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Jan 16, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
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eye 49
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every day real people. i'm dealing with things on the ground level, people into life, i'm not sitting at the table making a decision on who will get the meat. those are your puppets in office. i have to go to the market and deal with human beings who look at me because i have brown skin. they, and black and everything else and show me their attitude. where did they get that attitude? maybe it was their environment or their you will treat me as what somebody on television says. host: thank you for the comment. race is a very personal thing. we have to be able to root for this out at a very individual level. andtarts with the schools the educational system. it starts with the national conversation. it starts with all of the issues we bring out like corporations dealing with issues of diversity and inclusion and how you would actually advanced people through the ranks. in the military, what are the most integrated institutions in united states, what do they do in terms of promotion? if they promote somebody an
every day real people. i'm dealing with things on the ground level, people into life, i'm not sitting at the table making a decision on who will get the meat. those are your puppets in office. i have to go to the market and deal with human beings who look at me because i have brown skin. they, and black and everything else and show me their attitude. where did they get that attitude? maybe it was their environment or their you will treat me as what somebody on television says. host: thank you...
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92
Jan 28, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 92
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people think about race primarily affecting black people or people of color but it affects whites as well.it sends. the message he sins is things are not going to change that much. as much as he hated the planter class, he hated black people more. once he saw that radical republicans were going to change the south, take this people out of power, the people he said he always hated, -- part of his -- he made people come to him to ask for pardons. it was almost like a humiliation ritual. that part of him that felt looked down upon by the planter class asserted itself, at first, but once he began to look at the lay of the land and see where things were headed, he decided to put those people back in place as quickly as possible. when you are reading these things, there are all kinds of arguments about the balance of power between president and congress, that's a process. but the main theme or him was -- for him was white supremacy and how he accomplished that, try to accomplish that, by being as pugnacious as his real biographer describes them, the pugnacious president, was really in serv
people think about race primarily affecting black people or people of color but it affects whites as well.it sends. the message he sins is things are not going to change that much. as much as he hated the planter class, he hated black people more. once he saw that radical republicans were going to change the south, take this people out of power, the people he said he always hated, -- part of his -- he made people come to him to ask for pardons. it was almost like a humiliation ritual. that part...
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Jan 15, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
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eye 100
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but white people are not bad people, they are just people of a race who want to be superior.ut what we have a failed to realize is the world is watching, what he is doing to not just america but in africa he is giving china a chance to implement what they want to do. if you look at what china is doing in africa, they are spending big money and all donald trump is doing is tearing down america. for: ok, (202) 748-8000 those in the eastern and central time zones, (202) 748-8001 in the mountain and pacific time zones. you can post on our twitter feed at c-spanwj, and on facebook.com/cspan. a caller bringing up the president of the united states, he is in florida. alongside kevin mccarthy. the president for the first time directly addressing this morning topics of racism and triple the statements -- attributable to statements from the white house last week. here is the president responded to reporters. >> no, i am not a racist. i am the least racist you have ever -- that i can tell you. host: apologies for the audio for that. that again from mar-a-lago. legislators responding, we
but white people are not bad people, they are just people of a race who want to be superior.ut what we have a failed to realize is the world is watching, what he is doing to not just america but in africa he is giving china a chance to implement what they want to do. if you look at what china is doing in africa, they are spending big money and all donald trump is doing is tearing down america. for: ok, (202) 748-8000 those in the eastern and central time zones, (202) 748-8001 in the mountain...
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Jan 2, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
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eye 32
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this will be people who are managers, people who are white collar, high level salary people or owner operators. mom and pop shops. people who have their own engineering, graphic designers, things like that. the essence of capitalism everything we know about it, resolves around the relationship between the first and the second group of people. the wage laborers and the capitalist. we're going to ask the question, is this a system that is the best possible means for improving standards of living for providing opportunities, etc.? it's a hard question to answer, when we say best possible for socialists, you're comparing against two things. you're comparing it against a system that today, i hope we will all agree on this, a system that today nobody supports. which is soviet style or chinese style system of socialism. on the left today, people don't support it. on the right, that's usually raw man to knock down socialism. i want to stipulate now for the rest of the conversation, neither i or nor bhaskar will support that system. a second alternative to which we compare it is the improveme
this will be people who are managers, people who are white collar, high level salary people or owner operators. mom and pop shops. people who have their own engineering, graphic designers, things like that. the essence of capitalism everything we know about it, resolves around the relationship between the first and the second group of people. the wage laborers and the capitalist. we're going to ask the question, is this a system that is the best possible means for improving standards of living...
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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the numbers of people who particularly people who get sent to prison for a profession. if you are putting away all the dealers you wouldn't fill up all the persons but if you put people and the states do this as well. it isn't just federal law but that's a significant part of it and everything that happens you have to sort of look at the situation. it's very interesting book by james forman about how mass incarceration started in d.c. and there was a great deal of drugs, crack-cocaine in particular and it was bad. after that there was violence there. in both cases it was her. to do something and if you look at it, what happens and it's kind of the story for the whole country, if they have a problem that needs to be looked at and acted on. >> host: a criminal justice issue. guess that the sentences are crazy and the other thing which tells you the complexity this is largely around the country a racial thing. but in d.c. the leaders making these tougher laws were all african-american. so it if you kind of look at the whole thing and the politics you have been a largely bl
the numbers of people who particularly people who get sent to prison for a profession. if you are putting away all the dealers you wouldn't fill up all the persons but if you put people and the states do this as well. it isn't just federal law but that's a significant part of it and everything that happens you have to sort of look at the situation. it's very interesting book by james forman about how mass incarceration started in d.c. and there was a great deal of drugs, crack-cocaine in...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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the government has a duty to young people and we have a duty to our young people to give all young people the stunt to explore future options, to test their passions and find themselves and how they want to go out to their working years. for the sake of a more directed, passionate, prepared generation of young people, i urge you to pass this motion. and we'll see more individuals reaping rewards and our economy will reap rewards too. it is therefore that i urge you to stand for this motion. [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you. thank you very much indeed. what about a speaker from the -- i'm going to call a speaker from the northeast of england. yes, you were trying earlier. just hold on because i'm going to call you in a moment. take a seat for a moment. prepare yourself for your oration. the right honorable member since 1979, 38 years a member of parliament and widely recognized members of the youth parliament across the house and in many, many, many parts of our country as what people want a member of parliament to be, which is a principled and fearless seeker after and speaker for tru
the government has a duty to young people and we have a duty to our young people to give all young people the stunt to explore future options, to test their passions and find themselves and how they want to go out to their working years. for the sake of a more directed, passionate, prepared generation of young people, i urge you to pass this motion. and we'll see more individuals reaping rewards and our economy will reap rewards too. it is therefore that i urge you to stand for this motion. [...
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Jan 10, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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we have a lot of good people in this room a lot of people who have a great spirit taking care of people we all represent. any legislation on daca, we feel, at least a strong part of this group feels, has to accomplish three vital goals. the chairman will be submitting a bill over the next two to three days that will cover many of these things. and obviously thif it gets pass that will go to the senate and we'll see how it all turns out. i feel having the democrats with us is absolutely vital. this should be a bipartisan bill. this should be a bill of love, truly. we can do that. it also has to be a bill where we're able to secure our border. drugs are pouring into our country at a record pace. we've greatly stiffened, as you know, and fewer people are trying to come in. but we have tremendous numbers of people and drugs pouring into our country. so in order to secure it, we need a wall, we need closing enforcement -- we have to close enforcement loopholes. give immigration officers -- and these are tremendous people -- the border security agents, the i.c.e. agents. we have to give them
we have a lot of good people in this room a lot of people who have a great spirit taking care of people we all represent. any legislation on daca, we feel, at least a strong part of this group feels, has to accomplish three vital goals. the chairman will be submitting a bill over the next two to three days that will cover many of these things. and obviously thif it gets pass that will go to the senate and we'll see how it all turns out. i feel having the democrats with us is absolutely vital....
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Jan 13, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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still, people are optimistic. the idea of the awards as i interpret them is that if you identify and celebrate people, young people, older people, even dinosaurs who have been able to do things, think things, imagine things the rest of us have not -- my wife likes a call at the basis of curiosity, the basic engine of creativity. the smithsonian magazine leadership, the editor-in-chief decided to celebrate that by having an award ceremony in which different categories of endeavor would be celebrated. this theory event were having today is part of the smithsonian ingenuity festival, which included the ingenuity awards the other night. this was a very humbling experience. it was a 12-year-old lady who decided to develop a nonprofit effort, not an incorporated nonprofit, to bring books to underserved young ladies. she originally fitted with the it, is with a 1000 and already past the 10,000 mark. all the way to a neurosurgeon who has been able to implant stem cells in the brains of people who had a stroke and recovere
still, people are optimistic. the idea of the awards as i interpret them is that if you identify and celebrate people, young people, older people, even dinosaurs who have been able to do things, think things, imagine things the rest of us have not -- my wife likes a call at the basis of curiosity, the basic engine of creativity. the smithsonian magazine leadership, the editor-in-chief decided to celebrate that by having an award ceremony in which different categories of endeavor would be...
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Jan 2, 2018
01/18
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MSNBCW
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people really have been through it. people have lost people close to them. they're survivors themselves. there is a lot of them. >> absolutely. and i'm no stranger to the realities of depression or ptsd. a lot of the times you're dealing with your own need to survive in this environment. and then you have to as an advocate, i'm responding to death and crisis and poverty and pain every single day. you kind of go on autopilot. but it affects you. it's no way you'll see the amount of death in the city and not be affected. and one of the biggest things for that townhall is it finally gave effort chicagoans a voice. people were starved to get it out. that was a room full of people crying for help. >> three days after the townhaul, jedediah brown himself was crying for help. >> every relationship i had, i lost it because i was too busy fighting for y'all. really. and i've only lost because y'all. forgive me, lord. i'm so sorry. ♪ >> this is my first time looking at lake michigan in this very spot since that day. i drove my car right down to the side of where land
people really have been through it. people have lost people close to them. they're survivors themselves. there is a lot of them. >> absolutely. and i'm no stranger to the realities of depression or ptsd. a lot of the times you're dealing with your own need to survive in this environment. and then you have to as an advocate, i'm responding to death and crisis and poverty and pain every single day. you kind of go on autopilot. but it affects you. it's no way you'll see the amount of death...
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Jan 28, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 34
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the people who most want to change this system are the people who are dependent on it. they want to get off welfare. they want to go back to work. they want to do right by their kids. i once had a hearing when i was a governor, and i brought in people on welfare from all over america who had found their way to work. the woman from my state who testified was asked this question: what's the best thing about being off welfare and in a job? and without blinking an eye, she looked at 40 governors, and she said, "when my boy goes to school and they say, 'what does your mother do for a living? "he can give an answer." these people want a better system, and we ought to give it to them. last year we began this. we gave the states more power to innovate because we know that a lot of great ideas come from outside washington, and many states are already using it. then this congress took a dramatic step. instead of taxing people with modest incomes into poverty, we helped them to work their way out of poverty by dramatically increasing the earned-income tax credit. it will lift 15 m
the people who most want to change this system are the people who are dependent on it. they want to get off welfare. they want to go back to work. they want to do right by their kids. i once had a hearing when i was a governor, and i brought in people on welfare from all over america who had found their way to work. the woman from my state who testified was asked this question: what's the best thing about being off welfare and in a job? and without blinking an eye, she looked at 40 governors,...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 8, 2018
01/18
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SFGTV
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get information and it's a hub where people get health assistance and so many of those people who were vaccinated for the hepatitis as well as this season's flu, those things happen at a lot of the shelter sites so the expenseing of shelter beds is really crucial. thank you. >> thank you. >> good afternoon my name is shy walldrudge i'm we run largest single adult homeless shelter on fifth and bryant and we have the only 24 hour drop-in center which this resolution would definitely help is that we constantly have lines and we are at capacity every night and even with the bad weather we appreciate additional help and support with additional beds or navigation centers or tents and anything to keep our clients off the streets. thank you. >> thank you. >> any other public comments on this item? seeing none, public comments now closed. mr. kazisi, question, you mentioned it's a go for this year or this winter to open up another thousand beds for temporary shelters and the two you name is about 238. are we counting those places where some of the changes that opened up it during the winter as
get information and it's a hub where people get health assistance and so many of those people who were vaccinated for the hepatitis as well as this season's flu, those things happen at a lot of the shelter sites so the expenseing of shelter beds is really crucial. thank you. >> thank you. >> good afternoon my name is shy walldrudge i'm we run largest single adult homeless shelter on fifth and bryant and we have the only 24 hour drop-in center which this resolution would definitely...
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Jan 7, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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there's nothing wrong or inferior about black people or any asian people, about group of people. and that then we still have inequities.l so that means that we have racial inequities because policies.cist and so we, at the center, are teams of e organizing people to uncover discriminatory policies, to figure out policy, ways to out disseminate policies to make people aware of them. engage in to campaigns of change because those policies. >> as you know this year marking 50th anniversary of what happened in 1968 clearly a many icant year on so different levels politically, the vietnam war and, of course, rights movement. 50 years later, how are we doing, especially in regard to civil rights? >> well, i think we've oferienced simultaneous sort history. we've experienced a dual history. history of enced racial progress and, of course, obama as can look at one of the signifiers of racial segment of certain people of color, of the african-american community. ut the nation has also experienced the progression of racism. the progression of racism that i argue was critical in the electio
there's nothing wrong or inferior about black people or any asian people, about group of people. and that then we still have inequities.l so that means that we have racial inequities because policies.cist and so we, at the center, are teams of e organizing people to uncover discriminatory policies, to figure out policy, ways to out disseminate policies to make people aware of them. engage in to campaigns of change because those policies. >> as you know this year marking 50th anniversary...
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265
Jan 12, 2018
01/18
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CNNW
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eye 265
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dirty people.hithol shitholers built this country, called slant eyes, they stayed in internment camps as american citizens and that's a legacy we bear shame for. shit holers who escaped guatemala and el salvador i worked for shit holer who's p protected this country after 9/11. george is a shit holer gist. jose' head of counter terrorism at cia is a puerto rican. i guess he's not welcome. i'm proud to be a shit holer and i want a t-shirt i'm proud, yeah, let's stand against this and say it's not about black people, it's not about white people from norway it is about the people who built meramericao we denegrated and we're a shamed to what america is today. >> what you said brought tears to my eyes because it's just so offensive. i can't see how anyone can make excuses for that. it had is about pure racism that's -- that's all it is. to say otherwise is in deep denial or cunningly deceiving, deceptive. >> i have seen in conversation this is economic let's be clear a white honky from norway can come
dirty people.hithol shitholers built this country, called slant eyes, they stayed in internment camps as american citizens and that's a legacy we bear shame for. shit holers who escaped guatemala and el salvador i worked for shit holer who's p protected this country after 9/11. george is a shit holer gist. jose' head of counter terrorism at cia is a puerto rican. i guess he's not welcome. i'm proud to be a shit holer and i want a t-shirt i'm proud, yeah, let's stand against this and say it's...
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Jan 1, 2018
01/18
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BLOOMBERG
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so you know, we were just used to being people and dealing with people.urprised me how easily i could be turned into a two dimensional cartoon instead of a three-dimensional human being. you have to discipline yourself about what to talk about, how to talk about it. and you have to keep remembering there are all these layers between you and people that didn't used to be there. and that surprised me. i thought i was a pretty good communicator. i thought i could -- i just fell on my face four or five times. until i figured out how to do it. david: you became president at a young age. you were 46 years old. if you have been president at 56 or 66, do you think it would have been different, or did you think you would have had less energy at your age? mr. clinton: i think i would have been better in some ways if i had been older. but i think i would have been not as good in some ways. sometimes you get a bunch done because you are too dumb to know you can't do it. [laughter] you show up and you keep trying to do it and something happens. david: your father was
so you know, we were just used to being people and dealing with people.urprised me how easily i could be turned into a two dimensional cartoon instead of a three-dimensional human being. you have to discipline yourself about what to talk about, how to talk about it. and you have to keep remembering there are all these layers between you and people that didn't used to be there. and that surprised me. i thought i was a pretty good communicator. i thought i could -- i just fell on my face four or...
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Jan 22, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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and that's what i always tell people when i debate people online. i say the point here is not for you to agree with everything i say. in fact, we need allow space for people to disagree and never going to agreement time nothing going to agree with republicans or liberals as a progress sink might not agree women who i consider to be neoliberals. we probably can all agree that we all deserve to have respectful debate if and can do that, god bless america because people expect their -- this idea and resistance, the unitis uniformity and i mere blew that. ewanis not uniformity. unity is all of us understand that the end game here is that all marginalized communities are protected and when they're protected, we all live prosperous, full, productive lives in this country. how we get this, don't care. >> host: so linda, as part of those many different marginalized groups you just alluded to, this demographics that voted majority for donald trump, even though someone from their demographic was on the opposing ticket. white women. 53%, according to exit poll
and that's what i always tell people when i debate people online. i say the point here is not for you to agree with everything i say. in fact, we need allow space for people to disagree and never going to agreement time nothing going to agree with republicans or liberals as a progress sink might not agree women who i consider to be neoliberals. we probably can all agree that we all deserve to have respectful debate if and can do that, god bless america because people expect their -- this idea...
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Jan 29, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
tv
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whereas the people are the whole people. it seems to add an echo like that so thinking about this further prod me to one of my favorite writers. a political philosopher said he specifically praises the people on specific grounds. all of the write the writers age basically that people are stupid and you have to be governed to have any stagehand on the pillar. pity it was the american people who for a couple of decades at least were tired of unchecked illegal immigration. whereas they used the term got been some of the king or monarch or just anybody in charge in that sort of way where the elites that were more confident plus a financial crisis and a lot of other things come us who is wiser and more constant but this course is entitled as perhaps the 2016 election illustrated there is a multitude of border enforcement and one is the too bad trade deals and smarter safer policy that he couldn't gebut hecouldn't get it they hoped for a. they found a candidate who would explicitly and overtly championed their interest and now the
whereas the people are the whole people. it seems to add an echo like that so thinking about this further prod me to one of my favorite writers. a political philosopher said he specifically praises the people on specific grounds. all of the write the writers age basically that people are stupid and you have to be governed to have any stagehand on the pillar. pity it was the american people who for a couple of decades at least were tired of unchecked illegal immigration. whereas they used the...
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then you have to tell the people that they have to come aboard one by one one by one eyed if people don't remain calm there's a danger that their boat will collapse and passengers will fall into the water. to conceal fines and this is so off the court we hire so we have to hoist them up some of them are completely exhausted and fall back down because they're unaware of just how weak they are with us. if that isn't. last year the sea watch team had a particularly dramatic mission their plane spotted a group of people out at sea and in the water by the time men in geo rescue ship arrived seven had drowned. the surface of the homes in the shape of the top of the pictures the u. ventre it was seized by italian prosecutors and is currently unable to conduct any more operations so it makes us really angry knowing that the ship that rescued people back then is now stuck in italy. at the top just me tell you it's a policy that makes no sense. as when this one i'll admit they do everything they can to prevent people from coming here while at the same time trying to get rid of the rescue organizati
then you have to tell the people that they have to come aboard one by one one by one eyed if people don't remain calm there's a danger that their boat will collapse and passengers will fall into the water. to conceal fines and this is so off the court we hire so we have to hoist them up some of them are completely exhausted and fall back down because they're unaware of just how weak they are with us. if that isn't. last year the sea watch team had a particularly dramatic mission their plane...
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119
Jan 13, 2018
01/18
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FOXNEWSW
tv
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provocative means controversy and controversy means people watch it and people are going to watch it and say those sob's will watch it then we'll turn it off and the nfl ratings are going down down down down down and maybe this is a system for down down down. adam: i have a different perspective charles. charles: all right adam. adam: no i think it would be completely unamerican for them to not show it. i mean this would be something that the chinese or the old soviets would do. there's something meaningful happening on our program but we're not showing it to you because we don't want to upset you. charles: they haven't showed it in a while. >> the nfl is a business and long term this is a bad business decision and here is the irony here. lick i said i've done a lot of research on this the nfl in the past before 9/11 never showed players in the national anthem. players stayed in the locker rooms. roger goodell thought it would be a great marketing idea if he showed just how patriotic the nfl is by bringing him out. then, this thing backfired on him so it's really, listen the nfl is a
provocative means controversy and controversy means people watch it and people are going to watch it and say those sob's will watch it then we'll turn it off and the nfl ratings are going down down down down down and maybe this is a system for down down down. adam: i have a different perspective charles. charles: all right adam. adam: no i think it would be completely unamerican for them to not show it. i mean this would be something that the chinese or the old soviets would do. there's...
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there are also many wealthy people and u.b.i. opponents who say i don't think it will work these five euros should prove that. this is fun and exciting and on the other side you have the lucky winners who you recently invited to. exchange their experiences and what happened once they no longer had to work for this money let's see if. it is as good as the first question is would they still work if you b. i meant they didn't have to. one hundred thirty people only four quit the rest changed their jobs or. they weren't lazing around all say they sleep better less interest even if some work. not having to means they can better appreciate what they do it because it's their choice. i can say no to anything but saying yes it will be much better. some people became self employed because they felt older families came together many. many became socially active and two who had chronic illnesses and didn't have any new belts because that deep existential fear was gone . by the extent. to which they. use a most can't work. this also goes to t
there are also many wealthy people and u.b.i. opponents who say i don't think it will work these five euros should prove that. this is fun and exciting and on the other side you have the lucky winners who you recently invited to. exchange their experiences and what happened once they no longer had to work for this money let's see if. it is as good as the first question is would they still work if you b. i meant they didn't have to. one hundred thirty people only four quit the rest changed their...
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Jan 7, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
tv
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much as young people. if you earn too much to get medicaid and you are over age 40 but particularly over age 50 and still not old enough for medicare, health care is prohibitive. what hasn'ting and been working? this is one of the things that hasn't been working. this is what drive some of the calls for the medicare buy-in. to let people who are 50 or older purchase medicare insurance even though they are not quite eligible. that is one idea. and get olderve and sicker people out of the main health insurance to make the premiums cheaper but it would bring healthier people into medicare. so it would make medicare a better risk pool. but that is something that congress has not been able to do and it isn't something that republicans are looking at. host: when do premiums ever go down under the affordable care act? guest: premiums ever to go down. but they rose fairly slowly. health-care spending in general recentn rising slowly in years. but we have seen spikes in the individual market as newer and healthy pe
much as young people. if you earn too much to get medicaid and you are over age 40 but particularly over age 50 and still not old enough for medicare, health care is prohibitive. what hasn'ting and been working? this is one of the things that hasn't been working. this is what drive some of the calls for the medicare buy-in. to let people who are 50 or older purchase medicare insurance even though they are not quite eligible. that is one idea. and get olderve and sicker people out of the main...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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ALJAZ
tv
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kind of bring people together to be a voice or getting off of to people. but. if you're playing the people's music you have to fight to the people and it's been so much what i dreamt of but i was frustrated with what i'm doing always i dreamt of it i know what a song to sneak into the room i don't want to dance and i know it can energize people that make you feel and powered you know these are things that should not only happen if you need to use a venue right that's sort of i would in my views this is something which i want to be able to contribute to a you know a gathering protest space that i think is a space for this can be of value. for our store addressed and frustrations was to go back to the heart already know the system called. and sultana some time not just the stack of speaking of sound systems traditionally have been a way to take things in your own hands and to find ways to take music straight to people i mean literally i mean one thing to build a sound system ever since i started playing records like it was most of my life. sound systems i expensi
kind of bring people together to be a voice or getting off of to people. but. if you're playing the people's music you have to fight to the people and it's been so much what i dreamt of but i was frustrated with what i'm doing always i dreamt of it i know what a song to sneak into the room i don't want to dance and i know it can energize people that make you feel and powered you know these are things that should not only happen if you need to use a venue right that's sort of i would in my views...
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Jan 9, 2018
01/18
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ALJAZ
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which is not enough for one purpose for a week is not enough for the people people are starving people cannot survive in this situation so people want qantas to keep their life i face the interior minister says that the protesters who could cause destruction will be dealt with by force can the government contain these demonstrations if they grow. i think look the government they cut the oil you have the force to use but i think if they would you want to address the underlying causes which is actually pushing many people to come out at the people are coming out because they feel the pain of this economic policies not because leaders of opposition as them to come out and they came in without. anyone organizing them the problem is if the government is able to at this the problem which is facing the country if they are not able to address this problem then the discontent was going to continue is not going to stop because just using security and power to try and suppress you know. the people who are complaining about the policies of the government which has driven them to poverty and divisi
which is not enough for one purpose for a week is not enough for the people people are starving people cannot survive in this situation so people want qantas to keep their life i face the interior minister says that the protesters who could cause destruction will be dealt with by force can the government contain these demonstrations if they grow. i think look the government they cut the oil you have the force to use but i think if they would you want to address the underlying causes which is...
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of people step into the streets and then you know the climate change that people keep step new people keep entering and you know it's from selection suddenly you have tons of new people that say like odor is the time i need to get active and there's always dynamics that happen when a new group of people step into something and there's been people there many many years before but it's important to find ways not to make enemies of those people but to be inviting and to be welcoming and to to use it to kind of refresh and renew and strengthen the movement. so it's great to see the activists in the streets and holding the signs but what happens after the streets where you know where does the activism go you know after after the protest. yeah i mean i think there is there's a difference between sort of. generating power and then wielding that power and i think. for people who are brand new often there can be some conflict confusion and dissonance and you think well if we start to engage in the political process then we must be selling out or we must be somehow if all you have is a stylisti
of people step into the streets and then you know the climate change that people keep step new people keep entering and you know it's from selection suddenly you have tons of new people that say like odor is the time i need to get active and there's always dynamics that happen when a new group of people step into something and there's been people there many many years before but it's important to find ways not to make enemies of those people but to be inviting and to be welcoming and to to use...
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Jan 13, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
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>> people who move. >> 3% of what greater number? >> of all people in the country? >> so we have to divide it up? people do not move in any given year. most of those 3% are going to be located in one of the other ways. we are talking about a relatively tiny group of people the gensy then use with 50 or 60% of people. the process is vastly overbroad in its design. to try to find a relatively small group of people. starting with up to 60% in off year, 70% don't return the notice. you just end up with a lot of false positives. that is how this system is operating. it finds a lot of people that have moved who have not moved. i think i will leave it at that. >> thank you, counsel. two minutes mr. murphy. >> thank you. the first question i would like to answer is the statistics of people who move without relying on the post office. 40% of individuals do not notify the post office. number 395. i think this is significant because it shows why the postal service provision is a safe harbor for meeting the state's obligation to remove individuals. it will be woefully insuffici
>> people who move. >> 3% of what greater number? >> of all people in the country? >> so we have to divide it up? people do not move in any given year. most of those 3% are going to be located in one of the other ways. we are talking about a relatively tiny group of people the gensy then use with 50 or 60% of people. the process is vastly overbroad in its design. to try to find a relatively small group of people. starting with up to 60% in off year, 70% don't return the...
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Jan 6, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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if lincolns words were of any meaning all the people for the people by the people, weren't we people? then why weren't we there? to that extent i ran to be a part of what i would call politics, the decision-making process in this country and state and locality. >> where did you grow up an what was virginia like during that time? >> i grew up in the east end of richmond, 28th street right across from a famous church i only went to when i was late going to my church, an african baptist church. all my elementary schools were obviously not up to snuff and no -- it had outdoor toilets in the city of richmond, it had no cafeteria, no auditorium. and the principal was white and all the teachers were of color. but the finest and best teacher in the world, because they looked upon us as their children, and they had corrective responsibilities as well, but it was something you didn't know about it. with that backdrop, i was maybe about 10 blocks from the church where patrick henry made his famous speech, give them liberty or teeth. -- or death. i would ask my mother, what does it mean as to ina
if lincolns words were of any meaning all the people for the people by the people, weren't we people? then why weren't we there? to that extent i ran to be a part of what i would call politics, the decision-making process in this country and state and locality. >> where did you grow up an what was virginia like during that time? >> i grew up in the east end of richmond, 28th street right across from a famous church i only went to when i was late going to my church, an african...
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Jan 4, 2018
01/18
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ALJAZ
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people in power investigate. this time. january. african heads of states and governments will gather. for the thirtieth assembly of the african union where the goals set out in twenty seventeen minutes rewind returns with brand new episodes updating some of the best al-jazeera documentaries from over the years the biggest names in politics in business will meet in the swiss alps for the world economic forum what will be talk of the agenda. engages in rigorous debate cutting through the headline. and in a week our special coverage will be gauging reaction from around the world to america's most controversial president of modern times january. in the philippines millions live in overcrowded slow but some of another place to call home public cemeteries. meets those living among the dead at this time on al-jazeera. president. for his comments on this campaign's russia links and a much anticipated book. also coming out the chinese president.
people in power investigate. this time. january. african heads of states and governments will gather. for the thirtieth assembly of the african union where the goals set out in twenty seventeen minutes rewind returns with brand new episodes updating some of the best al-jazeera documentaries from over the years the biggest names in politics in business will meet in the swiss alps for the world economic forum what will be talk of the agenda. engages in rigorous debate cutting through the...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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LINKTV
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y youyou should people -- said people should not whitewash her legacy. what do you mean? when we s saw mayor de blasio sending his condolences on twtwitter. she was highly critical of him. he was one of the ones who said it was an archaic law and disciplinary records to 90 to be released. he has multiple strikes against him. we read about that. we know about that now. when we see somemeone dies and e revolutionary dies, s someone wo does not believe in political monopoly, , he does not follow a political party, who does not pull a line that is well behaved or someone who says what they're suppososed to say, we see their legacies whitewashed. we saw that with martin n luther king, how certain politicicians judged by theo be content of my chcharacter, but e color of my skin." they don't talk about him and say white people in particular, they think they're specialal because they're white. they don't talk about how you said -- the problem of persona say "this is how we fefeel about racial justice and this is how we should all come together." erica garner w was not about comin
y youyou should people -- said people should not whitewash her legacy. what do you mean? when we s saw mayor de blasio sending his condolences on twtwitter. she was highly critical of him. he was one of the ones who said it was an archaic law and disciplinary records to 90 to be released. he has multiple strikes against him. we read about that. we know about that now. when we see somemeone dies and e revolutionary dies, s someone wo does not believe in political monopoly, , he does not follow a...
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Jan 8, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN
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you have more people taking up benefits and less people paying in. that's where you have a fundamental program. we have health care cost growing faster than the economy. when you have health care growth above economic growth, you need more resources to help. of those accommodation is the main issue behind our fiscal problems. that melissa, is it true on average people pay into less than a takeout? over the years of working and paying into medicare, in the end they will take up more from medicare than they have actually put into the program? guest: in some cases, yes, but i think it's an important point that health care spending is rising faster than inflation. yes, we have an aging population. the question of whether or not health care spending is contributing to our long-term deficits, that's settled. the question is what to do about it? there's a senior protection plan that would allow you to address long-term health care spending without hurting beneficiaries because there's a lot of other places in the health-care care system you could find those
you have more people taking up benefits and less people paying in. that's where you have a fundamental program. we have health care cost growing faster than the economy. when you have health care growth above economic growth, you need more resources to help. of those accommodation is the main issue behind our fiscal problems. that melissa, is it true on average people pay into less than a takeout? over the years of working and paying into medicare, in the end they will take up more from...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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some people don't get to speak at all. what about the third person that hasn't spoken to the person wish to speak? i know you want to keep it brief but thank you. >> [inaudible] we have a system in northern ireland and i'm confident it's helped most people but there is still an ongoing problem. some don't even knowre it exist. i know fore a fact this is beneficial to young people to help advance careers and dreams and getting a chance to get them help in their upcoming decisions. i would love to see people in other parts of the uk to have io isame opportunities as will. i find it appalling that this is being overlooked in the system that has stood by us from our early days and i can't help but feel that the young people of england have been led down by the past government and as one we are promoting today. thank you very much. as[applause] now what about the east of england? we haven't heard from the east of england. a couple of years ago i had the privilege of doing work experience with the chief executive and it was furt
some people don't get to speak at all. what about the third person that hasn't spoken to the person wish to speak? i know you want to keep it brief but thank you. >> [inaudible] we have a system in northern ireland and i'm confident it's helped most people but there is still an ongoing problem. some don't even knowre it exist. i know fore a fact this is beneficial to young people to help advance careers and dreams and getting a chance to get them help in their upcoming decisions. i would...
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Jan 12, 2018
01/18
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CNNW
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in his heart people from african -- >> lack thereof. >> people from africa, almost a billion people liveere, to him all s-hole people who live in s-hole places. that's wrong and you should denounce it. you should, i know you very well. why won't you denounce that? >> everyone in the world -- >> why won't you denounce s-hole nation? >> everybody wants to come to the united states. why? great place. >> do you think africa is s-hole continent? >> we have to reform. >> maybe we do. talking man-to-man, person-to-person. ÷ s-hole continent? yes or no? >> there are s-hole places around the world. great effort to bait me. >> your president said it, not me. >> run out of ideas to trying to bait me. >> trying to have to conversation on immigration policy. >> bring in bakari sellers. jason is saying there's a lot of -- use the word the president is using. good enough for the president to use it, american people should hear the words the president is using. idea that all countries in africa are shitholes is just willfully ignorant, moronic and shows that the president knows nothing. >> i have to giv
in his heart people from african -- >> lack thereof. >> people from africa, almost a billion people liveere, to him all s-hole people who live in s-hole places. that's wrong and you should denounce it. you should, i know you very well. why won't you denounce that? >> everyone in the world -- >> why won't you denounce s-hole nation? >> everybody wants to come to the united states. why? great place. >> do you think africa is s-hole continent? >> we have...
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Jan 10, 2018
01/18
by
BBCNEWS
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hold you accountable, people should hold you accountable, people should hold you accountable, peoplethat in this context because if i start doing that, what and i don't want to do this by myself, it is like saying see it from my point of view and when you screw up and do things that hurt you, you should encourage people to see it from the point of the view of the people you have hurt, the readers of the independent, the people who worked at the independent with me, and the people i was nasty about. so i would rather people had their stories about it and saw it from their point of view and i have thought a lot about the an to your question, but i won't talk about it in that context for this reason. have you thought about whether there might have been about whether there might have been a link between what you did and your anxiety and depression?” a link between what you did and your anxiety and depression? i don't think there is. i think it was my character flaws. i think there is. i think it was my characterflaws. i think think there is. i think it was my character flaws. i think it
hold you accountable, people should hold you accountable, people should hold you accountable, peoplethat in this context because if i start doing that, what and i don't want to do this by myself, it is like saying see it from my point of view and when you screw up and do things that hurt you, you should encourage people to see it from the point of the view of the people you have hurt, the readers of the independent, the people who worked at the independent with me, and the people i was nasty...
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Jan 16, 2018
01/18
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ALJAZ
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on one hand you have people who are understanding of it on the other hand you have people who are critical so esther on twitter says existing in a long term cycle of temporary status for the past seventeen years place t.p.s. recipients of all salvador in a legally precarious situation and making them unsure of their futures in the u.s. so she can understand what that must feel like here's a question though from sam and he says if the status was made for a disaster or war and catastrophic. incident that forced people to find refuge in the u.s. and that condition is over then yes i agree they should go but what would you say to people who say this was temporary and it's not necessarily the trumpet ministrations fault that it wasn't taken away so many years ago let me tell you something when i left my calling it was better than the way you know i think right now we need more of that neighbor right now very dangerous country to leave anybody behind you know see if we go then we're just going to go to their. let me show you some pictures from your family so i can show our audience it's not just
on one hand you have people who are understanding of it on the other hand you have people who are critical so esther on twitter says existing in a long term cycle of temporary status for the past seventeen years place t.p.s. recipients of all salvador in a legally precarious situation and making them unsure of their futures in the u.s. so she can understand what that must feel like here's a question though from sam and he says if the status was made for a disaster or war and catastrophic....
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people sleeping or. saudi arabia's incursion in yemen is in its third year but devastating war has killed more than ten thousand people and displaced more than three million sunny led airstrikes have obliterated much of the country's infrastructure and the blockade has left around twenty million people in dire need of food and medical aid saudi arabia temporarily reopened a key port in yemen to allow in supplies of food and fuel we discuss the situation with a representative from the red cross. yemen is a country that depends on imports ninety percent of its needs are from imports so when you have three years stating war when you have restrictions on imports many people cannot have enough to eat and to feed their families every day this is when you see the bigger picture of things when you look at twenty four million people who are deprived of the basic commodities that we all have free access to and the fact that this is handled by restrictions on the arrival of goods humanitarian aid but most important
people sleeping or. saudi arabia's incursion in yemen is in its third year but devastating war has killed more than ten thousand people and displaced more than three million sunny led airstrikes have obliterated much of the country's infrastructure and the blockade has left around twenty million people in dire need of food and medical aid saudi arabia temporarily reopened a key port in yemen to allow in supplies of food and fuel we discuss the situation with a representative from the red cross....
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saying what most people say to defend the arms industry. best the weapons are used to implication is to kill people in yemen then we lose vital jobs in britain well let's see aces was being allowed to let us through some perspective on this first of all we are talking about not point to five percent of our g.d.p. this is about the same size of the beverage industry or the plastics industry now we're just talking about planning plastic cups and straws and putting charges on bags and trying to stop we don't hear people saying well you can't ban plastics because it will make jobs be lost what we say is that we will transform those jobs into things that are environmentally friendly well is the same with killing machines now we can still to ship building because you need ship building even without arms being attached to those ships you can still do car building and manufacturing all those jobs are transferable and actually they wouldn't even need to change company because the companies would just diversify as well the majority would surprise you
saying what most people say to defend the arms industry. best the weapons are used to implication is to kill people in yemen then we lose vital jobs in britain well let's see aces was being allowed to let us through some perspective on this first of all we are talking about not point to five percent of our g.d.p. this is about the same size of the beverage industry or the plastics industry now we're just talking about planning plastic cups and straws and putting charges on bags and trying to...
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Jan 13, 2018
01/18
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FOXNEWSW
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all power to the people vested into the people. when i say apledge allegiance to the people.s who i'm elected to represent. even before i was elected, that's who i stand for. >> tucker: i mean, good for you. i think you were elected by the people and you ought to represent them. when you have say you know how you feel about the flag and pledge of allegiance. how do you feel? >> so when i think about the pledge of allegiance, the thing that sticks out most is when i hear for liberty and justice for all, when i think liberty and justice for all, we obviously haven't seen that across the united states over time or over my 33 years of living. we see that there are -- when it comes to justice, that looks a little different, depending on sometimes where you're from. depending on sometimes what your socioeconomic status is. and what you look like. >> tucker: okay. but so does that mean you are against the pledge of allegiance because it holds those up as ideals? i'm confused. >> i understand they hold those up. my thing is we talk about liberty and justice for all. we repeat a pledg
all power to the people vested into the people. when i say apledge allegiance to the people.s who i'm elected to represent. even before i was elected, that's who i stand for. >> tucker: i mean, good for you. i think you were elected by the people and you ought to represent them. when you have say you know how you feel about the flag and pledge of allegiance. how do you feel? >> so when i think about the pledge of allegiance, the thing that sticks out most is when i hear for liberty...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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SFGTV
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people are overdosing and don't have access to the antidote or not around other people, that's how you end up with a fatal overdose. the second treatment point is we don't have great treatments for all drugs people use. that's something we don't like to acknowledge but is true. so how do you get people to change their behavior? well, you keep them alive long enough they figure it out on their own or you get them hooked into treatment that becomes available that aren't necessarily here right now. they're ten years from now. maybe there will be a more effective treatment for methamphetamine disorder. how do we keep people alive long enough? we let them use it in a secret way. from a treatment perspective we're up favor of supervised drug consumption services. the last point i'll make is from my business end, we're ready for patients. they are more likely to end up in care if they are alive and more likely to end up in care if they use publicly sponsored services. >> i'm involved in a large number of organizations in pemberline. i'll start bringing my issues with federal policy from now o
people are overdosing and don't have access to the antidote or not around other people, that's how you end up with a fatal overdose. the second treatment point is we don't have great treatments for all drugs people use. that's something we don't like to acknowledge but is true. so how do you get people to change their behavior? well, you keep them alive long enough they figure it out on their own or you get them hooked into treatment that becomes available that aren't necessarily here right...
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people the vast majority of people think this is a perfectly innocent. children of all races. it is good to have you with us today welcome to the program on international with. north korea and south korea are holding their first official talks in over two years ago taking place in the demilitarized zone between the two countries and here's what proceeded the negotiations january the reopening of a cross border telephone line and the following day donald trump agreed to a military drills with seoul until the next month's winter olympics in south korea well let's go. live in the studio i understand it's all going on behind closed doors these talks in this peace village but one that has been discussed well that. these talks a very sensitive for. for both sides in this specially if you consider what's at stake but things have gone but judging by the tidbits we've heard well which is rare enough these days when it comes to the to the koreas first they agreed that the north koreans will send a high profile delegation to the olympic games winter olympic games next month in south kore
people the vast majority of people think this is a perfectly innocent. children of all races. it is good to have you with us today welcome to the program on international with. north korea and south korea are holding their first official talks in over two years ago taking place in the demilitarized zone between the two countries and here's what proceeded the negotiations january the reopening of a cross border telephone line and the following day donald trump agreed to a military drills with...
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161
Jan 2, 2018
01/18
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KQED
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eye 161
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my only hope is that people around him and people who have a stake in the regime, people who realize the bloodshed that will come will prevail upon him to change his views. i hear that he's going to give a talk this friday, and if the talk that he gave this morning is any indication, i see very little hope of the much, much-needed tone of contrition that he needs to have. >> woodruff: is there room for dissent, for debate within the leadership of the country? >> i think there is. i think there is considerable room for factual dissent within the regime. they don't like it in public. they all have to be very careful of not causing problems for mr. rouhani. a number of people have been arrested illegally. they're under house arrest. the leader of the green revolution. most leaders of the country other than khomeini know this is stupid and counterproductive, but they don't challenge him. but behind closed doors, one hears unconfirmed reports that more and more people are beginning to realized that his path is literally a path of a grim future for iran, because i think the level of anger
my only hope is that people around him and people who have a stake in the regime, people who realize the bloodshed that will come will prevail upon him to change his views. i hear that he's going to give a talk this friday, and if the talk that he gave this morning is any indication, i see very little hope of the much, much-needed tone of contrition that he needs to have. >> woodruff: is there room for dissent, for debate within the leadership of the country? >> i think there is. i...
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Jan 4, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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for white people. it's a really important story. >>> you can find this and more from our trip to kansas city, missouri online at c-span.org. thursday night our look back at the 2017 c-span city tour continues. into washington. we hear about the 1940 collapse of the narrows bridge. and its impact on civil engineering today. in concord, massachusetts we'll take you to minuteman national park. where some of the first shots of the revolutionary war was fired. and california. a special tour of the 9066. exhibit chronicling the japanese american experience in the 1940s. >>> this weekend c-span city tour takes dwrou to springfield, missouri. while in springfield we're working with media come to explore the literary scene and history of the birthplace of route 66. in southwest missouri. saturday at noon eastern, on book tv. author talks about the conflict occurring along the kansas missouri border. in the struggle over slavery. in his book, the border between them. >> john brown having left kansas comes back t
for white people. it's a really important story. >>> you can find this and more from our trip to kansas city, missouri online at c-span.org. thursday night our look back at the 2017 c-span city tour continues. into washington. we hear about the 1940 collapse of the narrows bridge. and its impact on civil engineering today. in concord, massachusetts we'll take you to minuteman national park. where some of the first shots of the revolutionary war was fired. and california. a special tour...
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Jan 10, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 51
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most people just stop there. what i tried to do in my facebook and in my research is to go much deeper into all sass suspects of the criminal justice system and then also inside a prison and see what takes place. what i found is an actual horror show, which is to say that at every stage of what i call the criminal justice life cycle, which starts with plea bargaining, with sentencing, then prison conditions, rehabilitation, parole and then reentry, the u.s. is off the charts. and i would say off the rails. there is something that is distinctively american about this rm follow of punishment which is not just about making society safer sh keeping people out of -- protecting society by keeping dangerous people off the streets for a short period of time. of the' about punishing people, punishing them severely and personmently. this is something that's different. what i discovered in my work is that there are other countries that do it differently and other countries that do it better. why are we having this very insu
most people just stop there. what i tried to do in my facebook and in my research is to go much deeper into all sass suspects of the criminal justice system and then also inside a prison and see what takes place. what i found is an actual horror show, which is to say that at every stage of what i call the criminal justice life cycle, which starts with plea bargaining, with sentencing, then prison conditions, rehabilitation, parole and then reentry, the u.s. is off the charts. and i would say...
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39
Jan 19, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 39
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it is what the american people want. poll after poll after poll shows that 70%, 75%, 80% of the american people say, provide these 800,000 young people with legal status, provide them with a path towards citizenship. very few people think that we should turn our backs on these young people, let daca expire, and subject them to deportation. let us do what the american people want us to do and let us pass a strong dreamers act. and last, but not least, we had some terrible hurricanes some months ago and brought a lot of disaster to texas, to florida, to puerto rico, and to the virgin islands. months have gone by and we have yet to pass the kind of disaster relief that communities in those states and territories desperately need. mr. president, we cannot continue to kick the can down the road. we cannot continue to run a $3 trillion government on a month-by-month basis -- unfair to everybody. we have got to sit down and negotiate a serious budget agreement, and what republicans must understand is, yes, they have a 51-49 maj
it is what the american people want. poll after poll after poll shows that 70%, 75%, 80% of the american people say, provide these 800,000 young people with legal status, provide them with a path towards citizenship. very few people think that we should turn our backs on these young people, let daca expire, and subject them to deportation. let us do what the american people want us to do and let us pass a strong dreamers act. and last, but not least, we had some terrible hurricanes some months...
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75
Jan 9, 2018
01/18
by
CNNW
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eye 75
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in the white house, and these are largely good people, professional people, people who are doing theirple who are thinking about their own careers as well as the good of the country. these are people who think, okay, this is the situation. it's now up to us. it's our responsibility to temper this guy to -- to protect the country from this guy. >> all right. if you're saying -- you're saying -- this is your quote, you say acceptability in that, possibly dementia it's mentioned somehow. >> no, no, no -- i said that he -- he's afraid of that. you know, when, you know, when someone didn't want to -- actually when steve bannon didn't want to sort of interview with his relationship with murdoch, he had roger ales call the president and say murdoch, murdoch was losing it. when you bring up this up to the president, that's, that's a hot button issue he doesn't want to know about that. >> do you think? >> i understand his father had -- >> do you think that he thinks that he's suffering from this? >> again, draw the conclusion. i don't know if he thinks that. it is to everybody who speaks to him
in the white house, and these are largely good people, professional people, people who are doing theirple who are thinking about their own careers as well as the good of the country. these are people who think, okay, this is the situation. it's now up to us. it's our responsibility to temper this guy to -- to protect the country from this guy. >> all right. if you're saying -- you're saying -- this is your quote, you say acceptability in that, possibly dementia it's mentioned somehow....
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 73
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people engaged.think is abusive? quite clear, nothing wrong with this agreeing with people on a point of fa ct agreeing with people on a point of fact or principle but when you get into the realm of public insult, you have gone one step too far. is common were irresponsible, reckless, it is something he should apologise for. —— nothing wrong with disagreeing with people on a point of fa ct disagreeing with people on a point of fact or principle. but this is within parties as well. problem is, social media, no room for nuance, also you get a stream of narrative pumped out. how likely is it that a conservative party member would be reprimanded if they were seen to be attacking a rival to yellow the code of conduct, we will look at it, it must be zero tolerance across—the—board. too many tories are shying away from fighting with the party on social media. why is that, it seems that labour seem to engage more with their potential voters. there is a recognition that labour have owned the online space, cer
people engaged.think is abusive? quite clear, nothing wrong with this agreeing with people on a point of fa ct agreeing with people on a point of fact or principle but when you get into the realm of public insult, you have gone one step too far. is common were irresponsible, reckless, it is something he should apologise for. —— nothing wrong with disagreeing with people on a point of fa ct disagreeing with people on a point of fact or principle. but this is within parties as well. problem...
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Jan 25, 2018
01/18
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with people like mrs. hale who are doing community interventions and interviews and discussions with seniors. we also work closely with other federal state agencies to ensure we are getting the latest information. one of the things we have gotten feedback on is because we run one of the largest online benefit access tools, which is free to the public, and we updated consistently to ensure that the ship counselors and benefit counselors across the country have access at their computer, not only to the federal benefits tt the seniors might be eligible for, but also at the state level and also sometimes the municipality level. so what you will see here today is this ecosystem have built between federal partners, state agencies, volunteers, and national nonprofits who are serving the seniors. and ecosystem is critical we would not be able to do this work without the support of congress. >> and would you please submit an analysis of the impact of enrollment errors? i know there is a number of people who make mi
with people like mrs. hale who are doing community interventions and interviews and discussions with seniors. we also work closely with other federal state agencies to ensure we are getting the latest information. one of the things we have gotten feedback on is because we run one of the largest online benefit access tools, which is free to the public, and we updated consistently to ensure that the ship counselors and benefit counselors across the country have access at their computer, not only...
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Jan 19, 2018
01/18
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these are young people who were raised in the united states of america and these are young people who today are working and they are in school and they are in the military and this is the only home they have ever known and this is the only country that an event or many of them can't even remember and the idea of simply doing away with the legal status that they have subjecting them to deportation and subjecting them to being taken away from their only country they have ever known and loved is literally beyond retention and unspeakable in september when trump initiated this process recently in obama's executive order on daca he said to the congress, republican leadership in the house and senate, you fix it. get legislation while there are people right now, senator graham, many others were working on legislation to go as far as like i would like it to go but serious legislation is in the house. we have the vast majority of democrats and many republicans who understand we cannot turn our backs on these young people. that is not what we just feel here in t house and senate but it is what
these are young people who were raised in the united states of america and these are young people who today are working and they are in school and they are in the military and this is the only home they have ever known and this is the only country that an event or many of them can't even remember and the idea of simply doing away with the legal status that they have subjecting them to deportation and subjecting them to being taken away from their only country they have ever known and loved is...
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by the people living with the wider albeit people with you what i. believe will be she is i mean to for legal. challenge. she was always the case she somehow they're not getting her back. while the same mission is still in place who want the consequences to weaken bluebirds. well first. of this is the truth the consider is the consequences are actually quite acceptable to the decision maker. max keiser financial survival guide stacey let's lurch us out fill out let's say i'm a strike and you're fleeced. of the fight wall street fraud thank you for. destroying that's true. lavery. medication is widespread on the u.s. market a frequent cause of death at that point in my life i just felt like everything was ashes my family was literally coming unglued i had actually planned. to commit some sight what or who has made antidepressants so commonly used we were doing what the doctors told us to do we were being responsible and what other. real side effects. this is true because we all just what i did was done on a cocktail of illegal drugs. just because some
by the people living with the wider albeit people with you what i. believe will be she is i mean to for legal. challenge. she was always the case she somehow they're not getting her back. while the same mission is still in place who want the consequences to weaken bluebirds. well first. of this is the truth the consider is the consequences are actually quite acceptable to the decision maker. max keiser financial survival guide stacey let's lurch us out fill out let's say i'm a strike and you're...
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Jan 5, 2018
01/18
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, if the demonstrators are poor, there are no four or more oppressed people than the people in those areas but we have seen demonstrations sometimes. we've seen violence, but my guess is that because of the leadership with the spiritual leader of the sunnis in that area and many people respect them in that area and they have been under a lot of pressure by the government, maybe that has played a role, maybe they have asked not to come out and protest. that is the only reason i can provide. but, it is a puzzle. when you look at it people talk about unemployment. yes there is a high rate of unemployment in the cities of demonstration but there's cities with higher unemployment we have not seen demonstrations in those. >> thank you. my name is tom and i'm a graduate student at georgetown university. earlier we talked about how the protest had singled out support for what's happening in syria and yemen. do you think they will because to be scaled back. >> i think the iranian government will stop bragging about its victories in syria, yemen and iraq and that is just really bragging about
, if the demonstrators are poor, there are no four or more oppressed people than the people in those areas but we have seen demonstrations sometimes. we've seen violence, but my guess is that because of the leadership with the spiritual leader of the sunnis in that area and many people respect them in that area and they have been under a lot of pressure by the government, maybe that has played a role, maybe they have asked not to come out and protest. that is the only reason i can provide. but,...
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Jan 29, 2018
01/18
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say reland, people would those people over in dublin or if the european union, you say those people overn brussels. it is common to think that legislators are disconnected with the people they represent. the president was effective in that campaign messaging and it seemed to strike with the people who saw their representatives and senators going off on the train to washington dc in a fa ncy suit and whatever they were doing was not helping them get jobs. brian: specifically you write that statement reflects another part of donald trump's messaging that was borderline genius. if cartoonish in content, during the f -- drain the swamp. caitriona: he is a marketing guru, reality tv's star and he knows how to use the media and get messages across. mp, three words that are incredibly evocative. you get immediately what he is talking about. playing on that notion that washington dc was built on a swamp and draining it means putting better people there. whether voters believed that he could fulfill that are not, they were repaired to take a chance on it. that was something that came up time and
say reland, people would those people over in dublin or if the european union, you say those people overn brussels. it is common to think that legislators are disconnected with the people they represent. the president was effective in that campaign messaging and it seemed to strike with the people who saw their representatives and senators going off on the train to washington dc in a fa ncy suit and whatever they were doing was not helping them get jobs. brian: specifically you write that...
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with the people themselves this is a small community of people online which encourages people to think the worst in others and that makes any kind of solidarity impossible. to you i mean as. mentioned there are obviously there are problems within society of racism of discrimination you've got experience of the fashion industry the wider fashion industry is that a problem that is there this discrimination and racism or is this symbolic of it or as luke said is this being made too much of a big deal out of. there's no doubt that there's an issue there it's not it's not something it's. something that's just as a when you know there's definitely there has been issues with people of color coming into the fashion industry in the first place need to be represented fairly and even the connotation of beauty for people of color for star not just the first issue and but. the whole issue is with this advertising campaign it's an advertising campaign the. international it's an international campaign and it's so obvious that if you're going to use a connotation like monkey whether a child is a monke
with the people themselves this is a small community of people online which encourages people to think the worst in others and that makes any kind of solidarity impossible. to you i mean as. mentioned there are obviously there are problems within society of racism of discrimination you've got experience of the fashion industry the wider fashion industry is that a problem that is there this discrimination and racism or is this symbolic of it or as luke said is this being made too much of a big...
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you saw or at you saw people i don't even know if i at the time i thought those people are going to get out it was so it was traumatic you know it was beyond traumatic and we're hoping that somehow something will come along and rescue them somehow we will not literally watch these people beg for help and bend to death in front of us and you know what happened a helicopter came and it came within one hundred fifty two hundred mi is of the building and turned back around now that turn around was the most heartbreaking thing i've ever seen in my life. because the state the government the local council failed us in the aftermath of the file to continue to feed us. and i was so shocked in the first few days that there's a total absence of the council and that it was really shocking i saw i saw the leader and deputy leader being filmed on the first day looking at certain shell shocked as we all were and then that was it that gone and completely gone there was nobody there was no help we wait a day after day after day for the council to step in and say hello this is what needs to happen this i
you saw or at you saw people i don't even know if i at the time i thought those people are going to get out it was so it was traumatic you know it was beyond traumatic and we're hoping that somehow something will come along and rescue them somehow we will not literally watch these people beg for help and bend to death in front of us and you know what happened a helicopter came and it came within one hundred fifty two hundred mi is of the building and turned back around now that turn around was...