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Oct 9, 2024
10/24
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finally want to talk about crime, violent crime is up in major cities, if those like tony, who support early patrol, they support getting away with mandatory minimums. and for letting the violent prove criminals back in the street and two it is work murder we must be better they also like to talk about performance, most effective republican house, my university said they depended people, nurse rated the most bipartisan a publican in the house and senate and the governor's help them make it up a big difference in the national level i have 31 measures signed into law to prove the quality of life to billing military families in the pay raises that were targeted to the journey you and your jr. helping elder dormitories and there except getting failing grades created hoping that her spouse's give employment to pretty because we know how important that is to our military folks and has a seamless and of this firsthand. i've also been named the new cyber subcommittee chairman we have two bills possible prove cyber defense against russia, china and iran let's talk about locally, $5 billion in i
finally want to talk about crime, violent crime is up in major cities, if those like tony, who support early patrol, they support getting away with mandatory minimums. and for letting the violent prove criminals back in the street and two it is work murder we must be better they also like to talk about performance, most effective republican house, my university said they depended people, nurse rated the most bipartisan a publican in the house and senate and the governor's help them make it up a...
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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this is democrat talking points come from tony. i ask you to look separate into your research because he just does talking points, no meat on the bones on any of these things. the most important things we could do for housing is low interest rates. and because i and republican caucus stop this reckless been concluded american rescue plan, and gave us the worst inflation in 40 years and tony said he supported so he said hell yes did you translation. that's always suffered under that. we have been able to stop all the reckless been and now inflation is going down and interest rate to come down and that's probably the most important for housing now. >> next question from julie. >> gentlemen, the south is going to get the pieces from to make major hurricanes. nebraskans are recovering from a summer of devastating weather and at the same time homeowners face rising insurance rates and cost of rebuilding. do you believe climate change is to blame, and what role do you think the government should play in protecting americans fiscally and
this is democrat talking points come from tony. i ask you to look separate into your research because he just does talking points, no meat on the bones on any of these things. the most important things we could do for housing is low interest rates. and because i and republican caucus stop this reckless been concluded american rescue plan, and gave us the worst inflation in 40 years and tony said he supported so he said hell yes did you translation. that's always suffered under that. we have...
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Oct 26, 2024
10/24
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with tony.do. we really didn't know who tony harwood was. >> john lang knows that tony worked at north american van lines. so he calls up north american van lines and he says, hey, you don't happen to have your records from 11 years ago? and the guy says, yeah, there's some boxes full of files up in a musty attic. you're more than welcome to go poke around. >> we went up into a hot attic, and opened his first box that i went through and about the third document i looked at was jim sullivan. his address was on it, palm beach, florida. his signature was on it and tony harwood's signature was on it. >> he finds a bill of lading showing that tony harwood moved furniture for jim sullivan two months before the murder, and it's the paper trail he needs. it's, like, the jackpot. >> astounding. i don't know any other way to explain it. i mean, open this box and like the third record i look at, here it is. i mean, it just like it was meant to be. >> on a sunday morning in april of 1998, john lang and loca
with tony.do. we really didn't know who tony harwood was. >> john lang knows that tony worked at north american van lines. so he calls up north american van lines and he says, hey, you don't happen to have your records from 11 years ago? and the guy says, yeah, there's some boxes full of files up in a musty attic. you're more than welcome to go poke around. >> we went up into a hot attic, and opened his first box that i went through and about the third document i looked at was jim...
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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tony may be good with 5000 a day. i want more legal immigration, lest illegal immigration or tony talks about leadership. let's forget the former president he campaigned against me to discover i had a primary this primary people said i wasn't trumpet enough or not magazine update now he sang just the opposite. i have been rated the most effective and most bipartisan republican in congress. that's because it do what's right for this district, what's right for a country just like i did 30 years serving in military defending our country. >> next question comes from julie. >> we touched on this, please give us details. we seen the ads for mig about allegations that were you both stand on abortion. so right now what is your exact stance on when it is acceptable for women to have an abortion, and how has your voting record and in the proposed legislation supported that stance. >> was congressman bacon, and it has. >> i'm going to support the nebraska law. the nebraska lands restriction on abortion at three months. by the wa
tony may be good with 5000 a day. i want more legal immigration, lest illegal immigration or tony talks about leadership. let's forget the former president he campaigned against me to discover i had a primary this primary people said i wasn't trumpet enough or not magazine update now he sang just the opposite. i have been rated the most effective and most bipartisan republican in congress. that's because it do what's right for this district, what's right for a country just like i did 30 years...
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Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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there's the music and the graphic. >> when is it, tony?> we know them and it will be on cbs, cbs news 24/7 and streaming on paramount plus. >> i can't wait. >> we'll be talking about it tomorrow. ahead, when the v.p. candidates face off tonight many people like you will want to know what is being done about health care costs and jon lapook will be here to chat about that and a real-life practicing doctor. >> he's an m.d. >> we'll also talk about family vacations and aka road games as a parent. we l be right back. does mark farrell have the right experience to shake up city hall? in nearly ten years as supervisor, mark grew the bureaucracy by authorizing or creating a commission almost every year. he rubber stamped hundreds of millions to homeless nonprofits with zero accountability and orchestrated a pay-to-play scheme that sold out taxpayers to the highest bidder. mark farrell has all the wrong experience for the change we need. >> and lindor gets one to centerfield and back to the wall and it's out of here! linsanity again! >> linsanity
there's the music and the graphic. >> when is it, tony?> we know them and it will be on cbs, cbs news 24/7 and streaming on paramount plus. >> i can't wait. >> we'll be talking about it tomorrow. ahead, when the v.p. candidates face off tonight many people like you will want to know what is being done about health care costs and jon lapook will be here to chat about that and a real-life practicing doctor. >> he's an m.d. >> we'll also talk about family vacations...
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Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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he says he helped raise tony. >> they had a game going. >> mcneil says he took this video of tony when they went golfing the day before he was killed, and that they planned to golf again saturday night after the reunion. numbness. >> i mean, you you know, we live in a culture. we live in a neighborhood city where there's violence all the time. a grief compounded. >> tony's twin brother, tommy, was shot and killed in east oakland, september 2008, almost exactly 16 years ago. the family is taking solace in their pride. relatives tell me, tony worked in san francisco as a supervisor for urban alchemy, a nonprofit. tony is second from the left. >> he was a community healer. he worked in san francisco, in the tenderloin, helping the less fortunate. >> family and friends say they do not know if tony was the intended target in the shooting. they say they'll remember him as someone who worked to help others. >> just outgoing. fun loving. just everything. >> family members say they never imagined that they would lose both brothers to gun violence. tony leaves behind four children, ages 9 to 14,
he says he helped raise tony. >> they had a game going. >> mcneil says he took this video of tony when they went golfing the day before he was killed, and that they planned to golf again saturday night after the reunion. numbness. >> i mean, you you know, we live in a culture. we live in a neighborhood city where there's violence all the time. a grief compounded. >> tony's twin brother, tommy, was shot and killed in east oakland, september 2008, almost exactly 16 years...
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Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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and i love saying "tony-winning -- tony-winning sarah paulson." [ cheers and applause ] yeah.fe. i don't hate it, let me tell you that. i really do -- >> jimmy: how does it feel to have people say that about you? >> i mean -- >> jimmy: yeah. >> pretty amazing. >> jimmy: it's cool, right? >> i'm not going to lie. like, you know, i was a kid growing up in new york city wanting to be on broadway. and then i went on broadway, and then someone handed me a a statue, and i was done. >> jimmy: yeah. >> it was like, nuts. >> jimmy: you -- elle fanning posted this after the tony awards. it's a very cool picture of you. it says -- it's you and shake shack. >> yeah. [ light laughter ] >> jimmy: and you have the tony award. >> and then i also like to consume it. >> jimmy: yeah, so -- so you -- yeah, you had it all night. after you win, you take the tony and then -- >> yeah. >> jimmy: and then -- >> they take it from you. >> jimmy: they take it away? >> they take it away from you. and -- because they want to engrave it and do all those things, because they have them stacked, i think, backst
and i love saying "tony-winning -- tony-winning sarah paulson." [ cheers and applause ] yeah.fe. i don't hate it, let me tell you that. i really do -- >> jimmy: how does it feel to have people say that about you? >> i mean -- >> jimmy: yeah. >> pretty amazing. >> jimmy: it's cool, right? >> i'm not going to lie. like, you know, i was a kid growing up in new york city wanting to be on broadway. and then i went on broadway, and then someone handed me...
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Oct 31, 2024
10/24
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towns of livingston and east hanover are miles apart politically. >> i'm tony. >> tony, i'm lou. >>r: you can tell where lou damore and his fiance karen volino stand, along with many of their neighbors here in east hanover, which voted for trump by a large margin in 2020. while just across the passaic, it's pretty much the opposite story. >> hi, tony! dana miller. >> reporter: dana and jeff miller are among the large majority of livingston that voted blue four years ago. a divide that's noticeable here and everywhere else, with polls showing four out of every five adults believe americans are greatly divided on our most important values. how much do you think people's different opinions are based on just different sources of information? >> i know the people that i talk to, i know the channels they are watching. i know what they are watching. because they are so brainwashed they have no clue what's going on. >> reporter: so we asked lou and karen to join us at dana and jeff's. they've never met before, but agreed to sit down and hear each other out.% they couldn't agree on even the
towns of livingston and east hanover are miles apart politically. >> i'm tony. >> tony, i'm lou. >>r: you can tell where lou damore and his fiance karen volino stand, along with many of their neighbors here in east hanover, which voted for trump by a large margin in 2020. while just across the passaic, it's pretty much the opposite story. >> hi, tony! dana miller. >> reporter: dana and jeff miller are among the large majority of livingston that voted blue four...
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Oct 18, 2024
10/24
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meanwhile, as mentioned, tony, we have an actor playing tony in the film in a scene where a writer meetsh trump about "the art of the deal." >> i'm amazed you asked me to write this book, mr. trump, considering the article i wrote on you wasn't exactly flattering. >> you put me on the cover of a "new york" magazine and now you have to be nice because i'm paying you. >> i find it hard to settle on a grand narrative for the book. yes, you like making deals. >> i'm going to stop you right there, tony. i don't like making deals, do you understand? i love making deals. deals are my art form. >> "the art of the deal". >> it sounds good. >> the world is a mess, tony. you have to fight back. you have to have a tough skin. attack, attack, attack. you never, ever, ever admit defeat. you always claim victory, always. >> you know, that sounds like the u.s. foreign policy of the past quarter century. >> now, in "the new york times" you have a piece arguing that the film gets the most important things right because beneath the bluster trump struck you as, quote, one of the most insecure people you had
meanwhile, as mentioned, tony, we have an actor playing tony in the film in a scene where a writer meetsh trump about "the art of the deal." >> i'm amazed you asked me to write this book, mr. trump, considering the article i wrote on you wasn't exactly flattering. >> you put me on the cover of a "new york" magazine and now you have to be nice because i'm paying you. >> i find it hard to settle on a grand narrative for the book. yes, you like making deals....
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Oct 30, 2024
10/24
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as toni collette's d.a.put away the defendant for life. >> he's created this wonderful family. and he's ultimately, you know, a good person. and then somehow, through this event in his life, he's kind of dragged back into this terrible scenario where he really is, you know, between a rock and a hard place. and there's no easy way out. and then that's the, you know, the moral tale at the core of this. >> but before filming began, juror number two's savannah, georgia makeup trailer, the sight of a reunion more than two decades in the making between toni collette and nicholas hoult, who played mother and son in 2000 and twos, about a boy he came in to say hi to me, and i remember just looking up at this towering, gorgeous gentleman looking down at me, and it was just crazy to encounter you as an actual adult. >> it's like being like being a real parent. you can always see your child as they were. >> i can't be here to watch you all the time. i know we have to look after each other, the two of us. >> it was actu
as toni collette's d.a.put away the defendant for life. >> he's created this wonderful family. and he's ultimately, you know, a good person. and then somehow, through this event in his life, he's kind of dragged back into this terrible scenario where he really is, you know, between a rock and a hard place. and there's no easy way out. and then that's the, you know, the moral tale at the core of this. >> but before filming began, juror number two's savannah, georgia makeup trailer,...
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Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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at the end of the day, we did reach out and talk to tony podesta. once we had the book basically done and we knew where we were going, i went to him and said hey, we are writing a book about you and would love to talk. he invited us in. we spent many hours with him. what we found out about him which we didn't know in our reporting, he is almost the forced comp of democrat politics. tony podesta has basically been at every important event to the point in democratic party in the last 50 years. he has worked for every democratic presidential candidate since 1964. the famous incident with 1972 when he cried or didn't cry, that they tony podesta was his driver. so muskie had cithis incident where he is crying or not, defending his wife on her. he claimed that maybe a snowflake got in his eye. he got emotional defending his wife. he gets in the car, podesta is sitting there. and muskie says to podesta, i probably shouldn't have done that. podesta said nope, your campaign is done. he was also. >> did he cry in the car? >> i don't know. he was also at the d
at the end of the day, we did reach out and talk to tony podesta. once we had the book basically done and we knew where we were going, i went to him and said hey, we are writing a book about you and would love to talk. he invited us in. we spent many hours with him. what we found out about him which we didn't know in our reporting, he is almost the forced comp of democrat politics. tony podesta has basically been at every important event to the point in democratic party in the last 50 years. he...
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Oct 11, 2024
10/24
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let's go back, tony, to the very roots of the republican party. the first republican platform was in 1856, new party made of the conscious wigs, the wigs who were oppose today slavery and in that very first platform this party pledged itself to two principles, this republican party, this is what the new party would stand for. those principles were not even important things like economic freedom or lower taxes, you know what those two principles were, they were going to fight for marriage and for human dignity. they pledged themselves to oppose the barbarism, what were they? slavery and polygamy. >> undermining the very idea the concept of marriage as the exclusive and permanent and faithful union of husband and wife. if we give up on these moral issues, we have abandoned the heritage and legacy of the party, the thing that brought the republican party into being in the first place. >> katie, you touched on this and i think this is the practical application, few minutes left on the panel. how do we be faithful witnesses in an increasingly hostile c
let's go back, tony, to the very roots of the republican party. the first republican platform was in 1856, new party made of the conscious wigs, the wigs who were oppose today slavery and in that very first platform this party pledged itself to two principles, this republican party, this is what the new party would stand for. those principles were not even important things like economic freedom or lower taxes, you know what those two principles were, they were going to fight for marriage and...
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Oct 3, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN3
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that that was tony podesta. okay. so tony podesta was a lobbyist who realized that a good way to influence policy was public opinion. and using sort of smart sort of games and tactics to drive home his message and. at the time he was representing frozen or he's representing the non frozen chicken industry. it right, exactly and he used a frozen chicken, a bowling ball and he said you know this is obviously a good chicken eat. that was so funny. well, i didn't realize we had yet one last play for you so this is really the last one you are journalists. what are the biggest challenges facing today i mean that could be another whole right. what are the biggest challenges you know, there's so many different ways to answer this question, but think, you know, the problem for journalism is the the the lack of investment in, good quality investigative journalism or newspapers overall. i mean, you know, there's great investigative journalism done by accountability journalism done by the new york times, the wall street journal,
that that was tony podesta. okay. so tony podesta was a lobbyist who realized that a good way to influence policy was public opinion. and using sort of smart sort of games and tactics to drive home his message and. at the time he was representing frozen or he's representing the non frozen chicken industry. it right, exactly and he used a frozen chicken, a bowling ball and he said you know this is obviously a good chicken eat. that was so funny. well, i didn't realize we had yet one last play...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 3, 2024
10/24
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SFGTV
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[applause] >> tony here? tony, please, come on up. >> hi. my name is tony scott. i want to go ahead and thank you commissioners and special thanks to upper management. steve, angela, ryan. and among a bunch of other people, i cant begin to mention their names. i started out in 1995 and like angela stated, worked my way through the ranks. it has been a excellent opportunity. i have grown with the company. seeing was able to go ahead and show my skills. go ahead and basically when it comes to new personnel, training aspect of things, like running the facilities. once again, i'm going to miss all my colleagues. i want to thank each and every one of them, because they helped me to get where i am today. i am going to really miss you know, the puc. i plan on visiting from time to time and seeing the progress in the future. once again, i want to go ahead and thank everybody. thank you. [applause] >> so, i like to say a couple things. so, both-all of you, mike, frank and tony, this commissioner will always-comes from the labor movement and will say that we know why the ci
[applause] >> tony here? tony, please, come on up. >> hi. my name is tony scott. i want to go ahead and thank you commissioners and special thanks to upper management. steve, angela, ryan. and among a bunch of other people, i cant begin to mention their names. i started out in 1995 and like angela stated, worked my way through the ranks. it has been a excellent opportunity. i have grown with the company. seeing was able to go ahead and show my skills. go ahead and basically when it...
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Oct 20, 2024
10/24
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tony armstrong: she's always been a person of interest.ho we talk to, no matter what door we knocked on, no matter what crime stoppers tip we got, it always led right back to sherra. andrea canning: was anyone coming to her defense and saying she loved lorenzen, she would never do this? tony armstrong: i've investigated people that have committed multiple murders and had people come to their defense. i'd never gotten a call from anybody that has defended sherra ever. andrea canning: maybe that's why sherra had lawyered up and stopped talking to the police. out of the public eye, she sometimes surfaced at the mount olive baptist church, where she was now an ordained minister and ran a nonprofit called born to prosper ministries, which helped local kids. as for supporting her own children, sherra's primary source of income still came from ren. she is getting his insurance money and the pension from the grizzlies and all the other nba teams. so the money is going to sherra because she is the custodian of her own children with lorenzen. andrea
tony armstrong: she's always been a person of interest.ho we talk to, no matter what door we knocked on, no matter what crime stoppers tip we got, it always led right back to sherra. andrea canning: was anyone coming to her defense and saying she loved lorenzen, she would never do this? tony armstrong: i've investigated people that have committed multiple murders and had people come to their defense. i'd never gotten a call from anybody that has defended sherra ever. andrea canning: maybe...
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Oct 8, 2024
10/24
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how did tony vote? he voted present, not voting trade one of the 20% of the time he will not vote yes or no. that was a significant vote. one thing i believe we can do better is offer more trades. whether at the high school, junior high or post-high school. jenny roger is here today. i appreciate his support. the main thing he has focused on is getting more youth into trades program sprayed welding, carpentry work. it is the best way to help folks get out of poverty. he can get ahead because he is losing on those three issues. reasonable exceptions. he has asked -- been asked what restrictions would you like? only seven countries in the world out of 200 have abortion on demand until birth. that is where this man stands. it is -- the inhumanity of an eight or nine-month unborn child that is viable with a healthy mom. he is on the extreme end. most nebraskans don't want no restrictions at all. three and four months. we are going with the western world on this, not the extremes were seven other countries a
how did tony vote? he voted present, not voting trade one of the 20% of the time he will not vote yes or no. that was a significant vote. one thing i believe we can do better is offer more trades. whether at the high school, junior high or post-high school. jenny roger is here today. i appreciate his support. the main thing he has focused on is getting more youth into trades program sprayed welding, carpentry work. it is the best way to help folks get out of poverty. he can get ahead because he...
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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send tony martin and put democrats in charge. >> tony! tony! tony!overnor walz: for all of you, to give you a point of personal privilege, today is pretty special to me. my big sister is here today in support, and i'm just led -- [cheers and applause] like all of us, most of our family is with us, so thank you. i've got the crowd here, the valentines crowd and the alliance crowd, so thank you for that. every single one of you here, it's a beautiful day in october, 75°. you could have been anywhere. he chose to come here because you believe in the promise of america and you love this country, so thank you. if i could -- if i could, the blue dot that has taken over the country as they know what you're doing here, let me be clear what that symbolizes. this blue dot symbolizes democracy, decency, a woman's right to make her own choices. [cheers and applause] that's a lot more than politics. it's about who we are as people. this state and this district are showing the rest of the country democracy will run right through it. [cheers and applause] do we hav
send tony martin and put democrats in charge. >> tony! tony! tony!overnor walz: for all of you, to give you a point of personal privilege, today is pretty special to me. my big sister is here today in support, and i'm just led -- [cheers and applause] like all of us, most of our family is with us, so thank you. i've got the crowd here, the valentines crowd and the alliance crowd, so thank you for that. every single one of you here, it's a beautiful day in october, 75°. you could have...
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Oct 19, 2024
10/24
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that sounds good. >> the world is a mess, tony. you have to fight back and you have to have a tough skin. attack, attack, attack. never, ever, ever admit defeat. you always claim victory. always. >> you know, that sounds like the u.s. foreign policy for the past quarter century. >> now, in the new york times you have a piece arguing that the film gets the most important things right, because beneath the bluster, trump struck you as quote one of the most insecure people you never met. and the list self-aware. trump is essentially the same person today as he was a child. that is the central warning this apprentice movie poses, and it comes weeks before the election. explain. >> well, i think that the real issue with trump is what i said earlier, which is the absence of conscience combined with the decline cognitively, means that anything goes in this. look, he's got one term if he wins, and the writer anne applebaum is now making connections to what hitler said, and to all the language of other fascists dictators. that is what he's g
that sounds good. >> the world is a mess, tony. you have to fight back and you have to have a tough skin. attack, attack, attack. never, ever, ever admit defeat. you always claim victory. always. >> you know, that sounds like the u.s. foreign policy for the past quarter century. >> now, in the new york times you have a piece arguing that the film gets the most important things right, because beneath the bluster, trump struck you as quote one of the most insecure people you...
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Oct 21, 2024
10/24
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BLOOMBERG
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that is aerospace and defense analyst tony bancroft.olatility still elevated today but will terror threats and election uncertainty keep the markets anxious beyond election day? we are digging deeper, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ i can't believe you corporate types are still at it. just stop calling each other rock stars. and using workday to put finance and h.r. on one platform. tim, you are a rock star. using responsible ai doesn't make you a rock star. it kinda does. you are not rock stars. (clears throat) okay. most of you are not rock stars. oooh. data driven insights, and large language models. oh, that's so rock roll. it is, right. he gets it. yeah. katie: welcome back to bloomberg markets. tariffs have become a huge topic in the final weeks of the election season with wall street bracing for potential shifts in policy from a trump or harris administration, and any other pressure that could induce volatility. for more, we are joined by abigail doolittle as well as steve selznick. i can look at the vix to get a sense of how this mar
that is aerospace and defense analyst tony bancroft.olatility still elevated today but will terror threats and election uncertainty keep the markets anxious beyond election day? we are digging deeper, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ i can't believe you corporate types are still at it. just stop calling each other rock stars. and using workday to put finance and h.r. on one platform. tim, you are a rock star. using responsible ai doesn't make you a rock star. it kinda does. you are not rock stars....
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Oct 15, 2024
10/24
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CSPAN2
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tony may be good with 5000 a day. i want more legal immigration, lest illegal immigration or tony talks about leadership. let's forget the former president he campaigned against me to discover i had a primary this primary people said i wasn't trumpet enough or not magazine update now he sang just the opposite. i have been rated the most effective and most bipartisan republican in congress. that's because it do what's right for this district, what's right for a country just like i did 30 years serving in military defending our country. >> next question comes from julie. >> we touched on this, please give us details. we seen the ads for mig about allegations that were you both stand on abortion. so right now what is your exact stance on when it is acceptable for women to have an abortion, and how has your voting record and in the proposed legislation supported that stance. >> was congressman bacon, and it has. >> i'm going to support the nebraska law. the nebraska lands restriction on abortion at three months. by the wa
tony may be good with 5000 a day. i want more legal immigration, lest illegal immigration or tony talks about leadership. let's forget the former president he campaigned against me to discover i had a primary this primary people said i wasn't trumpet enough or not magazine update now he sang just the opposite. i have been rated the most effective and most bipartisan republican in congress. that's because it do what's right for this district, what's right for a country just like i did 30 years...
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Oct 9, 2024
10/24
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tony's heart sinks. >> i sat down next to her and i calmly prayed to god. and then i picked up the phone and dialed 911 and told them my daughter was killed. they told me i had to leave the house. i had to go outside, but i didn't want to leave her and i watched them take my baby out of her. her house in a body bag. i'll always remember seeing my mom how it affected her, her falling to the ground. >> investigator duane ralphs is struck by the unimaginable cruelty it was a very violent scene. >> there was a large amount of blood in the bedroom area. there was also blood in other parts of the of the home as well. >> blood from an overkill of stab wounds 60 times with a knife. the final blow straight to her chest. >> her body was moved and positioned. maybe after she was killed, there was a seminal fluid that was swabbed along with blood evidence from from the scene itself. it was possible that she was sexually assaulted after the homicide was committed. >> sifting through the grisly scene, cops discover a critical clue the killer had injured himself. as holly
tony's heart sinks. >> i sat down next to her and i calmly prayed to god. and then i picked up the phone and dialed 911 and told them my daughter was killed. they told me i had to leave the house. i had to go outside, but i didn't want to leave her and i watched them take my baby out of her. her house in a body bag. i'll always remember seeing my mom how it affected her, her falling to the ground. >> investigator duane ralphs is struck by the unimaginable cruelty it was a very...
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Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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BBCNEWS
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what james was talking about _ tony blair. what james was talking about was— tony blair.ould expect from the leader of— what you would expect from the leader of the opposition. | what you would expect from the leader of the opposition.- leader of the opposition. i think all of them _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite a - leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite a lot - leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite a lot of. all of them had quite a lot of attacking of labour in all of their speeches. he did say one thing i don't think i had from the other candidates which was, "we need to say sorry to those in the hall and party for what happened in the election." is that right?- party for what happened in the election." is that right? yeah, not 'ust a lot election.�* is that right? yeah, not just a lot of— election." is that right? yeah, not just a lot of mps _ election." is that right? yeah, not just a lot of mps lik
what james was talking about _ tony blair. what james was talking about was— tony blair.ould expect from the leader of— what you would expect from the leader of the opposition. | what you would expect from the leader of the opposition.- leader of the opposition. i think all of them _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite _ leader of the opposition. i think all of them had quite a - leader of the opposition. i think all of...
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Oct 22, 2024
10/24
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tony juniper, thank ou so simplicity. tony juniper, thank you so much — simplicity. juniper, thank you so much for coming on - simplicity. tony juniper, thank| you so much for coming on the programme and talking us to read. thank you.— read. thank you. pleasure. writes, _ read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking _ read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into - read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into our - read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into our live| writes, taking into our live pictures of lebanon. this is the capital, beirut. the skyline there, as you can see comments coming up to ten o'clock in the evening. rescuers throughout the day have been searching through rubble after the health ministry in lebanon now says 18 people were killed, dozens of others injured. in an israeli strike near a hospital in the capital there in beirut. we will have plenty more coverage coming up in the hours ahead. to stay with us for that. you are watching bbc news. giovanni pernice has been speaking for the first time about the report into his behaviour on strictl
tony juniper, thank ou so simplicity. tony juniper, thank you so much — simplicity. juniper, thank you so much for coming on - simplicity. tony juniper, thank| you so much for coming on the programme and talking us to read. thank you.— read. thank you. pleasure. writes, _ read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking _ read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into - read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into our - read. thank you. pleasure. writes, taking into our live| writes, taking into...
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Oct 11, 2024
10/24
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i'm tony perkins and we're broadcasting from the summit in washington dc with a live studio audience. [applause] and while congress wasn't in session this week that does not mean the nation and the world was not impacted by what happened here in our nation's capital as we reported record this on friday morning around in the rest of the world are watching to see how israel responds tuesday's unprecedented ballistic hustle attack by a ran. >> the answer is number and i think we will be discussing israel, what they're going to do but all seven of us agree that they have a right to respond but they should respond of course. >> that was president biden on wednesday urging israel to insure his response to iran was proportional but what is proportional look like when a nation is fighting for its very survival ? in a moment i'll be joined by house peter mike johnson and also hear from daniel cohen, news director of real-life network who arrived from israel and meanwhile the death toll from hurricane helene continues to climb potentially making it the most devastating storm in us history altho
i'm tony perkins and we're broadcasting from the summit in washington dc with a live studio audience. [applause] and while congress wasn't in session this week that does not mean the nation and the world was not impacted by what happened here in our nation's capital as we reported record this on friday morning around in the rest of the world are watching to see how israel responds tuesday's unprecedented ballistic hustle attack by a ran. >> the answer is number and i think we will be...
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Oct 24, 2024
10/24
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so, tony, let's start with you.tell us a little bit about this, this this new project that you're working on. >> well, it's new in the sense that we're our family. we do this united. my wife elaine, our daughters, bianca and devin, and we have this passion for companion animals and rescue animals because they can not only do we need to get rescued, but they can be rescuers. and we have we found a way that to connect them with veterans. you know, we can't do enough for them. they come back after serving abroad and they have issues. so this is something we've been doing for years. >> so andrew, tell us about your organization and how it wraps into what tony is doing. >> it's really awesome, andre, to have the shared passion for rescue animals and veterans and to be able to bridge the gap between the two, the penfed foundation empowers veterans as they make the transition from military service, and we really want them to have success and thrive in the civilian world. and one way we do that is by partnering them with ga
so, tony, let's start with you.tell us a little bit about this, this this new project that you're working on. >> well, it's new in the sense that we're our family. we do this united. my wife elaine, our daughters, bianca and devin, and we have this passion for companion animals and rescue animals because they can not only do we need to get rescued, but they can be rescuers. and we have we found a way that to connect them with veterans. you know, we can't do enough for them. they come back...
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Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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he says he helped raise tony started gang go. mack says he took this video of tony when they went golfing the day before he was killed, and that they planned to golf again saturday night after the reunion. >> numbness. i mean, you you know, we live in a culture we live in a neighborhood city where there's violence all the time. a grief compounded. >> tony's twin brother, tommy, was shot and killed in east oakland, september 2008. almost exactly 16 years ago. the family is taking solace in their pride. relatives tell me tony worked in san francisco as a supervisor for urban alchemy, a nonprofit. tony is second from the left. >> he was a community healer. he worked in san francisco in the tenderloin, helping a less fortunate family and friends say they do not know if tony was the intended target in the shooting. >> they say they'll remember him as someone who worked to help others. >> just outgoing, fun loving, just everything. >> family members tell me they never imagined losing both brothers to gun violence. tony leaves behind fo
he says he helped raise tony started gang go. mack says he took this video of tony when they went golfing the day before he was killed, and that they planned to golf again saturday night after the reunion. >> numbness. i mean, you you know, we live in a culture we live in a neighborhood city where there's violence all the time. a grief compounded. >> tony's twin brother, tommy, was shot and killed in east oakland, september 2008. almost exactly 16 years ago. the family is taking...
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tony was like a remake of melrose place. pick me hippos are endangered, with fewer than 2500 left in the wild in west africa. you're watching the deputies from berlin up next, close up investigates suspicious ship movements in the baltic sea thought to be signs of russian espionage. i'll be back at the top of the hour. with more rodents, i could see the quick and common rub up against you in touch you. that's how the von or into leaving the that's why i love his job. i even because i've got used to living with the living and dividing together peters at the rate. stacey addison century has been rescuing little trying to see here the elephant ninety's in the most of kenya . that's a tober 25th on dw, not far from.
tony was like a remake of melrose place. pick me hippos are endangered, with fewer than 2500 left in the wild in west africa. you're watching the deputies from berlin up next, close up investigates suspicious ship movements in the baltic sea thought to be signs of russian espionage. i'll be back at the top of the hour. with more rodents, i could see the quick and common rub up against you in touch you. that's how the von or into leaving the that's why i love his job. i even because i've got...
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Oct 31, 2024
10/24
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congressional candidate who is doing really well, to any weed -- tony weed. thank you, tony. [applause] tony, you are doing well. he is a winner? and my son-in-law michael who has helped us so much of this campaign. he is great and i want to thank him. i want to thank his father, chairman of the wisconsin republican party. brian shimming. while obama, have you been good, brian. i got to watch his speech on the plane. i had a choice. what the speech. i delayed the garbage truck. you were fantastic. we are doing well, we are going to win mr. chairman, right? thank you. great job. in conclusion, here are the facts. kamala is a radical left marxist rated even worse than crazy bernie sanders or even pocahontas herself. [laughter] she destroyed our economy. she was an original creator of the defund the police movement. anybody who wants to defund the police even one week or one day or even one second is not worthy of being president of the united states. [laughter] kamala wants to abolish i, our great i.c.e. heroes. these are great people, they love our country. as an, she redefine
congressional candidate who is doing really well, to any weed -- tony weed. thank you, tony. [applause] tony, you are doing well. he is a winner? and my son-in-law michael who has helped us so much of this campaign. he is great and i want to thank him. i want to thank his father, chairman of the wisconsin republican party. brian shimming. while obama, have you been good, brian. i got to watch his speech on the plane. i had a choice. what the speech. i delayed the garbage truck. you were...
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and tony benn said there was a process for the reform.deas are dismissed as ridiculous, then they're dismissed as well. there might be sensible, but there are more important things and this isn't the right time. then they're accepted and eventually people say, well, we were in favour of it all the time, of course, and it's taken for granted. but he also said the way to get reform and this influenced him a lot, was to mobilise the people behind you. and he found that with the campaign to renounce peerages, the establishment were totally against him. and hugh gaitskell, his party leader, said you can't expect us to make much of a fuss over you. and don't remember socialist. but we don't remember him for that. we remember him for his constitutional reforms. the first one was the renunciation. the right to renounce peerages, which he achieved, and that is now taken for granted. and indeed the remaining hereditary peers are about to be removed by the labour government. the second and most important one was the referendum . the third was that r
and tony benn said there was a process for the reform.deas are dismissed as ridiculous, then they're dismissed as well. there might be sensible, but there are more important things and this isn't the right time. then they're accepted and eventually people say, well, we were in favour of it all the time, of course, and it's taken for granted. but he also said the way to get reform and this influenced him a lot, was to mobilise the people behind you. and he found that with the campaign to...
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Oct 20, 2024
10/24
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MSNBCW
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tony armstrong: it was.he mayor of the city at that time had vowed to the public that we were going to solve it. i wanted to be able to tell his mom that we got the person that's responsible for this. andrea canning: but who would do such a thing? and why? run came from humble beginnings in mississippi, where he was born and first started playing basketball. but it was here in memphis where he became a star during his high school days. sports commentator: down court, lorenzen wright. andrea canning: and was showcased at tournaments broadcast on local cable tv. sports commentator: pretty shot, lorenzen wright. andrea canning: that's when he met his future wife sherra, whose father was his coach at the time. memphis investigative reporter marc perrusquia. marc perrusquia: a lot of people didn't know about him until he played aau ball for sherra wright's dad. and sherra's dad brought him up to memphis. and he played his last season of high school ball here in memphis and was a high school all-american. the coac
tony armstrong: it was.he mayor of the city at that time had vowed to the public that we were going to solve it. i wanted to be able to tell his mom that we got the person that's responsible for this. andrea canning: but who would do such a thing? and why? run came from humble beginnings in mississippi, where he was born and first started playing basketball. but it was here in memphis where he became a star during his high school days. sports commentator: down court, lorenzen wright. andrea...
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tony blair said in his bookin tony. tony blair said in his book in 2008.book in 2008. he predicted keir starmer. he said he assessed that there were three types of labour when he came in as prime minister. you can have old fashioned labour, which could never win. that's your jeremy corbyn. labour, modernised laboun corbyn. labour, modernised labour, which could win and keep winning, which was his ambition from the outset. but there is a third strand of labour which is plain labour, which could win once, but essentially, as a reaction to an unpopular conservative government. and i think that the labour party currently, in a nutshell, the idea that a government needs a reset after barely three months, he hasn't reached the 100 days. >> do you remember rishi saying this would all fall apart, that he would destroy the country and rishi sunak saying that in 100 days he hasn't even reached his 100 days? >> sue gray was meant to set out a plan for the first 100 days. she hasn't made it. you haven't had a budget yet? days? no. and you know, you talk about sue and
tony blair said in his bookin tony. tony blair said in his book in 2008.book in 2008. he predicted keir starmer. he said he assessed that there were three types of labour when he came in as prime minister. you can have old fashioned labour, which could never win. that's your jeremy corbyn. labour, modernised laboun corbyn. labour, modernised labour, which could win and keep winning, which was his ambition from the outset. but there is a third strand of labour which is plain labour, which could...
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and tony benn said there was a process for the reform.deas are dismissed as ridiculous, then they're dismissed as well. there might be sensible, but there are more important things and this isn't the right time. then they're accepted and eventually people say, well, we were in favour of it all the time, of course, and it's taken for granted. but he also said the way to get reform and this influenced him a lot, was to mobilise the people behind you. and he found that with the campaign to renounce peerages, the establishment were totally against him. and hugh gaitskell, his party leader, said you can't expect us to make much of a fuss over you. and when he went to clerk in the house of lords to explain his position, they said he was treated with contempt and he was treated with contempt and he said if i'd come dressed as a dustman with a string around my trousers and said i was the descendant of the earl of dundee , descendant of the earl of dundee, they'd have treated me with more respect than they did. but he said, when you mobilise the p
and tony benn said there was a process for the reform.deas are dismissed as ridiculous, then they're dismissed as well. there might be sensible, but there are more important things and this isn't the right time. then they're accepted and eventually people say, well, we were in favour of it all the time, of course, and it's taken for granted. but he also said the way to get reform and this influenced him a lot, was to mobilise the people behind you. and he found that with the campaign to...
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Oct 1, 2024
10/24
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BBCNEWS
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tony done in there, lucy fisher, see. tony done in there, lucy fisher. do — see.er, do you think this - fisher, do you think this british government would pause any direct support to israel if they do not escalate militarily against iran?— against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer _ against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer tonight - against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer tonight has| sir keir starmer tonight has stressed _ sir keir starmer tonight has stressed that— sir keir starmer tonight has stressed that the _ sir keir starmer tonight has stressed that the uk - sir keir starmer tonight hasj stressed that the uk stands with— stressed that the uk stands with israel. _ stressed that the uk stands with israel, understands- stressed that the uk stands l with israel, understands what he describes— with israel, understands what he describes as _ with israel, understands what he describes as the _ with israel, understands what. he describes as the reasonable demand — he describes as the reasonable demand for— he describes as the reasonable demand fo
tony done in there, lucy fisher, see. tony done in there, lucy fisher. do — see.er, do you think this - fisher, do you think this british government would pause any direct support to israel if they do not escalate militarily against iran?— against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer _ against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer tonight - against iran? well, certainly sir keir starmer tonight has| sir keir starmer tonight has stressed _ sir keir starmer tonight has stressed that— sir...
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Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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that day tony podesta was his driver. muskie has this incident where he is crying or not, the manchester union leader, he claimed there may be a snowflake in his eye. either way he got emotional defending his wife. he gets in the car and 20 podesta is sitting there and muskie says, you know i probably should've done that. he said no. your campaign is than. and that was true. >> right in the car. >> i don't know. 20 podesta was also at the democratic convention in 1968, he was walking down the street when a person next to them got clubbed by a policeman. always important moments in democratic history, he was there. closer stories we would not of gotten if not for talking directly to him. another fascinating thing, 20 podesta, he is john podesta's brother. top official who was the top aide to barack obama, top aide to president clinton before that. his brother tony podesta that we write about work as a lobbyist when his brother was in the white house and he became incredible he successful lobbyist. but we asked, he started
that day tony podesta was his driver. muskie has this incident where he is crying or not, the manchester union leader, he claimed there may be a snowflake in his eye. either way he got emotional defending his wife. he gets in the car and 20 podesta is sitting there and muskie says, you know i probably should've done that. he said no. your campaign is than. and that was true. >> right in the car. >> i don't know. 20 podesta was also at the democratic convention in 1968, he was...
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Oct 2, 2024
10/24
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i'm going to linger. >> let's take a walk, tony. >> this is my lingering wall.way, thank you again, guys. i appreciate it. so one of the first texts i got last night was from our big cheese around here, shawna thomas who told me it was last night from the debate we had moved from earth to where our politics is divisive and ugly and messy all of the way back to earth one, an old-fashioned version of our politics, a time when we can disagree and not disagreeable. we snapped back that was for a lot of people that was familiar, warm and comfortable. a whole different era of american politics and the candidates were thoughtful. they were introspective. they were humble. they talked about where they agree, where they don't and most of it watchers also felt that. that was coming through the screen. they told us what they heard was generally positive. that was the overwhelming reaction. if you want to take just one example to get the flavor for all this, consider this exchange on gun control. >> i think that governor walz and i actually probably agree that we need to do
i'm going to linger. >> let's take a walk, tony. >> this is my lingering wall.way, thank you again, guys. i appreciate it. so one of the first texts i got last night was from our big cheese around here, shawna thomas who told me it was last night from the debate we had moved from earth to where our politics is divisive and ugly and messy all of the way back to earth one, an old-fashioned version of our politics, a time when we can disagree and not disagreeable. we snapped back that...
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Oct 29, 2024
10/24
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tony hinkle dijo que la isla flotante de basura en el ocÉano se llama puerto rico.estÁ pasando la factura al republicano. tal y como nos explica karla amezola. oh, donald trump, has got to go. >> donald trump se tiene que ir. gritaba este grupo de trabajadores en harlem con la bandera boricua en alto, se pronunciaron contra los comentarios que el comediante tony hinchcliffe hizo durante el evento de trump en el icÓnico madison square garden floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. >> yeah, i think it's called puerto rico. this is marc anthony. >> hoy, el cantante puertorriqueÑo marc anthony dio su apoyo a kamala harris ante sus casi 14 millones de seguidores y dijo que no olvidarÁ lo que ocurriÓ anoche. ni cuando donald trump aventÓ toallas de papel a los boricuas tras el devastador huracÁn marÍa, llamÁndolos, dijo sucios y pobres, puerto rican voters. bad bunny fue uno de los primeros en compartir este video de kamala harris, donde la candidata habla de trump y el huracÁn marÍa. el mismo video fue reposteado por otros artistas puertorriqueÑo
tony hinkle dijo que la isla flotante de basura en el ocÉano se llama puerto rico.estÁ pasando la factura al republicano. tal y como nos explica karla amezola. oh, donald trump, has got to go. >> donald trump se tiene que ir. gritaba este grupo de trabajadores en harlem con la bandera boricua en alto, se pronunciaron contra los comentarios que el comediante tony hinchcliffe hizo durante el evento de trump en el icÓnico madison square garden floating island of garbage in the middle of...
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Oct 28, 2024
10/24
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let's ask tony pasquariello.overage at goldman sachs back with us again. it's good to see you. how are you feeling about it? >> the dynamics are favorable for risk. let's start with growth. q3 gdp will print 3%. alongside that we have earnings growth plus 8% this year and as the market looks forward plus 11% next year and then the fed. we think they cut 200 basis points. we have 50 in our pocket and another 150 from here until next june. >> i think that's probably well known to the market, the s&p looking to be up 11 of the past 12 months. where i keep coming out it's a bull market. the primary trend is higher. the setup is demanding and so i don't love risk/reward, we have a lot of wood to chop in the next two weeks. and my guess is a trader's market with an overarching bias which is positive. >> are you talking about the wood to chop being tactically the next two weeks is difficult but get past that and then we go towards what you said the bigger themes are, stronger growth, the fed is still going to cut maybe
let's ask tony pasquariello.overage at goldman sachs back with us again. it's good to see you. how are you feeling about it? >> the dynamics are favorable for risk. let's start with growth. q3 gdp will print 3%. alongside that we have earnings growth plus 8% this year and as the market looks forward plus 11% next year and then the fed. we think they cut 200 basis points. we have 50 in our pocket and another 150 from here until next june. >> i think that's probably well known to the...
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Oct 3, 2024
10/24
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guess what they did with the money, tony? >> what did they do? bought school supplies for an entire fourth grade class. >> amazing. >> listen to why she said they did it. >> now they have a whole list of things that they want the child to have, like the glue sticks and the scissors and the crayons and the pencils. but the fact that they need them and now they have them, that's really meaningful. >> stuff she had never even heard of before like ear buds. >> that's a scam. that's a teenager who is like, we need ear buds, too. glue sticks and air buds. >> air pods, if you want. she says she will continue playing bingo until she finds her next project. >> look, i wish people funded public schools sufficiently we didn't have to buy scissors with 99-year-old charity but i'm glad it exists because we need it. >> yeah, very cool. >>> ahead in a moment, how important is faith to you? lisa ling is here to talk about her series on spirituality. i love this series. some of the cool things that she has learned and the importance of ♪ ♪ >>> take a look at that
guess what they did with the money, tony? >> what did they do? bought school supplies for an entire fourth grade class. >> amazing. >> listen to why she said they did it. >> now they have a whole list of things that they want the child to have, like the glue sticks and the scissors and the crayons and the pencils. but the fact that they need them and now they have them, that's really meaningful. >> stuff she had never even heard of before like ear buds. >>...
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Oct 24, 2024
10/24
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i feel like there should be a special tony for a dog like that. >> i -- i know. you have not been on the stage at carnegie hall for 30 years, and you're returning -- >> about. almost 30 years. >> seth: and you're returning monday. >> monday night. i love that place, because it's -- it's like a horseshoe when you're on the stage. it embraces you. and it's just so exciting. >> seth: yes, it's so exciting. >> you know, it's new york, it's judy garland. i mean, the last time i was there i actually -- you guys are probably too young to remember, but judy garland, she actually sat on the edge of the stage and sang a song. and so, i did that last time. >> seth: oh, you're -- will you do it this time? >> i don't know if i have the right number, but maybe. >> seth: yeah, you've got to sit on the side. >> mm-hmm. >> seth: you've been performing a solo show for a great many years. you're about to go out west. >> yes! >> seth: is there anything out there you get as excited about as --? >> well, yeah, i'm going to be singing with the pacific symphony in costa mesa, that's the
i feel like there should be a special tony for a dog like that. >> i -- i know. you have not been on the stage at carnegie hall for 30 years, and you're returning -- >> about. almost 30 years. >> seth: and you're returning monday. >> monday night. i love that place, because it's -- it's like a horseshoe when you're on the stage. it embraces you. and it's just so exciting. >> seth: yes, it's so exciting. >> you know, it's new york, it's judy garland. i mean,...
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there's a difference between you and the 4th to insure and tony will go. yeah, comes from a coffee, growing family himself. he built up the you going to a coffee farmers alliance today he's, it's director. he's showing the agricultural economist around and answering her questions. and i think one thing i'm also really interested now about understand a little bit more about the 2 types of america. maybe a few, but actually show us as a treat. so you're welcome to this. you might as well because this one is already there trying to dry his coffee or mid tough while it was is recommended there visiting dave is cool over a coffee farmer with a lot of experience, which we'll see is this what new drive which type of the over the past years, he's been experimenting with growing the unusual coffee plant that the german researcher is so passionate about. uh huh. okay. and the listing of we also know about the cookies, around cheese that are really very promising in terms of resistance to draw social how they've changed back up into that box. they're just not yet bei
there's a difference between you and the 4th to insure and tony will go. yeah, comes from a coffee, growing family himself. he built up the you going to a coffee farmers alliance today he's, it's director. he's showing the agricultural economist around and answering her questions. and i think one thing i'm also really interested now about understand a little bit more about the 2 types of america. maybe a few, but actually show us as a treat. so you're welcome to this. you might as well because...
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thank you, tony. thank you. mercy. and thank you to a wonderful audience for being with us and for participating in this very lively debate about how young africans can use communication and other tools to shape the democracies into shape their societies. this was the street debate from berlin, germany. thank you so much for being part of the conversation to but the faith is not and that will soon have a longer version available for you on our youtube channel. from hard politics. we now want to go over to the community level coming together as a community makes us stronger, but having a community is even more important when you need a safe space because of your sexual orientation. them's nancy. get quiet in johannesburg is also a young south africans just that, wow, this quiet is raising its voice for change as it not only serves as a home for talented musicians, but also provides a safe space and family for its members. and that's why, because this is the am lonzey gay quiet in your hands, big being a musician of bein
thank you, tony. thank you. mercy. and thank you to a wonderful audience for being with us and for participating in this very lively debate about how young africans can use communication and other tools to shape the democracies into shape their societies. this was the street debate from berlin, germany. thank you so much for being part of the conversation to but the faith is not and that will soon have a longer version available for you on our youtube channel. from hard politics. we now want to...