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in fact, when i registered at nyu, i register. i had just arrived as luis antonio miranda concepcion junior and. i got my i.d. it said luis a m si junior yeah. i dropped everything and i have been luis miranda jr ever since. so the delighted to have you. to have you here. and those are coming from latin american countries in which both of your parental last names are used are very familiar with with that and that issue. let me let me begin with how mention the wonderful things that you've been involved in and all the activities and all the career and everything that you have done so a lot of spare time is, something that you probably don't have. so i wanted sort of see where the urge to write a book came from. garcia marti talk talks about the fact that that books have their own history and they come to us and they tell us they need to be written. this is something that you have been thinking a long time. no, not at all. it was a there i, i guess i complain a lot during trump. then after biden after reading article or after articl
in fact, when i registered at nyu, i register. i had just arrived as luis antonio miranda concepcion junior and. i got my i.d. it said luis a m si junior yeah. i dropped everything and i have been luis miranda jr ever since. so the delighted to have you. to have you here. and those are coming from latin american countries in which both of your parental last names are used are very familiar with with that and that issue. let me let me begin with how mention the wonderful things that you've been...
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joseph coresh is the director of the optimal aging institute at nyu langone health system.one of the authors of the study. how significant are the findings? dr. coresh: it is important for all of us. if you are thinking of your lifelong health, it makes you realize that you need to consider the risk that at some point you may hit dementia before death. john: what accounts for the higher risk? dr. coresh: so basically we did a study that was more diverse in more centers and spanned both white and black americans and we also spent an enormous amount of energy to make sure we captured all the cases. then the population has gotten older. as life expectancy has gotten older, the risk is higher. the risk by age 75 is 4%, by age 85, it is 20%, and by age 95, it rises to the full 42% chance of getting to dementia before death. but more than half the risk is after age 85. john: to make sure i understand, this is because the population is aging, not because something has changed about dementia. dr. coresh: exactly the population in the u.s. is aging and that is also the reason that w
joseph coresh is the director of the optimal aging institute at nyu langone health system.one of the authors of the study. how significant are the findings? dr. coresh: it is important for all of us. if you are thinking of your lifelong health, it makes you realize that you need to consider the risk that at some point you may hit dementia before death. john: what accounts for the higher risk? dr. coresh: so basically we did a study that was more diverse in more centers and spanned both white...
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take a look at amazon starting next week patients of nyu langone healthcare check into the doctor's officehe way is a contact list harm scanner. take a look at pfizer and executive from the company just said they will try to move outside manufacturing back into america if significant tariffs are pushed in place. there you have it. coming up the peace deal that blew up in the oval office friday would've been the starting point for negotiations to in the ukraine war, how come it fell apart. perhaps it is got something to do with the meeting they had with top democrats hours before he arrived at the white house that's my take top with our we have the big winners and taught moments from last night's oscars, joe concha deals with the doll next. ♪ (♪) (♪) voltaren... for long lasting arthritis pain relief. (♪) did they just hop from a baseball game to a show on max... without leaving directv? it's like all their apps and channels... are connected. oh, it's allll connected... shows, movies, sports, cooking shows. — oh my god cooking shows! — is she talkin' to us? tell me, how does directv put all
take a look at amazon starting next week patients of nyu langone healthcare check into the doctor's officehe way is a contact list harm scanner. take a look at pfizer and executive from the company just said they will try to move outside manufacturing back into america if significant tariffs are pushed in place. there you have it. coming up the peace deal that blew up in the oval office friday would've been the starting point for negotiations to in the ukraine war, how come it fell apart....
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Mar 3, 2025
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my husband who was resident in that program had been shot and brought to nyu. had been shot in the chest by a racist who confronted him on a crowded new york city bus during rush hour and told him to get out of his face and to apologize and use numerousnot later than 21 years of seem life in being at the creation interest. >> very good. >> i want to enter into the record multiple letters in support of mr. wright's nomination, a letter from the national association for police organizations, a letter from former editorial board members of the texas reveal on politics, a letter from mlk association from texas, a letter from the chairman of the board of regents at texas southern university, letter from the region of valley and letter from pastor willy davis and houston city council members of willy davis and without objection these are all enters into the record and senator welch, you're recognized? >> thank you very much. very nice to visit with you. all of are amazed here. guy named cruz from texas. okay. we can imagine what it's like for the chief of staff. >> y
my husband who was resident in that program had been shot and brought to nyu. had been shot in the chest by a racist who confronted him on a crowded new york city bus during rush hour and told him to get out of his face and to apologize and use numerousnot later than 21 years of seem life in being at the creation interest. >> very good. >> i want to enter into the record multiple letters in support of mr. wright's nomination, a letter from the national association for police...
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Mar 1, 2025
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joining me now is forensic dna expert nyu law professor erin murphy. her research focuses on technology in the criminal justice system, and she's the author of inside the cell the dark side of forensic dna, which addresses the scientific, legal, and ethical challenges of forensic dna. professor, good to see you. so did the fbi violate privacy laws in this case? >> truthfully? probably not. under the constitution, it's pretty clear the supreme court has said that state privacy laws do not set the scope of constitutional protection under the federal law. we don't have a kind of directly pertinent statute. we don't even really have good regulations of access to genetic material more generally. so there's no federal law to violate. and although about ten states have passed laws directly targeting law enforcement, access to genetic genealogy databases like these, these recreational databases. uh, those states don't include idaho. and even if it did, it's not clear the fbi has to follow idaho's law. when it does searches. >> so did the dna databases violate
joining me now is forensic dna expert nyu law professor erin murphy. her research focuses on technology in the criminal justice system, and she's the author of inside the cell the dark side of forensic dna, which addresses the scientific, legal, and ethical challenges of forensic dna. professor, good to see you. so did the fbi violate privacy laws in this case? >> truthfully? probably not. under the constitution, it's pretty clear the supreme court has said that state privacy laws do not...
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Mar 1, 2025
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we're joined by two great guests, nyu law professor melissa murray, who's clerked for sonia sotomayornomination, and is, of course, an msnbc analyst and guest host here and a podcast host with strict scrutiny. check it out. we are also joined by author rich benjamin, who's been published in the new yorker and the new york times, and has provided his insights on policy and race in america on msnbc, really for years, including drawing on his book whitopia, which presciently probed america's self-segregation in what became the seeds of the maga uprising. he's out with a new memoir, talk to me lessons from a family forged by history. the new york times calls it moving and valuable, while also critiquing its writing style. it happens, rich and salman rushdie says the book is brilliant and absorbing. mazel tov. welcome to both of you. >> thanks for having us. >> thanks for. >> having us. >> ari, the reviews are coming in, and congratulations. but we'll start with you. you're. the more, the more of the home base. what's it called? hometown. what's the word i'm looking for? >> hometown. >> he
we're joined by two great guests, nyu law professor melissa murray, who's clerked for sonia sotomayornomination, and is, of course, an msnbc analyst and guest host here and a podcast host with strict scrutiny. check it out. we are also joined by author rich benjamin, who's been published in the new yorker and the new york times, and has provided his insights on policy and race in america on msnbc, really for years, including drawing on his book whitopia, which presciently probed america's...
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Mar 2, 2025
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time of birth were in the united states lawfully or indeed permanent residents from a professor at nyu>> mr. cooper, do you share that view? >> i do share that view and i would point out again, wong itself conditioned irretistable conclusion from the 14th amendment, citizenship by birth within the territory in the allegiance and under the protection of the country which was premised in that case on the parents of wong being lawful permanent residents, allegiant to this country. >> so to be clear, mr. cooper, you do not believe that -- that wong's opinion extends certainly at a minimum beyond again what we would characterize under today's law as lpr status individual? >> no, it clearly just didn't have anything to do as mr. o'brian has said with illegal aliens or aliens here who may be here lawfully but only temporarily. >> are you aware of any opinion by the united states supreme court that has extended beyond that interpretation since wong? >> no. >> mr. cotter do you agree with that? >> i do. >> that is, in fact, the state of the law with respect to wong and everything since wong, no
time of birth were in the united states lawfully or indeed permanent residents from a professor at nyu>> mr. cooper, do you share that view? >> i do share that view and i would point out again, wong itself conditioned irretistable conclusion from the 14th amendment, citizenship by birth within the territory in the allegiance and under the protection of the country which was premised in that case on the parents of wong being lawful permanent residents, allegiant to this country....