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your brother must be rich man rich man no , not at all, he sells paintings to a merchant. your painting is not for sale yet. you should wash, sometimes at least once a week, you think i'm dirty you stink. nightmare in appearance, like nothing, if you put yourself in order, you can be attractive. stay until tomorrow. one of the best films about the war. heavy is coming, what is the blockade of the old partisans know well, it depends on each of you how long the war will last. klimov's telema film go and watch tomorrow on first why are you silent? why can't you see me? i am this you do not live, deaf blind. milk rivers so far, therefore milk is a bundle of benefits of milk that binds us. i'm willing to spend days and nights on a recipe for truffle caramel ice cream, but you know what i'm not ready to put my business on pause, get free service for 6 months and 15% on the bank account balance of opening your favorite strips on a big rosy bun . new big alexander with burger order in the kfc application only until the end of april i will have time to open a deposit with an insert
your brother must be rich man rich man no , not at all, he sells paintings to a merchant. your painting is not for sale yet. you should wash, sometimes at least once a week, you think i'm dirty you stink. nightmare in appearance, like nothing, if you put yourself in order, you can be attractive. stay until tomorrow. one of the best films about the war. heavy is coming, what is the blockade of the old partisans know well, it depends on each of you how long the war will last. klimov's telema film...
87
87
Apr 29, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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year career he won a total of 49 titles, six of them grand slams, making him a rich man, witha grand slams, making him a richit and novak djokovic's coach afterwards. but boom boom was soon bus. expensive lifestyle commitments —— lifestyle commitments, including a divorce and child maintenance payments... career earnings of £38 million were gone and a tax evasion and bankruptcy case followed. i think today, the tennis world is a little bit sad about what has happened. when you see someone who was such a great talent, had so much to offer and is still a very lovable, likeable character, and i think it's very sad thinking about where he is at tonight. his partner left tonight _ where he is at tonight. his partner left tonight to _ where he is at tonight. his partner left tonight to begin _ where he is at tonight. his partner left tonight to begin life _ where he is at tonight. his partner left tonight to begin life without i left tonight to begin life without him. you will now spend more than a yearin him. you will now spend more than a year in prison, a successfully —— successful career on court ended swiftly
year career he won a total of 49 titles, six of them grand slams, making him a rich man, witha grand slams, making him a richit and novak djokovic's coach afterwards. but boom boom was soon bus. expensive lifestyle commitments —— lifestyle commitments, including a divorce and child maintenance payments... career earnings of £38 million were gone and a tax evasion and bankruptcy case followed. i think today, the tennis world is a little bit sad about what has happened. when you see someone...
446
446
Apr 3, 2022
04/22
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KPIX
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and others see a stunning display of privilege by a rich and powerful man acted out by another rich and respond with violence and call it love, and they cloak their viciousness in valor, and how they profess to protect the vulnerable with violence, when in fact they're animate bide their own virgillity. my take is just one take from my own lived experience. other reasonable people, some very smart people, can have different perspectives, and that is how the slap became a psychological test for society. and, therefore, a sensation. ♪ we believe there's an innovator in all of us. ♪ that's why we build technology that makes it possible for every business... and every person... to come to the table and do more incredible things. need long-lasting freshness? try febreze unstopables touch andfabric spray.... it doesn't just eliminate odors... simply shake and spray to unlock the breakthrough power of touch-activated scent technology. that lasts, even hours later! that's because febreze touch stores scent in your fabrics so you get bursts of freshness with every touch. your whole world will co
and others see a stunning display of privilege by a rich and powerful man acted out by another rich and respond with violence and call it love, and they cloak their viciousness in valor, and how they profess to protect the vulnerable with violence, when in fact they're animate bide their own virgillity. my take is just one take from my own lived experience. other reasonable people, some very smart people, can have different perspectives, and that is how the slap became a psychological test for...
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rich man. let me go immediately, otherwise you will be in big trouble, it is unlikely that we will have a problem. captain samoilov well, welcome to the authorities. hold on richll, what are you ilya listen but you have to introduce yourself. i see such a bugai still standing with brass knuckles. well, in general, i decided thank you and about these gopniks. it don't worry. now we won't , thank you, but if you need my help. i always i will treat his second candy delicious, i have no doubt that they are delicious. only dogs can’t have sweets. although for the offer. thank you no, sweets, you can lyokha about a good one. i'll bring you sausages next time. so okay, we could go believe semyon and show me in the bag. wait, let's go. see you. when do you finish studying? so the guide sandwiches the camera clothes, that is, i look at all things in place. yes? yes, no, there were still pants collected about this pocket, as far as i understand, there are not enough basic necessities and change of clothes do not understand. why are they robbers? i have one version. or maybe timur himself took these things so as not to carry the whole bag with him. let's think together,
rich man. let me go immediately, otherwise you will be in big trouble, it is unlikely that we will have a problem. captain samoilov well, welcome to the authorities. hold on richll, what are you ilya listen but you have to introduce yourself. i see such a bugai still standing with brass knuckles. well, in general, i decided thank you and about these gopniks. it don't worry. now we won't , thank you, but if you need my help. i always i will treat his second candy delicious, i have no doubt that...
74
74
Apr 23, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 74
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rich man's war and a poor man's fight. is the american revolutionary war an example of this? no, it's not that quote from james mcpherson's battle cry of freedom. rich man's war poor man's fight. it's very accurate with the confederacy. it everyone was in all everyone was in on one side of the other in the revolution. the the wealthy put everything on the line and they were haunted men george washington moved 280 times in temporary headquarters during the war while his farms had no income is his wealth diminished by half before it was over but who was fighting who were the officers we had no office class. we had no military academy and people who had just been raw militia. fight and with their valid or promoted and wound up being general summit very young age. so that doesn't work too well. many people who were poor and under the british scheme of things could never own land. volunteered to fight because the states gave them bounties a land bounties when the war was over anywhere from a hundred acres. it was actually a schedule of what you got all the way up to general from this state and the states by the way were competing with each other now bidding each other for recruits. so rank or birth or class were not factors anyone who was willing to fight the british and risk british bayonets and british artillery was welcome. fortune applies not only to people who were trying to keep it or risk it but also to people who were trying to create it. was the revolution viewed by some as a way to better their economic condition? the answer is yes. because we had americans had no navy and what you could be done about that was merchants could invest in building their own ships. hiring their own crews and the called privateers who got commissions from congress. and then went out and attacked the british. attacked merchant ships attacked ships carrying weapons thousands of british ships were captured it's an amazing thing. we call that the merchant marine now, but the merchant marine really was privateers and everybody on that ship got a cut the loot when they captured another ship intact and brought it back with its cargo and auctioned at all. so the crews somebody who started as just a member of the crew wound up owning a ship or several ships. it was a way to wealth. we've reached the question and answer part of our conversation with willard stern randall. his latest book is called the founders fortunes how money shaped the birth of america. eugene has a question who was before that i would just like to eat. robert these are wonderful questions. i want to thank you for them. and then i'm looking forward more wonderful questions from our guests you as always you're incredibly kind and wonderfully gracious eugene has a really good one. who was the richest and the poorest founder? robert morris to both he started out this american's first billy. he came out of the revolution as the america's first billionaire because he had been a financier invested in ships and then use them to transport goods to france etc. i also had privateering ships that were very successful and by the middle of the revolutionary war the french said he was the richest american we would consider him a billionaire when it was all over. when the struggle was all over and there was a new constitution the the economy tanked because the british while they gave us our political independence in the treaty of paris did not give us our economic and independence and they cut off america's markets with europe with with a caribbean and robert morris was one of those people were no longer could sell goods and use ships to make money with europe. so he did the spectacularly foolish thing of speculating in land which so many had done three signers in the declaration of independence including robert morris wound up in debtors. because they they had so much so little cash and so many investments that land they could even keep up with them. so robert morris who financed the revolution and actually sat down signed 6,000 notes by hand to pay washington's army so they could be discharged and go home proudly he wound up in debtors prison for three years, and we didn't even know they had dinners. following is a anonymous question how would the founding fathers interpret the current financial situation of the united states and maybe focus a bit perhaps on mr. hamilton? well, mr. hamilton would be very happy. with his his idea which was creating national bank? to create the corporation. the first american corporation is the united states government. anybody has to pay back a government loan knows that the government makes profits. he would be very happy with the financial health of the country and banking and the stock market and all that but personally he was a disaster at making money. he was he was so broke when he was killed in the famous duel that his friends and colleagues had to pass the hat. so he he would be happy in the abstract but in and and real life and death. he would not be happy at all. so so in our previous conversation you made that comment about passing the hat expand upon that and say until the audience exactly what you mean by that. well passing the hackman he didn't have well it goes back to the land and money thing. hamilton and married the daughter of a wealthy hudson valley landowner but he couldn't sell his land any more than any other american he couldn't collect rent from tenant farmers because they didn't have any money. so hamilton worked very long hours supporting of family of seven as a lawyer. but he also couldn't get along with another american a different political persuasion. aaron burr. and so they wound up at odds on height. so we hawkins shooting it out. well, the problem was hamilton have any money. so his family didn't have the money for a funeral or a monument. and his colleagues in congress and the other officers literally took up a collection to pay for his funeral and to put a marker on his grave which by the way is right across the street from the world trade center. so but for for the man came up with our phenomenal financial system he was not very good at it himself. the next question is anonymous. so would you say that what the founding fathers lacked in material wealth they made up for in political power. ambition to have power. yes. but they really were powerless. because from the minute the the constitution was signed in washington took office. his his lieutenants hamilton and jefferson were at each other's throats, so they had no real power washington ran the country as if he was still a general the cabinet meeting was having three people over on tuesday afternoon and telling them what he wanted to find out about the next week. so the only one who had any power was george washington congress had no power basically because nobody had any money. through most of this period and each state as we're now finding out again came up with its own election laws and its own laws of who could hold office and in the south only the rich could afford to be governor. in in new jersey or in new england, it took very little money in new england the value of your tools counted as the property to meet the property qualification to become a voter. in in the south it was which was that their wealth was based on the value of human beings. they borrowed on the equity of slaves and the governor of south carolina had to be a millionaire. the governor of massachusetts for a while was sam adams with the old suit and very bad at making money. please submit your questions and the q&a feature we can ask willard stern randall before we leave we have a few minutes left. question is from robert. a lesser known financier is oliver pollock. can you comment about him and how he did post-war? i would like to know about him because i can't answer that question. so robert robert if you have a minute type in a little bit about mr. pollock, and we'll try to answer in a few minutes we have remaining next question is from jan what finally let tra
rich man's war and a poor man's fight. is the american revolutionary war an example of this? no, it's not that quote from james mcpherson's battle cry of freedom. rich man's war poor man's fight. it's very accurate with the confederacy. it everyone was in all everyone was in on one side of the other in the revolution. the the wealthy put everything on the line and they were haunted men george washington moved 280 times in temporary headquarters during the war while his farms had no income is...
55
55
Apr 24, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 55
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rich man's war and a poor man's fight. is the american revolutionary war an example of this? no, it's not that quote from james mcpherson's battle cry of freedom. rich man's war poor man's fight. it's very accurate with the confederacy. it everyone was in all everyone was in on one side of the other in the revolution. the the wealthy put everything on the line and they were haunted men george washington moved 280 times in temporary headquarters during the war while his farms had no income is his wealth diminished by half before it was over but who was fighting who were the officers we had no office class. we had no military academy and people who had just been raw militia. fight and with their valid or promoted and wound up being general summit very young age. so that doesn't work too well. many people who were poor and under the british scheme of volunteered to fight because the states gave them bounties a land bounties when the war was over anywhere from a hundred acres. it was actually a schedule of what you got all the way up to general from this state and the states by the way were competing with each other now bidding each other for recruits. so rank or birth or class were not factors anyone who was willing to fight the british and risk british bayonets and british artillery was welcome. fortune applies not only to people who were trying to keep it or risk it but also to people who were trying to create it. was the revolution viewed by some as a way to better their economic condition? the answer is yes. because we had americans had no navy and what you could be done about that was merchants could invest in building their own ships. hiring their own crews and the called privateers who got commissions from congress. and then went out and attacked the british. attacked merchant ships attacked ships carrying weapons thousands of british ships were captured it's an amazing thing. we call that the merchant marine now, but the merchant marine really was privateers and everybody on that ship got a cut the loot when they captured another ship intact and brought it back with its cargo and auctioned at all. so the crews somebody who started as just a member of the crew wound up owning a ship or several ships. it was a way to wealth. we've reached the question and answer part of our conversation with willard stern randall. his latest book is called the founders fortunes how money shaped the birth of america. eugene has a question who was before that i would just like to eat. robert these are wonderful questions. i want to thank you for them. and then i'm looking forward more wonderful questions from our guests you as always you're incredibly kind and wonderfully gracious eugene has a really good one. who was the richest and the poorest founder? robert morris to both he started out this american's first billy. he came out of the revolution as the america's first billionaire because he had been a financier invested in ships and then use them to transport goods to france etc. i also had privateering ships that were very successful and by the middle of the revolutionary war the french said he was the richest american we would consider him a billionaire when it was all over. when the struggle was all over and there was a new constitution the the economy tanked because the british while they gave us our political independence in the treaty of paris did not give us our economic and independence and they cut off america's markets with europe with with a caribbean and robert morris was one of those people were no longer could sell goods and use ships to make money with europe. so he did the spectacularly foolish thing of speculating in land which so many had done three signers in the declaration of independence including robert morris wound up in debtors. because they they had so much so little cash and so many investments that land they could even keep up with them. so robert morris who financed the revolution and actually sat down signed 6,000 notes by hand to pay washington's army so they could be discharged and go home proudly he wound up in debtors prison for three years, and we didn't even know they had dinners. following is a anonymous question how would the founding fathers interpret the current financial situation of the united states and maybe focus a bit perhaps on mr. hamilton? well, mr. hamilton would be very happy. with his his idea which was creating national bank? to create the corporation. the first american corporation is the united states government. anybody has to pay back a government loan knows that the government makes profits. he would be very happy with the financial health of the country and banking and the stock market and all that but personally he was a disaster at making money. he was he was so broke when he was killed in the famous duel that his friends and colleagues had to pass the hat. so he he would be happy in the abstract but in and and real life and death. he would not be happy at all. so so in our previous conversation you made that comment about passing the hat expand upon that and say until the audience exactly what you mean by that. well passing the hackman he didn't have well it goes back to the land and money thing. hamilton and married the daughter of a wealthy hudson valley landowner but he couldn't sell his land any more than any other american he couldn't collect rent from tenant farmers because they didn't have any money. so hamilton worked very long hours supporting of family of seven as a lawyer. but he also couldn't get along with another american a different political persuasion. aaron burr. and so they wound up at odds on height. so we hawkins shooting it out. well, the problem was hamilton have any money. so his family didn't have the money for a funeral or a monument. and his colleagues in congress and the other officers literally took up a collection to pay for his funeral and to put a marker on his grave which by the way is right across the street from the world trade center. so but for for the man came up with our phenomenal financial system he was not very good at it himself. the next question is anonymous. so would you say that what the founding fathers lacked in material wealth they made up for in political power. ambition to have power. yes. but they really were powerless. because from the minute the the constitution was signed in washington took office. his his lieutenants hamilton and jefferson were at each other's throats, so they had no real power washington ran the country as if he was still a general the cabinet meeting was having three people over on tuesday afternoon and telling them what he wanted to find out about the next week. so the only one who had any power was george washington congress had no power basically because nobody had any money. through most of this period and each state as we're now finding out again came up with its own election laws and its own laws of who could hold office and in the south only the rich could afford to be governor. in in new jersey or in new england, it took very little money in new england the value of your tools counted as the property to meet the property qualification to become a voter. in in the south it was which was that their wealth was based on the value of human beings. they borrowed on the equity of slaves and the governor of south carolina had to be a millionaire. the governor of massachusetts for a while was sam adams with the old suit and very bad at making money. please submit your questions and the q&a feature we can ask willard stern randall before we leave we have a few minutes left. question is from robert. a lesser known financier is oliver pollock. can you comment about him and how he did post-war? i would like to know about him because i can't answer that question. so robert robert if you have a minute type in a little bit about mr. pollock, and we'll try to answer in a few minutes we have remaining next question is from jan what finally let tra
rich man's war and a poor man's fight. is the american revolutionary war an example of this? no, it's not that quote from james mcpherson's battle cry of freedom. rich man's war poor man's fight. it's very accurate with the confederacy. it everyone was in all everyone was in on one side of the other in the revolution. the the wealthy put everything on the line and they were haunted men george washington moved 280 times in temporary headquarters during the war while his farms had no income is...
32
32
Apr 26, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 32
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of rich man having power and influence, jeff bezos took over the washington post, were you concerned about him having too much power when he bought the washington post? >> yes. yes. i think, these rich, powerful man, why don't they take this money and use something to improve mankind? the human mankind, there are people out here suffering. do something for them, instead of putting all this money into, their horrible human beings, horrible human beings. i would never want, i'm not a rich human being, i've worked on my way, i would never, never think that they're nothing to make, they are just some horrible human beings. >> that is an utter jamaica, new york. this is j in north carolina. you're next. >> yeah, good morning, i don't think there it is any improvement traitor or anything online, anything the media period. unless elon musk comes out and shows us exactly how twitter, facebook, c-span, cnn, abc, cbs, unless they come out and he shows us the algorithms of how you all help joe biden rig the election, i don't know why it is going to do. trump's not going to go back. what does it matter? that's my question to you. it doesn't matter? >> un must talking about making fraternal fenc
of rich man having power and influence, jeff bezos took over the washington post, were you concerned about him having too much power when he bought the washington post? >> yes. yes. i think, these rich, powerful man, why don't they take this money and use something to improve mankind? the human mankind, there are people out here suffering. do something for them, instead of putting all this money into, their horrible human beings, horrible human beings. i would never want, i'm not a rich...
60
60
Apr 1, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 60
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set up by putin and the gas companies to get rich because putin invaded the other countries and he thought he could get rich. he is already the richest manthe planet by stealing all the money in russia. now i causing this war and gas crisis -- now by causing this war and gas crisis, he is getting richer. we should set up an investigation on this son of a bitch. host: tony in wisconsin, republican. are you with us? caller: yes. host: go ahead. caller: i have a couple of comments on the gas. 100 million barrels that biden wants to release. we already paid for. who gets the 100 million barrels he wants to release? who is getting the money because the government is basically selling it to the oil companies at $100 per barrel. that is $100 billion per day. who gets that money? host: michael in ohio, democratic caller. caller: it is me, michael. when i drive and stuff, i want the gas to be low. right now, i think joe biden is doing a great job and stuff. host: michael, this is joseph on twitter who writes to say, electricity in california is not cheap and varies from $.24 to $.60 and charging a tesla cost between $24 and $60 depending on the t
set up by putin and the gas companies to get rich because putin invaded the other countries and he thought he could get rich. he is already the richest manthe planet by stealing all the money in russia. now i causing this war and gas crisis -- now by causing this war and gas crisis, he is getting richer. we should set up an investigation on this son of a bitch. host: tony in wisconsin, republican. are you with us? caller: yes. host: go ahead. caller: i have a couple of comments on the gas. 100...
101
101
Apr 26, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
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eye 101
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rich man to have this much power. this is going to be very dangerous. democracy in this country is almost gone anyway, i think this is almost the end of democracy. host: speaking of a rich man having power and influence, jeff bezos took over the washington post. were you concerned about him having too much power when he took over the washington post? caller: yes. i think these rich powerful men. why don't they take this money and do something for mankind. there are people suffering, do something for them. instead of putting all of this money -- i am not a rich human being. but i would never think, they are just horrible human beings. host: this is jay from wake forest, north carolina. caller: there is no improving twitter or anything online or anything on the media. unless elon musk shows how twitter, facebook, c-span, abc, cbs, unless they show us the algorithms of how you helped joe biden rigged the election. trump is not going to go back, what does it matter? host: elon musk is talking about making twitter and open force platform. taking twitter private and turning it into a bulwark of free speech. he said that they should open source the algorithms so others could recommend changes to the algorithm. one of the changes he has talked about. we are asking you this morning your thoughts on elon musk taking over twitter. here are just a few of your comments from
rich man to have this much power. this is going to be very dangerous. democracy in this country is almost gone anyway, i think this is almost the end of democracy. host: speaking of a rich man having power and influence, jeff bezos took over the washington post. were you concerned about him having too much power when he took over the washington post? caller: yes. i think these rich powerful men. why don't they take this money and do something for mankind. there are people suffering, do...