30
30
Jun 20, 2017
06/17
by
KQEH
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
it is strictly natural all the time, trees are natural. different. >> yeah. >> every blade of grass is different. >> every sky is different. it is fabulous. you keep watching nature. that's the boss. that's the massive painter, that's nature. >> do you paint on the road or just at home? >> where ever you are, you pull out your brushes? >> has it always been coloring? >> do you do sketches? >> do all of it. >> study anatomy and people and compositions. it is a wonderful way to live sfooch. >> you were not joking at all. when you say i was just getting started, you meant that. [ laughter ] >> is there anything. [ music playing ] -- musically at 90 that you have not done yet? >> that's a good question. there is an automatic search about that. >> uh-huh. >> i cannot say this is what i like to do. >> sure, sure. i don't know yet. >> you will know it when you see it? >> i like to get involved with another brand new chump of players from queens who's fantastic. >> uh-huh. >> right. >> he's settle and yet very muted, it is not like a loud trumpet
it is strictly natural all the time, trees are natural. different. >> yeah. >> every blade of grass is different. >> every sky is different. it is fabulous. you keep watching nature. that's the boss. that's the massive painter, that's nature. >> do you paint on the road or just at home? >> where ever you are, you pull out your brushes? >> has it always been coloring? >> do you do sketches? >> do all of it. >> study anatomy and people and...
42
42
Jun 1, 2017
06/17
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
within a few years, they went extinct in nature. ultimately, those animals diedd out and the species was lost forever. they canannot be studied and longer. arctitic ice is t turning ththe survivalal of the p polar wiwith a loss of the polar bear may c come the loss of potential medicines for diseases like osteoporosis, kidney failure, and diabetes. . essentiallyrs are in mobile as every hibernating bebear is fofor five-seven mont yet they do not get osteoporosis. their bones donon't ththin. there are the only mammal that does not get osteoporosis with prolonged immobility. if we were in mobilele for five months, if we were hospitalized or paralyzed, we would lose one- third of our bone mass. mobility, thehe balance shifts t to losing bone. osteoporosis. this is an enormous public health problem in the united states and the rest of the world. 70,000 people bought in this country every year, costing the u.s. economy $18 billion a year. one-third of women over 65, post menopausal women, will have a fracture not caused by injury, but ca
within a few years, they went extinct in nature. ultimately, those animals diedd out and the species was lost forever. they canannot be studied and longer. arctitic ice is t turning ththe survivalal of the p polar wiwith a loss of the polar bear may c come the loss of potential medicines for diseases like osteoporosis, kidney failure, and diabetes. . essentiallyrs are in mobile as every hibernating bebear is fofor five-seven mont yet they do not get osteoporosis. their bones donon't ththin....
95
95
Jun 26, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
after all, irish immigrants were white, so they could become citizens through naturalization if they lived in the u.s. for 5 years. technically, deportation law only applied to noncitizens. if you become a citizen through naturalization that would exempt , you from deportation. >> does the 14th amendment affect the status of these immigrant groups? hidetaka: yes. 14th amendment is very important. to start with, it provided for the first time the definition of u.s. national citizenship. it provided that anyone born or naturalized in america is citizen of the united states, and by doing so, it affirmed the quality of birth right and naturalized citizenship, and that was an empowerment for irish immigrants seeking broader acceptance into american society. >> how were the experiences of the irish different from other immigrants? >> that is a very important point. after all irish were regarded as , whites, and they could become american citizens through naturalization unlike some other immigrant groups such as asians, who were not eligible for naturalization until the mid-20th century. in
after all, irish immigrants were white, so they could become citizens through naturalization if they lived in the u.s. for 5 years. technically, deportation law only applied to noncitizens. if you become a citizen through naturalization that would exempt , you from deportation. >> does the 14th amendment affect the status of these immigrant groups? hidetaka: yes. 14th amendment is very important. to start with, it provided for the first time the definition of u.s. national citizenship. it...
59
59
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
if you become a citizen through naturalization, estate, that would exempt you from deportation. is a 14th amendment affect the status of these immigrant groups? hidetaka: yes. 14th amendment is very important. with, it provided for the first time the definition of u.s. national citizenship. provided that anyone born or naturalized in america is citizen of the united states, and by doing so, it affirmed the equality of earth right and naturalized citizenship, and that was an empowerment for seekingmigrants you are integration into society. >> power the experiments -- experiences of the irish different from other immigrants? regarded asish were whites, and they could become american citizens through naturalization unlike some other immigrant groups such as asians, who were not eligible for naturalization until the mid-20th century. the 14th amendment is important also for asian immigrant group as well. the children of the asian immigrants were citizens by birth. those also an empowerment for the families and communities of immigrants who themselves were not eligible for naturaliza
if you become a citizen through naturalization, estate, that would exempt you from deportation. is a 14th amendment affect the status of these immigrant groups? hidetaka: yes. 14th amendment is very important. with, it provided for the first time the definition of u.s. national citizenship. provided that anyone born or naturalized in america is citizen of the united states, and by doing so, it affirmed the equality of earth right and naturalized citizenship, and that was an empowerment for...
59
59
Jun 30, 2017
06/17
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
natural gas production in shale formations consists of three stages. drilling is down with huge wigs. itit drills many wells using directional drilling techniques to fan out the wells like the drill had as much as 10 kilometers away in any direction. was the drilling is c complete,t is taken away and service trks.. this is a process cannot hydraulic fracturing. the pipipes h have halls withh e extreme pressure drives the fluid into thehe s shale and crs it, releasing the gas and other chemicals. the millions of liters of polluted watater mixed with fracking lewis returns to the surface where the liquid must be disposeded of. often near this with the liquids and volatile compounds can evaporate into the air. for the 8-day year life of the well, trucks must take away the pollutedixture. this c c be 50% of everything coming up the well, mostly volatile organic compounds. potential pommells with h this process s are not just relegated to thehe fracking of the well bt every aspect of reduction. the mainin is when t ty leak out of the sideses of f the shaft
natural gas production in shale formations consists of three stages. drilling is down with huge wigs. itit drills many wells using directional drilling techniques to fan out the wells like the drill had as much as 10 kilometers away in any direction. was the drilling is c complete,t is taken away and service trks.. this is a process cannot hydraulic fracturing. the pipipes h have halls withh e extreme pressure drives the fluid into thehe s shale and crs it, releasing the gas and other...
100
100
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
i can say it in short, i love nature, i love wild nature, but most of the time, against my betterjudgement lot of modern moviemakers, they are somewhat obsessed with computer—generated images, special effects, and the extraordinary fake, breathtaking visions that can be created by man and computer. you get your breathtaking visions and your beauty and your stunning visual effects from nature itself? yes. it is how you experience nature and approach it. sometimes, i say it is a metaphor. those films made on foot, i have those images within me that come from travelling on foot. you know, we are all alone and exposed in the world. it is a strange attitude to the world, it somehow reveals itself to those who travel on foot. it is hard to communicate it. nobody travels on foot nowadays. but i have done it, and i'm not like a movie now, a trail hiker. you are not talking about wild. not like a backpacker. i travel, basically, without luggage. 0ne walk i know you did many years ago, which has lived in my memory, was a walk around the border of germany. yes. i briefly want to talk about germany. y
i can say it in short, i love nature, i love wild nature, but most of the time, against my betterjudgement lot of modern moviemakers, they are somewhat obsessed with computer—generated images, special effects, and the extraordinary fake, breathtaking visions that can be created by man and computer. you get your breathtaking visions and your beauty and your stunning visual effects from nature itself? yes. it is how you experience nature and approach it. sometimes, i say it is a metaphor. those...
1,470
1.5K
Jun 1, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
quote
eye 1,470
favorite 0
quote 1
decreased -- we've increased natural gas that our carbon footprint is down by 12.5% already. we're continuous decreasing our carbon output every year. we are one of the best environmental sound countries in the world today. >> all right. so you disagree clearly with those business leaders who say this was a major blunder on the part of the president. i know we're almost outful time, the chief -- you were the chief operating officer at goldman sachs. the ceo, a man you know well, he just tweeted this and i'll put it up on the screen. today's decision is a setback for the environment and for the u.s.'s leadership position in the world. what do you say to that? >> i didn't know he tweeted, first of all. what do i say to him, look, i think that the united states is a leader. we're a leader in technology. what we're doing in this country and our new technological wave in what silicon valley has done in the entrepreneurial capital that we have done in modernizing our energy fleet and looking at solar and looking at all the new evolution that's happened, we are ahead of almost every
decreased -- we've increased natural gas that our carbon footprint is down by 12.5% already. we're continuous decreasing our carbon output every year. we are one of the best environmental sound countries in the world today. >> all right. so you disagree clearly with those business leaders who say this was a major blunder on the part of the president. i know we're almost outful time, the chief -- you were the chief operating officer at goldman sachs. the ceo, a man you know well, he just...
45
45
Jun 29, 2017
06/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
and mexico but also natural gas exports to south korea, and we can look at natural gas as well. which part of this struck you as most dramatic? >> well, i think it is in the coal and natural gas area because what he's saying is that the u.s. is open for business, and we're going to lower the regulation to lower the cost to get oil and natural gas out of the ground. some of this stuff was underway, but he's just reinforcing that we more or less are having an all of the both of approach when he mentions nuclear and coal. the one thing i'll point out by omission he left out renewable solar and wind so this industries are probably wondering what's in it for them. liz: what do you think is in it for them, mike? >> i think that's a longer term solution as far as going to solar and wind type of power. but more specifically, it is up front what he's talking about the regulations like andy had said. that's going to be the most important thing. but i'm really curious to see what happens to price. andy had talked earlier about, you know, where the break even is on some of these production
and mexico but also natural gas exports to south korea, and we can look at natural gas as well. which part of this struck you as most dramatic? >> well, i think it is in the coal and natural gas area because what he's saying is that the u.s. is open for business, and we're going to lower the regulation to lower the cost to get oil and natural gas out of the ground. some of this stuff was underway, but he's just reinforcing that we more or less are having an all of the both of approach...
186
186
Jun 6, 2017
06/17
by
MSNBCW
quote
eye 186
favorite 0
quote 1
we need more diversity from coal, natural gas, oil, hydro, nuclear, across the board. what we ought to be talking about is how we burn coal, how we burn electricity using natural gas, using the latest technology, innovation to reduce emissions. that's what our example has been. we've reduced it 18 plus percent through actions not word. >> and we have. i think one of the great untold stories of what this country has done is the fact that we actually have actually made very good progress over the past two decades. we don't report about that enough. i don't think we have. but let's just say i agree with your -- barack obama's all of the above approach, we have to be diversified, that we have to look at every option in front of us. and i also agree that maybe paris, the impact of paris pulling out has been exaggerated. i personally think it's more of a diplomatic problem than
we need more diversity from coal, natural gas, oil, hydro, nuclear, across the board. what we ought to be talking about is how we burn coal, how we burn electricity using natural gas, using the latest technology, innovation to reduce emissions. that's what our example has been. we've reduced it 18 plus percent through actions not word. >> and we have. i think one of the great untold stories of what this country has done is the fact that we actually have actually made very good progress...
196
196
Jun 23, 2017
06/17
by
WTXF
tv
eye 196
favorite 0
quote 1
we're gearing up for fifth annual philadelphia natural hair show, how to easily take your natural hair, from work to a night out. >> yes. >> we will get great tips. i'm excited. they are in our dunkin' donuts green room. and we have, meredith here. >> you and mike. i was going to have you and mike do something for the q. where is mike. >> he kind of got fed up, he got so angry about the whitewall, he decided to go get some paint, and he went to do it himself. he should be back by now. >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> how are you doing, mike. >> two. two. >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> ♪ >> i got it. i got it. >> great. >> that was a longest trip to get a can of paint ever. >> this ain't a can of paint. >> hi, meredith. >> good to see you. >> from the q show. >> no, you sit in the middle. >> you sit in the middle. >> so i had to do a sample, what do you think about the red. >> it will be red.
we're gearing up for fifth annual philadelphia natural hair show, how to easily take your natural hair, from work to a night out. >> yes. >> we will get great tips. i'm excited. they are in our dunkin' donuts green room. and we have, meredith here. >> you and mike. i was going to have you and mike do something for the q. where is mike. >> he kind of got fed up, he got so angry about the whitewall, he decided to go get some paint, and he went to do it himself. he should...
199
199
Jun 3, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
tv
eye 199
favorite 0
quote 0
clean energy jobs 362,000, natural gas. 102 in wind power.loyment also is expanded in the last year, 17 times faster than the total u.s. economy according to the international renewable energy agency. there is a lot of jobs and money in renewable energy. why not focus energy and effort in that direction? >> well, we have ten times more people who work in the oil and gas industry than the wind and solar industry combined, so it's not even close. we have something like 6 million people who are directly or indirectly in the oil and gas industry. >> but where are your numbers coming from? those numbers are from the department of energy. >> using the word indirectly, ana, to create a loophole for himself. >> no, wait, hold on a minute. >> let him answer the question. >> put up that chart again. i think that was talking about natural gas. i just looked at it, i just saw a flash of it. but look, we have somewhere in the neighborhood of 4 or 5 or 6 million people -- look at texas, and north dakota and oklahoma and west virginia and pennsylvania, thos
clean energy jobs 362,000, natural gas. 102 in wind power.loyment also is expanded in the last year, 17 times faster than the total u.s. economy according to the international renewable energy agency. there is a lot of jobs and money in renewable energy. why not focus energy and effort in that direction? >> well, we have ten times more people who work in the oil and gas industry than the wind and solar industry combined, so it's not even close. we have something like 6 million people who...
67
67
Jun 30, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm dramatically reducing restrictions on the development of natural gas. canceled the moratorium on a new coal leasing, and you know what was happening, the new coal leasing on federal lands. it was being so terribly restricted and now with ryan and with the group, it's gonna be open. and the land will be left in better shape than it is right now. is that right? better shape. [applause] we have finally ended the war on coal. and i'm proud to report that coursicle just opened a brand-new coal mine in pennsylvania, the first one in many, many years. corsa, stand up. come on. congratulations. [applause] congratulations. employing a lot of people, and we are putting the coal miners back to work just like i promised, just like i promised when i went through ohio and west virginia, wyoming and all of the different places. congratulations, bob. you're in good shape, bob. right from the beginning. you just take care of yourself, all right? we're ending the intrusive e.p.a. regulations that kill jobs, hurt family farmers and ranchers, and raise the price of energy
i'm dramatically reducing restrictions on the development of natural gas. canceled the moratorium on a new coal leasing, and you know what was happening, the new coal leasing on federal lands. it was being so terribly restricted and now with ryan and with the group, it's gonna be open. and the land will be left in better shape than it is right now. is that right? better shape. [applause] we have finally ended the war on coal. and i'm proud to report that coursicle just opened a brand-new coal...
1,220
1.2K
Jun 8, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
quote
eye 1,220
favorite 0
quote 3
and then the nature of the person. i was honestly concerned he might lie about the nature of our meeting so i thought it important to document. that combination of things i had
and then the nature of the person. i was honestly concerned he might lie about the nature of our meeting so i thought it important to document. that combination of things i had
42
42
Jun 10, 2017
06/17
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
is this purely nature, or are tthere manmamade, therefore controllable, factors at worork? a warmer, moister environment can intensify storms, creating heavier precipitation. and this scientists say is why human activities may account, at least in part, for the rise in extreme weather we'rere experiencing. >> the debate is setettled. climate change is a fact. and when our children''s children lookok uin the eye a and ask ife didid all we could to leave them a safer, more stable world with new sources of energy, i want us to be able t to say yes, we did. [applause] >> as the obobama admininistratn renews itits commitment to ac the debate over climate change remains polarized. climat scientist michael mann is a central figure in that debate. he was one of the scientists behind the development of the controversial hockey stick chart, which showed how temperature in the late twentieth century was exceptionally warm compared to the previous 900 years. this triggered a tax on dr. mann and the science behind his work, all documented in his book "the hockey stick and the climate wa
is this purely nature, or are tthere manmamade, therefore controllable, factors at worork? a warmer, moister environment can intensify storms, creating heavier precipitation. and this scientists say is why human activities may account, at least in part, for the rise in extreme weather we'rere experiencing. >> the debate is setettled. climate change is a fact. and when our children''s children lookok uin the eye a and ask ife didid all we could to leave them a safer, more stable world with...
47
47
Jun 12, 2017
06/17
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
cocould it be tt that sort of warming happens naturally over a century time scale? to try to address that andnd related questions a aboutw the climate had changed in the past, my co-authorors and i attempted to make use of what we call proxy climate records-- nattural archives like tree rins or corals or ice cores or lake sediments that tell us something about how the climate changed in the past. and often these records are available not just 100 years, but 1,000 years or even further back in time. and so we took all of the information that was available at the t time fromom records ofs sortrt, so-called proxy recocor, toto estimate how the temperatue of the earth, specifically the northern hemisphere where we had the most data, how the temperature of the northern hemisphere had changed over the past 1,000 years. and what we found was--although the estimates are uncertain, as yoyou can imagine bececause we'e not working with thermometers, we're working with these very imperfect natural thermometers like tree rings and ice cores. so there's this band of uncertainty.
cocould it be tt that sort of warming happens naturally over a century time scale? to try to address that andnd related questions a aboutw the climate had changed in the past, my co-authorors and i attempted to make use of what we call proxy climate records-- nattural archives like tree rins or corals or ice cores or lake sediments that tell us something about how the climate changed in the past. and often these records are available not just 100 years, but 1,000 years or even further back in...
72
72
Jun 13, 2017
06/17
by
WJLA
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
go outside and enjoy nature. robert: i agree. the tv and stuff, that's a little too much. but the phones, yeah. nancy: well, now that the finals are over -- alison: a lot of people were watching tonight. robert: it is all over. in fiveiors ended (man) hmm. what do you think? ♪ (stranger) good mornin'! ♪ (store p.a.) attention shoppers, re's a great big un-khaki world out there. explore it in a subaru crosstrek. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. i'm at higher risk fore as depression.ave a stroke. i'm 26% more likely to develop an irregular heartbeat. i have a 65% higher chance of developing diabetes. no matter who we are, these diseases can be managed or prevented when caught early on. because with better research, the right medicine, and with doctors who help keep me healthy to begin with, we will thrive. ♪ z2e1jz zi0z y2e1jy yi0y creating jobs foreaner, reliour veterans... helping those in need save money on their energy bills. it takes 16,000 dominion energy employees doing the job. and now, dominion energy is investing $15 billion to build and upgrade our electr
go outside and enjoy nature. robert: i agree. the tv and stuff, that's a little too much. but the phones, yeah. nancy: well, now that the finals are over -- alison: a lot of people were watching tonight. robert: it is all over. in fiveiors ended (man) hmm. what do you think? ♪ (stranger) good mornin'! ♪ (store p.a.) attention shoppers, re's a great big un-khaki world out there. explore it in a subaru crosstrek. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. i'm at higher risk fore as...
64
64
Jun 17, 2017
06/17
by
KCSM
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
even then, they keep it secret and pretend the pregnancy happened naturally.e actually advise them to do that, because if the registry office learns that the child was conceived through insemination, it can be problematic. then the couple has to prove the child is really theirs. correspondent: although iran is highly-advanced when it comes to research into ivf, the topic is still taboo. and that's despite the fact that the country's religious authorities have given their approval for the procedure as a way of increasing the birth rate. but there is still legal uncertainty once the child is born, especially if the baby was conceived using donated sperm. >> islam does not forbid ivf. even surrogate mothers have been allowed since 2002. the question is whether the child was conceived using the father's own sperm or someone else's. if the father was not the sperm donor, then the question is whether he would be allowed to see his daughter without a headscarf. such a child would not inherit from the father, but could inherit from the mother. correspondent: the food
even then, they keep it secret and pretend the pregnancy happened naturally.e actually advise them to do that, because if the registry office learns that the child was conceived through insemination, it can be problematic. then the couple has to prove the child is really theirs. correspondent: although iran is highly-advanced when it comes to research into ivf, the topic is still taboo. and that's despite the fact that the country's religious authorities have given their approval for the...
75
75
Jun 5, 2017
06/17
by
CNBC
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
i want an all-natural pie filling that tastes amazing.erence. >> this is the big difference. a dairy, all-natural whipping ingredient, okay? >> more expensive? >> it is more expensive. it's about three times the cost. >> okay. oftentimes in business, people think you can make money by raising prices. in this case, we're gonna make money by raising volume. i'm actually gonna lower the price of the pie. everybody in town sells their pie for $18.95 and everybody's crust is pre-made. ours is homemade, our ingredients are all-natural, and our pie is $16.95. i'm gonna beat 'em on all fronts. >> i think we're almost there. >> i think that's good. >> okay. >> okay, thanks. >> all right. >> what are you doing? >> [laughs] inventory. >> inventory? so you take the inventory too? >> of course. >> is there anything you don't do? >> no. >> look, i continue to be amazed by tami's work ethic. she's making $300 a week working two jobs, two kids at home with a third on the way, and she has to deal with jim, which is no picnic. i need to make sure that she
i want an all-natural pie filling that tastes amazing.erence. >> this is the big difference. a dairy, all-natural whipping ingredient, okay? >> more expensive? >> it is more expensive. it's about three times the cost. >> okay. oftentimes in business, people think you can make money by raising prices. in this case, we're gonna make money by raising volume. i'm actually gonna lower the price of the pie. everybody in town sells their pie for $18.95 and everybody's crust is...
56
56
Jun 16, 2017
06/17
by
BLOOMBERG
quote
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 1
, regulatory in nature, to that we have the ability compete successfully and operate successfully on a global basis. there are so many factors that contribute to that from taxation to trade, healthy relationships with other countries from a trade perspective is extremely important to multinationals. the walt disney company is a major exporter of product. our movie business is a great example of that. maintaining an open relationship of the country -- with the countries of the world so we can bring our movies around the world, support jobs in the united states is really important. the environment is important as i expressed in the action i took
, regulatory in nature, to that we have the ability compete successfully and operate successfully on a global basis. there are so many factors that contribute to that from taxation to trade, healthy relationships with other countries from a trade perspective is extremely important to multinationals. the walt disney company is a major exporter of product. our movie business is a great example of that. maintaining an open relationship of the country -- with the countries of the world so we can...
88
88
Jun 2, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
move to clean energy, anderson, natural gas is a clean energy form. it's what reducing our carbon emissions. why isn't everybody all in on natural gas? >> it's better than coal but it's still a fossil fuel. coal has about twice as much carbon per apples to apples comparison than natural gas. natural gas is the key component here. coal is on its way out because of that. i was recently in west virginia at a huge mountain top mine, surface mining thousands of acres literally. i asked them how many people were working there. 23 people. these jobs are not coming back under any circumstance. >> my understanding is under this accord each country sets its own standards. couldn't the u.s. have basically just said look we can't live up to these standards, we're going to change our standards? >> we could do whatever we choose to do. >> under the accord we could have done that. >> but my point here, i mean we keep sliding away from this point which i think is critical. the base is mentioned here by several people. if hillary clinton were elected and did the oppos
move to clean energy, anderson, natural gas is a clean energy form. it's what reducing our carbon emissions. why isn't everybody all in on natural gas? >> it's better than coal but it's still a fossil fuel. coal has about twice as much carbon per apples to apples comparison than natural gas. natural gas is the key component here. coal is on its way out because of that. i was recently in west virginia at a huge mountain top mine, surface mining thousands of acres literally. i asked them...
89
89
Jun 30, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
but utah is a natural resource state.his includes mining and agriculture as critical natural resources. but it really also includes our national and state parks as well. so we truly believe in balancing both use and conservation. and we think that this is the best approach to leveraging all of our resources to generate revenues and create jobs. so focusing on energy in particular, though, this is an important aspect of our economy. it contributes 9% to our gross state product. it's 2.2% of the state wages, although it's only 1.1% of our employment numbers. so it indicates that these are very high paying jobs, as has already been discussed. and it contributes $673 million in revenues, most recently in 2015. these revenues are really important to utah. they help to provide education to our students and they also provide many other critical community services, which have also already been mentioned. utah, like i think much of the country that is dependent on natural resource development, experiences booms and bust in the nat
but utah is a natural resource state.his includes mining and agriculture as critical natural resources. but it really also includes our national and state parks as well. so we truly believe in balancing both use and conservation. and we think that this is the best approach to leveraging all of our resources to generate revenues and create jobs. so focusing on energy in particular, though, this is an important aspect of our economy. it contributes 9% to our gross state product. it's 2.2% of the...
116
116
Jun 1, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
they have a natural right to distill alcohol, really they have a natural right to make a living, however that living might be, free from government oversight. so for them, they're arguing, i have a natural right just like my grandfather, just like my father to make a living, free of government interference. so there's a motion of natural rights, why should i pay a tax. this is what i do to feed my family, to support my family. and, also, turns out after the american civil war that this whole issue of federal liquor taxation is intertwined with the politics of reconstruction. i know that a lot of you are not history major, very quickly reinstruction is the period of time right after the civil war. takes place roughly between, you know, 1865 to 1877. in reconstruction is a period of time in which the north, the federal government is trying to incorporate those former confederate states back into the union. well, if you remember our lecture from monday when we're talking about the civil war in ap latch chpalachian one thing demonstrated to you guys is that appalachian was not this mon lisk
they have a natural right to distill alcohol, really they have a natural right to make a living, however that living might be, free from government oversight. so for them, they're arguing, i have a natural right just like my grandfather, just like my father to make a living, free of government interference. so there's a motion of natural rights, why should i pay a tax. this is what i do to feed my family, to support my family. and, also, turns out after the american civil war that this whole...
126
126
Jun 9, 2017
06/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 126
favorite 0
quote 0
here is what james comey said about the nature of the person. >> and the nature of the person. i was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting. so i thought it really important to document. >> the nature of the person. the nature of the person has been obvious for many years to anyone who has been listening to donald trump. i started calling him a liar on this program in 2011, as soon as he opened his mouth about president obama's birth certificate. it took the rest of the news media to catch up and finally describe trump's statements as lies. he is a proven liar. that is the nature of the person james comey was about to meet. that's why james comey was concerned that he might lie. because james comey had heard him lie many times before. we all have. the world has. no one in public life has lied as much about as many things as donald trump. and so not one republican senator on the committee today tried to defend donald trump. not one of them said i don't believe donald trump would have asked for your loyalty. not one of them said i don't believe donal
here is what james comey said about the nature of the person. >> and the nature of the person. i was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting. so i thought it really important to document. >> the nature of the person. the nature of the person has been obvious for many years to anyone who has been listening to donald trump. i started calling him a liar on this program in 2011, as soon as he opened his mouth about president obama's birth certificate. it...
58
58
Jun 29, 2017
06/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
if you look at natural gas trade, the deficit is $35 billion just for natural gas imports.d be a billion dollars surplus in the u.s. that could get as high as $16 billion by 2020. anna: this is a growing story. how much is it help out by infrastructure restraints, if at all? i have been reading about the broker, tricky infrastructure constraints. is this something that holds back exports? nicholas: i think a bigger issue is that these projects take four or five years to build. rush to build these projects, and the first phase of projects are about to come on my next two years. but the u.s. is producing so much gas that infrastructure cannot keep up with production, and we could be back in the cycle where gases just bottled up in the u.s. that's what you see president trump and his administration out talking to koreans, india, chinese, making sure they know we would like to have an agreement with them as well is investing in new export infrastructure. alix: looking at the heart of it, you will not have companies contributing billions of dollars a month they have a long-term
if you look at natural gas trade, the deficit is $35 billion just for natural gas imports.d be a billion dollars surplus in the u.s. that could get as high as $16 billion by 2020. anna: this is a growing story. how much is it help out by infrastructure restraints, if at all? i have been reading about the broker, tricky infrastructure constraints. is this something that holds back exports? nicholas: i think a bigger issue is that these projects take four or five years to build. rush to build...
142
142
Jun 28, 2017
06/17
by
KQED
tv
eye 142
favorite 0
quote 0
he believes in the power of nature to heal. >> i buy and use natural health products.elieve in them. i've used them all my life. i've used them with my family. we have that anecdotal evidence that you have some ailment and you take whatever the remedy is and it's dealt with. >> narrator: so it's an irony that guelph university was responsible for one of the latest studies documenting problems with supplement quality. in 2012, newmaster and his team randomly selected 44 herbal products off the shelves in canada and the u.s. and started comparing them to the plant dna in their databank. >> and we looked at the results, and i was fairly astounded. i was like, "wow." >> narrator: 60% of the products contained ingredients not listed on their labels. even more astonishingly, one in three proved to be outright fakes. if i put my consumer hat on, that pissed me off, because i go in to buy a product that i believe in, that i care about and i pay a lot of money for, and it's not even the bottle? are you kidding me? >> narrator: unlike similar studies in the past, this one got no
he believes in the power of nature to heal. >> i buy and use natural health products.elieve in them. i've used them all my life. i've used them with my family. we have that anecdotal evidence that you have some ailment and you take whatever the remedy is and it's dealt with. >> narrator: so it's an irony that guelph university was responsible for one of the latest studies documenting problems with supplement quality. in 2012, newmaster and his team randomly selected 44 herbal...
141
141
Jun 2, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 141
favorite 0
quote 0
there is a natural move away from this area.going to be able to bring those back. the other point is that federal states are going to be able to make their own decisions. the governor of california has said they are going to work with china to cut carbon emissions. how much of an impact is this decision really going to make? we still get about one third of our electricity from coal, less tha n third of our electricity from coal, less than one third from natural gas. because us suppliers have increased production so much through fracking, we have such an abundant supply that we are competing with coal and increasing our electricity generation. that is what is driving emissions reductions. we have reduced greenhouse gas emissions more than any other developed country. we are leading, not by staying at the table with an ineffective international treaty, but by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. thank you for your time. let's take a look at some of the other stories making the news. president trump has asked the us supreme court to
there is a natural move away from this area.going to be able to bring those back. the other point is that federal states are going to be able to make their own decisions. the governor of california has said they are going to work with china to cut carbon emissions. how much of an impact is this decision really going to make? we still get about one third of our electricity from coal, less tha n third of our electricity from coal, less than one third from natural gas. because us suppliers have...
0
0.0
Jun 19, 2017
06/17
by
CNBC
quote
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 1
if you want to clean up the environment, you shift from older, inefficient plants to these natural gas burning plants it's what we did in texas and we saw emissions go down drastically. i think we led the country in emissions, we had almost a 20% reduction in co2 during the years i was governor america can lead this renaissance off energy and create a huge amount of jobs, which is what we'll be talking about in foreign direct investment in about 30 minutes at the conference that wilbur ross is overseeing >> it point's pointed out that epa, that talking about co2, emissions, toxic sites, maybe that didn't get quite the attention of toxic waste clean-ups. when scott pruitt was on, i asked him whether he believed that co2 was the primary control knob for climate you've mentioned co2 a couple of times. do you believe co2 is the prime rif control knob for the temperature of the earth and the climate? >> most likely the primary control knob is the ocean waters and the environment that we live in this shouldn't be a debate about is the climate changing, is man having an effect on it yeah, we
if you want to clean up the environment, you shift from older, inefficient plants to these natural gas burning plants it's what we did in texas and we saw emissions go down drastically. i think we led the country in emissions, we had almost a 20% reduction in co2 during the years i was governor america can lead this renaissance off energy and create a huge amount of jobs, which is what we'll be talking about in foreign direct investment in about 30 minutes at the conference that wilbur ross is...
128
128
Jun 5, 2017
06/17
by
CNBC
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
they are the world leader in liquefied natural gas. natural gas stocks you imagine they are down.tocks, the big leader, they develop liquefied natural gas terminals here in the united states. they held up very well. put up cheniere, there it is. and the liquefied natural gas is doing well. it's been down recently as we have seen this gigantic glut of liquefied natural gas and of course oil around the world. u.s. natural gas plays it's been down right ugly for them. down double digits. you see they're mixed here today. but overall no particular reaction here in the united states to that qatari news. terrible year for the liquefied natural gas. guys, back to you. >> thank you. let's head out to the bond pits right now. rick santelli at the cme group in chicago. we are seeing the yields tick up for a change. >> a basis points. we're at 2.17, up two basis points on 30s. dollar index is up a tenth of a cent. but overall very hard not to look at the intersection of the higher rates and low equities. you see it on the one week part of tens. we saw a falloff friday. we are coming back but
they are the world leader in liquefied natural gas. natural gas stocks you imagine they are down.tocks, the big leader, they develop liquefied natural gas terminals here in the united states. they held up very well. put up cheniere, there it is. and the liquefied natural gas is doing well. it's been down recently as we have seen this gigantic glut of liquefied natural gas and of course oil around the world. u.s. natural gas plays it's been down right ugly for them. down double digits. you see...
27
27
Jun 21, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
the committee amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be considered as read. all points of order against the committee amendment in the name of a substitute are waived. no amendment to the committee amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be in order except those printed in part a of the report of the committee on rules accompanying this resolution. each such amendment may be offered only in the order printed in the report, may be offered only by a member designated in the report, shall be considered as read, shall be debatable for the time specified in the report equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an opponent, shall not be subject to amendment, and shall not be subject to a demand for division of the question in the house or in the committee of the whole. all points of order against uch amendments are waived. at the conclusion of consideration of the bill for amendment the committee shall rise and report the bill to the house with such amendments as may have been adopted. any member may demand a separate vote in the house on any amendme
the committee amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be considered as read. all points of order against the committee amendment in the name of a substitute are waived. no amendment to the committee amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be in order except those printed in part a of the report of the committee on rules accompanying this resolution. each such amendment may be offered only in the order printed in the report, may be offered only by a member designated in the report,...
0
0.0
Jun 7, 2017
06/17
by
CNBC
quote
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 1
that's the natural thing. every treasury secretary is in charge of that. clearly, the treasury secretary wants us to do it earlier than later. that's what every treasury secretary says and should be saying. we'll work with them on this. we're having discussions on how to handle it before we hit the debt limit. >> [ indiscernible ]. >> i'm not going to negotiate with myself and the media. we'll have the discussions and find the best way forward. we'll come one a solution. >> [ indiscernible ]. >> i'm not going to get into it. i'm not foreclosing any option at this time. we're having these discussions with democrats and the other side of the capitol rotunda over at the senate. >> [ indiscernible ]. >> no, i have been to qatar a number of time, to the military base there. it's very important for us. but i do think that we should put some pressure on qatar. because qatar has -- i think they can improve their foreign policy let's put it that way. >> [ indiscernible ]. >> no, he didn't. no, but -- ray, right? i don't know the guy, but i have looked at his resume
that's the natural thing. every treasury secretary is in charge of that. clearly, the treasury secretary wants us to do it earlier than later. that's what every treasury secretary says and should be saying. we'll work with them on this. we're having discussions on how to handle it before we hit the debt limit. >> [ indiscernible ]. >> i'm not going to negotiate with myself and the media. we'll have the discussions and find the best way forward. we'll come one a solution. >> [...
60
60
Jun 28, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
given the nature of this ransomware professional.ra nsomwa re it professional. given the nature of this ransomware it is more sophisticated than the last attack but it is still not what we would call nation state—level sophistication, so there is a reasonable chance that an it professional could salvage some if not all of your files. this is really crippling it major global companies. is there any chance that the origins for this might be you know the cliche teenage hacker sitting in their bedroom, with a laptop? unfortunately probably not exactly a teenage hacker. at the same time, despite the industrial disruption it is causing, ironically enough this does seem to be straightforward cyber crime motivation. ransomware straightforward cyber crime motivation. ra nsomwa re is straightforward cyber crime motivation. ransomware is the modern cyber equivalent of a street mugging oi’ cyber equivalent of a street mugging or street crime. it is relatively straightforward to build a ra nsomwa re. straightforward to build a ransomware. you str
given the nature of this ransomware professional.ra nsomwa re it professional. given the nature of this ransomware it is more sophisticated than the last attack but it is still not what we would call nation state—level sophistication, so there is a reasonable chance that an it professional could salvage some if not all of your files. this is really crippling it major global companies. is there any chance that the origins for this might be you know the cliche teenage hacker sitting in their...