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Sep 23, 2014
09/14
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. >>> a coach is off the job, tom britain has coached football for more than a decade.ter a recent victory, he violated school policy by directing the team to pray. school administrators are standing by their decision to suspend while parents are outraged. >> i have no objections to him praying but you can't do that at games. >> tom britain gets two games for praying and ray rice gets two games for cold clocking his girlfriend. >>> on tuesday two palestinians were killed in suspicion of killing two israelis. israeli forces have been pursuing the suspect since the june 12th abduction, the teens including one with dual israeli citizenship were taken and killed soon afterwards. the disappearance led to events including a 50 day war between hamas and israel at the gaza strip. >>> officials say the one last weekend was successful with teams visiting more than a million homes to hand out information and checking for sick people, they have not said how many new cases were found in the survey, the world health organization says there are more than 5800 people sickened so far bu
. >>> a coach is off the job, tom britain has coached football for more than a decade.ter a recent victory, he violated school policy by directing the team to pray. school administrators are standing by their decision to suspend while parents are outraged. >> i have no objections to him praying but you can't do that at games. >> tom britain gets two games for praying and ray rice gets two games for cold clocking his girlfriend. >>> on tuesday two palestinians were...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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CNNW
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how does britain see things differently than the united states, tom?t differently because it is different for them. united states has maybe 100 people or slightly more that have traveled to join isis and syria in iraq and some of them have thankfully, i guess you could almost say, made that a one-way trip. so that reduces the fact that they're going to come back here and attack us at home. but for britain, they have more than 500 of their citizens that they know of that have traveled there. they don't have the resources that we have. in the past when i worked with them, they said they'd be lucky if they had enough resources to cover 20 or 30 small groups of terrorists. we saw an example of that in july of 2005 when they had looked at the group and didn't have the ability to keep them covered that carried out the bombings in london in the subway train and buses. they face a greater threat with fewer resources. i think for them that is a reason for caution. >> patrick, you agree their problem is not our problem just because britain is raising the threat
how does britain see things differently than the united states, tom?t differently because it is different for them. united states has maybe 100 people or slightly more that have traveled to join isis and syria in iraq and some of them have thankfully, i guess you could almost say, made that a one-way trip. so that reduces the fact that they're going to come back here and attack us at home. but for britain, they have more than 500 of their citizens that they know of that have traveled there....
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Sep 27, 2014
09/14
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FOXNEWSW
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so why are britain and other european allies refusing to go into syria, a safe haven for the terrorists. tom, good to see you. >> good to see you, also. >> as it stands now, i want to ask you, is the u.s. strategy for war against isis a winning one? and before you answer, how tricky is it to formulate a strategy when there's such an entanglement of the enemy? >> that's a very good question. the problem is that the strategy doesn't involve any specific -- in specific terms, it doesn't involve any combat on the ground, u.s. personnel or personnel that can all in air strikes on islamic state positions. until you have those individuals i am bedded with iraqi units, whether special forces or, for example, the kurdish peshmerga or the sunni arab tribes, don't have the ground forces to push them back. so all you have is the air campaigns to degrade them. because of the different groups, khorasan is part of an al qaeda syndicate, the al qaeda state, we're still seeing the strategy that is, at best, halfway. and when you're waging a military strategy, it must be comprehensive and it must be pertinent
so why are britain and other european allies refusing to go into syria, a safe haven for the terrorists. tom, good to see you. >> good to see you, also. >> as it stands now, i want to ask you, is the u.s. strategy for war against isis a winning one? and before you answer, how tricky is it to formulate a strategy when there's such an entanglement of the enemy? >> that's a very good question. the problem is that the strategy doesn't involve any specific -- in specific terms, it...
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Sep 16, 2014
09/14
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BLOOMBERG
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tom gibson, bloomberg. >> scotland still dominating the headlines. that is it for "on the move." ♪ . >> a week from hell for salmond and cameron. britain'sinister makes a last-ditch plea. tech.n meets -- the crate of kforce new creative a force in charge of burberry. >> it has to turn into something else. and failing to boost of the online sells. asos tumble. ♪
tom gibson, bloomberg. >> scotland still dominating the headlines. that is it for "on the move." ♪ . >> a week from hell for salmond and cameron. britain'sinister makes a last-ditch plea. tech.n meets -- the crate of kforce new creative a force in charge of burberry. >> it has to turn into something else. and failing to boost of the online sells. asos tumble. ♪
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Sep 8, 2014
09/14
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BLOOMBERG
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the news over the weekend with tom stirling weakening, that chiefwe need to speak to of economics. talk about scotland, about what it means for england and britainhat it means for the united states as well. we will get the second week of an autumn september going with jeffrey rosenberg of like rock on the fixed income market -- like rock on the fixed income market. tough call. >> it is wonderful news. >> it will make an interesting transition and little george's like. looking for to "surveillance." let's talk tech. alibaba could make ipo history. here with what could be the world's biggest is caroline hyde . big numbers. is a big business? big prices at $66 -- or if they get the overallotment they could exercise, they could get $24.3 billion raised for the most ever in evaluation would be to the tune of $163 billion. that is more than any pay. not as big as uggla or facebook. -- not as big as google or facebook, the biggest chinese internet player. it dominates in china. it brings together's buyers and sellers. it takes a little commission from whatever you might be buying. cakes is another key chinese ingredient. basically, this is what woos co
the news over the weekend with tom stirling weakening, that chiefwe need to speak to of economics. talk about scotland, about what it means for england and britainhat it means for the united states as well. we will get the second week of an autumn september going with jeffrey rosenberg of like rock on the fixed income market -- like rock on the fixed income market. tough call. >> it is wonderful news. >> it will make an interesting transition and little george's like. looking for to...
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Sep 19, 2014
09/14
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WRC
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britain. what's next for the group that wanted to say good-bye. alicia rudd.tions about the storm team 4 meteorologist tom kierein is here to help you face your friday. tom, i think we're going to do it in a good way. >> we are. another cool morning. a live view of northwest washington. a little bit of light fog hanging in the air. you can see it hanging in the distance in bethesda. patchy fog in the morning and rural a areas. during the afternoon, mild and comfy weather. are you or for summer-like temperatures over the weekend? it looks like it will be moving in for your morning drive. the morning commute. we'll have a little bit of that patchy fog until 8:00, 9:00. watch out for that. temperatures in the 50s. partly cloudy through the the rest of the morning. you'll need your sunglasses as the subpoena will break out quite rightly. by mid to late morning. by then we'll be in the mid-60s. for the rest of the day, a beautiful afternoon. up near 70 by noon time. lots of sunshine. temperatures reaching mid-70s b
britain. what's next for the group that wanted to say good-bye. alicia rudd.tions about the storm team 4 meteorologist tom kierein is here to help you face your friday. tom, i think we're going to do it in a good way. >> we are. another cool morning. a live view of northwest washington. a little bit of light fog hanging in the air. you can see it hanging in the distance in bethesda. patchy fog in the morning and rural a areas. during the afternoon, mild and comfy weather. are you or for...
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Sep 20, 2014
09/14
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FBC
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britain, are they going to be as happy? >> well, i think they're going to get a lot more power. they may get their own parliament. they'll be close to the united states. neil: tom, i love you dearly, i don't think that will happen, ever. >> we'll see. if not, we'll have another vote. neil: right. do you think there's emotion for this in places like spain and catelonia, and others that are contemplating it, or did this put the lid on it? >> no, i think it's going to keep going, and just as czechoslovakia broke apart and yugoslavia broke apart, you are going to see more independence movements. i bet you catelonia has a lot of movement. basque and france, et cetera. neil: you mentioned this idea that the tea party or the conservatives might have been onto some, but they have to channel their rage, make it washington, or make that the focus to your point at the outset, that people don't want a distant central government. they want more control ideally more local control closer to them. >> well, a good example is i work with job creators alliance, and we see the negativity for the economy that comes from trying to install a very high minimum wage. it makes absolutel
britain, are they going to be as happy? >> well, i think they're going to get a lot more power. they may get their own parliament. they'll be close to the united states. neil: tom, i love you dearly, i don't think that will happen, ever. >> we'll see. if not, we'll have another vote. neil: right. do you think there's emotion for this in places like spain and catelonia, and others that are contemplating it, or did this put the lid on it? >> no, i think it's going to keep going,...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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CNNW
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britain suspected of terrorism, and he also talked about restricting the movements of suspended terrorists now on british soil. we even heard the terms "exclusion zones" and "relocation powers" so tomck with me today, joins me from washington. is a contributor to the national review and london's "daily telegraph." tom, good to see you again. >> good to see you. >> it's true, is it not, that when talking about domestic terrorism, cameron has more leeway than president obama, and faces a bigger threat, more imminent threat from crisis, correct? >> on both counts, that is true. in the uk, unlike the fbi here, the uk has the metropolitan police and various different police services, counterterrorism divisions. but they also have a domestic intelligence service wishes we do not have the united states. so there are greater powers for the government to do more. at the same time, a greater threat. there are hundreds of british citizens, we don't know exactly how many, but at least over 500 fighting alongside isis in syria and iraq. and the concern on the british government's part is when they try and come back to the uk, they'll do so with the intention to commit trista trosties there. >>
britain suspected of terrorism, and he also talked about restricting the movements of suspended terrorists now on british soil. we even heard the terms "exclusion zones" and "relocation powers" so tomck with me today, joins me from washington. is a contributor to the national review and london's "daily telegraph." tom, good to see you again. >> good to see you. >> it's true, is it not, that when talking about domestic terrorism, cameron has more leeway...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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tom, we've been talking about this a bit. there is sort of i guess some disinterest in a way among a lot of the public in britain.as concerned? i mean, you hear the prime minister really sounding an alarm, but is that resonating with people? >> i think the issue here is that the british people have for a long time, whether it's terrorism coming from ireland, the ira and islamist extremism become accustomed to the rhetoric from government about threats. the problem is now with isis the rhetoric reflects reality and that as days go on and the threat grows, pileople have to come to grips with the fact that having british nationals fighting with this group poses a real security challenge. >> what does it take to convince people this is a real serious threat? >> obviously the media reporting reflects that threat. james foley was a shock to a lot of people. at the same time, what isis is doing across the region, the obvious destabilizing impact does impress on to people. now i think with the british government really reflecting pretty stringent measures are putting it to the front of the agenda as soon as parliament co
tom, we've been talking about this a bit. there is sort of i guess some disinterest in a way among a lot of the public in britain.as concerned? i mean, you hear the prime minister really sounding an alarm, but is that resonating with people? >> i think the issue here is that the british people have for a long time, whether it's terrorism coming from ireland, the ira and islamist extremism become accustomed to the rhetoric from government about threats. the problem is now with isis the...
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Sep 9, 2014
09/14
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BLOOMBERG
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britain considers a lesser united kingdom. city, and the financial district, what are the ramifications of the significantly weaker pound? >> we are seeing some of that play out in the markets, aren't we, tomto see you. we lost 6% on the pound against the dollar since the july highs. that is something about how seriously the markets are taking this now. they were not taking it seriously when the polls were suggesting that the no to independence campaign were going to win. now the polls are too close to call. it makes people very nervous. in terms of some of the stocks being moved by this, the banking anything anyone feels has significant exposure over the border. >> gordon brown and alastair darling usually don't speak to the prime minister until september 18. how closely are they attached as they take on the pros colin forces? pro-scotland forces? >> increasingly, it would seem. we talked to the former prime who is trying to salvage the no campaign, no to independence. we are talking about the possibility of a 307-year-old the union between scotland and england and the rest of the u.k. breaking down. planhave launched a new for scotland, a new deal for scotland. they are talking about giv
britain considers a lesser united kingdom. city, and the financial district, what are the ramifications of the significantly weaker pound? >> we are seeing some of that play out in the markets, aren't we, tomto see you. we lost 6% on the pound against the dollar since the july highs. that is something about how seriously the markets are taking this now. they were not taking it seriously when the polls were suggesting that the no to independence campaign were going to win. now the polls...
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Sep 24, 2014
09/14
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CSPAN2
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britain's future, let's make it happen together. thank you very much. [applause] [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ [applause] ♪ [applause] ♪ [applause] >> later today the head of the centers for disease control, dr. tom, and dr. fakuta of the world health organization update congress on the sped of ebola in west africa. a new cdc report says 1.4 million people in liberia and sierra leone could become infected by the end january. watch that live at noon eastern here on c-span2. >>> c-span2 providing live coverage of the u.s. senate floor proceedings and key public policy events. every weekend, booktv, now for 15 years the only television network devoted to non-fiction books and authors. c-span2, created by the cable tv industry and brought to you as a public service by the local cable or satellite provider. watch us in hd, like us on facebook and follow us on twitter. >>> on monday cq roll call and nyu law school security publication host ad discussion about national security. focusing on the issues important to voters in this year's midterm elections. the militant group isis, the russian ukraine conflict, and the immigration were among the issues discussed. this is an hour 1/2. >> thank you, ryan. my
britain's future, let's make it happen together. thank you very much. [applause] [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ [applause] ♪ [applause] ♪ [applause] >> later today the head of the centers for disease control, dr. tom, and dr. fakuta of the world health organization update congress on the sped of ebola in west africa. a new cdc report says 1.4 million people in liberia and sierra leone could become infected by the end january. watch that live at noon eastern here on c-span2....