23
23
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
that was philip alice alice business advisor. i. have you agree with alan greenspan who recently said the stock market is the key player in the game of economic growth and the economy is doing pretty well the dow jones industrial average closed at historic fifteen thousand yesterday in addition to the gave the stock market we have also seen increases and home prices and according to the as the average wages are no longer a trailing inflation but the picture is a bit bleaker for young adults in the u.s. workers aged twenty five to thirty four are the only age group with lower average wages in two thousand and thirteen than from two thousand in the year two thousand and for more on youth unemployment numbers we turn to prime interest producer justin underhill thanks for joining me thanks for having me so just seeing what are some of the major factors contributing to high unemployment for young americans while the recession has certainly taken a toll on younger workers there's been a lack of job creation and the jobs that have been cre
that was philip alice alice business advisor. i. have you agree with alan greenspan who recently said the stock market is the key player in the game of economic growth and the economy is doing pretty well the dow jones industrial average closed at historic fifteen thousand yesterday in addition to the gave the stock market we have also seen increases and home prices and according to the as the average wages are no longer a trailing inflation but the picture is a bit bleaker for young adults in...
175
175
May 2, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 175
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> joining us now is philip mudd. he's former deputy director of the cia's counterterrorism center and the fbi's security branch. he's now at the new america foundation. his new book is called "take down." mr. mudd, thank you very much for being with us. appreciate your time tonight. >> sure, sure. >> we learned today that fbi agents now have reportedly the laptop in their own hands. it seems to me like if you're looking for trying to connect the -- this crime to a motive or any sort of larger organization out there in the world, the laptop might be critically important. does it seem like an important break to you? >> it's not might be critical, it will be critical. the first question i would have as an intelligence professional is not just what these two guys did, one of whom is dead now. the question is, we cannot shut down this investigation until we determine whether these two spiders were in the middle of a spider web, and believe me, that investigation's going to take time. and a critical piece will be who they
. >>> joining us now is philip mudd. he's former deputy director of the cia's counterterrorism center and the fbi's security branch. he's now at the new america foundation. his new book is called "take down." mr. mudd, thank you very much for being with us. appreciate your time tonight. >> sure, sure. >> we learned today that fbi agents now have reportedly the laptop in their own hands. it seems to me like if you're looking for trying to connect the -- this crime...
130
130
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
so let me stop there. >> thank you, philip. thought deeply on this. give us the benefit of your thinking. >> i was a last-minute addition to the panel when the original rembrandt was going to be here. but i'm honored to pinch-hit and to be on this panel. i come at this subject differently than everyone up here. i'm the only person was not a lawyer. even the former cia guy is a lawyer. [laughter] and a national- security reporter where we are fundamentally try to get at basic questions about what is happening now and what has happened in the past on these issues. we are all basically try to ask the same questions and get some answers. my reporting for the new york times and in my book is to try to basically describes as much as possible the history of this secret war that has been waged. because ite 9/11, really is a war and it really has been a secret since those early years. i think by now we ever -- sort of know the broad outlines of the war in iraq and the war in afghanistan, but what is happening and what is happening in pakistan and yemen and oth
so let me stop there. >> thank you, philip. thought deeply on this. give us the benefit of your thinking. >> i was a last-minute addition to the panel when the original rembrandt was going to be here. but i'm honored to pinch-hit and to be on this panel. i come at this subject differently than everyone up here. i'm the only person was not a lawyer. even the former cia guy is a lawyer. [laughter] and a national- security reporter where we are fundamentally try to get at basic...
81
81
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
it is the most powerful company in the world $150 billion company philip morris international. it is very powerful their printing money because the cigarette paper wrapped in paper so you they use the war chest from litigation that is why we still smoke 6 trillion cigarettes which by the way 6 trillion cigarettes smoked every year is 350 billion miles of cigarettes and that is enough to make a continuous chain of cigarettes to the errors and the sun and back. and several round trips to mars. they are produced a 350 million miles per year faster than the rate of satellite's orbit the earth so pitcher a continuous cigarette smoked faster seeking get a sense of the scale of the problem. >> host: we're talking with professor robert proctor from stanford university. professor of history of science and here is his most recent book "golden holocaust" origins of the cigarette catastrophe and the case for abolition" >> now joining as a stanford university a more familiar name is the newest book this save your general's hall five great commanders say doors that were lost dr. hansen what
it is the most powerful company in the world $150 billion company philip morris international. it is very powerful their printing money because the cigarette paper wrapped in paper so you they use the war chest from litigation that is why we still smoke 6 trillion cigarettes which by the way 6 trillion cigarettes smoked every year is 350 billion miles of cigarettes and that is enough to make a continuous chain of cigarettes to the errors and the sun and back. and several round trips to mars....
88
88
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
people $10,000 of philip morris stock in 1958 is worth $50 million today so these are still the most powerful companies in the world to love morris international law hundred $50 billion company they are very popular and printing money because the cigarette is paper wrapped in paper wrapped in paper with a war chest to influence government that is why we smokes $6 trillion. that is 350 million miles a cigarettes. with the continuous chain of cigarettes to the sun and back with enough left over with a round trip to mars. says cigarettes are produced a 350 million miles per year faster than the rate that satellite's orbit the earth. so pitcher being smoked data rate faster you forget a scale of the problem. >> host: booktv on c-span2 talking to professor robert proctor from stanford university from history and science professor his book "golden holocaust" origins of the cigarette catastrophe and the case for abolition"
people $10,000 of philip morris stock in 1958 is worth $50 million today so these are still the most powerful companies in the world to love morris international law hundred $50 billion company they are very popular and printing money because the cigarette is paper wrapped in paper wrapped in paper with a war chest to influence government that is why we smokes $6 trillion. that is 350 million miles a cigarettes. with the continuous chain of cigarettes to the sun and back with enough left over...
234
234
May 15, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 234
favorite 0
quote 2
i don't think philip is going to muscle out cree. this kind of thing is not knew.s been going on for years. these companies night for lighting agents all the time. psychiatry not cheap. no, selling for 33 times next year's earnings with a 16.5 growth rate. i do not like to recommend anything on this show which sells two times its growth rate. google, i like this company. at these levels, no, only on a pullback. for once, i happy the bears will be right. if cree gets hit, that will give you terrific buying opportunities. this is what i think. bottom line, when two analysts contradict each other, you need to go with the side that's more ris rigorous. lazar says their trusts were strong. lazar only checked with home depot. stern is important. they cast a much wider net to make the best judgment. the best judgment is a decree against cree. i can't recommend cree at tleefls. if we get a pullback like this guys if ace 82 are predicting, i think cree, indeed, would be an excellent buy. sally in illinois. sally. >> caller: hi, jim. are you the best of the best on cnbc. let
i don't think philip is going to muscle out cree. this kind of thing is not knew.s been going on for years. these companies night for lighting agents all the time. psychiatry not cheap. no, selling for 33 times next year's earnings with a 16.5 growth rate. i do not like to recommend anything on this show which sells two times its growth rate. google, i like this company. at these levels, no, only on a pullback. for once, i happy the bears will be right. if cree gets hit, that will give you...
150
150
May 11, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 150
favorite 0
quote 0
so explain to me how did philip garrido come to you?p garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department. he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event he wanted to host on campus. >> what about him -- what was that gut intuition? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he was a professor, a student, just a random homeless guy. the girls were sort of recessed on the outer office, but once they emerged, my immediate attention went to the girls. i began -- i'm thinking, whose children are these? and he immediately said, they're mine. they resembled him. so there was no doubt in my mind that the children were his. i think the question then was, well, who had kids with this guy? really he was just that out of sorts. he was just all over the place. that's where the trigger sort of started. >> did you have the same initi
so explain to me how did philip garrido come to you?p garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department. he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event he wanted to host on campus. >> what about him -- what was that gut intuition? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at...
221
221
May 10, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
today, philip morris international alone is worth that much. $174 billion.ondelez and kraft, 109 billion. altria has more than doubled before the first spinoff was announced. that's where the s&p was just up 14%. oh, and that 100%-plus gain doesn't include the bountiful returns you get over the years, because they all pay hefty dividends. wow. those are the big three anchor breakups. what about the breakups here on mad money? marathon oil said it was breaking up into an oil and gas and refinery company. a few years later, marathon and conoco philips as a company i thought could follow in marathon's footsteps. marathon gave you a 30% gain between the announcement and when the breakup happened in 2011. how about this conoco? finally broke up in may, 2012. since then, conoco phillips are up. i think occidental, oxy could be next, which is why my charitable trust has been aggressive when it went down to the low- to mid-'80s. i bet you can get an advance similar to conoco if they would bring out the cleaver. how about this covidien, it was spinning off its pharma
today, philip morris international alone is worth that much. $174 billion.ondelez and kraft, 109 billion. altria has more than doubled before the first spinoff was announced. that's where the s&p was just up 14%. oh, and that 100%-plus gain doesn't include the bountiful returns you get over the years, because they all pay hefty dividends. wow. those are the big three anchor breakups. what about the breakups here on mad money? marathon oil said it was breaking up into an oil and gas and...
106
106
May 1, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 1
i agree with philip, at least from a u.s. versus international perspective, there are paradigms, i would say there is a law of war paradigm that we are applying versus not a constitutional paradigm but a human rights law paradigm from the rest of the world. >> hina? >> one way to think about it is the constitutional standards and the human rights standards are very similar, and with what the constitutional rights allow i'm going to put that aside a little bit and pick up from there john left off about how the rest of the world not only does not agree but i think from our perspective we have to be concerned about the precedent that we are setting for the rest of the world to follow. not just with respect to the use of drones, to the legal framework in which we conduct targeted killings. perhaps we can discuss this. in a very literal sense, when talk about the signatures trikes and such, there is no question we are talking about targeted killing in a literal sense. but going back to the precedent- setting standard, there is no
i agree with philip, at least from a u.s. versus international perspective, there are paradigms, i would say there is a law of war paradigm that we are applying versus not a constitutional paradigm but a human rights law paradigm from the rest of the world. >> hina? >> one way to think about it is the constitutional standards and the human rights standards are very similar, and with what the constitutional rights allow i'm going to put that aside a little bit and pick up from there...
80
80
May 12, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
philip mudd? >> i faced this problem for example the classic question of we don't have a domestic intelligence service for the united states. i don't think it's a good idea. i don't think it's a bad idea. it's not necessary. centers in this country. 70 plus police departments in regions like california that are centers to her in say what's our collective view of a problem like gangs or drugs. i happen to work with the fusion centers on that issue. you have the joint terrorism forces within fbi offices bringing police departments together with federal investigators to. to the question of a federal service. that's what the fbi does. except they have the law enforcement prosecutorial function. it's a on i don't think good idea is the reason i don't think it will work. the reason is this -- the grass on the other side problem. ou have in the bureau you can investigate and react together. what you have is you investigate chain of command for intelligence and pass the metropolitan police for prosecution
philip mudd? >> i faced this problem for example the classic question of we don't have a domestic intelligence service for the united states. i don't think it's a good idea. i don't think it's a bad idea. it's not necessary. centers in this country. 70 plus police departments in regions like california that are centers to her in say what's our collective view of a problem like gangs or drugs. i happen to work with the fusion centers on that issue. you have the joint terrorism forces...
79
79
May 17, 2013
05/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
among them is real estate agent philip clayton. he moved here from london seven years ago. >> i think there is a lot of xenophobic rhetoric with regards to the bulgarians coming over to the u.k., and speaking from personal experience, they go over there on seasonal jobs, and many ino do not particularly want to go to the u.k. apart from maybe and holiday like anybody else would. look at it. just look. this does not represent what they have shown on british tv. i'm somewhat angry by these remarks. >> clayton fell in love with the many old houses and castles in the region. many of his countrymen have since followed. >> to develop new business lines in bulgaria. the thoughts and the river. it is that time of the year. it is our home. it is our home in deed. >> two years ago, philip clayton's wife joined him, and now she, too, has fallen in love with bulgaria and the bulgarians. >> the local people are very friendly here and very helpful. they are more family oriented than in london. >> they quickly made bulgarian friends. >> my goal f
among them is real estate agent philip clayton. he moved here from london seven years ago. >> i think there is a lot of xenophobic rhetoric with regards to the bulgarians coming over to the u.k., and speaking from personal experience, they go over there on seasonal jobs, and many ino do not particularly want to go to the u.k. apart from maybe and holiday like anybody else would. look at it. just look. this does not represent what they have shown on british tv. i'm somewhat angry by these...
59
59
May 14, 2013
05/13
by
KCSMMHZ
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
among them is real estate agent philip clayton. he moved here from london seven years ago. >> i think there is a lot of xenophobic rhetoric with regards to the bulgarians coming over to the u.k., and speaking from personal experience, they go over there on seasonal jobs, and many ino do not particularly want to go to the u.k. apart from maybe and holiday like anybody else would. look at it. just look. this does not represent what they have shown on british tv. i'm somewhat angry by these remarks. >> clayton fell in love with the many old houses and castles in the region. many of his countrymen have since followed. >> to develop new business lines in bulgaria. the thoughts and the river. it is that time of the year. it is our home. it is our home in deed. >> two years ago, philip clayton's wife joined him, and now she, too, has fallen in love with bulgaria and the bulgarians. >> the local people are very friendly here and very helpful. they are more family oriented than in london. >> they quickly made bulgarian friends. >> my goal f
among them is real estate agent philip clayton. he moved here from london seven years ago. >> i think there is a lot of xenophobic rhetoric with regards to the bulgarians coming over to the u.k., and speaking from personal experience, they go over there on seasonal jobs, and many ino do not particularly want to go to the u.k. apart from maybe and holiday like anybody else would. look at it. just look. this does not represent what they have shown on british tv. i'm somewhat angry by these...
69
69
May 1, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
i have a question for philip. it is a hypothetical question.but i hope it might help me to better understand the argument for the international legality. if al qaeda was to get its hands unlikely, but if it were and use them to attack u.s. military sites here or government offices involved in planning attacks, what would be the international legality of that, given that the u.s. is engaged in a mutual act of war with al qaeda, and the other being response to an imminent threat. if al qaeda was to satisfy the requirement, would that passed the international legality? >> i do not know if you want to respond to the guardian. [laughter] >> we are discussing warfare with remotely piloted vehicles against people with directly- piloted vehicles. >> [inaudible] >> there is nothing in international law that prohibits people from going to war against the united states. there are consequences from it. would be legal to go to war and legal for us to wage war against the people who did that. >> governor king. historians through history when we have had wars
i have a question for philip. it is a hypothetical question.but i hope it might help me to better understand the argument for the international legality. if al qaeda was to get its hands unlikely, but if it were and use them to attack u.s. military sites here or government offices involved in planning attacks, what would be the international legality of that, given that the u.s. is engaged in a mutual act of war with al qaeda, and the other being response to an imminent threat. if al qaeda was...
63
63
May 12, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
>> philip garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department.ffice in an attempt to get a permit for an event that he wanted to host on campus. >> and what about him -- i mean, what was that gut intuition you had? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact that he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he was a professor, a student, just a random homeless guy. the girls were sort of recessed on the outer office, but once they emerged, my immediate attention went to the girls. and i began -- i'm thinking, whose children are these? and he immediately said, they're mine. and they resembled him. so there was no doubt in my mind that the children were his. i think the question then was, well, who had kids with this guy? really. i mean, he was just that out of sorts. he was just all over the place. so i think that's where the trigger sort of started. >> did you have that same initial reaction? >> it just didn't add up from a p
>> philip garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department.ffice in an attempt to get a permit for an event that he wanted to host on campus. >> and what about him -- i mean, what was that gut intuition you had? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact that he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he was a...
111
111
May 31, 2013
05/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
let's begin by leaping in here, one of your choices is philip morris, i guess that's philip morris international as compared with altria. why do you like it? >> the main thinking, we're going for div dens and stability. div den growth. 3% dividend yielder, 10% growth potential in the underlying dividend. great when you can get that sort of an income, plus the growth on top of it, a stable business. people smoking habits, unfortunately, don't change through the times and they also have a very substantial growth exposure, a large market going into emerging markets and we think that is a huge growth opportunity for a lot of companies out there the other companies we're talking about meet that as well. they are seeing 10% to 20% increases in their wages in emerging markets. they spend more money on everything from toothpaste to cigarettes. >> talking about toothpaste, colgate on your list. the stock down today, but it's been up sharply this year. same investment theme, right? >> very similar investment theme. going for stability. toothpaste and dish washers, this is a -- this is your staples. you do
let's begin by leaping in here, one of your choices is philip morris, i guess that's philip morris international as compared with altria. why do you like it? >> the main thinking, we're going for div dens and stability. div den growth. 3% dividend yielder, 10% growth potential in the underlying dividend. great when you can get that sort of an income, plus the growth on top of it, a stable business. people smoking habits, unfortunately, don't change through the times and they also have a...
85
85
May 20, 2013
05/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
philip randolph. >> a dedicated man.ause]d >> seeking to bring about social change for the advancement of justice and freedom and human dignity. i have the pressure -- pleasure to present to you, dr. martin luther king. [applause] >> dr. martin luther king. ando join with you today what will go down in history -- in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation. [applause] years ago, a great american in whose symbolic shadow we stand today signed the emancipation proclamation. ass momentous decree came the light of hope for millions of negro slaves who had been seeared in the flames of withering injustice. to end thea daybreak long night of their captivity. , the negrors later still is not free. 100 years later, the life of the negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and chains of discrimination, 100 years later. the negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vastcean of imperial prosperity. 100 years later -- the negro is still l
philip randolph. >> a dedicated man.ause]d >> seeking to bring about social change for the advancement of justice and freedom and human dignity. i have the pressure -- pleasure to present to you, dr. martin luther king. [applause] >> dr. martin luther king. ando join with you today what will go down in history -- in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation. [applause] years ago, a great american in whose symbolic...
74
74
May 20, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
this is actually after philip and i had our first encounter. did not think of that as .mart it was just a guy thing. one thing -- one day, another friend asked me a question. i said, i do not know the answer to that. he sat back, stunned. he said, that is the first time in three or four years i have known you that you have not know the answer to a question. he said, you are smart. i thought, a.b. he is right. -- maybe he is right. define smart? >> it has a lot of definitions. i could tell you one way i am not smart. if you put me on a basketball court, i will embarrass myself. i am not smart at basketball. what is smart to me means really the capacity to use one's intellectual ability to create new solutions, to find answers to problems, in ways that maybe have never occurred t before. >> where did you meet your wife? >> m.i.t. is an impressive lady in her own right. she is a medical doctor who has been in practice in charles county, maryland, for over 20 years. she is the managing partner and ceo of the business side of the practice she runs a
this is actually after philip and i had our first encounter. did not think of that as .mart it was just a guy thing. one thing -- one day, another friend asked me a question. i said, i do not know the answer to that. he sat back, stunned. he said, that is the first time in three or four years i have known you that you have not know the answer to a question. he said, you are smart. i thought, a.b. he is right. -- maybe he is right. define smart? >> it has a lot of definitions. i could tell...
58
58
May 11, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
so explain to me how did philip garrido come to you?e -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department. he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event he wanted to host on campus. >> what about him -- what was that gut intuition? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he was a professor, a student, just a random homeless guy. the girls were sort of recessed on the outer office, but once they emerged, my immediate attention went to the girls. i began -- i'm thinking, whose children are these? and he immediately said, they're mine. they resembled him. so there was no doubt in my mind that the children were his. i think the question then was, well, who had kids with this guy? really he was just that out of sorts. he was just all over the place. that's where the trigger sort of started. >> did you have the same initial reaction?
so explain to me how did philip garrido come to you?e -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department. he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event he wanted to host on campus. >> what about him -- what was that gut intuition? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he...
73
73
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
philip, you want to respond to ?the guardian" [laughter] >> we are discussing warfare with remotely piloted vehicles against people with directly- piloted vehicles. >> [inaudible] >> there is nothing in international law that prohibits the united states. there are consequences from it. it would be legal to go to war and legal for us to wage war against the people who did that. >> governor king. >> historians through history -- knowed civil rights. history we suspended civil rights. we have done things profoundly illegal, sometimes regretted them afterwards but that is what we've done during war. we've never had a war that has lasted 15 years. the idea you can be extra legal for this time and have a program like this that kills people -- i tried to follow this. i do not even know who authorizes it. i do not know if it is john brennan or a military man or who it is, let alone legal framework for the rationale for this kind of thing. i worry very much that as this technology spreads, we have throughout history been a re
philip, you want to respond to ?the guardian" [laughter] >> we are discussing warfare with remotely piloted vehicles against people with directly- piloted vehicles. >> [inaudible] >> there is nothing in international law that prohibits the united states. there are consequences from it. it would be legal to go to war and legal for us to wage war against the people who did that. >> governor king. >> historians through history -- knowed civil rights. history we...
63
63
May 20, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
my friends would say, i bet philip is smarter than you are. you know, at that age, you walk around with a chip on your shoulder about something if you are a guy. this guy cannot be that smart. some of our mutual friends introduced us. we felt each other out in terms of, what do you think about algebra class? it was really funny. normally, guys, who has got the better hoops? with me, it was, how fast can you get to the answer to this problem? we are feeling each other out intellectually and coming to understand, this guy is pretty good. it was the first time in my life i actually met someone who intellectually, i felt, i better watch this for -- this person. he introduced me to chess, which he knew how to play and i did not. he wiped me off the board for a couple of months. it was so incredibly frustrating. i had never been intellectually bested at anything in my life. eventually, one day, while we were playing chess, i beat him. i used a painting maneuver with a rook. you set up a certain thing where the piece locks the rook and you move it an
my friends would say, i bet philip is smarter than you are. you know, at that age, you walk around with a chip on your shoulder about something if you are a guy. this guy cannot be that smart. some of our mutual friends introduced us. we felt each other out in terms of, what do you think about algebra class? it was really funny. normally, guys, who has got the better hoops? with me, it was, how fast can you get to the answer to this problem? we are feeling each other out intellectually and...
61
61
May 10, 2013
05/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
what i learned best was taught to me by philip aiker's father. philip had hearing problems, and i started my conference with his dad, talking down to him, i'm embarrassed to say. but i learned within about two minutes of our starting the conversation that his vocabulary was very much equal to mine. i think i had them confused with christian scientists, or at least in my- i don't know much about that, but my picture was that they had nothing to do with modern medicine, so he would not have known anything. he knew a lot, and i learned an important lesson early in my career, which was, thou shalt not talk down to anyone who's sitting in front of you. and i didn't. but years later, i met a friend who had an amish - sounding name- i don't know if i'm at liberty to say it, so i guess i won't. but let's just say freeman. and after i knew him a while, i said, "were you ever an amishman?" and he said, "yes." he was episcopal when i met him. so we talked about my experiences and about his life, and i asked him, did- were you shunned when you first left to
what i learned best was taught to me by philip aiker's father. philip had hearing problems, and i started my conference with his dad, talking down to him, i'm embarrassed to say. but i learned within about two minutes of our starting the conversation that his vocabulary was very much equal to mine. i think i had them confused with christian scientists, or at least in my- i don't know much about that, but my picture was that they had nothing to do with modern medicine, so he would not have known...
83
83
May 2, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
i had a question for john and philip.help me understand better these , ifments for the legality al qaeda was to get their hands on this technology -- unlikely, but if they were to use them to attack u.s. military sites year or government offices involved in playing -- planning the attacks, would be the legality of that, you think? if al qaeda was to fantasize that requirements, with parsley galilee internationally? so, we are discussing warfare against people waging warfare with directly positive vehicles. there is nothing in international law that prohibits people from one to war with the united states. there are consequences from it. legal to go to war and it would be legal for us to wage war against the people who did that. >> historians through history, and we have had what has been a suspensive civil-rights, we have done things that have been profoundly legal, but never had a war that lasted 15 years. the idea that you could be extralegal for this period of time with a program like this that kills people -- i do not
i had a question for john and philip.help me understand better these , ifments for the legality al qaeda was to get their hands on this technology -- unlikely, but if they were to use them to attack u.s. military sites year or government offices involved in playing -- planning the attacks, would be the legality of that, you think? if al qaeda was to fantasize that requirements, with parsley galilee internationally? so, we are discussing warfare against people waging warfare with directly...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
planned as philip morris we need a third party validator so why don't we develop a tea party so they went out and hired literally that phrase oh not just the phrase you know the imagery of the flags they went and hired p.r. firms corporate p.r. firms to go to kentucky go to d.c. and organize these rallies and this is in ninety three it's ninety three it just didn't take off i mean they had these rallies it just didn't have cache and we see this over and over again in one thousand nine hundred seven dick armey with a set of other republican congressman they go to boston at that moment they're working with a bunch of corporate lobbyists that are trying to push the flat tax they want to get rid of the progressive income tax replace it with a flat tax everything with the same amount they dumped on the harbor they launch all these you know kind of organizations to support a new boston tea party to support the flat tax they were just kind of lampooned in the media no one took them seriously and we see. the koch brothers. their group citizens for a sound economy which changed to americans f
planned as philip morris we need a third party validator so why don't we develop a tea party so they went out and hired literally that phrase oh not just the phrase you know the imagery of the flags they went and hired p.r. firms corporate p.r. firms to go to kentucky go to d.c. and organize these rallies and this is in ninety three it's ninety three it just didn't take off i mean they had these rallies it just didn't have cache and we see this over and over again in one thousand nine hundred...
105
105
May 29, 2013
05/13
by
KRCB
tv
eye 105
favorite 0
quote 0
joining us david sger of "theew york mes", david mart ofcb news and former fbi deputy director philip mudd. >> i think the most important message that its president's probably going to have is that cyberissues, whether it's cybersecurity, cyberespionage, whether or not it's possible to come to some kind of an agreement between the united states and china, how to limit the use of these weapons, that these have moved it from the periphery of the u.s. china relationship where they really were even a year or two ago. and they have now moved to the center. >> rose: we conclude way convertion dow not want to mi it is with siren robinson, not only is he the person who has been voted number one among all the ted talks, he's also written a book for you called finding your element, how to discover your talents and passions and transform your life. >> if you look at the odds of you being here at all, then really strikes me as sad that people settle for so little along the way. i know people have desperate circumstances, sometimes. i mean i-- i don't do all the old soldr thing about this. but i t
joining us david sger of "theew york mes", david mart ofcb news and former fbi deputy director philip mudd. >> i think the most important message that its president's probably going to have is that cyberissues, whether it's cybersecurity, cyberespionage, whether or not it's possible to come to some kind of an agreement between the united states and china, how to limit the use of these weapons, that these have moved it from the periphery of the u.s. china relationship where they...
68
68
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
and standing for me was prince philip, and he kind of said with a straight face, are you following them to the louvre? likely he laughed and i laughed. it didn't turn into an international incident but definitely awkward. >> host: why did you choose the photo on the cover of "front row seat" treachery that picture to me visually the composition, the lighting, it's an iconic image to me. it shows the seriousness of the job. but it also shows the environment of the white house. to me that one stood out from the pack as a cover photo. >> host: do you have a favorite trip he went on? >> guest: i think the president's trip to africa from his last trip to africa i believe in 2007, to me that was my favorite trip. i think witnessing the outpouring of love and thankfulness from all of the countries that we visited, and this is after come in reaction to the pet far, which all of the aids global health that the president initiated and all the african people in these countries are so thankful and it was just wonderful to witness. and a color, the culture there, and for me it was my first trip to a
and standing for me was prince philip, and he kind of said with a straight face, are you following them to the louvre? likely he laughed and i laughed. it didn't turn into an international incident but definitely awkward. >> host: why did you choose the photo on the cover of "front row seat" treachery that picture to me visually the composition, the lighting, it's an iconic image to me. it shows the seriousness of the job. but it also shows the environment of the white house. to...
161
161
May 12, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 161
favorite 0
quote 0
>> philip garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department.he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event that he wanted to host on campus. >> and what about him -- i mean, what was that gut intuition you had? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact that he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point he was a professor, a student, just a random homeless guy. the girls were sort of recessed on the outer office, but once they emerged, my immediate attention went to the girls. and i began -- i'm thinking, whose children are these? and he immediately said, they're mine. and they resembled him. so there was no doubt in my mind that the children were his. i think the question then was, well, who had kids with this guy? really. i mean, he was just that out of sorts. he was just all over the place. so i think that's where the trigger sort of started. >> did you have that same initial reaction? >> it just didn
>> philip garrido came -- i was an events manager at u.c. berkeley with the police department.he came into the office in an attempt to get a permit for an event that he wanted to host on campus. >> and what about him -- i mean, what was that gut intuition you had? >> he was peculiar in and of himself, but the fact that he had two young daughters with him was even more alarming. that's where the bells started going off. philip, i could not determine whether or not at that point...
28
28
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
complexity and cost to develop it it should be no great surprise that here electro has teamed up with philips. this is the first full cycle innovative partnership of its kind in russia initially the russian side provided some fifteen percent of the components for the most part this included things like service aleutians and associated software. but. thirty percent were in the process of increasing it to as much as fifty percent. in other words. around the country. which takes us. to the days of peter the great. work. the structures. and. what we do here is considered a priority for the limited physical. currently the biggest medical project being developed by the russian academy of sciences. supported by the ministry of industry and trade. m.r.i. machine very small. big m.r.i. . currently . good laboratory. was able to build a most sophisticated robot which fortunately doesn't sound anything tim's mission to teach me. to care about humans and. this is why you should care only. i. more news today violence is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets
complexity and cost to develop it it should be no great surprise that here electro has teamed up with philips. this is the first full cycle innovative partnership of its kind in russia initially the russian side provided some fifteen percent of the components for the most part this included things like service aleutians and associated software. but. thirty percent were in the process of increasing it to as much as fifty percent. in other words. around the country. which takes us. to the days of...
24
24
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
you've been we've been talking about the tea party in the whole national thing in the republican philip morris starting this a ninety three this is all at a national level and yet when you look at i grew up in michigan and michigan was always a labor state and it was always it was always a blue state it i think it arguably still is a blue state except that we have a republican senator republican house and republican governor and and we and michigan just lost you know just got this right to work for less law passed you know it's like it's the ground shifted the state it's somehow and you know i said you know i still have a lot of family there i go back there every year. i don't think the ground has shifted at the level of the people it seems more like but i'm not really sure what's going on other than the device family an enormous amount of money being dumped into that state what is happening at the individual state levels around this country and how is it coming about how it how did michigan wisconsin. simply put it takes less money to buy a state where the state politics is much cheape
you've been we've been talking about the tea party in the whole national thing in the republican philip morris starting this a ninety three this is all at a national level and yet when you look at i grew up in michigan and michigan was always a labor state and it was always it was always a blue state it i think it arguably still is a blue state except that we have a republican senator republican house and republican governor and and we and michigan just lost you know just got this right to work...
104
104
May 2, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 104
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> think you, philip. you, philip. give us the benefit of your thinking. >> thank you. terrific to be here. a last-minute addition to the panel. i am honored to pinch hit and be on this panel. i come at this subject differently than everyone up here. i am the only person not a lawyer, even the former cia guy is a lawyer. reporter, national security reporter were fundamentally we're trying to get at basic questions about what is happening now and what has happened in the past among these issues. basically sorts of tried to ask the same questions and get answers. what i do in my reporting for the new york times and in my of --s try to all basically describe the history of the war that has been waged. since 9/11 and before, because and reallys a war has been a secret since those early years. i think by now we know the broad outlines and contours of the war afghanistan but what is happening in pakistan and what has happened in yemen and other parts, places like somalia, still those stories need to be told. that is what i have been trying to do. on the that we do focus idea
. >> think you, philip. you, philip. give us the benefit of your thinking. >> thank you. terrific to be here. a last-minute addition to the panel. i am honored to pinch hit and be on this panel. i come at this subject differently than everyone up here. i am the only person not a lawyer, even the former cia guy is a lawyer. reporter, national security reporter were fundamentally we're trying to get at basic questions about what is happening now and what has happened in the past among...
95
95
May 11, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
host: philip from montclair, virginia. caller: i am a mechanical engineer. we happen to use a few different 3-d printing services as well as have a particular printer in-house. that particular printer costs well over $30,000. even at that, the key thing is the materials -- the engineered materials. this guy printed something out of abs. abs, as you can see, is not a material that can handle anything larger than what he shot and maybe really only once or twice. fearnk the idea -- the that everybody is going to run out and buy a printer for $2200. those printers that are easily made at home and/or purchased for very, very little, they are not renters that really can actually lay down -- it is called fused deposition of material. they cannot lay down and engineered material that hasn't the strength to truly be able that's trulyweapon viable. yes, he is trying to make a point. i don't by all means think that lord, one of these -- we've got to get the government in here to do regulation. host: can i ask a question? in your estimation, what does it mean to you the
host: philip from montclair, virginia. caller: i am a mechanical engineer. we happen to use a few different 3-d printing services as well as have a particular printer in-house. that particular printer costs well over $30,000. even at that, the key thing is the materials -- the engineered materials. this guy printed something out of abs. abs, as you can see, is not a material that can handle anything larger than what he shot and maybe really only once or twice. fearnk the idea -- the that...
28
28
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
given the complexity and cost to develop it it should be no great surprise that he has teamed up with philips. this is the first full cycle innovative partnership of its kind in russia initially the russian side provided some fifteen percent of the components for the most part this included things like service aleutians and associated software. but today a contribution has risen to thirty percent and we are in the process of increasing it to as much as fifty percent. in other words we're gradually replacing foreign components. to the. more than five hundred. the country. exports. which takes us to physical. researchers that received. physics. just. stretching all the way to the days of peter the great moment. is work on a revolutionary kind of. the structures of. electromagnetic radiation. and. what we do here is considered a priority for the limited physical. currently the biggest medical project being developed by the russian academy of sciences. supported by the ministry of industry and trade. provided a grant to stimulate and implement this project. makes the whole in. just. such a constr
given the complexity and cost to develop it it should be no great surprise that he has teamed up with philips. this is the first full cycle innovative partnership of its kind in russia initially the russian side provided some fifteen percent of the components for the most part this included things like service aleutians and associated software. but today a contribution has risen to thirty percent and we are in the process of increasing it to as much as fifty percent. in other words we're...
100
100
May 28, 2013
05/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
listen to what he has to say, and philip in the pits of the cme.hilip, starting with you, and when it's tuesday, getting bylaw about this, and it seem like a year is up. just extraordinary what the moment is doing. i wonder about technical binch marks. guys say we're blowing through the benchmarks, doesn't make sense anymore. what do you think? >> yeah, i mean, it was a real easy day. the nikkei up, great housing number, good consumer confidence, central banks talking about cutting rates, providing more support. just catch a wave and ride it back on up. we're 30 points after last week's low. looks like sometime this week, especially if we get good data come out here on thursday, we'll probably see that market push right on up to the 1686 level, and i think 1700, right around the corner. liz: woah, 1700. upped forecasts a week and a half ago too, 1650 to 17 -- i can't remember, but, okay, so people are jumping on what now appears to be a crowded bandwagon, and, yet, there's an excellent point, momentum tremendous, and the at terntives to anything ot
listen to what he has to say, and philip in the pits of the cme.hilip, starting with you, and when it's tuesday, getting bylaw about this, and it seem like a year is up. just extraordinary what the moment is doing. i wonder about technical binch marks. guys say we're blowing through the benchmarks, doesn't make sense anymore. what do you think? >> yeah, i mean, it was a real easy day. the nikkei up, great housing number, good consumer confidence, central banks talking about cutting rates,...