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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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such a government needed not the founder's static constitution but a living constitution. a much more permissive constitution, that is the new progressive government needed the old constitution to be construed as granting to the government, powers sufficient for whatever projects the government decided or required for progress. what then about the framer's purpose of writing a constitution to protect people from popular passions. wilson argued that the evolution of society had advanced so far that such worries were acknist i can. the passions in society such as the united states had wilson believed been domesticated. they no longer threatened to be tyrannical or threatened the social order. hence wilson thought the state emancipated from the founders static constitution should be and i quote him an instrumentality for quickening in every way both collective and individual development. well, who was to determine what ways might not be suitable. the answer must be the government itself. wilson was as progressives tended to be a his or the cyst, that is someone with a strong
such a government needed not the founder's static constitution but a living constitution. a much more permissive constitution, that is the new progressive government needed the old constitution to be construed as granting to the government, powers sufficient for whatever projects the government decided or required for progress. what then about the framer's purpose of writing a constitution to protect people from popular passions. wilson argued that the evolution of society had advanced so far...
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is becoming theater and the fiscal cliff discussion as you point out in the beginning is a large statical performance belongs on broadway not here in washington it it's really irrelevant and so increasingly in the united states and the governments both national and local citizenry become obsessed with each other and with discussions about things about shaving one hundred billion dollars when we're when we're facing trillion dollar deficits. about. you know controlling this liberty or struck me down. regulation when we should be figuring out how to how to liberate. capitalistic enterprise yeah yeah so there is that the same thing that you look at all are there any other specific things that you think are concerning to you when you talk about that long term trajectory the u.s. is on shore well you know erick speaks about and it's quite correct i think to speak about the theater that is engrossing the american population as they you know get fed these others to d.d. piece to. and on on and. employment index i'm a little more unsettled with what's going on behind that theater and the militari
is becoming theater and the fiscal cliff discussion as you point out in the beginning is a large statical performance belongs on broadway not here in washington it it's really irrelevant and so increasingly in the united states and the governments both national and local citizenry become obsessed with each other and with discussions about things about shaving one hundred billion dollars when we're when we're facing trillion dollar deficits. about. you know controlling this liberty or struck me...
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almost everyone and they're not getting here so if you look around you say ok well the world is not static never has been this dynamic and dynamic means that change is sometimes better sometimes worse well i don't want to be on the side of something that's getting worse if i can identify so i mean it's getting better so here's an example of something it's getting better but it's a tiny country right tiny country one of the poorest in the western hemisphere record to the united states which is one of the wealthiest nations but very different dynamics we can bring up unemployment just so we can see people show our audience what has happened to us unemployment rolling five year change versus nicaragua and so you know if you look at the tail end there it's been on the ascent in nicaragua and down in the u.s. i know that you're saying this is an example is this just the dynamic though of a developing nation that is going to come in from very low bar and so it's beginning to grow and and not sort of thing versus a developed country that has had a crisis and already has developed yeah that's exac
almost everyone and they're not getting here so if you look around you say ok well the world is not static never has been this dynamic and dynamic means that change is sometimes better sometimes worse well i don't want to be on the side of something that's getting worse if i can identify so i mean it's getting better so here's an example of something it's getting better but it's a tiny country right tiny country one of the poorest in the western hemisphere record to the united states which is...
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Dec 23, 2012
12/12
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WRC
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what if you said that still photograph is not some arrested static moment but a representation of some place, some moment in time that had a past and will have a future? and what if you moved in it the way your eye would move in it if you were living in it, the way you might walk through it if you were living in it? what if you listen to it? is that cart wheel turning or canon firing or the crowds cheering? what are the things that would will that inanimate moment alive again trusting in its secret that it is some portal to that time? that is part of waking the dead. what if you didn't impose the third person narrator but allowed first person voices of the way people spoke then to help animate the period? what if you added period music and the commentary of people that had spent so much of their life studying it that it is almost there. he said to his friend and you think if i just pulled the camera out next to shelby will be layman and then we will get to see abraham lincoln. and people who can put you in that moment and together the aggregate of that is the ken burns effect. there ar
what if you said that still photograph is not some arrested static moment but a representation of some place, some moment in time that had a past and will have a future? and what if you moved in it the way your eye would move in it if you were living in it, the way you might walk through it if you were living in it? what if you listen to it? is that cart wheel turning or canon firing or the crowds cheering? what are the things that would will that inanimate moment alive again trusting in its...
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and stuff so this perception a gang banging is wonderful that is the lifestyle to live it's no life static live period y'all we war but gangbang is to be crippled lang for life your greatest we war is the way plus forty years young ultimate reward again banging is death and you don't come back from that. if you. believe. any. of the you know. the. major streets of south l.a. have given rise to a new sort of guy determined to fight not simply for turf or colors but for the lives of the next generation. i work with about four or five hundred high risk you every month the first thing i do apologize to him because i have to let them know my generation is build you miserable see up to the one years old i've been to decades of destruction so we let them know that hey we have those roles just like you do iraq these peacemakers many of them former gang members have stepped out from behind the gods and are now standing between them literally risking their lives in the formation of street level gang intervention organizations. privately funded receiving almost no support from either state or federal
and stuff so this perception a gang banging is wonderful that is the lifestyle to live it's no life static live period y'all we war but gangbang is to be crippled lang for life your greatest we war is the way plus forty years young ultimate reward again banging is death and you don't come back from that. if you. believe. any. of the you know. the. major streets of south l.a. have given rise to a new sort of guy determined to fight not simply for turf or colors but for the lives of the next...
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Dec 4, 2012
12/12
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LINKTV
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the photographers of the civil war, whose equipment made action scenes impossible, homer preferred static group formations, and yet the feeling of directness in recording the ordinary lends to his work a special force. prisoners from the front, with its profound sense of the resignation, exhaustion, and human cost of war, evoked the admiration of both critics and the public and brought homer his first recognition as an artist. paris, december 1866. homer arrived for an extended visit and to see prisoners from the front and another of his civil war paintings that had been selected for showing at the universal exsition. enjoying the celrity of an artist whose work was well-received, he made the trip profit drawing parisian enes for harper's. homer must have been intrigued by the changes underway in french art and by what he saw in the galleries. with friends, he made several excursions into the countryside near paris, where he developed an eye for the light that would soon appear in his own paintings. after 11 months, he was ready to return to america. he had gone to france as an illustrato
the photographers of the civil war, whose equipment made action scenes impossible, homer preferred static group formations, and yet the feeling of directness in recording the ordinary lends to his work a special force. prisoners from the front, with its profound sense of the resignation, exhaustion, and human cost of war, evoked the admiration of both critics and the public and brought homer his first recognition as an artist. paris, december 1866. homer arrived for an extended visit and to see...
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that's the motto here at the peterhof gardens and all the buildings of the static and economic purposes. of the greats god made an example of this the emperor personally ordered dutch fruit and vegetable seeds which were scolded to russia as a valuable cargo. though the wood says garden has the fairy plants that peter is a great first brought to russia in the seventeen eleven rule that i think that all of them grow here to date as if a sister lettice radish the famous and most unusual vegetable called sigh to choke and a coarse potatoes. in the legend has it that peter is a great planter defers to sacks of potatoes with his own had. vegetables became so popular that the white flowers from potato plants were the most fashionable and ladies had decoration for quite some time today the keeper of the historical go because mento sets about harvesting fruit and vegetables according to dutch tradition she uses them to decorate the vases in peterhof slow gardens. agio the fountain festival is dedicated to a particular era in two thousand and twelve the show takes the audience back to the heroic
that's the motto here at the peterhof gardens and all the buildings of the static and economic purposes. of the greats god made an example of this the emperor personally ordered dutch fruit and vegetable seeds which were scolded to russia as a valuable cargo. though the wood says garden has the fairy plants that peter is a great first brought to russia in the seventeen eleven rule that i think that all of them grow here to date as if a sister lettice radish the famous and most unusual vegetable...
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Dec 13, 2012
12/12
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those 40 and over, race seems to be a static concept.ounger seem they have a better understanding of what race can mean functionally. i'll give you an example. at our school, we are a magnate school. there are times when families will say it's right. i have families say my kid is going to be white to get into capital prep and black to get into college. it's a conversation that we have all over the country. now we have a president who is black and whose mother is white like me. i consider myself african-american but have a white parent. we have a history that we're recommitting to our race. which what once was so static has now become functional and fluid. >> what point, i guess the question is, do you check one of those boxes when you're a quarter american, a half? for students they're asking these questions and so are the institutions, too. >> well, i think what happens when it serves you, you decide which one it's going to be. for me, i'm always black, i don't know any other way to be. but i do understand if i were growing up in a time
those 40 and over, race seems to be a static concept.ounger seem they have a better understanding of what race can mean functionally. i'll give you an example. at our school, we are a magnate school. there are times when families will say it's right. i have families say my kid is going to be white to get into capital prep and black to get into college. it's a conversation that we have all over the country. now we have a president who is black and whose mother is white like me. i consider myself...
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which was about static we seem to have it. tempts as today the leaders organize a demonstration and legal. strategy is to merge several extremist groups into a unified front against immigration big business and economic globalization. all our classic extreme right wing going on this is what i'm. going to. put a lid on pay better course. i'll figure. it out on interest for said that the mail that's. what you got to say they can't come in they don't come in. two buses one hundred or so militants. it's a controversial combo that is closely monitored fifteen kilometers before their destination to. because it. was i. yes well you're right that is why mr behave the journalists here. with cameras present nothing must tarnish the image he wishes to give of his organization right here for a crime going to have a look i'm going fed up i have to do everything around my room ruchir know what the case would like to be able to express our point of view like anyone else on this real day meeting that people realize that we're just going to yo
which was about static we seem to have it. tempts as today the leaders organize a demonstration and legal. strategy is to merge several extremist groups into a unified front against immigration big business and economic globalization. all our classic extreme right wing going on this is what i'm. going to. put a lid on pay better course. i'll figure. it out on interest for said that the mail that's. what you got to say they can't come in they don't come in. two buses one hundred or so militants....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Dec 10, 2012
12/12
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WHUT
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the book to book, the character can never be static.has to be as new as the plot, every time i write about him. tavis: we can read how harry has changed over the years. how has harry changed you? >> he has gone from a guy who had a black and white view of the world. his views on guilt, and so forth. the edges have been sanded down over 20 years. some tough experiences. personal experiences as well as cases. he sees the world more in terms of gray. i think i have made the journey with him. tavis: every detective eventually retires. how will you know it is time to retire harry? >> i hate to say it, but it is coming up soon. if i could write a few of these books, i could put it against the evolution of the city in real time. we were never thinking he was going to be around 20 years. he has aged 20 years. he has a birthday in the book. he is 62. live by the sword and die by the sword. the realism of the series dictates he has two years left. something will pivot, and we will do something else. tavis: does that scare you or excite you as a w
the book to book, the character can never be static.has to be as new as the plot, every time i write about him. tavis: we can read how harry has changed over the years. how has harry changed you? >> he has gone from a guy who had a black and white view of the world. his views on guilt, and so forth. the edges have been sanded down over 20 years. some tough experiences. personal experiences as well as cases. he sees the world more in terms of gray. i think i have made the journey with him....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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so, missing isn't a static installation. it is an installation that is going to grow and change over time. and she has worked to bring all of this information together from laboratory after laboratory including, fortunately, our great fwroup of researche e-- g researchers at the california academy. >> this couldn't have been more site specific to this place and we think just visually in terms of its scupltural form it really holds its own against the architectural largest and grandeur of the building. it is an unusual compelling object. we think it will draw people out on the terrace, they will see the big cone and say what is that. then as they approach the cone tell hear these very unusual sounds that were obtained from the cornell orinthology lab. >> we have the largest recording of birds, mammals, frogs and insects and a huge library of videos. so this is an absolutely perfect opportunity for us to team up with a world renown, very creative inspirational artist and put the sounds and sights of the animals that we study i
so, missing isn't a static installation. it is an installation that is going to grow and change over time. and she has worked to bring all of this information together from laboratory after laboratory including, fortunately, our great fwroup of researche e-- g researchers at the california academy. >> this couldn't have been more site specific to this place and we think just visually in terms of its scupltural form it really holds its own against the architectural largest and grandeur of...
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the recession with the brits at bases of a static as the government announces the extension of its cuts program tells a story much more of this will bring. wedge issues do just what their name implies they get between people and drive them apart like a wage and these issues seem to always take the forefront in the media it's things like abortion gun rights marijuana legalization and the weather well the weather isn't really a west. people sure talk about it way too much there's only so much room in the national discourse and these wage issues just eat up all of the time and attention but the thing is that there is a little something called the tenth amendment you know the. and that says that any powers that are specifically delegated the federal government are reserved for the states and last time i checked the constitution doesn't have a special weed clause saying that marijuana has to be an all or nothing a national proposal and that goes for abortion and most of the wedge issues also there's a simple answer all these wedge issues just left the states make up their own ma ains but the
the recession with the brits at bases of a static as the government announces the extension of its cuts program tells a story much more of this will bring. wedge issues do just what their name implies they get between people and drive them apart like a wage and these issues seem to always take the forefront in the media it's things like abortion gun rights marijuana legalization and the weather well the weather isn't really a west. people sure talk about it way too much there's only so much...
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Dec 2, 2012
12/12
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republicans nationally, the story they conveyed was that the 47% are stuck at a static world.t have to worry about you. i cannot think of an idea more an threat calm well, that's a strong state. did he mean the 47 thinking or the fact that david corn and "mother jones" got that out and said that down there? >> i think part of it is we let them -- >> was it about looking down on people? >> i think what happened is early on the obama people did a good job with the perception that mitt romney was not george bailey. he was mr. potter. >> right. >> then we said narratives that confirmed that to people. >> lionel barrymore. >> we kept do that as a party. we have to let everybody know we understand their lives. failed in 2010. but we can do well again. >> the banker's eye, right? tip of the ice. your thoughts, bochblt is it just the personality? the guy looked like an elitist, cold-hearted guy that would say no to you when you went to the banker's window? >> yes. i'll tell you. he's right. what happened in the summer is the obama campaign brilliantly went out and defined mitt romney.
republicans nationally, the story they conveyed was that the 47% are stuck at a static world.t have to worry about you. i cannot think of an idea more an threat calm well, that's a strong state. did he mean the 47 thinking or the fact that david corn and "mother jones" got that out and said that down there? >> i think part of it is we let them -- >> was it about looking down on people? >> i think what happened is early on the obama people did a good job with the...
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Dec 2, 2012
12/12
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FOXNEWSW
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fascinating to put it in the bigger context of the debate about tax revenue, the economists have the static view, you've got x-amounts of capital gains income and you get 20% more tax revenue. >> you don't, because people decide to shelter it. they do their transactions the year before, when the amount is less. and so, all of these numbers that the white house is counting on and sort of rubbing its hands together hoping to get. they're not going to get anywhere near that because wealthy, as mary said. are very good at making sure the tax man can't get their hands on it. >> here is the thing i don't get about the president's calculation politically. if you look at the reagan's presidency and clinton's, the one reason they had successful terms, they had growth. clinton 4% growth. more than 4% and reagan chose to that. that buoyed public sentiment that helped their approval ratings throughout enormous revenues that they could use. if obama gets a recession in the second term after the slow growth of the first term, he's dead in the water. he can't afford that. >> yes, but ball there's a whole
fascinating to put it in the bigger context of the debate about tax revenue, the economists have the static view, you've got x-amounts of capital gains income and you get 20% more tax revenue. >> you don't, because people decide to shelter it. they do their transactions the year before, when the amount is less. and so, all of these numbers that the white house is counting on and sort of rubbing its hands together hoping to get. they're not going to get anywhere near that because wealthy,...
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nobody really fights drug production is like fighting cancer there is no point in fighting men to static tumors without addressing the original tumor this phenomenon is actually a direct threat to international peace and security which means this is something that the u.n. security council and not just the general assembly should deal with all governments want to control everything they think this is a government's main function to control everything including drug use in drug distribution but this is why i mean you can freeze one to legalize what they call soft drugs so the least harmful drugs you think i called that this is a road to nowhere that tell us why. and you know a quarter conventions in general assembly declarations don't allow legalization of drugs and here is why. even the drugs that you referred to as soft like. marry juana for example damage the central nervous systems they kill people they destroy their personality. at the worst number one and number two this business generates huge profits which will immediately send crime rates up so it's a grave mistake but the roots
nobody really fights drug production is like fighting cancer there is no point in fighting men to static tumors without addressing the original tumor this phenomenon is actually a direct threat to international peace and security which means this is something that the u.n. security council and not just the general assembly should deal with all governments want to control everything they think this is a government's main function to control everything including drug use in drug distribution but...
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN
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such a government needed not the founder's static constitution but a living constitution. much more permissive constitution, that is the new progressive government needed the old constitution to be construed as granting to the government, powers sufficient for whatever projects the government decided or required for progress. what then about the framer's purpose of writing a constitution to protect people from popular passions. wilson argued that the evolution of society had advanced so far that such worries were acknist i can. the passions in society such as the united states had wilson believed been domesticated. they no longer threatened to be tyrannical or threatened the social order. hence wilson thought the state emancipated from the founders static constitution should be and i quote him an instrumentality for quickening in every way both collective and individual development. well, who was to determine what ways might not be suitable. the answer must be the government itself. wilson was as progressives tended to be a his or the cyst, that is someone with a strong se
such a government needed not the founder's static constitution but a living constitution. much more permissive constitution, that is the new progressive government needed the old constitution to be construed as granting to the government, powers sufficient for whatever projects the government decided or required for progress. what then about the framer's purpose of writing a constitution to protect people from popular passions. wilson argued that the evolution of society had advanced so far...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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CNNW
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i don't like static cling. >> who likes static cling?p you out i know some members of congress, male and female let's say who have terrible reputations, characters barkley, terrible reputations web it comes to using the staff. does that happen? >> that kind of stuff i think happens all the time. you'll see staffers walk in, dogs are on the capitol complex. >> carrying purses around. >> i think a lot of people don't realize, we wanted to capitalize on the tasks. >> what's the worst, dealing with the spouse, come on, out with it. >> you get asked interesting requests. staffers, fellow colleagues might not be there for a reason. we came from a campaign because we believed in minnesota, maybe folks are looking at their reputation versus everything else. >> that was a potomac two-step like that. you see how she danced around that question. >> look i know why people bought "the devil wears prada." they got behind the scenes stuff there. you're saying it's not about norm coleman. what percentage of your book is real, what percentage is fiction?
i don't like static cling. >> who likes static cling?p you out i know some members of congress, male and female let's say who have terrible reputations, characters barkley, terrible reputations web it comes to using the staff. does that happen? >> that kind of stuff i think happens all the time. you'll see staffers walk in, dogs are on the capitol complex. >> carrying purses around. >> i think a lot of people don't realize, we wanted to capitalize on the tasks. >>...
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Dec 1, 2012
12/12
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MSNBCW
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republicans nationally, the story they conveyed was that the 47% are stuck in a static world, we don'tave to worry about you. i cannot think of an idea more antithetical to this country's principles. >> did he mean the 47 thinking or the fact that david corn and mother jones got that out that he had said that out down there. >> part of it was -- >> was it the thinking or the words. >> early on, the obama people did a good job with the perception that mitt romney wasn't george bailey, he was mr. potter. and then we said narratives that confirmed that to people. >> lionel barrymore. >> we can't do that as a party. as a party we have to let everybody know we're fighting for them, understand their lives, and, frankly, we failed this time, but we did well in 2010, and we can do well again. >> the banker's eye, right? i mean, tip o'neill used to say the guy who had an eye missing, the glass eye, that was the warmer one, the glass one, for the banker. did he just look like an elitist, cold-hearted guy? >> i don't always agree with john. i seldom agree with john, but he's right. what happened
republicans nationally, the story they conveyed was that the 47% are stuck in a static world, we don'tave to worry about you. i cannot think of an idea more antithetical to this country's principles. >> did he mean the 47 thinking or the fact that david corn and mother jones got that out that he had said that out down there. >> part of it was -- >> was it the thinking or the words. >> early on, the obama people did a good job with the perception that mitt romney wasn't...
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who wear you out just to give us sort of a small example this is only now in the a few months of a static and general start of this as you consider them not as the most little event of the to society but they are one of the most of the motor for until you see . the normally out of the establishment to go on certainly extended state goes to the field knowing that we're going to put in links with use of nukes of course and if so it's going to be exact number of our own economy if you finally get the sum up of money but another layer where you go to the closest. or i'd george shortcuts are going to turn in professor of constitutional law thank you andrew. online from us tonight there is international role reversal going on with a warning over nuclear aggression this time it's a random sounding the alarm against the united states over atomic tests in nevada with washington accused of double standards and snubbing the u.n. nuclear watchdog reporting on the web sites say also as well smart new set of wheels this was say these benedict the sixty years the pope's taken the liberty of his new heig
who wear you out just to give us sort of a small example this is only now in the a few months of a static and general start of this as you consider them not as the most little event of the to society but they are one of the most of the motor for until you see . the normally out of the establishment to go on certainly extended state goes to the field knowing that we're going to put in links with use of nukes of course and if so it's going to be exact number of our own economy if you finally get...
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is a static now is a system stable is it moving forward. well they're pushing ahead with him for infrastructure in a very big way anybody who hasn't been to japan in simple years who notices how much new infrastructure there is that mean it's extraordinary if you take for instance the airports they're all it super modern. they make kennedy and dulles airport in washington the make them look like third world airports so there's an enormous amount of infrastructure investment and the maglev thing is a classic example of that the trains will run at more than three hundred miles an hour. and they will be the fastest in the world. entirely japanese technology coming from the heavy industries and this is basically government owned and run. but the. lines will be technically private in the sense that there will be outside shareholders. to be heavily. regulated the government is deciding for instance the route that the maglev will take. on this sensitive partnership between the government and all this other infrastructure the airports and things th
is a static now is a system stable is it moving forward. well they're pushing ahead with him for infrastructure in a very big way anybody who hasn't been to japan in simple years who notices how much new infrastructure there is that mean it's extraordinary if you take for instance the airports they're all it super modern. they make kennedy and dulles airport in washington the make them look like third world airports so there's an enormous amount of infrastructure investment and the maglev thing...
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574
Dec 1, 2012
12/12
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KPIX
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conference, which is why republicans regard the president's proposal and his heech today as more static than substance. >> pelley: major, thank you. well, the government will be getting a shot of revenue, about $67 million from just one american family in dearborn, missouri. that is their tax bill after they hit the lottery jackpot. mark and cindy hill claimed their share of the record $588 million power ball jackpot. that's their six-year-old daughter jayden whom they adopted from china and her big brothers. cindy, who lost her job two years ago, was the first to know that they'd won. >> i didn't find out until the next day after i'd taken my daughter to school and i went by to see what the numbers were and i got back in my car and i didn't have my glasses and i was thinking "is that the right numbers, is that the right numbers?" and i was shaking and i called my husband and i said "i think i'm having a heart attack." >> pelley: the hills take home $135 million after taxes. mark hill, a mechanic, is quitting his job. >> i talked to my boss over the phone. he didn't belief me. later he
conference, which is why republicans regard the president's proposal and his heech today as more static than substance. >> pelley: major, thank you. well, the government will be getting a shot of revenue, about $67 million from just one american family in dearborn, missouri. that is their tax bill after they hit the lottery jackpot. mark and cindy hill claimed their share of the record $588 million power ball jackpot. that's their six-year-old daughter jayden whom they adopted from china...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 4, 2012
12/12
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SFGTV
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will continue to move along in the coming months and will eventually change the zoning that's been static in west soma for years, so staff will continue to keep you informed and if commissioner tan or hyde have anything to add, you can do it now or i can finish my report. >> i have a question just on this. so, this plan has been ten years in the making and this goes to you and you and possibly you, so this plan's been ten years in the making and they've come up with all of these recommendations. have they taken into consideration in your best guess changing times, like the city is coming back, we have less unemployment, we have an influx of new tech companies, we possibly are going to have a warrior's arena, has this plan in any way taken into consideration changing times in the future or is it set somewhere 8 or 10 years ago? >> i think that's a loaded question and i'm probably not apt to answer that directly to you. >> anybody have an opinion? >> i sat on the planning task force for a few months. i was an appointee from james kim's office, by the time i got there, it was already in the
will continue to move along in the coming months and will eventually change the zoning that's been static in west soma for years, so staff will continue to keep you informed and if commissioner tan or hyde have anything to add, you can do it now or i can finish my report. >> i have a question just on this. so, this plan has been ten years in the making and this goes to you and you and possibly you, so this plan's been ten years in the making and they've come up with all of these...