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30
Jan 26, 2015
01/15
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 30
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that way and then get them to the group that has been identified as being unfaithful, and get them to talk about their motivations. but the psychologists who have created these brilliant research systems for doing that, they decipher that people who do cheat, people who are unfaithful inevitably saying this is a specific transgression and it is not who i am. it plays into the larger biology of menu kind which is great at forgetting the mistakes, the trauma, like wild birth we only remember the good things and continue to do it again. the mind is flexible when it comes to being bulletproof you let it bounce right off you and let it go on with your life. >> was it cathartic to call your book life of a plaguerist? >> it was but it wasn't even my title. but the book is enoughtive, it's creative non-fiction what i mean it's a satire on the readers themselves as well as the confession that i'm avowing then i'm happy with the title. >> i want to say something about rationalization. >> jake watered was with us from san francisco. professor copelson with us from iowa. that brings us to the end
that way and then get them to the group that has been identified as being unfaithful, and get them to talk about their motivations. but the psychologists who have created these brilliant research systems for doing that, they decipher that people who do cheat, people who are unfaithful inevitably saying this is a specific transgression and it is not who i am. it plays into the larger biology of menu kind which is great at forgetting the mistakes, the trauma, like wild birth we only remember the...
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111
Jan 8, 2015
01/15
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WJLA
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eye 111
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. >> i mean a man of faith who was sometimes unfaithful had an ego, had some guilt, was a prankster, he was a dynamic. he was a human being. >> reporter: she has faced criticism for her portrayal of lbj and how much he did or did not do. >> i can't do that this year. i won't. i told you. >> reporter: something she acknowledged to us it was a challenge. >> analyzing johnson's part in the selma campaign i really had to try to get into the mind of the president. it was a bit of a chess game at that time you know one thing triggered another and what was right for this side wasn't right for this side. >> reporter: when american saw those images you had people come from boston and detroit. >> yeah. >> reporter: a housewife from detroit who came to march, she lost her life to the kkk. >> going to finish this promise you that miss amelia. >> reporter: so many not knowing it was a woman named amelia who invited dr. king to selma. >> she was the one saying selma is the perfect place. we have a sheriff who is going to resist us when we come in. >> if you don't disperse you're going to be arrest
. >> i mean a man of faith who was sometimes unfaithful had an ego, had some guilt, was a prankster, he was a dynamic. he was a human being. >> reporter: she has faced criticism for her portrayal of lbj and how much he did or did not do. >> i can't do that this year. i won't. i told you. >> reporter: something she acknowledged to us it was a challenge. >> analyzing johnson's part in the selma campaign i really had to try to get into the mind of the president. it...
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154
Jan 11, 2015
01/15
by
FOXNEWSW
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. >> destroying the enemy and the unfaithful and the nonbelievers. i'm not stupid. i'm a judge. i can read this. >> the book you should have in front of you is the curran. it is perhaps the most misunderstood -- >> she's reading -- >> harris, she's reading -- >> harris, you answered it. harris, stop. >> harris, she's reading from the leading sharia book for the school of thought in sunni islam. >> yes. >> you can tell the american public whatever you want right now but your denial is preventing the confrontation of the imams that are teaching this stuff that infuses the radicalism of the guys in paris, saudi arabia and pack stan andless where. >> you're right. i agree with you. >> we have to have a jihad against jihad. and your apoll jet ticks are killing us and killing islam. >> i've got to go. >> you know the track record of us. >> it says it's a responsibility of muslims to rise up and stop groups like isis who cause chaos. >> yes. >> that's your interpretation of the curran. where does i say that. >> it says when you see two parties or believers fighting, you make peace. >>
. >> destroying the enemy and the unfaithful and the nonbelievers. i'm not stupid. i'm a judge. i can read this. >> the book you should have in front of you is the curran. it is perhaps the most misunderstood -- >> she's reading -- >> harris, she's reading -- >> harris, you answered it. harris, stop. >> harris, she's reading from the leading sharia book for the school of thought in sunni islam. >> yes. >> you can tell the american public whatever...
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35
Jan 18, 2015
01/15
by
CSPAN2
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eye 35
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of the information that exchanged because the sad story of okay, i have this one wife that was unfaithful so needless to say -- >> host: b'nai, this is getting a little bit complicated for a call-in program. can you cut to the chase for the add? >> caller: i'm so sorry. i'll go ahead and cut to the chase. needless to say needless to say, this is a young man that was a folk star and had all-white jury and that's no offense to anyone. all white jury. the jury found this particular kid guilty of conspiracy to shoot or kill. forgive me. i don't know the legal terms. >> host: okay, you know what i am sorry. we are going to have to let you go. i think that's going to go on a little bit long. any response, do you know where she's going with this? >> guest: i'm not altogether sure. the fact of the matter is the administration of criminal justice, the subject of my first book is still in the area of the racial context is very unsatisfactory. we need as a society to reevaluate how we punish people commend the extent to which we punish people. we live in a society in my view which is just hyper puni
of the information that exchanged because the sad story of okay, i have this one wife that was unfaithful so needless to say -- >> host: b'nai, this is getting a little bit complicated for a call-in program. can you cut to the chase for the add? >> caller: i'm so sorry. i'll go ahead and cut to the chase. needless to say needless to say, this is a young man that was a folk star and had all-white jury and that's no offense to anyone. all white jury. the jury found this particular kid...
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184
Jan 8, 2015
01/15
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MSNBCW
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i see numbers of 80% and 90% in countries like pakistan who support stoning for a woman who is unfaithfulhese are high percentages. you say it is only older people. it sounds like it is most people. >> i don't know the methodology behind this so i'm not going to comment on what the ages were in the people being polled. what i can tell from you hard personal experience is that very representative of the kind of tweets that i got today, and that didn't just come to me but were retweeted by others and in that way came to me was one from a muslim woman, young, who said i am muslim. i defend fully freedom of speech including offensive speech. and people like these terrorists make a mockery of islam. i hear this every single day. from members of a new generation. here's the thing. they don't make the news. idiots like these terrorists make the news. so a lop-sided understanding here. let me finish the point. there's a lop-sided understanding. what we news is what we think is all there is. if we don't see it on the news, we don't believe it exists. but you've got to look hard and you will find t
i see numbers of 80% and 90% in countries like pakistan who support stoning for a woman who is unfaithfulhese are high percentages. you say it is only older people. it sounds like it is most people. >> i don't know the methodology behind this so i'm not going to comment on what the ages were in the people being polled. what i can tell from you hard personal experience is that very representative of the kind of tweets that i got today, and that didn't just come to me but were retweeted by...
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59
Jan 31, 2015
01/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 59
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to see him, and the uncle laid a sad story on him or sob story on him, had this one wife who was unfaithful. >> host: renee, this is getting a little complicate for a call-in program. can you cut to the chase? what's your final statement. >> caller: i'm so sorry. i'll cut to the chase. needless to say this -- sure. needless to say this young man was a football star, had an all-white jury and the jury found this particular kid guilty of conspiracy to shoot or kill -- i'm not sure. forgive me. i don't know the legal terms. >> host: all right. you know what renee, i'm sorry. we have to let you go. i think that's going to go on a little bit long. any response that you want to give tomer? do you know. >> guest: i'm not sure. the fact of the matter is that the administration of criminal justice -- the subject of my first book, race, crime and the law, is still an area not only in the racial context but in many contexts, that it's very unsatisfactory and we need as a society to re-evaluate how we punish people, the sent to which we punish people. we live in a society in my view which is just hyper
to see him, and the uncle laid a sad story on him or sob story on him, had this one wife who was unfaithful. >> host: renee, this is getting a little complicate for a call-in program. can you cut to the chase? what's your final statement. >> caller: i'm so sorry. i'll cut to the chase. needless to say this -- sure. needless to say this young man was a football star, had an all-white jury and the jury found this particular kid guilty of conspiracy to shoot or kill -- i'm not sure....
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74
Jan 23, 2015
01/15
by
WJLA
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. >>> coming up unfaithful fiance.he eye-opening study that says millions of married americans are hiding their money from spouses. >> are husbands or wives more likely the cull sprit in you are watching "world news now." >> announcer: "world news now" continues after this f ♪ >>> shocking just shocking results from a new poll about family finances. it shows millions of americans are hiding secret bank accounts or credit cards from tear partners. >> you can guess who's doing more of the hide something. >> women. >> men. yeah. not as bad as cheating but financial infidelity sure isn't good. >> i have to go. >> so go. >> reporter: when it comes to cheating in a marriage, there's this kind heating up showtime's "the affair" and then this kind of affair the financial kind. a new study by credit cards.com says millions of married americans are guilty of committing financial infidelity. according to the study, some 7 million americans have secret bank or credit card accounts their spouses know nothing about. the survey found
. >>> coming up unfaithful fiance.he eye-opening study that says millions of married americans are hiding their money from spouses. >> are husbands or wives more likely the cull sprit in you are watching "world news now." >> announcer: "world news now" continues after this f ♪ >>> shocking just shocking results from a new poll about family finances. it shows millions of americans are hiding secret bank accounts or credit cards from tear...
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130
Jan 10, 2015
01/15
by
CSPAN3
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eye 130
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what social go is advanced by allowing the law to have these relationships the unfaithful and insecure? how often has the magazine transformed our debate in this way? we started chronologically in the progressive area. the magazine really developed the ideas that would culminate in new deal. >> the very name "new deal" -- the new republic did a lot to champion many of the ideas that would be part of the new deal. the idea of economic planning which was the dominant idea of something that had been meticulously pressed. of course, the "new republic" is a magazine of skepticism. it did not stop them from hating the new deal and franklin roosevelt as a too timid, half measured type of guy. some of the things, i'm ashamed to admit, in 1993, we published a piece by betsy mccoy who went on to become lieutenant governor of new york denouncing hillary clinton's health care reform. she published a piece called "no exit" which predicted the -- depicted the clinton health care reform as this kafka-esque bureaucracy. it which read the american economy. that piece was faxed around in the day of the
what social go is advanced by allowing the law to have these relationships the unfaithful and insecure? how often has the magazine transformed our debate in this way? we started chronologically in the progressive area. the magazine really developed the ideas that would culminate in new deal. >> the very name "new deal" -- the new republic did a lot to champion many of the ideas that would be part of the new deal. the idea of economic planning which was the dominant idea of...
474
474
Jan 14, 2015
01/15
by
MSNBCW
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eye 474
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a majority supports stoneing as a penalty for the unfaithful. in jordan 67% there. it's 60% in malaysia. when it comes to conversions, taking the life of those who abandon islam is most widely supported in egypt. 86% and jordan 82%, roughly two-thirds who want sharyia to be the law of the land. that's important. in the other countries, surveyed in the middle east in africaen region fewer than half take this view. >> harold we have to acknowledge, we have to acknowledge, do we not, the nature of the wrath and the difference? >> one of the boys you met shown was david ignacious who talked about about on your show the funeral of one of the police officers who had a relative get up at the viewing and say those who committed these acts are not muslims, they're terrorists. but those numbers are hard to refute what mica said from the few polls. the white house the language i agree with carole this white house and this president language is very important to him as it should be but at the same time you can't -- >> shouldn't we though wouldn't it have been helpful for fdr to
a majority supports stoneing as a penalty for the unfaithful. in jordan 67% there. it's 60% in malaysia. when it comes to conversions, taking the life of those who abandon islam is most widely supported in egypt. 86% and jordan 82%, roughly two-thirds who want sharyia to be the law of the land. that's important. in the other countries, surveyed in the middle east in africaen region fewer than half take this view. >> harold we have to acknowledge, we have to acknowledge, do we not, the...
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118
Jan 18, 2015
01/15
by
WRC
tv
eye 118
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. >> he was completely unfaithful to her. >> in just about every way and just about every opportunity she was his partner because they had gone through so much. they had had children together. >> reporter: all along, levi's family felt the investigation into tera's death was flawed and fueled by an obsessed detective. >> when one theory came up and it didn't pan out, then he had another theory. i think in police work, you gotta have evidence. you have to have something that we can hold onto. >> reporter: in a series of testy exchanges, the defense tried to discredit aaron jones on the stand. >> i just thought as a world-class cop, maybe you could -- were clairvoyant, as well. >> i'm working on it. >> i know you -- i bet you are, i have no doubt of that. >> reporter: serna grilled jones about his work history. turns out he'd been fired twice and formally reprimanded for his handling of cases, including one that caused jones to be written up as unfit for duty. >> dr. role basically found you, in a five-page written report -- >> objection. >> -- mentally unfit to be a police officer, rig
. >> he was completely unfaithful to her. >> in just about every way and just about every opportunity she was his partner because they had gone through so much. they had had children together. >> reporter: all along, levi's family felt the investigation into tera's death was flawed and fueled by an obsessed detective. >> when one theory came up and it didn't pan out, then he had another theory. i think in police work, you gotta have evidence. you have to have something...
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47
Jan 30, 2015
01/15
by
CSPAN
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eye 47
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and to counsel the president when he is close to the line of unfaithful execution. >> in other words, is the attorney general there to find some plausible theoretical justification for whatever the president wants to do orp is she there to enforce the power that sness for all of our liberty? >> the attorney general should help the president to find legal ways to do what he wants to do, but at the end of the day it's essential for the attorney general to be able to say, no, mr. president, that's something you cannot do. >> my time is up. >> thanks very much, mr. chairman. i'm going to be very brief. this is really a hearing to discuss the qualifications of a nominee. in this case a very distinguished, very exceptionally well-qualified nominee on virtually any area that one can state. i really don't want to see that diminished by a critique by various people of the administration. and to me, loretta lynch is an outstanding role model, not only for women but for all of us in this arena because, as you can see, so much of this arena has become so partisan that uses a hearing of the qualif
and to counsel the president when he is close to the line of unfaithful execution. >> in other words, is the attorney general there to find some plausible theoretical justification for whatever the president wants to do orp is she there to enforce the power that sness for all of our liberty? >> the attorney general should help the president to find legal ways to do what he wants to do, but at the end of the day it's essential for the attorney general to be able to say, no, mr....
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51
Jan 29, 2015
01/15
by
CSPAN
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eye 51
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and to counsel the president when he is close to the line of unfaithful execution. >> in other words, is the attorney general there to find some plausible theoretical justification for whatever the president wants to do orp is she there to enforce the power that sness for all of our liberty? >> the attorney general should help the president to find legal ways to do what he wants to do, but at the end of the day it's essential for the attorney general to be able to say, no, mr. president, that's something you cannot do. >> my time is up. >> thanks very much, mr. chairman. i'm going to be very brief. this is really a hearing to discuss the qualifications of a nominee. in this case a very distinguished, very exceptionally well-qualified nominee on virtually any area that one can state. i really don't want to see that diminished by a critique by various people of the administration. and to me, loretta lynch is an outstanding role model, not only for women but for all of us in this arena because, as you can see, so much of this arena has become so partisan that uses a hearing of the qualif
and to counsel the president when he is close to the line of unfaithful execution. >> in other words, is the attorney general there to find some plausible theoretical justification for whatever the president wants to do orp is she there to enforce the power that sness for all of our liberty? >> the attorney general should help the president to find legal ways to do what he wants to do, but at the end of the day it's essential for the attorney general to be able to say, no, mr....