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Apr 30, 2021
04/21
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this week's apologies om the university of pennsylvania and princeton uversity for the handling of the of an african-american child killed by philadelphia police in the 1985 move bombing that killed 11 people, five of them children, come after the university of pennsylvania museum of archaeology and anthropology known as the penn museum just apologized earlier this month for holding more than 1000 stolen schools of enslaved people -- skulls of enslaved people and its morton collection. in january, the president of harvard university issued a letter acknowledging the 22,000 human remains in its collections included 15 from the people of african dissent who may have been enslaved and pledge to review its policies of ethical stewardship. for more on the growing demands for respectful treatment of african-american remains and museum collections, especially those of the enslaved, we're joined by samuel redman, historian at the university of massachusetts amherst. author of "bone rooms: from scientific racism to human prehistory in museums" and the forthcoming books "prophets and ghost: the
this week's apologies om the university of pennsylvania and princeton uversity for the handling of the of an african-american child killed by philadelphia police in the 1985 move bombing that killed 11 people, five of them children, come after the university of pennsylvania museum of archaeology and anthropology known as the penn museum just apologized earlier this month for holding more than 1000 stolen schools of enslaved people -- skulls of enslaved people and its morton collection. in...
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Apr 27, 2021
04/21
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we turn now to explosive velationthat theniversit of pennsvania and princeton university have been inn of bones thought to belong to children who were killed in the 1985 police bombing of the philadelphia home of the radical, black liberation, anti-police-brutality group move. in a minute, we will show you video of the remains being used in an online teaching course and get response from mike africa, jr. but first, we go back to that day on may 13, 1985, when the philadelphia police killed six adults and five children and destroyed over 60 homes, burning an entire block to the ground. they bombed the move house. in a 2010 interview on democracy now!, ramona africa -- the sole adult survivor of the 1985 attack -- described what happened after the bomb was dropped on their house. in terms of the bombing, after bein attacked the way we were with houses by the fire department and hence have tear gas and then being shot at, the police admit to shooting over 10,000 rounds of bullets at us in the first 90 minutes, there was a lull. it without any warning at all, two members of the philadelph
we turn now to explosive velationthat theniversit of pennsvania and princeton university have been inn of bones thought to belong to children who were killed in the 1985 police bombing of the philadelphia home of the radical, black liberation, anti-police-brutality group move. in a minute, we will show you video of the remains being used in an online teaching course and get response from mike africa, jr. but first, we go back to that day on may 13, 1985, when the philadelphia police killed six...
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Apr 28, 2021
04/21
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BLOOMBERG
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princeton university professed -- princeton university professor alan blinder.s i said, you sat at the table, you helped make these decisions. for many years. would you be having any second thoughts about this steadfast decision the fed has made, inflation has to be high and accelerating, that is one of the two key that has to happen before the start reducing stimulus. do you see any risks there? alan: there is. i'm not sure about your and accelerated that you had. added it has to be above 2%. they have some catch up to do from the below 2% years. the fed is extremely cagey about how much catch up there is. i think that is entirely appropriate. my opinion is that until it gets into the upper -- upper two's, if that ever happens, the fed is not going to get into fingers. if it starts -- just to say a hypothetical, if it goes into the upper two's and it looks like it is rising, then i think the fed will get itchy fingers and we will see changes to the policy. kathleen: do you have any sympathy with larry summers, former treasury secretary harvard university econom
princeton university professed -- princeton university professor alan blinder.s i said, you sat at the table, you helped make these decisions. for many years. would you be having any second thoughts about this steadfast decision the fed has made, inflation has to be high and accelerating, that is one of the two key that has to happen before the start reducing stimulus. do you see any risks there? alan: there is. i'm not sure about your and accelerated that you had. added it has to be above 2%....
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Apr 8, 2021
04/21
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joined by seyed hossein mousavian, a middle east security and nuclear policy specialist at princeton university. from 2003 to 2005, he served as spokesperson for iran in its nuclear negotiations with the european union. he's the author of several books, including "iran and the united states: an insider's view on the failed past and the road to peace." his most recent book is "a new structure for security, peace, and cooperation in the persian gulf." welcome to democracy now! it is great to have you back, ambassador. can you start by explaining the scene in vienna right now? you have the u.s. in one hotel, iran at another hotel, and countries of the european union shuttling back and forth. what are they negotiating this week? >> good morning. actually, the problem with the current negotiation is that since the u.s. broke the promise , practically the u.s. killed the trust on the iranian side. after days of negotiation, iran and the world powers agreed in 2015n a deal, which is the most comprehensive agreement during the history of nonproliferation. it was going very well and iran delivered compl
joined by seyed hossein mousavian, a middle east security and nuclear policy specialist at princeton university. from 2003 to 2005, he served as spokesperson for iran in its nuclear negotiations with the european union. he's the author of several books, including "iran and the united states: an insider's view on the failed past and the road to peace." his most recent book is "a new structure for security, peace, and cooperation in the persian gulf." welcome to democracy now!...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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that later becomes princeton university. on wednesday, march 22nd he writes, fine day, played baseball but i'm beaten, but can't catch or hit. he's not a great player. the following year the college faculty will ban baseball as being unbecoming of a gentleman. this is the earliest written reference we have to baseball. so already the game is on college campuses. already played by boys much older than children. these are older teenagers playing this game. a couple of other things to note in the early going of the game. we've got examples of 1850s from the new york game and massachusetts game. you can see in the new york game the diamond we're used to but massachusetts had a competitive rival game which was in the shape of a rectangle. these two battled for supremacy in the 19th century. it's the new york game with the popularity of new york press. their enthusiasm of the game, constant coverage of the game. eventually it's the new york game that's going to win out. of the things that we've just shown you, everything in here i
that later becomes princeton university. on wednesday, march 22nd he writes, fine day, played baseball but i'm beaten, but can't catch or hit. he's not a great player. the following year the college faculty will ban baseball as being unbecoming of a gentleman. this is the earliest written reference we have to baseball. so already the game is on college campuses. already played by boys much older than children. these are older teenagers playing this game. a couple of other things to note in the...
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Apr 19, 2021
04/21
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of princeton university, anna palm palmer founder of punch bowl news and senior eder to of "the dispatchvid fren. welcome to sunday. it's "meet the press." >> announcer: from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history, this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. >>> good sunday morning. there was no shortages of big stories this week, criticism of police tactics, yet another mass shooting, this one in indianapolis. troop withdrawal from a war zone. president biden tried to flip and then flop on immigration policy. the news that garnered the biggest headlines came when federal health agencies temporarily halted injections of johnson & johnson vaccines because a small number of people suffered blood clots after receiving them. while it's not clear what connection, if any, there is between the vaccine and this clotting, the halt is likely to have profound implications, however temporary it is. will people ever feel confident about getting the j&j shot? >> will vaccine skeptics use this incident to erode confidence in all the vaccines? will developing countries feel
of princeton university, anna palm palmer founder of punch bowl news and senior eder to of "the dispatchvid fren. welcome to sunday. it's "meet the press." >> announcer: from nbc news in washington, the longest running show in television history, this is "meet the press" with chuck todd. >>> good sunday morning. there was no shortages of big stories this week, criticism of police tactics, yet another mass shooting, this one in indianapolis. troop...
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Apr 24, 2021
04/21
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diary from 1786 john ray smith who is attending the college of new jersey that later becomes princeton university and on wednesday, may, march 22nd. he writes a fine day play baseball, but am beaten for i can't catch or hit. he's he's not a great player and in the following year the college faculty will ban baseball is being unbecoming of a gentleman, but this is the earliest written reference that we have to baseball. so already the game is on college campuses already. it's being played by boys who are much older than children. these are probably older teenagers who are playing this game a couple of other things to note here in the early going of the game. we've got examples from the 1850s of the new york game and the massachusetts game. you can see in the new york game the very familiar diamond that we're all used to but massachusetts had a competitive rival game, which was in the shape of a rectangle and these two sort of battled for supremacy in the mid-19th century, but it's the new york game that with the popularity of the new york press their enthusiasm for the game. they're constant cover
diary from 1786 john ray smith who is attending the college of new jersey that later becomes princeton university and on wednesday, may, march 22nd. he writes a fine day play baseball, but am beaten for i can't catch or hit. he's he's not a great player and in the following year the college faculty will ban baseball is being unbecoming of a gentleman, but this is the earliest written reference that we have to baseball. so already the game is on college campuses already. it's being played by...
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Apr 3, 2021
04/21
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a native of wisconsin, brad is a graduate of princeton university and received his jd from columbia university law school. over the past decade, he spearheaded the company's work to advance privacy protection for microsoft customers, the rights of dreamers and other immigrants, including bringing multiple lawsuits against the government on these issues. bravo, brad. thank you for doing that. in the time i've known brad, i've always thought of his insight on the responsibility of the sector to preserve and promote civil society. brad is uniquely qualified to speak about the type of values-based principled leadership, not just at the corporate level, but at the personal level that will be necessary for american leadership in the 21st century . so, we are so grateful to have you with us today and i can't thank you enough personally. brad: thank you, john. it's great to be with you and brookings and mount vernon, two great institutions. it's a pleasure and it's a great topic to discuss and i look forward to it. john: we will benefit from your views on these issues we will be facing. so, george was
a native of wisconsin, brad is a graduate of princeton university and received his jd from columbia university law school. over the past decade, he spearheaded the company's work to advance privacy protection for microsoft customers, the rights of dreamers and other immigrants, including bringing multiple lawsuits against the government on these issues. bravo, brad. thank you for doing that. in the time i've known brad, i've always thought of his insight on the responsibility of the sector to...
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of america's most influential conservative thinkers because we professor jurisprudence at princeton university professor robert p. george thank you so much for coming on so the world is watching this trial how have you seen the reaction to perceived decline in the united states over many years of law and of ethics well i think one thing that hasn't declined is this most americans of most races want. mr sheldon to receive a fair trial if he's guilty of murder they want to be convicted of murder if he's guilty of a lesser offense of manslaughter offense they want to see him convicted of that if he's not guilty they want to see him quit so i just hope that will of most americans again of all races all ethnic backgrounds and so forth will prevail in this matter when we get a verdict now i thought i had from the trial corporations and government institutions and police forces have been key in certainly here in britain and i know in the united states too to have courses on bias training compulsory these courses on race on gender you don't think that's the solution to the kind of atrocities we've see
of america's most influential conservative thinkers because we professor jurisprudence at princeton university professor robert p. george thank you so much for coming on so the world is watching this trial how have you seen the reaction to perceived decline in the united states over many years of law and of ethics well i think one thing that hasn't declined is this most americans of most races want. mr sheldon to receive a fair trial if he's guilty of murder they want to be convicted of murder...
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Apr 4, 2021
04/21
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bernard haykel is professor of near eastern studies at princeton university in newjersey. thank you forgramme. what is your reaction to these arrests? i think there is a lot of opaqueness, we don't really know that much. rumours on social media flying in all directions, claiming there are outside forces involved. some blaming the uae, other saudi arabia, and others israel. what is clear to me, in the message to the bbc, which was in english, for a western audience, there is a weakening of the monarchy. there are clearly fissures in the hashemite kingdom. but i see this as part of a pattern, where the king, when faced with domestic problems, questions of legitimacy, complaints about the economic situation, the corruption and so on, he has often turned on former prime ministers, governments, and now it is the long fought relationship with his half brother, the former crown prince. what is unusual for people like this, a very important person involved in the saudi relationship, he was also arrested. that makes it unclear what is going on. given the criticisms, _ unclear what is going on. g
bernard haykel is professor of near eastern studies at princeton university in newjersey. thank you forgramme. what is your reaction to these arrests? i think there is a lot of opaqueness, we don't really know that much. rumours on social media flying in all directions, claiming there are outside forces involved. some blaming the uae, other saudi arabia, and others israel. what is clear to me, in the message to the bbc, which was in english, for a western audience, there is a weakening of the...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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i went to the virginia historical society princeton university's rare book manuscript division the howard gottlieb library of austin university the harry ransom center, which is where this picture is from. it's a picture of blair and a prisoner on devil's island. i love the shadow in the background that looks like he's gonna kill her or something, but it was from the harry ransom center, which is at the university of texas and also the wildlife conservation society, which is at the bronx zoo. so i discovered that that's an expedition took a toll on her marriage and when they returned to the united states, she and her husband she actually kind of arranged to to have a she arranged to have their new home be next to this guy that she really liked. and then she had an affair with them. and then she traveled to reno to get a divorce and once she had that divorce. she was free to travel and do the things that she wanted to do, which was not pheasants and wasn't asia. it was latin america. and so i was reading about her and then i discovered that. in 1925 she met with a friend who was margaret h
i went to the virginia historical society princeton university's rare book manuscript division the howard gottlieb library of austin university the harry ransom center, which is where this picture is from. it's a picture of blair and a prisoner on devil's island. i love the shadow in the background that looks like he's gonna kill her or something, but it was from the harry ransom center, which is at the university of texas and also the wildlife conservation society, which is at the bronx zoo....
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Apr 20, 2021
04/21
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carol swain, former professor at vanderbilt and princeton university and author of we the people.see in cities across the country they are learning this behavior and social justice warrior game, your thoughts? >> i remember a few years ago at the university they were teaching on protest and that is when you think about the 1960s there were many protests but they geared up for the moment that is taking place today in america and what is troubling is the biden administration want to fund history and activism so young people in the k-12 category would become activists so instead of learning civics, how to be a good citizen, how to be patriotic, they are being taught how to disrupt, they are not being taught to respect the of law, the institutions, the civilizing agencies we have had in this nation. they are just being taught to disrupt. they are not being taught, they are being indoctrinated because when you teach someone you expose them to opposing views. >> this is what msnbc reported about a group of activist educators who travel to minneapolis for the chauvin trial. >> this is a
carol swain, former professor at vanderbilt and princeton university and author of we the people.see in cities across the country they are learning this behavior and social justice warrior game, your thoughts? >> i remember a few years ago at the university they were teaching on protest and that is when you think about the 1960s there were many protests but they geared up for the moment that is taking place today in america and what is troubling is the biden administration want to fund...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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this idea of the public good becomes most clear around princeton university. he introduction on page 12. as the critical moment forces us to reckon with influence over cities, we cannot keep discussing how the university is truly educational in terms the universe cities are all around us that we failed to examine the consequences of schools embracing an increasingly for-profit approach to their urban surroundings. our blind spot largely comes from the assumption that higher education is an inherent public good most clearly marked by the status to provide services that would otherwise come from the government it appears a critical paradox has emerged. this is precisely what allows for an easier transfer of public dollars for private developments. city colleges and universities pay no taxes on their increasingly prominent real estate footprints. even public universities use their public goods status and for-profit research with the financial security of private developers and investors sitting on campus land. school reaps the benefits of police and trash removal
this idea of the public good becomes most clear around princeton university. he introduction on page 12. as the critical moment forces us to reckon with influence over cities, we cannot keep discussing how the university is truly educational in terms the universe cities are all around us that we failed to examine the consequences of schools embracing an increasingly for-profit approach to their urban surroundings. our blind spot largely comes from the assumption that higher education is an...
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Apr 4, 2021
04/21
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a native, a student could allowed -- a summa come out a graduate of princeton university. winner of a prize given to the most outstanding graduate, she was an editor. that is a pretty impressive background. i which had a background as impressive. but, when you were growing up, did you say that he wanted to be a lawyer? was that clear from the early days that he wanted to be a lawyer? >> it was. for reasons that were not self-evident. i grew up in a housing project in the south bronx. there were no lawyers or judges in the projects which i live. but, when i was seven i developed diabetes. i understood back then, it is not true now, but back then, if you had juvenile diabetes, you were not permitted to become a law enforcement agent. i wanted to become a detective because of nancy drew. it was the first chapter book i begin to read. by the time i was 10, perry mason appeared on tv. i know, for those audience members were closer in age to me and you, david. we know who perry mason was, he was the first tv lawyer. and, the first lawyer on which tv ran a series. from him, i lea
a native, a student could allowed -- a summa come out a graduate of princeton university. winner of a prize given to the most outstanding graduate, she was an editor. that is a pretty impressive background. i which had a background as impressive. but, when you were growing up, did you say that he wanted to be a lawyer? was that clear from the early days that he wanted to be a lawyer? >> it was. for reasons that were not self-evident. i grew up in a housing project in the south bronx....
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Apr 7, 2021
04/21
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and joining our discussion now, chair of the african-american studies at princeton universities and msnbcn with you. this does seem to be one of the cases where the people arrested are what they appeared to be when we were watching them do what they did that day. >> right, lawrence. you know, reading this piece by my colleague. it reads like a water is wet story for a lot of folks. this idea of economic anxiety is something black organizers have been talking about for years. the economic anxiety is so miniscule compared to the white supremacy that we saw in charlesletsville and saw on display on january 6th. when people were talking about the jews will not replace us. blacks will not replace us. and explicitly sort of going under the ideology that the then president had sort of sewn the seeds for months and for years, so many americans knew exactly what that was. and during the tenure of donald trump, far too many americans refused to recognize it. they told themselves it was everything but white supremacy and everything but racism. even on january 6th we had far too many americans trying
and joining our discussion now, chair of the african-american studies at princeton universities and msnbcn with you. this does seem to be one of the cases where the people arrested are what they appeared to be when we were watching them do what they did that day. >> right, lawrence. you know, reading this piece by my colleague. it reads like a water is wet story for a lot of folks. this idea of economic anxiety is something black organizers have been talking about for years. the economic...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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we saw it in t 1990's at princeton university with a scholar or alleged scholar who was hired to promotenial project. i am happy to say so much good scholarship, by so many scholars worldwide, has so eroded and rebuffed turkish denial that today turkish denial is a laughingstock. the turkish government is a laughingstock in the face of the rest of the world. it would be so important for turkey to move forward to stop the denialism, to let go of this racist hate project against its ethnic minorit cultures, including the kurds today, just are embracing democracy, human rights, and diversity. the fact that turkey has more journalists in jail than any country in the world over the last several decades according to human rights watch and amnesty international tells us something. amy: we have to leave it there. professor, thank you so much for being with us. pulitzer prize winning armenian americanç?ç?ç?ç?o■o■Ñ■ç■ç■ç■
we saw it in t 1990's at princeton university with a scholar or alleged scholar who was hired to promotenial project. i am happy to say so much good scholarship, by so many scholars worldwide, has so eroded and rebuffed turkish denial that today turkish denial is a laughingstock. the turkish government is a laughingstock in the face of the rest of the world. it would be so important for turkey to move forward to stop the denialism, to let go of this racist hate project against its ethnic...
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Apr 21, 2021
04/21
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eddy cloud at msnbc a princeton university professor. here's what he said he's concerned will happen now. watch this. >> we have been preparing for the violence and protests. now we need to prepare for the reaction of the police. we were prepared for the protesters. what they might do if the verdict came down in a way that they were not satisfied. now we need to be mindful of seeing the tectonic plates of seeing the policing shift in the country. >> what do you mean the reaction? the thin blue line condemned -- a few police unions that sent out a message. but police departments all over the country said this is not us. national police unions said this is not us. the new york police union said this is not us. the prosecution said that it's a noble profession. this is not us. many people forget the chief law enforcement officer and many places is the d.a. they said this is not us. i'm not sure what he's talking about. the current police chief there that has been embattled with his own police department in the past said this is not us. this
eddy cloud at msnbc a princeton university professor. here's what he said he's concerned will happen now. watch this. >> we have been preparing for the violence and protests. now we need to prepare for the reaction of the police. we were prepared for the protesters. what they might do if the verdict came down in a way that they were not satisfied. now we need to be mindful of seeing the tectonic plates of seeing the policing shift in the country. >> what do you mean the reaction?...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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i just got off the phone with a princeton university epidemiologist in new delhi who told me he had lost a 42-year-old colleague of his there. and also telling us that the numbers of the mortality right now where you are having close to 3,000 deaths a day, that he estimates that they are much lower, what is being reported than in actuality. we are hearing anecdotally about crematoriums working around the clock. with the traditional burning of body ceremony in india, they can't keep up with the sheer number of people succumbing to disease. people dying gasping for breath outside of hospitals because there is no oxygen to provide them, and no beds for them either. listen to what one individual in new delhi had to say. >> announcer: my father is 70 years old. last night i purchased an oxygen cylinder on the black market. it is already empty. oxygen cylinders around even available on the black market right now. >> the government announced plans to create moore than 500 oxygen-generating plants around the country. we will see how fast they can ramp that up. the defense -- top defense official
i just got off the phone with a princeton university epidemiologist in new delhi who told me he had lost a 42-year-old colleague of his there. and also telling us that the numbers of the mortality right now where you are having close to 3,000 deaths a day, that he estimates that they are much lower, what is being reported than in actuality. we are hearing anecdotally about crematoriums working around the clock. with the traditional burning of body ceremony in india, they can't keep up with the...
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Apr 5, 2021
04/21
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princeton university doctor always great to see you, everyone, of course, once free and fair electionsulations, though, like those in georgia help or hurt that effort? well, that's exactly the issue is it's very hard to tell. you know, there's not evidence that georgia had a widespread election fraud issue in the first place, but republicans have outright said if you take you know the former president trump's word for it that some of these democratic voting measures have levels of voting that you would never get another republican elected again, so they've explicitly said in some cases that it is designed to make sure that an overwhelming number of democrats don't vote but on the basis you know, to get back to your original question. we just don't know as social scientists. weather small shifts and voting laws whether it's to make voting more or less convenient, have a big impact on turnout. so the major problem for republicans here is the message as a political party. you want to be the party that says we want to make it as easy as possible for the largest number of people to vote, an
princeton university doctor always great to see you, everyone, of course, once free and fair electionsulations, though, like those in georgia help or hurt that effort? well, that's exactly the issue is it's very hard to tell. you know, there's not evidence that georgia had a widespread election fraud issue in the first place, but republicans have outright said if you take you know the former president trump's word for it that some of these democratic voting measures have levels of voting that...
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Apr 22, 2021
04/21
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ramanan lakshminarayan, is an economist, epidemiologist and senior research scholar with princeton university joins me now from new delhi, india. doctor, welcome to the newshour and thanks for joining us. you are in new delhi, can you just describe what it is you're seeing there? >> amna, it's probably the worst humanitarian crisis that i've ever witnessed, there are people without a hospital beds, there's no oxygen. i'm hearing of people who are dying because the oxygen ran out in their hospitals. it's undescribable. and i hope to never witness anything like what we're going through right now. >> nawaz: as an epidemiologist, when you see that spike, you see that curve going like this, do you worry what happens if that goes unchecked? >> well, as an epidemologist i have known that the place that curve goes is basically determined entirely by human behavior and people's attitudes. so it's there because mass gatherings were allowed, because the messaging was poor in terms of how serious the virus was and is. and the system is already overrun right now. and it's hard to imagine what it's going t
ramanan lakshminarayan, is an economist, epidemiologist and senior research scholar with princeton university joins me now from new delhi, india. doctor, welcome to the newshour and thanks for joining us. you are in new delhi, can you just describe what it is you're seeing there? >> amna, it's probably the worst humanitarian crisis that i've ever witnessed, there are people without a hospital beds, there's no oxygen. i'm hearing of people who are dying because the oxygen ran out in their...
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Apr 22, 2021
04/21
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leading off our discussion tonight, professor the chair of african american studies at princeton university. also with us marissa murray, professor of law and new york university, both are msnbc contributors. professor let me begin with you, and your reactions to this day after this night after the verdict. . he >> i'm still exhausted. there is a kind of general sense, of the tight stomach that i've lived with for the past few weeks is not so tight. but then i'm still dealing with the images of macaya bryant in columbus ohio, in her death. so it feels as if there's these kind of waves, the tsunami waves that keep coming. we're still at a. there's a good verdict but we're still dealing with the question. >> melissa murray we're going to go through all of this evidence again on august 23rd when the trial of the other three officers begins. >> that's right and again to eddie's point, this trial was simply about derek chauvin's conduct, the trial of the officers will actually be as you say, lawrence more about the broader culture of policing, in how we actually perform that role, in the united
leading off our discussion tonight, professor the chair of african american studies at princeton university. also with us marissa murray, professor of law and new york university, both are msnbc contributors. professor let me begin with you, and your reactions to this day after this night after the verdict. . he >> i'm still exhausted. there is a kind of general sense, of the tight stomach that i've lived with for the past few weeks is not so tight. but then i'm still dealing with the...
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Apr 22, 2021
04/21
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leading off our discussion tonight, professor eddie glaud, chair of african-american studies at princeton university. also with us melissa murray, professor at law at new york university. both are msnbc contributors. professor, let me begin with you and your reactions to this day after, this night after the verdict. >> well, i'm still exhausted. there is a kind of general sense that by the tight stomach i've lived with for the last few weeks isn't so tight, but then i'm still dealing with the images of muchia bryant in columbus, ohio, and her death. it feels as if there are these tsunami waves that keep coming. so we're still at it. there was a good verdict but we're still dealing with the question, the central question at hand. >> and melissa murray, we're going to go through all of this evidence again on august 23rd when the trial of the other three officers begins. >> that's right. and again, to eddie's point if this trial was simply about derek chauvin's conduct i think the trial of the officers will be as you say, lawrence, more about the broader culture of policing and how we actually perform
leading off our discussion tonight, professor eddie glaud, chair of african-american studies at princeton university. also with us melissa murray, professor at law at new york university. both are msnbc contributors. professor, let me begin with you and your reactions to this day after, this night after the verdict. >> well, i'm still exhausted. there is a kind of general sense that by the tight stomach i've lived with for the last few weeks isn't so tight, but then i'm still dealing with...
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Apr 18, 2021
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imani perry is a professor of african-american studies at princeton university and the author of numerous books. joyce vance is a former united states attorney and professor at the university of alabama school of law. thanks to both of you. >>> this morning we're putting faces to the names of victims who lost their lives in yet another mass shooting. this one taking place on thursday at a fedex warehouse in indianapolis. eight workers were killed that day. we now know that the gunman behind thursday's mass shooting purchased his firearms legally after authorities had previously seized another gun from him. the indianapolis police chief says last march the 19-year-old gunman's mother raised concerns about his mental state and police came and took his shotgun. just months able he was able to stroll into a store and legally buy two more semiautomatic rifles. the gunman is said to be a former employee at the fedex facility. "velshi" is just getting warmed up. still ahead another week of police violence has emphasized the need for police reform. we'll speak to a captain. plus nbc news revealin
imani perry is a professor of african-american studies at princeton university and the author of numerous books. joyce vance is a former united states attorney and professor at the university of alabama school of law. thanks to both of you. >>> this morning we're putting faces to the names of victims who lost their lives in yet another mass shooting. this one taking place on thursday at a fedex warehouse in indianapolis. eight workers were killed that day. we now know that the gunman...
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Apr 22, 2021
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she's a health policy analyst at princeton university. she and her husband, the late, renowned health economist uwe rheinhardt, have advised world leaders, and helped design taiwan's universal care system. so ashish, why is it that we have those kinds of disparities here in the us? jha: you know, william, we've made a bunch of political choices. we have more than enough capacity, certainly more than enough resources to cover everybody. but we have chosen not to do that, again from a policy point of view. this is not a tradeoff that we have to live with. we can continue to have the best health care and cover everybody. we just, for political reasons, we've chosen not to do that. brangham: may, do you see it the same way, that this is a decision we have made, that we are going to be okay with a society that looks like this? cheng: yes. in this country, we're very different from these other countries that have health insurance that covers everyone. health reformers in europe, in asia, they would make explicit that social ethic that underlie t
she's a health policy analyst at princeton university. she and her husband, the late, renowned health economist uwe rheinhardt, have advised world leaders, and helped design taiwan's universal care system. so ashish, why is it that we have those kinds of disparities here in the us? jha: you know, william, we've made a bunch of political choices. we have more than enough capacity, certainly more than enough resources to cover everybody. but we have chosen not to do that, again from a policy...
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Apr 5, 2021
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professor at princeton university, eddie glad jr., and author of "how the right lost its mind," charlie sykes. we have former chief of staff to the dccc, adrienne elrod, she recent worked for the biden campaign and the inaugural committee. mika and willie have the morning off. and it was quite a weekend, rev, easter weekend, but also, obviously, yesterday, remembering the passing of martin luther king over half a century later. 53 years later. >> yes, it was. the irony of the day is as we that are christian celebrate the resurrection of many of us in this country and in the civil rights community remember the assassination of dr. king. i was 13 years old when he was assassinated and had already become youth director of his new york chapter of operation breadbasket. and i thought about as we are in the midst of this trial of derek chauvin and minneapolis around the killing of george floyd, as we're dealing with voter suppression laws in georgia and 43 other states, how far we have come and how far we have not come since dr. king's assassination. but then i'm reminded of his last book ent
professor at princeton university, eddie glad jr., and author of "how the right lost its mind," charlie sykes. we have former chief of staff to the dccc, adrienne elrod, she recent worked for the biden campaign and the inaugural committee. mika and willie have the morning off. and it was quite a weekend, rev, easter weekend, but also, obviously, yesterday, remembering the passing of martin luther king over half a century later. 53 years later. >> yes, it was. the irony of the...
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Apr 26, 2021
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also with us, the president of howard university, wayne frederick, princeton university's eddie glaudenell's piece, if i could, to end this spiritual catastrophe, we must restore true education, mobilizing all of the intellectual and moral resources we can to create human beings of courage and vision and civic virtue. this classical approach is united to the black experience. it recognizes that the end and aim of education is really the anthem of black people which is to lift every voice. that means to find your voice, not an echo or an imitation of others. but you can't find your voice without being grounded in tradition, grounded in legacies, grounded in heritages, engaging with the classics and with our civilizational heritage is the means to finding our true voice. it's how we become our full selves, spiritually free and morally great. >> cornell, it's always great to have you here. i'm sorry we blindsided you with eddie glaude. we will make sure eddie is respectful. for those watching, they have been friends for so long. cornell, when i first read this, i had to stop and look. is
also with us, the president of howard university, wayne frederick, princeton university's eddie glaudenell's piece, if i could, to end this spiritual catastrophe, we must restore true education, mobilizing all of the intellectual and moral resources we can to create human beings of courage and vision and civic virtue. this classical approach is united to the black experience. it recognizes that the end and aim of education is really the anthem of black people which is to lift every voice. that...
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Apr 18, 2021
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i'm from princeton university. i saw before i teach alongside your son and princeton, and so let me start out by saying first. thank you and also saying i hardly agree with you. i i've been a tremendous beneficiary of private philanthropist being at a private university right maybe even gotten rich in the process. so so i certainly would be the last person to run down philanthropist. i think it's a wonderful institution for a lot of the reasons that you said particularly in terms of building higher education scientific advancement when you go around the world and you you talk to i mean my colleagues around the world everyone is envious of our university structure our scientific advances right the problem. however that i i sensed in your talk is i wasn't quite sure who you were arguing against the marketplace to be sure and i share your your skepticism that the market can really do these things plantopy is wonderful in that respect but as david pointed out there is government and that wasn't quite sure why you posed
i'm from princeton university. i saw before i teach alongside your son and princeton, and so let me start out by saying first. thank you and also saying i hardly agree with you. i i've been a tremendous beneficiary of private philanthropist being at a private university right maybe even gotten rich in the process. so so i certainly would be the last person to run down philanthropist. i think it's a wonderful institution for a lot of the reasons that you said particularly in terms of building...
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Apr 13, 2021
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also joining us, eddie glaude, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton universityost of nbc's "politics nation" and the president of the national action network. rev, there's so much new information coming in, just in the last hour. i want to get your thoughts on all of it, but let me start, first, you're in the center of so many of these tragedies because the families reach out to you. can you talk about this latest incident and daunte wright's family? >> i talked today with daunte wright's girlfriend, who they have a child, and i've talked to the father, and they're devastated, and they're devastated because you're talking about a 20-year-old young man losing his life over some tags of a car. and a stop to ask him about tags. and then they come up with a misdemeanor warrant. it makes absolutely no sense to them, but this is, again, a question of how we tolerate policing in certain communities. there's no doubt in many minds that had this been a 20-year-old kid, another community, particularly in a pandemic when there's a backlog of trying to get your tags upgrade
also joining us, eddie glaude, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton universityost of nbc's "politics nation" and the president of the national action network. rev, there's so much new information coming in, just in the last hour. i want to get your thoughts on all of it, but let me start, first, you're in the center of so many of these tragedies because the families reach out to you. can you talk about this latest incident and daunte wright's family?...
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Apr 8, 2021
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also joining us, eddie glaude, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton universitylly a civil debate, i won't call it a war because there are many more foot soldiers on the disinformation side but it's a debate happening on the right. amanda carpenter worked for ted cruz. max boot has a scathing op-ed out in the "washington post" calling out republicans as being more committed to disenfranchising voters than enacting sensible gun reform. the attacks are most sort of violent from republicans against what the republicans are trying to do based on a lie. that stated, do you see any sign that it will slow down the role in 47 states to enact voting restrictions? >> i think quite the contrary. the reality is the republican party's base seems to be enthusiastically supporting politics and other leaders who propagate the kind of nonsense that giuliani spent months sowing and perhaps the most recent eye-popping example of this is a scoop that my colleagues got, which is that marjorie taylor greene brought in an enormous fund-raising haul after being kicked off of her committ
also joining us, eddie glaude, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton universitylly a civil debate, i won't call it a war because there are many more foot soldiers on the disinformation side but it's a debate happening on the right. amanda carpenter worked for ted cruz. max boot has a scathing op-ed out in the "washington post" calling out republicans as being more committed to disenfranchising voters than enacting sensible gun reform. the attacks are most...
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reportedly plans to hike the capital gains tax to 43.4% let's bring in alan blinder, professor at princeton universityo see you, alan >> nice to be here >> the president, the treasury secretary, the federal reserve chair, they have all been telling us how fragile avenue i place we are in in this economy, how we are not out of the woods yet on covid-19. is now really the time to do this >> well, we're not out of the woods now, but we're moving out of the woods i mean, the economy's looking very strong. i don't want to quite say it's firing on all cylinders because we still have covid problems and i think the biggest risk in the outlook is that covid could get worse. it doesn't look like that's going to happen. it looks like it's getting better, at least in the united states but if you want to pick a risk, i would pick that one. but you know, popular forecasts for gdp growth this year, so fourth quarter, fourth quarter for 2021, are running 6%, 7% some people are higher than that that's quite powerful momentum that we have right now so yes and especially if i was secretary of the treasury or chairman of
reportedly plans to hike the capital gains tax to 43.4% let's bring in alan blinder, professor at princeton universityo see you, alan >> nice to be here >> the president, the treasury secretary, the federal reserve chair, they have all been telling us how fragile avenue i place we are in in this economy, how we are not out of the woods yet on covid-19. is now really the time to do this >> well, we're not out of the woods now, but we're moving out of the woods i mean, the...
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Apr 19, 2021
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official and eddie glaude is back, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton university and msnbc contributor. i want to start with you, paul butler, on this fight between the lawyers while the jury was still in the room about stories. and it has such an echo to what is rotting our politics right now, but it was a fight in a legal context about the defense, at least, interpreted it as denigrating the things they were saying in their closing arguments, basically saying, you can't call it a story. what the prosecution said so powerfully is verdict means truth and there's only one truth. there are not two sides to this case. there's one. >> that's right, nicole, so the prosecution focused on the facts and its closing statement was not flashy, but it was forceful and effective at summarizing weeks of testimony into a coherent story for the jury. and prosecutors are allowed to characterize the evidence, including in ways that the defense may not agree with. so i think the judge made the appropriate ruling here if prosecutors or defense don't like what the other person says, t
official and eddie glaude is back, chair of the department of african-american studies at princeton university and msnbc contributor. i want to start with you, paul butler, on this fight between the lawyers while the jury was still in the room about stories. and it has such an echo to what is rotting our politics right now, but it was a fight in a legal context about the defense, at least, interpreted it as denigrating the things they were saying in their closing arguments, basically saying,...
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Apr 20, 2021
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a native of new jersey, she graduated from princeton university, earned a masters in public policy from georgetown, and embarked on it in impressive prayer in federal health policy. to say that she understands the u.s. health care system would be an understatement. over the course of more than two decades, she has ms a deep knowledge of federal policy and the role that programs like medicare, medicaid, and the affordable care act play in the life of consumers especially those from low income beauties and committees of color. cms is sure to benefit from her expect -- extensive experience. from early days according policy and budget and management to her work with the house ways and means committee passing signature legislation the formal care act to her service as director of coverage policy as a department of health and human services as well as deputy director for policy for the center of oversight. most recently in the private sector, she assured work helping clients in the health care space navigate regulatory issues often involving medicaid and medicare. simply put, her current dent
a native of new jersey, she graduated from princeton university, earned a masters in public policy from georgetown, and embarked on it in impressive prayer in federal health policy. to say that she understands the u.s. health care system would be an understatement. over the course of more than two decades, she has ms a deep knowledge of federal policy and the role that programs like medicare, medicaid, and the affordable care act play in the life of consumers especially those from low income...