SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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i went to undergrad at duke university and law school at harvard. after clerking for a judge, i came out here and have been in here for the last 14 years. i always assumed i would go back to the philadelphia area because that is where my family is, but i was always interested in sanford cisco in terms of the city, culture, the amazing lgbt community -- i was always interested in san francisco. i am an attorney. i started off in private practice, doing complex litigation. in 2002, i moved to the san francisco city attorney's office, where our work on the trial team, doing trials for the city and doing my own cases and supervising a team of attorneys as well. another huge issue confronting the city is the deferred maintenance on our infrastructure. we have a lot of infrastructure that has been deteriorating because we have not maintained it properly, from our roads to our sewer system to muni. we need to be much more diligent about maintaining our infrastructure. i have been interested in politics since i was a kid. i have worked on campaigns since i
i went to undergrad at duke university and law school at harvard. after clerking for a judge, i came out here and have been in here for the last 14 years. i always assumed i would go back to the philadelphia area because that is where my family is, but i was always interested in sanford cisco in terms of the city, culture, the amazing lgbt community -- i was always interested in san francisco. i am an attorney. i started off in private practice, doing complex litigation. in 2002, i moved to the...
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Apr 8, 2013
04/13
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women got some more personal free advice in an open letter from a princeton alum to other princeton undergrads>> for most of you the cornerstone of your future and happiness will be inextricably linked to the man you marry. find a husband on campus before you graduate. chris: well, this is the other side -- this is the other side of the universe for me and the men here because we live on the other part of that in some cases. lucky casses. katty kay. i have no idea what you're going to say. which one, lean in, not lean forward, lean in, work, get to be the boss and the c.e.o. and along the way, find some guy who's willing to go along with that deal and do it? on the other side which number one goal is to find a way while you're still in college. and marry him. >> i actually think the more important point for women is actually about when you have kids. we are leaving it very late. the professional women into their mid to late 30's and becomes hard to have children. and that is the more -- chris: what's -- when does the clock ring? >> i don't know what the latest science is. increasingly you can
women got some more personal free advice in an open letter from a princeton alum to other princeton undergrads>> for most of you the cornerstone of your future and happiness will be inextricably linked to the man you marry. find a husband on campus before you graduate. chris: well, this is the other side -- this is the other side of the universe for me and the men here because we live on the other part of that in some cases. lucky casses. katty kay. i have no idea what you're going to...
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and we're now joined live by every kind of bag men they profess sometimes undergrad to listen to for european studies at the before us university musselburgh meant you were part of the assembly that revise the atlantic constitution after major antique license protest back in two thousand and eight i contend with the state of other country the way it's in the. mode it has been great progress in this country be still have a long way to go stan go for a complete recovery we can say that the economy is quite run on track again are almost up to the pre-crisis level when it comes to growth in the g g p they in unemployment costs come down but quite many houses households here are still quite urgent. there are hospital not in the same political reform if you will. as much as there hostin economic recovery but today we don't go to the polls to vote on new. parliaments. eventually merging with government so would the economy on such a good track i mean iceland the recovery story is seen as a success to many but some voters apparently very wary of a ceratin and i'd turning to those who lead th
and we're now joined live by every kind of bag men they profess sometimes undergrad to listen to for european studies at the before us university musselburgh meant you were part of the assembly that revise the atlantic constitution after major antique license protest back in two thousand and eight i contend with the state of other country the way it's in the. mode it has been great progress in this country be still have a long way to go stan go for a complete recovery we can say that the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 27, 2013
04/13
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SFGTV
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i actually took an arts extra course at cca and in undergrad and had a wonderful time there. i wanted to ask a further question about the temporary structures. i'm supportive of temporary structures. if not for the sud, what would be the process? >> i believe diego sanchez with staff. they would have to submit for a temporary permit. and [speaker not understood] can chime in. >> it depends on the use. the temporary use authorization could be for a period of two weeks or, you know, one per month. it depends on the type of use, but we do have a process. it's a temporary authorization that's submitted and we review it per the planning code. >> okay, thank you. >> commissioners, then, on that motion including the correction read into the record to reflect the correct block no. 39 13 to adopt a recommendation for approval, commissioner antonini? >> aye. >> commissioner hillis? >> aye. >> commissioner moore? >> aye. >> commissioner wu? >> aye. >> and commission president fong? >> aye. >> so moved, commissioners, that motion passes unanimously 5 to 0. commissioners, there is a reque
i actually took an arts extra course at cca and in undergrad and had a wonderful time there. i wanted to ask a further question about the temporary structures. i'm supportive of temporary structures. if not for the sud, what would be the process? >> i believe diego sanchez with staff. they would have to submit for a temporary permit. and [speaker not understood] can chime in. >> it depends on the use. the temporary use authorization could be for a period of two weeks or, you know,...
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by susan kane susan is an author lecturer and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton university received her ged from harvard law school she's also the author of the critically acclaimed new york times best selling book quiet the power of interview words in a world that can't stop talking she joins me now from our new york studios susan walker thank you so much it's a pleasure to be here thanks for joining us i thought i have to say by the way in addition to your book being extraordinary your ted talk was exceptional as well it's sort of sort of some are gone viral it's brilliant what thank you what brought you to this topic of introversion and extroversion. well you know i'd say what brought me to it was really my my own life history and i consider myself an introvert and i think like many ensure verts from the time i was a small child so you know as early as four i had the sense of the world having different expectations for me from the ones that i had for myself and i couldn't i obviously didn't have a language for describing the situation but it was
by susan kane susan is an author lecturer and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton university received her ged from harvard law school she's also the author of the critically acclaimed new york times best selling book quiet the power of interview words in a world that can't stop talking she joins me now from our new york studios susan walker thank you so much it's a pleasure to be here thanks for joining us i thought i have to say by the way in addition...
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susan kane susan is an author of watcher and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton university received her ged from harvard law school she's also the author of the critically acclaimed new york times best selling book quiet the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking she joins me now from our new york studios susan welcome thank you so much it's a pleasure to be here thanks for joining us i thought i have to say by the way in addition to your book be an extraordinary your ted talk was exceptional as well it's sort of some are gone viral it's brilliant what thank you what brought you to this topic of the introversion and extroversion. well you know i'd say what brought me to it was really my my own life history and i consider myself interviewer and i think like many introverts for the time it was a small caps you know as early as four i had the sense of the world having different expectations for me from the ones that i had for myself and i couldn't i obviously didn't have a language for describing the situation but it was something that
susan kane susan is an author of watcher and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton university received her ged from harvard law school she's also the author of the critically acclaimed new york times best selling book quiet the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking she joins me now from our new york studios susan welcome thank you so much it's a pleasure to be here thanks for joining us i thought i have to say by the way in addition to...
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fired he was actually walked back in with some of the organizers from this campaign and less an undergrad lander and they got him his job back and that kind of thing and along with going out and strike and then walking back in getting your job back it really emboldens workers to take more action to have people have more people join the campaign so this is really more of a rolling tactic to get more people involved than it is to really at this point cause economic damage we know strokes are also very much connected to political pressure what political pressure we seen in the city on the state for these workers the support from the pall of. for these workers i mean we've seen support from like i said several different members of the city council christine quinn who wants to be our next mayor is apparently speaking at the rally that i'm missing right now to be on your show with the pacifier. it's ok i've seen christine quinn speak. there is also the impact that this movement is having on city and state politics is worth noting new york last week the city passed finally the paid sick days bil
fired he was actually walked back in with some of the organizers from this campaign and less an undergrad lander and they got him his job back and that kind of thing and along with going out and strike and then walking back in getting your job back it really emboldens workers to take more action to have people have more people join the campaign so this is really more of a rolling tactic to get more people involved than it is to really at this point cause economic damage we know strokes are also...
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susan kane susan is an author like sure and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton universe.
susan kane susan is an author like sure and former wall street corporate attorney she graduated undergrad from princeton universe.
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> let's say you are dating an younger man undergrad at usc. >> it stands for university of spoiled children. by the way, go trojans, love usc. >> trojans, usc? >> yes. >> i thought it was ucla bruins. >> the guy is not apologizing. this wasn't a rant. he doesn't even care that he was caught. he told fox news exactly that's what i meant to say. i stand by it. if anybody is a bad guy, student that he thinks is bad because he taped this sara rupp ticiouszly. this is what you get in college campuses. thank god i graduated a long time ago because my professors at uc davis. no relationship to usc were great. my political science professor did not behave in this fashion. professor moore wonderful, professor gates, handsome and wonderful. so, you know, what can i say? this guy, i would have dropped him like that. i would have dropped that guy. >> he is just wonderful. >> weeping right now going is f. she only knew. >> just like those old professors you had these are not greg's stereotypes. >> is he trying to build the ideal professor. >> i don't have to. it's built for me. open up the pape
. >> let's say you are dating an younger man undergrad at usc. >> it stands for university of spoiled children. by the way, go trojans, love usc. >> trojans, usc? >> yes. >> i thought it was ucla bruins. >> the guy is not apologizing. this wasn't a rant. he doesn't even care that he was caught. he told fox news exactly that's what i meant to say. i stand by it. if anybody is a bad guy, student that he thinks is bad because he taped this sara rupp ticiouszly....
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Apr 13, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN
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as a policy level, the government abuse undergrad as really something that they want to provide as muchccess to and grad loans are seen as more of an individual choice, individual investment. with the graduate loans, does your major depend on whether you get a loan or not? federal loan.m a it is to that. it is not depend on anything, really. i'd your income, on your credit school -- on your income, on your credit score. any private loan market, it does. for certain majors you cannot get loans. for certain wagers you can get decent interest rates that are pretty imperative -- ready competitive. host: would you have examples of both of those? the type of majors. easiest to get federal grad student loans for the medical profession, not just doctors but certain types of nursing and things like that. , for lawinary medicine school, for business school, they are the type of professional careers that ultimately gets very high incomes after graduating. so those are where you can get the lowest rates. host: a few more minutes with our guest. this is rich from ohio on our republican line. caller:
as a policy level, the government abuse undergrad as really something that they want to provide as muchccess to and grad loans are seen as more of an individual choice, individual investment. with the graduate loans, does your major depend on whether you get a loan or not? federal loan.m a it is to that. it is not depend on anything, really. i'd your income, on your credit school -- on your income, on your credit score. any private loan market, it does. for certain majors you cannot get loans....
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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FOXNEWSW
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in undergrad they do browbeat you. >> they do. >> bill: if you don't spit back yourology to them manysh you. >> i can't believe they tried to convert you to islam. >> bill: what school was that. >> akron university. her name is professor wane write. >> bill: do that. >> if professor wane wright at akron university is telling the kids both muslims and contributions believe in the same god. allah is going to be real offended. >> exactly. >> bill: going to be real offended. >> the university of missouri. the other example is in the criminology class they bring in democrat activists during the election and show video clips of mitt romney taken out of context and that's why a few of those kids left the classroom. >> bill: really? all right. jesse watters, everybody. he will follow up on this and he -- you are never going to stop wearing the collar very polarizing i'm noticing though. dudley dowright do you know who that is. >> no. >> bill: factor tip of the day something you can do that may get to you heaven. the tip 60 seconds away. : a want to go to heaven? >> tip of the day. want to go
in undergrad they do browbeat you. >> they do. >> bill: if you don't spit back yourology to them manysh you. >> i can't believe they tried to convert you to islam. >> bill: what school was that. >> akron university. her name is professor wane write. >> bill: do that. >> if professor wane wright at akron university is telling the kids both muslims and contributions believe in the same god. allah is going to be real offended. >> exactly. >>...
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Apr 17, 2013
04/13
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CURRENT
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meanwhile, reinforcing boston's reputation for resilience, a group of boston college undergrads is organizing an event on facebook titled boston marathon the last five miles where this friday, participants will walk the final five miles of the marathon, explaining that the march will be for anyone who did not get to finish, for anyone who was injured and for anyone who lost their life, we will walk. we will walk to show that we decide when our marathon ends. and over 13,000 people have signed up thus far. joining us now from massachusetts is christina wilkie, reporter for "the huffington post." thank you so much for joining us this evening. >> thanks so much for having me. >> john: you were in boston today. what was the mood of the city? >> this was a city in recovery. whereas i expected when i arrived at 7:30 this morning to see a potentially a situation that was where a city was within paralysis or life wasn't going on and people were just stopping to wonder what happened and how this could have happened. the people i spoke to today were going to work. they were taking their children out. t
meanwhile, reinforcing boston's reputation for resilience, a group of boston college undergrads is organizing an event on facebook titled boston marathon the last five miles where this friday, participants will walk the final five miles of the marathon, explaining that the march will be for anyone who did not get to finish, for anyone who was injured and for anyone who lost their life, we will walk. we will walk to show that we decide when our marathon ends. and over 13,000 people have signed...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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MSNBCW
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he was an undergrad. also saying his older son was a three-time u.s. boxing champ and was famous in the u.s. so what his sons were telling him, how much contact he had, is really unknown. in terms of all these other family members that we've heard from from other parts of the world, some in the u.s., one in canada. i mean, this is a family that had been through a lot together. they were refugees from kyrgyzstan to dagestan at one point. they got this chance to come to the u.s. together and really make it in life. nobody is really talking to each other. some of the family members said, several, in fact, said they hadn't talked to these two young men in years. some of them said that they were shocked by this. although how shocked can you be when during this formative period where a young man is shaping his future, you haven't spoken to him in several years? not really knowing what was going on in their lives other than what maybe they've heard years ago. so you know there was some kind of rift in the family. in fact, the two uncles that were interviewed
he was an undergrad. also saying his older son was a three-time u.s. boxing champ and was famous in the u.s. so what his sons were telling him, how much contact he had, is really unknown. in terms of all these other family members that we've heard from from other parts of the world, some in the u.s., one in canada. i mean, this is a family that had been through a lot together. they were refugees from kyrgyzstan to dagestan at one point. they got this chance to come to the u.s. together and...
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Apr 3, 2013
04/13
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just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse udience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at what it does. i do not think it practices are very different to the industry more broadly. when i wrote the book and the op-ed, i was using my career there as a view of what i think has become conflicted in the industry. the second thing i would say, i think a lot of people would would want to classify my views or this talk as in the occupy wall street camp or a different type of camp. i would say, i am very much a capitalist. i just have the view that free markets imply that the playing field is fair and there aren't a lot of conflicts of nterest. a big thesis of my book and wha
just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse udience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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. >> a few years later, i had four years off between undergrad and graduate school. >> rose: yeah. and deciding that i want to write plays, is that what you came out of that saying, i'm going to be, i am a playwright. >> i didn't feel very certain ff for a long time. i felt like it was something that was working betzer than acting. i was holding lots of day jobs in the meantime. and then yeah by the time i applied for graduate school i did feel like maybe this can actually be a career. >> rose: why does one decide they want to write plays rather than novels. >> one has to be silly, i think, because the theatre is a small kind of cottage industry. but i grew up on the theatre. my grandmother was involved in the theatre. i went to the theatre growing up. so it felt native for me. i didn't survey the option and make a practical choice, i just felt like writing plays was what i could do. >> rose: dow need a confirmation that that is true or dow make that judgement yourself. >> i made that judgement myself and had to wait a long time for the confirmation that it was true. so i had a lot
. >> a few years later, i had four years off between undergrad and graduate school. >> rose: yeah. and deciding that i want to write plays, is that what you came out of that saying, i'm going to be, i am a playwright. >> i didn't feel very certain ff for a long time. i felt like it was something that was working betzer than acting. i was holding lots of day jobs in the meantime. and then yeah by the time i applied for graduate school i did feel like maybe this can actually be...
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Apr 6, 2013
04/13
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taketo get a sense, can i a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse audience. you will have a good dialogue, onmagine people are split these issues. --ouple things i will say the professor mentioned the op- ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at what it does. are not think it practices very different to the industry more broadly. when i wrote the book and the op-ed, i was using my career there as a view of what i think has become conflicted in the industry. the second thing i would say, i think a lot of people would would want to classify my views or this talk as in the occupy wall street camp or a different type of camp. i would say, i am very much a capitalist. freet have the view that markets imply that the playing field is fair and there aren't a lot of conflicts of interest. a big thesis of my book and what i was trying t
taketo get a sense, can i a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse audience. you will have a good dialogue, onmagine people are split these issues. --ouple things i will say the professor mentioned the op- ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at what it does....
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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undergrad a million -- where i did my undergrad a million years. i had a chance to talk to fraternity brothers from four different states, including your state, madam president, that were there for a weekend conference, leadership conference. i talked to them about leadership. i also talked to them about making tough decisions haoupbd we use our -- and how we use our values to make those tough decisions. i asked those guys from across those eight states, i said how many of you think you'll someday receive a social security check? not one hand went up. i said how many think you might be eligible for medicare when you're 65? not one hand. i want to make sure that they do. not that they need it. i want to make sure our sons, our daughters, our grandsons, our granddaughters, our nieces and nephews, i want to make sure those programs will be there for them. the president gets that. i understand we can't keep going business as usual. we'll run out of money in the medicare trust fund by 2024. we're starting to run out of money, inability to pay for social
undergrad a million -- where i did my undergrad a million years. i had a chance to talk to fraternity brothers from four different states, including your state, madam president, that were there for a weekend conference, leadership conference. i talked to them about leadership. i also talked to them about making tough decisions haoupbd we use our -- and how we use our values to make those tough decisions. i asked those guys from across those eight states, i said how many of you think you'll...
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Apr 1, 2013
04/13
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CNNW
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career woman and a princeton 1977 class president, further explained her advice is only to princeton undergradsaditional family. listen. >> what i'm suggesting, though, is women who graduate and then spend the next ten years of their lives focused on nothing but career find themselves in their early 30s with nothing but career. and for women who, in fact, want to be married and want to have children, to be in your early 30s and have a great job and nothing else, it now becomes panic time for them. >> ladies, i got to ask you first. donna, you know what is your interpretation of what susan patton is saying? >> first of all, i think her advice is a little old school. i know it is narrowly tailored to those who are primarily at princeton, maybe other ivy league schools. i teach at georgetown, been there for over a decade. i would never tell my young female students that they better hurry up and find a husband and have babies and get their tickets in so they can go out and be whatever. i think this is an opportunity for women when they're in college to explore the possibilities of who they are, wha
career woman and a princeton 1977 class president, further explained her advice is only to princeton undergradsaditional family. listen. >> what i'm suggesting, though, is women who graduate and then spend the next ten years of their lives focused on nothing but career find themselves in their early 30s with nothing but career. and for women who, in fact, want to be married and want to have children, to be in your early 30s and have a great job and nothing else, it now becomes panic time...
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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host: senator baldwin was born and bred in wisconsin and got her undergrad at smith.ichael in missouri. caller: i have a few issues. i was a marine 21 years and it than i gave six to the army, and i have had issues with gun control. you know, you talk about background checks. they have been doing background checks for a while. all these politicians, even in congress, are so complacent with making money and letting these states do as they please. you know, you got people out there going to conceal classes -- they will take your money and anybody will pass that class. they need to quit being so complacent. and the government wants to sit there and make money and take money away from veterans and seniors. it is ridiculous. we pay that social security .nto our retirement but then the government wants to take it from us because they don't have to pay into social security and will put more money in their pocket. i think it is ridiculous. guest: well, thank you also for your service to the country. keepingwith you about our promises, keeping our promises to veterans and keep
host: senator baldwin was born and bred in wisconsin and got her undergrad at smith.ichael in missouri. caller: i have a few issues. i was a marine 21 years and it than i gave six to the army, and i have had issues with gun control. you know, you talk about background checks. they have been doing background checks for a while. all these politicians, even in congress, are so complacent with making money and letting these states do as they please. you know, you got people out there going to...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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i am a licensed clinical psychotherapist, and i remember at a undergrad school at the university of maryland. one prefer says in order to change one part of the system you have to change another. so the question is reforming medicare, and mr. reichaur we need to change prices. i'm on medicare. it is not a great system. so my question i'm putting out to all of you in united healthcare, you're aarp. you're one of the largest insurance companies and you have supplements to part b. you need cheek attitude. not just for me. at it down the road. the younger people. if you're talking about fee for service -- i want to pick it, my doc, i like competition but you haven't addressed the major part of health care reform, which is the patient-doctor relationship, the issue of deductibles, and the amount that it's gone up, and the issue of possible malpractice if a patient knows enough and says, i don't want this test but the doc has to cover themselves because if they don't they're going to get sued, and that has never been part of this healthcare, medicare, or portable care act discussion, and i think i
i am a licensed clinical psychotherapist, and i remember at a undergrad school at the university of maryland. one prefer says in order to change one part of the system you have to change another. so the question is reforming medicare, and mr. reichaur we need to change prices. i'm on medicare. it is not a great system. so my question i'm putting out to all of you in united healthcare, you're aarp. you're one of the largest insurance companies and you have supplements to part b. you need cheek...
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Apr 30, 2013
04/13
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MSNBCW
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i think he went to princeton undergrad.e doesn't have my cred. >> way higher than number one. >> i went to princeton. >> populism. >> wasn't he working the solicitor general's office? >> clerks for william rehnquist. >> clerk for the great william rehnquist, once alone the center, one of the most influential conservative jurists of the 20th century. he's just a simple guy. going down to texas talking about, hey, i found the place and i'm shaking it up. >> truth to power, baby. >> truth to power because he's never been around it. puts on his best clean shirt and goes to work and puts on the clip-on tie and, you know, does his best. he's a harvard lawyer and this is whatever, good luck today, senator cruz. we're thinking about you. they'd be doing it today. >> okay. there is just one week left before that closely watched congressional race in south carolina. and last night, democrat elizabeth coe ber bush and former republican governor mark sanford had what will likely be their one and only debate. they battle over issues fro
i think he went to princeton undergrad.e doesn't have my cred. >> way higher than number one. >> i went to princeton. >> populism. >> wasn't he working the solicitor general's office? >> clerks for william rehnquist. >> clerk for the great william rehnquist, once alone the center, one of the most influential conservative jurists of the 20th century. he's just a simple guy. going down to texas talking about, hey, i found the place and i'm shaking it up....
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Apr 3, 2013
04/13
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just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse udience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at what it does. i do not think it practices are very different to the industry more broadly. when i wrote the book and the op-ed, i was using my career there as a view of what i think has become conflicted in the industry. the second thing i would say, i think a lot of people would would want to classify my views or this talk as in the occupy wall street camp or a different type of camp. i would say, i am very much a capitalist. i just have the view that free markets imply that the playing field is fair and there aren't a lot of conflicts of nterest. a big thesis of my book and wha
just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse udience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at...
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Apr 6, 2013
04/13
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sticking to years in getting your undergrad gun -- dad is not a bad option, but in my community there are a lot of mormon families. their kids go on a two-year mission. they come back so much more mature and ready for college. instead of failing there freshman year, they actually study. okay. i cannot -- the number of kids to take five and six years to get through college is phenomenal, and some of that is, i think, the majority of the student that -- how prepared they are for college. as parents and as journalists, we don't present that this is a really good option for kids. you know, do not just go down this path because all the parents and your neighbor are talking about harvard and princeton and all of these places. to end up pushing your kid to do something that you know, as a parent, they're not ready for. >> i would add to that that the research is clear. the date is very clear. the unemployment rate for those who don't go to college is more than twice as high for those who have a college degree, so on average it is a good investments , but people need to be much -- where they
sticking to years in getting your undergrad gun -- dad is not a bad option, but in my community there are a lot of mormon families. their kids go on a two-year mission. they come back so much more mature and ready for college. instead of failing there freshman year, they actually study. okay. i cannot -- the number of kids to take five and six years to get through college is phenomenal, and some of that is, i think, the majority of the student that -- how prepared they are for college. as...
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Apr 3, 2013
04/13
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just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse audience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at hat it does. i do not think it practices are very different to the industry more broadly. hen i wrote the book and the op-ed, i was using my career there as a view of what i think has become conflicted in the industry. the second thing i would say, i think a lot of people would would want to classify my views or this talk as in the occupy wall street camp or a different type of camp. i would say, i am very much a capitalist. i just have the view that free markets imply that the playing field is fair and there aren't a lot of conflicts of interest. a big thesis of my book and wha
just to get a sense, can i take a quick poll -- who are undergrads in the audience? and business school students? and members of the community? faculty? great. we have an excellent and diverse audience. you will have a good dialogue, i imagine people are split on these issues. a couple things i will say -- the professor mentioned the op-ed i wrote about goldman sachs. everything i said i very much believe is true to the industry. i do not think -- goldman is a smart firm and excellent firm at...
119
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Apr 1, 2013
04/13
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it took me straight back to hugo -- [inaudible] from undergrad. i thought i'd long left those days behind. >> thank you. >> okay, gentlemen, do you want to go through those? >> great. um, i'll be very interested in the rules of engagement. we've already heard some hint about the way the u.s. has gone. it seems like the military feels more and more confident that they're getting the rules of engagement right. we've been reading that from "the washington post" and other places. and so that can make us feel quite good. i, because we don't know what they are, of course, there are many of us that wonder if we've gotten it right. they don't want to release the rules of engagement because that will let the bad guys know how far they can go, but a little bit of transparency would make us feel a lot better. and especially having looked at history the way that i have and seeing how much warning time we tend to have, seeing how much response time that engagements, that conflicts take weeks, months, years, i'm personally cautious that the rules of engagement
it took me straight back to hugo -- [inaudible] from undergrad. i thought i'd long left those days behind. >> thank you. >> okay, gentlemen, do you want to go through those? >> great. um, i'll be very interested in the rules of engagement. we've already heard some hint about the way the u.s. has gone. it seems like the military feels more and more confident that they're getting the rules of engagement right. we've been reading that from "the washington post" and...