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Feb 8, 2017
02/17
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KSTS
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. >>> mecanismo legal para proto giro a los hijos nacidos en estados unidos no evita separara a un padreecanismo tener un pod poder, documento que muchos pueden buscar en internet o ir con un abogado para que re daboing te este documento lo firmen los pooadres y si son detenidos los niÑos van a quedar con la persona que asignÓ esta madre o este padre. >>> doctora, si uno no tiene este poder y se llevan a los padres deportados, estos hijos donde van. >>> se van aquÍ cuidado de estado y podrÍan ir en adopciÓn es un documento importante que toda persona que estÁ indocumentado tiene que hacer. >>> poder, power... >>> gracias. >>> muchas otras preguntas, sobre su futuro que la comunidad se plantea. >>> no tengo licencia, tengo un hijo ciudadano, no he cometido delitos aquÍ. cree que me puedan de por tar? >>> quÉ pasarÍa con quien sometemos un perdÓn con migraciÓn. >>> este domingo, 7, 6 centros un grupo de expertos va a responder estas pregunta en un programa especial, inmigraciÓn, trump y los hispanos no se lo pierda mucha informaciÓn valiosa. >>> es importante estar informado y preparado, l
. >>> mecanismo legal para proto giro a los hijos nacidos en estados unidos no evita separara a un padreecanismo tener un pod poder, documento que muchos pueden buscar en internet o ir con un abogado para que re daboing te este documento lo firmen los pooadres y si son detenidos los niÑos van a quedar con la persona que asignÓ esta madre o este padre. >>> doctora, si uno no tiene este poder y se llevan a los padres deportados, estos hijos donde van. >>> se van aquÍ...
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Feb 9, 2017
02/17
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KCSM
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in this image, the proto-star is located in the central blue region.t is just like the sun in our solar system. the red region shows gas and dust spreading out like a disc. the scientists observed the gas and dust gathering inside the disc. this will eventually lead to the formation of a group of planets. >> translator: we couldn't have achieved this without the telescope. we expect that many planets will be born from this region in the future. >> sakai says she intends to observe more store-forming regions. she intends to find similar s solar systems to ours. >>> in central japan, a wintry sight is forming. what are you seeing right now? >> hello, catherine. we are seeing the snow falling through the area. the combination of the cold air coming in from the north and low pressure moving to the south. this is the northern portion of the country region. i'm going to take you live over into mito. let's look and see what's happening. notice that snow is starting to come down in the area. it was chilly this morning.lows degrees. we're seeing potentially up
in this image, the proto-star is located in the central blue region.t is just like the sun in our solar system. the red region shows gas and dust spreading out like a disc. the scientists observed the gas and dust gathering inside the disc. this will eventually lead to the formation of a group of planets. >> translator: we couldn't have achieved this without the telescope. we expect that many planets will be born from this region in the future. >> sakai says she intends to observe...
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Feb 11, 2017
02/17
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BLOOMBERG
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after 15 years, the role of these other companies that were proto-companies.e talked internally at great length about, how do you get great companies founded? the answer is strong ceos, incentive programs, boards of directors. there are other problems out of the creek create that within the context of google? that is what alphabet is. it is a holding company of which google is the best known. david: many technology companies that are well known apple, microsoft, the ceos are the founders. you had a different situation. you had two people that were the founders, but they want to the ceo with more experience. was it awkward to come in and be the ceo when you are dealing with the founders that do not have the ceo title? eric: in their case they had been searching for someone to work with for 16 months. they would have each of the candidates do something with them for the weekend, so they would go skiing with one of them in the go play sports with the other want to see if they were compatible. when i met them, we all have similar backgrounds as computer scientists
after 15 years, the role of these other companies that were proto-companies.e talked internally at great length about, how do you get great companies founded? the answer is strong ceos, incentive programs, boards of directors. there are other problems out of the creek create that within the context of google? that is what alphabet is. it is a holding company of which google is the best known. david: many technology companies that are well known apple, microsoft, the ceos are the founders. you...
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Feb 11, 2017
02/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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so after 15 years of being google, we had all of these other companies that were sort of proto-companiesey were not real businesses and they did not have real ceos. we talked internally at great length about, how do you get great companies founded? and the answer is strong ceos, , strong incentive programs, strong boards of directors. there are not other models. so how do we re-create that within the context of google? that is what alphabet is. apple bit is a holding company of companies of which google is the best known. david: many technology companies that are well known apple, microsoft or facebook, are run, the ceos initially are the founders. you had a different situation. you had two people that were the founders, larry and sergey, but they wanted more experience than the venture investors did. was it awkward to come in and be the ceo when you are dealing with the founders that do not have the ceo title? eric: in their case they had been searching for somebody they could work with for 16 months. what they would do is they would have each of the candidates do something with them fo
so after 15 years of being google, we had all of these other companies that were sort of proto-companiesey were not real businesses and they did not have real ceos. we talked internally at great length about, how do you get great companies founded? and the answer is strong ceos, , strong incentive programs, strong boards of directors. there are not other models. so how do we re-create that within the context of google? that is what alphabet is. apple bit is a holding company of companies of...
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Feb 22, 2017
02/17
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CSPAN
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that is to say if one students as proto-scholars, as people who are joining a dialogue, and not only joining a dialogue, but joining a process by which they are expected to acquire the skills of the scholar just as the faculty will practice the skills of the scholar, then over time one begins to nurture a certain kind of student culture, not only a way and which faculty relate to students and students relate to faculty, but the way students relate to each other. leaving aside the issue a formal legal rights or rules, one finds a culture merging of an interactive pedagogy dominated in the classrooms and elsewhere in the graduate and professional school as well, and this is not something to be taken for granted. this was not typical, because our student culture was not typical. further, it is important to remember this culture was not in a sense in fused by these ideals, but also infused by parallel ideas of merit and a lack of privilege or inherited wealth. student body of chicago is different from many of the eastern universities. first of all, it was male and female, both genders we
that is to say if one students as proto-scholars, as people who are joining a dialogue, and not only joining a dialogue, but joining a process by which they are expected to acquire the skills of the scholar just as the faculty will practice the skills of the scholar, then over time one begins to nurture a certain kind of student culture, not only a way and which faculty relate to students and students relate to faculty, but the way students relate to each other. leaving aside the issue a formal...
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Feb 28, 2017
02/17
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CNNW
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i think there's sort of a proto call here that's sort of something you don't do. and one of the whereins you don't do it is because it begins a compromise. the person you call, when your senate, the chairman, you call the chairman, the republican chairman, intelligence committee and call the press, and he does it, and then you say, no, but you can conduct it independent. he's not being intimidated by the white house, but he is. >> we've spoken about conflicts of interest when it comes to this administration, this one, spicer reaching out. to the very people leading the investigation into russia. the head of the senate intelligence committee. is it legal, unethical or not an issue with it? >> i don't think there's a particular statute that it violates, but it's completely inappropriate the cia, the fbi. they certainly are there for the purpose of communicating with the press. we had that the week before the election when the fbi got suckered into the house about hillary clinton. that's not the role. the same thing with respect to the house of representatives in the
i think there's sort of a proto call here that's sort of something you don't do. and one of the whereins you don't do it is because it begins a compromise. the person you call, when your senate, the chairman, you call the chairman, the republican chairman, intelligence committee and call the press, and he does it, and then you say, no, but you can conduct it independent. he's not being intimidated by the white house, but he is. >> we've spoken about conflicts of interest when it comes to...
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Feb 14, 2017
02/17
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MSNBCW
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he is the deputy director of centcom and he is a proto jay of secretary mattis.though, david petraeus. the president will be meeting later today with his attorney general and homeland security secretary, presumably this has to be topic one. alex. >> andrea, thank you so much for that report. >>> joining us from washington, nbc news intelligence ken delaney. another good morning to you, ken. let's talk about what happened here. flynn resigning. was that the only option? can you see it playing out any other way? >> reporter: well, alex, in any normal white house flynn would have been gone weeks ago. as you just heard, nbc news is reporting that the acting attorney general went to the white house weeks ago to explain flynn had misled senior officials and she was worried he could be blackmailed. it's remarkable he stayed on this long, not to mention reports of a chaotic, tumultuous national security process. there was a yemen raid that didn't go the way one would want it to go. so there's been a lot of bad news around flynn. at the same time though, just yesterday yo
he is the deputy director of centcom and he is a proto jay of secretary mattis.though, david petraeus. the president will be meeting later today with his attorney general and homeland security secretary, presumably this has to be topic one. alex. >> andrea, thank you so much for that report. >>> joining us from washington, nbc news intelligence ken delaney. another good morning to you, ken. let's talk about what happened here. flynn resigning. was that the only option? can you...
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Feb 21, 2017
02/17
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> it is very irresponsible, ultimately dangerous moment in history, some almost a proto- fascist momentstory. the media itself is broken. >> as we know, since 2,000, there has been a couple dozen suspicious deaths of journalists and russia who came out against the government there. donald trump has made no secret about going after journalists. distaste for any news that doesn't agree with him here. do you find that this is a dangerous path he is heading down? >> bill: now, he is going to kill us. again, it is not a stretch for any fair-minded person to believe that the national media leans heavily left and despises president trump. not willing to give him a chance or any benefit of the doubt. surely, that is what is going o on. surely. as for the adversarial nature of the press, senator mccain is correct. the founding fathers gave us specific freedom so we could tell you how the people in power were behaving. but when the press aligns itself with a political movement, in this case, liberalism, then, it is no longer objective or free, because it is sympathizing with a political point of
. >> it is very irresponsible, ultimately dangerous moment in history, some almost a proto- fascist momentstory. the media itself is broken. >> as we know, since 2,000, there has been a couple dozen suspicious deaths of journalists and russia who came out against the government there. donald trump has made no secret about going after journalists. distaste for any news that doesn't agree with him here. do you find that this is a dangerous path he is heading down? >> bill: now,...
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Feb 8, 2017
02/17
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CSPAN3
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. >> 2017, the supplier have one year to develop the proto-type. we like to test vehicles in different climate and the like. >> how would you determine most efficient costs of the two. >> we look at fuel efficiency and the like also the efficiency for the employees to be able to maneuver in the back of the vehicle. >> okay. how are the going to fund this a akwi significance? >> that's why the vehicles are beyond their live expand. the sooner we get bill passed sooner we get outcome from the price review. incumbent upon management to continue to do our cost. >> you are look -- >> we are in proto-type testing phase. >> whether tn the time comes, hy vehicles are you looking at? >> we are made no commitments on numbers if you look at delivery fleet it could be as my at 100,000. there's no commitment made. >> i understand there's no commitment because you're waiting on the funding aspect of it all. is there any consideration of looking just to throw arbitrary number out of purchasing ten thousand veehicles at a time or do you feel a hundred thousand. >>
. >> 2017, the supplier have one year to develop the proto-type. we like to test vehicles in different climate and the like. >> how would you determine most efficient costs of the two. >> we look at fuel efficiency and the like also the efficiency for the employees to be able to maneuver in the back of the vehicle. >> okay. how are the going to fund this a akwi significance? >> that's why the vehicles are beyond their live expand. the sooner we get bill passed...
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Feb 5, 2017
02/17
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CSPAN3
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he was a proto-new dealer in a way. he was a lifelong pacifist. and he was secretary of state 1913 to 1915 and continued to press wilson at every point, trying to get wilson to be neutral in deed as well as in word. he was very reluctant for the court to allow jpmorgan to help the british, or allow u.s. credit to the british, even though he knew american workers were happy that they were going back to work. factories, making the munitions and stuff. he was the most popular figure in his own party except for the president himself. as most of you know, he was resigned as secretary of state after lusitania was torpedoed, because he thought that wilson's second note to the germans was much too tough. he knew more than everybody in his party wanted to go to war. i also mentioned ethnic animists on all sides. new york city was full of immigrants, children of immigrants. this is february 8, a week after the germans have already resumed unrestricted u-boat warfare. so as the title of my book has it, it is a war against war. yiddish, italian, and others sp
he was a proto-new dealer in a way. he was a lifelong pacifist. and he was secretary of state 1913 to 1915 and continued to press wilson at every point, trying to get wilson to be neutral in deed as well as in word. he was very reluctant for the court to allow jpmorgan to help the british, or allow u.s. credit to the british, even though he knew american workers were happy that they were going back to work. factories, making the munitions and stuff. he was the most popular figure in his own...
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Feb 23, 2017
02/17
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CSPAN2
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sees students, even young students, young students, 17, 18 -year-olds and undergraduate students, as proto- scholars, as people who are joining a dialogue and not only joining a dialogue, but joining a process by which they are expected to acquire the skills of the scholar just as the faculty will practice the skills of the scholar, then over time, especially, especially over the generations, one begins to nurture a student culture in a way in which students relates he and faculty relate to students and students relate to each other. leaving aside the issue of formal legal rights were rules, one finds emerging in chicago a culture of interactive pedagogy dominated, a core practice of our classroom and elsewhere in the graduate schools, and this is not to be taken for granted. it is not typical because our student culture was not typical. further, i think it's important to remember this culture was also not only, you know, in a sense infused by these ideas of academic freedom but also infused by parallel ideas of merit, and a lack of scripted privilege or inherited wealth because for a vari
sees students, even young students, young students, 17, 18 -year-olds and undergraduate students, as proto- scholars, as people who are joining a dialogue and not only joining a dialogue, but joining a process by which they are expected to acquire the skills of the scholar just as the faculty will practice the skills of the scholar, then over time, especially, especially over the generations, one begins to nurture a student culture in a way in which students relates he and faculty relate to...
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Feb 6, 2017
02/17
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CNNW
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it's about where baghdadi is creating his new proto empire and where that threat is going to go nextwhen we hit harder in places like mosul. it's about trying to prevent what's going to happen next and about what the bad guys are doing right now, not about history 16 years ago. >> what threat assessment tells you that refugees are whom you should target right now? and what do you make of all the intel people who have come out, former chairman joint chief of staff mullin this morning, hayden, the head of the nsa said this actually helps propagate the isis motives to get more people in their ranks, that hurts our spies, hurts our connections around the world? >> i can't talk about classified threat assessments. i can talk about what we know in open source. your viewers should check it out. there's an isis magazine called dabiq. they have said in english on numerous occasion, we will ke stroi you the infidel, your countries by inserting our operatives into the refugee stream. they eve written it. we've seen it happen in europe. at least one of the attackers was on a false syrian passpor
it's about where baghdadi is creating his new proto empire and where that threat is going to go nextwhen we hit harder in places like mosul. it's about trying to prevent what's going to happen next and about what the bad guys are doing right now, not about history 16 years ago. >> what threat assessment tells you that refugees are whom you should target right now? and what do you make of all the intel people who have come out, former chairman joint chief of staff mullin this morning,...
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Feb 16, 2017
02/17
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KQED
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he's the proto-rogue, and now he says everybody seems to be joining in. >> nobody has said, "shut thatabase down, take that off your website." but what's going to happen when you've got this giant, bubbling, simmering, social media crowd and they go from being worried about things that might happen to things that are happening? there's a colossal hair trigger waiting out there. >> reporter: in the meantime, data refuge is as much therapeutic as it is prophylactic. programmer brendan o'brien-- no relation-- showed me how they're doing their work. >> the toughest part about this is figuring out what this all means and to be able to archive it in a sensible form. >> reporter: data refuge organizers sent questionnaires to 65,000 scientists to determine how to prioritize their gargantuan task. so far, they received 7,500 responses. as they march through the databases, they are simultaneously developing tools to organize the effort, protect the integrity of the data, and make an app for widespread use. >> if we have the foresight to back the stuff up now, we may be-- maybe later generations
he's the proto-rogue, and now he says everybody seems to be joining in. >> nobody has said, "shut thatabase down, take that off your website." but what's going to happen when you've got this giant, bubbling, simmering, social media crowd and they go from being worried about things that might happen to things that are happening? there's a colossal hair trigger waiting out there. >> reporter: in the meantime, data refuge is as much therapeutic as it is prophylactic....
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Feb 14, 2017
02/17
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CNNW
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can we get our arms around type of cyber proto coals as a way to narrowly define how we're going to engageith russia, are we going to engage with china to help us with north korea. what are we going to do with isis, we've all described that as an he can step shall threat, does it remain so? there are a host of issues out there, and rather than boil the ocean, i think what we can do is very commonly breathe through our nose and say, here are the top three priorities, this is the area we're going to focus in on where we're going to put some resources and time. let's get about the business of getting this ship with the rudder in the water. we can do that, but that has to take place right now. what are we going to do next, all the faces and the yelling and screaming and the personality stuff. >> jill dougherty, there's always been questions about why this president took the stance he has, when it comes to vladimir putin. and now you have his national security adviser resigning over issues that have to deal with russia. this is certainly more than palace intrigue, this goes beyond that. >> oh,
can we get our arms around type of cyber proto coals as a way to narrowly define how we're going to engageith russia, are we going to engage with china to help us with north korea. what are we going to do with isis, we've all described that as an he can step shall threat, does it remain so? there are a host of issues out there, and rather than boil the ocean, i think what we can do is very commonly breathe through our nose and say, here are the top three priorities, this is the area we're going...
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137
Feb 20, 2017
02/17
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CSPAN
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terrorist proto-states are trying to gain territory. thesek at these and say problems are not completely disconnected from each other. adversaries and enemies will continuously calculate actions and pay attention to where they might see opportunities associated with the effect that others are having on us and our interests. what is common across all these conflicts is they are fundamentally about the control of territory, populations, and resources. what is also common is that our potential areas -- enemies do four things that are common. they try to evade what they see as our strength. we understand our enemies will not be passive recipients of our military prowess. they will engage in counter actions and traditional simple ones, like dispersion and concealment. they will disrupt our capabilities.they will come after our network strike capability with sophisticated cyber capabilities that the russians build up. they are concerned about our airpower. they are establishing supremacy over ukraine from the ground. these are the kinds of th
terrorist proto-states are trying to gain territory. thesek at these and say problems are not completely disconnected from each other. adversaries and enemies will continuously calculate actions and pay attention to where they might see opportunities associated with the effect that others are having on us and our interests. what is common across all these conflicts is they are fundamentally about the control of territory, populations, and resources. what is also common is that our potential...
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Feb 24, 2017
02/17
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WPVI
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companies would have to submit design ideas and build proto types.resident trump said today construction on that 2000-mile wall will start "very soon" and his words is ahead of schedule. >> meanwhile president donald trump is taking aim at what he calls excessive regulation. he was surrounded by business executives today as he signed a new executive order. it requires federal agencies to evaluate their rules and to get rid of the ones deemed unnecessary. now during a speech to the conservative political action conference mr. trump said regulation is killing jobs and driving companies out of the united states. >> we don't need 75 percent of the repetitive horrible regulations that hurt companies, hurt jobs, make us noncompetitive overseas with other -- >> now, during that same speech, the president repeated his criticism of the media and just two hours ago several news organizations including cnn and the new york times were denied entry to an off camera news conference at the white house but the white house is responding saying they were not denied en
companies would have to submit design ideas and build proto types.resident trump said today construction on that 2000-mile wall will start "very soon" and his words is ahead of schedule. >> meanwhile president donald trump is taking aim at what he calls excessive regulation. he was surrounded by business executives today as he signed a new executive order. it requires federal agencies to evaluate their rules and to get rid of the ones deemed unnecessary. now during a speech to...
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Feb 18, 2017
02/17
by
CNNW
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almost a proto fascist moment in history where he is laying seed beds in the mind of people that the media is broken. i don't think it's a wild critique to say there are parts of fox news that are communications of the republican party. there's a difference between critiquing a particular journalist or network and saying that media as such doesn't work. nsa what donald trump has said. he's saying don't trust the facts, don't trust the media, just trust me. there's nothing scarier than that. >> thank you so much, ryan, alice, mark for sharing your perspective. we have more to discuss. we're waiting for president trump's rally in melbourne, florida, a live look here at the airport hangar. where he'll deliver his speech when it begins. and we'll bring it to you live. >>> when we come back, a white house on shaky ground as the president's search for a national security adviser causes concern for lawmakers. say goodbye to extra taxes and fees on your wireless bill and hello to t-mobile one. right now, get 2 lines of unlimited data for $100 bucks taxes and fees included. 2 lines, $100 doll
almost a proto fascist moment in history where he is laying seed beds in the mind of people that the media is broken. i don't think it's a wild critique to say there are parts of fox news that are communications of the republican party. there's a difference between critiquing a particular journalist or network and saying that media as such doesn't work. nsa what donald trump has said. he's saying don't trust the facts, don't trust the media, just trust me. there's nothing scarier than that....