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mr. anderson. it's good to see you and thank you for being a today. our first question from maine would be for mr. rasmussen and general taylor. one of the recurring themes in my life is to figure out what works and i want to play off of that for a moment. go back seven years ago. iraq the sunni awakening and the predecessor to isis was rolling along pretty well and then not so much. due to the enlightened leadership of general petraeus, i think good work done by the prime minister of iraq working with tribal leaders. al qaeda in iraq -- was greatly diminished. what can be gained or map doesn't it? is there anything that can inform what we do today. >> one of the things we try to do is we try to think about the problem with isil to think of potential vulnerabilities that the group hasn't a to think of ways in which the progress they have made can be addressed. you point to some of the lessons from previous efforts against al qaeda in iraq and there i think we did learn the group very much struggled
mr. anderson. it's good to see you and thank you for being a today. our first question from maine would be for mr. rasmussen and general taylor. one of the recurring themes in my life is to figure out what works and i want to play off of that for a moment. go back seven years ago. iraq the sunni awakening and the predecessor to isis was rolling along pretty well and then not so much. due to the enlightened leadership of general petraeus, i think good work done by the prime minister of iraq...
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mr. anderson. we have not picked on you enough one opportunity, a point you want to make a share with us before we get the closed session. now. >> thank you, mr. chairman. thank you for holding this important hearing. i want to tinker with this is what they do keep the country safe. secretary taylor, wanted to follow upon some of the questions that senator baldwin had. and i would ask all of you to give me some insight on a comment that i heard from our fbi director. i think it's important that the american people understand what we're dealing with in terms of not only americans but westerners who have potentially travel this area or of interest in traveling to syria and joining with one of these extremist groups, including isil you had testified that more than 100 u.s. persons your tracking and have identified those who have intended to go, those who have gone and some of own, have been actually engage in killed. i note that the fbi director said in august -- and i give you the number of 100 americ
mr. anderson. we have not picked on you enough one opportunity, a point you want to make a share with us before we get the closed session. now. >> thank you, mr. chairman. thank you for holding this important hearing. i want to tinker with this is what they do keep the country safe. secretary taylor, wanted to follow upon some of the questions that senator baldwin had. and i would ask all of you to give me some insight on a comment that i heard from our fbi director. i think it's...
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mr. anderson, thanks so much. great to see you. thanks so much for joining us today. uestion from me would be for perhaps mr. rasmussen or general taylor. one of the recurring themes in my life is find out what works, do more of that and i just want to play off of that for a moment. go back about seven years ago, iraq, sunni awakening, and the -- to isis was rolling along pretty well and then not so much and then under the enlightened leadership of i think general petraeus, i think the good work done by the fellow who has just become the new prime minister of iraq, working with the sunni tribal leaders, isis -- al qaeda and iraq, their progress just stopped and was greatly diminished, pushed back. what can we gain from that lesson? is there anything there that can inform what we do today? >> mr. chairman, one of the things we've tried to do is we've tried to think about the problem and the theret posed by isil is to think of potential vulnerabilities that the group has and to think of ways in which the progress that they've made can be addressed. and you point to some
mr. anderson, thanks so much. great to see you. thanks so much for joining us today. uestion from me would be for perhaps mr. rasmussen or general taylor. one of the recurring themes in my life is find out what works, do more of that and i just want to play off of that for a moment. go back about seven years ago, iraq, sunni awakening, and the -- to isis was rolling along pretty well and then not so much and then under the enlightened leadership of i think general petraeus, i think the good...
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mr. snarb anderson, we give tu opportunity to have a closing thought, please. >> thank you, mr. chairman. if i could, i'd just make a closing remark and turn back to cyber for a second. the one thing that i think the committee needs to know and they probably do is when it comes to cyber, i've never seen more cooperation in my entire law enforcement career than i have in the last year or so. the people at this table, d.h.s., secret service, a large variety of our intelligence partners, we all get it. we get that this is something that is going to go through from now to the next several years in our government. this is a deep concern of ours. to work together and work towards a fix. we talked about a little while ago about the number of federal departments within our government that possibly could be hacked or if they weren't hacked -- they were hacked and they just didn't know about it. i think one of the things we're working on and i know the legislature is also, to figure out how we share real-time information with our private sector partners i think is absolutely imperative, m
mr. snarb anderson, we give tu opportunity to have a closing thought, please. >> thank you, mr. chairman. if i could, i'd just make a closing remark and turn back to cyber for a second. the one thing that i think the committee needs to know and they probably do is when it comes to cyber, i've never seen more cooperation in my entire law enforcement career than i have in the last year or so. the people at this table, d.h.s., secret service, a large variety of our intelligence partners, we...
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mr. anderson, welcome. please proceed. you, mr. chairman, wrecking dr. coburn and members of the committee. thanks for the opportunity to talk to you about the cyber terrorism threats to our nation and how we are working together with our partners to prevent and combat them. in my role as executive assistant director of the fbi, i manage multiple divisions within the fbi. the two i will concentrate on the most are the criminal and cyber program. as the committee knows, the number of sophisticated cyber attacks against our nation's network have increased or medically over the recent years. we expect them to continue to climb and grow. i could break down the threats to our country in four categories. spies, transnational organized criminals, terrorists, and hacktivist groups. we are losing a lot of data, money, ideas, and innovation to a wide range of cyber adversaries. director has recognized this and the severity of the threat and made cyber one of the number one top priorities in the fbi. bi's continuing to strengthen our cyber capabilities in the same
mr. anderson, welcome. please proceed. you, mr. chairman, wrecking dr. coburn and members of the committee. thanks for the opportunity to talk to you about the cyber terrorism threats to our nation and how we are working together with our partners to prevent and combat them. in my role as executive assistant director of the fbi, i manage multiple divisions within the fbi. the two i will concentrate on the most are the criminal and cyber program. as the committee knows, the number of...
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mr. anderson an opportunity.i'll give you one opportunity to point that you want to make or share with us in the open session before we go to the closed session. you'll have that opportunity, okay. for now, senator ayotte. >> thank you, mr. chairman. i want to thank you for holding this important hearing, i want to thank our witnesses for what they do to keep the country safe. so secretary taylor, i wanted to follow up on some of the questions that senator baldwin had asked. and i would ask all of you to give me some insight on a comment that i heard from our fbi director. i think it's important that the american people understand what we're dealing with in terms of not only americans, but westerners who have potentially traveled to syria or have interest in traveling to syria and joining with one of these extremist groups, including isil. so you had testified that more than 100 u.s. persons you're tracking and you've identified those as those who have intended to go and some of whom have been engaged and killed
mr. anderson an opportunity.i'll give you one opportunity to point that you want to make or share with us in the open session before we go to the closed session. you'll have that opportunity, okay. for now, senator ayotte. >> thank you, mr. chairman. i want to thank you for holding this important hearing, i want to thank our witnesses for what they do to keep the country safe. so secretary taylor, i wanted to follow up on some of the questions that senator baldwin had asked. and i would...
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Sep 9, 2014
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mr. anderson or mrs. jones, you get 30 seconds; the opponent on the other side gets four hours. that is exactly what we're seeing in elections across this country. you may see in some elections that the average donation may be $50. along comes the koch brothers, who in most states would be out of state -- out of state oil and coal billionaires coming in and maybe spending $3 million or $5 million or more through a variety of front groups that they have set up. how many individual donations does it take to get the same time to present your case as the koch brothers spending, say, $3 million? well, it would take about 60,000 $50 donations to buy the same opportunity to speak. and so citizens united is very much like that town council saying, you, madam citizen, get 30 seconds but you, mr. rich, powerful individual, get four hours. and so of course it's corrosive and corrupting. it erodes fair opportunity for all citizens to have their voice heard. and because it does erode the ability of all citizens to have their voice heard, of course it enhances the belief, that is, the appeara
mr. anderson or mrs. jones, you get 30 seconds; the opponent on the other side gets four hours. that is exactly what we're seeing in elections across this country. you may see in some elections that the average donation may be $50. along comes the koch brothers, who in most states would be out of state -- out of state oil and coal billionaires coming in and maybe spending $3 million or $5 million or more through a variety of front groups that they have set up. how many individual donations does...
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Sep 23, 2014
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mr. anderson >> good morning mr. chair. thank you for inviting me to testify today. i'm a professor at boston university and serve on the centers for disease control prevention and resistance working group. at the institute for international visiting fellow my remarks today are my own but the work that we've been doing the past year is focused on the linkage. i think today we need to focus and act decisively because the business model for antibiotics is broken. not only for antibiotics but other things that treat and prevent diseases such as diagnostics and other devices. so i have a couple of slides to look at the business model and this is based on the study stunned study stunned by the eastern research group by which i was a part for the department of health and human services. the first slide no one in the committee needs to see this. we know this is a huge problem. the number of deaths on the assessment was 37,000 per year. it's a huge problem. let's look at the business model. we are looking at the present value from the private perspective. this is a company l
mr. anderson >> good morning mr. chair. thank you for inviting me to testify today. i'm a professor at boston university and serve on the centers for disease control prevention and resistance working group. at the institute for international visiting fellow my remarks today are my own but the work that we've been doing the past year is focused on the linkage. i think today we need to focus and act decisively because the business model for antibiotics is broken. not only for antibiotics...
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mr. anderson >> good morning mr. chair. thank you for inviting me to testify today. i'm a professor at boston university and serve on the centers for disease control prevention and resistance working group. at the institute for international visiting fellow my remarks today are my own but the work that we've been doing the past year is focused on the linkage. i think today we need to focus and act decisively because the business model for antibiotics is broken. not only for antibiotics but other things that treat and prevent diseases such as diagnostics and other devices. so i have a couple of slides to look at the business model and this is based on the study stunned study stunned by the eastern research group by which i was a part for the department of health and human services. the first slide no one in the committee needs to see this. we know this is a huge problem. the number of deaths on the assessment was 37,000 per year. it's a huge problem. let's look at the business model. we are looking at the present value from the private perspective. this is a company l
mr. anderson >> good morning mr. chair. thank you for inviting me to testify today. i'm a professor at boston university and serve on the centers for disease control prevention and resistance working group. at the institute for international visiting fellow my remarks today are my own but the work that we've been doing the past year is focused on the linkage. i think today we need to focus and act decisively because the business model for antibiotics is broken. not only for antibiotics...
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mr. lutnick, you mentioned pam anderson and jenny mccarthy in a red dress, you two could be sisters. >> reporterk you, lori. i'll pay you later for the compliment. i'll leave a check under your office door. lori: thank you for bringing us the story of cantor fitzgerald, howard lutnick chairman and ceo of bgc. special programming note, fox business will air timeline of terror at 10:00 p.m. eastern, 7:00 p.m. pacific right here on fox business. >>> we're just about half an hour, 35 minutes away from the closing bell, and the nfl is facing blistering criticism over the way it dealt with the scandal over baltimore ravens' running back ray rice, knocked his then fiancee unconscious in an elevator. did nfl commissioner roger goodell screw up? charlie gasparino on the developing story. >>> apple's system could kickstart buying goods and services with the smartphone. what does this mean for existing mobile payments companies like levelup? the company's ceo joins us in a fox business exclusive. lot of work to do. stay with us. [ breathing deeply ] [ inhales deeply ] [ sighs ] [ inhales ] [ male announcer
mr. lutnick, you mentioned pam anderson and jenny mccarthy in a red dress, you two could be sisters. >> reporterk you, lori. i'll pay you later for the compliment. i'll leave a check under your office door. lori: thank you for bringing us the story of cantor fitzgerald, howard lutnick chairman and ceo of bgc. special programming note, fox business will air timeline of terror at 10:00 p.m. eastern, 7:00 p.m. pacific right here on fox business. >>> we're just about half an hour, 35...
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mr. obama's strategy. first, becky anderson joins us live from abu dhabi.the big effort is to build this broad coalition, drawing from nations in the middle east. talk to us how those nations are likely to react to mr. obama's plan to wipe out isis and if they will be on board, even those strange bedfellows we've been talking about. >> reporter: that's right. those strange bedfellows. iran and washington, saudi with iran. iran really the elephant in the room on this. we are talking here about a concerted effort on counterterrorism to contain the spread of isis, without let's remember strengthening syria's assad, without strengthening iran, and the shia militia in iraq and lebanon. that's the big challenge posed for secretary of state john kerry, who has arrived -- who is on his way to jetta today to speak to the regional allies. so who are we talking about? saudis have said they are on board as far as logistics are concerned. they will be mindful, though, of anything that will undermine their position as leader of the sunni arab world. then you've got turke
mr. obama's strategy. first, becky anderson joins us live from abu dhabi.the big effort is to build this broad coalition, drawing from nations in the middle east. talk to us how those nations are likely to react to mr. obama's plan to wipe out isis and if they will be on board, even those strange bedfellows we've been talking about. >> reporter: that's right. those strange bedfellows. iran and washington, saudi with iran. iran really the elephant in the room on this. we are talking here...
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anderson, not surprising. because we saw the early stages of what mr. maliki was doing.replacing very good leaders with his approximate pr. i'll make the comparison if you go to ft. bragg, north carolina or ft. hood, texas and replace all the great leaders with guys that are paying for their positions and who are terrible leaders, in a three-year period of time, those units are going to fall apart, too, even though you have great soldiers under them. we saw a lot of really great -- let's put it we saw a lot of really good soldiers in the iraqi army. they were coming to the point where they were becoming a very good army with very good leadersh leadership. even when i was there in 2008 and that's a verybeginning to s erosion of good leadership by replacing the good leaders with not so good leaders. >> you can make the argument that this argues in favor of the idea of the u.s. should have kept some sort of residual force because even though we have the largest embassy in the world in baghdad, if you don't have american military advisers out with iraqi forces, clearly the v
anderson, not surprising. because we saw the early stages of what mr. maliki was doing.replacing very good leaders with his approximate pr. i'll make the comparison if you go to ft. bragg, north carolina or ft. hood, texas and replace all the great leaders with guys that are paying for their positions and who are terrible leaders, in a three-year period of time, those units are going to fall apart, too, even though you have great soldiers under them. we saw a lot of really great -- let's put it...
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anderson. and i wouldn't focus on what mr. time it takes to train the iraqi forces. the forces were trained. problem is they had nothing and no one to fight for. our problem is going to be helping governments stand up in the region that embody ideals that people are willing to fight for. lacking that, isis will have a free pathwayissue creating a sie people feel they're fighting for a society that they want to be part of, a leadership they believe in. . we can somehow help the iraqi and syrian people put those kind of governments in place then there won't be any problem with the forces being able to go against isis and be effective. >> i appreciate you being on. michael shank, as well. up next, "the new york times" editorial board ripping president obama as well as congress for not debating this war before it began. a senator trying to recruit arab countries to join the coalition. we'll be right back. ♪ hey, jake! come on over here for a sec. why you wanna touch my dart so bad? ♪ [ high-pitched ] why's he wanna touch it? ♪ who said i wanted to touch it? ♪ jake, you know they've got affordabl
anderson. and i wouldn't focus on what mr. time it takes to train the iraqi forces. the forces were trained. problem is they had nothing and no one to fight for. our problem is going to be helping governments stand up in the region that embody ideals that people are willing to fight for. lacking that, isis will have a free pathwayissue creating a sie people feel they're fighting for a society that they want to be part of, a leadership they believe in. . we can somehow help the iraqi and syrian...
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. >> they are anderson mr.nd her mother are wearing faux trimmed hoods, on salay. this is a great way to get a touch of the trend. they have the parka thing going on and channeling the pacific northwest. zulily loves to feature the brands. this is a great sweater mixed in with a bit of puffer from capital k. >> pouring out the jock, make sure the coat fits properly. he broke his arm. >> how'd you break your arm, bud? what happened? >> i fell off the monkey bars. >> oh, i hate when that happens, let's bring everybody back in. >> come on families. good stuff. >> only your coats can protect you from the dangers of the dreaded monkey bars in the playground. >> topping ahank you all so muc. first this is "today" on nbc. we a [ music playing ] >> if you'd like to learn more about those hero dogs, how can you vote for one of those eight finalists, head to today.com. they are remarkable. >> they're downstairs. >> all right, ladies. what do you guys have coming up? >> well, something we need to learn, how to be a better
. >> they are anderson mr.nd her mother are wearing faux trimmed hoods, on salay. this is a great way to get a touch of the trend. they have the parka thing going on and channeling the pacific northwest. zulily loves to feature the brands. this is a great sweater mixed in with a bit of puffer from capital k. >> pouring out the jock, make sure the coat fits properly. he broke his arm. >> how'd you break your arm, bud? what happened? >> i fell off the monkey bars. >>...
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anderson. >> and your friend last night on the program, obviously, mr.d rebels sold sotloff. the fact that he called them so-called moderate rebels, to you, does that implicate the free market or leave it open? >> you and i don't know what mr. barfi meant by moderate opposition. certainly you and i wouldn't consider al nusra a front. the other thing, anderson, the white house has a whole inter-agency working group. i supervised it when i was in the white house, lisa monaco, the assistant to the president, supervises it now. it includes the intelligence community, the dod, remember, we know there was an attempted rescue. so the administration clearly knows much more than we know. but they're not willing to say it right now as long as there are additional americans being held. >> fran, i appreciate you being on. ivan watson, as well. coming up, what parents should be looking out for with a new virus sending hundreds of kids to the hospital. we'll be right back of the i hope he's saving. i hope he saved enough. who matters most to you says the most about yo
anderson. >> and your friend last night on the program, obviously, mr.d rebels sold sotloff. the fact that he called them so-called moderate rebels, to you, does that implicate the free market or leave it open? >> you and i don't know what mr. barfi meant by moderate opposition. certainly you and i wouldn't consider al nusra a front. the other thing, anderson, the white house has a whole inter-agency working group. i supervised it when i was in the white house, lisa monaco, the...
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anderson award. welco ifmi i have you help me join in welcoming mr.nk you very much for that extremely kind introduction. the award of a medal for writino a book about the war of 1812 isi somewhat ironic back home 't because in all k honesty we don know it happened. it's a great honor for me to be here today for which my thanks ghou to t go to the team at the white house historical association and all of those h who managed to p thisin splendid event together. it's important to take a look outside and see what everybody else isybod doing at the same t where this particular set of in events in this country fits into the bigger picture and really my job this afternoon is to situat the warsi of 1812 in world histo and to put that relationship onh between britain and america in a the wider world. the war of 1812, posed serious problems for governments on both sides of the atlantic.in the u in the united states president james madison's decision for war split the country. f the federalist northeast opposed the conflict that would damage o their economicul
anderson award. welco ifmi i have you help me join in welcoming mr.nk you very much for that extremely kind introduction. the award of a medal for writino a book about the war of 1812 isi somewhat ironic back home 't because in all k honesty we don know it happened. it's a great honor for me to be here today for which my thanks ghou to t go to the team at the white house historical association and all of those h who managed to p thisin splendid event together. it's important to take a look...
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anderson, turn your back. get back, please. >> i'm getting you a taxi. >> mrs.t answer anthony. you're watching "cbs this morning" saturday. [ brian ] in a race, it's about getting to the finish line. in life, it's how you get there that matters most. it's important to know the difference. like when i found out i had a blood clot in my leg. my doctor said that it could travel to my lungs and become an even bigger problem. and that i had to take action. so he talked to me about xarelto®. [ male announcer ] xarelto® is the first oral prescription blood thinner proven to treat and help prevent dvt and pe that doesn't require regular blood monitoring or changes to your diet. [ brian ] for a prior dvt i took warfarin which required routine blood testing and dietary restrictions. not this time. ♪ ♪ while i was taking xarelto® i still had to stop racing but i didn't have to deal with that blood monitoring routine. ♪ ♪ you made great time. i found another way. [ male announcer ] don't stop taking xarelto®, rivaroxaban, unless your doctor tells you to. while taking xarel
anderson, turn your back. get back, please. >> i'm getting you a taxi. >> mrs.t answer anthony. you're watching "cbs this morning" saturday. [ brian ] in a race, it's about getting to the finish line. in life, it's how you get there that matters most. it's important to know the difference. like when i found out i had a blood clot in my leg. my doctor said that it could travel to my lungs and become an even bigger problem. and that i had to take action. so he talked to me...
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anderson, agrees. so well introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures including stronger ocal constraints on suspects either through exclusions or through relocation powers. mr. speaker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent extremism. this has included stopping the funding of organizations that promote extremis, banning hate preachers and ensuring that every part of government from schools and universities to prisons are all focused on beating the scouring of extremism. putting a deradicalization program on a statutory footing. anybody subject to the investigation measures will be required to engage with the prevent program. mr. speaker, we are proud to be an open, free, and tolerant nation. but that tolerance must never be confused with a passive acceptance of cultures living separate lives or people behaving in ways that run completely counter to our values. adhering to british values is not an option or choice. it is a duty for all those that live in these
anderson, agrees. so well introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures including stronger ocal constraints on suspects either through exclusions or through relocation powers. mr. speaker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent extremism. this has...
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anderson, there are lots of things to predict. that is unfortunately unlikely to happen any time soon. i think what is more likely to happen is mr. assad will be the effective mayor of the areas of the country in the west and northwest. the real question is what happens in parts of syria close to iraq, the big desert areas many of which are controlled by isis or other radical groups. there are alternative groups, to simply hope we can build ofup a secular opposition. working with the kurds, those are two forces we can deal with. secondly we can try to get some of the arab countries to consider, not simply introducing air power but possibly introducing their air forces alongside our air forces. that is something we want to look at. we also have to come up with a sense of strategy inside syria. and this gets to some very awkward questions, which is does the united states try to take on mr. assad and isis simultaneously. or do we essentially make it more sequential and prioritize. saying the far more threat to the u.s. interests and the world is isis. that ought to be what we concentrate on. we don't concentrate on mr. assad in the
anderson, there are lots of things to predict. that is unfortunately unlikely to happen any time soon. i think what is more likely to happen is mr. assad will be the effective mayor of the areas of the country in the west and northwest. the real question is what happens in parts of syria close to iraq, the big desert areas many of which are controlled by isis or other radical groups. there are alternative groups, to simply hope we can build ofup a secular opposition. working with the kurds,...
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Sep 2, 2014
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anderson, agrees. so well introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures including stronger local constraints on suspects either through exclusions or through relocation powers. mrspeaker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent extremism. this has included stopping the funding of organizations that promote extremis, banning hate preachers and ensuring that every part of government from schools and universities to prisons are all focused on beating the scouring of extremism. putting a deradicalization program on a statutory footing. anybody subject to the investigation measures will be required to engage with the prevent program. mr. speaker, we are proud to be an open, free, and tolerant nation. but that tolerance must never be confused with a passive acceptance of cultures living separate lives or people behaving in ways that run completely counter to our values. adhering to british values is not an option or choice. it is a duty for all those that live in these is
anderson, agrees. so well introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures including stronger local constraints on suspects either through exclusions or through relocation powers. mrspeaker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent extremism. this has...
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mr. oswald. former first assistant with the dallas da office was the defense attorney. so, i got to learn a lot with the assistance of my super paralegal who is here, lisa and anderson -- anderson. let me tell you about the panelists. wow is what you are going to say when this is all over. judge burt griffin is a graduate of amherst college and yeah law school. yale lawhile school -- school. he served as a law clerk for the district of columbia servant -- circuit. assistant staff counsel to the warren commission. he served as a trial judge in cleveland for 30 years and has been a mediator and arbitrator since 2005. justice richard moss, a grad -- graduate of stanford university and harvard law school joined the military before joining the staff. after a clerkship on the california supreme court, he worked in private practice. he served for 10 years in the 80's and 90's on the iran-united states claims tribunal, adjudicating financial claims made hazard result -- as a result of relations breaking down between the two countries in 1979. in 2001 he was appointed to the california court of appeal. i doe sit court of appeal, not know, but apparently california has this prac
mr. oswald. former first assistant with the dallas da office was the defense attorney. so, i got to learn a lot with the assistance of my super paralegal who is here, lisa and anderson -- anderson. let me tell you about the panelists. wow is what you are going to say when this is all over. judge burt griffin is a graduate of amherst college and yeah law school. yale lawhile school -- school. he served as a law clerk for the district of columbia servant -- circuit. assistant staff counsel to the...
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57
Sep 9, 2014
09/14
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CSPAN
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mr. speaker, i ask permission to enter into the record letters of support for h.r. 4067 from the american hospital association, the national rural health association, the kansas hospital association and anderson county hospital, which is a critical access hospital in garnett, kansas, one of 1,300 nationwide. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. ms. jenkins: i was born and raised in a small town in kansas, and i feel strongly that folks in rural communities deserve access to quality health care. i urge my colleagues to support this legislation, and i'm hopeful that the senate will soon act on it so it may become law. with that i'd yield back. thank you. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields. the gentleman from texas is recognized. mr. burgess: reserve my time, mr. speaker. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from new jersey is recognized. mr. pallone: mr. speaker, i have no other speakers at this time. so i would -- i would yield the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields. the gentleman from texas. mr. burgess: mr. speaker, i urge my colleagues to support the bill and yield back the balance of our time. the speaker pro tempo
mr. speaker, i ask permission to enter into the record letters of support for h.r. 4067 from the american hospital association, the national rural health association, the kansas hospital association and anderson county hospital, which is a critical access hospital in garnett, kansas, one of 1,300 nationwide. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. ms. jenkins: i was born and raised in a small town in kansas, and i feel strongly that folks in rural communities deserve access to quality...
449
449
Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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FOXNEWSW
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anderson, agrees. we will introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures, including stronger locational constraints on suspects on the -- through enhanced exclusion zones or through relocation powers. mrker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization, focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent extremism. this has included stopping the funding of organizations that promote extremism, banning hate preachers, and insuring that every part of government from schools and universities to prisons, are all focused on beating this scourge of extremism. as part of this we're putting deradicalization program called channel on statutory footing. anyone subject to our strengthened terrorism prevention investigation measures will be required to engage with the prevent program. mr. speaker, we are proud to be an open, free, and tolerant nation. but that tolerance must never be confused with passive acceptance of cultures, living separate lives, or people behaving in ways that run completely counter to our values. adhering to british values is not an
anderson, agrees. we will introduce new powers to add to our existing terrorism prevention and investigation measures, including stronger locational constraints on suspects on the -- through enhanced exclusion zones or through relocation powers. mrker, dealing with this terrorist threat is not just about new powers, it is also about how we combat extremism in all its forms. that is why we have a new approach to tackling radicalization, focusing on all types of extremism, not just violent...