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Sep 8, 2018
09/18
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CNBC
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free tuition nyu recently announced it will cover the full tuition cost for all of its medical students regardless of need tuition this year is $55,000 that number doesn't include housing and fees which can run an additional $27,000. the association of medical colleges findings 75% of medical students are carrying debt with a median loan of $192,00 >> walking around with six figures of debt is scary. >> paying off that burden is sending new doctors into specialties like orthopedics instead of primary care, pediatrics and research where there's higher need but lower pay. home depot co-founder and billionaire hopes the program will change that. >> these kids will be able to pick a specialty or pick a field of medicine they want to go in because that's where their passion is and that's where they can do the most good. >> he donated $100 million of the $450 million that nyu has raised so far. >> we think we've given them a good start in life to leave here debt free. and we think it's the right thing to do. >> so will this new policy at nyu address the shortage of doctors in less lucrative f
free tuition nyu recently announced it will cover the full tuition cost for all of its medical students regardless of need tuition this year is $55,000 that number doesn't include housing and fees which can run an additional $27,000. the association of medical colleges findings 75% of medical students are carrying debt with a median loan of $192,00 >> walking around with six figures of debt is scary. >> paying off that burden is sending new doctors into specialties like orthopedics...
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Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN
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like me sweets from minnesota, or people from all over the country and student diversify the body at nyu and they felt it aided a richer place. speakers, faculty members, thatnts just to make sure you are not constantly exposed to one point of view. the concept of limited powers in our federal government. at the same time, we have a vast enteral government with many powers, departments, including education. what to do you think the federal government should do? that is essentially supporting free speech claims by students who have been discriminated against report more do you think the government could do? sen. alexander: i can tell you what they should do and what they should not do. what they should do is more things like this day. like your statement of interest in cases that students bring or someone brings. , private right of action alleging free speech has been violated. what people might not know is that most -- we have 6000 colleges and universities, many of them smaller. the average tenure for a university president is probably three to five years. a boardage tenure for trustees
like me sweets from minnesota, or people from all over the country and student diversify the body at nyu and they felt it aided a richer place. speakers, faculty members, thatnts just to make sure you are not constantly exposed to one point of view. the concept of limited powers in our federal government. at the same time, we have a vast enteral government with many powers, departments, including education. what to do you think the federal government should do? that is essentially supporting...
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95
Sep 14, 2018
09/18
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BBCNEWS
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eye 95
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co nsta nce wu kwan novel which i have not read, constance wu plays a chinese—american assessor at nyu is dating a guy called nick who's she does not know is to be rich until the moment he says, there is a wedding in singapore, you should come with me. they get to the aeroplane, they turn left. she goes, we go that way! he says, no, no. they are in super first—class and people are offering them champagne. she says, what is all this about? he says my family are comfortable. she then arrives and meets the family and she is pitied —— pitted against and she is pitied —— pitted against a series of wannabe girlfriends, a grandmother who is kind of in charge of everything. the mother has no intention of letting her son marry whomever he wants. here is the clip. it's just great seeing you guys all like this. when i was growing up, it was just me and my mom. but we didn't really have a big family like this. that's a beautiful ring, auntie eleanor. nick's father had it made when he proposed to me. how did you guys meet? well, actually, they met at cambridge. they were studying law together. oh,
co nsta nce wu kwan novel which i have not read, constance wu plays a chinese—american assessor at nyu is dating a guy called nick who's she does not know is to be rich until the moment he says, there is a wedding in singapore, you should come with me. they get to the aeroplane, they turn left. she goes, we go that way! he says, no, no. they are in super first—class and people are offering them champagne. she says, what is all this about? he says my family are comfortable. she then arrives...
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Sep 16, 2018
09/18
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BBCNEWS
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eye 59
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she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick who she doesn't knows filthy rich until the moment he says, "look, you know, there's a wedding in singapore. i'm gonna be there. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering champagne. and she goes, "how — what is all this about?" he says, "well, my family are comfortable." she then arrives and she meets the family and she is pitted against a series of ex— and wannabe girlfriends, a grandmother who is kind of in charge of everything, and michelle yeoh's eleanor, the mother, who has no intention of letting her son marry whomever he wants. here's a clip. it'sjust great seeing you guys all like this. when i was growing up, it wasjust me and my mum. but we didn't really have a big family like this. that's a beautiful ring, auntie eleanor. nick's father had it made when he proposed to me. how did you guys meet? actually, they met at cambridge, both s
she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick who she doesn't knows filthy rich until the moment he says, "look, you know, there's a wedding in singapore. i'm gonna be there. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering champagne. and she goes, "how — what is...
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383
Sep 10, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN2
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. >> i teach at nyu i found this conversation from china, singapore. i was expecting to find a free-speech environment and then much more greater than it was in china or singapore. >> they are horrified, too. john stuart mills was not about restrictions on speech when the government here and it was all about the social effect and that's what we're experiencing. >> did you say what country? so in 2015 we thought it was american universities through 26th of a lot of the same things happen and written in canada and 2017 in australia and new zealand. it's not on the continent. the political correctness on the continent is not this idea that you'll be damaged. we have a couple things in common. one thing we in the u.k. do this on the continent based card -- scandinavia they give kids much more free play, much more dependent. we got this idea that if it's good for kids to learn math and spelling, if we make them learn his father still go further by the time their adult. that's completely wrong. we've used it -- worse here than in some scandinavia countries.
. >> i teach at nyu i found this conversation from china, singapore. i was expecting to find a free-speech environment and then much more greater than it was in china or singapore. >> they are horrified, too. john stuart mills was not about restrictions on speech when the government here and it was all about the social effect and that's what we're experiencing. >> did you say what country? so in 2015 we thought it was american universities through 26th of a lot of the same...
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28
Sep 13, 2018
09/18
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BLOOMBERG
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the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuee. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump that who has real doubts about the president's approach to trade and deficits. on this edition of "bloomberg big decisions," ken langone.
the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuee. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump that who has real doubts...
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48
Sep 16, 2018
09/18
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 48
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the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuor his business degree. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. and he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump who has real doubts about the president's approach to trade and to deficits. on this edition of "bloomberg big decisions," ken langone. ken langone, welcome to "big decisions." ken: thank you for having me. david: you've spent a career making deals. somebody you and i both know and respect, tom murphy, said you are better off missing five to six good deals than making one bad one. ken: you know how i tell people about deals? i tell them the best deals i ever did with the ones i didn't do. david: let's talk about those. what are the ones you are glad you didn't do that would have been a big mistake? ke
the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuor his business degree. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. and he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump who...
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61
Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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BLOOMBERG
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the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuor his business degree. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. and he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump who has real doubts about the president's approach to trade to deficits. on this edition of "bloomberg big decisions," ken langone. ken langone, welcome to "big decisions." ken: thank you for having me. david: you've spent a career making deals. somebody you and i both know and respect, tom murphy, said you are better off missing 5-6 good deals than making one bad one. ken: you know how i tell people about deals? i tell them the best deals i ever did with the ones i didn't do. david: let's talk about those. what are the ones you are glad you didn't do that would have been a big mistake? ken: i don't w
the american success story, the son of a plumber and a cafeteria worker who went to night school at nyuor his business degree. ken langone fought his way onto a wall street that did not want him and proceeded to put together some of the most important deals of his generation, culminating in cofounding home depot. now, a national chain with 300,000 employees. but langone is the first to say he can be rough around the edges. and he is not afraid to speak his mind. a supporter of donald trump who...
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81
Sep 23, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN2
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making these institutions and vulnerable to criticism the academy is extraordinarily important from nyu to try to hold the academy's feet to the fire for extreme lack of intellectual diversity but i will be honest. this has been a tactic of both the liberals and conservatives for a long time to dig into the voter registration of the faculty and notice the ever growing divide and imbalance between democrats registered and republican registered faculty. it matters i suppose for sociology departments but in theory it really should be an ivory tower. it wouldn't really matter if everybody were democratic if they kept politics out of the classroom. and understood their obligation is to pass on this inheritance with gratitude and love. the paradox academy is hitting hard there is no ideological balance on campus it is worth pointing out. anything else, the core problem with all of this is this unchallengeable idea that society is fundamentally oppressive and that oppression explains our world today. if you have any opportunity to hit back against that take it on because as long as that remain
making these institutions and vulnerable to criticism the academy is extraordinarily important from nyu to try to hold the academy's feet to the fire for extreme lack of intellectual diversity but i will be honest. this has been a tactic of both the liberals and conservatives for a long time to dig into the voter registration of the faculty and notice the ever growing divide and imbalance between democrats registered and republican registered faculty. it matters i suppose for sociology...
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79
Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 79
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>> it was launched bay second-year student -- launched by a second-year student at nyu law school and she invented the notorious rbg just after the shelby county decision came out. she was distressed by the decision, even angry, and then she decided what good does that do for me to be wringing my hands and say bad things about the court. i should do something positive. so she put up my dissent, and then it just took off into the wild blue yonder. i -- you mentioned a number of the items you can get. one is a room freshener. people who sell that product sent me a sam. in bubble gum flavor. >> have i ever told you, justice, that i have a nickname too? you know the actress jennifer lopez, she goes by j-lo. my chief justice calls me j-lou. [ applause ] what do you read for pleasure? >> my choices are eclectic. i do have a favorite mystery writer. her name is donna leon. i recommend her to you highly. i went to rome this summer. i have a book called "mistress of the vatican" that i'm in the middle of and there are many, many books on the shelf that i would like to read if there were time.
>> it was launched bay second-year student -- launched by a second-year student at nyu law school and she invented the notorious rbg just after the shelby county decision came out. she was distressed by the decision, even angry, and then she decided what good does that do for me to be wringing my hands and say bad things about the court. i should do something positive. so she put up my dissent, and then it just took off into the wild blue yonder. i -- you mentioned a number of the items...
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70
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 70
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you know he is from nyu.t essays on the financial crisis and how we get regulation wrong. michael spence on china. i swear we will talk about italy as well. it is london. the weather is perfect. in new york, the weather is not. ♪ tom: yields continue to grind ever hire. even the negative german two-year moves to a lesser negative rate. the fed will raise rates tomorrow. today, president trump will speak to the united nations. the assembled will not include judge kavanaugh or deputy attorney general rod rosenstein. in this hour, michael spence of nyu. this is bloomberg surveillance. we're live from new york. francine is in town for the festivities. the headline has to be prime minister may. francine: this is on the back of the labour conference. there is a speech by the shadow brexit secretary. with the european union, whether she can get a new parliament. tom: this is the opposing party. francine: they hold the key to parliament. if you count the numbers, this is what we are doing. whatever deals she gets, sh
you know he is from nyu.t essays on the financial crisis and how we get regulation wrong. michael spence on china. i swear we will talk about italy as well. it is london. the weather is perfect. in new york, the weather is not. ♪ tom: yields continue to grind ever hire. even the negative german two-year moves to a lesser negative rate. the fed will raise rates tomorrow. today, president trump will speak to the united nations. the assembled will not include judge kavanaugh or deputy attorney...
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101
Sep 24, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 101
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there is a press critic and journalism professor at nyu that has put forward the idea that maybe journalists should not go to white house press briefings anymore. maybe you send the interns, they asked the questions, but you will not get genuine information out of a person. the more experienced journalist should be out there trying to figure out what the actual story is. i think we have had important moments where skilled journalist have pushed back and there is a real value, even if you do not necessarily believe what an administration is saying and this has been an issue with the iraq war, the vietnam war, it is not the first time people have had issues with how the presidency and administration represents what it is doing, but you need both. you need someone who is in the white house and who can take the temperature and has a behind the scenes relationship with the press secretary. maggie can speak much more to this than i can but they have these relationships who can see what is going on. you can tell what the motives. then he need people who are out there figuring out if it's true or no
there is a press critic and journalism professor at nyu that has put forward the idea that maybe journalists should not go to white house press briefings anymore. maybe you send the interns, they asked the questions, but you will not get genuine information out of a person. the more experienced journalist should be out there trying to figure out what the actual story is. i think we have had important moments where skilled journalist have pushed back and there is a real value, even if you do not...
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161
Sep 13, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN
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justice ginsburg: it was launched by a second year student at nyu law school. invented the notorious rbg just after the shelby county decision came out. she was distressed by the decision, even angry. what does thatd do for me to be wringing my hands and say bad things about the court? i should do something positive. dissent onup my tumblr. took off into the wild blue yonder. [laughter] you mentioned a number of the items you can get. freshener.om people sell that product. sample inme a bubblegum flavor. [laughter] justice liu: have i ever told you, justice, that i have a nickname too. jenniferow the actress lopez, she goes by j-lo? liu.hief justice calls me j- [laughter] [applause] what do you read for pleasure? justice ginsburg: my choices are eclectic. i do have a favorite mystery .riter highly.end her i have a book called "mistress of the vatican" i am in the "mysteries of the vatican" i'm in the middle of. there are many books on the shelf i like to red give -- to read if there were time. justice liu: we are almost out of time. have a couple of very last q
justice ginsburg: it was launched by a second year student at nyu law school. invented the notorious rbg just after the shelby county decision came out. she was distressed by the decision, even angry. what does thatd do for me to be wringing my hands and say bad things about the court? i should do something positive. dissent onup my tumblr. took off into the wild blue yonder. [laughter] you mentioned a number of the items you can get. freshener.om people sell that product. sample inme a...
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99
Sep 11, 2018
09/18
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KTVU
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eye 99
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joining me now is a social psychologist at nyu and professor, as well as author of the book, "coddlingamerican mind." you argue that college kids these days are feeling a new vulnerability. why is that, and what's causing it? >> beginning around 2014, we began to see students reacting in ways that they had never done before. of course, students sometimes protest but for the first time, they were beginning to say, if the book is red on campus, if this speaker comes to campus, it will be damaging. it will harm people. around the same time, depression and anxiety began going up. so, my co-author and i are trying to figure out, why? what has been changing? why are kids born after 1995 different on campus? >> okay. why are they? >> they were hit by a lot of changes in childhood, and they were hit by social media. so imagine if we do not let kids read a book until they were 14 and then we said okay, now you can read. there would not be very good readers in college. in the 1990s, we started saying you can't go outside on your own until you are 14. you will be abducted. you will be killed. we
joining me now is a social psychologist at nyu and professor, as well as author of the book, "coddlingamerican mind." you argue that college kids these days are feeling a new vulnerability. why is that, and what's causing it? >> beginning around 2014, we began to see students reacting in ways that they had never done before. of course, students sometimes protest but for the first time, they were beginning to say, if the book is red on campus, if this speaker comes to campus, it...
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51
Sep 17, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 51
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i took a one-year sabbatical from nyu where i'm a professor to work on this book, and i had two goals in that year. one was to write the book and the other was to teach in a prison, and so that you was really eye-opening for me because your question about did sister helen visit the victims families, if you've spent time in a prison, you come to realize that there's a pretty wide spectrum of people and it's not so different from the wide spectrum of people you encounter in your daily life, which is kind of a mind blowing idea that there's that much similarity. and the rides home, to be a traffic would be two to three hours. the right home, my brain with just, like implode with confusion of trying to reconcile the reality of how peoples lives were affected by actions of the students i was investing in and care deeply about. and who were kind and generous and fun a protective of me. like if you're confused, just imagine my brain on those long car rides home. i don't think we can afford to dehumanize anyone. if people were not actually human, then fine, we could dehumanize them but the ra
i took a one-year sabbatical from nyu where i'm a professor to work on this book, and i had two goals in that year. one was to write the book and the other was to teach in a prison, and so that you was really eye-opening for me because your question about did sister helen visit the victims families, if you've spent time in a prison, you come to realize that there's a pretty wide spectrum of people and it's not so different from the wide spectrum of people you encounter in your daily life, which...
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106
Sep 29, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 106
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certainly i support he academy, an extraordinarily importanted a venture by johnathan haith at nyu to hold the academy's feet to the fire for its extreme lack of intellectual diversity. i'll be honest. this has been a tactic of both principal liberals and conservatives for a long time, to get -- dig into the voter registration of the faculty and notice an evergrowing divide and imbalance between democrat registered and republican registeredded faculty, and its certainly -- matters i suppose for sociology departments but in theory, my view of the academy is that it should be an ivory tower and it wouldn't really matter if everybody in a university were democratic if they kept their politics out of the classroom and, again, understood that their obligation is passing on this inheritance with gratitude and love. so, -- the academy is hitting hard on the fact there is no ideological balance on camp and is worth pointing out. as far as what else to do ail can say is, again, the core problem in all of this is this unchallengeable idea that this society is fundamentally still oppressive and
certainly i support he academy, an extraordinarily importanted a venture by johnathan haith at nyu to hold the academy's feet to the fire for its extreme lack of intellectual diversity. i'll be honest. this has been a tactic of both principal liberals and conservatives for a long time, to get -- dig into the voter registration of the faculty and notice an evergrowing divide and imbalance between democrat registered and republican registeredded faculty, and its certainly -- matters i suppose for...
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96
Sep 21, 2018
09/18
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FBC
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eye 96
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recuse them showing a classic conflict of interest and get professor this and that from harvard and nyund legal experts to write opinions saying this is a clear concept of interest and he can't be conducting an investigation while he's worried about himself being medicated and investigated and himself being a conspirator to instruct justice. the president obstructed justice and he did not do it but by firing kobe that rod rosenstein is a conspirator because he worked with him to fire james comey and he's more guilty than the president - why? the president has the order to go to power to fire james call me. rod rosenstein does not have that same article to power. john: speaking of more craziness in the white house in washington dc but not talking to the veracity of doctor ford's allegations but the way the structure is going forward she put forward that she wanted to happen in dc and she would have judge kavanaugh testify first, no cross-examination from lawyers and this seems highly unorthodox to. >> very unorthodox. during the inquisition that way it was done. in the inquisition they w
recuse them showing a classic conflict of interest and get professor this and that from harvard and nyund legal experts to write opinions saying this is a clear concept of interest and he can't be conducting an investigation while he's worried about himself being medicated and investigated and himself being a conspirator to instruct justice. the president obstructed justice and he did not do it but by firing kobe that rod rosenstein is a conspirator because he worked with him to fire james...
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121
Sep 17, 2018
09/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 121
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you know where nyu university law school is. it's in greenwich village. so i got one round trip a year in the scholarship i had. i got off the plane, took a bus into greenwich village. looked out the window at 3:00 in the morning and thought who are all these strange people? i'm in the wrong place. and then i went to school. i'm a presbyterian from the mountains of tennessee. 95% of the kids at nyu law school at that time were jewish or roman catholic. they came from very different backgrounds as i did. they asked me who i wanted to room with. i wrote on the list, i'd like to room with somebody from as different a background of mine as possible. i did all that deliberately so i could learn to live in the world that strengthened me a lot. now, i'm not sure i'd write that down today if i were looking for a roommate in the college or university because maybe things have changed. but deliberately being exposed to different points of view is a part of growing up and if you -- we want a nation of leaders, actually, a nation of neighbors, who are familiar with m
you know where nyu university law school is. it's in greenwich village. so i got one round trip a year in the scholarship i had. i got off the plane, took a bus into greenwich village. looked out the window at 3:00 in the morning and thought who are all these strange people? i'm in the wrong place. and then i went to school. i'm a presbyterian from the mountains of tennessee. 95% of the kids at nyu law school at that time were jewish or roman catholic. they came from very different backgrounds...
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62
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
by
LINKTV
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eye 62
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board in the d debt crisis witha member of puerto rico's promesa control board, arthur gonzalez, from nyu school. he was joinened by -- lycia.tasha this was part of her exchange. >> the board is probably said on several occasions that their goal is to turn puerto rico into -- caribbean. members of the board -- >> if you're going to say the board said something, you really need, i think, to try to be accurate. no m member said it. >> have said that. they said that in public statements. as in their capacity as a member of the board, we want to make sure puerto rico becomes the hong kong of the caribbean, and what does it mean to be the singapore of hong kong or the caribbean? are we talking about an elitistt base, high will that income states for only those that can afford to live there, are able to live there and those being poor being pushed out? i think that is surely problematic, that signifies the signal with the vision of the board are members of the board have and in their, you know, in being entrusted by congress to enact an economic vision is one that is not shared by 3.5 million i
board in the d debt crisis witha member of puerto rico's promesa control board, arthur gonzalez, from nyu school. he was joinened by -- lycia.tasha this was part of her exchange. >> the board is probably said on several occasions that their goal is to turn puerto rico into -- caribbean. members of the board -- >> if you're going to say the board said something, you really need, i think, to try to be accurate. no m member said it. >> have said that. they said that in public...
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124
Sep 30, 2018
09/18
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MSNBCW
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we will have also gloria brown marshall and melissa murray nyu professor of law. she testified at judge kavanaugh's confirmation hearing in this very process. melissa, let's start with you. you can see the accusations there of the senate judiciary committee of the sorts of questioning of the tone. you and i got to talk about this over the recent weeks before but we certainly saw something new this past week. >> well, i think this was more john mcinn row than john roberts which is unfortunate because it needed to be more in the vein of john roberts, more even tempered, more judicious and this was a partisan injected screed that i think will raise eyebrows certainly among his likely colleagues at the court. >> one of the questions that came out, kurt, is after you watched judge kavanaugh there and the way that he was using -- well, i should say his point of screw is that he came across potentially as partisan and if he does what does that mean in this process. >> he became unprecedently partisan. this was a job interview about a lifetime appointment to a court where
we will have also gloria brown marshall and melissa murray nyu professor of law. she testified at judge kavanaugh's confirmation hearing in this very process. melissa, let's start with you. you can see the accusations there of the senate judiciary committee of the sorts of questioning of the tone. you and i got to talk about this over the recent weeks before but we certainly saw something new this past week. >> well, i think this was more john mcinn row than john roberts which is...
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86
Sep 17, 2018
09/18
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FBC
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eye 86
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just gave $100 million to nyu medical center.ents are getting free tuition thanks in part to that. capitalism that does allow for occasional free gifts, genuine gifts from people that have the money to do it. >> there is a couple other things capitalism does, david. she is talking about we ought to have medical system like the uk or the europeans. the europeans have for decades been free riding on pharmaceuticals created in the united states by a for-profit system and some extent switzerland. they use the things we have. what she is proposing in effect is to put a ceiling on medical innovation and medical progress because there would not be enough money to contribute to that sort of innovation. it would all be going to supporting the underlying system. we know in the uk and canada it is already breaking beneath the cost of those systems. david: well, you know, politics you never let facts get in the way of a good argument. there is still despite the fact numbers don't add up, she hasn't bothered to ad things up, things up she has
just gave $100 million to nyu medical center.ents are getting free tuition thanks in part to that. capitalism that does allow for occasional free gifts, genuine gifts from people that have the money to do it. >> there is a couple other things capitalism does, david. she is talking about we ought to have medical system like the uk or the europeans. the europeans have for decades been free riding on pharmaceuticals created in the united states by a for-profit system and some extent...
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Sep 6, 2018
09/18
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in a 2000 panel discussion at nyu law school regarding bush administration anti-terrorism policies, you said the bush administration went, quote, right up to that legal line to defend the security of the united states, end quote. implying that bush policies did not cross the legal line. do you mean to suggest that bush administration post-911 programs, including the cia torture program, were legal? >> no, senator, that's not what i was suggesting there. let me try to provide you an explanation. president bush's view as i think he said publically was in trying to keep america safe, he was going to do everything he could within the law. he relies on his lawyers to provide him the boundaries of what the law is and then he would go up to that line as he thought effective as a matter of policy. it was up to the lawyers, therefore, to make sure that they were giving sound advice and not -- and having the backbone -- this is something your legislation reinforces. lawyers need to have backbone, even in pressurized moments to say no. i talked about that in times. one of the most important respon
in a 2000 panel discussion at nyu law school regarding bush administration anti-terrorism policies, you said the bush administration went, quote, right up to that legal line to defend the security of the united states, end quote. implying that bush policies did not cross the legal line. do you mean to suggest that bush administration post-911 programs, including the cia torture program, were legal? >> no, senator, that's not what i was suggesting there. let me try to provide you an...
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Sep 13, 2018
09/18
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more to come over the next two days, including the former ceo of deutsche bank, and a professor at nyund former cfo of lehman brothers. let's get the bloomberg business flash from dubai. iphone haslatest shown how even the world's largest company has to surrender to the dictates of the crucial chinese market. the new models come with a feature that supports to cellular services and easier switching between carriers, but that technology won't be available in china, hong kong, and account. macau.- and it will offer slots for sim card set identify and authenticate users phone numbers. >> it means you have both phone ,umbers there in your phone waiting for the call and whichever one gets it becomes the active line. >> another high-ranking finance executive at tesla is leaving the company. bloomberg has learned the vice president of for a wide and operation is parting ways with the electric carmaker. tesla representatives did not respond to her request for comment. plan for a special dividend of 1.5 billion euros to sell leasing and other business lines to the parent group. the two banks sa
more to come over the next two days, including the former ceo of deutsche bank, and a professor at nyund former cfo of lehman brothers. let's get the bloomberg business flash from dubai. iphone haslatest shown how even the world's largest company has to surrender to the dictates of the crucial chinese market. the new models come with a feature that supports to cellular services and easier switching between carriers, but that technology won't be available in china, hong kong, and account....
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Sep 20, 2018
09/18
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i am in another section of the, school of education at nyu. but, i think that it is just a matter of time. i just think it is timing, and, you know, if it takes seven generations, for those of us who are black to kind of have extra generations for people to move, it probably takes three or four generations for women to move, but i think we are there. and we are going to go there.>> i certainly want to agree with what ruth has said. it has been at least 20 years that we have at least more than one person who is studying women in the superintendency, and i know that work is probably the most recent in that area, but it is very confounding to all of us that especially for african-american women right now, it is at 4%. women in general, if you take in all women, the percentage is low. and it is always lower than male, the percentage of males, whether they are black, or, people of color. women are still behind. and, how we grow that, i am not really quite sure. right now, because as ruth has said, there are barriers, and i do know that there was an
i am in another section of the, school of education at nyu. but, i think that it is just a matter of time. i just think it is timing, and, you know, if it takes seven generations, for those of us who are black to kind of have extra generations for people to move, it probably takes three or four generations for women to move, but i think we are there. and we are going to go there.>> i certainly want to agree with what ruth has said. it has been at least 20 years that we have at least more...
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Sep 16, 2018
09/18
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she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick, who she doesn'tre. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering them champagne. and she goes, "how — what is all this about?" he says, "well, my family are comfortable." she then arrives and she meets the family and she is pitted against a series of ex and wannabe girlfriends, a grandmother who is kind of in charge of everything, and michelle yeoh's eleanor, who is the mother, who has no intention of letting her son marry whomever he wants. here's a clip. it'sjust great seeing you guys all like this. when i was growing up, it wasjust me and my mum. but we didn't really have a big family like this. that's a beautiful ring, auntie eleanor. nick's father had it made when he proposed to me. how did you guys meet? actually, they met at cambridge, both studying law together. oh, i didn't know you were a lawyer! i withdrew from university when we
she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick, who she doesn'tre. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering them champagne. and she goes, "how — what is all this about?" he says, "well, my family are comfortable." she then arrives and she meets...
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Sep 16, 2018
09/18
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she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick who she doesn't knowthere's a wedding in singapore. i'm gonna be there. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering champagne. and she goes, "how — what is all this about?" he says, "well, my family are comfortable." she then arrives and she meets the family and she is pitted against a series of ex— and wannabe girlfriends, a grandmother who is kind of in charge of everything. and michelle yeoh's eleanor, the mother, who has no intention of letting her son marry whoever he wants. here's a clip. it'sjust great seeing you guys all like this. when i was growing up, it wasjust me and my mum. but we didn't really have a big family like this. that's a beautiful ring, auntie eleanor. nick's father had it made when he proposed to me. how did you guys meet? actually, they met at cambridge, both studying law together. oh, i didn't know you were a lawyer!
she's a chinese—american economics professor at nyu who is dating a guy called nick who she doesn't knowthere's a wedding in singapore. i'm gonna be there. you should come with, you should meet the family." they get on the aeroplane, they turn left. she says, "we go that way." he says "no, no, no." suddenly, they are in super first class and people are offering champagne. and she goes, "how — what is all this about?" he says, "well, my family are...
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Sep 23, 2018
09/18
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and what was -- and a professor at nyu wrote, tainted by design, very fine book, and worked with the industry about how 80% of gambling is done on slots and these slots replicate the kind of zombie-like state that one gets when they take a depressant like heroin. people -- it's called time on device, and the way they monitor these people -- many of the tactics in terms of building profiles that now the security and surveillance state and, thank you, google and facebook, should say, for complicitness, build on -- about us were pioneered win the casino industry because they wanted to -- they did, they built projections as to how much addicted gamblers would actually spend during their lifetimes. they could trace when they would get frustrated and show up in give enemy free cup coupons at the slot machines to keep them, and gambling addicts have the highest rates of attempted suicide or suicide of any addiction. but it replicates the many other forms of addiction, which are really about unplugging yourself from the world around you because reality has become so difficult to bear. >> hos
and what was -- and a professor at nyu wrote, tainted by design, very fine book, and worked with the industry about how 80% of gambling is done on slots and these slots replicate the kind of zombie-like state that one gets when they take a depressant like heroin. people -- it's called time on device, and the way they monitor these people -- many of the tactics in terms of building profiles that now the security and surveillance state and, thank you, google and facebook, should say, for...
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Sep 1, 2018
09/18
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our next speaker is the professor of nyu. tim is working on a biography of jfk that will be out with norton very soon, i hope. i cannot wait to read it. he is also the co-author of "one hell of a gamble." professor, please. [applause] >> thank you, aj. i also want to thank bob and his team at the white house for inviting us and for giving us a very good reason, not that we needed one, to come to key west. the weather is magnificent. what i him doing now as i am going to try to arrange -- i will have to speak a little longer than the 11 minutes that george c marshall spoke at harvard. if you think about it, that is a standard. you can change the world in 11 minutes, if you take more, you are really wasting people's time. harry truman, i understand, was a good poker player. and i believe, or i suspect at least, that the beautiful poker table, now lovingly preserved at the little white house, no doubt more than paid for itself over the years. today, i want to talk about its another historical event. it occurred around that poker
our next speaker is the professor of nyu. tim is working on a biography of jfk that will be out with norton very soon, i hope. i cannot wait to read it. he is also the co-author of "one hell of a gamble." professor, please. [applause] >> thank you, aj. i also want to thank bob and his team at the white house for inviting us and for giving us a very good reason, not that we needed one, to come to key west. the weather is magnificent. what i him doing now as i am going to try to...
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Sep 26, 2018
09/18
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welcome to the brennan center all,ustice, and, first of i just want to thank nyu's brademas center center and the great team here come in white teen in d.c. who always make us -- team in d.c. who always make us feel welcome. i'm larry nordern, deputy director of the democracy program at the brennan center, and just to repeat because i was told i can't say too much, entrees discussion of how you can keep up with her work, you can find this online at brennancenter.org. follow us on facebook and twitter, watch our videos on youtube, and listen to our podcasts on itunes and sound cloud. for those who don't know, the brennan center is a nonpartisan law and policy institute the -- that works to reform and revitalize and when necessary defend our systems of democracy and justice. we have been deeply engaged in addressing the many issues surrounding the election security to protect our constitutional democracy for over a decade. so i'm sorry to disappoint folks we will not be discussing rod , rosenstein or robert mueller or judge kavanaugh today, but we are here to discuss a somewhat related topi
welcome to the brennan center all,ustice, and, first of i just want to thank nyu's brademas center center and the great team here come in white teen in d.c. who always make us -- team in d.c. who always make us feel welcome. i'm larry nordern, deputy director of the democracy program at the brennan center, and just to repeat because i was told i can't say too much, entrees discussion of how you can keep up with her work, you can find this online at brennancenter.org. follow us on facebook and...
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Sep 24, 2018
09/18
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good afternoon, welcome to the brennan center for justice, and forcible i just want to thank nyu brademas center center into the great team here come in white teen in d.c. who always make us feel welcome. i'm larry nordern, deputy director of the democracy program at the brennan center, and just to repeat because i was told i can't say too much, entrÉes discussion of how you can keep up with her work, you can find this online at brennancenter.org. follow us on facebook and twitter, watch our videos on youtube, and listen to our podcasts on itunes and sound cloud. for those who don't know, the brennan center is a nonpartisan law and policy institute the works to reform and revitalize and when necessary defend our systems of democracy and justice. we we've been giving gays in addressing the many issues surrounding the election security to protect our constitutional democracy for over a decade. so i'm sorry to disappoint folks who we will not be discussing rod rosenstein or robert mueller or judge kavanaugh today, but we are here to discuss a somewhat related topic, election security. and as
good afternoon, welcome to the brennan center for justice, and forcible i just want to thank nyu brademas center center into the great team here come in white teen in d.c. who always make us feel welcome. i'm larry nordern, deputy director of the democracy program at the brennan center, and just to repeat because i was told i can't say too much, entrÉes discussion of how you can keep up with her work, you can find this online at brennancenter.org. follow us on facebook and twitter, watch our...
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Sep 10, 2018
09/18
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i'm in another section of the school of education at nyu. but i think that it's just a matter of time. >> okay. >> i just think it's timing. if it takes seven generations for people to move -- for those of who are black, for people move it probably takes three or four generations for women to move. i think we are there and going there. >> i want to agree with what she said. it's been at least 20 years that we have at least more than one person who is studying women in the superintendantsy. and i know that that work is probably the most recent in this area. but it's very confounding to all of us that especially for african-american women right now it's at 4%. women in general, if you take in all women, the percentage is low. and it's always lower than males, the total number of males whetherer black or people of color. women are still behind and how we grow that, i am not really quite sure right now because as la ruth has said there are barriers and i do know there was an article maybe five years ago, aasa did list what some of those barriers
i'm in another section of the school of education at nyu. but i think that it's just a matter of time. >> okay. >> i just think it's timing. if it takes seven generations for people to move -- for those of who are black, for people move it probably takes three or four generations for women to move. i think we are there and going there. >> i want to agree with what she said. it's been at least 20 years that we have at least more than one person who is studying women in the...
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Sep 25, 2018
09/18
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. >> joining us is scott from the nyu school of business if this is purely driven by them wanting tot have left earlier? >> it was six. >> words matter. it is clear facebook didn't approve this press release they said they will start something and look, founders get -- i'm a founder of several companies. control is really addictive. most founders leave. a lot are trying to figure out what it reflects about facebook. generally speaking it's a matter of time before the founder leaves founders are not good in bigger organizations where they are not in charge. >> but it has been so good for facebook whether it is having them on board or having instagram? general on board that it raises questions. there was a clash over the future of instagram with facebook what are your expectations >> it doesn't surprise me. >> it is a billion dollars by any reasonable metric it would have to be between 50 and 200 billion. so amazingacquisition. maybe instagram will be used to suppress turnout i can't imagine it right now >> and the acquisition has been fantastic for facebook whether or not they are now
. >> joining us is scott from the nyu school of business if this is purely driven by them wanting tot have left earlier? >> it was six. >> words matter. it is clear facebook didn't approve this press release they said they will start something and look, founders get -- i'm a founder of several companies. control is really addictive. most founders leave. a lot are trying to figure out what it reflects about facebook. generally speaking it's a matter of time before the founder...
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Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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this was exemplified by an op-ed published by a professor and administrator at nyu several years ago at the new york times. speeched about hate causing literal damage to minorities. and if you are already at risk then the idea that action, that speech becomes a form of behavior, and this was rhetoric that was used by the middle barry faculty as a reason for shutting down charles murray. something that resulted in a gettingarry professor pummeled, so she got a concussion, had to wear a neck brace for months, allison stanger. the idea that hate speech is a form of action, and therefore can be shut down, grows out of the oppressionof of females another -- under representative -- under represented minorities on campus. that is why i argue that we are not going to be able to open up the ability to challenge campus orthodoxies unless we take on this core problem. john: i would like to give you an opportunity to respond. see to determine if we something different instruments today, we need more data like what robert and fire gathered and what we have seen from the knight foundation in pew a
this was exemplified by an op-ed published by a professor and administrator at nyu several years ago at the new york times. speeched about hate causing literal damage to minorities. and if you are already at risk then the idea that action, that speech becomes a form of behavior, and this was rhetoric that was used by the middle barry faculty as a reason for shutting down charles murray. something that resulted in a gettingarry professor pummeled, so she got a concussion, had to wear a neck...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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i'm a former public defender and currently a master's student at nyu studying policy and i'm curiousknow, i'm a firm believer that the system is working exactly how it was intended to work. so until it is no longer, oppression will persist. so i'm curious to know your thoughts on abolition but any inspiring words for a young woman looking to affect policy in a positive way for communities of color. any advice that you have? thank you. >> before anyone answers, let's do this quickly. i'm going to try to get all of these questions in and then let everybody close out and we'll wrap. abolition is the first question. >> my name is alexis locket from arizona and i work at a college in arizona and so we have a lot of brown and black students. and i want to know as a millennial woman, young black woman, what can i do as an activist? i just feel like with my studies, i don't know if i'm doing enough what, is enough as a young millennial? >> thank you. nice question. >> hi. i'm j.d. and i'm from arizona, here as a student. and i've always been a little confused about my idea of blackness. blac
i'm a former public defender and currently a master's student at nyu studying policy and i'm curiousknow, i'm a firm believer that the system is working exactly how it was intended to work. so until it is no longer, oppression will persist. so i'm curious to know your thoughts on abolition but any inspiring words for a young woman looking to affect policy in a positive way for communities of color. any advice that you have? thank you. >> before anyone answers, let's do this quickly. i'm...
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Sep 16, 2018
09/18
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i took a one-year sabbatical from nyu where i'm a professor to work on this book, and i had two goals in that year. one was to write the book and the other was to teach in a prison, and so that you was really eye-opening for me because your question about did sister helen visit the victims families, if you've spent time in a prison, you come to realize that there's a pretty wide spectrum of people and it's not so different from the wide spectrum of people you encounter in your daily life, which is kind of a mind blowing idea that there's that much similarity. and the rides home, to be a traffic would be two to three hours. the right home, my brain with just, like implode with confusion of trying to reconcile the reality of how peoples lives were affected by actions of the students i was investing in and care deeply about. and who were kind and generous and fun a protective of me. like if you're confused, just imagine my brain on those long car rides home. i don't think we can afford to dehumanize anyone. if people were not actually human, then fine, we could dehumanize them but the ra
i took a one-year sabbatical from nyu where i'm a professor to work on this book, and i had two goals in that year. one was to write the book and the other was to teach in a prison, and so that you was really eye-opening for me because your question about did sister helen visit the victims families, if you've spent time in a prison, you come to realize that there's a pretty wide spectrum of people and it's not so different from the wide spectrum of people you encounter in your daily life, which...
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Sep 26, 2018
09/18
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and facebook doesn't put up any safeguards to protect the commonwealth >> scott galloway, nyu >>> thank very much. we are moments away from the fed decision on interest rates another increase, of course, widely expected, a quarter point. up next, we'll take a closer look at how rising rates affect housing, and how it becomes a reality. stay with us what's the hesitation? eh, it just feels too complicated, you know? well sure, at first, but jj can help you with that. jj, will you break it down for this gentleman? hey, ian. you know, at td ameritrade, we can walk you through your options trades step by step until you're comfortable. i could be up for that. that's taking options trading from wall st. to main st. hey guys, wanna play some pool? eh, i'm not really a pool guy. what's the hesitation? it's just complicated. step-by-step options trading support from td ameritrade adults are just kids with much, much better toys. [ giggling ] introducing the 2018 c-class sedan, coupe and cabriolet. the thrills keep getting better. lease the c300 sedan for $399 a month at your local mercedes-benz
and facebook doesn't put up any safeguards to protect the commonwealth >> scott galloway, nyu >>> thank very much. we are moments away from the fed decision on interest rates another increase, of course, widely expected, a quarter point. up next, we'll take a closer look at how rising rates affect housing, and how it becomes a reality. stay with us what's the hesitation? eh, it just feels too complicated, you know? well sure, at first, but jj can help you with that. jj, will you...
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Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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to nyu marketing professor scott galloway where this is going. professor, good to see you.ets were interpreting this could be a lot worse. the chinese could have responded with steeper tariffs, implementing all of these at much steeper level and we haven't. is that good news, or how do you hear isn't. >> the markets believe cooler heads will eventually prevail. this has gone from a border skirmish to a conflict but markets don't believe it will erupt into war. neil: do you? >> you know, rationally no but that's rational thinking. i'm not entirely sure there is a good reason this ever started. what is interesting about apple being exempted, is one, both parties, the chinese and the -- neil: its products are exempted for time being. >> apple, iphone and seven dwarfs. if you exclude the iphone, largely excluding apple, okay? whether it is the cases or some of their other products that is, you know, that is foam. neil: did they get special treatment? >> that is the correct question. when you have the most value ab, most successful company in the world, has a lot of power in was
to nyu marketing professor scott galloway where this is going. professor, good to see you.ets were interpreting this could be a lot worse. the chinese could have responded with steeper tariffs, implementing all of these at much steeper level and we haven't. is that good news, or how do you hear isn't. >> the markets believe cooler heads will eventually prevail. this has gone from a border skirmish to a conflict but markets don't believe it will erupt into war. neil: do you? >> you...
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Sep 13, 2018
09/18
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there is quite a powerful study by professor of the stern business school at nyu which supports withof this. sayingdame lagarde she would not want to be ecb president. what christine lagarde be proper as ecb president in frankfurt, germany? tradition, i disappoint, right? [laughter] because i keep internal excitement of these name guessing strictly internal. tom: ok. mario monti, thank you so much for joining us today. it's greatly appreciated. we are going to continue forward. adam posen on turkey. stay with us worldwide. this is bloomberg. ♪ morning, 10 disbelief, and who held lehman exposure was the question. they needed to make it less of a .risis we have a recent book that came out. was should they .ave and would they have tom: let's bring in my colleague. francine: do you think when you look at the markets we have any firewalls in place? does that make any sense if we had another lehman to contend with. they had no information on this in 2008. the banks have a bigger liquidity reserve error. leverage is down. the size of trading books are down. an event, butve says we are bette
there is quite a powerful study by professor of the stern business school at nyu which supports withof this. sayingdame lagarde she would not want to be ecb president. what christine lagarde be proper as ecb president in frankfurt, germany? tradition, i disappoint, right? [laughter] because i keep internal excitement of these name guessing strictly internal. tom: ok. mario monti, thank you so much for joining us today. it's greatly appreciated. we are going to continue forward. adam posen on...
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Sep 5, 2018
09/18
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we expect him to arrive here any minute now >> we'll check back with you, julia, thank you >>> nyu's scott galloway joins us his runaway best-seller is called "the four." welcome to "power lunch. good to have you with us. >> thank you for having me. >> are we going to look back on the hearings and say this was the beginning of the end of big tech >> no. i don't think so i thought it was a thoughtful conversation, a good dialogue, substantive, i don't see anything meaningful coming out of this panel much less washington, d.c. d.c. now lacks a domain expertise or will to go after big tech where you night see it is one out of brussels or out of a red state whose attorney general sees the brightest blue line path between the ag's mansion and the governor's mansion as a populist argument against big tech the war against big tech is going to break out where all the major conflicts of the 20th century broke out, continental europe d.c., this will be seen as largely a nothing burger. >> no regulation whatsoever coming out of capitol hill, you think. >> i don't think so. i think they're outgu
we expect him to arrive here any minute now >> we'll check back with you, julia, thank you >>> nyu's scott galloway joins us his runaway best-seller is called "the four." welcome to "power lunch. good to have you with us. >> thank you for having me. >> are we going to look back on the hearings and say this was the beginning of the end of big tech >> no. i don't think so i thought it was a thoughtful conversation, a good dialogue, substantive, i...