition about arti
in the hearts and minds in the shia population.t's like the vatican. voices inside iran say it's willing to use its influence in cooperation to solve the myriad problems consuming the middle east today. >> today iran merged as a major player. the islamic revolution has a lot of influence. there's a lot of areas where iran can play a prominent role. >> sol we were really interested -- so we were really friday in talking to government officials, business owners and regular working...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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84
Aug 31, 2015
08/15
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 84
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he subtle could move anything through the process and one of the examples that really sticks in any mind is when the that he had fell took fronted stage in so many communities he's passionate about girlfriend i've gifrg the victims an opportunity in court and he the really the impossible by creating out of a whole thing the statute of limitations that would stand for a elder of one or two years his challenge in the court would super been held unconstitutional but john did it and people have been victimized have got relieve so when it was a was trying to make sure we got a particular benefit about from hoirl money or whether it was making sure the poor were not forgotten john burton was also the conscious of the state senate and we had great times together and tough times together during the energy crisis when we have govern leadership that wasn't shall we see as amenable as john's way of doing business he was challenged from time to time john it is indeed fitting you're a hero to us you've got to do the right thing when it is the wrong time so your leadership will be remembered through t
he subtle could move anything through the process and one of the examples that really sticks in any mind is when the that he had fell took fronted stage in so many communities he's passionate about girlfriend i've gifrg the victims an opportunity in court and he the really the impossible by creating out of a whole thing the statute of limitations that would stand for a elder of one or two years his challenge in the court would super been held unconstitutional but john did it and people have...
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73
Aug 12, 2015
08/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 73
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never in mind, china has to walk a fine line. they were accused of being currency manipulators a few years back. this is them taking baby steps towards liberalization regime of their currency. i don't personally see this as being a major devaluation trend. jonathan: a lot of people talking, talking about it cut to the rrr rate. has to gonk the pboc down now? john: they have shown they will use all of the tools available. slowdown a significant that is taking place in terms of exports. there is a desire to see a greater presence from the spending inconsumer the makeup of their gdp. the tools could include rate cuts, reserve rate requirement cuts, some intervention from the pboc. i will ask you -- jonathan: i will ask you this is just a knee-jerk reaction. down another 3.3%. if this is just a knee-jerk reaction, is the market reaction the right one, as far as you are concerned? john: for the market to pick a negative slant on this is probably understandable. the technicals of the equity markets technically have not been great as of
never in mind, china has to walk a fine line. they were accused of being currency manipulators a few years back. this is them taking baby steps towards liberalization regime of their currency. i don't personally see this as being a major devaluation trend. jonathan: a lot of people talking, talking about it cut to the rrr rate. has to gonk the pboc down now? john: they have shown they will use all of the tools available. slowdown a significant that is taking place in terms of exports. there is...
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Aug 27, 2015
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it is important to keep in mind the second amendment in the u.s. institution allows the americans to right to bear arms, to have weapons. >> president obama and hillary clinton say they don't want to deny basic gun access to law-abiding citizens, but they are asking for gun control legislation. >> what we know is that the number of people who die from gun-related incidents around this country dwarves any deaths that happened through terrorism. we're willing to spend trillions of dollars to prevent terrorist activities, but we haven't been willing so far at least to impose some common sense gun safety measures that could save some lives. >> yes, i feel great heart ache at what happened. and i want to reiterate how important it is we not let yet another terrible instance go by without trying to do something more to prevent this incredible killing that is stalking our country. >> now to put this gun issue in to context for you, look at these numbers. private citizens in the u.s. own more guns than any other nation worldwide. an estimated 270 million c
it is important to keep in mind the second amendment in the u.s. institution allows the americans to right to bear arms, to have weapons. >> president obama and hillary clinton say they don't want to deny basic gun access to law-abiding citizens, but they are asking for gun control legislation. >> what we know is that the number of people who die from gun-related incidents around this country dwarves any deaths that happened through terrorism. we're willing to spend trillions of...
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Aug 21, 2015
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for other women who have that same goal in mind, just keep that goal in mind. >> good day. i'm luke russert in for andrea mitchell. tramming donald trump from manhattan to mobile. college football kicks off in two weeks but the leader in the political polls is making his way to scc country where the tide and the tigers will take a backseat to the trump show in a soldout stadium spectacle tonight. katy tur is live now from the university of south alabama. and, katy tur, we've heard as many as 30,000, that's what the trump folks are saying. if nothing else, this will be trumpapalloza. >> 36,000 is actually somewhat they're saying. we'll see if that's how many show up tonight. i got that from one of their more reliable sources on the campaign trail. we all know the trump organization and trump himself does like to exaggerate his numbers, calling 7,000, 8,00020,000 in arizona. if he is able to fill this stadium it will be the largest rally yet so far of the political season. there are some obstacles in his way though. namely the one he can't control, the weather. it is extremel
for other women who have that same goal in mind, just keep that goal in mind. >> good day. i'm luke russert in for andrea mitchell. tramming donald trump from manhattan to mobile. college football kicks off in two weeks but the leader in the political polls is making his way to scc country where the tide and the tigers will take a backseat to the trump show in a soldout stadium spectacle tonight. katy tur is live now from the university of south alabama. and, katy tur, we've heard as many...