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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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so let's be honest with new yorkers. the only thing that will solve this problem is building hundreds and hundreds of thousands of homes. [applause] new york already spends more than any other state in our nation on housing. our capital plan is the most ambitious in history deploying state and private dollars adding to $25 billion in funding. what does that get us? sounds like a lot of money, right? that results in 100,000 new and preserved units, very important. but still a fraction of what we need. here's what i know. spending more money or insisting on new regulation will not get us out of the deep hole dug by decades of inaction or overcome the lack of courage doing simply what is required. already new york has vastly more housing stock than any other state. but it still hasn't made more homes for people. that's where the status quo has failed. it's a band-aid while we need reconstructive surgery. where does that leave us? we need a statewide approach to encourage new construction. but in the meantime, there are aggre
so let's be honest with new yorkers. the only thing that will solve this problem is building hundreds and hundreds of thousands of homes. [applause] new york already spends more than any other state in our nation on housing. our capital plan is the most ambitious in history deploying state and private dollars adding to $25 billion in funding. what does that get us? sounds like a lot of money, right? that results in 100,000 new and preserved units, very important. but still a fraction of what we...
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22
Mar 2, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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so you say what's in this forcz new yorkers? alley exploded the 1980s will be the birthplace of countless new startups, spin ups in the technological advancements for everyone. just imagine the possibilities ai can help diagnose cancer and it can predict dangerous storms racial and economic disparities in our communities. that is something the seniors at the university at buffalo buffalo who is with us hereho today and started working on. [applause] let me tell you what holidays dog. research can improve the child welfare system. she is passionate about increasing the black women's person's dissipation inen scien. thank you. again. holiday and scholars and universities will help build this industry in the■# future. with this new consortium we will drive ethical ai development and do it inhat way that protects our workers andma make it a fore for good in the world. we will be the veryivate sectoro galvanize it we will share this power to make it people like collett who are innovating for the good of society. that is how we change
so you say what's in this forcz new yorkers? alley exploded the 1980s will be the birthplace of countless new startups, spin ups in the technological advancements for everyone. just imagine the possibilities ai can help diagnose cancer and it can predict dangerous storms racial and economic disparities in our communities. that is something the seniors at the university at buffalo buffalo who is with us hereho today and started working on. [applause] let me tell you what holidays dog. research...
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Mar 2, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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sos; you for new yorkers? alley exploded in the 1980's, we -- we will be the birthplace of countless new start-ups, spinoffs and the technological advancement that is benefit everyone. just imagine the possibilities. a.i. can help diagnose cancer an cure diseases. it can predict dangerous storms our communities have advanced flood warnings or uncover solutions for racial and economic dispar miss our communities. that's something holiday simms a senior who is with us today at the university of buffalo is working on. mr. holiday? [applause] let me tell you what holiday is doing. she's kicked research on how a.i. could improve the child welfare system and she's passiote about increasing black women's participation in computer science. holiday -- [applause] stand up again. [applause] thank you. holiday and scholars like her at our universities will help build this industry of the future. and with this new consortium, we will drive ethical a.i. development and do it in a way that protects our workers and make it a f
sos; you for new yorkers? alley exploded in the 1980's, we -- we will be the birthplace of countless new start-ups, spinoffs and the technological advancement that is benefit everyone. just imagine the possibilities. a.i. can help diagnose cancer an cure diseases. it can predict dangerous storms our communities have advanced flood warnings or uncover solutions for racial and economic dispar miss our communities. that's something holiday simms a senior who is with us today at the university of...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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could submit the new yorker.ime could, like, go in person and show your work to the editor who at that was bob mankoff and you could actually sit down with him and would give you feedback on your work. and that was a really rare thing in publishing. you know to be able to have an editor even respond to you alone, sit down with you in person and. so when she told me about that, i was like how? i was very intimidated like, i don't know if i can do this. this is going to take over my life. it turns out it did take over life, but it was great. so, you know, i went well, first i spent a summer drawing a single pound and liana told me something that i never forgot, which is shecartoons are playin. it's like practice for your longer work, you know? and it's just sort of like constant of those muscles of like word and image and image, how to get a story happening really quickly, like how to make an impact, how to use space, how to get the reader to have a reaction in the things you're not giving them. so, you know there'
could submit the new yorker.ime could, like, go in person and show your work to the editor who at that was bob mankoff and you could actually sit down with him and would give you feedback on your work. and that was a really rare thing in publishing. you know to be able to have an editor even respond to you alone, sit down with you in person and. so when she told me about that, i was like how? i was very intimidated like, i don't know if i can do this. this is going to take over my life. it...
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Mar 28, 2024
03/24
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FOXNEWSW
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those new yorkers you just heard from really summing the frustrations that most new yorkers felt. train here and there was a fellow new yorker with a blue live spin. a thin blue line pin. it struck me the disconnect from back i felt and how average new yorkers feel and what i experience every day in the city council. i just left the city council. the last public safety hearing we had was on getting rid of -- overturning wrongful convictions for the next public safety hearing we are hearing is also on overturning wrongful convictions. it's like there is a disconnect between the reality new yorkers are facing and what they can see plainly with their own eyes and what government at all levels is doing. it is unfortunate and it is resulting and not just officer diller's death but it is resulting in punches on women we are seeing on tiktok right now. all sorts of horrible things by repeat violent offenders. >> shannon: two what do you do attribute that disconnect? i say mayor adams has served as a law-enforcement officer himself himself. where is the breakdown between what you are sayi
those new yorkers you just heard from really summing the frustrations that most new yorkers felt. train here and there was a fellow new yorker with a blue live spin. a thin blue line pin. it struck me the disconnect from back i felt and how average new yorkers feel and what i experience every day in the city council. i just left the city council. the last public safety hearing we had was on getting rid of -- overturning wrongful convictions for the next public safety hearing we are hearing is...
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6.0
Mar 30, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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this is a new yorker cartoon. this is my proof that i actually have a degree in powerpoint presentations. so you can rest assured that i plan to entertain you. so. this is one woman show. i'm really we have more than one one woman show, but you never know with book events. you know, sometimes. so i put that one in there. like in case that happens and we make a joke about it. yeah. okay. books. so some book themed cartoons, 3 p.m. meet the author, 3:10 p.m. tweet negative reviews the author 3:25 p.m. meet the authors disappoint good parents 3:30 p.m. meet the author spouse who has raised the author's children on a single earner salary. total fiction. nothing true about that at all. another literary one you'll never believe who's here. so i'll let that. this is a moby--- cartoon cartoon and this is going to be us after. the author cocktail party like looking the white whales in the room. yeah. the very stressed cat. a pillar. that's with apologies to eric carle. yeah. i wanted to throw a love themed cartoon in there
this is a new yorker cartoon. this is my proof that i actually have a degree in powerpoint presentations. so you can rest assured that i plan to entertain you. so. this is one woman show. i'm really we have more than one one woman show, but you never know with book events. you know, sometimes. so i put that one in there. like in case that happens and we make a joke about it. yeah. okay. books. so some book themed cartoons, 3 p.m. meet the author, 3:10 p.m. tweet negative reviews the author 3:25...
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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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FOXNEWSW
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it is not fare for average new yorker to go to work everyday, swipe their metro card and pay the fare. we are seeing small group of people, small group of individuals we catch during these operations. >> kayleigh: we'll break away for a moment as he lays out a horrifying incident that transpired yesterday 4:45 at a manhattan train. viewer discretion is advised, if you have young children, remove them from the room, take a look. [screaming] [video playing] >> all the way down, baby. >> let me out. let me out. let me out. let me out. let me out. let me out. [shot fired] [shots fired] >> emily, it was a jarring moment and just to take our viewers through the video. video begins, you see a fight ensue and it seems to be a fist fight. you see a woman off to the side who appears to be associated with one of the men, as we see them and laid out. she appears to have an object and the 36-year-old man is seen bleeding, seems to have incurred an injury. you see the 36-year-old man take out a gun and camera breaks away. there is a tussle between a 36 and 32-year-old man. and the 32-year-old man w
it is not fare for average new yorker to go to work everyday, swipe their metro card and pay the fare. we are seeing small group of people, small group of individuals we catch during these operations. >> kayleigh: we'll break away for a moment as he lays out a horrifying incident that transpired yesterday 4:45 at a manhattan train. viewer discretion is advised, if you have young children, remove them from the room, take a look. [screaming] [video playing] >> all the way down, baby....
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Mar 27, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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a recent new yorker piece about there in the new yorker and how she handles her own. that kind of takes on sort of frantic pace of anxiety. and she justifies that the advice saying, my catharsis is your boredom. i hope i'm not butchering that quote. but that was such a lovely way to justify her pacing in that. and also a really great piece on the term autofiction, which i sort of quarrel with as a genre. as a pejorative nowadays for a lot of writers. but she very warily, very trenchantly explains why this is actually a novel approach to fiction writing. so that's a great book for sure. and that'sr's no judgment essay. what's another book that you're interested in this spring? oh, there's always this year by hanif abdurraqib that comes out later in the month. terrific writer from columbus, ohio, macarthur fellow recently has also been a national book critics circle finalist for his book called go out in the rain. go ahead in the rain by throw throughout a tribe called quest. it's been a finalist for the national book award and along with the national book award. i don'
a recent new yorker piece about there in the new yorker and how she handles her own. that kind of takes on sort of frantic pace of anxiety. and she justifies that the advice saying, my catharsis is your boredom. i hope i'm not butchering that quote. but that was such a lovely way to justify her pacing in that. and also a really great piece on the term autofiction, which i sort of quarrel with as a genre. as a pejorative nowadays for a lot of writers. but she very warily, very trenchantly...
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Mar 26, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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most prominently in the new yorker.r's london review of books and she has a reputation as a critic who says things that other people are afraid to, particularly about popular books are novelist. i don't think that's an unfair assessment, but i think the trouble is that focusing on this kind of obfuscates her humor and the intelligence with which she constructs her pieces. and so this book singular writet kind of focuses on issues in the culture at large. and i think it really allows this the sort of wit and intelligence in her writing to shine. there is a ton of great essays in the collection, i believe a collection of seven essays, but the standouts to me are a rumination on gossip that takes gawker as kind of a test case in the literary world. a recent new yorker piece about anxiety. it was out there in the new yorker and how she handles her own. that kind of takes on sort of frantic pace of anxiety. and she justifies that the advice saying, my cathars bore. i hope i'm not butchering that quote. but that was such a lo
most prominently in the new yorker.r's london review of books and she has a reputation as a critic who says things that other people are afraid to, particularly about popular books are novelist. i don't think that's an unfair assessment, but i think the trouble is that focusing on this kind of obfuscates her humor and the intelligence with which she constructs her pieces. and so this book singular writet kind of focuses on issues in the culture at large. and i think it really allows this the...
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Mar 28, 2024
03/24
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FOXNEWSW
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policies and throwing law enforcement under the bus, and prioritizing criminals over law abiding new yorkersyone hears about the cashless bell law but prosecutors who are refusing to prosecute in new york city and the attack on qualified immunity -- and elected officials are not having the back of law enforcement so it is a tough moment to be law enforcement because i came from a law enforcement household. so to this 1-year-old little boy, with that time comes to watch this discussion, to no end this moment we want you to know how with wolf we are and we never want you to forget. >> kayleigh: i was reading the details of this horrific killing and it is so hard to watch. it made my heart tug, a 1-year-old boy who will not know his father here on earth. maybe one day in heaven he will, but he will know if his heroism and i give great credit to the former president for going and bringing attention to the story all day and you will hear about officer diller and even more so because the former president is showing up in highlighting this hero. >> emily: he is representing all americans in that mo
policies and throwing law enforcement under the bus, and prioritizing criminals over law abiding new yorkersyone hears about the cashless bell law but prosecutors who are refusing to prosecute in new york city and the attack on qualified immunity -- and elected officials are not having the back of law enforcement so it is a tough moment to be law enforcement because i came from a law enforcement household. so to this 1-year-old little boy, with that time comes to watch this discussion, to no...
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Mar 25, 2024
03/24
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FBC
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you're a lifelong new yorker. >> 70 years in new york, i love new york, if we don't fix it up on thisthere's a big election in november, and all we want is -- we love new york. all we want is new york to go in the right direction and enough of the crime. stuart: it's a leadership problem. change the leadership and you maybe the problem improves. >> absolutely. stuart: on the subway, it's getting more dangerous to ride the subway. crimes on trains and in stations are up 53% since before the pandemic in 2019. if people don't feel safe on the subways, they're not coming back to live or walk in new york city. how can we krugere a some-back if working people are afraid to get on the subway. last word to you, john. >> stuart, yes, there's 8.5 million new yorkers in new york city that want to live in a civilized way. and there's millions of repeat violaters arrested 50 times. the state said it. are they working for the 8.5 million new yorkers that want a civilized city or are they working for the 3300 criminals? i mean, that's what it comes down to, stuart. stuart: good question. john catsim
you're a lifelong new yorker. >> 70 years in new york, i love new york, if we don't fix it up on thisthere's a big election in november, and all we want is -- we love new york. all we want is new york to go in the right direction and enough of the crime. stuart: it's a leadership problem. change the leadership and you maybe the problem improves. >> absolutely. stuart: on the subway, it's getting more dangerous to ride the subway. crimes on trains and in stations are up 53% since...
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Mar 11, 2024
03/24
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FBC
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all new yorkers are good to get day one congestion pricing is slapped with a 15-dollar toll and no newcularly who live in transit or have no viable transit is going to be a burden no option to get onto public transit right now. neil: the way i see it what they want you to do is not consider you bringing your own vehicle and take public transportation as you say that is an option for many is not an option for all and of course there is an issue of crime and other things that give people pause even thinking of going into a subway or a train station on either side of the hudson. it is just a concern what do you think. >> i think it is it's a very classist approach those that can afford it will continue to drive that leaves the question wide open how much is going to reduce congestion those that are to get hit the worst are the out of bar were new yorkers that don't have transit options but will have to pay $15 to get into the city from the outer boroughs. it's very classic in downtown brooklyn hipsters if you will on long island city or downtown brooklyn against the blue-collar heart of n
all new yorkers are good to get day one congestion pricing is slapped with a 15-dollar toll and no newcularly who live in transit or have no viable transit is going to be a burden no option to get onto public transit right now. neil: the way i see it what they want you to do is not consider you bringing your own vehicle and take public transportation as you say that is an option for many is not an option for all and of course there is an issue of crime and other things that give people pause...
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Mar 5, 2024
03/24
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and that was another part of "the new yorker" piece. does he know what's happening?problem for any president. you have your bubble and you have your white house advisors and you rely on them to have an honest assessment for what they are. i wonder what those around him are showing him. one last point on the maga language, i found it interesting at the piece. at one point, he throws down a paper in front of the reporter. and it's a list of all the things trump has said, rhetoric that he didn't like attacks on him, taking away, destroying the constitution. it's just interesting to me that's a paper the president would have him on as a ready go to talking point. >> bill: the point that you made about the state of the union is very interesting. does he go there with the national audience of 40, 50 million americans watching? we'll see on that. meanwhile, tonight, all right, a little clip from nikki haley from last hour here on fox and whether or not there's going to be some sort of magnamamus handshake. how would you characterize it? >> dana: maybe not tonight. >> bill:
and that was another part of "the new yorker" piece. does he know what's happening?problem for any president. you have your bubble and you have your white house advisors and you rely on them to have an honest assessment for what they are. i wonder what those around him are showing him. one last point on the maga language, i found it interesting at the piece. at one point, he throws down a paper in front of the reporter. and it's a list of all the things trump has said, rhetoric that...
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Mar 8, 2024
03/24
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FOXNEWSW
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new yorkers want law and order.does absolutely nothing when it comes to law and order. >> harris: leo terrell, breaking it down on a friday. thank you. >> thank you for having me, harris. thank you. >> harris: president biden tried to reassure americans as he stared down a rematch with president trump. deaccomplish that? and robert f. kennedy jr. is wrapping up the threat and he had his own response speech. >> -- americans everywhere want to heal the divide. >> harris: veteran journalists say this is a three-man race and rfk jr. should not be ignored. just to see if you qualify for a home loan. yet, some lenders charge you hundreds of dollars in upfront fees just to apply. they keep your money even if they turn you down. call newday. unlike other lenders, at newday there's no upfront appraisal fee, no upfront termite inspection fee and no upfront water test fee. not $1 out of pocket. give us a call. (♪ ) why did i keep missing out on this? before you were preventing migraine with qulipta? do you remember the pain, t
new yorkers want law and order.does absolutely nothing when it comes to law and order. >> harris: leo terrell, breaking it down on a friday. thank you. >> thank you for having me, harris. thank you. >> harris: president biden tried to reassure americans as he stared down a rematch with president trump. deaccomplish that? and robert f. kennedy jr. is wrapping up the threat and he had his own response speech. >> -- americans everywhere want to heal the divide. >>...
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0.0
Mar 19, 2024
03/24
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KGO
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>> we are prepared to make sure that the judgment is paid to new yorkers. >> reporter: there's also the possibility that trump could put his buildings up for sale now to raise quick cash. but his lawyers say that kind of fire sale would result in irrecoverable losses if his appeal succeeds. so, bottom line, trump wants the court to let him post a smaller bond. his lawyers say securing anything close to $464 million "is a practical impossibility." there's no telling when the appeals court may rule. but david, if trump is unable to post a bond, the attorney general could begin to take ownership of trump's properties. we're not sure that means padlocks and stickers on the door, but she told us she is determined to make sure trump
>> we are prepared to make sure that the judgment is paid to new yorkers. >> reporter: there's also the possibility that trump could put his buildings up for sale now to raise quick cash. but his lawyers say that kind of fire sale would result in irrecoverable losses if his appeal succeeds. so, bottom line, trump wants the court to let him post a smaller bond. his lawyers say securing anything close to $464 million "is a practical impossibility." there's no telling when...
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4.0
Mar 26, 2024
03/24
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LINKTV
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joshua yaffa, contributing writer to "the new yorker" who been a long time moscow correspondent. king to us from berlin, germany. we will link to his new piece "how will putin respond to the terrorist attack in moscow?" nina khrushcheva, professor of the new school. her book is titled "the lost khrushchev: journey into the gulag of the russian mind." co-author of "impotence." footsteps." breaking news, going the ceo plans to resign by the end of the year. the justice department recently opened a criminal probe into the company. there is a mem going around that says "when one door closes, another one opens." next up, we will speak with the world peace foundation's alex de waal who says we are about to witness and gaza the most intense famine since the second world war. we will also talk to him about catastrophic hunger in sudan. back in 20 seconds. ♪ [music break] amy: "farasha " by alsarah. this is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. we turn now to gaza, where the aid groups say famine is imminent after five months of u.s.-backed attacks by
joshua yaffa, contributing writer to "the new yorker" who been a long time moscow correspondent. king to us from berlin, germany. we will link to his new piece "how will putin respond to the terrorist attack in moscow?" nina khrushcheva, professor of the new school. her book is titled "the lost khrushchev: journey into the gulag of the russian mind." co-author of "impotence." footsteps." breaking news, going the ceo plans to resign by the end of the...
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the everyday new yorker going about their business. i'm a new yorker. man by night. we'll start calling people out respectfully. do your job. if everyone does your job i'm not here talking to you this morning. maria: i want to get your take on something that a senator told me is about to blow up and that is human trafficking and i want to see what you're seeing in that regard. i spoke with kansas senator roger marshall on sunday and he told me that the chinese communist party is working with the drug cartels and they're getting people in over the border and then once they're in america, they need to pay up. they need to pay the drug dealers and how are they paying up? they're working in these massage parlors. here's roger marshall. watch this. >> we're we're seeing an explf human trafficing. the chinese triad, an organized crime unit, multinational, been around for hundreds of years is behind this and whenever you see fentanyl trafficking you're going to see human trafficking explode as well. we have more massage parlors than starbucks in kansas. i thin
the everyday new yorker going about their business. i'm a new yorker. man by night. we'll start calling people out respectfully. do your job. if everyone does your job i'm not here talking to you this morning. maria: i want to get your take on something that a senator told me is about to blow up and that is human trafficking and i want to see what you're seeing in that regard. i spoke with kansas senator roger marshall on sunday and he told me that the chinese communist party is working with...
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10.0
Mar 2, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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july 13th-16th, 1863, in the middle of the civil war, thousands of poor and working class why not new yorkers, incensed by equities in the new military draft, resentful about wartime hardship and enflamed by the lincoln administration's emancipation policies, looted and destroyed buildings, battled police, state militia and federal troops and brutally attack thed the city's african-american residents. in the century and a half since thne york city draft riots, numerous psychological lahrs, popular -- scholars, popular books and articles are their rad and examined the significant events that comprised the largest civil insuecon this u.s. history, and and mostf these works have included illustrations o the violence that we published in its immediate aftermath in the weekly newspapers. none of these many studies or popular accounts have used tse images as much more than endorsement for or reiteration of their text. certainly, they have not serd as evidence to be value waited in their own -- evaluated in their o right. illustrated newspapers covered the riots. the three american pictorial weeklie
july 13th-16th, 1863, in the middle of the civil war, thousands of poor and working class why not new yorkers, incensed by equities in the new military draft, resentful about wartime hardship and enflamed by the lincoln administration's emancipation policies, looted and destroyed buildings, battled police, state militia and federal troops and brutally attack thed the city's african-american residents. in the century and a half since thne york city draft riots, numerous psychological lahrs,...
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Mar 5, 2024
03/24
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> kayleigh: i want to get to the new yorker piece. biden sits down for this interview with a reporter, we are just getting full profile. we're going to take you now to a fox news alert. here is president biden speaking. take a listen. >> president biden: five in a row. you guys only look at the "new york times," they're a great paper. >> israelis to allow more aid into gaza. >> president biden: pardon me. >> the israelis, are you pressuring them to get more aid to gaza. >> president biden: i'm working hard with them, we must get more aid in, no excuses, none. >> how is your relationship with benjamin netanyahu these days? >> president biden: like it has always been. >> what are you preparing for your state of the union address? >> president biden: you'll hear me on thursday, thank you very much. >> kayleigh: that was president biden talking about gaza, need to get aid in, talking about his relationship with prime minister netanyahu and that state of the union comment. i'm curious what we'll see. clearly on his mind is the former presid
. >> kayleigh: i want to get to the new yorker piece. biden sits down for this interview with a reporter, we are just getting full profile. we're going to take you now to a fox news alert. here is president biden speaking. take a listen. >> president biden: five in a row. you guys only look at the "new york times," they're a great paper. >> israelis to allow more aid into gaza. >> president biden: pardon me. >> the israelis, are you pressuring them to get...
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43
Mar 26, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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i was another new yorker writer while you were speaking. that's john mcphee.ts too. how would you compare your approach to his approach? yeah. i mean, he's an inspiration you know, as a writer, you other writers to learn how you this thing mcphee's been doing this a lot longer than i have and has really mastered form and so for i'll give you two exampl of how this can actually happen and play out for example, the first two chapters of the book are kind of set up. i have to kind of build the world, the woodenship so that ye civilization that will slowly then you have to know the world before, can understand what happens when it breaks apart. and so one of the books i looked at was david mccullough, the brooklyn bridge. i remember reading years earlier, and as it got, he always made engineering so exciting. and so i read that book none of it's in my book, but it was just an inspiration. and that's how you do this. that's how you write about construction and building and you make it vivid, exciting and come alive for the people. and there was a passage, a very sp
i was another new yorker writer while you were speaking. that's john mcphee.ts too. how would you compare your approach to his approach? yeah. i mean, he's an inspiration you know, as a writer, you other writers to learn how you this thing mcphee's been doing this a lot longer than i have and has really mastered form and so for i'll give you two exampl of how this can actually happen and play out for example, the first two chapters of the book are kind of set up. i have to kind of build the...