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Aug 18, 2009
08/09
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iran and the internal probms we have o the country, there is some interrence of other countries, from feign countries, not from ira that pushed the iranians to hold these demonstrations a the stris and all these things. i suppe there i some part interfering with iran. in the meantime, however, until iran, i say to iran, i you complain of the interventions against the forces of iran i will say to you, don't interfe with the home affairs of other arab countries. like lanon,ike hamas and hers. since you complain of this external or foign interferenceso don't do i wi other countries. >> charlie: there is this idea in ts region, the middle ea and the gul that egypt and iran are competi to be the dominantegional force. egypt, iran. >> first, i would not compare ourselves toran. iran is not an arab country to start with. >> chlie: in the regn. >> so in the arab countries, they are trng, they are attempting. but our eort is known. they are tryg to dominate certain arabs but th will n succeed in this. we are capable, we are not competing th them and our role is well-known in the region. hover
iran and the internal probms we have o the country, there is some interrence of other countries, from feign countries, not from ira that pushed the iranians to hold these demonstrations a the stris and all these things. i suppe there i some part interfering with iran. in the meantime, however, until iran, i say to iran, i you complain of the interventions against the forces of iran i will say to you, don't interfe with the home affairs of other arab countries. like lanon,ike hamas and hers....
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2.2K
Aug 13, 2009
08/09
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the probm is we have a vast amountf debt in our banking system. the governnt knows this, and in my cases is directly supporting this de while regulatory bodies, sucas fasb have aowed banks to over-value it. insolveninstitutions should be allowed to fail. banks ould be required to value their assets at realisc prices. but cause we have postponed reality for so long, it is doubtful we have theerve to face it now. >> suzanne: that's "ghtly business rort" for thursday, august 13. i'm sunne pratt odnight, everyone and good night to you paul. >> paul: goodnig, suzanne. i'm paul kangas wishing all you the best of od buys. "nightly business report" made possiblby: th program was made possible by contributionso your pbs station from vwers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by wpbt ptioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.or
the probm is we have a vast amountf debt in our banking system. the governnt knows this, and in my cases is directly supporting this de while regulatory bodies, sucas fasb have aowed banks to over-value it. insolveninstitutions should be allowed to fail. banks ould be required to value their assets at realisc prices. but cause we have postponed reality for so long, it is doubtful we have theerve to face it now. >> suzanne: that's "ghtly business rort" for thursday, august 13....
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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rose: some have suggesd for wile there, maybe still, you had a probm with crashing because there s so much usage. >> we did we had aterrible first year and a half, actuay where the site wentown a lot and was ow a lot and itook us a long time to getut of that. it almost killed us, i think >> rose: let's talk abt the company as business. it is reported know i'm unlikely to get anywhere on this. facebook wanted tbuy you r anywhere between $300 and $500 million, a, s there an offer from facebook. >> we talked to facebo, yeah. >> rose: and is this valuation in the balark? >> i can'tomment onhe valuation. >> rose: why did you me theecisionnot to sell? >> well we thought about it carefully. and i n't say, you know, offers are in various forms of seriousnessnd who know appromates if, you know, ey would have done it. but our analysis was carefully coidered. we're forepfit company. we have outside investors that have toook at these deals. but i never ft like it s the best thing fo twter. it really, it just sms way too early. we have alot of momenm. there's - thers tons of resi we don't make mon
rose: some have suggesd for wile there, maybe still, you had a probm with crashing because there s so much usage. >> we did we had aterrible first year and a half, actuay where the site wentown a lot and was ow a lot and itook us a long time to getut of that. it almost killed us, i think >> rose: let's talk abt the company as business. it is reported know i'm unlikely to get anywhere on this. facebook wanted tbuy you r anywhere between $300 and $500 million, a, s there an offer from...
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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. >> because hunr gatherer societie, you've got 30, 40 people,t's not that much of a probm keeping peoplein le really. religion was about morehat ience is about today, which is guring out how the world works in particular whyatastrophes stri and trying to figure out how to increase the number o successeand decrease the nuer of catastrophes and the eories they came up with were okay, outhere there are these beings we can't see and they're like humans. if they do something bad to you, they're mad you. you must havdone something to offend them. that lodge sick theain thing rly religion is about. and as tim goes on a society getue ties and states, religion changes in t character of god changes. it becomes more abo morality and good. >> rose: when did that happen? >>efore the god of israel rael. one themis that there's more ntinuity between prison israel looits religion and israelite religion. everyone wants to say their relion is special. we have this revolion and then erything changed. i y to show it's an olutionary path. ere are gods that are much about goodness. >>rose: does this book have
. >> because hunr gatherer societie, you've got 30, 40 people,t's not that much of a probm keeping peoplein le really. religion was about morehat ience is about today, which is guring out how the world works in particular whyatastrophes stri and trying to figure out how to increase the number o successeand decrease the nuer of catastrophes and the eories they came up with were okay, outhere there are these beings we can't see and they're like humans. if they do something bad to you,...
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Aug 15, 2009
08/09
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so we have our probms, too. pete: th statements ominated the cerage of her trip back he. overshadowing t reason she was there. you ju returned, janine. did it feel at way for you overhere? did these comments ovrshadow what she was up to? >> ithink it ju overshaded the things her. bureally over there people were ver focused on her trip there. i think that theommentators here got cfused and thought it was the califrnia primary instead of te congo and there was all these poitics going on. but reay, they stayed on meage. and to give little bit of the setti for that commenabout bill clnton, we were -- it was 100 degrees in in a roo and getting hostile questis from the audience. and more stile than anywhere el on the trip. and the student ked her about a chinese lo and said wha does mr. clint think through the mouth of mrs.clinton? and she was offended by it an thght it was condescending and her feminism spoke o. but because bil clinton landed in north korea a we lande in keny and eclipsed s in h beginning that verybody seized on this thatshe's mad at bill. but that's all it wa
so we have our probms, too. pete: th statements ominated the cerage of her trip back he. overshadowing t reason she was there. you ju returned, janine. did it feel at way for you overhere? did these comments ovrshadow what she was up to? >> ithink it ju overshaded the things her. bureally over there people were ver focused on her trip there. i think that theommentators here got cfused and thought it was the califrnia primary instead of te congo and there was all these poitics going on....
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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theselections certainly gives the incoming government a strong mandate to tack the country's many probms. among them aapidly aging populati and record unemoyment. >>> some more on yesterday' historic election andow it willffect japan's relations withhe united stes and beyond. we're joined by a man who followed the american/japanese relaonship closely. kenji kono is a washington bure chief at the japanese television network nhk and he joinus from washington. hello to you. let me start by asking you, the incoming prime minister go his ctorate inngineering at stanford university. so he obviouslynows a lot somethg about the united states. is there going tobe a ske-up of the stus quo when it comes to american/japase relations? >> i thk there will be i the end. you expectome kind of new dynamism betwn the two countries. but i don't think it will come ry soon. rst of all, the united stas andlso this new government th called the u.s./japan alliance the cornerstone for st asian peace d security. t the new democratic party in japan wted to have -called equal standing, equal relions. andhis phrase
theselections certainly gives the incoming government a strong mandate to tack the country's many probms. among them aapidly aging populati and record unemoyment. >>> some more on yesterday' historic election andow it willffect japan's relations withhe united stes and beyond. we're joined by a man who followed the american/japanese relaonship closely. kenji kono is a washington bure chief at the japanese television network nhk and he joinus from washington. hello to you. let me start...
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Aug 29, 2009
08/09
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millions of ople are uninsure and sure, that part of the probm. but that's not the wle problem. the whole problem is bigr than that. >> i am on top here. any problem up there? any problem in the back? there arjust not enough resources outhere for, not on your uninsured patients, but also your insured tients. insud patients have a problem also because tir doctors, when they call their office andays, "i need see... we can't see you for three weeks." "well, wt am i going to do for three wes?" >> open your mouth health care costs keep goi up, up and uand up. t the access seems to be goi do, down, down, down. all ght. you need anything for pain right now? you do? okay, we'll get u something all right? we've got to run some tests d we'll be back. >> okay, thank you. i'm just glad, y know, that there's a place to come to, u know. i mean, dyinis not no big deal me, but you know, people ha to go throh a lot before they get there. >> when i was a nancial journalist at "barrens," i wte manytories about health care. and what i learned was tt much of what we think we know aut heal care isn't
millions of ople are uninsure and sure, that part of the probm. but that's not the wle problem. the whole problem is bigr than that. >> i am on top here. any problem up there? any problem in the back? there arjust not enough resources outhere for, not on your uninsured patients, but also your insured tients. insud patients have a problem also because tir doctors, when they call their office andays, "i need see... we can't see you for three weeks." "well, wt am i going to do...
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Aug 22, 2009
08/09
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>> that is the probm. there artoo many movin parts. i's like the hum back. most people have back pblems, and mrobama has ba problems beuse there is the question of controingosts, who do you cover, the devery of services. th is the pblem. of course, these are all real problems. but it is just too ha to explain. there isot a single thing. what i don't unrstand is th nazi analogies,people showg up with hitlerustache is pnted on presideobama. peop showing up with loaded weapons. at presidential four run how do they t away with that? >> that a provocative act and act of intimidationnd has no place in pitics. maybe ey are trying tsay that the second amendmt is a viable a that they are emphasizing their right to the second amendment. this isgoing to have political discourse. it ialso potentially very dangerous. >> i wan to say something about this. during t bush administratn, there wereots of people pushed away from rlies because they haa john kerry button maybe not even displayed. little old ladies wer the administration would alys say it is theecret service. now
>> that is the probm. there artoo many movin parts. i's like the hum back. most people have back pblems, and mrobama has ba problems beuse there is the question of controingosts, who do you cover, the devery of services. th is the pblem. of course, these are all real problems. but it is just too ha to explain. there isot a single thing. what i don't unrstand is th nazi analogies,people showg up with hitlerustache is pnted on presideobama. peop showing up with loaded weapons. at...
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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man is certainly responble for probms farming now so tensively that vast partsf the country arfull of plants but not any plants that are any good to bees or insts because there are not flowers. >>eporter: their numbers y be dwindlg across the country but there isoneerhaps surising place where bees are thving, and that's lonn. colonies like thisne have been springg up across t city's rotops. these beehives are on top of the department store in pickly and the honey made by its bees is then sold in the sp. for more and me londoners, te declining numbs are deciding keep bees. lison and brian started four years ago. their hive is the garden continue can host up to 50,0 bees and they l seem to be dog well. >> the's more variety for the bees to eat in the city. so you have the rks, you ha the railwaysidings, you have peop's gardens, you hve the treeshe road. where the countryside you might just ha fieldf oil seed rape or othercrops, and they sayhat hey in the city just tastes much, much nicer than honey from the couryside. >> reporr: it'easy to forget th bees don just make honey. they're res
man is certainly responble for probms farming now so tensively that vast partsf the country arfull of plants but not any plants that are any good to bees or insts because there are not flowers. >>eporter: their numbers y be dwindlg across the country but there isoneerhaps surising place where bees are thving, and that's lonn. colonies like thisne have been springg up across t city's rotops. these beehives are on top of the department store in pickly and the honey made by its bees is then...
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414
Aug 23, 2009
08/09
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out bind your stained glass ndows and come ouhere and help people, because if you don't, alof those probms are going to end up, and ey are ending up, on youroorstep. >> reporte they've heard promises ofelp before, promises often notept. now it's the mo trusted men and women in the ighborhood who areffering hope. >> if we lock arms, ife ntinue to move and work together, will improve the communities whe we live, work, and worsh. i came byere to tell you to stand your feet, because we gonna be morbetter. let's gi god some praise. >> reporter: so far, t old lio have passed the mantle to about 400 youngepastors who sem determined to do what authorities he been unable to do without them. for "religion & eths neweekly," i'm lucky severson in soh central los angeles. >> pr: on our lendar awe mentioned earlier, muims are observing rhamad and hindus are celebrating ganesh chatuhi, which commemorates the birthday ofhe popular deity, rd ganesha. believermark the t-day festival by offering prars and delicacies to the god wi the head of an elephant. the final day of celebratio a statue olord ganesha is
out bind your stained glass ndows and come ouhere and help people, because if you don't, alof those probms are going to end up, and ey are ending up, on youroorstep. >> reporte they've heard promises ofelp before, promises often notept. now it's the mo trusted men and women in the ighborhood who areffering hope. >> if we lock arms, ife ntinue to move and work together, will improve the communities whe we live, work, and worsh. i came byere to tell you to stand your feet, because we...
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Aug 30, 2009
08/09
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WRC
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thatoeup, soo vital communicatnsor this entir regi, and at's not thenly probm tonight. for ve dayshe la cana fire has ravagouther california. toweng flame haveipped acro me than 3000 acres d counti. but it was ovnight wnhe aze tookturn, sdenly exploding, triing in size. the infernfeedon acre after acre of bone dry bus refighrs callthe perfect stor today thgovernor cled an emerncy. >> this fe is sll totally t of contro reporte with the fir line retching 11 mileslong, nearly 2,0 firefigersre on the ound ey make a sta where the n, but much the attac mesro their. arly 2,00 ppleave been forced to evacuate. more tha12,0 homes are reatened. thew strucres lost, the damage has beeninal, buthe threats not. >> wre jt ting too the last ltle bit that we can do. >> repter: chip was told t evacuate satday. he w'teaveye >> when y see the flames closer tn they re bore a they're just a of a sudde there, then you srt -- y look at yourxi and you ink, at if ttappens where my exits. reporr: as eight mor wildfisurn acrs liforn, e laanadfire pose t most danger trle dig temperare and air qualit
thatoeup, soo vital communicatnsor this entir regi, and at's not thenly probm tonight. for ve dayshe la cana fire has ravagouther california. toweng flame haveipped acro me than 3000 acres d counti. but it was ovnight wnhe aze tookturn, sdenly exploding, triing in size. the infernfeedon acre after acre of bone dry bus refighrs callthe perfect stor today thgovernor cled an emerncy. >> this fe is sll totally t of contro reporte with the fir line retching 11 mileslong, nearly 2,0...
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Aug 28, 2009
08/09
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but we can't solve a the river's probms with all the peop, all the growth, all the other animalon thehicken and the poultry rmers. i'll be the first one to sa i d it. i'veaid this before: we're all part of it. and, yes, i think agculture is a big contributor to the pollution, tthe run... the runo into the chesapeake bay. the industry kno it. buwhat i am tired of is eryone wasting all their tim and engy in saying, "i didn't do it." i did it why can'they admit it? i mean, you knowlet's all say, "oy, we're a part of it." now, let's find an answeú& >> all in favor of adopting e committereport signify by saying, "aye." aye. >> opposed, no. >>mith: but finding an answer has en politically impossible. >>..178 is on thirreading. >> smith: inhe late 1990s, a bill went bere the maryland legislature to requireandatory nutrient management by farrs to curb runoff from chicke mare. big chken didn't like that idea at all. >> i think the survival pouly industry is at stake on the eastn shore. >> smith: thpoultry industry, among the most finanally poweul lobbies in maryland, pushed for a looser altern
but we can't solve a the river's probms with all the peop, all the growth, all the other animalon thehicken and the poultry rmers. i'll be the first one to sa i d it. i'veaid this before: we're all part of it. and, yes, i think agculture is a big contributor to the pollution, tthe run... the runo into the chesapeake bay. the industry kno it. buwhat i am tired of is eryone wasting all their tim and engy in saying, "i didn't do it." i did it why can'they admit it? i mean, you knowlet's...
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Aug 2, 2009
08/09
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. >> bob: that was his big probm going back on a ball in cenr field. if he fancies himself a cenr fielder, he has to make that adjustment to left. >> rob: how about fancy yoursf as a big leaguer? he has shown me nothing defensively to show me that he belongs up here. >> bob: alberto gonzalez has on rbi today on a ground back bak in the 2nd with runners at first and third. he could endear himself to hi hitting coach, his manager, teammates and get on the rod back with a rbi hit here. >> rob: and this broadcast te. time for a hit. >> bob: i don't enjoy sitti here talking about somebody being poor for 46. >> rob: i know you don't. >> bob: sosa called up afte friday night's game. throwing the ball well when was called up. that inside breaking ball is killing alberto. >> rob: the 2-0 hitter's pi, he takes a swing to hit a h run, instead of hitting it up the middle. you heard from ryan, you might get one good pitch at-bat to wail on, but other than tha, you
. >> bob: that was his big probm going back on a ball in cenr field. if he fancies himself a cenr fielder, he has to make that adjustment to left. >> rob: how about fancy yoursf as a big leaguer? he has shown me nothing defensively to show me that he belongs up here. >> bob: alberto gonzalez has on rbi today on a ground back bak in the 2nd with runners at first and third. he could endear himself to hi hitting coach, his manager,...
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637
Aug 14, 2009
08/09
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the probm between the snnis and the shiite-dinated governme. ere's a lot of iernal problem an they haven't en passed an oil law itself. >> but you ued the word "internal problem." >> buthey're not iternal problems ithe sense tha this is not a pla that's easy to walk away fro had is the middle flooecht's oil here the's strategic neighborhos around there thers saudi arabia, there's kuwait. a big, big challenge itselfp. and there, has been progress ma but i don't tnk they're tendintheir guard adequately. one of the reasons thathe civil waracked off is becse th cut a deal whthe sui awakening cosels. they're not tending tm. >> whore not teing them, the iraqgovernment. >> t maliki gornment isn't buu.s. is the big dender of the sunnis that the point. sunni extremistsho basically lost their base supporrs p and trying to geon iniatives, atta back and provoekt soonis again and unless the shii-dominate government tend thesunnis. yo have a really serious problem that it could reigte. >> do you awthat deption? >> everythg that carla saids true but it doesn'
the probm between the snnis and the shiite-dinated governme. ere's a lot of iernal problem an they haven't en passed an oil law itself. >> but you ued the word "internal problem." >> buthey're not iternal problems ithe sense tha this is not a pla that's easy to walk away fro had is the middle flooecht's oil here the's strategic neighborhos around there thers saudi arabia, there's kuwait. a big, big challenge itselfp. and there, has been progress ma but i don't tnk they're...
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Aug 25, 2009
08/09
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WRC
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the elecon's dispute is the latest of a growing number of probms. violence is on the rise. the taliban has stronghold in about half the country. and even analysts here are starting to say the u.s. is getting deeper in what could be an unwinnable war. and that war erupted in kandahar this evening where at least five car bombs went off at once killing at least 41 people and wounding over 60 in a neighborhood that houses many ntractors.nal aid workers and just hoursarlier four u.s. troops were killedy a roadside bomb making 2009 the deadliest year yet for american forces here. as afghanistan is now at a new low, with a deadly mix of litical uncertainty and increasingly aggressive enemy. richard engel, nbc news, kabul. >>> back in this country, we now know the obama administration will be investigating the interrogation techniques used by the bush administration including torture. federal prosecutor has been named and a fight is now under way er it al our own andrea mitchelhas the very latest om our washington newsroom. andrea, good evening. >> good evening, brian. did those co
the elecon's dispute is the latest of a growing number of probms. violence is on the rise. the taliban has stronghold in about half the country. and even analysts here are starting to say the u.s. is getting deeper in what could be an unwinnable war. and that war erupted in kandahar this evening where at least five car bombs went off at once killing at least 41 people and wounding over 60 in a neighborhood that houses many ntractors.nal aid workers and just hoursarlier four u.s. troops were...
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Aug 7, 2009
08/09
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we'll tell what you caused big probms for facebook and twitter yesterday. falling apart for some people. but it's fixed. >>> hollywood is mourning the loss of legendary film director yop hughes. he died yesteday of a heart attack. he is best known no the movies sixteen candles, the breakfast club. he also wrote the scene play for home alone. he was 59 years old. >> this as liz our producer is showing off right now, he was responsible for great sound tracks in those '80s films. >> it was really for people who are my age, i think he was the -- i guess real lit film maker of myling coming of age time. in the '80s. >> he definite hi shapeed a generation i think. >> when the news popped up, i was surprised. i was stunned and a little bit sad. i mean this is a name that has been floating around there to 0 years or so. these folks -- it is just very sad. we are losing a lot of people it seems this year. a lot of them in their 50s which is disturbing to me. >> i was waiting for the personal aspect coming. >> but it is sad. >> shaped generation. oka
we'll tell what you caused big probms for facebook and twitter yesterday. falling apart for some people. but it's fixed. >>> hollywood is mourning the loss of legendary film director yop hughes. he died yesteday of a heart attack. he is best known no the movies sixteen candles, the breakfast club. he also wrote the scene play for home alone. he was 59 years old. >> this as liz our producer is showing off right now, he was responsible for great sound tracks in...
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Aug 31, 2009
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everything we see points to pugesound being a hot spot for pcbs and a persistent probm.tamination of animals. we've seen no provement in the levels of pcbs in thlast 20- odd years, despite rulations implented in the 1970s. and th, to me, indicates there are coinuous inputs from land- bad sources, from the sediments, and deliverg them right into that food web smith: one big reason pcbs are a rsistent problem is that it takes so long to cln up places likthe duwamish river, seattle's industri corridor. some of seate's heaviest industry settled herdecades ago, and today, it's the region's large hot spot for pcbs. >> my name is b.j.ummings, i represt the duwamish river eanup coalition. >> smith: j. cummings leads urs of the river, but this isn't your typical toust outing. it's an envinmental wakeup call. >> the epa did an investigion here oduwamish river about ten years ago, and concled that industrial hisry here had left hind such a legacy of toxic pollution that the riv was declared a feder superfund site in 2001. >> smith: superfund is onef epa's big stks. it was the regul
everything we see points to pugesound being a hot spot for pcbs and a persistent probm.tamination of animals. we've seen no provement in the levels of pcbs in thlast 20- odd years, despite rulations implented in the 1970s. and th, to me, indicates there are coinuous inputs from land- bad sources, from the sediments, and deliverg them right into that food web smith: one big reason pcbs are a rsistent problem is that it takes so long to cln up places likthe duwamish river, seattle's industri...
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Aug 15, 2009
08/09
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howid freeman dyson, libal intellectual, probm solver wind up iuriating the enronmentalists? we'll ask that and more. i'pleased to have freema dyson backt thisable. welcome. >> tnk you. >>ose: i'llet to this in a moment but you really stirred them uwhen you talk abo glal warming, don't you. >> so, th article, of cose, is totally misleadin glal warmg is a very smaller part of my concern. the auor is a very fine writer. >> rose: he is, indeed. but it isostly fiction rather than ft. >> rose:ow can a very fine writer write fiction rather than fact. >> he had his agenda which sn't mine. >> rose: what was his agenda? >> his agenda was to write a piece about globa warming. >> rose: right. >> he told me he was going to a profile of m, and it was-- he isted it into a story about global warming, which is really-- i don claim to be an expert on that subject. i'm not activis and i certainly am not an appropriate persono be a political acvist. so it gave, i think oth a very misleading view. however, i mean theictures arbeautiful, and so i can compin. ( laughter ) rose: it like your tie. y
howid freeman dyson, libal intellectual, probm solver wind up iuriating the enronmentalists? we'll ask that and more. i'pleased to have freema dyson backt thisable. welcome. >> tnk you. >>ose: i'llet to this in a moment but you really stirred them uwhen you talk abo glal warming, don't you. >> so, th article, of cose, is totally misleadin glal warmg is a very smaller part of my concern. the auor is a very fine writer. >> rose: he is, indeed. but it isostly fiction rather...
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Aug 19, 2009
08/09
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. >> rose: savinhas not been a probm. >> saving is n aroblem. (laughs) but, you know.... >> rose:pending has been the problem. >> youant people to spend more. so you wt peopleto sort of.... rose: spending w o problem. (laughs) saving was our problem,spending was our... >> now savg here sin creasing. >> rose: exactly. so there's all kinds of speculation. everybody talks about thi relationsh between the united states and china where you export, we import. you save we spend. we jus.. everything works out fine. when you are a lender and we are a borrower. that's been the classic relationshiphat has made your economy gw and enabled us to have a take care of a current counts deficit. at's thereality. will that change? >> i think it wl change because obviously the growth model here will change. the amnt of consumption will nobe out there. people will save more. if is happening and it will continue, i think. but the fundamental queion here, i think, is the development sue. so we need to pay more attention to the developme issue. development forll the de
. >> rose: savinhas not been a probm. >> saving is n aroblem. (laughs) but, you know.... >> rose:pending has been the problem. >> youant people to spend more. so you wt peopleto sort of.... rose: spending w o problem. (laughs) saving was our problem,spending was our... >> now savg here sin creasing. >> rose: exactly. so there's all kinds of speculation. everybody talks about thi relationsh between the united states and china where you export, we import. you...
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Aug 30, 2009
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>> wow, that's a big probm.d i'm sure probably others o you have h the same problem i would gather in your ses, am i right? yeah. well, i just think you have to work -- start with your professor. try to work with him. then go to the chairman of the department. then go to the dean. then if that doesn work, try to figure out -- you might be lucky. there might perhaps be some alumnists on e board of trustees, probably a recognizable conservative that you could go to and also to try to get not only yourself but other students maybe to sign a petition in whic you're saying here are some books that we think ought to be added, some of the things we talked about here this morning to the reang list and just keep at it and be as politely aggressive as you can be. >> what i'd say is -- i don't really think our goal -- i mean, in politics and economics, it's a little different but in the humanities and particularly in all kinds of literature, i don't really think our goals should be to get more conservative books on the rea
>> wow, that's a big probm.d i'm sure probably others o you have h the same problem i would gather in your ses, am i right? yeah. well, i just think you have to work -- start with your professor. try to work with him. then go to the chairman of the department. then go to the dean. then if that doesn work, try to figure out -- you might be lucky. there might perhaps be some alumnists on e board of trustees, probably a recognizable conservative that you could go to and also to try to get...
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Aug 13, 2009
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silly what americans face is a probm is theyon't ve the guarantee of good health care they ca afford.the out of five personal bankrtcies in this country are because of medical costs and most of those pple have insurance, bu the insurance is't there had they need it because if th get seriously illt stops pang. did you know that premis in the last decade have gone up four tis as fast as wages, people can't afford to get ealth coverage. so we are ts tremends sense of insecurity, and what peple need us a guantee of good aforable coverage a work. or if ey're not at wo, to have cverage too. we're talking about sang to america, you ha good coverage that u can afford. >> woodruff:and provide that how? >> very simply. what t reforms are, two things. ifyou're at work, your employer is going to ctinue to provide coverage at work, or, and the covage is going to be good, ther will be to be a specified setof good benefs, and if you don't ha coverage at work, you' go into a warketplace where you'll have guanteed coverage, affordable. >> this sounds great, i have tomorrow tell you you're warming my h
silly what americans face is a probm is theyon't ve the guarantee of good health care they ca afford.the out of five personal bankrtcies in this country are because of medical costs and most of those pple have insurance, bu the insurance is't there had they need it because if th get seriously illt stops pang. did you know that premis in the last decade have gone up four tis as fast as wages, people can't afford to get ealth coverage. so we are ts tremends sense of insecurity, and what peple...
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Aug 6, 2009
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so thiis a bigumanitarian probm. it's also a big security problem a what hillary clinto was saying w that the u.s. willo its best to supporthe traitional federal government in both these areas. >> warne i know you're not in somalia, you're in naiobi, but from what you understd who has the momenm in at least the militaryonflict part of this struggle goingn in mogishu and elsewhere in somia? >> well, since early may al shabab has loed like it's had he upper ha. although inthe last few weeks, the rican union peacekeepers have been rather more forceful in their defen of the trantional federal government. this 4,300 odd strong contingent of uganda and burundan peacekeepers who are the to supposedly ep the peace but to defend e transitional federal gornment. now, wh we've seen in the last few weeks is it's like shing bac on al shabab andnow we hava real state mil situation in madishu. but if we lookt the kind of control that president sharif's govement actually has, it's very limited, indeed. at the mome, they do have cont
so thiis a bigumanitarian probm. it's also a big security problem a what hillary clinto was saying w that the u.s. willo its best to supporthe traitional federal government in both these areas. >> warne i know you're not in somalia, you're in naiobi, but from what you understd who has the momenm in at least the militaryonflict part of this struggle goingn in mogishu and elsewhere in somia? >> well, since early may al shabab has loed like it's had he upper ha. although inthe last few...
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Aug 6, 2009
08/09
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don't e directl afcting them getting a job, and indiana or ohio or whatever, i think that causes more probms. but alsoarack obama is limited by what happened over the past eight years. george. bush and the republicancochran t debt up about $11 trillion. barack obama's fit budget was very expensive. it doubled the debt. his projections, and americans just aren't ready to go tt far. >> rose: the book "restong conservatism and arica's promise" basically is an indictment of the bush adnistration. >> well, yh. i mean.... rose: they got away from main street conservism. >>it's an indictmen of republicanm. it'sn indictment of people being more interested in keeping the reblican party in power than doing wt they said th we going to do whenhey got to washington. i mean, got elected in994 by saying "we're going to show restrain wee going to show rtraint in spending. we're going to try to balae the budget. >> rose: contract th america. >> rht. we were gointo show restraint in forei policy. we weren't going to eage in military adventurism, we were going to try to rei in the growth of entitment proams. w
don't e directl afcting them getting a job, and indiana or ohio or whatever, i think that causes more probms. but alsoarack obama is limited by what happened over the past eight years. george. bush and the republicancochran t debt up about $11 trillion. barack obama's fit budget was very expensive. it doubled the debt. his projections, and americans just aren't ready to go tt far. >> rose: the book "restong conservatism and arica's promise" basically is an indictment of the bush...
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Aug 20, 2009
08/09
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tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, probms passing urine or an enlarged prostate, as these may worsen spiriva. also discuss the medicines you take, even eye drops. side effects may include dry mouth, constipation and trouble ssing urine. every day could be a good day to breathe better. announcer: ask your doctor if once-daily spiriva is right for you. ock ♪ so i could hear myself myseas a ringtone ♪hone ♪ ♪ who knew the store would go and check my credit score ♪ ♪ now all they let me have is this dinosaur ♪ ♪ hello hello hello can anybody hear me? ♪ ♪ i know i know i know i shoulda gone to ♪ ♪ free credit report dot com! ♪ that's where i shoulda gone! coulda got my knowledge on! ♪ ♪ vo: free credit score and report with enrollment in triple advantage. >>> it is time for today's face-off. president obama's claimed that reforming health care is, quote, a moral obligation. >> monica, the president held a conference call with religious leaders this week to plead with them to use their influence to help sell his plan for reform. >> i know there's been a lot of misinformation in this debate
tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, probms passing urine or an enlarged prostate, as these may worsen spiriva. also discuss the medicines you take, even eye drops. side effects may include dry mouth, constipation and trouble ssing urine. every day could be a good day to breathe better. announcer: ask your doctor if once-daily spiriva is right for you. ock ♪ so i could hear myself myseas a ringtone ♪hone ♪ ♪ who knew the store would go and check my credit score ♪ ♪ now all they...
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Aug 11, 2009
08/09
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. >> yes, it's true andhe probm with the reset metaphor, theidea of pushing areset button is it's implicaonhate excesses and madness and sfunction in our complex econic systems can be fixedasily. right. and americans, another american trait i think is beeving in wishing for sh the button, ey solutions. and this isn't going to be easy. and as y look at the heal-care bill and everything elsgoing through washingt these last month you see, i is a sausage maki factory. and i can talk about how wonderful it is that we now have this opportunit to reset but seeing it actually done is a slow, ugly process. but i am hopeful that by the d of it we're going to be in a better pce than we were before. >> rose: tell me aut the sear sucker. >> wel charlesie, it's -- it a sear sucker suit and when it's hot as is tay in new york city. >> rose: with thhorn rim glasses and the sear sucker it, you look like you cod play right out of any movie uthern lawyer. >> oh, really. >> rose: or soutrn law professor. >> i will take that as a compliment. >>ose: who does something interesting apt from teaching conitutional law.
. >> yes, it's true andhe probm with the reset metaphor, theidea of pushing areset button is it's implicaonhate excesses and madness and sfunction in our complex econic systems can be fixedasily. right. and americans, another american trait i think is beeving in wishing for sh the button, ey solutions. and this isn't going to be easy. and as y look at the heal-care bill and everything elsgoing through washingt these last month you see, i is a sausage maki factory. and i can talk about how...
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Aug 7, 2009
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and t william and flora hewlett foundation, working solve social andnvironmental probms at home and aroundhe world. and with the ongoing suppo of these institions and foundatis. and. this program was made psible by the corration for publicroadcasting. and by ntributions to your pbs station from viewers le you. thank you. ptioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer produions captioned by media access gup at wgbh acss.wgbh.org >> thank you for joinings for another evening of "the newshour witjim lehrer." i'm ul anthony here with pbs' president and chief ecutive officer, paula kerger. we're here t encourage you to calls now with your contribution to weta in support of the "newsho." now you always know that when you tune in to the "newshour yoll receive your news in an inteigent and rpectful way ande're proud to produce the very best news in public affairs programs right here at weta. but to do this, we need member suppor and it's critical. and you could become a member by dialg 888-202-2777. >> hello, i jim lehrer. for more than 30ears public television viewers like youave found the "wshour" right h
and t william and flora hewlett foundation, working solve social andnvironmental probms at home and aroundhe world. and with the ongoing suppo of these institions and foundatis. and. this program was made psible by the corration for publicroadcasting. and by ntributions to your pbs station from viewers le you. thank you. ptioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer produions captioned by media access gup at wgbh acss.wgbh.org >> thank you for joinings for another evening of "the newshour...
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Aug 31, 2009
08/09
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the probm with this is, if the like these been doing what you love is entirely different and putting yourself out to bid to the highest bidder, the only wa you can say thatakes the difference is to save the life makes the difference and i fnd this out myself. i worked on wall street for 16 years and as most of you know i am sure that is the lrave field to be in. i happen to be in it a good time, but after 16 years i have grown bored with the industry. i love the financial markets. i will never get tired of the financial rks but that is not what your job is. your job is to have conversations with their clients about their accounts day after day and it had gotten tds to me. i started thinking about leaving and when i talked to my colleagues they thought i absolutely lost my mind. one fellog came up to me and he goes, green, nobody gets t where you are in this busess with all of these clients and all these assets and all these these coming in and then just walks away. if you leave you are going to regret it for the rest of your life but i did leave and they didn't regret it for one minu
the probm with this is, if the like these been doing what you love is entirely different and putting yourself out to bid to the highest bidder, the only wa you can say thatakes the difference is to save the life makes the difference and i fnd this out myself. i worked on wall street for 16 years and as most of you know i am sure that is the lrave field to be in. i happen to be in it a good time, but after 16 years i have grown bored with the industry. i love the financial markets. i will never...
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602
Aug 1, 2009
08/09
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i think well, isn't that the point o the movie that in the starting, at e starting gate, ts is his probm. >> rose: and uerliing it ways is itunny, and it is funny. peoplecting horribly, i don't knowfnything that, i mean that is what its, if he was- if these guys weren't xist oridn't act in an immature way what would be going on in the movie,ou know, if anice gugets airl pregnant, then we just marry her and i would have an 11 minute movie. >> rose: all right, another scene this iwhere eric who play clark speaksmandarin th his kid. >> this is really good pizza. they say like new york has e best pizza. i ways thought pizza a. was only o kok butho would ha thought marin county w really hidinghe good pizza pies. >> clark speak fluent chinese. >> really? >> you speak cantonese or mandarin. >> oh, -- >> mandarin. >> it's a bloody hard lauage, grge, gee. peaking mandarin). >> kind of lika scene from er hunter. >> mao! >> so explain that scene. well, in that part of the moe leslie's charact laura, her husba thinks that adam is still sick. but he's better and she knows that i he says she's bett he
i think well, isn't that the point o the movie that in the starting, at e starting gate, ts is his probm. >> rose: and uerliing it ways is itunny, and it is funny. peoplecting horribly, i don't knowfnything that, i mean that is what its, if he was- if these guys weren't xist oridn't act in an immature way what would be going on in the movie,ou know, if anice gugets airl pregnant, then we just marry her and i would have an 11 minute movie. >> rose: all right, another scene this...
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Aug 28, 2009
08/09
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moderating them, so let's begin with kim boboho is focused on its this that they can really shocking probm as a working labor lawyer-- southea a lot of, which is the w people ried off ismall ways in the mone they have earned them but we can do about it. cam. >> do not take advantage of a hired worker who is for a needy, whether that worker is an raite or a forgner priding ione of you towns. they them their wages each day bere sunset because they are poor and they are countinon . otherwise they may cry to the lord against youth and he will be guilty of sin. at passage from deuteronomy clearly indicates that there was some sin back thennd i'm he to say that we hav got some sin right here in tn. [lghter] wage that. so, what is it? wage that is when employers illegally don't pay workers for all their woro two to 3 miion workersre not paid the minum wage even though e law is very clear. millions of worrs are not paid overtime. in fact aonservative business estimate is that $19 billion a year is olen in unpaid overtime. then there are wke misclassifng as independent contractors when they are rea
moderating them, so let's begin with kim boboho is focused on its this that they can really shocking probm as a working labor lawyer-- southea a lot of, which is the w people ried off ismall ways in the mone they have earned them but we can do about it. cam. >> do not take advantage of a hired worker who is for a needy, whether that worker is an raite or a forgner priding ione of you towns. they them their wages each day bere sunset because they are poor and they are countinon . otherwise...
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Aug 15, 2009
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you can't solve a probm unless you agree on what u're trying to achieve.threpublicans are not the rty of equality. they're the rty of liberty and they're the party of efficiey. >> moyers: and liberty leadso inequality. >> liberty leads to ineqlity just as attemp to reduce equality lead to adoption of liberty. and it is that tradeoff thats why you ve two parties so that thcountry can come to its balae. especially in this heah care debate, we are tking a lot about efficiencies. why is themerican health system so crazy? why americans spend so much more than anybody else f outcomeshat aren't a lot beer? well, wealk about the health market. we don't have a alth market. we have 50 state markets and although there are many, many iurers, in many states there are only oner two who are acve. so what we need to do, fst of al is create a national market. i would like to see the responsibity for regulating health care moved from the states entiry and put in the hands of the fedal government. we don't regulate bankinat statlevel anymore because it doesn't make sense. th
you can't solve a probm unless you agree on what u're trying to achieve.threpublicans are not the rty of equality. they're the rty of liberty and they're the party of efficiey. >> moyers: and liberty leadso inequality. >> liberty leads to ineqlity just as attemp to reduce equality lead to adoption of liberty. and it is that tradeoff thats why you ve two parties so that thcountry can come to its balae. especially in this heah care debate, we are tking a lot about efficiencies. why is...
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Aug 27, 2009
08/09
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um... he, ... ...certainly was devoted to ethel kennedy and-and her family, but he was having probmss own. he began to try-- and tedid-- try to pick up t things that bob had repsented and even follow some of the trips that he'taken. that's what starteds all the way up to aska. rrator: as chairman of a special subcommite onndian education, a post oe held by his brotherobert, kennedled his colleagues tolaska in april, accompanied by cama crews and 25 reporrs. he did hisest to act as his brher would have aed, but it wasn't thsame. kennedy: how old is this litt girl? woman: five. ha gorey: the trip bacwas kind of a disast, especially for tdy. we all met in e bar and had a drinor two before the plane tk off. ere were further drinks on the plane. teddy got sowhat boisterous and ayful. he started throwg rolls at various ous in the press, and-and pele started throwing lls back at him. and therstarted to be a largcall ofeskimo power" up andown the aisles and a few pills being thrown and number of other things. d then it didn't seem to be controllable. here was a man who was thought of by many
um... he, ... ...certainly was devoted to ethel kennedy and-and her family, but he was having probmss own. he began to try-- and tedid-- try to pick up t things that bob had repsented and even follow some of the trips that he'taken. that's what starteds all the way up to aska. rrator: as chairman of a special subcommite onndian education, a post oe held by his brotherobert, kennedled his colleagues tolaska in april, accompanied by cama crews and 25 reporrs. he did hisest to act as his brher...
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Aug 28, 2009
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it's not an uncommon trend in russian history, but it is one that causes a lot of probms because even in the 80s we pointed out that the military political doctrine on the one hand was aery true what they called the military tactical doctrine and it was a lot of pressure on russia toeform and they did. furthermore, the government by having bought general threat assessment and in this doctrine has also recently seen the fact that the government today as it is constituted in moscow doesn't work. it is a dysfunctional state. just to giveou one example that we had a conference last year here in town where sasha go to pointed out that 30 to 50% of the defense budget was done as a minor of coarse. that's why w have why women anticorruption campaign in the government as a whole, and in the defense ministry as a whole as well. but this doctrine, apart from its postulation of foreign, is primary a doctrine to enforce bureaucraticoordination to in policy disputes and to set up this russian ideals of the power vertical, although that is what putin calls a. it is a czarist ideal of a governnt tha
it's not an uncommon trend in russian history, but it is one that causes a lot of probms because even in the 80s we pointed out that the military political doctrine on the one hand was aery true what they called the military tactical doctrine and it was a lot of pressure on russia toeform and they did. furthermore, the government by having bought general threat assessment and in this doctrine has also recently seen the fact that the government today as it is constituted in moscow doesn't work....
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Aug 27, 2009
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. >> you don't think that he wanted to run and that was the probm? >> i think that he was ambivalent through his life, he knew he had to run at some point but as one of his old advisers told me, he never called me at two in the morning and said why really want to run and no one cod recall a private conversation he expressed passion to be president. >> is that why he was so terrific once it was out of his hands and then he started the primaries, was he liberated at that point? >> there's a lot of political physics that says you are always a better when youon't have a chance anymore. michael dukakis was pretty good the last couple of weeks and that happens the time. [laughter] and i think that happened here. he said i'm going to be myself but he still got nailed a lot and he was considered by congress people and most people if they loo at a bad loser. normally the first thought he was going to get down illinois then he stayed through the end of the campaign than he wouldn't quit and he took his fight to the convention on a diaphanous idea he would get
. >> you don't think that he wanted to run and that was the probm? >> i think that he was ambivalent through his life, he knew he had to run at some point but as one of his old advisers told me, he never called me at two in the morning and said why really want to run and no one cod recall a private conversation he expressed passion to be president. >> is that why he was so terrific once it was out of his hands and then he started the primaries, was he liberated at that point?...