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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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FBC
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i will say, those people walking out of the ghetto, if they walk out the ghetto young enough, they'llcompeting for higher paying jobs, not these jobs. research has proven what i've always said. there is a connection between how much gulf a ceo plays and the performance was their company and it ain't good. i have a a few interesting stats that will surprise you when we come back ♪ charles: so should investors be wary of investing in companies where the ceo spends too much time on the golf course? and i say, it's the same thing applies to the president of a country. we'll be right back to debate it charles: so on november 13, augusta country club in georgia announced its third female member. while many cheered the progress, remember it took them 80 years to name their first female members. there were other parts of the announcement that bother me. i think ceos play too much golf already. the more they play, the worst off investors are. research of golfers from 363 companies in the s&p 1500, from 2,008, 2012, a big nice study showed golfers who played 22 rounds or more had returns on ass
i will say, those people walking out of the ghetto, if they walk out the ghetto young enough, they'llcompeting for higher paying jobs, not these jobs. research has proven what i've always said. there is a connection between how much gulf a ceo plays and the performance was their company and it ain't good. i have a a few interesting stats that will surprise you when we come back ♪ charles: so should investors be wary of investing in companies where the ceo spends too much time on the golf...
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Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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when you grow up like how we grew up with gangs or whatever in the neighborhood, in the ghetto, you'reed to watch your back because you have enemies on the street. you go to school with your enemies and you get on the bus with them. when people come here it's not that new to us. we've been watching our back all our life. looking at. he's looking at every individual movement of this yard. when you grow up like how we grew up with gangs or whatever in the neighborhood, in the ghetto, you're raised to watch your back because you have enemies on the street. you go to school with your enemies and on the bus with them. why do i cook for the holidays? to share with family to carry on traditions to come together, even when we're apart in stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy, and more, swanson® makes holiday dishes delicious! what if we finally had that would be amazing. hey, what if we took down this wall? what if this was my art studio? what if we were pre-approved? shut up! from finding to financing, how'd you do that? zillow. then boom... what happened? stress, fun, bad habits kids, now what? l
when you grow up like how we grew up with gangs or whatever in the neighborhood, in the ghetto, you'reed to watch your back because you have enemies on the street. you go to school with your enemies and you get on the bus with them. when people come here it's not that new to us. we've been watching our back all our life. looking at. he's looking at every individual movement of this yard. when you grow up like how we grew up with gangs or whatever in the neighborhood, in the ghetto, you're...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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ALJAZAM
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reagan, and the other republicans i know, probably felt they were doing people in the ghetto and in the barrio trying to do them a favor by protecting their children from the drug dealers. >> would you agree that the war on drugs failed? >> yeah i think the war on drugs was like the war in iraq. it was something we should not have really gotten into. one of the unintended consequences of marijuana prohibition is the fact that we have undermined honest government in various parts of the third world, especially on our own border with mexico. we have created a flow of wealth and power into the hands of a criminal element. >> it's a chilling and draconian sentence... it simply cannot stand. >> its disgraceful... the only crime they really committed is journalism... >> they are truth seekers... >> all they really wanna do is find out what's happening, so they can tell people... >> governments around the world all united to condemn this... >> as you can see, it's still a very much volatile situation... >> the government is prepared to carry out mass array... >> if you want free press in the n
reagan, and the other republicans i know, probably felt they were doing people in the ghetto and in the barrio trying to do them a favor by protecting their children from the drug dealers. >> would you agree that the war on drugs failed? >> yeah i think the war on drugs was like the war in iraq. it was something we should not have really gotten into. one of the unintended consequences of marijuana prohibition is the fact that we have undermined honest government in various parts of...
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Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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KQEH
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and that the bombs that were dropping in vietnam were dropping in the ghetto. >> it was precient. go ahead. ♪ our cities crumble from a bomb ♪ ♪ dropped on a foreign land ♪ when politicians stand and watch ♪ ♪ as the flames of hate are fanned ♪ ♪ no one is too young to help ♪ no effort too small >> 1972? ♪ we all must heed the call ♪ if you love your country ♪ and for which it stands ♪ vote for gene mccarthy ♪ and bring peace to our land >> talk about gene mccarthy, dollars for bombs, deprive us of the honorable use of our resources so we can be a caring nation. >> i want to go back to this group staying together, you were making a point about what kept you together all these years. i can die and go to heaven now. noel read my book. knowing, i am honored that you actually took a book of mine, of course it was a book about dr. king. i love you for reading that text. it was a labor of love for me. >> i bet it was. >> let me go back to this notion that peter raises of all the things and the social injustice where they kept you together. so the "new york times," they kind of outed you
and that the bombs that were dropping in vietnam were dropping in the ghetto. >> it was precient. go ahead. ♪ our cities crumble from a bomb ♪ ♪ dropped on a foreign land ♪ when politicians stand and watch ♪ ♪ as the flames of hate are fanned ♪ ♪ no one is too young to help ♪ no effort too small >> 1972? ♪ we all must heed the call ♪ if you love your country ♪ and for which it stands ♪ vote for gene mccarthy ♪ and bring peace to our land >> talk...
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a ground level unit in the ghetto is like having front row seats to a tom cruise action flick, except in this one, tom doesn't do his own stunts, and his stunt double is always black. nobody with that penis should ever consider suicide. how come cool like that happens in this neighborhood? that was our office? here's why i only wrestle boys in the dark. yeah. whatever. holy sucker. i bet he just had a really good idea. we're gonna to need a medic and an electrician. the ghost of owen hart has been haunting that middle school for years. i wish this would happen to ray lewis every time he starts to dance. i wouldn't be surprised if the mouth of the south jimmy hart was behind this. if you're too chunky to take your shirt off at the beach, you're too chunky to do this -- ready. he's going to do it. holy crap. holy crap. i'd say try not to put too much weight on it, but that doesn't seem likely. everyone who's ever worn a livestrong bracelet, know that karma's coming for ya. that's why dawson only went to the pier to think. what's next? [foreign language spoken] relax. he clearly has a pr
a ground level unit in the ghetto is like having front row seats to a tom cruise action flick, except in this one, tom doesn't do his own stunts, and his stunt double is always black. nobody with that penis should ever consider suicide. how come cool like that happens in this neighborhood? that was our office? here's why i only wrestle boys in the dark. yeah. whatever. holy sucker. i bet he just had a really good idea. we're gonna to need a medic and an electrician. the ghost of owen hart has...
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Nov 11, 2014
11/14
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WHYY
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. >> i'm the same guy i was, you know, in chicago as a little kid on the south side in the ghetto. >>tle more proficient now. >> and i learned a few years thing. i learned a few thing. i'm the same person. i mean, we don't have to change from being the person that you have always been since childhood. has nothing to do with being happy in your life. you don't have to change into something other than yourself. >> yeah. >> to be happy. that's the idea of possibilities. it just means that this life that we have is a real treasure. >> yeah. and the most important things that are part of the happiness that one can achieve is not getting the perfect spouse, getting the car and the house, it's not that. it's the things that are priceless -- courage, compassion, wisdom, integrity. those thing. there are lessons that i've learned from others about exactly those subjects. >> i'm always honored to have you on this program. i walked into my producer's of the other day and saw a roster of folk coming on. and guess whose name of up there other than yours? jo joni merchle. i'm on cloud nine -- joni
. >> i'm the same guy i was, you know, in chicago as a little kid on the south side in the ghetto. >>tle more proficient now. >> and i learned a few years thing. i learned a few thing. i'm the same person. i mean, we don't have to change from being the person that you have always been since childhood. has nothing to do with being happy in your life. you don't have to change into something other than yourself. >> yeah. >> to be happy. that's the idea of...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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going into the ghetto. and the cops said, don't go. they were fearful of a riot.ays. >> for those of you who are black and are tempted to be filled with hatred and mistrust of the injustice of such an act, i would only say that i can also feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. i had a member of my family killed. and he was killed by a white man. >> he gives this spontaneous speech to an absolutely devastated crowd. this wasn't just politics. he made it personal. >> let us say a prayer for our country and for our people. thank you very much. [ applause ] >> this country and every person in it suffered a terrible loss tonight with the assassination of this man. the perpetrator of this deed brings down upon all of us the painful charge that we americans are the prisoners of violence and destruction and death. that is the tragedy of it. restraint, gentleness, charity, virtues we so desperately need, have had a dark day. >> king was the only rational voice that was left in america. he stood against the war in vietnam. he stood against violence, period. so, when
going into the ghetto. and the cops said, don't go. they were fearful of a riot.ays. >> for those of you who are black and are tempted to be filled with hatred and mistrust of the injustice of such an act, i would only say that i can also feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. i had a member of my family killed. and he was killed by a white man. >> he gives this spontaneous speech to an absolutely devastated crowd. this wasn't just politics. he made it personal. >> let...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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closed the ghettos. -- got rid of the inquisition, of course, which was still in existence. got rid of the holy roman empire an all these old structures. >> many people regard him as a monster and regard him as an evil dictator, instituted a coup, murdered his opponents. what do you say to them? >> first of all, he murdered one opponent. and you can actually name the people who he killed for political reasons on the fingers of one hand. so the idea that he was some kind of an adolf hitler who killed millions of people or political and racial reasons is completely absurd as far as i'm concerned. i don't for a moment deny that he did do some totally ruthless things, including a massacre in jaffa in israel which was a war crime to all intents and purposes. what i do deny though is he was anything like hitler. he didn't see things in racial terms. he was not an exterminationist and he had a positive vision which is something people tend to forget. >> do you think that at the end of his life he regarded himse
closed the ghettos. -- got rid of the inquisition, of course, which was still in existence. got rid of the holy roman empire an all these old structures. >> many people regard him as a monster and regard him as an evil dictator, instituted a coup, murdered his opponents. what do you say to them? >> first of all, he murdered one opponent. and you can actually name the people who he killed for political reasons on the fingers of one hand. so the idea that he was some kind of an adolf...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
by
WUSA
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car got keyed one time and he would say, "that's the kind of thing that happens when you live in the ghetto." when this is all you can afford that this is what you can drive. he was never motivated by the money. >> he'll be interesting to see the kind of celebration that the city will plan to send him off. first thank you. >>> ferguson, missouri is bracing for more possible trouble tonight after two days of protest and violence. the unrest lead to the cancellation of the annual thanksgiving day parade. >>> 45 people were arrested in ferguson during the demonstration. >>> the area's first snowstorm of the season. there's been quite a bit of snow to the north and the west of the beltway. >> and that is why we've got our scott broom and the mobile newsroom vehicle positioned in frederick county, maryland. scott, tell us where you are going and what is happening where you are. >> reporter: i'm at the top over the hill. here is the gopro camera. we'll show you a couple of those shots in a moment as it is foggy up here and still snowing, 32 degrees behind me here. you can see it there in pittsbur
car got keyed one time and he would say, "that's the kind of thing that happens when you live in the ghetto." when this is all you can afford that this is what you can drive. he was never motivated by the money. >> he'll be interesting to see the kind of celebration that the city will plan to send him off. first thank you. >>> ferguson, missouri is bracing for more possible trouble tonight after two days of protest and violence. the unrest lead to the cancellation of...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
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you're black, joe black, female coming within the ghetto, your life is going to be lousy vote for democrats. that is the message so many get. so if we can have more inspiration and people telling how they overcame that i think we've will inspire an awful lot of people. america has always been a storytelling nation. >> host: but do you think that is from the fact that there is a growing inequality in times of income in the country that when you look at the harsh realities into the top 1% and venus occupy movement at the top 1%. and the increases in the country over the last ten years and by consequence has been a declining middle class and increasing numbers of people in poverty and when you pulled up the exceptional people and say this person so you can do is to come a time. >> guest: they've been talking about income inequality and i wrote a column in which i stated i had a deep dark secret i had headed from public view. it's true there've always been people that made more money. you probably make more than i do. but it doesn't affect me. the fact that you make $2 i make 1 dollar doesn't m
you're black, joe black, female coming within the ghetto, your life is going to be lousy vote for democrats. that is the message so many get. so if we can have more inspiration and people telling how they overcame that i think we've will inspire an awful lot of people. america has always been a storytelling nation. >> host: but do you think that is from the fact that there is a growing inequality in times of income in the country that when you look at the harsh realities into the top 1%...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
by
WHYY
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paul was declared dead january 31, 1943, murdered in either the treblinka concentration camp or the warsaw ghetto. hedy's fate is unclear, but her dresses live on. almost 60 years later, karen's parents found the letter in the basement, complete with a nazi censor's swastika stamp and the colorful drawings. >> the dresses represent prejudice and persecution and what was lost in the holocaust because of it. the dresses represent love. >> reporter: the strnads gave the letter and dress designs to what is today the jewish museum of milwaukee, just another painful link to the past. until one day a visitor had an idea-- why not make the dresses? >> we had a wonderful opportunity to fulfill a victim's dream. >> reporter: so, when kathy bernstein, the museum's director, met the costume director of the milwaukee repertory theater, she didn't hesitate. >> and i said, "we want to create an exhibit. we want to show... have a tangible example of what has been lost in the holocaust, and is this something the rep can do?" well, she said, "absolutely." >> reporter: and the rest, as they say, is history. the mil
paul was declared dead january 31, 1943, murdered in either the treblinka concentration camp or the warsaw ghetto. hedy's fate is unclear, but her dresses live on. almost 60 years later, karen's parents found the letter in the basement, complete with a nazi censor's swastika stamp and the colorful drawings. >> the dresses represent prejudice and persecution and what was lost in the holocaust because of it. the dresses represent love. >> reporter: the strnads gave the letter and...
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 86
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and she wanted out of the ghetto and a sister died of meningitis type of disease she used to hang around a wine bar. one day she met a very dynamic man more than twice her age named franklin do with. and they began an affair. she was 88 years old and he was in his 40's. and she became pregnant at 18 years old. and david, clare boothe luce brother and the baby was born the following year and there were still not very. i don't think they ever buried he did not get a divorce and 1907 when the child was four years old. i never found any marriage certificates chicago and new york beverage they lived. never found one. but she could not have reburied in new york state because in those days you could not marry if you were the guilty party in the divorce action which he was. by the time he was free to marry their relationship was on the rocks and shortly after word clare's mother left him returnee he's leaving him in chicago. but the fact telling them he had died and clare corrupt thinking that her father was dead. >>cspan: how did she die? >> she died in the accident. she was in miami shoes to g
and she wanted out of the ghetto and a sister died of meningitis type of disease she used to hang around a wine bar. one day she met a very dynamic man more than twice her age named franklin do with. and they began an affair. she was 88 years old and he was in his 40's. and she became pregnant at 18 years old. and david, clare boothe luce brother and the baby was born the following year and there were still not very. i don't think they ever buried he did not get a divorce and 1907 when the...
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Nov 24, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
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they get caught in the cycle of poverty in the ghetto, almost. that's like life to you. t that there's something better. >> it's finally over. i survived the challenge that is cs 50. yeah, i wanted to do more. i had this big goal. >> the more campuses one visits, the more one discovers that the diversity of america's college students is mind-boggling. and everywhere i go, i meet students who give me hope for the future of our country. it has been and will continue to be a challenge to keep the doors of college open to provide the best possible education to as many people as possible. not everybody's going to want it. not everybody will be able to take good advantage of more education. but let's not assume that college has outlived its usefulness. let's not assume that it's inevitable that public support for institutions of higher learning has to just continue to decline. there are other choices that can be made. i mean, what kind of a society do we want to be? we should tap into the idealism of young people and provoke students to think for themselves, to think critically
they get caught in the cycle of poverty in the ghetto, almost. that's like life to you. t that there's something better. >> it's finally over. i survived the challenge that is cs 50. yeah, i wanted to do more. i had this big goal. >> the more campuses one visits, the more one discovers that the diversity of america's college students is mind-boggling. and everywhere i go, i meet students who give me hope for the future of our country. it has been and will continue to be a challenge...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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the intent of the method was to move catholics out of the rigid insularity or ghetto to bring about a more just society in partnership with others. radical concept in the early part of the 20th century. this method required that we look at the reality of our community learning how people felt, saw, believed, and acted. now that i reflect on this process, it trained as for the fundamentals of community urbanization and research. it is the reverse of the traditional research with the hypothesis to test for this starts with local knowledge. through reflection and action, the structural roots of community dysfunction are revealed. i joined ycs in high school and went on to find it in college and then was recruited to the national staff in 1961 to eventually organize on campuses and support ycs groups across campus. in the process of working with the organization, i met latin american and african activists who are also part of the movement, and many of whom were in really dangerous situations. the students in brazil i came to know, many of them disappeared and i never heard from them again
the intent of the method was to move catholics out of the rigid insularity or ghetto to bring about a more just society in partnership with others. radical concept in the early part of the 20th century. this method required that we look at the reality of our community learning how people felt, saw, believed, and acted. now that i reflect on this process, it trained as for the fundamentals of community urbanization and research. it is the reverse of the traditional research with the hypothesis...
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. >> to tell the story, a state-of-the-art facility that sits on the site of the warsaw ghetto where were forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited with several holocaust survivors including linda who spent three years at the notorious auschwitz. 60 years after she walked out of auschwitz, she walked in again with me. when you stand here at auschwitz, linda, now 60 years later, do images, emotions run through your mind? >> i have no emotions here. >> no emotions here? >> no emotions here. >> later on our trip, understandably, the emotions came. we stayed in touch until lyindas death a few years ago. i saw with my own eyes how jews were killed. what you're saying this museum is about how jews lived long before the holocaust. >> that's right. it's a very, very important history because during that 1,000-year period most of the elements of western culture evolves. the revival of jewish life in a country that became a graveyard for millions. comprised of eight salons they take visitors through the different periods of jewish life in poland. when people leave this mus
. >> to tell the story, a state-of-the-art facility that sits on the site of the warsaw ghetto where were forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited with several holocaust survivors including linda who spent three years at the notorious auschwitz. 60 years after she walked out of auschwitz, she walked in again with me. when you stand here at auschwitz, linda, now 60 years later, do images, emotions run through your mind? >> i have no emotions here. >> no...
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museum of the history of polish jews, a state-of-the-art facility that lives on the site of the warsaw ghettoere forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited those camps nine years ago with several bay area holocaust survivors including linda brayer who spent three years at auschwitz. she walked in again with me. >> when you stand here at auschwitz, linda, now, 60 years later, do images, emotions race through your mind? >> i have no emotions here. >> no emotions here. >> later in our trip, understandably, the emotions came. we stayed in touch until linda's death a few years ago. >> i saw with my own eyes how jews were killed, but what you're saying is this museum is how jews lived long before the holocaust. >> that's right. that's exactly correct, and it's a very, very important history because during that thousand-year period most of the elements of western culture evolved. >> today, poland is becoming a different place. a museum telling the world of the revival of jewish life in a country that became a graveyard for millions. comprised of eight sal ornonsal museum takes v
museum of the history of polish jews, a state-of-the-art facility that lives on the site of the warsaw ghettoere forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited those camps nine years ago with several bay area holocaust survivors including linda brayer who spent three years at auschwitz. she walked in again with me. >> when you stand here at auschwitz, linda, now, 60 years later, do images, emotions race through your mind? >> i have no emotions here. >> no...
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the museum of the history of polish jews, a state-of-the-art facility that sits on the site of the warsaw ghetto of jews were forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited those camps nine years ago with several bay area holocaust survivors including linda broader who spent three years at the notorious auschwitz. 60 years after she walked out of auschwitz, she walked in again with me. >> when you stand here with me now 60 years later, do images, emotions race through your mind? i have no emotions here. >> no emotions here? >> no e motions here. >> later in our trip, understandab understandably, the emotions came. >> we stayed in touch until linda's death a few years ago. >> i saw with my own eyes how jews were killed, but what you're saying is this museum is about how jews lived long before the holocaust? >> that's right. that's exactly correct, and it's a very, very important history because during that thousand-year period, most of the elements of western culture evolved ♪ >> reporter: today poland is becoming a different place. the museum telling the world of the revival of
the museum of the history of polish jews, a state-of-the-art facility that sits on the site of the warsaw ghetto of jews were forced to live before being taken to the death camps. i visited those camps nine years ago with several bay area holocaust survivors including linda broader who spent three years at the notorious auschwitz. 60 years after she walked out of auschwitz, she walked in again with me. >> when you stand here with me now 60 years later, do images, emotions race through...
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Nov 25, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 111
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. >> for decades, meat alternatives have been stuck in the health food ghetto. want to break out of that, not by magically creating the entire steak, but by nudging us to plant-based alternatives that are indistinguishable from the real thing. if you cannot taste the difference between chicken and beyond meat chicken, if their product is better for you and their environment, the company is betting on the hope that you will become a vegetarian. coming up, a gel that can stop bleeding in seconds. how this small lab in brooklyn could change everything we know about trauma surgery. >> our goal is to get this in every ambulance, in every soldier's belt, in every mom's purse. ♪ >> we know that the diamond is a gem. we know that it takes billions of years to form deep in the center of the earth. we know that it is beautiful, expensive, and rare, but diamonds can serve another purpose far beyond jewelry. it may just be that the diamond is the foundation of a new era in computing performance. >> if people understood all the technological applications that are possible wi
. >> for decades, meat alternatives have been stuck in the health food ghetto. want to break out of that, not by magically creating the entire steak, but by nudging us to plant-based alternatives that are indistinguishable from the real thing. if you cannot taste the difference between chicken and beyond meat chicken, if their product is better for you and their environment, the company is betting on the hope that you will become a vegetarian. coming up, a gel that can stop bleeding in...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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43
Nov 8, 2014
11/14
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SFGTV
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eye 43
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i want to feel safer and join with all the people that want to join me in walking the streets to be safer we won't ghetto there without vision zero by january 2016 all 24 projects that ben is in favor which to cooperate throughout the city have to be done and spend down this $300 million of the $500 million that will not raise property tax in the city and spend that down because we not all of those improvements whether their signal consortiums traffic improvements pedestrian safety bulb outs or signage sloan traffic making people more aware and big thrust in education because everybody has to be more aware so i will want to say this we have to move together on this and noted pointing out the fingers it's not just infrastructure or education it's not just one or the other all i have those things have to work in concert with each other and we have to talk what the bicyclists and the car drivers and talk with people that are moving supplies in and out for all of those crosswalks projects and talk with people that walk our streets in multiple different languages we have a lot of visitors from all over the wo
i want to feel safer and join with all the people that want to join me in walking the streets to be safer we won't ghetto there without vision zero by january 2016 all 24 projects that ben is in favor which to cooperate throughout the city have to be done and spend down this $300 million of the $500 million that will not raise property tax in the city and spend that down because we not all of those improvements whether their signal consortiums traffic improvements pedestrian safety bulb outs or...
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Nov 9, 2014
11/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 58
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the middle of it. >> they go through up to s, ghettos, farms. it's a tran sect of american society. and it also - because it's no man's land on either side of the lines, there's a lot of places to sleep. we didn't have tents. this is all legal. we were sleeping under bridges, in the woods. the line was perfect. you show the video of you and tim. a friend who died. the two of you talking about doing this going along the train lines. how powerful was that for you to see america in that way? >> i group up in a suburb outside of bostion. i have a particular -- boston. i have a particular experience of america. what is interesting for me as an american is to walk a few hundred miles, and see the incredible variety of this world, lands, country. i mean we walked through ghettos, farms, racially it was subdivided. socioeconomically it was divided. we had a sampling of what america is. we walked through healthy towns. and we would ask people about the country. one of the questions i had is what do you think the best thing about america is? when we went through really really poor neighbourhoo
the middle of it. >> they go through up to s, ghettos, farms. it's a tran sect of american society. and it also - because it's no man's land on either side of the lines, there's a lot of places to sleep. we didn't have tents. this is all legal. we were sleeping under bridges, in the woods. the line was perfect. you show the video of you and tim. a friend who died. the two of you talking about doing this going along the train lines. how powerful was that for you to see america in that way?...
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35
Nov 18, 2014
11/14
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 35
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do you see when they build the the wall, the germans also built a wall and create a ghetto. >> you knowthe son knows it hurts. but most of the children have been hiten by their parents, they hit their children. most of the men that have seen their fathers hitting their wives, then hit their wives as well. they have been victims, and then they are the ones that make someone else victims. so you don't know from suffering. >> before ending our trip we knew we had to go to the wall itself in order to understand the latest phase of this ongoing separation. we went to a suburb of jerusalem where the wall cut through that village and divided it into two halves, separating family members from each other, preventing people from going to their places of work, and children from going to their schools. >> i think it's shocking how you could slice a neighborhood into two and believe that you can stop people from going to prayer or shopping and just bashed wire and cement -- barbed wire and cement are going to create more hatred. >> the war that she spoke to us about was part of israel's largest nati
do you see when they build the the wall, the germans also built a wall and create a ghetto. >> you knowthe son knows it hurts. but most of the children have been hiten by their parents, they hit their children. most of the men that have seen their fathers hitting their wives, then hit their wives as well. they have been victims, and then they are the ones that make someone else victims. so you don't know from suffering. >> before ending our trip we knew we had to go to the wall...
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Nov 14, 2014
11/14
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ALJAZAM
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the former inmates to services in their communities. so there will be a plan so they can continue to get mental health counseling and never ghetto the point where they have to be arrested again. >> lacy's task force is sieging to divert money from building jails to opening up more mental health beds. treatment in the community, would save a lot of money. >> the way we are doing it now, is the most expensive way you can possibly do it. you have to have more deputies more security it isn't just law enforcement that recognize it is need. the board of supervisors recently voted to allow families and police to commit a mentally ill person to involuntary treatment, keeping them out of jail. the board also voted to expand existing outpatient treatment. >> i think that there is an awakening if you will, of those of us in law enforcement, and in prosecutors offices where we are taking a serious look a much more intelligent look at the underlying causes of what leads people to be incarcerated. have we contributed to it, sure, in some sense. but we are determined, i am determined, that we are going to lead this cause. >> my cream is we can close dow
the former inmates to services in their communities. so there will be a plan so they can continue to get mental health counseling and never ghetto the point where they have to be arrested again. >> lacy's task force is sieging to divert money from building jails to opening up more mental health beds. treatment in the community, would save a lot of money. >> the way we are doing it now, is the most expensive way you can possibly do it. you have to have more deputies more security it...
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Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> for decades meat alternatives have been stuck in the health food ghetto.ond meat hopes to break out of that, not by converting all of us to veganism and not by magically creating an entire steak but judging us to plant-based alternatives. if they're right, if you can't tell the difference between, say, chicken and beyond meat chicken and their product is better for you and the environment, the company is betting its future on the hope that you are about to become much more of a vegetarian than you planned. >> hmm. "businessweek's" sam grobart there. be sure to tune into the year ahead special airing tonight on bloomberg tv. we will look at 10 innovations that will change everything you know about tech, food and medicine. well, arguably no federal agency finds itself more in the hot seat than the federal communications commission. the head of the national cable and telecommunications association and former chairman of the f.c.c., michael powell, joins us next on "bloomberg west." ♪ >> welcome back to "bloomberg west." i'm emily chang. the decision on whethe
. >> for decades meat alternatives have been stuck in the health food ghetto.ond meat hopes to break out of that, not by converting all of us to veganism and not by magically creating an entire steak but judging us to plant-based alternatives. if they're right, if you can't tell the difference between, say, chicken and beyond meat chicken and their product is better for you and the environment, the company is betting its future on the hope that you are about to become much more of a...
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Nov 10, 2014
11/14
by
ALJAZAM
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the best thing about america is? when we went through really, really poor neighbourhoods, ghettos in baltimore, invariably people said the best thing about america is freedom, it's a free country, freedom of speech. wealthier community said a land of opportunity. >> you mentioned what you were doing was illegal, walking near the tracks. something i didn't know. i didn't know there were amtrak police out there. that you had to hide from them. that helped recreate the hardship and the brotherhood of a mission at war. without getting fired upon, and that's why you called this the last patrol. >> yes, it's technically not legal to walk along the railway lines. in rural areas, people do it. particularly on the high speed line between d.c. and new york, it's frowned upon. we had a game of cat and mouse with the police. one thing we look for is a helicopter. we stay clear of them. they don't want people getting killed is the problem. we were careful and we were switched on. we were pretty together guys. i was confident we'd be okay. >> a point you make is in one way or another, you were addicted to battle. that excitement,
the best thing about america is? when we went through really, really poor neighbourhoods, ghettos in baltimore, invariably people said the best thing about america is freedom, it's a free country, freedom of speech. wealthier community said a land of opportunity. >> you mentioned what you were doing was illegal, walking near the tracks. something i didn't know. i didn't know there were amtrak police out there. that you had to hide from them. that helped recreate the hardship and the...
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Nov 7, 2014
11/14
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ALJAZAM
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the best thing about america is. when we go through really, really poor neighbourhoods, ghettos in phil baltisberger, invariably people said the best thing about america is freedom. it's a free country, freedom of speech. wealthier communities, they opportunity. >> you mentioned what you were doing was illegal to walk near the tracks. i didn't know that. i didn't know there were amtrak police, that you had to hide from them, and helped to recreate the hardship and brotherhood of a mission at war without getting fired upon, and that's why you called this "the last patrol." yes, it's technically not legal to walk along the railway lines. in rural areas people do it. on the high speed line between d.c. and new york, it's frowned upon. we had a game of cat and mouse with the police. at one point they are looking at the helicopter, but we stayed clear of them. they don't want people getting killed. we are careful and want - and are pretty together guys. there. >> one of points you make, you are addicted to battle and you don't want to go back. that excitement, rush, hard to find anywhere else, you talk about how george was
the best thing about america is. when we go through really, really poor neighbourhoods, ghettos in phil baltisberger, invariably people said the best thing about america is freedom. it's a free country, freedom of speech. wealthier communities, they opportunity. >> you mentioned what you were doing was illegal to walk near the tracks. i didn't know that. i didn't know there were amtrak police, that you had to hide from them, and helped to recreate the hardship and brotherhood of a mission...