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Oct 1, 2011
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in the public garden in boston there's a statue for charles sumner. all it says is sumner. there's no explanation. to explanation of who he was. no explanation who the sculpture was. most people, i think, probably probably 1 out of 1,000 out of boston has no idea who he was. if they have any thought is that he built the sumner tunnel in boston which he did not. charles sumner went to paris because he wanted to attend lectures at the sorbonne. and he attended lectures of all kinds. and he took notes. he crammed in french before he started his lecture attendance and he became quite fluent in it and he took notes on everything. everything imaginable and one day he -- his mind began to strain a little because the professor was running on a little longer than he expected. so he began looking around at the other students in the hall. the hall is still there, by the way. and of there's close to 1,000 students in the hall and he noticed that the black students were treated as if everyone else. they talked the same as everyone else. they dressed the same as everyone else and they ha
in the public garden in boston there's a statue for charles sumner. all it says is sumner. there's no explanation. to explanation of who he was. no explanation who the sculpture was. most people, i think, probably probably 1 out of 1,000 out of boston has no idea who he was. if they have any thought is that he built the sumner tunnel in boston which he did not. charles sumner went to paris because he wanted to attend lectures at the sorbonne. and he attended lectures of all kinds. and he took...
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159
Oct 7, 2011
10/11
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FOXNEWSW
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even larry sumners had red flags. the president can pawn this off as a risky proposition. >> the resignation won't make the congressional investigation and it is fbi investigations go away. weil see what happens next. if there are other things about bhiert house interference. what is on the record now, folks at the white house were pushing this because it was a storyline that they wanted to fit the president and the vice-president into as a centerpiece of their plans for energy investments and this seemed like a perfect company to fit the bill. >> i think what's disstress is that those who had bad judgment at the white house, they have their jbo jobs. it is not just a bad risk. there were red flags and lots of signs and they are making decisions -- maybe not on loans, but other things. >> this program's done. >> thankfully. which is another issue, before it was finished, they just last week, they just quickly rammed through a bunch of other loans because it was the end of the program. >> that's right. you have heard t
even larry sumners had red flags. the president can pawn this off as a risky proposition. >> the resignation won't make the congressional investigation and it is fbi investigations go away. weil see what happens next. if there are other things about bhiert house interference. what is on the record now, folks at the white house were pushing this because it was a storyline that they wanted to fit the president and the vice-president into as a centerpiece of their plans for energy...
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Oct 18, 2011
10/11
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CNN
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have hired, the folks that wanted to deal with the inequality, he bypassed them for geithner and sumnern you have volcker and others who want to make systemic changes to wall street to get rid of all the crap that we saw and he chose not to go with them but chose to go with the team that put him in a position. how can he say the first guys were right, i should have brought my "a" advisers in but i went with the other ones. >> that's his fault. he's the president of the united states. he can't blame anybody but himself. it all goes to the top. the other point that david made is waiting for moments to take place so that your fortune is in a better place is a very, very difficult place for a president to be. you want to be in control. you want to be able to drive your message. you want to be able to define the parameters of this debate. but right now he's not. >> i agree with that. but that's because he's weak and he's wounded. he has to find something around that can bring strength to him again. >> they've not been strong at going on the offensive with communications wise. we talk all the
have hired, the folks that wanted to deal with the inequality, he bypassed them for geithner and sumnern you have volcker and others who want to make systemic changes to wall street to get rid of all the crap that we saw and he chose not to go with them but chose to go with the team that put him in a position. how can he say the first guys were right, i should have brought my "a" advisers in but i went with the other ones. >> that's his fault. he's the president of the united...
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182
Oct 25, 2011
10/11
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KNTV
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the city is up to 300 and the city staffing is down. 67 san jose police officers were laid off this sumner a move projected to save the city between $12 million and $13 million but the flip side is fewer officers mean more overtime. consider between july and october of this year officers worked 48,679 hours of overtime. in the same period the year before, it was almost the same at 49,481 hours of ot, also the same but with 67 fewer officers on the street. >> overtime is always going to be an issue because public safety is a 24/7 job, and, you know, if we take officers away from the police department, that job still has to get done. >> ask any officer and they say o is it part of the job. in fact, salary records reflect how much a part. one crime analyst made $69,000 in base pay but made nearly $61,000 in overtime. that was the highest overtime payout for the department last year. the next highest was that of an officer who made $107,000 of base pay and wrakd up 60 grand in overtime. officers expect overtime for big events like the violence between biker gangs this fall and the one-man crim
the city is up to 300 and the city staffing is down. 67 san jose police officers were laid off this sumner a move projected to save the city between $12 million and $13 million but the flip side is fewer officers mean more overtime. consider between july and october of this year officers worked 48,679 hours of overtime. in the same period the year before, it was almost the same at 49,481 hours of ot, also the same but with 67 fewer officers on the street. >> overtime is always going to be...
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236
Oct 1, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN2
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you know, france may be, that the british were impressing the british to a forth sumner frontier andstirring up indians, the british invaded virginia and chased my friend jeffrey sent out with on a cello is relate this mom grudge list. and so, the war of 1812 and a very important sense it's all right, let's just do it finally. let's just have it out. this has been going on for years. enough already. and you know, at the end, technically it's a grow off that we declared the jury. so that's how it becomes a big tree. yes, sir. >> thank you for a very interesting discourse. my question brings us back to madison and jackson. jackson during madison president was a rising star militarily and politically in the indian wars and in 1814 in new orleans. what was the real relationship? selected madison really think about jackson? >> during that time and later. >> well, i'm glad you added that because it anticipated changes. early on like the other great virginians consorted the older jefferson and madison and also monroe who is the youngest of them. they are alarmed by jack sim. this sort of th
you know, france may be, that the british were impressing the british to a forth sumner frontier andstirring up indians, the british invaded virginia and chased my friend jeffrey sent out with on a cello is relate this mom grudge list. and so, the war of 1812 and a very important sense it's all right, let's just do it finally. let's just have it out. this has been going on for years. enough already. and you know, at the end, technically it's a grow off that we declared the jury. so that's how...
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534
Oct 26, 2011
10/11
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MSNBC
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. >> well, i was very shocked because actually we didn't use tear gas this sumner london, although there were obviously demands. tear gas is not used much on mainland britain at all because of the pr carpet it gives to protesters and the police here to be very careful. a "new york times"/cbs, 40% of the americans are the pro wall street occupied movement and 20% disagree and have you to be worry about galvanizing that sympathy towards that movement by using something as extreme as tear gas. >> at the same time, rob, it's become apparent that each of these protests in each city is very different from each other's city because it takes on the culture and the dynamic and the -- whatever the attitude, not just of the protesters, but each police force i really think has a different culture depending on who the chief of police is and what the mechanism of that engagement is. what do you see as the greatest sort of social and political risk of the inconsistency, if you will, of both the occupation itself, and to both of you really, and also the inconsistency of its policeing? >> imogen is right
. >> well, i was very shocked because actually we didn't use tear gas this sumner london, although there were obviously demands. tear gas is not used much on mainland britain at all because of the pr carpet it gives to protesters and the police here to be very careful. a "new york times"/cbs, 40% of the americans are the pro wall street occupied movement and 20% disagree and have you to be worry about galvanizing that sympathy towards that movement by using something as extreme...