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good bye so long well so long it was great seeing you would love to see you. the soviet union started supplying these planes to cuba shortly after the bay of pigs invasion as a result the most advanced make twenty one fighter jets with trained crew and started patrolling the airspace over the island. through my old friend. have we flown together. how high we used to fly and how fast. yes this was a very good craft it has never failed me. at all in september nine hundred sixty two we were ordered to take these planes to cuba. we didn't feel any danger of course we were so young. because we had been prepared and we were ready for anything in. the soviet u.s. standoff grew more tense every day these top secret shots were taken during nuclear tests and the soviet testing ground at that time very few people thought about the real consequences of a nuclear conflict never before had the world been closer to a third nuclear world war. will there be war on iraq. friends or for this missile defense offensive where it stopped us in action at the close to twenty seconds o
good bye so long well so long it was great seeing you would love to see you. the soviet union started supplying these planes to cuba shortly after the bay of pigs invasion as a result the most advanced make twenty one fighter jets with trained crew and started patrolling the airspace over the island. through my old friend. have we flown together. how high we used to fly and how fast. yes this was a very good craft it has never failed me. at all in september nine hundred sixty two we were...
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but most of time things aren't really an issue so long as the killing is being done elsewhere and so long as other people are dying so long as other people are dying it really isn't too much of an issue but of course evenly the bland talk of well will be out by two thousand and fourteen is actually not true because of course the united states is at the moment to go sheeting with president karzai of afghanistan to maintain a fairly substantial u.s. military presence in afghanistan so therefore all the talk that somehow will definitely be out by twenty fourteen is simply not true but both obama and romney went through the charade of reassuring america is all well we'll be out not not to worry about it and so again it was just that they did there was there was real dishonesty ok one of the things i thought if i go back to new york basically you had romney saying that you know it's incumbent upon the united states to teach the arab world the muslim world not to be violent i mean it's kind of ironic isn't it i mean a lot of the violence that comes out of the islamic world right now is a re
but most of time things aren't really an issue so long as the killing is being done elsewhere and so long as other people are dying so long as other people are dying it really isn't too much of an issue but of course evenly the bland talk of well will be out by two thousand and fourteen is actually not true because of course the united states is at the moment to go sheeting with president karzai of afghanistan to maintain a fairly substantial u.s. military presence in afghanistan so therefore...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 7, 2012
10/12
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and where the elbow room is -- i forget the name now it's been so long. what was the name? >> amelia's. >> amelia's. of course the haight had a few places. congratulations on having, you know, being able to stay open for so long. >> thank you. >> we're grateful to you also and the sacrifices of a lot of small business owners [speaker not understood] to stay there for the community. so, thank you. >> billy, i don't know if you'd like to say a few words. >>> i just want to say thank you. pat and nancy did this. i just took over two years ago. pat was my mother. but it would be an honor. thank you. >> thank you very much. >>> she helped me get the bar going really good. >> pat, would you like to say a few words? thank you for waiting today. >>> we're really honored to be here today and to have the recognition from the city and county of san francisco. it means the world to us. so, thank you all very much. >> i know that there is entire bernal heights neighborhood that will be celebrating with you. and, again, we want to thank you for what you do for our neighborhood and the en
and where the elbow room is -- i forget the name now it's been so long. what was the name? >> amelia's. >> amelia's. of course the haight had a few places. congratulations on having, you know, being able to stay open for so long. >> thank you. >> we're grateful to you also and the sacrifices of a lot of small business owners [speaker not understood] to stay there for the community. so, thank you. >> billy, i don't know if you'd like to say a few words. >>>...
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Oct 1, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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i have been writing about lyndon johnson so long sometimes people ask me don't you get bored? the answer is the very opposite is true. i don't think of these books as being about lyndon johnson just like a power broker was not about robert moses. just to tell the life of a famous man from the moment i first thought about doing books i thought of biographies, i thought of biographies as a way of examining the great forces that shaped the times they lived in and particularly political power. why is political power so important? we live in a democracy. we have the power of the votes we cast that ballot boxes and the more we know about political power really works not as it is
i have been writing about lyndon johnson so long sometimes people ask me don't you get bored? the answer is the very opposite is true. i don't think of these books as being about lyndon johnson just like a power broker was not about robert moses. just to tell the life of a famous man from the moment i first thought about doing books i thought of biographies, i thought of biographies as a way of examining the great forces that shaped the times they lived in and particularly political power. why...
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Oct 23, 2012
10/12
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> > it's very uncomfortable sitting on this fence for so long. but if you look at a lot of the developed countries that are out there, you look at like 13 of the most developed countries, 50% of the consumers have a negative trend toward consumer confidence. so, the world is slowing down. so until we see this big push for everybody is very negative, i really don't see an opportunity to start buying. > > there are a handful of money managers out there though that are starting to feel comfortable putting money to work in europe. alan, are they ahead of the curve or right on time? > > i think they're right on time. obviously as a trader you want to buy things when it looks the worst, and we've already seen that major turn. and you can use the performance that we've seen in the stock market here in america. four years we've gone essentially straight up where the s&p has doubled in value. against all potential performance issues, it's continued to go higher. so, the news is noise. trade what the markets and the trends are telling you. > > ed, where wo
> > it's very uncomfortable sitting on this fence for so long. but if you look at a lot of the developed countries that are out there, you look at like 13 of the most developed countries, 50% of the consumers have a negative trend toward consumer confidence. so, the world is slowing down. so until we see this big push for everybody is very negative, i really don't see an opportunity to start buying. > > there are a handful of money managers out there though that are starting to feel...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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do it sometime during the course of litigation if there is a problem with access to your premises, so long as the renovations are readily achievable. if it does not so much cost that it is so excess of for the amount of revenue being generated for your business, you have to make -- the way to look at it is let's say it takes $50,000 to renovate or remedy a the property for business. if your business is generating $100,000 a year in revenues, you clearly are not going to come up with $50,000 to make the changes, at least not in year one. but some of it you can do in year one. that percentage is not in a fixed amount. that usually gets 15% of your gross revenues could be assessed as being available to you to make these repairs. they will aggregate that over time, so if you cannot make all your repairs in year one, you can make some, but it may take you three or four years before you have to make the changes, but there is no defense to making the changes. even if it is a historical building. that is not a defense. when i get involved, it is because 90% of the time, the tenant is the only one
do it sometime during the course of litigation if there is a problem with access to your premises, so long as the renovations are readily achievable. if it does not so much cost that it is so excess of for the amount of revenue being generated for your business, you have to make -- the way to look at it is let's say it takes $50,000 to renovate or remedy a the property for business. if your business is generating $100,000 a year in revenues, you clearly are not going to come up with $50,000 to...
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Oct 10, 2012
10/12
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why is it taking so long? >> the initial -- it would be understandable that the initial story might be confused, right? there's utter chaos. and we often hear it from the military, the fog of battle. that kind of explains the first 48 hours. there is no good explanation for a month later. you have this hearing that begins this morning and just last night sources in the state department leak in advance of the hearing -- >> phone call. wasn't even a leak. >> right. but they wanted the story out before the hearing. it's an intentional sort of thing that, by the way, there was no protest. well, they didn't realize that last night. they realized last night the hearing was this morning and it was going to come out so they wanted to get the story straight. having lived these crises, do
why is it taking so long? >> the initial -- it would be understandable that the initial story might be confused, right? there's utter chaos. and we often hear it from the military, the fog of battle. that kind of explains the first 48 hours. there is no good explanation for a month later. you have this hearing that begins this morning and just last night sources in the state department leak in advance of the hearing -- >> phone call. wasn't even a leak. >> right. but they...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 1, 2012
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administrators we would not see the growth that we have seen but they can only work like this for so longnd we're at the critical point to continue this work. we know what to do now we need the resources to do that district wide so thank you for your attention this evening. we are happy to answer questions. [applause] >> thank you superintendent carranza and other staff members that presented the wonderful news. any comments from the board? commissioner maufas. >> thank you president yee and thank you all for the pretty jam packed full of information presentation. what i would like to ask is knowing that we have come this far and we have been working quite intensely over the last few years -- particularly since i have been on the board and really knowing the work that i of focused on, i would like to know how are we -- you know, how are teachers bringing this work about? and administrators in school sites? and this is a really ongoing question because this is an ongoing presentation where you update us. i would like not only to hear from you now but in the future this sort of discussion p
administrators we would not see the growth that we have seen but they can only work like this for so longnd we're at the critical point to continue this work. we know what to do now we need the resources to do that district wide so thank you for your attention this evening. we are happy to answer questions. [applause] >> thank you superintendent carranza and other staff members that presented the wonderful news. any comments from the board? commissioner maufas. >> thank you...
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Oct 1, 2012
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supreme court because the court has been so evenly divided for so long. so it was very important. and in 1987, remember president reagan nominated? robert bork. robert bork, and something important had happened between the nominations of rehnquist and scalia in 86 and the nomination of bork in 1987. in a midterm election, the democrats had retaken controls of the united states, so the chairman of the judiciary committee was no longer strom thurmond, but was instead a young senator from delaware named joseph biden. and biden engineered a really meticulous examination of orcs record. and bork to his credit, perhaps to his regret, engaged the senators in discussion of how he felt about the issues, and it became clear he felt the civil rights act, a thomas just think, he thought there was no such thing as a right to privacy to the constitution, and the senate by a vote of 58-42 said to conservative and he was voted down. ronald reagan nominated instead to that seat anthony kennedy, who was serving a liberal but was certainly no robert bork either. and he has h
supreme court because the court has been so evenly divided for so long. so it was very important. and in 1987, remember president reagan nominated? robert bork. robert bork, and something important had happened between the nominations of rehnquist and scalia in 86 and the nomination of bork in 1987. in a midterm election, the democrats had retaken controls of the united states, so the chairman of the judiciary committee was no longer strom thurmond, but was instead a young senator from delaware...
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Oct 11, 2012
10/12
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. >>> we've lived this way for so long. searching for her and hoping she would come home. >> a new clue in an infamous bay area kidnapping. why a bay area mother believes she finally knows what happened to the daughter who disappeared 24 years ago. >>> a real-life bonnie and clyde, the husband and wife suspected in a thousand-mile crime spree. and a retired bay area teacher who may have gotten caught in the middle. >>> a new online matchmaker. but this one is not for dating. the new service designed to find your start-up soul mate. good evening. i'm ken bastida. >> and i'm dana king. >>> a bone recovered in the speed freak killer's case is being tested as a possible match for mckayla garrett. she was nine years old when she was abducted in 1988. earlier this year, convicted killer wesley shermantine linked his late partner loren herzog to her disappearance. it took a bizarre route to get to the crime lab. joanne hobson's remains were found in a well back in february. but new testing found 28 of the bone fragments returned t
. >>> we've lived this way for so long. searching for her and hoping she would come home. >> a new clue in an infamous bay area kidnapping. why a bay area mother believes she finally knows what happened to the daughter who disappeared 24 years ago. >>> a real-life bonnie and clyde, the husband and wife suspected in a thousand-mile crime spree. and a retired bay area teacher who may have gotten caught in the middle. >>> a new online matchmaker. but this one is...
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that's quite long enough. so, anyway, that's what happens with this -- >> it's quite long enough for what? i'm kind of curious about that. >> i just thought you were brand new to the job. you acted like what am i supposed to do about you, you know? anyway, i am not assaulting you, man, i'm just checking on your credentials a little bit. >> okay. >> schreiber went on to tell evans a specific group of limon inmates had it out for him. >> they told me they were going to write all of their friends, whatever cell houses they're in, they're going to write their friends and tell them about me and basically, have my [ bleep ] sanctioned, either assaulted or stabbed or killed or whatever. >> did they just see you and decide you were the guy that they were going to write all their friends about? >> no, i was the guy that they were -- >> did you provoke them in any way? >> this is what happened. they kept talking [ bleep ] to me, and then i started talking [ bleep ] back to them and i threatened them, yeah. i threatened the
that's quite long enough. so, anyway, that's what happens with this -- >> it's quite long enough for what? i'm kind of curious about that. >> i just thought you were brand new to the job. you acted like what am i supposed to do about you, you know? anyway, i am not assaulting you, man, i'm just checking on your credentials a little bit. >> okay. >> schreiber went on to tell evans a specific group of limon inmates had it out for him. >> they told me they were going...
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so everything exists is exacerbated and grow. it can hide a lot of problems but we don't have that right now. i just don't think we have a long rope here so either scenario you don't see it ending well what are it's the government tries to inflate and transfers wealth in this works or if everybody says hey we're not going to go for this and there is some kind of major market event so the question is how should people meaning average investors average folks think about their investments their savings their nest egg and perhaps readjust their assumptions about what safety is or what where they should be invested in your view i think that i think that the most important thing is to understand the traditional concepts about diversification and about correlation between various assets classes are no longer operational in this environment whereas before people diversified between fixed income and stocks and as they grew older they did it withdrew the money from stocks and more into fixed income which was perceived to be safer i think things that are were used to be safer probably the least safe and perhaps some things that were per
so everything exists is exacerbated and grow. it can hide a lot of problems but we don't have that right now. i just don't think we have a long rope here so either scenario you don't see it ending well what are it's the government tries to inflate and transfers wealth in this works or if everybody says hey we're not going to go for this and there is some kind of major market event so the question is how should people meaning average investors average folks think about their investments their...
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Oct 7, 2012
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my charge to go out there and get involved and learn the issues and basically what i've been doing so long. we need more of that, the more of the parents being more engaged with the issues and talking about these important issues for the latino community. what is interesting, we've seen such a rise of conservative hispanics such as senator marco rubio and so many of these that have come out really that even for them they have been able to talk about the message of why it's important to get involved and why it's important for hispanics to vote. we are seeing it in florida where you are going to see i think a lot more active hispanics going out to vote. it's interesting to see how california and texas are just not going down that direction. although we have senatorial candidate in texas, ted cruz chance of woning he's hispanic. we're seeing more hispanics getting involved in the political process now we got to get those younger hispanic voters to be more interested in going out and vote. >> i agree, i feel like there is also several barriers that have to do with the latino community not comi
my charge to go out there and get involved and learn the issues and basically what i've been doing so long. we need more of that, the more of the parents being more engaged with the issues and talking about these important issues for the latino community. what is interesting, we've seen such a rise of conservative hispanics such as senator marco rubio and so many of these that have come out really that even for them they have been able to talk about the message of why it's important to get...
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Oct 17, 2012
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after the debate, he said that he wanted to clarify why it took so long to say a terror attack, evenent mentioned it in the rose garden. here's the quote. president obama said he really wanted to take the time to be deliberate rat, to make sure he had all the information. he also told the "washington post" this, obama gave him more information about why he delayed calling the attack a terrorist attack. he told the "washington post" the rationale was to make sure that the intelligence he was acting on was real intelligence and not disinformation. that's according to kerry ladka who had this conversation with the president. he will be on the record with greta tonight. >>> let's bring in our panel. we've had kind of day to digest this. steve? >> well, look. the first thing that must be said is the president did not, in fact, say on september 12th that this benghazi attack was an act of terror. he used the phrase acts of terror, but he used it in a much more je then generic way. when the phrasi don't actually e argument. i think it's a difficult argument for them to make given the contex
after the debate, he said that he wanted to clarify why it took so long to say a terror attack, evenent mentioned it in the rose garden. here's the quote. president obama said he really wanted to take the time to be deliberate rat, to make sure he had all the information. he also told the "washington post" this, obama gave him more information about why he delayed calling the attack a terrorist attack. he told the "washington post" the rationale was to make sure that the...
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Oct 10, 2012
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the lines for tickets for an event in the northeastern part of the state were so long that officials here are saying that it might be the biggest of romney's entire campaign. but campaign officials are cautious. they know it's a long slog ahead. if you count the electoral votes that president obama has locked up, he has -- or almost locked up, he has about a 30-vote lead over governor romney so campaign officials are very cautious. they also say that it can be seductive when polls are going very well in lots of different states, campaigns can spend time in a state that they really in the end based on the fundamentals are not likely to win. but i talked to another campaign official who said given the way things were going a week ago, having too many opportunities is a good problem to have. >> pelley: strategy and tactics changing. john, thanks very much. tomorrow a state department official is expected to tell congress that he warned his bosses that security in libya was getting worse before they that attack on the u.s. consulate. correspondent sharyl attkisson tells us his warnings i
the lines for tickets for an event in the northeastern part of the state were so long that officials here are saying that it might be the biggest of romney's entire campaign. but campaign officials are cautious. they know it's a long slog ahead. if you count the electoral votes that president obama has locked up, he has -- or almost locked up, he has about a 30-vote lead over governor romney so campaign officials are very cautious. they also say that it can be seductive when polls are going...
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members that were just cheering them on and were so surprised that they could get back up and it wasn't literally brushing themselves off obviously there was a long rehabilitation by. these men both men my grandfather also had an assassination attempt survive these things so i think that certainly there was a transition in being more careful in feeling protected and secluded. maybe limiting their reach to other groups because they were just protected for so long but this wasn't the did it didn't succeed in terrorizing them. i don't really seem to show it here i think that i mean i can say that certainly wives and the family and i begin to learn a lot of the back story about how i do believe that their children and the wives were afraid a lot of the time and that's a whole another film i can tell about you know being this connection to very powerful men shot where they themselves terrorized then and felt concerned about their their well being i have it's hard to tell because they got right back up again seems like every journalist because italy committed to this. show in the in the just in the minute we have left martin sheen actor and activist na
members that were just cheering them on and were so surprised that they could get back up and it wasn't literally brushing themselves off obviously there was a long rehabilitation by. these men both men my grandfather also had an assassination attempt survive these things so i think that certainly there was a transition in being more careful in feeling protected and secluded. maybe limiting their reach to other groups because they were just protected for so long but this wasn't the did it...
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Oct 14, 2012
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. >> schieffer: but why did it take so long for the administration to admit the attack was the work of terrorists when the president of libya had told us five days after the attack that's what it happened? >> this leaves us with no doubt that this was preplanned, predetermined. >> schieffer: we'll talk to south carolina senator lindsey graham, who has been looking into the situation. and we'll talk to california congressman darrell issa whose committee is investigating. we'll also gret the take of congressman elijah cummings, senior democrat on the committee. then we'll talk about that, the with vice presidential debate, and the campaign with our political panel, david corn of "mother jones" magazine. katrina vanden heuvel of the can the nation. bay buchanan, pollster frank lutz and our own john dickerson. that's a lot but this is "face the nation." captioning sponsored by cbs from cbs news in washington, "face the nation" with bob schieffer. >> schieffer: good morning. senator lindsey graham is one of the senior republicans on the armed services committee. and he has been looking into
. >> schieffer: but why did it take so long for the administration to admit the attack was the work of terrorists when the president of libya had told us five days after the attack that's what it happened? >> this leaves us with no doubt that this was preplanned, predetermined. >> schieffer: we'll talk to south carolina senator lindsey graham, who has been looking into the situation. and we'll talk to california congressman darrell issa whose committee is investigating. we'll...
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including in new mexico working with kathleen and her organization are coming to the conclusion that so long as corporations have a structure of law and governance which protects them and allows them to come in and to our communities the communities will never be able to protect themselves will never be able to achieve sustainability or sustainable energy and so this work is very much about asserting a community has rights over the rights of corporations and over the rights of a structure of governance which says that they have to have beef forced to be fracking and that they must accept these toxic chemicals and they must accept the earthquakes and other impacts that come with fracking communities are saying no more and they're not willing to accept that structure of governance and so they're actually beginning to move forward new structures of laws through these bills of rights ordinance like we saw in las vegas new mexico this year saying we're going to assert our right to decide not corporations do you think the chances are that we might be able to to have the e.p.a. actually regulate fr
including in new mexico working with kathleen and her organization are coming to the conclusion that so long as corporations have a structure of law and governance which protects them and allows them to come in and to our communities the communities will never be able to protect themselves will never be able to achieve sustainability or sustainable energy and so this work is very much about asserting a community has rights over the rights of corporations and over the rights of a structure of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 9, 2012
10/12
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and where the elbow room is -- i forget the name now it's been so long. what was the name? >> amelia's. >> amelia's. of course the haight had a few places. congratulations on having, you know, being able to stay open for so long. >> thank you. >> we're grateful to
and where the elbow room is -- i forget the name now it's been so long. what was the name? >> amelia's. >> amelia's. of course the haight had a few places. congratulations on having, you know, being able to stay open for so long. >> thank you. >> we're grateful to