753
753
Jun 8, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
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eye 753
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in fact, thehere's almostt twicice as many cacalories per mil of blood a say, be.it's k kind of readydy to plate up,p, i think. here we go. black puddining á la michahae. mm, not bad, cld do o wi a t morere st, i think, i obviously dot have very salty blood i n't t ink it's g gng to take off a n natiol dishshthis. quite chewy. we've seen that one of blood's primary jobs is to carry oxygen and nutrients to evevery part t the bod it does so via arteries, veinins ancapillllars. and, of cocourse, itirirculate these days thededea that blood circulate is as obobvious as the fact the earth goes round the s su. but it's a surprisiny rececent discoveryry. the romans, believers in vital spirits, were also convinced that blood is made fresh evy day d travels ly one way out to our fingers and toes, where it is burnt away. it sounds bizarre to us today, but thisis idea survivived largelely unchallengnged for ovover 1,000 yeaears, untitil someone dedecided to a ratherer obvious expererim. now, ourur modern undederstandig of thehe human circuculatory sye began here in bart's host
in fact, thehere's almostt twicice as many cacalories per mil of blood a say, be.it's k kind of readydy to plate up,p, i think. here we go. black puddining á la michahae. mm, not bad, cld do o wi a t morere st, i think, i obviously dot have very salty blood i n't t ink it's g gng to take off a n natiol dishshthis. quite chewy. we've seen that one of blood's primary jobs is to carry oxygen and nutrients to evevery part t the bod it does so via arteries, veinins ancapillllars. and, of cocourse,...
51
51
Jun 2, 2016
06/16
by
WJLA
tv
eye 51
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go, theher west you likelihood for the showers and storms will increase. we will have what to expect for the rest of the week and the upcoming weekend could look at severe weather. we will talk you about that. anchor 2: developing now, things are getting back to normal at uc la. the campus was on lockdown because of a shooting. we are live in the satellite center with the new details on the investigation tonight. anchor 1: the -- reporter: the shooting was a murder-suicide. it is being reported that the victim was an engineering -- an engineering profe time. there were text messages, twitter, and e-mails from the police saying to shelter in place. investigators pieced together what happened. a homicide and suicide occurred in the engineering facility. we believe that there are no outstanding suspects and no continuing threat to the campus. >> at this hour, the police have not identified the shooter. ucla is providing counseling to those who need it. classes are expected to resume tomorrow, except in the engineering school. right now, a manhunt is underway.
go, theher west you likelihood for the showers and storms will increase. we will have what to expect for the rest of the week and the upcoming weekend could look at severe weather. we will talk you about that. anchor 2: developing now, things are getting back to normal at uc la. the campus was on lockdown because of a shooting. we are live in the satellite center with the new details on the investigation tonight. anchor 1: the -- reporter: the shooting was a murder-suicide. it is being reported...
80
80
Jun 29, 2016
06/16
by
WJLA
tv
eye 80
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quote 1
most of us woke up to very muggy theher this morning, in 70's.ow, in the 60's, more comfortable, and not as humid. the high pressure moving in, the cold front sparked off thunderstorms. that continues to push over the atlantic. that means mostly sunny skies for tomorrow and thursday with lower humidity. tomorrow morning, 67 degrees. it is cooler, but we are drying out. tomorrow, do your best to get outside. not as humid, good amount of sunshine. the drive home, still dry, feels great, but you will need the sunglasses. eather tomorrow. the holiday weekend, we are contending with some thunderstorms. looks like saturday and monday are the best chances. saturday, just some spotty afternoon stuff, not a washout. like the driest day of the holiday weekend, 85 degrees. 84 with a few storms monday. that is a little flip-flop in the weather model monday. we will keep a close eye on that. hoping the high-pressure sneaks back in as things improve, but for now, be ready for spotty thunderstorms monday. the picks this week are wednesday and thursday. the humi
most of us woke up to very muggy theher this morning, in 70's.ow, in the 60's, more comfortable, and not as humid. the high pressure moving in, the cold front sparked off thunderstorms. that continues to push over the atlantic. that means mostly sunny skies for tomorrow and thursday with lower humidity. tomorrow morning, 67 degrees. it is cooler, but we are drying out. tomorrow, do your best to get outside. not as humid, good amount of sunshine. the drive home, still dry, feels great, but you...
46
46
Jun 17, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 46
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plutonium doesn't escae until thehere is an accident lie a meltdown or an explosion like fukushima or chernonobyl. t thre mile island had a meltdown. i remember when i first read a book about nuclear power and it was called "poisoned power" by dr. gofman and tamplin, my hair nearly fell out on the desk. i'd never read anything so dangerous...and i still got along with it. i can't tell you how indignant as a physician i feel about that, having helped so many children die of cystic fibrosis, the commonest fatal genetic c disease of childhoodo, which will be increased by plutonium,m, having helped childldren die of leukemia. what are we talking abobout? how precious is life?e? we going to kill peoplple? >> so going forward, ddr. caldicott, whwhat would you like to see donene? >> i want an informed democracy. that's what jefferson said, "an informed democracy will bebehave in a responsiblble fashion," and it's like i have to inform a patient. say i have to tell you you've got pancreatic cancer. i have to tell you what it means, where your pancreas is, how it operates, where the cancer cou
plutonium doesn't escae until thehere is an accident lie a meltdown or an explosion like fukushima or chernonobyl. t thre mile island had a meltdown. i remember when i first read a book about nuclear power and it was called "poisoned power" by dr. gofman and tamplin, my hair nearly fell out on the desk. i'd never read anything so dangerous...and i still got along with it. i can't tell you how indignant as a physician i feel about that, having helped so many children die of cystic...
69
69
Jun 10, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 69
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quote 0
in fact, thehere weree of the same machines, the same tools, sstuck in storage, brougt out a couple of decades later. as if nothing had changed. >> the industry hadn't moved from where it was in 20-something years. >> the idea of an xprize challenge to find a better way to clean it up seemed d like the most obvious and practical thing toto do. >> so xprize came up and set an audacious but achievablee goal. 2,500 gallons per minute of oil cleaned up at 80% rate of oil clean up. and you u have too it in 14 months. that 2,500 gallo per minutute was ouout double the industry standard. this isis technologically achievable. it is. people just haven't beenen incented to do i. >> we have one shot to get this right. once we launch the prize, we can't change the rules. the teams are spending their own money. and so we want to make sure we get it right. and so, we spend a lot of time talking to all the potential stakeholders, including those that would hopefully adopt these techchnologies and buy these technologies frorothe teams s tt are competing at the end of the day. tthe top 10 teams got to
in fact, thehere weree of the same machines, the same tools, sstuck in storage, brougt out a couple of decades later. as if nothing had changed. >> the industry hadn't moved from where it was in 20-something years. >> the idea of an xprize challenge to find a better way to clean it up seemed d like the most obvious and practical thing toto do. >> so xprize came up and set an audacious but achievablee goal. 2,500 gallons per minute of oil cleaned up at 80% rate of oil clean up....
97
97
Jun 28, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 97
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but thehere's no transitition program really y within the veteterans affafairs. >> e ofof t things at' the hardest for the vetshen ty cocomeack is ty'y' been a part of unitt, reallyight it, all on thsameme mison. an when n ey come me, and ty dodon't have missisi, and ty dodon't have anit, tt't's lo w what ads to t isosotion, whicicthen canead to t the dg and alhol abuse, which then very often leads to suicide. and whahat i have foundnd from e vveterans i've interviviewed is that theyey really hahad to seek their own salalvation and fin their own way back into what we would call civilizationon-- that, youou know, the civiliaian world. there's something about farming, and working with the soil, and wworking w with livingng plantsd with livestock ananimals that after you've been n in a culture of death and war, to bee in a culture of life and sustaining and d creating life, isis deeply hehealing. >>>> you know, i'm m not ashamef my service or what happened in iraq, , but i learned that i ifu know, when working with living things you become a nurturer instead of a destroyer. and t that wa
but thehere's no transitition program really y within the veteterans affafairs. >> e ofof t things at' the hardest for the vetshen ty cocomeack is ty'y' been a part of unitt, reallyight it, all on thsameme mison. an when n ey come me, and ty dodon't have missisi, and ty dodon't have anit, tt't's lo w what ads to t isosotion, whicicthen canead to t the dg and alhol abuse, which then very often leads to suicide. and whahat i have foundnd from e vveterans i've interviviewed is that theyey...
246
246
Jun 14, 2016
06/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 246
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day is theher bad best way to describe it. let'sill get started with what's happening in the fixed-income state. the yield are either pushing more to the negative were closer to zero, so the japanese 10 , the 16 basis points under aussie dollar touched 205. the shorter that she looked toward the shorter and of the yield curve and we are well into the negative curve. let me show you how it looks in japan. you almost don't see it anymore. -28 points. that is still treating through into the equities and we are just opening for the afternoon session. we were down 1.3%. we are below 16,000 for the first time since april on the nikkei 225. -- we to see where we are -- 7.5%.as much as 9% when market to watch closely is australia, which is playing catch-up, the biggest drop since february. the only group of stocks that are getting a decent bid are the gold miners around 2% in what is a down day across the region. ♪ emily: microsoft is buying linked in. the acquisition is one of the largest ever seen in tech history. they are paying $1
day is theher bad best way to describe it. let'sill get started with what's happening in the fixed-income state. the yield are either pushing more to the negative were closer to zero, so the japanese 10 , the 16 basis points under aussie dollar touched 205. the shorter that she looked toward the shorter and of the yield curve and we are well into the negative curve. let me show you how it looks in japan. you almost don't see it anymore. -28 points. that is still treating through into the...
319
319
Jun 1, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 319
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[laughter] i would say that most of the available senior --urity experts thehere are arguments among generals on specifics, however all of them to the last have signed on to the movements vision. give the answer to your specific question. in the past, there were existential challenges from the outside. no longer so at the moment. at the moment the only existential challenge is internal. thatrelated to the concern if we don't go to a two state solution, israel as we know it will not survive. as a democratic jewish society, it cannot survive if we don't separate from the palestinians for the reasons that you are all familiar with. there is a very selfish one. it does not come out of generosity. yes, we have that, but primarily for very selfish, self preservation. >> we are so thrilled to partner with the center for new american security to help advance and ideas and the the plans contained in both initiatives. first of all i want to say congratulations on the rollout of this most important work. about to ask a question the interim steps that are such a critical part of both plants. you
[laughter] i would say that most of the available senior --urity experts thehere are arguments among generals on specifics, however all of them to the last have signed on to the movements vision. give the answer to your specific question. in the past, there were existential challenges from the outside. no longer so at the moment. at the moment the only existential challenge is internal. thatrelated to the concern if we don't go to a two state solution, israel as we know it will not survive. as...
520
520
Jun 1, 2016
06/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 520
favorite 0
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theher day of gains for index. >> that is true. aspect is finish higher throughout the day, we will be at the fifth consecutive update and a longest winning streak since mid february. mild volatility. the index opened lower, read around 11:00 a.m., he started to turn higher and has been fluctuating between small gains and losses. from a the nasdaq today sector standpoint and consumer staples led by costco, shares are higher in a bullish upgrade by goldman sachs as well as the health care sector being helped by biotech. the index is higher by more than half of 1%, being boosted by region, which is higher on firmsh comments from the reiterating its outperforming rating, saying that biotech company is coming into its own. it does see 30% upsizing potential. a stock that is down roughly 30 cents from its record week last year. a bullish scenario comes true and it will actually be a bit of a round-trip. you mentioned a tug-of-war in trading today. abigail: from a sector standpoint, we have had technology down just slightly but of course
theher day of gains for index. >> that is true. aspect is finish higher throughout the day, we will be at the fifth consecutive update and a longest winning streak since mid february. mild volatility. the index opened lower, read around 11:00 a.m., he started to turn higher and has been fluctuating between small gains and losses. from a the nasdaq today sector standpoint and consumer staples led by costco, shares are higher in a bullish upgrade by goldman sachs as well as the health care...
101
101
Jun 17, 2016
06/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 101
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thehere any sense of how merger can affect the referendum results?t: the most immediate effect is that campaigning has stopped, which is a very appropriate response. sir lesch to point out that this very senseless act came at a point when this debate was getting extremely nasty, very personal in many respects. politicalisplays of unity, which we can start with cameron.rbyn and david the temperature has calmed down a little bit. what that means, once the brexit debate against again in earnest, which i think will happen again in the next few days, is yet to be seen. mark: and the show must go on, and it will continue tomorrow. what is upcoming in the next few days? matt: well, we will have david cameron appearing on a very prominent sunday news broadcasts here, michael goads, one of the leaders of the campaign, also a conservative party lawmaker will be appearing as well. so really sunday the debate will be relaunched in earnest. days ofsee the last few both sides making their case. one exception, of course, is that there will be this recall of parliam
thehere any sense of how merger can affect the referendum results?t: the most immediate effect is that campaigning has stopped, which is a very appropriate response. sir lesch to point out that this very senseless act came at a point when this debate was getting extremely nasty, very personal in many respects. politicalisplays of unity, which we can start with cameron.rbyn and david the temperature has calmed down a little bit. what that means, once the brexit debate against again in earnest,...
57
57
Jun 7, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 57
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whether or not thehere is really anything unique about the way in whicich primarily muslim americs and others in the uniteded stats hahave been targeted with this kind of persecution. as alluded to earlier tonight, the history of the united states is one that has a continuous stream of minority groups who have been targeted landscape goaded and victimized by abususs of power, african-americans being ththe most commoand consistent example, but other groups as well, whether immigrantsts or accuse communiss were japanese-americans during world war ii have been similarly targeted based on the knowledge that these marginalized minority groups that the government can seize power without anyone much caring about it. the air is an argument that the muslims are the latest in this continuum, the cururrent exampme that hasas replaced communists d other groups as this favorite group from the u.s. govovernment to target and demonize to justify abuses of power. there is an argugument that one should look atat it that way.. i actually think there are some unique attributes about this persecution that
whether or not thehere is really anything unique about the way in whicich primarily muslim americs and others in the uniteded stats hahave been targeted with this kind of persecution. as alluded to earlier tonight, the history of the united states is one that has a continuous stream of minority groups who have been targeted landscape goaded and victimized by abususs of power, african-americans being ththe most commoand consistent example, but other groups as well, whether immigrantsts or accuse...
85
85
Jun 1, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 85
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to thehere is a limit generosity of the german taxpayers. the germans have benefited significantly from the euro but otherk the idea of european countries, patients will run out in germany as angela merkel faces a tough election next year. little seeing the physical landscape -- the physical landscape starting to change across europe and the great momentum toward sovereignty and self-determination across the european continent. greece countries like are far better off if they are unshackled from the euro. i think greece is that are off outside of the european union as well. i believe that brexit will certainly and courage many other to hold countries popular referenda. european elite that have dominated the continent for many decades it will be taken by when european populations actually vote on their future in the eu. even in germany, there is rising euro skepticism and the european project is being fundamentally challenged all over europe, not just in britain. that's a very good thing, i think. anything that advances the drive andrd democr
to thehere is a limit generosity of the german taxpayers. the germans have benefited significantly from the euro but otherk the idea of european countries, patients will run out in germany as angela merkel faces a tough election next year. little seeing the physical landscape -- the physical landscape starting to change across europe and the great momentum toward sovereignty and self-determination across the european continent. greece countries like are far better off if they are unshackled...
33
33
Jun 22, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 33
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again, i thank this panel for contributions of sharing your public policy and being thehere today. >> thank you. >> thank you very much mr. chairm chairman. i am sorry about earlier. we had some canadians in town. i head up the group. i have a candid question to camp that off. senator and i head up the caucus generation. we worked hard to update some of our system and making it, we had the i-35 w bridge collapsed and despite the fact where there dozens of cars in the collapse and of the biggest collapse. i think it does not get a lot of attention of why they were able to get people to safety and get them to hospitals so immediately was that the emergency community center, communication center received a process over 500 call and 51 came directly from the scene to feel disaster. 77 men and women were handling those calls and of course, no warning what so ever and not even the warning of the storm. it is an incredible story of work that had been done for years into it and anticipating some kind of disaster between our area hospitals. >> my first question is about the in ability, we had
again, i thank this panel for contributions of sharing your public policy and being thehere today. >> thank you. >> thank you very much mr. chairm chairman. i am sorry about earlier. we had some canadians in town. i head up the group. i have a candid question to camp that off. senator and i head up the caucus generation. we worked hard to update some of our system and making it, we had the i-35 w bridge collapsed and despite the fact where there dozens of cars in the collapse and of...
67
67
Jun 30, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 67
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quote 0
mind, it is important to come together to about theher future of this world where we are more and more connected. we have to agree more and more in this world. our response is to highlight when we come together at events like this, there is a opportunity to come together in ways that are beneficial for our countries and beneficial for individual citizens. we know that export intensive industries pay on average 50% higher wages than nonexpert in industries. we know that trade leads to innovation and opportunities for communities, for individuals and workers. we need to make sure that we are dealing with challenges and problems as they come up and that is where a constant engaged dialogue comes with positive outcomes. just yesterday quit president -- we weresident nieto, able to establish forward movement on issues that will have a beneficial impact on both sides of the deal. we will be lifting these us for for visitorsisas which will have a positive impact on communities across the country as a welcome tourists. but also we have been able to secure access for canadian farmers to sell th
mind, it is important to come together to about theher future of this world where we are more and more connected. we have to agree more and more in this world. our response is to highlight when we come together at events like this, there is a opportunity to come together in ways that are beneficial for our countries and beneficial for individual citizens. we know that export intensive industries pay on average 50% higher wages than nonexpert in industries. we know that trade leads to innovation...
36
36
Jun 29, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 36
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theher that is measuring duration or using a combination of ultrasound and other types of test that have not been developed. i think that will be critically important. so it is doing things that can help manage the risks that we need to be focused a lot of attention on. do you have anything to add to that? to fill in the primary gaps in research? iso the idea that this is a critical time. we can get critical information to people who are scared. a couple of other areas that are is aboutortant, one the persistence of the virus in different body sites. right now, our resolution is about sexual transmission is based on their little information about how long the virus can persist. of the harmtion that it causes and we are interesting. about whether it does clear in semen. is the work on diagnostics. i am very proud of my centers for disease control laboratory scientists who have developed different diagnostic tests and shared them and commercial companies are developing similar ones. diagnosticsbetter so that a woman can know, oh, i already had zika. with rubella, we vaccinate against it fo
theher that is measuring duration or using a combination of ultrasound and other types of test that have not been developed. i think that will be critically important. so it is doing things that can help manage the risks that we need to be focused a lot of attention on. do you have anything to add to that? to fill in the primary gaps in research? iso the idea that this is a critical time. we can get critical information to people who are scared. a couple of other areas that are is aboutortant,...
93
93
Jun 23, 2016
06/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 93
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citizens are today voting on a referendum on theher to remain in european union.avid cameron among those casting valance -- ballots. we will be following all the action as a result. special coverage begins at 5:00 p.m. eastern, 10:00 p.m. eastern in london. alix: a snapshot of the situation shows the growing debt pile in corporate and total debt, and there are worries about risks associated with rapid deleveraging as well as the recent revelation and more wealth management projects are investing in each other in china. scarlet: jim grant sounded off earlier on bloomberg . a financial dystopia. it is immensely leveraged. the leverage is very dangerous, and debts of low quality. the first quarter they say gdp grew. evidently, banking assets grew at something like 17%. in the first quarter china materialized that $1 trillion of new debt. we are going to wake up someday there has been overnight a combustion in the so-called wealth management product area of chinese finance. >> and get the world is clamoring for china to keep going. we keep watching it. what is the
citizens are today voting on a referendum on theher to remain in european union.avid cameron among those casting valance -- ballots. we will be following all the action as a result. special coverage begins at 5:00 p.m. eastern, 10:00 p.m. eastern in london. alix: a snapshot of the situation shows the growing debt pile in corporate and total debt, and there are worries about risks associated with rapid deleveraging as well as the recent revelation and more wealth management projects are...
149
149
Jun 13, 2016
06/16
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 149
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something that folks thehere kn a lot about it. [ applause ] >> it is often been said that our law enforcement, our intelligence agencies and first responders have to be right 100% of the time. the terrorist only have to be right once. what a heavy responsibility? >> these men and women deserve our respect and gratitude and they deserve the right tools and resources and training. too often state and local officials cannot give access to intelligence to the federal government that would help them do their jobs. we need to change that. we also need to work towar towartoward -- [ applause ] >> we need to work with local law enforcement and business owners on ways to protect vulnerables so called soft targets like night clubs and shopping malls and hotels and movie theaters and schools and houses of worship. >> now, i know a lot of americans are asking how it is possible that someone already on the fbi's radar still been able to commit an attack like the one in orlando. what we can do from stopping this kind of thing from happening again. we have to see what the investigation uncovers. if there ar
something that folks thehere kn a lot about it. [ applause ] >> it is often been said that our law enforcement, our intelligence agencies and first responders have to be right 100% of the time. the terrorist only have to be right once. what a heavy responsibility? >> these men and women deserve our respect and gratitude and they deserve the right tools and resources and training. too often state and local officials cannot give access to intelligence to the federal government that...
63
63
Jun 17, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
a result,happen as whether it is just or now, theher it remains or goes, european debate has been transformed in british politics. we now know that people who want to leave the european union are half of the population. 52%, they48%, or won't fall below 40%. it won't go above 60%. you cannot have half of the publication -- population believing something with the rest of the structure, the major parties, the bbc, the media acting as if they are a small handful of cranks. the european debate has been transformed in britain, and that is a permanent change. it will have to be reflected in the conservative party. one interesting point about this. it is being conducted entirely within the conservative party. the other parties just haven't got it. --y haven't counted because people thought they were uniformly committed to remaining within. but that's not quite true. it contains a lot of people who want to leave here they are discovering this. some of these people moved to brexit. u.k. itself is a part of the british structure. inbritain decides to remain it will be a watchdog to make sure that any o
a result,happen as whether it is just or now, theher it remains or goes, european debate has been transformed in british politics. we now know that people who want to leave the european union are half of the population. 52%, they48%, or won't fall below 40%. it won't go above 60%. you cannot have half of the publication -- population believing something with the rest of the structure, the major parties, the bbc, the media acting as if they are a small handful of cranks. the european debate has...
75
75
Jun 12, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
i was just thehere listenining. and almost that entire time, i am below him slightly. i want him to look down on me, not me looking over the rail at him because i want to empower him, show him that he does have significance, self-worth, and there are people that care. you know, very, very few--maybe 1% to 2% folks live after that fall. what happens when somebody jumps off that bridge, i've talked with a coroner about this, and they fall about 220 feet, roughly 75 miles an hour. you hit that water, it's--it's tough. it's really tough. you know, many people-- many people die on impact but then, quite a few pe--people don't. so it's a horrible death. and the bridge was open in, i believe, may of 1937. and there's been well over 2,000 people who have leapt to their death from that bridge. the board of supervisors for the bridge voted to put in place a safety net, a safety barrier, uh, on the bridge. and that's going to take place within the next 3 years. there are studies that show if you take away certain means that someone was going to do, uhuh, it significantly reduces
i was just thehere listenining. and almost that entire time, i am below him slightly. i want him to look down on me, not me looking over the rail at him because i want to empower him, show him that he does have significance, self-worth, and there are people that care. you know, very, very few--maybe 1% to 2% folks live after that fall. what happens when somebody jumps off that bridge, i've talked with a coroner about this, and they fall about 220 feet, roughly 75 miles an hour. you hit that...
93
93
Jun 14, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
i was just thehere listenining. and almost that entire time, i am below him slightly.ant him to look down on me, not me looking over the rail at him because i want to empower him, show him that he does have significance, self-worth, and there are people that care. you know, very, very few--maybe 1% to 2% folks live after that fall. what happens when somebody jumps off that bridge, i've talked with a coroner about this, and they fall about 220 feet, roughly 75 miles an hour. you hit that water, it's--it's tough. it's really tough. you know, many people-- many people die on impact but then, quite a few pe--people don't. so it's a horrible death. and the bridge was open in, i believe, may of 1937. and there's been well over 2,000 people who have leapt to their death from that bridge. the board of supervisors for the bridge voted to put in place a safety net, a safety barrier, uh, on the bridge. and that's going to take place within the next 3 years. there are studies that show if you take away certain means that someone was going to do, uhuh, it significantly reduces the
i was just thehere listenining. and almost that entire time, i am below him slightly.ant him to look down on me, not me looking over the rail at him because i want to empower him, show him that he does have significance, self-worth, and there are people that care. you know, very, very few--maybe 1% to 2% folks live after that fall. what happens when somebody jumps off that bridge, i've talked with a coroner about this, and they fall about 220 feet, roughly 75 miles an hour. you hit that water,...
212
212
Jun 28, 2016
06/16
by
CNNW
tv
eye 212
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they want to feel like they've got somebody in the oval office who's in thehere slugin insluggr behalfthere's just a lot of communities like this all throughout western pennsylvania, formerly industrial towns that are never recovered from the steel collapse of the 1980s. trade is a big conversation. a lot of people blame china for the steel industries woes and japan. a lot of it ended up moving up south to the southern state where is ths where they don't have unions. building the wall is always very popular here in western pennsylvania even though we don't have that many immigrants. >> let's go back to trade for just a second before we get into the wall and immigration. hillary clinton years ago, she was talking about the latest trade deal negotiated by the obama administration and she came out and said it was great. i want to play that for you now. >> this tpp sets the gold standard in trade agreements to open free, transparent, fair trade, the kind of environment that has the rule of law in a level playing field. and when negotiated, this agreement will cover 40% of the world's total
they want to feel like they've got somebody in the oval office who's in thehere slugin insluggr behalfthere's just a lot of communities like this all throughout western pennsylvania, formerly industrial towns that are never recovered from the steel collapse of the 1980s. trade is a big conversation. a lot of people blame china for the steel industries woes and japan. a lot of it ended up moving up south to the southern state where is ths where they don't have unions. building the wall is always...
302
302
Jun 3, 2016
06/16
by
WTTG
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eye 302
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pgr it includes 15 safety surges sur and the first one is kicking kki off at this station here, theher east falls church station inon i virginia.virginia. and so is here is how it's going to be affected.e trains a tracking from east falls church to ballston.o ba metro will close at midnight mii every night.t. orange and silver line trainsra will run every 18 minutes and a so expect delays, expectect crowded trains.dins. again, this starting tomorrow.or then in two weeks, riders inersi d.c. will feel the impact as work begins at the easternheas market station. s. so starting june 18th mark m your calendars there will bee no service between eastern market and benning road and minnesota avenue. anue. it's totally cutting theutng orange silver and blueline services between ward sevenetwew east of the anacostia river to downtown d.c. d.c that is going to be happeningapi for 16 days. now, according to ddot they ty say about 230,000 people areeopa going to be affected by thishi shutdown in d.c. d.c. mayor muriel bowser making arrangements doing what w shrek tshe can to help things ms along ea
pgr it includes 15 safety surges sur and the first one is kicking kki off at this station here, theher east falls church station inon i virginia.virginia. and so is here is how it's going to be affected.e trains a tracking from east falls church to ballston.o ba metro will close at midnight mii every night.t. orange and silver line trainsra will run every 18 minutes and a so expect delays, expectect crowded trains.dins. again, this starting tomorrow.or then in two weeks, riders inersi d.c. will...
51
51
Jun 2, 2016
06/16
by
LINKTV
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eye 51
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there's not only no systemic criitique, thehere's no alternative. solutions offered are more of f what they've doneththey'rere pretending that it's been wonderfully successfuful because they're the in president justt like the other guys had to claim it was a bibig disaster. first of all, the president politics in this country is a very peculiar institution. let me close with that because it's really important. the united states is unique in the world, i think, for the following. we have been the most successful in convincing the american people of something that's patently absurd, and that is that when they have an economic problem it's the fault of the government. it's stunning. 95% of the p people whwho've lost tr job inin this crisis--and ththee are millions of them--were fired bby a private capitalist employeyer. if you're gonna get angry at somebody because of unemployment, , the logigical target is the company that fired you. not in america. our people are trained. they leap over the company that fired them to the politician, the senator or th
there's not only no systemic criitique, thehere's no alternative. solutions offered are more of f what they've doneththey'rere pretending that it's been wonderfully successfuful because they're the in president justt like the other guys had to claim it was a bibig disaster. first of all, the president politics in this country is a very peculiar institution. let me close with that because it's really important. the united states is unique in the world, i think, for the following. we have been...
111
111
Jun 27, 2016
06/16
by
FBC
tv
eye 111
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thehere's a chance of a rate cu, liz. that's according to some. the idea that there could be a rate cut when a month ago it was all about when will it be the next hike? >> they're already talking australia overnight about cutting rates. what they were trying to extricate themselves and get themselves out of the abyss. maybe you start to see a lot of other nations not just holding their fire, but cutting their rates and could that be us as well? now what? are you kidding me? held hostage because 28 or 27 other nations simply couldn't get their act together. >> exactly. >> why must we be so entrenched globally. i prefer not to call it an isolationist move, perhaps, i'm not sayings it's the right move. that's going to play out. we don't have to worry about some oh, maybe had we exited. the u.k. decided we will see what's going to happen. >> and keith, i wanted to ask you about that. the notion now is that rates are back in play and certainly the fed's going to remain accommodative. in the past, that looked at the market. are we really seeing between
thehere's a chance of a rate cu, liz. that's according to some. the idea that there could be a rate cut when a month ago it was all about when will it be the next hike? >> they're already talking australia overnight about cutting rates. what they were trying to extricate themselves and get themselves out of the abyss. maybe you start to see a lot of other nations not just holding their fire, but cutting their rates and could that be us as well? now what? are you kidding me? held hostage...