129
129
May 22, 2023
05/23
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
my name is andrew heinrich and i'm the founder and executive director of project rousseau.ple need right when they get off the bus in port authority, of course they need food and water, medical attention, access to immigration legal services, but also, and perhaps most importantly, they need dignity. have someone who just sees you as an equal for a few minutes and sits and chats with you one on one is really really important. >> you have what i think is a strong case for asylum. in our office today, we are providing some screenings for folks who are at the early stages of the immigration legal services process. i ask a variety of questions related to why they left their home country, why they fear returning to their country, to understand whether they might have a strong claim to asylum or another form of immigration relief. >> we have a family that's just reunited in the last 48 hours, one branch of the family came here in the fall, the mother's sister stayed behind because she has a disabled child. eventually, unfortunately, the persecution and the risk of what was coming
my name is andrew heinrich and i'm the founder and executive director of project rousseau.ple need right when they get off the bus in port authority, of course they need food and water, medical attention, access to immigration legal services, but also, and perhaps most importantly, they need dignity. have someone who just sees you as an equal for a few minutes and sits and chats with you one on one is really really important. >> you have what i think is a strong case for asylum. in our...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
here he loves christ he he he he loves rousseau too. that's about the same love. this is what they love about, because he is christ, he competes with christ tolstoy, and he competes with everyone over time. well, that is, the higher, so to speak, the point in humanity, the more he competes with her. that's it in the end. i think that's the feeling, the gospel of miracles and things. it. actually, this is what it is. well, he came. i am a tolstoy teacher of life. why do you even shake someone else, amazing in this sense on sunday, where where is the present uh, the liturgy is a real paska not real? the present e finale, when the people's reduced pieces of the gospel about them appear, and now he is really on the path of resurrection, otherwise it was not entirely satisfactory for tolstoy, although this is late, of course. tolstoy also needs this, but at the same time tolstoy i even remember talking about this more than once, but tolstoy poses such questions, and without answers, to which our church and, as it were, we, as a community of christians, cannot exist. th
here he loves christ he he he he loves rousseau too. that's about the same love. this is what they love about, because he is christ, he competes with christ tolstoy, and he competes with everyone over time. well, that is, the higher, so to speak, the point in humanity, the more he competes with her. that's it in the end. i think that's the feeling, the gospel of miracles and things. it. actually, this is what it is. well, he came. i am a tolstoy teacher of life. why do you even shake someone...
11
11
May 15, 2023
05/23
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 11
favorite 0
quote 0
danil medvedev won his first career victory at the master in rome by outplaying athens or rousseau ori six two for the first victory in the capital of italy, it took four attempts at first matches completely left for the finnish tennis player. having made the project, he led these 3.0. however, daniil managed to quickly get involved in the game and turn the game over, taking it with 6.4. at the start of the second set, the rivals exchanged breaks. after that, the bears took their own and someone else’s serve, i’ll make the score, 3:1 this separation of the russian was enough for a confident victory in the second neighbor 6.2 in the third round , medvedev’s rivals will be the spaniard bernabelle, miras this was sports news, see you next hour. i wanted to tickle the nerves of vices, they gilyarovskim do not crawl out of khitrov's slums , bending is not scary. and now keep your pockets cleaned in an instant, and you could still flog something with a knife, well, the corpse would wait, a couple of hours the killer will find the criminal. install open. russian channels and all tv series mov
danil medvedev won his first career victory at the master in rome by outplaying athens or rousseau ori six two for the first victory in the capital of italy, it took four attempts at first matches completely left for the finnish tennis player. having made the project, he led these 3.0. however, daniil managed to quickly get involved in the game and turn the game over, taking it with 6.4. at the start of the second set, the rivals exchanged breaks. after that, the bears took their own and...
37
37
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
and we are not interested in having some rousseau for big aggressive rhetoric against russia because we already paid for the july the 8th, and george and russian war. so we'd like to be smart to know. because we know that if something happens in georgia to won't get the same support those because we are all on the little board to keep countries move on the russia to, to better by the media. and our, our, we do the much, much more complicated norm going to help us with smartshoot. it doesn't mean that to up for russia smarter. we don't want to have anything else with the rush again, i mean the best hope with something about wallace. so the about mutual benefit and peace. thank you so much for joining me. it's always a pleasure talking to you. thanks again for your time. thank you. bye. turn our attention out to the african continent of violence in recent ways. incident have continued despite the announce sees by extension between the countries mincey and an insurgent group known as the rust. they support forces. now the persistent fighting has the they'd further negotiation backs by f
and we are not interested in having some rousseau for big aggressive rhetoric against russia because we already paid for the july the 8th, and george and russian war. so we'd like to be smart to know. because we know that if something happens in georgia to won't get the same support those because we are all on the little board to keep countries move on the russia to, to better by the media. and our, our, we do the much, much more complicated norm going to help us with smartshoot. it doesn't...
41
41
May 21, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
we read rousseau, we read david hume, we read thomas paine and the american founding fathers and just a whole variety of people and it was a huge hit in a couple of the students actually said, why don't we read these things in high school? they're so important and we don't know them. so that was a great it was a hit both at the college and at the at the prison. it is indeed material we should all be reading in high school. so brooke allen the obvious question is what was it like teaching john locke to maximum security prisoners and what did you expect and what was he? what was the actual reality? well, i expected that it might be a difficult i'm sure, but in fact, they were a lot easier to deal with. and and still are really than college students. they had had to make a big effort to get into the program. they had to apply to bennington college effectively and be deemed at a good enough level to get in and do their college level work, not remedial. and so some of the students i had were sort of like ordinary college students, quite young and untested, and some of them were men in thei
we read rousseau, we read david hume, we read thomas paine and the american founding fathers and just a whole variety of people and it was a huge hit in a couple of the students actually said, why don't we read these things in high school? they're so important and we don't know them. so that was a great it was a hit both at the college and at the at the prison. it is indeed material we should all be reading in high school. so brooke allen the obvious question is what was it like teaching john...
50
50
May 14, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
we read rousseau, we read david hume, we read thomas paine and the american founding fathers and just a whole variety of people and it was a huge hit in a couple of the students actually said, why don't we read these things in high school? they're so important and we don't know them. so that was a great it was a hit both at the college and at the at the prison. it is indeed material we should all be reading in high school. so brooke allen the obvious question is what was it like teaching john locke to maximum security prisoners and what did you expect and what was he? what was the actual reality? well, i expected that it might be a difficult i'm sure, but in fact, they were a lot easier to deal with. and and still are really than college students. they had had to make a big effort to get into the program. they had to apply to bennington college effectively and be deemed at a good enough level to get in and do their college level work, not remedial. and so some of the students i had were sort of like ordinary college students, quite young and untested, and some of them were men in thei
we read rousseau, we read david hume, we read thomas paine and the american founding fathers and just a whole variety of people and it was a huge hit in a couple of the students actually said, why don't we read these things in high school? they're so important and we don't know them. so that was a great it was a hit both at the college and at the at the prison. it is indeed material we should all be reading in high school. so brooke allen the obvious question is what was it like teaching john...
19
19
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
uh, differently polymerized in juiciness, because after all, uh, rousseau is part of the enlightenmenthe problem. e, in that e dostoevsky's controversy is here is mentioned. uh, christ is true uh, there can be no impersonal truth, that's why because if uh, it's the truth, without uh, uh, personal. she is a lie, yes she is a lie in fact, which you give out a loan, and therefore , o christ of the real, the truth, that is, that's the point , but tolstoy still seems to me, uh, tolstoy still has this moral, just ethical uh say uh hmm aspect in uh gospel. yes, so to speak, he is, in many respects , self-sufficient. well, this is the problem, because religion is not reduced to morality, it is not reduced to morality, but, as it were, through lev nikolaevich tried to explain this morality , uh, you need to go to god through students all the time i say that this is the famous one, i want to be quite good. here, here it is not about religion, because religion is not about what i want to be, because i want to be immortal like that. here, i would generally say that this story of dostoevsky is like
uh, differently polymerized in juiciness, because after all, uh, rousseau is part of the enlightenmenthe problem. e, in that e dostoevsky's controversy is here is mentioned. uh, christ is true uh, there can be no impersonal truth, that's why because if uh, it's the truth, without uh, uh, personal. she is a lie, yes she is a lie in fact, which you give out a loan, and therefore , o christ of the real, the truth, that is, that's the point , but tolstoy still seems to me, uh, tolstoy still has...
52
52
May 20, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
he talked a bit about rousseau's role in the region and venezuela being a place where i think you're right, we haven't quite figured out how to work together. nicaragua would be another case. haiti, of course. i am thinking times in the past when brazil really stepped up to play an important role in peace building and peacekeeping, but i am wondering if that is anywhere on the agenda these days. they have been reluctant to get pulled back into haiti. canada doesn't want to be involved either. do you see opportunities that had to deal with these very tough cases in the region for lula and biden? mr. jones: gentlemen in the back. >> hello, cedric, executive director or -- foundation. i could not agree more with ambassador thomas shannon when he said that brazil and the u.s. should not overemphasize the importance of china. my question is to all of you, maybe to matias, let me provoke my friend here, if that is all -- at all possible not to overemphasize china objectively speaking? one thing that is a matter of concern from my point of view is that the sales society is -- brazil society
he talked a bit about rousseau's role in the region and venezuela being a place where i think you're right, we haven't quite figured out how to work together. nicaragua would be another case. haiti, of course. i am thinking times in the past when brazil really stepped up to play an important role in peace building and peacekeeping, but i am wondering if that is anywhere on the agenda these days. they have been reluctant to get pulled back into haiti. canada doesn't want to be involved either....
48
48
May 28, 2023
05/23
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
abrams into making my character on alias, a rousseau cuban assassin. >> and he was, like what is happeningd that was the beginning of mind being able to say, by the, way this is what this is, and we need this. >> we need to see ourselves in film, that is the importance of film and photography and anything that's a picture, if we can see ourselves, that i feel like we have value. >> and it brings people together, and it gives them a commonality. i think the more we can support each other and pull each other up, and create situations where we are mentoring, when we are having honest, discourse about what can happen and we are not our own worst enemy. >> thank you, thank you for sharing. that was beautiful. for thank you for bringing all of yourself. >> what else my going to bring? >> what else my going to bring >> what else my going to bring cut! another health insurance commercial, another aqua-aerobics scene. yup. most health insurance companies see us all the same: smiley seniors golfing, hiking... don't forget antiquing. that's why i chose humana. they see me, not a stereotypical senior.
abrams into making my character on alias, a rousseau cuban assassin. >> and he was, like what is happeningd that was the beginning of mind being able to say, by the, way this is what this is, and we need this. >> we need to see ourselves in film, that is the importance of film and photography and anything that's a picture, if we can see ourselves, that i feel like we have value. >> and it brings people together, and it gives them a commonality. i think the more we can support...
21
21
May 31, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
edmund burke, a conservative, but he also he also didn't believe in the corresponding french idea of rousseau and so forth that private property the problem and we need to crush it and centrally plan on the contrary he believed all through his life in in the liberty side of the enlightenment which what you see in france but it's especially obvious in adam smith and david hume and of the scottish enlightenment so oh i came to hayek late. he's had a tremendous influence. me and i highly recommend this book because he'll have an influence on you. thank you, deirdre. we'll the florida questions. now, as i said online you can submit questions a variety of ways facebook youtube, hashtag keto events. and here in the auditorium raise your hand and we will bring a microphone to you all right right there in the back. thank you. bert ely. before proposing my question, i just want to mention that i had the pleasure of the time that i came to cato and i came here, what year was david? but i may probably not long before he died, but it was a real pleasure. and i still think back it of hearing the man himse
edmund burke, a conservative, but he also he also didn't believe in the corresponding french idea of rousseau and so forth that private property the problem and we need to crush it and centrally plan on the contrary he believed all through his life in in the liberty side of the enlightenment which what you see in france but it's especially obvious in adam smith and david hume and of the scottish enlightenment so oh i came to hayek late. he's had a tremendous influence. me and i highly recommend...
27
27
May 6, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
we consider the revolution again to have followed the blueprints of jean-jacques rousseau and other latentphilosophers as reform, reflecting a rational mastery and understanding of humankind. and this is a grim and brutal way to redefine the secular order. ironically, a brutality that didn't seem to have any end in sight, hardly a picture of a perfect and progressive human in state. now, in march 1953, stalin died. stalinism. the system of government ideology that he had spawned within the soviet orbit spanning half a dozen countries borders by the time of his death in 1953 survived, the man himself, germany, would remain divided until 1990. the european continent would also remain divided and stalin's successor depicted here, nikita khrushchev, proved to be a man of political. on the one hand, he denounced stalin at the 20th congress of the communist party of the soviet union, held in february 1956. you see it depicted here calling a political criminal who betrayed the communist vision of the future, working against the classless piety, against communism itself by wrongly indicting loyal
we consider the revolution again to have followed the blueprints of jean-jacques rousseau and other latentphilosophers as reform, reflecting a rational mastery and understanding of humankind. and this is a grim and brutal way to redefine the secular order. ironically, a brutality that didn't seem to have any end in sight, hardly a picture of a perfect and progressive human in state. now, in march 1953, stalin died. stalinism. the system of government ideology that he had spawned within the...
32
32
May 28, 2023
05/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
to sarah rousseau and suzanne williams for sharing their time and expertise to help us publicize theawards. thank you to p.a. knitwear for selling books in the lobby tonight. so please bye from them. you remember that's the best way to show your support for these wonderful authors. and now i am delighted to start prizes by introducing the inaugural greg barrios book and translation prize. good evening, everyone my name is mandana chaffa. and as one of the deputies for the barrios book in translation prize and especially as an immigrant for whom english a second language, it is a remarkable honor to be here to present this award. as many of you know, the barriers book in translation prize is named after a board member, greg berrios, a latino poet, playwright and obviously a book critic who away in 2021. as a board member of the nbcc made an immeasurable impact on our organization. he funded the first balakian book excuse me, the blake prize for book critics. in 2012, he chaired the john leonard prize committee, and he also served our first vice president of diversity and inclusion. he
to sarah rousseau and suzanne williams for sharing their time and expertise to help us publicize theawards. thank you to p.a. knitwear for selling books in the lobby tonight. so please bye from them. you remember that's the best way to show your support for these wonderful authors. and now i am delighted to start prizes by introducing the inaugural greg barrios book and translation prize. good evening, everyone my name is mandana chaffa. and as one of the deputies for the barrios book in...
51
51
May 5, 2023
05/23
by
CNBC
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
and also looking forward to your pro talk at 11:30 today, with the long-time shareholder thomas rousseauro talks thanks >>> traders pairing bets on fed rate cuts after a strong jobs report wage increases the big nest a year joining us at post nine is goldman sachs chief economist and head of global investment research jan hatzius great to have you on. >> great to be with you. >> okay. ahead of this report, you were estimating non-farm payrolls rising 250,000 for the month we got 253,000 walk us through your takeaways. >> i think the takeaway it's a strong report, pretty much across the board you look at the payroll number that was, obviously, on the high side, the unemployment rate edged down to a new multidecade low on an unrounded basis and you had a strong wage number now underneath the surface, there are always, you know, some caveats and qualifications around that, but the basic takeaway is that the labor market is very resilient and that is providing support to household real income which is important at a time when we're concerned about the drag from tighter credit conditions. thi
and also looking forward to your pro talk at 11:30 today, with the long-time shareholder thomas rousseauro talks thanks >>> traders pairing bets on fed rate cuts after a strong jobs report wage increases the big nest a year joining us at post nine is goldman sachs chief economist and head of global investment research jan hatzius great to have you on. >> great to be with you. >> okay. ahead of this report, you were estimating non-farm payrolls rising 250,000 for the month...