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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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KPIX
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, that we are seeing is completely normative. and a jewish person of color is a just a person of a particular skin color who happens to want to assimilate into and asking isaac normative jewish life. there is a lot of plexaderm to that. i would imagine if it works very seriously with that kind of an issue, i'm wondering if you can come speak to it a little bit? >> let's unpack it a little bit. largely, when the jewish came to the united states, let's say the second wave in the 1800s into the 1900s and then into the 20th century the first wave that came to the united states were often german. they were often moving toward something, but not necessarily fleeing their european background and environment. as we look at what we consid mee night wave of european states, eastern european jews that came of the 20 century there were fleeing being marginalized a crossed targeted in their own countries. that whole group of eastern european jews came to the united states at a time when the u.s. did not identify them as right , white. we talk
, that we are seeing is completely normative. and a jewish person of color is a just a person of a particular skin color who happens to want to assimilate into and asking isaac normative jewish life. there is a lot of plexaderm to that. i would imagine if it works very seriously with that kind of an issue, i'm wondering if you can come speak to it a little bit? >> let's unpack it a little bit. largely, when the jewish came to the united states, let's say the second wave in the 1800s into...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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the norm you rouge that donald trump has of kind of stood up on the united states over the last 3 and a half years has been something that people have been looking at with rave concern and now with the pandemic it's just worse we're going to see the consequences of what happens when you just allow this kind of erosion of democratic norms to go unchecked again and again and again and so not only is it concerning on the theoretical level but on the practical level you know. i would be concerned i'm sure many countries are concerned about travelers from the united states into every other area of the world this is the norm it's a problem and so president chavez talking about how he closed china or china well i wouldn't be surprised if many other countries in the world and americans from traveling and steve and so donald trump is is criticizing the w.h.o. for basically saying that they went easy on china and we have already shown our viewers some tweets were donald trump was praising china weeks and months ago is donald trump the person to actually criticize the w.h.o. when it comes to thi
the norm you rouge that donald trump has of kind of stood up on the united states over the last 3 and a half years has been something that people have been looking at with rave concern and now with the pandemic it's just worse we're going to see the consequences of what happens when you just allow this kind of erosion of democratic norms to go unchecked again and again and again and so not only is it concerning on the theoretical level but on the practical level you know. i would be concerned...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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those who are old enough to remember those years have fixed that as the norm and it was not the norm. it was the exception. we agree trade is good and the china shop, the us manufacturing was real but small and geographically targeted. katherine abraham, the impact of the china shop has had less than a one% impact on the population ratio and mostly in the past but there is a risk to prosperity from both protectionism and reduced immigration and a risk to social are many from incitement of racial animosity. there is a risk from the reduction in dynamism which michael didn't talk about, people moving jobs etc.. i would add the sharp decline in geographical mobility is another reason to worry about dynamism. we agree the value of work goes beyond economic utility to include dignity, purpose, etc.. i strongly agree with michael's statement on page 135 the government needs to do more to advance economic opportunity to those who need it most. that brings me to four areas of disagreement. the first is -- to be anti-populist. michael talks a lot about the need for limited government, a dim vi
those who are old enough to remember those years have fixed that as the norm and it was not the norm. it was the exception. we agree trade is good and the china shop, the us manufacturing was real but small and geographically targeted. katherine abraham, the impact of the china shop has had less than a one% impact on the population ratio and mostly in the past but there is a risk to prosperity from both protectionism and reduced immigration and a risk to social are many from incitement of...
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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items not the norm, is the exception to the norm. agreement trade is good. on that and in the long run in the china shop, the u.s. manufacturing, that is real. but a small mostly geographically targeted it. and out magnified in certain places. they estimate that the impacts of the china chalk has had less than 1 percent impact on the employment of the population ratio. and mostly in the past. the risk from prosperity, and the risk to social harmony from racial. a risk dynamism which michael didn't talk about but in this book, people losing jobs etc. i would also add that that shock declining geographical mobility of americans is another reason to worry about this. we agreed that the value of work goes way beyond the economic facility to include dignity and proper structure etc. i strongly agree with michael statement of age 135. the government needs to do more to advance economic opportunity to those who need it most. every. wilfred: for areas of disagreements. the first discernment is don't think you need to be offensive government, as michael appears to be
items not the norm, is the exception to the norm. agreement trade is good. on that and in the long run in the china shop, the u.s. manufacturing, that is real. but a small mostly geographically targeted it. and out magnified in certain places. they estimate that the impacts of the china chalk has had less than 1 percent impact on the employment of the population ratio. and mostly in the past. the risk from prosperity, and the risk to social harmony from racial. a risk dynamism which michael...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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CNBC
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we see access to fresh food being the global norm, not the exception. we see homes staying cooler, without the planet getting warmer. at emerson, when issues become inspiration, focusing core strengths to create a better world isn't just a result, it's a responsibility. emerson. consider it solved.
we see access to fresh food being the global norm, not the exception. we see homes staying cooler, without the planet getting warmer. at emerson, when issues become inspiration, focusing core strengths to create a better world isn't just a result, it's a responsibility. emerson. consider it solved.
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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>> the broad question that is more pessimistic as can we get other nations to agree and have norms that way we have another 2 degrees of warfare and the way we have seen technologies emerge in the past and then we build up in arms tthe norms to try to coe them. i am skeptical of them and i think this is an opportunity where it serves the interests of all nations or the perceived to compete in cyberspace and the norms that have been outlined before by the un have been very high level in a very general. and i don't think they are constraining a part of the behavior. >> you have some of the nations that do the most destructive attacks on the u.s. and the west from iran to north korea, china, russia they don't seem to adhere oto the practices or norms. >> i think that is fair, yes. >> because of that or they getting better and have they surpassed the united states in their capabilities? >> this is a p phrase you hear a lot the united states has the nicest rocks the place to live in a glossy house, so when it comes to intricate i don't use the word often, beautiful offense american capabilit
>> the broad question that is more pessimistic as can we get other nations to agree and have norms that way we have another 2 degrees of warfare and the way we have seen technologies emerge in the past and then we build up in arms tthe norms to try to coe them. i am skeptical of them and i think this is an opportunity where it serves the interests of all nations or the perceived to compete in cyberspace and the norms that have been outlined before by the un have been very high level in a...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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KPIX
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many see mental health is at stake and beaches stay open as long as social distancing is the norm. the vote passed 5-2. 178 points county residents are in the hospital with covid-19 and 42 have died. >>> next on kpix 5 and streaming on cbsn bay area, big area, it may not be traditional, but it will be one to remember. how big-name celebrities are coming together to help graduation like know whether. >>> let's take a live look outside. this time at the richmond san rafael bridge. it is 5:51 am.
many see mental health is at stake and beaches stay open as long as social distancing is the norm. the vote passed 5-2. 178 points county residents are in the hospital with covid-19 and 42 have died. >>> next on kpix 5 and streaming on cbsn bay area, big area, it may not be traditional, but it will be one to remember. how big-name celebrities are coming together to help graduation like know whether. >>> let's take a live look outside. this time at the richmond san rafael...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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the way we have had norms and other categories of warfare and the way we seen technologies emerge in the past and then we build mars to try to counteract them. this is an opportunity for serves the interest of all all nations or at least the procedures of all nations to compete in cyber space in the norms that have been outlined with the u.n. have been very high-level and general. some of the nations that conduct the most if i'm the west lawson west iran or korea china russia who don't seem to adhere to any practices or norms. have they because of that or they getting better and have they surpassed the united united states in a capabilities? >> away like to phrase it is the united states has the nicest rocks that we still live in a very glasshouse so when it comes intricate and don't use this word lightly dutiful cyber offense american capabilities are truly extraordinary. talking about stuxnet an extraordinary operation against the nuclear program but just because we can do that doesn't mean we can defend very well and get this long vulnerability better adversaries have not been shy
the way we have had norms and other categories of warfare and the way we seen technologies emerge in the past and then we build mars to try to counteract them. this is an opportunity for serves the interest of all all nations or at least the procedures of all nations to compete in cyber space in the norms that have been outlined with the u.n. have been very high-level and general. some of the nations that conduct the most if i'm the west lawson west iran or korea china russia who don't seem to...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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people are not held responsible and they feel adrift so to have the chance to say yes, there were norms, i violated them and looking forward what do i do? >> host: when you talk about that some children are coerced into going into that kind of terrorism, other children do it voluntarily. should the law treat that differently those two sets of children? >> guest: it is something the law has tended to treat very differently. the continuum of coercion to voluntariness is more salient even with children than it is adults, present for all of us. when we say someone volunteered under what circumstances, what choices so understanding the context matters a lot. in my view, actually, more relevant is whether people acknowledge they did something wrong and wants to make amends. i'm very affected by brian stevenson's comments, the great civil rights lawyer who says no one should be judged by the worst moment in their life and i think there is more of a will spring of sympathy when we think about young people who have decades ahead of them and we should tap into that. >> host: in criminal law we ta
people are not held responsible and they feel adrift so to have the chance to say yes, there were norms, i violated them and looking forward what do i do? >> host: when you talk about that some children are coerced into going into that kind of terrorism, other children do it voluntarily. should the law treat that differently those two sets of children? >> guest: it is something the law has tended to treat very differently. the continuum of coercion to voluntariness is more salient...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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were billed norms to try to counteract to them. i am very skeptical of that i think it's an opportunity where it serves the interest of all nations of the perceived interest of all nations to compete in cyberspace. the norms that have been outlined so far in the un have been very high level, very general i don't think are constraining a lot of state behavior. >> when you have those that conduct the most destructive attacks on the u.s. and the west, we don't seem to adhere to any kind of ethical practices and norms. >> guest: that's fair. >> host: because of that are they getting better had they surpassed the united states their capability? >> the way i like to phrase it and you hear it a lot. we have a lot of rocks will eliminate glasshouse. when it comes it intricate i don't use this lightly, beautiful cyber offense american abilities are extraordinary. it's extremely intricate operation. just because we can do that doesn't mean we can defend very well print got the long tail of vulnerability that our adversaries have not been shy
were billed norms to try to counteract to them. i am very skeptical of that i think it's an opportunity where it serves the interest of all nations of the perceived interest of all nations to compete in cyberspace. the norms that have been outlined so far in the un have been very high level, very general i don't think are constraining a lot of state behavior. >> when you have those that conduct the most destructive attacks on the u.s. and the west, we don't seem to adhere to any kind of...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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the technologies in the past and then we build the norms to try to counteract them. i'm skeptical and i think that this is an opportunity where it serves the interest of all nations to compete in cyberspace and the norms that have been outlined by the un have been very high level and general and i don't think they are constraining them out of the state behavior. >> some of the nations that do the most conducted tasks on iran, china, russia that don't adhere to these practices or norms. because of bad are they getting better, have they surpassed the united states in theirss capability? t >> the phrase you hear a lot the united states has the nicest rocks that we live in a very glasshouse so when it comes to intricate beautiful cyber offense the american capabilities are truly extraordinary talking about the intricate operations against the program but just because we can do that doesn't mean we can defend very well and we've got this vulnerability that our adversaries haven't been exploiting. this is the case in which most don't know these companies access to a this i
the technologies in the past and then we build the norms to try to counteract them. i'm skeptical and i think that this is an opportunity where it serves the interest of all nations to compete in cyberspace and the norms that have been outlined by the un have been very high level and general and i don't think they are constraining them out of the state behavior. >> some of the nations that do the most conducted tasks on iran, china, russia that don't adhere to these practices or norms....
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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the governmentm norms and that might become a big problem for the government.at that time of the early evening where you are and you must be so grateful to have the balcony. it is good to speak to you, thanks for sitting outside for us. the headlines on bbc news... uk foreign secretary dominic raab rejects calls for an early easing of the coronavirus lockdown, urging "caution" and the need for "ca reful ste ps". he was speaking as uk prime minister boris johnson prepares to return to work tomorrow, two weeks since he left hospital after falling ill with coronavirus. children in spain are allowed out for the first time in six weeks, as one of europe's strictest lockdowns is relaxed. president trump didn't go ahead with his daily coronavirus briefing at the white house yesterday, tweeting that it was not worth his "time or effort". his absence after weeks of attending briefings comes two days after he caused an outcry by suggesting that people could be treated for the virus with disinfectant. daniela relph reports. president said we authorised the first... presid
the governmentm norms and that might become a big problem for the government.at that time of the early evening where you are and you must be so grateful to have the balcony. it is good to speak to you, thanks for sitting outside for us. the headlines on bbc news... uk foreign secretary dominic raab rejects calls for an early easing of the coronavirus lockdown, urging "caution" and the need for "ca reful ste ps". he was speaking as uk prime minister boris johnson prepares to...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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norm for a few years.ple with symptoms but that doesn‘t help in the case because we know half the infections come from people who don‘t have symptoms at the time when the infection happens so what happened, in taiwan and hong kong, there were pretty close to the epicentre of this pandemic. they had people on the ground in were hand, they saw the asymptomatic and re— symptomatic spread so they very quickly realised, everybody needs to wear a mask. they already had the mask wearing culture because they have a history of respiratory pandemics in that region salerno importance of masks and despite the scientific fact, that you can transmit the disease and even if you don‘t know you have it, very quickly everybody realised we need everybody realised we need everybody wearing masks otherwise people are at risk. brieflyjeromy, your advice to anyone in city with a significant coronavirus up a, as well as social distancing, would be to wear a mask. yes, and any mask. you can take a piece of paper towel, staple rubb
norm for a few years.ple with symptoms but that doesn‘t help in the case because we know half the infections come from people who don‘t have symptoms at the time when the infection happens so what happened, in taiwan and hong kong, there were pretty close to the epicentre of this pandemic. they had people on the ground in were hand, they saw the asymptomatic and re— symptomatic spread so they very quickly realised, everybody needs to wear a mask. they already had the mask wearing culture...
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doubt a coronavirus is impacting every facet of our daily lives social distancing has become the new norm across the globe and another trend is occurring in every country where women are allowed to work and that is since the coburg crisis began the gender pay gap has actually widened here in the u.s. women tend to earn about $0.81 on the man's dollar meaning a male colleague in the same job is paid almost 20 percent more so why is the coronavirus impacting the pay gap here to explain. she is the director of labor market policy at an economist at the washington center for equitable growth kate good to see you thanks for being with us so 1st can you can you explain to us how this global pandemic will disproportionately impact us women and hit us in our pocketbooks yeah sure so there's a couple different factors that are all intersecting. women and we see in the labor market 2 big factors is that women tend to be a lot of front line workers were in healthcare particular and just in time women are a lot of their jobs women in service for jobs like hospitality. workers reducing the jobs most a
doubt a coronavirus is impacting every facet of our daily lives social distancing has become the new norm across the globe and another trend is occurring in every country where women are allowed to work and that is since the coburg crisis began the gender pay gap has actually widened here in the u.s. women tend to earn about $0.81 on the man's dollar meaning a male colleague in the same job is paid almost 20 percent more so why is the coronavirus impacting the pay gap here to explain. she is...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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sites book will try to explain to the reader how you would go about trying to encode and embed social norms that we care about directly into algorithms themselves. i couple preparatory remarks. we got a review on an early draft of the book that basically said i think your title is a conventional or possibly even an oxymoron. what you mean an ethical algorithm? how can an algorithm be any more ethical than a a hammer? this reviewer pointed out an algorithm like a hammer is a tool, it is a human design for particular purposes. while it's possible to make an ethical use of a hammer, for instance, i might decide to hit you, nobody would make the mistake of ascribing in unethical behavior or immoral activity to the hammer itself. if i hit you on the hand with a hammer you would blame before him and you and i would both know that real harm had come to because of my hitting you on the hand with a hammer. this reviewer said i do see why the same arguments apply, tone applied algorithms. we thought about this and decided we disagreed. we think algorithms are different even though they are indeed jus
sites book will try to explain to the reader how you would go about trying to encode and embed social norms that we care about directly into algorithms themselves. i couple preparatory remarks. we got a review on an early draft of the book that basically said i think your title is a conventional or possibly even an oxymoron. what you mean an ethical algorithm? how can an algorithm be any more ethical than a a hammer? this reviewer pointed out an algorithm like a hammer is a tool, it is a human...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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in my book, i looked at a amazonian tribe, hunter gatherers and had huge collective sharing norms but importantly the terrain was so improved they cannot support themselves as hunter gatherers so they moved on to farms and they literally were so high on sharing that they had rules that a man could ever eat the meat that he himself headhunted because if they ate it they would lose their bro realty and be able to un hunt. >> they said every morning they would ring a bell to go in the fields together, about three mornings and they bring about and no one showed up. so they actually had to evolve new norms that were about property and like this is my patch and the stuff in my patch is mine and you cannot have it. it happened rapidly, that is an amazing thing, it was not like they did not believe these things, there is fundamental to their belief system and our belief that my yard is mine and you cannot come on and lest i let you. it's a fundamental to our society, they change because their circumstances change. i had tremendous belief, both in short-term unwisdom of people but in our long-
in my book, i looked at a amazonian tribe, hunter gatherers and had huge collective sharing norms but importantly the terrain was so improved they cannot support themselves as hunter gatherers so they moved on to farms and they literally were so high on sharing that they had rules that a man could ever eat the meat that he himself headhunted because if they ate it they would lose their bro realty and be able to un hunt. >> they said every morning they would ring a bell to go in the fields...
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Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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i personally am shocked that the president is so violating the norm of expected presidential behavior and so politicizing and using for personal aggrandizement what it seems to me would be better use for public information by helping people to understand the nature of the problem or helping us understand how to make this okay eventually. the fact that the president is not doing that is something that should weigh heavily in all of our judgment as we choose our political leaders. >> coming back to the question i asked earlier about the silver lining on that or let them, do you foresee there could be any sort of long-term shift in terms of the power structure in the federal government because of this? i mean we hear a lot about the norms that child may have violated it and what it could mean longer term but it strikes me that this could portend a shift as well. kori you want to take that first? >> it's a really interesting challenge marissa. it difficult to know the will result in a shuffling of feet of 40s or responsibilities between states and the federal government. but i do think it
i personally am shocked that the president is so violating the norm of expected presidential behavior and so politicizing and using for personal aggrandizement what it seems to me would be better use for public information by helping people to understand the nature of the problem or helping us understand how to make this okay eventually. the fact that the president is not doing that is something that should weigh heavily in all of our judgment as we choose our political leaders. >> coming...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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CNBC
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i get the pressure on the schools but hopefully they can work out an economic model around new normsthink that that is one of e that getting down played everybody wants to return to the way things were. i don't know that's ever going to happen. it's going be a new norm not going back to where we were. >> let me concludes with a question about testing it seems to me, and this is my opinion, and you don't have to agree with it. there's been a lot of pressure to increase the people tested and it's a very component in learning about the spread of the disease but there are a couple of things that concern me. number one is the tests are new and they are not flawless. there's a lot of false negatives that attends to these tests. maybe even 20% the second thing is the test measures the individual at a particular point in time on a particular day that person could be negative today and positive two days from now and you get a very different look could you react. >> yes, i agree with you 100%. testing is being way over played the main purpose of testing today, the only purpose is for the healt
i get the pressure on the schools but hopefully they can work out an economic model around new normsthink that that is one of e that getting down played everybody wants to return to the way things were. i don't know that's ever going to happen. it's going be a new norm not going back to where we were. >> let me concludes with a question about testing it seems to me, and this is my opinion, and you don't have to agree with it. there's been a lot of pressure to increase the people tested...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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it's not common it's not the norm or something toot be expected. but you can go from the bottom to the top in america. if you want to look at rags to comfort you see considerably more upward mobility and to end up rising for the middle class at a pretty good clip. the measure of upward mobility is not that relative ranking i just want to ask are you doing better than your parents did? and what i have done is look at people in their forties today and their household income if you are 20 something year old today are you earning more than your parents earned when they were the same age? three quarters of people in their forties today have a higher household income than their parents did when they were in their forties. if you were born in the bottom 20 percent, 86 percent of those 40 -year-olds have a higher household income than the parents had in their forties this should be considered upward mobility. and across those two4 generations and if you're in the bottom 20 percent these are not trivial games. what about earnings? it includes government tra
it's not common it's not the norm or something toot be expected. but you can go from the bottom to the top in america. if you want to look at rags to comfort you see considerably more upward mobility and to end up rising for the middle class at a pretty good clip. the measure of upward mobility is not that relative ranking i just want to ask are you doing better than your parents did? and what i have done is look at people in their forties today and their household income if you are 20...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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political power to is someone who can't be controlled, who's unaccountable to the rule of law, to the norms of political discourse. trump convinced americans that those discourse, those norms of political discourse were themselves fraudulent, that they were corrupt. and so he was able to convince his supporters that by breaking those norms, he was actually more democratic than the norms were themselves. >> and this is so true, and this is what's been happening, never underestimate the people. never. [cheers and applause] i don't think it'll ever happen again. [applause] and i want you all to know that we are fighting the fake news. falk, phony, fake -- fake, phony, fake. [cheers and applause] a few days ago i called the fake news the enemy of the people, and they are. if they are the enemy of the people. [applause] >> we have examples of previous demagogues using these strategies, but what we don't have is someone using them as successfully as donald trump has done. to be able to actually deem as much -- gain as much power as he has gained. so one of the really interesting things about what
political power to is someone who can't be controlled, who's unaccountable to the rule of law, to the norms of political discourse. trump convinced americans that those discourse, those norms of political discourse were themselves fraudulent, that they were corrupt. and so he was able to convince his supporters that by breaking those norms, he was actually more democratic than the norms were themselves. >> and this is so true, and this is what's been happening, never underestimate the...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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have been more incidents of violence on health care workers complete violation of social distancing norms and too much movement of vehicles and urban areas. david alexander is professor of risk disaster reduction the university college of london joins us now via skype good to have you with us so does this mean the fact that europe or lots of europe is not everywhere of course is heading towards some kind of easing does that mean the worst of the virus is behind us now. we really can tell you that it does appear that we're over the 1st of this wave and we hope very much that there will be only one worries but i think back to the influenza or epidemic of a 100 years ago. was worse than the 1st one it was most serious than the 1st wave hopefully that will not happen here prove pilots have to be exercised in. relaxing the let's. put it let me put it this way i mean how does one know if there's going to be a 2nd wave and how bad is it going to be without opening up i mean is what the government's doing right now inevitable anyway you have to open up and see how it goes well we're moving toward
have been more incidents of violence on health care workers complete violation of social distancing norms and too much movement of vehicles and urban areas. david alexander is professor of risk disaster reduction the university college of london joins us now via skype good to have you with us so does this mean the fact that europe or lots of europe is not everywhere of course is heading towards some kind of easing does that mean the worst of the virus is behind us now. we really can tell you...
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for decades now narrow high radiator grills were the norm as here on the d.s. his predecessor the tuxedo avant but the d.s. his design concept was own new it was streamlined flat and low like a race car yet comfortable inside. the oldest surviving d.s. was a preproduction vehicle the number 31 can barely be made out inside the engine compartment . keller is a historian specializing in automotive history. in 1934 french tire maker michelin took over sitwell and and the new c.e.o. decided to give the successful tuxedo ovando a sibling. to portray that out there at all regionally the d.s. project was for a vehicle look grown diffuse your meaning for the masses at the a.f. so it was named project d. at the same time it was supposed to offer some luxury like the trucks your own before it's your extra. several prototypes called d. models were built and as was added to make it plural the resulting abbreviation sounds like the french word for goddess dance and ideal name for this car. out of the studio and vendor put the d.s. was described as a turning point in automot
for decades now narrow high radiator grills were the norm as here on the d.s. his predecessor the tuxedo avant but the d.s. his design concept was own new it was streamlined flat and low like a race car yet comfortable inside. the oldest surviving d.s. was a preproduction vehicle the number 31 can barely be made out inside the engine compartment . keller is a historian specializing in automotive history. in 1934 french tire maker michelin took over sitwell and and the new c.e.o. decided to give...
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where i come from women are balanced by the social norms and then something as simple as learning how to write them by side those isn't. since i was in little girl i want to talk albums by cycle of my home and it took me years to undismayed. finally name often mentioned by me and i saved those and returned with the sewing machine sewing i suppose was more appropriate for those then writing i'm biased as now i want to meet those woman back home where bones by their duties and social norms and inform them of old dead basic rights my name is the about of people homes and i work ads see them. move move move. move move over this for me to. use for. children is for. me to. beethoven is for. beethoven is for grandma. beethoven 2020. the 50th anniversary here on d. w. . blah. blah blah blah. this is the. prime minister.
where i come from women are balanced by the social norms and then something as simple as learning how to write them by side those isn't. since i was in little girl i want to talk albums by cycle of my home and it took me years to undismayed. finally name often mentioned by me and i saved those and returned with the sewing machine sewing i suppose was more appropriate for those then writing i'm biased as now i want to meet those woman back home where bones by their duties and social norms and...
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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they had landed in norm did. they have slashed their way to germany's quarters.hey absorbed the roughest punishment the germans could dish out. they moved against a common enemy. now with air power in the lead, they were started on the last long drive to victory. american forses on the west and south of the bulge carved up elite units. montgomery's british on the north were immovable. together they crushed the final german bid for victory and moved steadily to a meeting with their demrant russian ally in the east. berlin, city of naziism, fell. early in january, franklin roosevelt was inaugurated as president of the united states, his fourth term. the ceremony took place on the white house porch. almost immediately the president went to the altar, confered with joseph stalin and churchill on final steps to crush the axis and establish peace. it was the originalal meeting of the big theo. franklin roosevelt looked tired and old. in april, a great man was dead. the loss of franklin roosevelt was deeply felt by people all-around the world. ♪ >> in the cabinet room o
they had landed in norm did. they have slashed their way to germany's quarters.hey absorbed the roughest punishment the germans could dish out. they moved against a common enemy. now with air power in the lead, they were started on the last long drive to victory. american forses on the west and south of the bulge carved up elite units. montgomery's british on the north were immovable. together they crushed the final german bid for victory and moved steadily to a meeting with their demrant...
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Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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is the forum where i can be discussed and where agreements concern and the norms that are set for the system are basically stabbed and it's important life in the fog that really there is nothing. that consarned the work that the assembly cannot discuss and it is. let each deliberations lead by a preventive or an ambassador do you and does the office of the president or the general assembly have any influence over proceedings which issues are heard for each session of the general assembly i mean do you have influence over that i think the influence lies in the for that the president is elected by the membership on the adoption that he or she. is respected enough to be listened to especially when there are disagreements and that he is able to shepherd. his friends and partners in the general assembly. division and to also work with urgency to do more to appear important and it is a deliberate and it must be incredibly difficult $193.00 countries with divergent views and opinions and interests it is true it is incredibly difficult in some cases because it's all sort of looked at or some
is the forum where i can be discussed and where agreements concern and the norms that are set for the system are basically stabbed and it's important life in the fog that really there is nothing. that consarned the work that the assembly cannot discuss and it is. let each deliberations lead by a preventive or an ambassador do you and does the office of the president or the general assembly have any influence over proceedings which issues are heard for each session of the general assembly i mean...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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to them on norm can cause cancer for instance several sites that signify the beginning of slavery and freedom and the suppression of the african family in a sister that wasn't on the services side but trickling legs africa's back to their roots and to give us a straight what i'm getting some interesting feedback on our lives he chewed chatty and i want to share some of this with you because s. and questions been an os so is saying that the world has moved on moved on from slavery and some black americans are still stuck in the past. i want you to explain what is the value of reconnecting with your heritage if you're very much removed from it or if you're not taught about it as oh yeah well it's interesting that term stuck in the past well you're stuck because you haven't had you haven't had a chance to explore it you don't really know the history so you're stuck in the pain of the shame of it where by growing and reconnecting and understanding the resilience you actually gain. and understanding of the resilience to then actually get past it like sheena just described you know if it gi
to them on norm can cause cancer for instance several sites that signify the beginning of slavery and freedom and the suppression of the african family in a sister that wasn't on the services side but trickling legs africa's back to their roots and to give us a straight what i'm getting some interesting feedback on our lives he chewed chatty and i want to share some of this with you because s. and questions been an os so is saying that the world has moved on moved on from slavery and some black...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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to figure that out that is true of a lot of things ultimately you have to have those norms and what happens with an amazon tribe there were hunter gatherers with huge collective sharing norms that they could not support themselves as hunter gatherers and moved on to farms and were so high on not sharing that the man could not eat the meat he hunted if they aided they would lose their virility to hunt so they try to do this when they are farming. and they said every morning they would ring the bell and then nobody showed up so they had to if all new norms like this is my property this is my patch you cannot have it. and it isn't what they did bits fundamental to their belief system that that is mine and you cannot come on it unless i let you but that change because of circumstances change. i have tremendous believes both in the short term or long term ability to adapt and to build things that really do work to connect us to that moral community. >> thank you. >> it's a good note to end on. we could go on all day but we won't. [applause] >> this will be available onlin online. don't l
to figure that out that is true of a lot of things ultimately you have to have those norms and what happens with an amazon tribe there were hunter gatherers with huge collective sharing norms that they could not support themselves as hunter gatherers and moved on to farms and were so high on not sharing that the man could not eat the meat he hunted if they aided they would lose their virility to hunt so they try to do this when they are farming. and they said every morning they would ring the...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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very high confidence stop i think that was not the norm that was an odd moment but it was an odd momentto cutter to find our sense of default. living now in america that has so little trust in institutions feels to us much more broken a prehearing we still with the norms of baby boomers grew up with. our leaders still are those baby boomers.were really testing how elderly our leaders can get and it turns out pretty elderly. so i do think there's something distinct about this american approach to institutions that contributes to this problem that understanding are we part of the solution but the breakdown of social trust and the rise of populism is certainly not just an american. >> thank you for your talk. we watched two different versions of reality play out in our politics recently. your points in institutional failures and the performative nature of some actors are very well taken but i think you have it properly addressed another contributing factor in opposition to both expertise and experts. this is a long-standing pattern. the declining trust in major newspapers. i tell my studen
very high confidence stop i think that was not the norm that was an odd moment but it was an odd momentto cutter to find our sense of default. living now in america that has so little trust in institutions feels to us much more broken a prehearing we still with the norms of baby boomers grew up with. our leaders still are those baby boomers.were really testing how elderly our leaders can get and it turns out pretty elderly. so i do think there's something distinct about this american approach...
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN
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jerry, norm, and so many of you. but a president, institutionally, seeks to wield power to accomplish the goals for the people. it's complicating the wheel by using its own great power. that makes for friction. every president will try to use the press to his best advantage, and to avoid the situations that aren't to his advantage. the demolished man of his powers. it has more freedom, more influence than ever in our history. the press can take care of itself quite nicely. and a president should be able to take care of himself as well. so what i hope my epitaph will this, hehe press is gave as good as he got. [applause] fmr. pres. reagan: and that, i think, will make for a healthy press and a healthy presidency. i think all that's left to say is, thank you for inviting me and. thank you for your hospitality -- inviting me in. thank you for your hospitality. [applause] fmr. pres. bush: thank you all very much. thank you, charles. please be seated. tonight is a night for relaxation and fun. barbara and i are glad to be
jerry, norm, and so many of you. but a president, institutionally, seeks to wield power to accomplish the goals for the people. it's complicating the wheel by using its own great power. that makes for friction. every president will try to use the press to his best advantage, and to avoid the situations that aren't to his advantage. the demolished man of his powers. it has more freedom, more influence than ever in our history. the press can take care of itself quite nicely. and a president...
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which tree how to turn signal is she getting down to a sustainable social norm at a time when society that expected to make such dramatic sacrifices to treat these diseases that are easily preventable we do not know the virus goes off so we have a lot of data but it's data so far we'll be able to fully judge only when it's over and 2nd i would not describe any disease as it's looked at although of course there is a connection between you know where flight and the way are sealed as also in genetics . inclination or does inclination towards a disease so it's not a thing you can blame a person on for having having made though those 2 of those deployed 2nd proceed to your original questions baldoni august the 6th type of privacy and this is our this is very interesting thing and this is my kind of thing because it's social and it's political. by a policy or by of politics the way the state or society off the old and needy or off the lords and early them. interferes so on direct your physical. what things are and what. doing. with your body what was a body off your loved ones with your chi
which tree how to turn signal is she getting down to a sustainable social norm at a time when society that expected to make such dramatic sacrifices to treat these diseases that are easily preventable we do not know the virus goes off so we have a lot of data but it's data so far we'll be able to fully judge only when it's over and 2nd i would not describe any disease as it's looked at although of course there is a connection between you know where flight and the way are sealed as also in...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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what would have been unusual is now the norm.e to move down here, honest to god, you wouldn't, it'd be absolutely heaving, chock—a—block, beach, pathways, all the shops would be busy, everything. 0ur town and every town, certainly on the seaside, we need people to stay at home, keep away, keep themselves safe, to keep us, the nhs safe, so we can save people's lives. other coastal resorts were also deserted — from southend—on—sea to southwold. and skegness, where on a normal easter weekend it would be impossible to park. sir! no running! that's it. you can only walk on the river walk. in london, officials have been reminding people to keep a distance. sir, could you dismount, please? thank you. sitting on the beach — you're all right walking around, but staying stationary, are you from the same household or...? in birmingham, rangers have been patrolling the parks. stay indoors because of covid—19. so you're saying i am not allowed on my front garden? you cannot come on yourfront garden. in rotherham, one householder thought the p
what would have been unusual is now the norm.e to move down here, honest to god, you wouldn't, it'd be absolutely heaving, chock—a—block, beach, pathways, all the shops would be busy, everything. 0ur town and every town, certainly on the seaside, we need people to stay at home, keep away, keep themselves safe, to keep us, the nhs safe, so we can save people's lives. other coastal resorts were also deserted — from southend—on—sea to southwold. and skegness, where on a normal easter...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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KRON
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the parents and students are struggling with the new norm of doing classwork at home and then on top of that you know the distance learning challenges some are dealing with even more problems one mother said that she went through several learning practices to help her son who has dyslexia and adhd nothing was really working until she found a live streaming a learning program that's free for anyone to use kron four's taylor bisacky has more. >>stress in toward early life changing you really to you know being diligent in restructuring teachers overnight from helping her son learn at home through distance learning to losing her job because of the coronavirus outbreak shows movies gone through drastic changes. the last few weeks and f y the day is spent, you know downloading all the assignments really assignments to because he does >>learning differences when dyslexia and adhd and pretty much tied the knot all the responses neeson august, you know is a 5th grader at washington elementary school in burlingame. >>while they've been using resources from school together mooney says they need
the parents and students are struggling with the new norm of doing classwork at home and then on top of that you know the distance learning challenges some are dealing with even more problems one mother said that she went through several learning practices to help her son who has dyslexia and adhd nothing was really working until she found a live streaming a learning program that's free for anyone to use kron four's taylor bisacky has more. >>stress in toward early life changing you...
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medicare it is child to diabetes now the question i want to ask you is about the prevailing social norms of the time being we treat how to as our turn signal issue do you think that's a sustainable social norm at a time when society is that expected to make such dramatic sacrifices to treat these diseases that are easily preventable we do not know how the virus goes off so we have a lot of data but it's data we'll be able to. gedge only when it's over and 2nd i would not describe any disease as inflicted although of course there is a connection between the old way of life and the way are sealed as also genetics. inclination or does inclination towards a disease so it's not a thing you can blame a person on for having having made though those 2 of those deployed 2nd proceeds to your original questions about the august the 6th type of privacy and this is our this is very interesting thing and this is my kind of thing because it's social and it's political. by a policy or by a politics of the way the state or society are all the needy all the lords and early on and on who the lord interfere
medicare it is child to diabetes now the question i want to ask you is about the prevailing social norms of the time being we treat how to as our turn signal issue do you think that's a sustainable social norm at a time when society is that expected to make such dramatic sacrifices to treat these diseases that are easily preventable we do not know how the virus goes off so we have a lot of data but it's data we'll be able to. gedge only when it's over and 2nd i would not describe any disease as...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 32
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it is not the norm. it is not something to be expected if you born into the bottom 20 percent. t you can go from the bottom to the very top in america. if you want to cover that. and look at rags to comfort. uc considerably more upward mobility. people born in the bottom 20 percent into the next quintile. end up rising into the middle class and a pretty good clip. the measure of upward mobility is sort of relative rank thing and instead i just want to ask are you doing better than your parents did. and what they've done is these calculations is look at people who are in the 40s today. how can their household income. and if you're 40 something years old today, are you earning more than your parents earned when your parents the same age. and about three quarters of the people who are in the 40s today have a howard higher household income and when their parents were the 40s. if you are born in the bottom 2e 40 -year-olds have a higher household income the present when the parents were in the 40s this strikes me as considerable upward mobility. how much more, a bike 54 percent rate
it is not the norm. it is not something to be expected if you born into the bottom 20 percent. t you can go from the bottom to the very top in america. if you want to cover that. and look at rags to comfort. uc considerably more upward mobility. people born in the bottom 20 percent into the next quintile. end up rising into the middle class and a pretty good clip. the measure of upward mobility is sort of relative rank thing and instead i just want to ask are you doing better than your parents...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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i'm not going to change all social distancing norms based on that one report.e complicating that more and we already have enough to worry about. 6 feet make sense. the w.h.o. only asked for 3 feet. i think 6 feet is wise. >> harris: i remember that. if you make it complicated, people will feel like whatever they do won't be good enough. and he don't want to be defeatist with that. we have been doing so far, at least from what you were telling us as experts, is working. i want to get to this. aaron asks, "we've known about aids virus since the early 1990s and still have no vaccine. why do the experts expect a vaccine within 18 months for this virus?" dr. oz? >> dr. oz: this virus has certain telltale signs on it. there is something called the spike protein, it spikes into your cell to the specific receptors. so the virus acts like a key to unlock ourselves to get in. one of them -- actually, the most advanced vaccine out there, it's a hong kong company, they are taking that spike protein and putting it on top of the virus that is not dangerous. so it spreads thr
i'm not going to change all social distancing norms based on that one report.e complicating that more and we already have enough to worry about. 6 feet make sense. the w.h.o. only asked for 3 feet. i think 6 feet is wise. >> harris: i remember that. if you make it complicated, people will feel like whatever they do won't be good enough. and he don't want to be defeatist with that. we have been doing so far, at least from what you were telling us as experts, is working. i want to get to...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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and it was not the norm. and the china shop. it was real but it was small. and geographically targeted. that the impact of the china shop looks back on the population ratio. so the link to prosperity with protectionism and from racial animosity. the dynamism which michael does not talk about. the sharp decline of mobility this is way beyond economic utility. with a 335. and those who need it most. the first disagreement and those to be anti- populist. and of your governmenten bureaucrats. but what seems to me and it takes two to tango. with innovation hard work. and i put prefer to think of the governments as you balance your way. and the way the government in the fear of the future and of the conference room at of chancellor in the uk with a very strong arguments that you don't have to worry about where your healthcare is comingyour from. i don't plan to get into that particular debate right here. you can have it strong with the open ended economy and with that debate and politics. and to achieve them. and have the nt government approach. and one example of
and it was not the norm. and the china shop. it was real but it was small. and geographically targeted. that the impact of the china shop looks back on the population ratio. so the link to prosperity with protectionism and from racial animosity. the dynamism which michael does not talk about. the sharp decline of mobility this is way beyond economic utility. with a 335. and those who need it most. the first disagreement and those to be anti- populist. and of your governmenten bureaucrats. but...
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biased as knowledge i want to meet the boss woman back home would bones by then duties and social norms and inform them about dead basic rights my name is the about of the home and i work at them. lose. the only. thing. they spread fear and terror among people though they'd rather hide from them but that's becoming increasingly difficult in the time metropolis of bangkok. the city is booming natural habitats for snakes are disappearing. in some trial one camp is a fine fine so he hasn't put out any finance for months instead he's out catching snakes everything from harmless garden snakes to poisonous find us. in a. good. workout guys are all right we'll send someone out keep an eye on the snake until we get there. so that you have to know this all and all and it's on taiwan comes 1st mission on this sunday morning rainy season has begun in thailand. that means snake season has as well. snake cancers almost always work in pairs because they never know what to expect attempting to catch one of the larger reptiles all alone would be too dangerous one cam and his colleagues sent off with 2
biased as knowledge i want to meet the boss woman back home would bones by then duties and social norms and inform them about dead basic rights my name is the about of the home and i work at them. lose. the only. thing. they spread fear and terror among people though they'd rather hide from them but that's becoming increasingly difficult in the time metropolis of bangkok. the city is booming natural habitats for snakes are disappearing. in some trial one camp is a fine fine so he hasn't put out...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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term "new norm," but it's going to be the norm in terms of social distancing, the requirements around sanitization in places of business, whether restaurants on gymnasiums, we're going to do things differently in terms of how we conduct business and as it reles to the people. >> woodruff: right. yes, there's always the question of personal responsibility, but none of expected, planned or anticipated hevid 19 being thessue of t day. >> woodruff: justuickly, what percentage of the businesses affected do you think are actually going to go ahead and reopen tomorrow? >> well, we're getting e-mails, we've gotten th since monday, and you've got mixed responses you've got some who say, mayor, we're going to continue to follow your re and not open yet, we don't believe we've met the peak. then you have some who are doing soft openings who arfocused around keeping the buildings cleaned, going in and doing a deep cleaning and sanitizyoion. that it's a fairly mixed d,sponse particularly because people are afr they're concerned about the fact that, one, you could be working with someone who was as
term "new norm," but it's going to be the norm in terms of social distancing, the requirements around sanitization in places of business, whether restaurants on gymnasiums, we're going to do things differently in terms of how we conduct business and as it reles to the people. >> woodruff: right. yes, there's always the question of personal responsibility, but none of expected, planned or anticipated hevid 19 being thessue of t day. >> woodruff: justuickly, what percentage...
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Apr 8, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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many of the places that were listed in the guide, especially the early ones , were either ymca door norm rooms or the home of african-american families so if you had an empty room or an extra room, women rented their rooms out. you might provide a good breakfast as a way to make extra money for your family and this is a ymca room. this is the rock, if any of you have visited the african-american museum in washington dc you've seen the rock which was a leisure place to stay in kettering maine. it was an african-american guesthouse run by hazel and clayton sinclair and this is the rock, this original environment . this was a place i was away from thebeach . the beaches were segregated in portsmouth and in kittery but you could go and you could stay for a week or two weeks at rock crest. you can enjoy your meals at rock rest, hazel was apparently a really good cook and she catered meals for the white community as well as the black community. there were other places to stay like mackenzie's court in hot springs arkansas which was a motor hotel, perfect for the automobile. you could park righ
many of the places that were listed in the guide, especially the early ones , were either ymca door norm rooms or the home of african-american families so if you had an empty room or an extra room, women rented their rooms out. you might provide a good breakfast as a way to make extra money for your family and this is a ymca room. this is the rock, if any of you have visited the african-american museum in washington dc you've seen the rock which was a leisure place to stay in kettering maine....
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137
Apr 8, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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learning from home, the new norm. i love fractions! some are having more fun than others.nvinced that we're really achieving very much. children came home with textbooks and links to online learning. 0thers brought back practice papers for exams. parents, though, are finding each school's approach is different, as are their kids'. 0ne came back from school with a complete itinerary of what his school day is, from english, maths, science, minute by minute — it was fantastic. the other child tried to convince us that they'd done four hours of pe every day. so, it's life lessons today. with holidays cancelled and staycations on the cards, parents are being more imaginative. a field trip... are you having fun, boys? yeah. ..to the garden. a pe lesson and a music class. the advice is to do what you can and have fun. so, it's ten squared minus two squared. exactly... like this family, posting videos online when the parents get it wrong. two is smaller, which means it's ten — you times that by... you times... ten... so... frankie mccamley, bbc news. many of us have been showing o
learning from home, the new norm. i love fractions! some are having more fun than others.nvinced that we're really achieving very much. children came home with textbooks and links to online learning. 0thers brought back practice papers for exams. parents, though, are finding each school's approach is different, as are their kids'. 0ne came back from school with a complete itinerary of what his school day is, from english, maths, science, minute by minute — it was fantastic. the other child...