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Nov 6, 2020
11/20
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york, me and i know congresswoman clark from new york, we all started sounding about, what is new york being punished when other states withhold the same information is not as if you cdp for mister walt were not aware that there were claims that new york state was being treated differently than other states similarly situated. so mister walt claimed that he had to ban the residents of new york state from the program. while at the same time dhs continued to process applications for residents from those are other jurisdictions. why? >> i may madame chairwoman. very specific difference that still remains respect to what was occurring even then with new york. new york band and stopped transmitting any and every bit of information that they were prior and still capable of transmitting area that is still unique. was having with the other states and territories, we were still receiving these returns. again, there was nothing we were aware of readily by virtue of what we were receiving from those returns with respect to the trusted traveler program that would have alerted us to the fact that t
york, me and i know congresswoman clark from new york, we all started sounding about, what is new york being punished when other states withhold the same information is not as if you cdp for mister walt were not aware that there were claims that new york state was being treated differently than other states similarly situated. so mister walt claimed that he had to ban the residents of new york state from the program. while at the same time dhs continued to process applications for residents...
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Nov 8, 2020
11/20
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new york, new york city, in southern california, in illinois where he can be the balance of power in those states. democratstates which should win, into the republican column. so, the republican column. who is the republican going to be? the same answer at some point as we have now, looking forward to 2012, very crowded, confused field. typical, typical when you have a president, an incumbent who is vulnerable. the opportunity is there and a lot of opposition candidates come out. and the four front-runners that year, governor thomas e. dewey of nework. new york is the big kahuna, 45 electoral votes. you take that and you have a big leg up on the presidency. harold e. stassen, former governor of minnesota. now i punchline in american political history because he ran and lost so many times and ran and lost so many times with absolutely no chance of success. robert a. taft, senator from ohio, leader of the congressional republicans. the fact out. -- de facto. mr. republican, mr. conservative but as they say, dull as paint. not charismatic. and the fourth is not even in the country. the general of the army, douglas mccarthy in tokyo running the former, i guess still present empire of japan and a popular guy, but can he pull it off from faraway? he doesn't. he has entered into the wisconsin primary. he should win that. he doesn't. he stumbles and is out fairly quickly. there are not a lot of primaries that year. there's the new hampshire primary. there is always the new hampshire primary. there is the wisconsin primary which macarthu
new york, new york city, in southern california, in illinois where he can be the balance of power in those states. democratstates which should win, into the republican column. so, the republican column. who is the republican going to be? the same answer at some point as we have now, looking forward to 2012, very crowded, confused field. typical, typical when you have a president, an incumbent who is vulnerable. the opportunity is there and a lot of opposition candidates come out. and the four...
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Nov 21, 2020
11/20
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CNNW
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new york? >> new york is a very large city, new york city is a very large city. new york state is a very large state and we have to look at how to operatalize the yin vaccine and to get supplemental staffing from the military offsets the needs we have. new york state is bracing for a potential second wave and so a lot of attention and staffing is going to go that side and volunteer groups and with the military personnel made available they would be strategic where they putt them and you have a vaccine now, you need the people to help facilitate the vaccinations. we need to do that and better plans in place for community engagement. it is another thing to start inoculating individuals. >> do you feel like many cities are in that second wave now? >> i believe so. we have seen an uptick in cases, all bracing for additional surges but i think that given the strategy of new york state in place hopefully we'll do more measures, interventions to ensure that we don't get to where we were in april and may. that would certainly be a really bad moment for new york if we were
new york? >> new york is a very large city, new york city is a very large city. new york state is a very large state and we have to look at how to operatalize the yin vaccine and to get supplemental staffing from the military offsets the needs we have. new york state is bracing for a potential second wave and so a lot of attention and staffing is going to go that side and volunteer groups and with the military personnel made available they would be strategic where they putt them and you...
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because you know, this is personal, racial, social and, you know, all of that, new york, new york, brooklyn you know, new orleans, but a laboratory really need to go there and show the some of the love and money and power it is part of can credibly when you think about it, because as you pointed out, it is we're, there we are, the nation's capital. and you know, we have one of the big homeless populations in this country. we have some of the biggest gentrification taking place in this country. and just so people understand why it is that the influx of, as mr. tuchman earlier with like the influx of stores and big box retailers and things like that, coming in the neighborhoods. how does that actually hurt of neighborhood? and then hurt a city and hurt a culture. well, i mean you can see it in the book with him going to looking up and then he's back. and he's, you know, part of the order has become, you know, clean it up if you will be troubled and, and, you know, made him a danger. but you see around him the, you know, the people who will be helped by this aren't me hell. but people were on the glee enjoy
because you know, this is personal, racial, social and, you know, all of that, new york, new york, brooklyn you know, new orleans, but a laboratory really need to go there and show the some of the love and money and power it is part of can credibly when you think about it, because as you pointed out, it is we're, there we are, the nation's capital. and you know, we have one of the big homeless populations in this country. we have some of the biggest gentrification taking place in this country....
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because you know, this is personal, racial, social and, you know, all of that, new york, new york, brooklyn you know, new orleans, but a laboratory already there. and the purpose of the show, the so many look at it because you do have money and power it is part of can credible. and if it's about it, because, as you pointed out of there is where there we are, the nation's capital, and yet we have one of the big, almost populations in this country. we have, you know, some of the biggest transportation taking place in this country. and just so people understand why is that, you know, the influx of well as misha was talking earlier with like the influx of, you know, stores and big box retailers and things like that. coming in the neighborhoods, how does that actually hurt of neighborhood and then hurt a city and hurt a culture? well, i mean you can see it in the book with him going to looking up and then he's back. and he's, you know, part of or to become, you know, clean it up if you will be troubled. and, and, you know, made him a danger. but you see around him the, you know, the people who will be helped
because you know, this is personal, racial, social and, you know, all of that, new york, new york, brooklyn you know, new orleans, but a laboratory already there. and the purpose of the show, the so many look at it because you do have money and power it is part of can credible. and if it's about it, because, as you pointed out of there is where there we are, the nation's capital, and yet we have one of the big, almost populations in this country. we have, you know, some of the biggest...
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Nov 14, 2020
11/20
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there are a lot of people in new york angry what the trump administration and family have done to new york. new york was especially targeted for higher rates for condemntory remarks, for falsehoods told by the president. it cuts deeper because the president is a new yorker. changed his residence and lie about his hometown. i think they will have maybe a little bit of a hard time participating in public life the way they might have done before. >> i really appreciate this. thank you for taking the time. >>> new york warning, it ma i be forced to shut down schools as soon as monday as the coronavirus positivity rate continues to tick up. we'll take you to the former epicenter next live in the cnn "newsroom". >>> in a year filled with memorable ones, here's to one more. the lexus december to remember sales event. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. wake up in a winter slumberland with a cozy casper mattress and pillows, soft percale sheets, even glow, our magical light for better sleep shop the black friday sale and save up to 30% today at casper.com even glow, our magical light for better sl
there are a lot of people in new york angry what the trump administration and family have done to new york. new york was especially targeted for higher rates for condemntory remarks, for falsehoods told by the president. it cuts deeper because the president is a new yorker. changed his residence and lie about his hometown. i think they will have maybe a little bit of a hard time participating in public life the way they might have done before. >> i really appreciate this. thank you for...
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new york new york at all my rallies and i'd be playing my way at all my rallies so i get that. it was a very good years another one. i think what surprises me is that the public even with a health scare is willing to come up come out and show up for down trump even though he's down in most down in every poll and even though most pundits don't think he's going to win that they're willing to be heard they're willing to be seen and even to put their own health on the on the line to let their support and their voices be heard by by people like us i'm surprised at the intensity of these rallies and how he can still really wepa crowd. rang bells in the face of his seem stupid to you why would you go to a rally ok and then you're going to say that i'm stupid because i want to see this i want to know what's going on i want to talk to people i will stand away from them i will have a mask on i went to the peace agreement between israel and because i knew how stuart was it not been done in 27 years i went to trump's convention speech because i was invited i wanted to see these events i was careful careful about what i touched i was careful about where i went i was careful about where i stood. but that hasn't changed the day that i stop really trying to understand america's the day that i've given up and while i am not optimistic about our future i haven't given up yet i'm still trying i'm still learning and so trying to impart a sense of unity and community and frankly. reconciliation we all have a mantra and that mind the idea that you and i don't agree on politics i know we don't but it's a joy to talk to you even if it's just to the computer you and i may not agree on policy but i want to know what our you think what you think i want to know your experiences i want to know everything about you i believe that under reconciliation will will again be curious about each other charities to know why things work the way that they do curious to know why we had successes and why we failed that hasn't changed and i think that uniquely american and that. no matter what happens with donald trump and joe biden that will still be a part of the american psyche. use of the job i mean will win can you break it down for me yes i lose my will i think pennsylvania the state that i'm looking at the bayou has advantage right now or pennsylvania michigan wisconsin and all 5 of those states went asar all 3 of those states with their 5th roughly 50 electoral votes went for. went for donald trump i think that by winning those 3 states that gives biden the edge i do believe the florida ends up in trump's camp ohio which which most of the polling shows is to cause a cause i think that ends up with donald trump i think iowa and up or down trump. and so it's going to be a relatively relatively close election but it's very hard to add those extra states to get those extra electoral votes to put for me to see trump actually beating by that point but who knows i could be surprised i've been surprised before living women will lead job president who knows that it's yes and specifically younger women have been voting democrat for many many years there in under then it got to be women who are under the age of 40 where i think biden is going to do better than hillary clinton or women between the ages of 40554054 that those women had been republican and now exactly marry women with kids and now that vote has shifted towards biden and one of the reasons why is the schools we open in the schools and you're i've not talked about this but i think it's really really important the idea that trump said go back to school that all the kids go back to school and these moms were afraid to send their kids back to school because they were afraid they could get sick or they were afraid of the virus that they would bring home with them and that down in that period of cold it when they were making decisions and an education that the american people thought this is not the right approach to education that we need to be sick and need to react safely sensibly my sponsor glee and those women left out trump at that point and i think that that's going to be the deciding factor in the selection you wearing election night you get excited. i will be in washington d.c. election why i hope to spend it with friends you're right to ask me that question because for me election night is the most election night is christmas and new year's oh my god they all welled up and one. and where i spend it definitely matters i've been offered the chance to be an analyst on a major national network i have not decided yet if i would take it because i enjoy being with real people and and i'll lose friends what people realize is that individuals like me know all the senators they know all these congressman and some of my friends will be defeated on election night and i want to be there for them i want to be there as a shoulder for them to support them and tell them that i'm grateful for their service so we'll see find you are an important contributor to the american scene for lois and so on and knowing you now larry larry please hear me is an otter knowing you your national treasure i'm glad that you are still doing this and you have so many interviews and so many years to go you teach us what we don't know on behalf of america thank you for all that you do god bless frank luntz we thank him for time today and we thank you fo
new york new york at all my rallies and i'd be playing my way at all my rallies so i get that. it was a very good years another one. i think what surprises me is that the public even with a health scare is willing to come up come out and show up for down trump even though he's down in most down in every poll and even though most pundits don't think he's going to win that they're willing to be heard they're willing to be seen and even to put their own health on the on the line to let their...
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Nov 19, 2020
11/20
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and it's so inconsistent because new york state is a 9% threshold. why is new york city and newt? it doesn't make sense? i say shut the bars. shut the gyms. shut indoor dining. shut that first because it's clear that, you know, transmission isn't happening at schools. you could shut the schools down but it's going to group and up and up until you close the gyms. until you close indoor dining. so it doesn't make any sense. >> dana: you also wrote about it's not fair to pit parents against teachers. can you talk a bit about that? >> absolutely. i mean, it feels as though, you know, i often get asked the question what about the teacher's union? are you kidding me? the teacher's union, teachers, principals, they are our heroes. and they are doing their job, which is to keep teachers safe. but many of them i have spoken to so many of them who said i didn't want schools to open in the beginning. now that they are open, i don't want them to close because i know what is happening to our kids. and so stop pitting us against the teachers. don't act like you can't make schools safe and tea
and it's so inconsistent because new york state is a 9% threshold. why is new york city and newt? it doesn't make sense? i say shut the bars. shut the gyms. shut indoor dining. shut that first because it's clear that, you know, transmission isn't happening at schools. you could shut the schools down but it's going to group and up and up until you close the gyms. until you close indoor dining. so it doesn't make any sense. >> dana: you also wrote about it's not fair to pit parents against...
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new york times, new york of your books, the nation that we have to punish donald trump. i haven't quite figured out what it is. they're going to put him on trial for what crime did because of committed. but they know that he's a criminal, that kind of figure out later on what, what are the crimes, once they subpoena, or his documents or his account, or his bank statements going back out into how many decades they're hoping that they're going to find something that they can put him on trial, or alternatively, just fine, want to import forever and bankrupt him. so what's, what's really going on here is just this. i'm attempting news the legal process to intimidate anyone so that any future off the boat from the end will get the message . don't go down this path unless you want to end up bankrupt or imprisoned. you know, robert, if they want to go after trump and this, this rampage of rage and rebellion, and that means we're going after 73000000 people that voted for him to think. absolutely. i think that's the understated danger here. and it could even be more than that. if the election was as much of a fraud is some people view that while as they're going to have to really share the lightly here because there are a lot of you just have to go on twitter for example. i mean, it is like the modern version of war is unbelievable. the 2 sides, they don't talk to each other and that's the mainstream media. they've completely blocked any news from, from the the right. it's unbelievable how they're getting away with it. i know myself, i mean, i'm not even in the united states right now, but i feel the fury that i'm sure
new york times, new york of your books, the nation that we have to punish donald trump. i haven't quite figured out what it is. they're going to put him on trial for what crime did because of committed. but they know that he's a criminal, that kind of figure out later on what, what are the crimes, once they subpoena, or his documents or his account, or his bank statements going back out into how many decades they're hoping that they're going to find something that they can put him on trial, or...
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Nov 15, 2020
11/20
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new york down again? evan mcmorris-santoro, cnn, new york. >> new york isn't the only city coming under scrutiny, over itshe coronavirus pandemic. some teachers in houston feel they're at risk, and are demanding a new approach. cnn's brianna has this report. >> the first day was kind of like, oh, this is exciting. i'm back with kids again. you know, i love seeing them face to face. but, by the second day, it was pretty clear that this was very different. >> reporter: two days after houston public schools opened for in-person learning last month, naseeb gill, a 5th grade language arts teacher, decided she had enough. >> the scariest part is you just -- you have no idea what you're walking into. i could be putting my students at risk. i could be putting my family members at risk. >> reporter: she's one of the dozens of houston public school teachers asking for a different approach. >> i just had a teacher, today, talk to me and say, i had never thought i would say this but we need to go back to virtual. >> reporter: protesting the covid-19 protocols that leave them feeling unsafe. >> yes, they have masks on
new york down again? evan mcmorris-santoro, cnn, new york. >> new york isn't the only city coming under scrutiny, over itshe coronavirus pandemic. some teachers in houston feel they're at risk, and are demanding a new approach. cnn's brianna has this report. >> the first day was kind of like, oh, this is exciting. i'm back with kids again. you know, i love seeing them face to face. but, by the second day, it was pretty clear that this was very different. >> reporter: two days...
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Nov 12, 2020
11/20
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new york new york personnel but but it is fascinating to hear and as i said we do have a lot of partners one is per square book so it is a thrill and as many of you know me when the series of american inspiration. i cannot think of a better person to be part of the series the end eleanor roosevelt. she and her family with fdr are large figures in american history and eleanor in particular is such an end one - - an inspiration for inclusion and diversity and is such a will model and a truly inspiring and a big fan of roosevelt and start off with the first question. >> let me apologize for being late to join you as my computer shut down the head of special collections with the state house in downtown boston the depository of publications and many other things we are glad to be part of this tonight so we have written some questions for david and compiled questions that came of people when they registered and those that come in during the talk tonight we will start with the one question because i am a huge the another is also including questions i came in from other people. here is my first question. with that line in the whole book and there were many favorite lions was right after the dedication page but before the table of contents it is a quotation that says i felt obliged to notice everything. to me, that sentence can everything that happened to her or shaped her life. i wondered if you can give us some context for that quote and tell us if you agree with my thoughts? >> i am so touched of your thoughts because as an epigraph i hoped that would sound as an overture to her life. you still listen to aaron copeland and with expansion from her own personal life to the life of the country and her ability to notice something of a survival mechanism or a coping mechanism when she was young and i was almost shocked at how many people left records of working so carefully at them sometimes feel they were staring if she didn't think someone was noticing her she would look very carefully at them i think she missed a thing. and in and wanted democracies great principles which is reciprocity that everybody counts with life and rates are equally judged and taken into account, i thank you are noticing was also extremely democratic and equal opportunity. one of the things that everybody who did meet her who came into context with her felt that being seen by someone who comes from the center the governmental democracy of washington dc was individual experience in those days and to make claims towards someone like eleanor roosevelt is sure humanity had been taken into account and i think that was one of gifts that was automatic and natural and authentic i think she felt there wasn't anybody she could learn from there she understood them carefully on their own terms and then to take it back to the president sometimes. go back to an agency or back to her own column to perfect those thoughts and what she saw in others so the noticing i have an entire file name did noticing because of's job description. >> so they can. >> also part of that sentence is the would acknowledge. i was very struck how obligated he felt to so many people in her life starting with her father and then to move subject to other people's controls to the boarding school in england and she looked after the girls that were there and then she looked after fdr there was a lot of stepping back into play jean that she did. she just born this type of service? it is amazing. >> is to think of eleanor roosevelt when i was younger as the greatest good of all time there was a to go to quality but were began to appear more certainly to me is that the wish to do a good mp good had a great deal to do with needing to reshape ideas of her father who died in such disgrace as a trunk and a junkie and absently dragged through the mud ultimately in his final years and then afterwards by people in his own world and people she came across. for wish to do a good became something that translated and she to be loved and to take the care and to give back to her and it became a mission to be the kind of person whose usefulness was illuminating or enlightening to create the offensive awakening that became her transaction. >> we of questions why she withstood certain things to she had feelings is that the capacity to forbear quick. >> her willingness to be tolerant is something she first worked on to understand to understand parts of herself she cannot fulfill and others rose the acceptance to well to be tolerant and it was battle and the struggle that she conquered. she had to conquer wonderful feelings she didn't really have a broad range she wasn't allowed to express anger as a child she had a resentment even a mild peak to me for broad angry she was taught to go into the bathroom hitting her head of the bathtub and it into the hotel but please. she was very constrained and then to respond should first only numeral two turned to the wall to be furious and this is part of the responses in that transcendence allowed will obviously need to become independent woman she later became a step-by-step. one reason about the roosevelt marriage worked in the long run as a partnership she learned early not so much lucy is a rifle but later people who came to help franklin became part of their lives and replaced her almost as a surrogate and to become part of the family and their parallel lives. >> many who attend our author talks are interested in how authors do their work so this the freeze sees like it has a cast of thousands of similar names. thank you by the way for those characters in the beginning of the book especially the nicknames. can you tell us how you manage your research and how you keep details being documented? and asking this but only as a library and. >> there is a couple of tricks that i learned is the idea that each person of color so franklin was always every index card red card and his mama were roosevelt yellow is any woman or man eleanor fell in love with it is a love interest yellow but it works and quotation from other sources >-right-angle-bracket loosely useful to keep things straight in the beginning and then you can expand the colors purpose for people those that were the go-betweens. all in chronological order i learned years ago when i was doing a profile every single thing that came in that was complicated by information gathering pre- internet and thought much of his work was global the only way to keep things straight was to file everything chronologically. every time we get a piece of information if we do put chronologically into a chronological file when it comes into your own life you remember but also going into a chronological file for every day of eleanor's life and then put them in her life when they happened and in that way the two things you put next to each other reveal something that is quite often the case for what was not there in the first plac place. >> the first answer is index cards. >> i have to have it in my hands in the beginning going into the great digital soup and i have a space because of my mother but to end up in the digital rolling stones and then to be alive. >> that sounds like fun. [laughter] i was fortunate in my early machine clear to work for pat can off. he kept a chronology of everything and ask is administrative person every letter that he wrote that would be all, logical. and then to say please give me 1990. >> and then that becomes its own subfile. each of them separately very clear. and i am delighted and were fired in doing to keep all the gilded age families. the roosevelt marriage world fdr the emerging of the oyster bay that comes from the valley that those on the hudson valley where a remarkable collection and and our hall, eleanor's mother and hung out with other high society and it is an amazing collection and in many ways thinking of eleanor roosevelt and is a portrait of new york and is a neighbor girl. and to get away from that gilded age and then the vanderbilts might divorce but they do not. and then in history. >> and very much the ones in charge and then in general the older version of great wealth and that was a portrait of the city what was left on the cutting floor and thank you early again who help me cut out for the city she was born into but absolute raised with unimaginable wealth and unimaginable poverty and the way the immigrants arrived at cap the garden and then to finally transcend to be committed to reshaping and saving those that were performed the franklin roosevelt those that help save people who didn't have representation and the guy from tammany hall came over bringing you services to do the building politically or to buy you something. eleanor and franklin and then to replace that corrupt city to give special favors and and the american dream. and the american dream. one - - of the work and the statue of eleanor roosevelt and with
new york new york personnel but but it is fascinating to hear and as i said we do have a lot of partners one is per square book so it is a thrill and as many of you know me when the series of american inspiration. i cannot think of a better person to be part of the series the end eleanor roosevelt. she and her family with fdr are large figures in american history and eleanor in particular is such an end one - - an inspiration for inclusion and diversity and is such a will model and a truly...
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new york times. page searches for unbiased to impartial or balance. come a blank, no results found in the text. not that it's much of a secret though, that the new york times isn't that interested in covering a happy russia. but some readers weren't that impressed with the sudden spasm of honesty from the paper did the see any right. new york times new russia crisp on in job at these job for a new york times correspondent in moscow is telling and not in a good way screenwriters wanted for a new james bond film. imagine yourself working undercover in moscow. the capital of love to meet putin's evil empire. if you think you have the creative writing skills to turn the monday into juicy narratives of horror and suspense, contact the new york times, we've been in touch with the new york times for comment. you know, both sides of the story and all that, but we've yet to hear anything back from them. cynically speaking, it makes perfect sense. positive stories from russia don't tickle the fancy of pulitzer prize, judges allegations lacking evidence or though do just believe in the bogeyman. the pulitzer prize winning journalist and former new york times foreign correspondent chris hedges says that the ad exposes the real russia angle of the paper. i initially thought it was satire, i didn't think it was real. and then i wen
new york times. page searches for unbiased to impartial or balance. come a blank, no results found in the text. not that it's much of a secret though, that the new york times isn't that interested in covering a happy russia. but some readers weren't that impressed with the sudden spasm of honesty from the paper did the see any right. new york times new russia crisp on in job at these job for a new york times correspondent in moscow is telling and not in a good way screenwriters wanted for a new...
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Nov 10, 2020
11/20
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BLOOMBERG
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new york's lieutenant governor. from london and new york, this is bloomberg. ♪ ritika: with the first word news, i'm ritika gupta. ity leader mitch mcconnell has given president trump cover for challenging election returns. mcconnell says the president is within his rights and has no obligation to accept projections based on vote counts that joe biden won. mcconnell and other republican leaders in congress have not congratulated biden since news media called the election in his favor on saturday. obamacare returns to the supreme court today. justice will hear arguments over whether the affordable care act is constitutional. the trump administration and conservative states argue that it is not. they say the entire law was rendered unconstitutional when congress eliminated the penalty on those who remained uninsured. if the majority conservative court agrees, more than 20 million americans could be left uninsured. u.s. regulators could give the boeing 737 max the ok to resume commercial service as soon as next week. the faa is finalizing their review affixes to the aircraft. boeing's best-selling jet has been ground
new york's lieutenant governor. from london and new york, this is bloomberg. ♪ ritika: with the first word news, i'm ritika gupta. ity leader mitch mcconnell has given president trump cover for challenging election returns. mcconnell says the president is within his rights and has no obligation to accept projections based on vote counts that joe biden won. mcconnell and other republican leaders in congress have not congratulated biden since news media called the election in his favor on...
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Nov 11, 2020
11/20
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new york, for instance -- >> it's not happening in new york. i'm talking about like in wisconsin or in georgia or in arizona. it's not happening in new york. york is not your problem. >> no. >> you got the love gov over there. i'm talking about in these other states. what if they go bad on the vote? >> i don't think that's going to be a problem, either. i don't think that will be a problem in pennsylvania. they may attempt to do that in pennsylvania, but the constitution is clear. and i know it gives the legislatures the authority to elect electors as they would have them be. but if you got all the electors, i don't believe you're going to go to wisconsin and pennsylvania and get them to elect republican electors when the democrat won. i just don't think you're going to have that. it may happen, and then i've been telling people for a long time now, i'm beginning to see what happened in germany back in the 1930s. i never thought that could happen in this country. how do you elect a person president, then all of a sudden give him the authority to be dictator? that's what we are teetering on here. that's what hitler did in germany. he was ele
new york, for instance -- >> it's not happening in new york. i'm talking about like in wisconsin or in georgia or in arizona. it's not happening in new york. york is not your problem. >> no. >> you got the love gov over there. i'm talking about in these other states. what if they go bad on the vote? >> i don't think that's going to be a problem, either. i don't think that will be a problem in pennsylvania. they may attempt to do that in pennsylvania, but the constitution...
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Nov 25, 2020
11/20
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new york. the state is reopening an emergency facility in new york's staten island to help with the rising number of coronavirus cases. the facility was last set up in the spring in the height of the first surge in new york is now seeing more daily cases than at any time since that point. you can see there. we're on staten island outside the emergency facility and shimon is joining us now. what are you hearing about why this is needed and what could it mean in the coming weeks? >> for staten island certainly, they're seeing a surge in cases that is very alarming for the governor. they're seeing hospitalization triple in the last three weeks. and they have not seen these number of people in the hospital because of covid in six months. so the hospital has asked for some extra help and they opened a facility here behind me where they're already getting patients. people are already being admitted. these are less critical patients but nonetheless, it is significant they're already getting patients, all in an effort to lessen the burden here hospital officials on staten island are seeing because the number of cases continue to rise. the governor just finishing up, actual actually having his press conferen
new york. the state is reopening an emergency facility in new york's staten island to help with the rising number of coronavirus cases. the facility was last set up in the spring in the height of the first surge in new york is now seeing more daily cases than at any time since that point. you can see there. we're on staten island outside the emergency facility and shimon is joining us now. what are you hearing about why this is needed and what could it mean in the coming weeks? >> for...
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Nov 14, 2020
11/20
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new york and the new york's governor. >> a vaccine will be available for the entire region but within the exception of new york and the new york's governor. i don't think it is bad. he wants to take his time with the vaccine. he does not trust where the vaccine is coming from. he had some very bad editorials recently about this statement and what's happening with respect to nursing homes and his handling of nursing homes. i hope he does not handle this badly as he's handling those nursing homes. we are ready to provide as soon as they let us know. >> governor cuomo is joining us and the author of "american crisis." first of all, the idea of the united states withholding the vaccine from the citizens of new york, your thoughts? >> yeah, good to be with you anderson. i think your opening point is very powerful and frames the entire conversation. what the president says does not matter. it is not true as usual. what he's going to do in april. he's not going to be here in april. that i said i would not distribute the vaccine, not true but it does not matter. there are editorials and it is not true but it does in the matter. h
new york and the new york's governor. >> a vaccine will be available for the entire region but within the exception of new york and the new york's governor. i don't think it is bad. he wants to take his time with the vaccine. he does not trust where the vaccine is coming from. he had some very bad editorials recently about this statement and what's happening with respect to nursing homes and his handling of nursing homes. i hope he does not handle this badly as he's handling those nursing...
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Nov 20, 2020
11/20
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new york, new york city waitress and mom of 2, thank you for being here for this important conversation. a single mom of two kids, your younger daughter has type i diabetes, what are your concerns? >> my concerns are she won't the learning correctly. i am not a teacher, at home when working to disrupt. >> same to you. your son is in occupational therapy. is that hard for you to do outside the classroom making sure he gets everything he needs? >> it definitely is. occupational therapy twice a week or speech therapy twice a week, i'm trying not to allow him to fall behind more so than he is already. school keeps shutting down and he's at a young crucial age by receiving these in person services. >> you have two kids as well, a family therapist. i'm curious on the personal and professional commute personally what your kids are up against but also professionally. i am curious if you had an uptick in people coming to you because they are having a hard time with it. >> both my kids are online. not far from newa couple cases, my daughter who is in eighth grade, it is not good for her but more concerning to me is in private practice i am dealing with kids and what i am seeing is major social emotional compromises because kids are staring at screens 24 hours a day, not having the interaction they need, not developing the critical communication and social skills they need to survive and thrive. >> so many parents across the country regardless whether you're in new york city or the west coast or middle america. you talk about access to technology for remote learning, new york city students have not received i've hads a laptops from the city, that is an alarming statistic. let's take a listen to the cdc director saying it is counterproductive to close schools. >> one of the safest places they can be from our perspective is to remain in school. it would be counterproductive from a public health point of view containing the epidemic if there was an emotional response to say let's close the schools.
new york, new york city waitress and mom of 2, thank you for being here for this important conversation. a single mom of two kids, your younger daughter has type i diabetes, what are your concerns? >> my concerns are she won't the learning correctly. i am not a teacher, at home when working to disrupt. >> same to you. your son is in occupational therapy. is that hard for you to do outside the classroom making sure he gets everything he needs? >> it definitely is. occupational...
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Nov 18, 2020
11/20
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box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]> thank you for joining us. from our studio in tokyo, this is nhk "newsline." >>> we begin in the united states. president donald trump is further refusing his country's military presence in afghanistan and iraq. the move is drawing concerns from some republicans and democrats who fear it could destabilize the region and disrupt ongoing peace efforts. >> by january 15th,
box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]> thank you for joining us. from our studio in tokyo, this is nhk "newsline." >>> we begin in the united states. president donald trump is further refusing his country's military presence in afghanistan and iraq. the move is drawing concerns from some republicans and democrats who fear it could destabilize the region and disrupt ongoing peace efforts. >> by january 15th,
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Nov 17, 2020
11/20
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box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!] ññó?wcrcrcrcrcrcrcrcrcrc natasha del toro: coming up on america reframed... shawn: i came home expecting it to be normal. that's all i wanted. del toro: america's veterans often have to work hard to rebuild their lives after combat. claude: i felt isolated, alienated, disenfranchised. i didn't fit anywhere. bobby: my head was burnt to the skull. you know, i'd pray to god every night just to let me fall asleep and not wake up. del toro: tonight, the stories of four veterans filmed over nearly ten years, as they wrestle with the past and the future. some of the things i've done were... horrible. just really inhumane. bobby: you know, i made it back home.
box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!] ññó?wcrcrcrcrcrcrcrcrcrc natasha del toro: coming up on america reframed... shawn: i came home expecting it to be normal. that's all i wanted. del toro: america's veterans often have to work hard to rebuild their lives after combat. claude: i felt isolated, alienated, disenfranchised. i didn't fit anywhere. bobby: my head was burnt to the skull. you know, i'd pray to god every night just to let me fall asleep and...
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Nov 12, 2020
11/20
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finally here in new york, new york state, governor cuomo adding some new restrictions to make sure that the spike doesn't get out of control. it has been over 3%. the rate right now. and that is one of the issues. effective 10:00 p.m. eastern on friday night, bars and gyms will have to close at 10:00. when it comes to private gatherings in your home they're supposed to be limited to 10 people, neil. neil: wow. here we go again. i'm sure that, that science advisory to joe biden indicating a six week sort of a mini lockdown type after thing this gets out of control, i'm sure that helped to add to the selling. we'll see, jackie, thank you very, very much for all of that. gary kaltbaum with us right now. nancy davis as well following the market response on this. gary, i begin with you. i'm wondering what you make of this talk that right now with these spikes in cases, forget about states that are reimposing restrictions, various lockdown measures of their own but that a president-elect biden could implement something far more sweeping upon taking office january 20th. what do you think? >> b
finally here in new york, new york state, governor cuomo adding some new restrictions to make sure that the spike doesn't get out of control. it has been over 3%. the rate right now. and that is one of the issues. effective 10:00 p.m. eastern on friday night, bars and gyms will have to close at 10:00. when it comes to private gatherings in your home they're supposed to be limited to 10 people, neil. neil: wow. here we go again. i'm sure that, that science advisory to joe biden indicating a six...
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Nov 14, 2020
11/20
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louis or wherever else but even in new york, the new york herald -- new york tribune put john hay, future secretary of state, then working for them on a train and sent him right to chicago to coffer this. to cover this. and then there were all -- chicago had a dozen dailies and had all these papers, and these people were trying to write the story, meanwhile their buildings are burning down, but they're still writing them and getting them out. what was possible is that western union kept, the telegraph center in the center of town burned down, the ones just outside the burned district stayed open. so they would get the news to the telegraph links just south of town, and then it went to new york or wherever and then to london, paris, around the world. >> there's a question what were your main sources of documentation? >> well, what i wanted to do was focus as much as possible on contemporary stories. so the core ones are these eyewitness accounts of which there are many and in various places a rot of them in the chicago history museum which is a treasure house and the major repository of or
louis or wherever else but even in new york, the new york herald -- new york tribune put john hay, future secretary of state, then working for them on a train and sent him right to chicago to coffer this. to cover this. and then there were all -- chicago had a dozen dailies and had all these papers, and these people were trying to write the story, meanwhile their buildings are burning down, but they're still writing them and getting them out. what was possible is that western union kept, the...
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Nov 1, 2020
11/20
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new york absolutely. new york has become a ghost town, sister. what they've done, what cuomo has done to new york is unbelievable. it's terrible. it's terrible. what they've done to new york and you take a look at certain things, i mean -- and then with crime. take a look at portland. we want to go to portland so badly. our guys would solve the portland problem in about 12 minutes, right? but we have to be asked because we play nice nowadays. we have to be asked by the governor. we keep asking her, you want us to go in? no, sir, let a few more stores burn down. that's antifa. that's a anarchists. look at chicago. we're talking about all democrat-run cities. all run by the left or the radical left. and these are the problem areas. the republican cities -- they're all doing great. we're doing great, the republican cities. that's why you can't have a radical left -- and joe's not really radical left. he's shot. it doesn't matter. he's shot. let's face it. i mean, let's face it. oh, of by the way, those slips, those are the easy ones. we didn't want to go any worse. they're much worse than that.
new york absolutely. new york has become a ghost town, sister. what they've done, what cuomo has done to new york is unbelievable. it's terrible. it's terrible. what they've done to new york and you take a look at certain things, i mean -- and then with crime. take a look at portland. we want to go to portland so badly. our guys would solve the portland problem in about 12 minutes, right? but we have to be asked because we play nice nowadays. we have to be asked by the governor. we keep asking...
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Nov 5, 2020
11/20
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seats are ayanna pressley of massachusetts and alexandria ocasio-cortez of new york, co-sponsor of the green new deal. in new york's 16th congressional district, jamal bowman has defeated republican challenger patrick mcmanus. bowman is a former bronx middle school principal who recently joined protests demanding an end to racism and police brutality. in june's democratic primary, bowman defeated congressmember eliot engel, the foreign affairs committee chair who's served in congress for more than 30 years. congressmember-elect bowman spoke to democracy now! on elecon night. >> i am going to washington to fight for housin as a human ght, health care as a human right, fully funding our public schools, a federal jobs guaranty raising a federal minim wage, a green new deal, and he maine criminal justice and immigration reform. amy: also here in new york, democrats mondaire jones and ritchie torres are set to become the first two openly gay black men elected to congress, replacing lawmakers who are retiring after decades in washington. mondaire jones spoke with democracy now! on election night. >> i am so thrilled to b
seats are ayanna pressley of massachusetts and alexandria ocasio-cortez of new york, co-sponsor of the green new deal. in new york's 16th congressional district, jamal bowman has defeated republican challenger patrick mcmanus. bowman is a former bronx middle school principal who recently joined protests demanding an end to racism and police brutality. in june's democratic primary, bowman defeated congressmember eliot engel, the foreign affairs committee chair who's served in congress for more...
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Nov 11, 2020
11/20
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york. i am committed to new york city. i love new york city. t marathon south will be an option for our employees. where people travel to and where people work and what business willl has done as a result not necessarily benefit new york city in the next couple of years relative to places like charlotte, atlanta, nashville, miami. issue, asat is a tax well i imagine. guest: the billionaires are leaving new york city. they are going to tax friendly states. some of the crime in the city which is very unfortunate, i think hopefully that will correct itself. and policy will be put in place to return to normalcy. that is unfortunate, because covid is a lot to deal with and when you deal with safety in the streets it's a consideration. vonnie: you mentioned you have done a lot on health care recently. i am curious as to what parts of health care? is it covid related? when people will get back to doing what they should have been doing during this time? guest: we love the health care sector. before the fires are announcement -- before the pfizer announc
york. i am committed to new york city. i love new york city. t marathon south will be an option for our employees. where people travel to and where people work and what business willl has done as a result not necessarily benefit new york city in the next couple of years relative to places like charlotte, atlanta, nashville, miami. issue, asat is a tax well i imagine. guest: the billionaires are leaving new york city. they are going to tax friendly states. some of the crime in the city which is...
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new york times of new york times writers were they were low for anonymous sources or writers and they had it's amazing and they wonder why the print media become so expensive. why does it ever taken 5 journalists to write one piece? that's only not but you get, we're not, i don't, i wouldn't, i would fully suspect, given president here is that it was, it was written by a deep state property and they just put their name on it. ok. because that's essentially what this particularly the case, that particular case when it comes to national security issues, it a rough draft is provided and then put their stamp on it. but, you know, robert, you know, staying with you. again, the media has never been able to get their head around the fact that these wars are very unpopular. i mean, i can remember someone making a joke with me and it was a very sick joke. is that after the invasion of iraq that, you know, c.n.n. was already with all the graphics, all they had to do was change one letter to iraq. ok, because it's good for ratings, the way they see those beautiful missiles, probably the most disgusting thing ever said. i'm n.b.c. news, winner of syria. it was being in the early attack here. so i mean the, there's an appetite for war because it's good for ratings they think, but it's not a vote getter and trump intuitively understood that. and we have to say, you know, for all the faults and i talk to george very often here. he didn't start a new war. i think want him to have the perception by the public that he doesn't keep his promises. and then essentially he's a madman. it's essentially a way of you moralize using him of wanting a war, which actually why one of the reasons the site from closing the border with mexico was to stop these senseless wars. so you have this, these rumors, i mean, this is, you know, a moment of opportunity as well. you know, the trump right now and his administration there, are there bogged down trying to find a way through fraud corruption in the election. the last thing that they're going to be able to do right now it's come out and waste time trying to disprove a near new york times
new york times of new york times writers were they were low for anonymous sources or writers and they had it's amazing and they wonder why the print media become so expensive. why does it ever taken 5 journalists to write one piece? that's only not but you get, we're not, i don't, i wouldn't, i would fully suspect, given president here is that it was, it was written by a deep state property and they just put their name on it. ok. because that's essentially what this particularly the case, that...
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Nov 19, 2020
11/20
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new york are colored by the closing of the new york schools. that is all understood around the bravery of essential workers in new york. cerns me is the city schools are stories worldwide. moscow,the news out of overlay that with the imf news, overlay that with the short term. these pandemic events do have a short term event. jonathan: you know it is amazing, the difference in approach, the same science but a different approach. in the u.k., schools are still open. they were the last thing to close. in the u.s. and new york, it is the opposite. tom: applebaum had the tweet of the night where he said he's going to send his kids to a restaurant to be safer than schools. it is funny but it is not. jonathan: it is not funny. coming up, we will catch up with patrick foye the ceo -- the metropolitan ceeo. this bloomberg surveillance the international monetary fund warns the global recovery maybe dating. the imf cautioned government against withdrawing stimulus measures prematurely. a resurgence of the coronavirus is leading to new restrictions on companies and households. the job picture in the u.s. has gotten worse as the nu
new york are colored by the closing of the new york schools. that is all understood around the bravery of essential workers in new york. cerns me is the city schools are stories worldwide. moscow,the news out of overlay that with the imf news, overlay that with the short term. these pandemic events do have a short term event. jonathan: you know it is amazing, the difference in approach, the same science but a different approach. in the u.k., schools are still open. they were the last thing to...
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Nov 14, 2020
11/20
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they are new restrictions and show governors are nervous without doing something they won't get this virus under control. >> there are a lot in new york and new yorklking about these thresholds in place in new york, governor cuomo talking about it. how are we seeing people respond to the one time epicenter in new york? >> that's a great very important question. up until a couple hours ago i had a pretty clear answer for you. right now, where i'm standing is kind of unclear. let me show you a tweet that came from the mayor this morning saying how the city has not crossed the 3% threshold in the 7-day averages of infection rate required to keep the schools from shutting down. all week last week the mayor said if that 3% number was crossed, schools would immediately close to in-person classes once again in new york city. then, just a couple hours ago, governor, on a press call with reporters said something different. the governor said, maybe schools could test their way out of shutting down. if inside the numbers are lower than 3% those schools can stay open. we don't really no which one of those two things will turn out to be what happens next. we r
they are new restrictions and show governors are nervous without doing something they won't get this virus under control. >> there are a lot in new york and new yorklking about these thresholds in place in new york, governor cuomo talking about it. how are we seeing people respond to the one time epicenter in new york? >> that's a great very important question. up until a couple hours ago i had a pretty clear answer for you. right now, where i'm standing is kind of unclear. let me...
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Nov 11, 2020
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new york. somebody from new york knows new york better than me. so we empowered or delegations, congressional members to tell us at the national committee who are the people that are best qualified that could be the best candidates. then we encourage them to run. i'll give you an example. if a woman, like ashley hinton from iowa, she came out to washington d.c. we sat down with her, encouraged her first. first, it was the fear as to where the country was going. she doesn't want what the squad wants. she wants the freedoms to reach their full potential. she wants that for her children. that motivated her. we put her in great women we already have in congress. the elise stefaniks, kathy rogers. we have talented women that sat down with them and said if you're a professional, you can continue to have that life and you can do this. made a difference. >> dana: congratulations to you on those races. i know you aim to give nancy pelosi a run for her money in the next congress. we'll start in touch with you. thanks, tom emmer. >> thank you. >> dana: let's
new york. somebody from new york knows new york better than me. so we empowered or delegations, congressional members to tell us at the national committee who are the people that are best qualified that could be the best candidates. then we encourage them to run. i'll give you an example. if a woman, like ashley hinton from iowa, she came out to washington d.c. we sat down with her, encouraged her first. first, it was the fear as to where the country was going. she doesn't want what the squad...
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Nov 19, 2020
11/20
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new york post" up there, please. this is a classic from "the new york post." no class dunce caps for clueless cuomo and mayor of new new york at this moment, absolute despair. terrible thing to see. meanwhile, leave you with the market showing the dow down 120 points. not that much stock price movement so far today. let's see what neil's got. sir, it is yours. neil: stuart, thank you very much for that. we're looking at new restrictions not only going on in new york and new york state, we're up to 22 states that are really dialing things back. we'll get into that. getting the latest on astrazeneca. very confident it could have a vaccine out. one really helps older and more vulnerable people who get this covid-19. that and word that johnson & johnson is waiting on the runaway. so that would be four big biotech and drug companies right now that are ready to launch. how far that goes, anyone's guess. get the latest read from jackie deangelis following all of this.
new york post" up there, please. this is a classic from "the new york post." no class dunce caps for clueless cuomo and mayor of new new york at this moment, absolute despair. terrible thing to see. meanwhile, leave you with the market showing the dow down 120 points. not that much stock price movement so far today. let's see what neil's got. sir, it is yours. neil: stuart, thank you very much for that. we're looking at new restrictions not only going on in new york and new york...
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york that other states have experienced because of the early voting procedures here now there have been reports from the new york post about individuals here in new york city who were caught voting under the names of people who have already died now those reports are coming out however potential fraud isn't really expected to affect the results here in new york state because new york state is a stronghold of the democratic party and its electoral votes are presumed to go to joe biden anyway now what is interesting and quite an important development is that a federal judge has recently ordered the u.s. postal service to inspect several processing facilities in swing states and one of them is in pennsylvania and as a result of this postal ballots will not be counted for several days until after the official vote has ended according to the supreme court's decision now during his scheduled visit to the republican national convention and next u.s. president donald trump he spoke about this and he said that there's actually undermines the transparency of the election take a listen. winning is easy losing is never easy enough for me it's not you have to have
york that other states have experienced because of the early voting procedures here now there have been reports from the new york post about individuals here in new york city who were caught voting under the names of people who have already died now those reports are coming out however potential fraud isn't really expected to affect the results here in new york state because new york state is a stronghold of the democratic party and its electoral votes are presumed to go to joe biden anyway now...
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Nov 19, 2020
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new york. new york city now closing its schools. what do you make of the fact that the schools are closed, yet businesses are still open, restaurants, and gyms remain open, restaurants, and gyms remain open, i'll be at having to close at ten o'clock? well, the consensus on the biden — harris advisory board is that we need to be scaling up and scaling down restrictions based on what areas are, what settings our highest risk for transmission, so that would imply indoor restaurants, indoor gyms, where they have classes, perhaps, bars, those kinds of settings. schools are much lower risk, as we have observed, notjust in the united states but in other countries, especially younger children under the age of 12 do not seem to be significant spreaders of the illness to adults. and so we would really advocate for an approach that dials up or dials down restrictions on the basis of true risk, as well as essential services, andi risk, as well as essential services, and i would argue that schools are a pretty essential service. and at the moment, the us has every state having its own way in terms of restrictions on how to tackle the crisis. do you think the country needs a nationwide federal strategy, and will that change underjoe biden? well, the united states is a federalist system, and historically, thatis federalist system, and historically, that is just how our constitution is written, how are government functions. so there are certain limitations to what any president can do to override that. that said, i think you will see a much more coherent, cogent national plan here and a lot more leadership coming from the white house as well as the cdc and other agencies within the federal government. but doctor, you are part of the incoming administration's advisory board. thank you forjoining us from the york. my pleasure. donald trump still hasn't conceded — 12 days sincejoe biden was declared the winner of the election. and his campaign team is continuing to make claims of fraud without proof. here's his personal lawyer rudy giuliani at a press conference earlier. this is not a singular voterfraud in one state. this pattern repeats itself in a number of states. almost exactly the same pattern. which, to any experienced investigator, prosecutor, would suggest there was a plan from a centralised place to execute these various acts of voter fraud. well, as we've discussed many times on this show, those claims are unsubstantiated. gary 0'donoghue is with me now from washington. increasingly outlandish claims, gary. any foundation in evidence? no, there is no foundation in evidence. what essentially rudy giuliani and the trump legal team are suggesting is that the democrats in large cities across america got together, hatched a plan, implemented it without anyone kind of knowing, and managed to steal the election. it's quite an extraordinary claim. it's one of those things that you would expect to see circulating on the internet, and really, preferably, staying there. but this is something that they haven't produced any great evidence for. there are miss counts in all sorts of elections. that a lwa ys in all sorts of elections. that always happens. some miss counting of ballots, machines not working, disputes over certain ballots. that is why you have a kind of recount process like we have seen in georgia, but this idea of a sort of nationwide criminal conspiracy to defraud the american people, there is really no evidence for that at all, and its risks, ithink, undermining americans' trust in democracy generally. and as you say, gary, there has been a recount going on in georgia due to the narrowness of the margin. are we likely to hear anything about that anytime soon? well, we were hoping to hear something about that a couple of hours ago. we haven't yet. the deadline for that particular hand recount of those 5 million ballots was last night at midnight, overnight. that will hopefully... we will hopefully get the result of that later today. that will not be the end of it, because they can be a machine recount ordered or requested in georgia, where they feed ballots into a machine. that could take another bunch of days as well. so it may not be all over in georgia, and it's certainly not all over in georgia in the sense that they will have two senate run—off elections at the beginning of january. have two senate run—off elections at the beginning ofjanuary. hugely important in the sense that that will decide the balance of power in the senate, because if the democrats win both of those likejoe biden won the state, the senate would be 50—50 and kamala harris, joe biden‘s vice president would have the deciding vote. thank you very much, gary. mike pompeo has become the first us secretary of state to visit a jewish settlement in the occupied west bank, breaking from decades of us policy in the region. he visited a winery in a settlement close to ramallah. a wine was named in his honour. earlier he met israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu in jerusalem. their friendship was on show. here they are giving each other an elbow bump. last year mr pompeo caused outrage when he said israel's settlement policy didn't contradict international law. he made a case for that again. you talked about the fact that for a long time, the state department at the wrong view of settlements. it took the view that they did not recognise the history of the special place, and today, the us department of state stand strongly in the view that the settlements can be done in a way that are lawful, appropriate and proper. palestinian leaders immediately hit back, calling it a step towards supporting occupation. here's plo member dr mustafa barghouti. well, it seems that mr pompeo does not lose any opportunity to make himself and his administration participant in a war crime. the crime of annexing occupied territories, the crime of building illegal settlements on occupied territories. these visits are unacceptable. they are provocative. whether to settlements which will become part of the state in the west bank, or to the golan heights, which we re bank, or to the golan heights, which were illegally annexed by israel. in my opinion, pompeo is running a very provocative policy, and they are trying to create difficulties for mr biden and his administration to stop they are trying to create as much as possible what they think could become a reversible fact on the ground, that will destroy the potential and possibility of two state solution and peace in the region. might pompeo arrived in israel on wednesday, in what many people consider his last trip before leaving office next year. palestinians called him an unwelcome visitor. this was the scene on the west bank. dozens demonstrated in al—bireh, a community betweenjerusalem and ramallah. they burned tyres near israeli settlements. the settlements are bitterly disputed. this is the background. more than 600,000 jews live in settlements that israel has built on land it's occupied since 1967. there are 140 settlements in total, in eastjerusalem and the west bank — land that palestinians consider is rightfully theirs and seek for a future, independent state. this is likely to inflame tensions. mike pompeo has announced that imports from israeli settlements in the occupied west bank will be labelled as having been "made in israel" or "product of israel". mr pompeo's visit continued in the occupied golan heights on israel's border with syria. last year, the us became the first country to recognise israel's sovereignty over the area, which israel annexed in 1981. that's not internationally recognised. and here's mike pompeo on why the us chose to go it alone. 35 years ago, as a young cadet, i studied about this very place, this amazing and important piece of real estate. you can't stand here and stare out at what is across the border and deny the central thing that president trump recognised, that president trump recognised, that previous presidents had refused to do, that this is a part of israel, and a central part of israel. our state department correspondent barbara plett usher joins us from washington. what you think mike pompeo's strategy was in paying a visit like this in the dying days of trump administration? mike pompeo has been a real cheerleader of trump's policy on israel, which essentially embraced that vision of the israeli right, the expansionist vision with regard to the occupied territories, and as you said, he really made his mark last year when he announced that he was changing the us assessment ofjewish settle m e nts the us assessment ofjewish settlements in the occupied territories, that they did not contradict international law as the state department has previously assessed. so by visiting the first secretary of state to visit the jewish settlements in the west bank and the golan heights, he can physically stamp that policy with his imprinta, physically stamp that policy with his imprint a, if you like. it is a victory lap for all the pro israel moves the trump administration has made, and some commentators say it is also a photo opportunity in case mrtrump does is also a photo opportunity in case mr trump does decide to run for presidency in 202a. stay right there, barbara. donald trump and benjamin netanyahu have made no secret of their close friendship in the past four years. they've seen eye—to—eye on numerous issues. we were reminded of that again today. thanks to president trump, the us recognise jerusalem as israel's n moved its embassy here. thanks to president trump, the united states recognised israeli sovereignty over the goal and heights. thanks to president trump, the us pulled out of the dangerous nuclear deal with iran. place crippling sanctions on the iranian regime, and eliminated the iranian regime, and eliminated the terrorist soleimani. thanks to president trump, the united states proposed the first truly realistic plan for peace between palestinians and israelis, thanks to president trump, israel was able to forge peace with three arab countries, the uae, bahrain and sudan. barbara, after the extreme warmth we heard there to watch president trump, how different is israel likely to find things underjoe biden? well, it won't be the same. it isa biden? well, it won't be the same. it is a blow for mr netanyahu, because president trump fulsomely supported his right—wing policies. having said that, joe biden is not left—wing. he is a moderate, a traditional pro—israel democrat, so he would not, for example, tight us aid to any conditions, which is what some of the left—wing members of his party wa nt. some of the left—wing members of his party want. he said he is not going to reverse the trump administration's decision to recognise jerusalem as administration's decision to recognisejerusalem as israel's capital, but he will almost certainly want to restore us policy towards israel and the west bank and the occupied territories and the settlements. though i do not think he is going to come up with an initiative, a big peace process initiative. where you might see the most pragmatic differences in policy towards the palestinians, with those relationships cut off under the trump administration, i think he would want to restore diplomatic ties and humanitarian assistance, reopen that consulate in east jerusalem that used to serve as palestinians'. i think when mr biden and mr netanyahu will clashes over iran. mr netanyahu strongly opposes the iran nuclear deal whereas mr biden wants to rejoin it. and just briefly, going back to their visit to the winery resort, that newements can be labelled as coming from israel, how controversial is that? well, it reverses us guidelines. current us guidelines had been that they should be labelled goods made in the west bank. for mr pompeo to say they are to be made in israel, it is again blurring that line between israel and the occupied territories. it is consistent with the trump administration's peace plan, which envisioned israeli sovereignty over all the jewish settlements with envisioned israeli sovereignty over all thejewish settlements with a kind of truncated palestinian state alongside, and it could throw up hurdles for mr biden if he wants to restore or roll back the trump administration's policy on settlements. thank you very much, barbara. to australia, where a long—awaited report into alleged war crimes has found credible evidence that some of the country's elite soldiers murdered 39 civilians and prisoners while serving in afghanistan. this is the head of the australian defence force. it is alleged t
new york. new york city now closing its schools. what do you make of the fact that the schools are closed, yet businesses are still open, restaurants, and gyms remain open, restaurants, and gyms remain open, i'll be at having to close at ten o'clock? well, the consensus on the biden — harris advisory board is that we need to be scaling up and scaling down restrictions based on what areas are, what settings our highest risk for transmission, so that would imply indoor restaurants, indoor gyms,...
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i'm not saying that his testimony was the linchpin, but new york, that's where -- 2080%f the income tax from new york. new york is one of the states you would expect to resist but it in fact goes along with the 16th amendment as well. does that help? it was a round about response to your question, richard. but it gives you some flavor. >> more questions? well, if a.j. has not given us a really example of why we should purchase his book, i don't know -- it was a great discussion of clarity on a frightful topic. thank you so much for a wonderful presentation. >> thank you. thank you all for coming. [ applause ] >>> weeknights this month we're featuring american history tv as a preview of what's available every weekend on c-span3. tonight, a look back at a union prisoner of war camp during the u.s. civil war in new york where almost 3,000 confederate p.o.w.s died. derek maxfield is the author of the most famous prison camp in the civil war. that starts at 8:00 p.m. eastern. enjoy american history tv this week and every weekend on c-span3. >> historian and author molly michaelmore discusses her book. she look
i'm not saying that his testimony was the linchpin, but new york, that's where -- 2080%f the income tax from new york. new york is one of the states you would expect to resist but it in fact goes along with the 16th amendment as well. does that help? it was a round about response to your question, richard. but it gives you some flavor. >> more questions? well, if a.j. has not given us a really example of why we should purchase his book, i don't know -- it was a great discussion of clarity...
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so that's why there's always dog now, i mean we've had articles in the new york times, new york of your books, the nation that we have to punish donald trump. i haven't quite figured out what it is they're going to put him on trial for what crime did because of committed. but they know that he's a criminal, that kind of figure out later on what, what are the crimes, once they subpoena, or his documents or his account, or his bank statements going back out into how many decades they're hoping that they're going to find something that they can put him on trial or alternatively just on.
so that's why there's always dog now, i mean we've had articles in the new york times, new york of your books, the nation that we have to punish donald trump. i haven't quite figured out what it is they're going to put him on trial for what crime did because of committed. but they know that he's a criminal, that kind of figure out later on what, what are the crimes, once they subpoena, or his documents or his account, or his bank statements going back out into how many decades they're hoping...
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box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]hank you for joining us. from our studio in tokyo, this is nhk "newsline." there's been another potential breakthrough in the search for a coronavirus vaccine. u.s. pharmaceutical firm moderna says its vaccine candidate was found to be 94.5% effective based on preliminary results. it comes about a week after pfizer and biontech announced a
box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]hank you for joining us. from our studio in tokyo, this is nhk "newsline." there's been another potential breakthrough in the search for a coronavirus vaccine. u.s. pharmaceutical firm moderna says its vaccine candidate was found to be 94.5% effective based on preliminary results. it comes about a week after pfizer and biontech announced a
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box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]xxxxxdñoooooooooooo. trying
box 693 new york, new york 10013. [captioning made possible by democracy now!]xxxxxdñoooooooooooo. trying
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called jim crow new york, which is the -- some people might find threatened by and i think what this history you tell us i think takes news a very different direction from the way that new york tends to portray and if it racial politics, liberalism, multiculturalism, its openness and this idea of a jim crow new york is very different from that. and maybe you could key that a little bit, what it -- why are we calling this jim crow new york and how tolls thatt history you just told us about attempts to kind of reform the police and the backlash, the racial backlash, the white racial backlash, reshape our notion of the city and its liberalism. >> yeah. you're right. this is the imagehat new york has portrayed. many people who are outside of th city always want to come in and they make i the wonderful cultural melting pot, and i mean there are aspects of it, sure. if you have money, it's fine. but what is missing is the massive inequality, andsually that's on racial lines in the city. the mistreatment, is a noted. the brow at that time that continues with policing, the educion, the segregaon of public schools and new york city and the lack of funding t those schools thatre premi
called jim crow new york, which is the -- some people might find threatened by and i think what this history you tell us i think takes news a very different direction from the way that new york tends to portray and if it racial politics, liberalism, multiculturalism, its openness and this idea of a jim crow new york is very different from that. and maybe you could key that a little bit, what it -- why are we calling this jim crow new york and how tolls thatt history you just told us about...