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Apr 11, 2015
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suarez presentÓ conversar con univisiÓn deportes. ayudarÁn a kenny suÁrez fuese el centro de las crÍticas? luÍs: de la prensa y los medios hacen su trabajo. si yo le doy de comer a la prensa ellos tambiÉn ami. acepto la la crÍtica, cada vez que puedo me tratÓ de levantar y no escuchar. ivÁn: suÁrez, el cuarto de siete hermanos de una familia humilde, dice que su esposa es la gran luz que ilumina su vida. luis: a pesar de que era un adolescente siempre estuvo conmigo y me ayudaban todo. ivÁn: promete que ahora se portara bien y que obtendrÁ la credibilidad que necesita. luÍs: capas que los 33 o 34 saco e libro fuerte. esto mÁs que nada era una biografÍa. (risas) ivÁn: no se pierdan los 15 minutos de entrevista con luis suÁrez este domingo el expediente univisiÓn deportes a las 8 hora del este y cinco pacÍfico. barbie: vamos con jackie para que nos cuente mÁs de las condiciones del tiempo parecen de semana. jackie: muchos ya hacen planes para el fin de semana y a otros nos toca descansar. asÍs armÓ _ asÍ cerramos la semana. bastante ca
suarez presentÓ conversar con univisiÓn deportes. ayudarÁn a kenny suÁrez fuese el centro de las crÍticas? luÍs: de la prensa y los medios hacen su trabajo. si yo le doy de comer a la prensa ellos tambiÉn ami. acepto la la crÍtica, cada vez que puedo me tratÓ de levantar y no escuchar. ivÁn: suÁrez, el cuarto de siete hermanos de una familia humilde, dice que su esposa es la gran luz que ilumina su vida. luis: a pesar de que era un adolescente siempre estuvo conmigo y me ayudaban...
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Apr 28, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. now, if you need to you can knit stories together from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. stories that may not be inspiring. we are looking at college bound schoolers, and the new curriculum for a.p. history. will the board look at a national framework, and come up with different matters to get the job done. joining me is two guests. jim, before the break you talked about low flexibility. over the course of the year, very different versions are carolina. >> it's possible. teachers teach in a different way. the point of the framework is for them to be emphasised . yes, they might teach in different ways depending upon culture, ways in which they see the needs of their students. we have to trust the expertise. we ought to show more professional development. and provide professional development teachers. it doesn't tell mechanics how to work. the state doesn't tell them how to do heart surgery. teachers are qualified to teach american history. let's teach it. >> the kids are closing up b
i'm ray suarez. now, if you need to you can knit stories together from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. stories that may not be inspiring. we are looking at college bound schoolers, and the new curriculum for a.p. history. will the board look at a national framework, and come up with different matters to get the job done. joining me is two guests. jim, before the break you talked about low flexibility. over the course of the year, very different versions are carolina. >> it's possible....
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Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. there was a time somali's violent extremist group al-shabab vied for control of much of the cratering state. it collected taxes, set up religious courts, and with remorseless pitiless violence, it threatened the stability of the fledgeling government. these days that al-shabab is in trouble in somali. revenues are down, territory under the group's control is whittled down. al-shabab is under pressure, in decline, and very dangerous. the photos from the provincial college in garissa kenya was shocking. the death toll exacted by an armed military organization storming a school, and with steady brutality killing students and staff. a spokesman for al-shabab in somali told "inside story" kenyan violence towards muslim just giifiedthe attack and included this declaration: we'll start the programme in the kenyan capital nairobi, with al jazeera's mohammed adow. welcome to the programme. i hear that the government moved against groups of which it has suspicions. >> indeed. yes. the governmen
i'm ray suarez. there was a time somali's violent extremist group al-shabab vied for control of much of the cratering state. it collected taxes, set up religious courts, and with remorseless pitiless violence, it threatened the stability of the fledgeling government. these days that al-shabab is in trouble in somali. revenues are down, territory under the group's control is whittled down. al-shabab is under pressure, in decline, and very dangerous. the photos from the provincial college in...
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Apr 22, 2015
04/15
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. >>> hello, i'm ray suarez. federal agents raided buildings in three southern californian counties, looking for pregnant women arriving from other countries with a goal to giving birth to an american citizen. if you make it to the united states, a newborn gets you a passport and social security number. it's a squirmish in the immigration area. a place where it doesn't confir citizenship like it does here. it's "inside story." birth right citizenship. >> thousands of times an ear at the united states citizens go into labour. if all goes well, screaming and kicking, an american citizen takes their first breath. many get on a plane and go home, american citizen in their arms, clushed in the baby's fist. federal ates on tuesday raided 20 locations of women found in the sweents from china, paying $15,000 to $50,000 to come to the united states to have their baby. >> what we are investigating is the allegations that the companies facilitate the women to commit visa fraud. it's not illegal it is illegal to lie about th
. >>> hello, i'm ray suarez. federal agents raided buildings in three southern californian counties, looking for pregnant women arriving from other countries with a goal to giving birth to an american citizen. if you make it to the united states, a newborn gets you a passport and social security number. it's a squirmish in the immigration area. a place where it doesn't confir citizenship like it does here. it's "inside story." birth right citizenship. >> thousands of...
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Apr 25, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. the 2016 presidential race offers a field crowded with potential candidates, exploratory candidates and rumoured candidates, and now a declared real-life official campaign. ted cruz "16 kicked off at liberty university, virgin your, where he laid -- virginia, where he laid out his views of an america ready and able to rise to the challenges of this time. >> from the dawn of this country, at every stage america enjoyed god's providential blessing. over and over again when we faced impossible odds, the american people rose to the challenge. you know, compared to that, repealing affordable care act, and abolishing the i.r.s. ain't all that tough. >> al jazeera american political correspondent michael shure joins me, on the road in montgomery alabama. good to have you with us. >> nice to be with you. >> why did ted cruz make a point of stealing a day's march on opponents, declare now rather than virginia, texas? >> i think a little bit of that is an imagery. he's at liberty university in
i'm ray suarez. the 2016 presidential race offers a field crowded with potential candidates, exploratory candidates and rumoured candidates, and now a declared real-life official campaign. ted cruz "16 kicked off at liberty university, virgin your, where he laid -- virginia, where he laid out his views of an america ready and able to rise to the challenges of this time. >> from the dawn of this country, at every stage america enjoyed god's providential blessing. over and over again...
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Apr 23, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. this time on the programme we have been looking at cre, the latest infectious bacterium to become immune to multiple antibiotic medicines. maybe you have heard reports from asia of malaria that is not treatable with drugs, or the variety of tuberculosis resistant to almost every cugdrug to fight that scourge. are we on the cusp of a new earee ear eareeear earee era. we joined by a doctor and specialist in infectious diseases. welcome to the programme. let's begin with an understanding of why the list of diseases that are no longer treated by our most reliable drugs is growing. >> thank you for having me. it's a problem that has been brewing for some time, it's natural evolution. we lose a lot of antibiotic. we use main in the host setting. when we do, the bacteria have little choice but to figure out way to survive the onslaught. they mutate and acquire genes result. >> are human being making the problem worse by not using drugs as prescribed or not using them the best way. i think we
i'm ray suarez. this time on the programme we have been looking at cre, the latest infectious bacterium to become immune to multiple antibiotic medicines. maybe you have heard reports from asia of malaria that is not treatable with drugs, or the variety of tuberculosis resistant to almost every cugdrug to fight that scourge. are we on the cusp of a new earee ear eareeear earee era. we joined by a doctor and specialist in infectious diseases. welcome to the programme. let's begin with an...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. >> humanitarian mission land lands in yemen. strikes against houthis. >>> hello and welcome to al jazeera live from our headquarters i'm elizabeth farrah. also ahead extending the hand of friendship, the u.s. and cuba begin to normalize their relationship. >>> the man
i'm ray suarez. >> humanitarian mission land lands in yemen. strikes against houthis. >>> hello and welcome to al jazeera live from our headquarters i'm elizabeth farrah. also ahead extending the hand of friendship, the u.s. and cuba begin to normalize their relationship. >>> the man
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Apr 24, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez.e're looking at the announcement by mcdonald's this week that it will stop buying chickens raised on antibiotics also used on humans. in the days since, there's been praise and skepticism. we're looking inside big food. chick-fil-a had already moved to antibiotic free poultry. panera has used it for a century. susan von broderers and arianda gann. welcome both of you. ended. do you think this is public relations, mcdonald's is famously well aware of what people are saying about it or an important change in the american food supply? >> i think it's a bit of both. i think it's what americans have been wanting a while, they've been wanting transparency . where their foods are produced how they are produced and where they're coming pr. it'sfrom. it's got to be good pr. i think it's a bit of both. >> your chdges chickens from your suppliers have always been raise raised without antibiotics. is it easy for your farmers or for someone who is doing large factory farming? >> yes of course, than
i'm ray suarez.e're looking at the announcement by mcdonald's this week that it will stop buying chickens raised on antibiotics also used on humans. in the days since, there's been praise and skepticism. we're looking inside big food. chick-fil-a had already moved to antibiotic free poultry. panera has used it for a century. susan von broderers and arianda gann. welcome both of you. ended. do you think this is public relations, mcdonald's is famously well aware of what people are saying about...
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Apr 1, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. the white house said documents being hammered out light on specifics spell out what sides still have to work on. john kerry who had planned to leave switzerland today is staying. and the iranian delegation is willing to stay as long as it takes. americans who say they're skeptical to the obama administration's commitment to iran they don't trust iran to keep a deal it makes with world powers. but that doesn't change the conversation much. do inspections work? can they fake compliance? can they care on a parallel program in secret while reaping the benefits? we figured we would ask someone whose answers are more than jade the guesses. federal arms control inspector welcome to "inside story." >> good to be here, ray. >> if a country summits itself to an international inspection regime first of all how does that work? we've got an iran that already has labs and centerfuges how does that work? >> that's what we're going to find out i think. people have made a lot of comparisons with iraq,
i'm ray suarez. the white house said documents being hammered out light on specifics spell out what sides still have to work on. john kerry who had planned to leave switzerland today is staying. and the iranian delegation is willing to stay as long as it takes. americans who say they're skeptical to the obama administration's commitment to iran they don't trust iran to keep a deal it makes with world powers. but that doesn't change the conversation much. do inspections work? can they fake...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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. >> this is "inside story" from al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez in washington. during the height of the cold war, cuba was frozen outs but the world kept changing. the soviet union assess assess ceased to exist. one thing didn't change, cuba still wasn't welcome and it was becoming a sore spot in bilateral relations, didn't want to see cuba kept in permanent pariah status. 2014, president obama announces a major change in step. president raul castro was among heads of state participating in the hemisphereic confab, and cuba well be removed from the list of state sponsoring terrorism. saturday president obama will meet with raul castro, the first u.s. cuba summit in more than 50 years. cuba ton way back but not all the way back this time on the program. we'll begin this "inside story" at the summit with peter corncornblue, director of the national security archive in washington. welcome to "inside story", peter. is this kind of the last chapter of the cold war that we're watching here? >> well we're witnessing a day tant coming to the detente. that all can discus
. >> this is "inside story" from al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez in washington. during the height of the cold war, cuba was frozen outs but the world kept changing. the soviet union assess assess ceased to exist. one thing didn't change, cuba still wasn't welcome and it was becoming a sore spot in bilateral relations, didn't want to see cuba kept in permanent pariah status. 2014, president obama announces a major change in step. president raul castro was among heads of state...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. >> on "america tonight": sex crimes on campus. lessons learned after a groundbreaking year of reports. >> did you know that title 9 was something that could be applied, that universities could be held responsible under title 9 before this happened to you, before you saw oreport? >> i never heard of title 9. i was one of the people that thought oh it's never going to happen to
i'm ray suarez. >> on "america tonight": sex crimes on campus. lessons learned after a groundbreaking year of reports. >> did you know that title 9 was something that could be applied, that universities could be held responsible under title 9 before this happened to you, before you saw oreport? >> i never heard of title 9. i was one of the people that thought oh it's never going to happen to
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Apr 17, 2015
04/15
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. >>> this is "inside story" on al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez. whether it's commuter rail roads and bridges, municipal water and sue in as a country -- sewerage as a country we are crossing fingers hope well built but old infrastructure holds up. a creaky part is the stricke -- electric grid. it comes to an outlet in your kitchen where without a second thought you make toast and heat coffee. the outage in 2003 was a reminder hour ageing equipment is natural events can plunge millions into the dark. it took days to recover. businesses closed their doors, airports stopped operating, transit and traffic systems were disabled. the white house went dark when an outage hit d c. museums closed. tourists have to be evacuated. traffic lights were out. and the subway had no juice. the state department went dark. and continued with the help of a cell phone mire. >> my colleagues indicated that they do not currently see an a nexus to terrorism or anything like that. given the location or places robbed of power, it was natural that terrorism had to be recalle
. >>> this is "inside story" on al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez. whether it's commuter rail roads and bridges, municipal water and sue in as a country -- sewerage as a country we are crossing fingers hope well built but old infrastructure holds up. a creaky part is the stricke -- electric grid. it comes to an outlet in your kitchen where without a second thought you make toast and heat coffee. the outage in 2003 was a reminder hour ageing equipment is natural events can...
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Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez.cent years more and more armed forces and strategists are thinking about what happens when aqua fers dry up or rains are unreliable, does it make a place more vulnerable to conflict, regional, international or ethnically based. in some places the ability of a place to support a nation is diminished by the water supply. think sudan and other areas. there were ongoing conflict, but when farmers found it impossible to farm, when herdsman had to range further from home to water cattle it ratcheted up tensions there and fanned them into a full-blown armed conflict. the vulnerability of the maldives - a string of islands in the indian ocean threatened with sea level rides, may show up in the chronic instability there. it's tough to make a good life for millions of bangladeshis, as they cling to a smaller territory that's not under threat of floods. all this month on al jazeera america we are doing special programs and reports called "fragile planet." tonight a look at the threats of water in
i'm ray suarez.cent years more and more armed forces and strategists are thinking about what happens when aqua fers dry up or rains are unreliable, does it make a place more vulnerable to conflict, regional, international or ethnically based. in some places the ability of a place to support a nation is diminished by the water supply. think sudan and other areas. there were ongoing conflict, but when farmers found it impossible to farm, when herdsman had to range further from home to water...
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Apr 29, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. shortly after britney maynard's death a harris poll asked americans if they should be allowed to end their lives in cases of terminal illness accompanied by great pain. sizeable majority favour physician issed suicide and euthanasia. 66% say doctors should be allowed to comply with the risks of patients in severe distress who ask to have their lives ended. up from 58%. opposition decreased from 20% in 2011 to 15% now. joining me for the rest of the programme, the director of the institute for human caring at providence health, and jessica, director of criminal affairs and advocacy for compassion and choices, supporting patients making end of life decisions. what happened to dying in america, that made ending your open life look like an attractive proposition. >> in fact, it's hard to get good care through the end of life through people in america's health care system. we know that dying is harder than it needs to be. many people get treatments for their disease and get care through th
i'm ray suarez. shortly after britney maynard's death a harris poll asked americans if they should be allowed to end their lives in cases of terminal illness accompanied by great pain. sizeable majority favour physician issed suicide and euthanasia. 66% say doctors should be allowed to comply with the risks of patients in severe distress who ask to have their lives ended. up from 58%. opposition decreased from 20% in 2011 to 15% now. joining me for the rest of the programme, the director of the...
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Apr 10, 2015
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i'm ray suarez. when the killing of michael brown broke this ferguson, missouri and made nationwide new, americans began to learn more about the community just outside st. louis. it had a sizeable black majority, much of the power in ferguson was in the hands of white politicians chosen in low-turn out elections. the mayor, the schoolboard and police force, and command structure were white in a mostly black down after elections that will change some. wesley bell is a city council-elect from ferguson and joins me. welcome to the programme. what did you make to the video out of north charleston. >> watching the video and having an opportunity to watch it several times, it looks like murder. >> i can't think of any other way to describe it. >> does the existence of the video change in the way you are watching it unfold. does it change the conversation. we had a law enforcement expert a career law enforcement guest in the first segment. it seems like the reaction has been muted and measured. >> well you
i'm ray suarez. when the killing of michael brown broke this ferguson, missouri and made nationwide new, americans began to learn more about the community just outside st. louis. it had a sizeable black majority, much of the power in ferguson was in the hands of white politicians chosen in low-turn out elections. the mayor, the schoolboard and police force, and command structure were white in a mostly black down after elections that will change some. wesley bell is a city council-elect from...
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Apr 20, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. pace is quick thing on american farms.hich means trucks loaded with hives containing millions of bees are already setting out across the country to help pollenate crops. phil torres of al jazeera, "techknow" is still with us. as well as ray gurian. i'll bring back randy vercook to the conversation. if you have to keep upping your population of bees and trying to cope with these sizable losses year after year is that finally going to send a price signal? are you going to have to change the way you do business in ways that make an apricot cost more a plum cost more an almond cost more down the road? >> yes, absolutely. you know i've been doing this thing for 25 years. and it's -- i've just seen constant change. i've had to move my operation several times mainly because of farming practices. and you know i talked earlier about adaptation, that's part of what we have to do. part of the adapting part is spending more money on our bees trying to keep them alive. if you are making up bees all year long you got to think of a hive
i'm ray suarez. pace is quick thing on american farms.hich means trucks loaded with hives containing millions of bees are already setting out across the country to help pollenate crops. phil torres of al jazeera, "techknow" is still with us. as well as ray gurian. i'll bring back randy vercook to the conversation. if you have to keep upping your population of bees and trying to cope with these sizable losses year after year is that finally going to send a price signal? are you going...
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Apr 16, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez.me on the programme we have been talking about the increasing difficulty the state are having buying and using the drugs for lethal injections. utah state representative paul ray helped return an old method of execution to use, so his state has a different position. he joins us from salt lake city. why did you propose and help enact a return to the firing squad in utah? >> thanks for having me. the reason being that the law is - we have the death penalty in utah. the drawings are not available. we needed a way to do the executions so the thought was let's bring back the firing squad. we currently had, if lethal injection was institutional, we added the caveat was if drugs weren't available within 30 days of the execution, the firing back was a fallback. >> have you lost with concern or interest where one state or the other are executing men and women because of problems with the drugs. >> we have watched that closely. i started this a year ago, last march, i realised that the drug was
i'm ray suarez.me on the programme we have been talking about the increasing difficulty the state are having buying and using the drugs for lethal injections. utah state representative paul ray helped return an old method of execution to use, so his state has a different position. he joins us from salt lake city. why did you propose and help enact a return to the firing squad in utah? >> thanks for having me. the reason being that the law is - we have the death penalty in utah. the...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. part of what americans don't seem to understand about iran is if it backed away from making progress in nuclear enrichment it didn't want the decision to come as a result of american orders. the two countries have been at odds for 35 years over just about everything. in his 2002 state of the union speech president george w. bush numbered iran with a group of countries he called an axis of evil. ambassador ryan crocker was in talks about iran over next steps, afghanistan. the tehran government also with the taliban, when the axis of evil brought everything to a halt. the ambassador said talks were constructive. iranians pragmatic. but once the united states signalled that it considered iran an enemy, the talks seized. what can the u.s. accomplish is the nuclear deal the first of many or not workable on its own. can the u.s. build down the tension with iran without jeopardizing long-standing relations with the saudis with israel. >> this is a deal leaving iran with the capacity to produ
i'm ray suarez. part of what americans don't seem to understand about iran is if it backed away from making progress in nuclear enrichment it didn't want the decision to come as a result of american orders. the two countries have been at odds for 35 years over just about everything. in his 2002 state of the union speech president george w. bush numbered iran with a group of countries he called an axis of evil. ambassador ryan crocker was in talks about iran over next steps, afghanistan. the...