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well as university of worry lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 worry set out to see her young woman alert into the trade she went undercover as a street walker and legless and then for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i still trads much as possible. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of the traffickers in country rape sexual exploitation and forced labor. some of those ladies wanting to xscape from local prostitution and mean they got books so i decided to also it tries it's with them into the next level though in reality i wasn't a sex worker but in the i mean i was a sex worker i did what they did the only thing i didn't do. was to actually do real costs. nigeria has a high number of traffic victims of the seas especially in europe direct a kind of young believes that since its release in october 21000 troops have shown in mind the nigerians criminal trafficking networks. to field hospital it changed pe
well as university of worry lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 worry set out to see her young woman alert into the trade she went undercover as a street walker and legless and then for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i still trads much as possible. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of the traffickers in country rape...
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Apr 10, 2021
04/21
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KTVU
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of property rights. the university condemned all acts of racism. don't worry my eyes. nice to be home a day. giants fans have been waiting 18 months for big back at oracle park to see the team and person. a day of celebration up next, and president biden promised to diverse administration. it looks like he is following through later tonight. the unprecedented number of arab americans now serving in the white house and florida, representative matt gates is facing a federal investigation how he defended himself today against sex trafficking allegations. end. that energy in. everything's great seeing the players in person. it's just been. it's been a long year. i'm ready to be the hat and exciting day in san francisco, as thousands of fans were allowed inside oracle park to watch you die ins play in person for the first time in over a year and a half 8900 fans returned to the ballpark today for the giants home opener. it's ktvu is rob roth, reports, fans and businesses were equally excited at oracle park. what a difference a year makes my eyes nice to be home. you can tell, but it feels like be
of property rights. the university condemned all acts of racism. don't worry my eyes. nice to be home a day. giants fans have been waiting 18 months for big back at oracle park to see the team and person. a day of celebration up next, and president biden promised to diverse administration. it looks like he is following through later tonight. the unprecedented number of arab americans now serving in the white house and florida, representative matt gates is facing a federal investigation how he...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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KQED
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in canada, with its taxpayer- funded, universal health care system, at least she doesn't have to worry about getting good care or affording it. >> that's all part ofversal health care. so i'm not paying any of those bills. >> brangham: but... does a universal system help more broadly when a pandemic breaks out? >> welcome back. >> brangham: dr. danielle martin is a family doctor and executive vice president at women's college hospital in toronto. >> the first and most obvious success of the canadian health care systems in response to the covid-19 pandemic is that if anyone has symptoms of covid-19, they've been able to access testing free of charge and, heaven forbid, if you require an i.c.u. stay, if you need to be intubated and ventilated, all of those things are covered under the public system. >> brangham: martin notes that canada has lost many thousands of people to covid, and has struggled, in parts, with its response. >> and this is one of the things about covid-19 is, it's posed in every country the places where you built something strong from the foundations up, and it's also exposed the places where you're running around trying to patch
in canada, with its taxpayer- funded, universal health care system, at least she doesn't have to worry about getting good care or affording it. >> that's all part ofversal health care. so i'm not paying any of those bills. >> brangham: but... does a universal system help more broadly when a pandemic breaks out? >> welcome back. >> brangham: dr. danielle martin is a family doctor and executive vice president at women's college hospital in toronto. >> the first and...
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Apr 14, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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of my band mates, starting playing music at eight years old or anything like that. i started at university, almost as a way of meditation, kind of taking me away from my other worrieserything else that i had to do, and music became my passion. and for years, i didn't take it as my vision in life until i had a kind of epiphany. as you've seen in the film truth to power. and from that day forward, i knew that music was my path, but i was an activist before becoming a musician, so the two kind of naturally combined in... yeah. well, you talk about your film truth to power, and a lot of that is about your politics, but a lot of it is about the music too, and when we see the young serj on stage in the mid and late �*90s and early 2000s, withjust thousands of adoring fans, as the popularity of your band grew and, frankly, heavy metal music, a genre which often, you know, can be sexist and it can indulge in occult imagery and all sorts of stuff, it is an awful long way from serj the political activist. how did you sort of square the two at the time? well, you know, it's kind of interesting you say that. the first band i played in, i played at keyboards, and it wasn't heav
of my band mates, starting playing music at eight years old or anything like that. i started at university, almost as a way of meditation, kind of taking me away from my other worrieserything else that i had to do, and music became my passion. and for years, i didn't take it as my vision in life until i had a kind of epiphany. as you've seen in the film truth to power. and from that day forward, i knew that music was my path, but i was an activist before becoming a musician, so the two kind of...
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Apr 5, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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the director at the center for infectious disease research and policy at the university of minnesota. and he's very worriedlked about how it's not 50-100% not 50—100% more infectious, it causes more severe illness —— this b117 variant, the one that we've talked about, the one from the uk, just as we have talked about how it's now 50—100% more infectious, it causes more severe illness, 50—60% of the time. this is almost like having a whole new pandemic descend upon us. the only good news is our vaccines do work against it. let's look at the role variants are playing more closely. we know that the more contageous variant which was first detected in the uk is now by far the most prevalent variant across europe. this graph helps show this — it has the distruibution of the main covid strain which spread widely across europe in 2020. scientists refer to that variant 20—e. apologies, i can show you that graph. —— can't show you that graph. it peaked in most parts of europe in the autumn. by december, it had started to drop off. but while that variant started to go away, a new one started to spike. it's called 20—
the director at the center for infectious disease research and policy at the university of minnesota. and he's very worriedlked about how it's not 50-100% not 50—100% more infectious, it causes more severe illness —— this b117 variant, the one that we've talked about, the one from the uk, just as we have talked about how it's now 50—100% more infectious, it causes more severe illness, 50—60% of the time. this is almost like having a whole new pandemic descend upon us. the only good...
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Apr 6, 2021
04/21
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LINKTV
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of platelets." the comments come as oxford university has suspended its own trials on children, amid new worries about the shock. the emaas not released an official statement, but the news the problem appears mostly in young people has raised concerns with many nations now using the vaccine. in march, more than a dozen countries, including france and germany, suspended their use of the oxford astrazeneca shop over the blood clot issue. but most eu nations restarted its use in mid-march after the ema said the benefits outweigh the risks. u.k. prime minister boris johnson addressed the issue at an astrazeneca manufacturing facility on tuesday. >> the best thing people could do is look at what the advice is to people, to keep going out and getting your jab, your second jab. >> but it is one of many agencies still investigating the blood clot concerns. in the u.s., the fda has not given the green light pending its own study in the world health organization and is investigating thblood clot concerns. if confirmed, the chances appear to be low, with a german study finding 31 cases of blood clots and nine de
of platelets." the comments come as oxford university has suspended its own trials on children, amid new worries about the shock. the emaas not released an official statement, but the news the problem appears mostly in young people has raised concerns with many nations now using the vaccine. in march, more than a dozen countries, including france and germany, suspended their use of the oxford astrazeneca shop over the blood clot issue. but most eu nations restarted its use in mid-march...
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while at university over lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see how young woman alert into the trade she went on the cover as a street walker and legace and then for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i still try as much as possible. scapes. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are the mercy of the traffickers in country rape sexual exploitation and forced labor. some of these ladies once came from local prostitution and mean we got books so i decided to also try seeds with them into the next level though in reality i wasn't a sex worker but in the army i was a sex worker i did what they did the only thing i didn't do. was to actually do real cost. nigeria has a high number of trafficked victims of the seas especially in europe direct the kind of young believes that since its release in october 29000 has shown alliance on nigeria's criminal trafficking networks. the feel has totally changed people's perspective about tr
while at university over lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see how young woman alert into the trade she went on the cover as a street walker and legace and then for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i still try as much as possible. scapes. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are the mercy of the traffickers in country...
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while at university or very lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see her young woman alert into the trade she went undercover as a street walker and legless and then i would for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i stink trads much as possible. scapes. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of the traffickers in country rape sexual exploitation and forced labor. some of these ladies one thing came from local prostitution and mean we got books so i decided to also transits with them into the next level though in reality i wasn't a sex worker but in the i mean i was a sex worker i did what they did the only thing i didn't do. was to actually do real costs. nigeria has a high number of traffic victims of the seas especially in europe director kind of young believes that since its release in october 21000 troops have shine a light on i cheeriest criminal trafficking networks. the field hospital it changed people's
while at university or very lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see her young woman alert into the trade she went undercover as a street walker and legless and then i would for 7 months. i was able to follow every day lives. 7 years down the line i stink trads much as possible. scapes. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of the traffickers in...
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565
Apr 22, 2021
04/21
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KQED
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canada with its taxpayer funded, universal health care system, at least she doesn't have to worry about getting good care... or affording it. castellanos: that's all part ofour universal health care. so i'm not paying any of those bills. brangham: but does a universal system help more broadly when a pandemic breaks out? martin: welcome back. brangham: dr. danielle martin is a family doctor and executive vice president at women'llege hospital in toronto. martin: the first and most obvious success of the canadian health care systems in response to the covid-19 pandemic is, that if, anyone has symptoms of covid-19, they've been able to access testing free of charge and, heaven forbid, if you require an icu stay, if you need to be intubated and ventilated, all of those things are covered under the public system. brangham: martin notes that canada has lost many thousands of people to covid, and has struggled, in parts, with its response. martin: and this is one of the things about covid-19 is, it's exposed in every country the places where you built something strong from the foundations , and it's also exposed the places where you're running around trying to p
canada with its taxpayer funded, universal health care system, at least she doesn't have to worry about getting good care... or affording it. castellanos: that's all part ofour universal health care. so i'm not paying any of those bills. brangham: but does a universal system help more broadly when a pandemic breaks out? martin: welcome back. brangham: dr. danielle martin is a family doctor and executive vice president at women'llege hospital in toronto. martin: the first and most obvious...
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Apr 18, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN
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of our country. that is something we should all celebrate. what worries me now is that we are living in an alternative universe. -- that you are not supposed toelebrate the success of our past. we spend so much time, governor, did a grating who we are as americans. i believe in the goodness of america. i understand the goodness of americans. we are a good country. we are good people. there are so many people who have learned to monetize conflict. it is profitable. now look at the agenda of the left right now. covid relief. the only thing missing in covid relief was covid early. 1% for vaccines. infrastructure, the only thing missing in their infrastructure packets, roads and bridges. only 6% towards those priorities. if you look at their voting strategies, hr one, the goal is simple, to fundamentally transform what it means to be an american. they want to take away our opportunities. we can defend ourselves and will defend ourselves. because, we have a great government. in this great state. and we have an amazing junior senator in joni ernst. god bless you. i am so thankful for senator grassley. he is still running at 4:00 a.m. every morning.
of our country. that is something we should all celebrate. what worries me now is that we are living in an alternative universe. -- that you are not supposed toelebrate the success of our past. we spend so much time, governor, did a grating who we are as americans. i believe in the goodness of america. i understand the goodness of americans. we are a good country. we are good people. there are so many people who have learned to monetize conflict. it is profitable. now look at the agenda of the...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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researchers at oxford university, independent of the 0xford/astrazeneca vaccine team, said those who've had covid should not be unduly worriedilip's funeral on saturday. under covid restrictions, there's a limit of 30 guests. today, the prince of wales and duchess of cornwall have been to look at some of the thousands of floral tributes to the duke of edinburgh. 0ur royal correspondent nicholas witchell reports. it is the vehicle which will take him on his finaljourney — a classic british land rover, designed to the duke's own specification to carry a coffin, his coffin, to its final resting place. it is a no—nonsense approach to a funeral, which reflects the duke's particular wish for a minimum of fuss. normally, a ceremonial royal funeral, this was the one for queen elizabeth the queen mother in 2002, would have the coffin born on a horse—drawn gun carriage, behind which members of the royal family would walk. and those family members would all be in military uniform. but for the duke's funeral — notwithstanding his long association with the military — all the royals will wear civilian dress. there will be a short funeral
researchers at oxford university, independent of the 0xford/astrazeneca vaccine team, said those who've had covid should not be unduly worriedilip's funeral on saturday. under covid restrictions, there's a limit of 30 guests. today, the prince of wales and duchess of cornwall have been to look at some of the thousands of floral tributes to the duke of edinburgh. 0ur royal correspondent nicholas witchell reports. it is the vehicle which will take him on his finaljourney — a classic british...
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Apr 11, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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university of pennsylvania and codirector of the ten memory center where he cares for patients he lives in philadelphia. today's talk is being recorded for broadcast at a later date. you don't have to worry about muting yourself. we expect to have time after hours to take questions from the online audience. please use q&a to suggest questions we will bring them later on in the presentation. so my e-book copy was picked up shortly after it was released last month it is a great example of science communication in the same class of books that it effectively and describes complex scientific principles and problems. and skillfully weaves in the humanistic and social context. it sparked questions for me and i will take my prerogative as moderator. thank you for joining us. >> it's a pleasure to be here i regret we cannot be live in person on campus but to be here at the university of pennsylvania. host: i'm looking forward to the day when we can get back to me be doing a panel of authors who have written and researched about alzheimer's. that would be a tremendous opportunity. my opening question is basic. alzheimer's disease, dementia, what is the difference? can you clarify the differences o
university of pennsylvania and codirector of the ten memory center where he cares for patients he lives in philadelphia. today's talk is being recorded for broadcast at a later date. you don't have to worry about muting yourself. we expect to have time after hours to take questions from the online audience. please use q&a to suggest questions we will bring them later on in the presentation. so my e-book copy was picked up shortly after it was released last month it is a great example of...
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Apr 11, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting engineering before he decided to embrace the philosophy as your discipline and you know you do offer relative optimism about the state of the hard scientist yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific questions that are increasingly leather sized or also it goes beyond what its position and i'm pleading guilty about something i was talking about earlier on. when you think about the amount of public funding that goes into some domain it does seem as though it might shape the incentive than it might shape scientific discourse as well. when you're talking about the standpoint of system knowledge in talking about the imperative racial and ethnic versa they there is a sense that it's not just the humanities, such as the social sciences but there is a pervasive problem in the realm of knowledge production that you see reproduced in the science as well. what do you wh
and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting engineering before he decided to embrace the philosophy as your discipline and you know you do offer relative optimism about the state of the hard scientist yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific...
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Apr 26, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN2
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university of maryland. >> i used to live at college park. >> if under armour as a company decides to devote money to words brain science because they put kids on the football field and they are worried about the long-term trend of collisions, could i sue them because they are not pursuing profits, they are spending money on brain science at the university of johns hopkins or something of the sort? >> not really because it's one of those things where there's a clichÉ version of this. there's articles in the magazine which a lot of people pointed to as an example of the traditional shareholder value and a lot of people that refer to it i expect have never read it and the strict and unyielding it's 100%. in reality in american law, corporations have pretty wide latitude to spend money on all kinds of stuff and it's low to interfere under armour could ard easily say that by funding medical research on traumatic brain injuries we would require a positive pr value we will let that fly. it's very unlikely the case like that would end up with under armour spending on the wrong things because it doesn't directly [inaudible] >> let me bring this back for either of you. if we have these option
university of maryland. >> i used to live at college park. >> if under armour as a company decides to devote money to words brain science because they put kids on the football field and they are worried about the long-term trend of collisions, could i sue them because they are not pursuing profits, they are spending money on brain science at the university of johns hopkins or something of the sort? >> not really because it's one of those things where there's a clichÉ version...
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Apr 9, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN
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universe. [laughter] since you are transportation secretary, travels a big part of what you have to worry about, for americans eager to go back overseas, biplane or cruise ship, there questions about the cruise industry especially, there is guns, the kinds had concerns that there was not enough specifics. for specific benchmarks. have you been in touch with the cdc about the industry's concerns and the request to be treated like the airlines. >> the bottom line is safety. i cannot wait for us to be on the move as much as possible and safe and responsible. airlines -- airplanes f-150 profile, cruise ship's have another, the vehicles of another. each wendy's is to be treated on what a safer that sector. i care a lot about -- each one is to be treated on what is safer for that sector. i care a lot about that. laying out the specific aids that they need to get the is an important step. >> to those saying that the mid-summer is too late, the governor saying that is too late for the economies. >> we want to do this as soon as we responsibly can but we have to make sure it is safe. >> once you get the
universe. [laughter] since you are transportation secretary, travels a big part of what you have to worry about, for americans eager to go back overseas, biplane or cruise ship, there questions about the cruise industry especially, there is guns, the kinds had concerns that there was not enough specifics. for specific benchmarks. have you been in touch with the cdc about the industry's concerns and the request to be treated like the airlines. >> the bottom line is safety. i cannot wait...
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Apr 1, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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universally effective? >> i am quite worried about the variants. we seem to be getting many variants and variants of almost every week. we have had a variant that clobbers a vaccine, the astrazeneca vaccine is 90% ineffective against the south african variant. we have other variants that reinfect people who have had the disease as in brazil and, as you say, with the u.k. b.1.1.7 variant, a variant that is not only more trans-siberian orchestra miscible but creating greater morbidity and mortality. i think we have to have a backup plan in addition to vaccinating everybody as fast as we can. they have to get much better at outbreak containment, detecting of diseases, findk them, ice lighting them and vaccinating them with the vaccine that matches the variant. >> so that point, pfizer and moderna are test ago third shot that's a booster, right. that adds a whole level of complexity anyway to getting people to coming bee back and d it. you are saying we need other vaccines as well as? am i not summarizing it correctly? >> i think it could be that the booster does it. i am hopeful boosters will immunize
universally effective? >> i am quite worried about the variants. we seem to be getting many variants and variants of almost every week. we have had a variant that clobbers a vaccine, the astrazeneca vaccine is 90% ineffective against the south african variant. we have other variants that reinfect people who have had the disease as in brazil and, as you say, with the u.k. b.1.1.7 variant, a variant that is not only more trans-siberian orchestra miscible but creating greater morbidity and...
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146
Apr 1, 2021
04/21
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KRON
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worry a lot about judges getting into the business. >> deciding how amateur sport should be wrong. >> justice clarence thomas question of paying athletes would create an unfair divide between big and small universities schools and begin to cherry pick under current in ca rules. students can be paid and the scholarship money colleges can offer. it's kept at the cost of attending the school justice amy coney barrett. >> but i'm wondering why did the nc double get to define what. hey is. >> it's an issue. lawmakers are also interested in with several bills addressing college athlete pay proposed in recent years in washington, rashad hudson that. >> tomorrow night the a's will welcome fans back to the coliseum for the first time in a year and a half. yeah. it's opening day at the ballpark. obviously the experience will be much different thanks to the pandemic the restrictions right now you can have up to 26% capacity at the coliseum and only california residents are allowed to buy tickets tickets. technically they gates open an hour before the first pitch. everything. it's going to be done on your phone. right. so you need a smart one you'll enter using mobile tickets on the mlb app. you'll also use tha
worry a lot about judges getting into the business. >> deciding how amateur sport should be wrong. >> justice clarence thomas question of paying athletes would create an unfair divide between big and small universities schools and begin to cherry pick under current in ca rules. students can be paid and the scholarship money colleges can offer. it's kept at the cost of attending the school justice amy coney barrett. >> but i'm wondering why did the nc double get to define what....
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and mean glenn with the sex walk cuz you're well at university over a lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see her young woman alert and the trade she went undercover as a street in lagos and then i was 7 months. i was a wood so for every day lives. 7 years down the line i still try as much as possible. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of the traffickers in country rape sexual exploitation and forced labor. some of those ladies once came from local. and mean bigger books so i decided to also tries it's weave them into the next level though in reality i wasn't a sex worker but in the army i was a sex worker i did what they did the only thing. i. was too apt to wildly do real customers. nigeria has a high number of traffic victims of the seas especially in europe director kenneth young believes that since its release in october 29000 has shone a light on my jury a scream and all traffic networks. feel has totally changed people's perspective about trafficking but what it has done i
and mean glenn with the sex walk cuz you're well at university over a lost a friend who she says died after being trafficked to italy. in 2013 of worry set out to see her young woman alert and the trade she went undercover as a street in lagos and then i was 7 months. i was a wood so for every day lives. 7 years down the line i still try as much as possible. human trafficking is a $150000000000.00 global industry young nigerian women are promised passage to europe but they are at the mercy of...
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Apr 25, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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sample of $53.00 captured bats researchers at university of east anglia found that the new virus cannot infect humans in its current form what they are worried about though is if coded 19 is passed from humans to these bats it could mix to create an all new mutation that could then pose a threat to us their research as stress this makes it even more important for people to get vaccinated against covert 19. annabel is a professor an expert in emerging diseases at the university of east anglia here in the u.k. and says that this says the 1st such discovery in the west and its warning so far the focus is really remained in china or in southeast asia but this shows that the subject of viruses but was the occurred to us for a long time and we found a number one there are millions of undiscovered viruses and you know this is what this is one of them and you know the fact that we found it in just 50. 3. suggests that it might might might occur at high prevalence but we it would be researched not here to look at w.h.o. i'm going. along with contusions the lines that we still don't know the origins of . everything but yes i mean it's. very closely re
sample of $53.00 captured bats researchers at university of east anglia found that the new virus cannot infect humans in its current form what they are worried about though is if coded 19 is passed from humans to these bats it could mix to create an all new mutation that could then pose a threat to us their research as stress this makes it even more important for people to get vaccinated against covert 19. annabel is a professor an expert in emerging diseases at the university of east anglia...
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Apr 25, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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sample of $53.00 captured bouts researches at the university of utah and it found that the new virus cannot infect humans in its current form or they are worried about is if covert 19 has passed from humans to these bats it could mix to create an all new mutation that could then pose a threat to us the research of stress this makes it even more important for people to get vaccinated against covert 19 so let's explore this further let's speak to diana bell who's a professor and expert in emerging zoonotic diseases at the university of east anglia joins us now live by skype from norwich. first what is tell us more about the significance of these findings. well it's very inconsistent because it's not new. virus which means it's the same group of viruses and sars and starts to be too. and this time it's in the west in range of the 'd horseshoe but distribution there are 90 species for. which it distributes. problems over here in the west of europe. australia and nothing. in asia and so far the focus is really remained in in china or in southeast asia but it shows that the subject of viruses but obviously occurred to you and more sheep but a lot of
sample of $53.00 captured bouts researches at the university of utah and it found that the new virus cannot infect humans in its current form or they are worried about is if covert 19 has passed from humans to these bats it could mix to create an all new mutation that could then pose a threat to us the research of stress this makes it even more important for people to get vaccinated against covert 19 so let's explore this further let's speak to diana bell who's a professor and expert in...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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KGO
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university school of public health, slamming the cdc decision on twitter saying, quote, we're in a pandemic. short pause to alert folks is reasonable. waiting when it's unlikely to change what we know is not. meantime, worries about vaccinations lagging while the virus rages in michigan. since last week covid deaths have spiked 39%. icus were seeing 25% more patients. and as for the johnson & johnson vaccine, the cdc advisory panel is hoping to make a decision within the next ten days. mona. >> faith, thank you. >>> the biden administration is expected to announce new sanctions against russia today. the new financial penalties are retaliation for russian cyberattacks that breached several government agencies as well as the kremlin's interference in the u.s. election. similar punitive measures by the u.s. in the past have failed to stop russian aggression. >>> cia director william burns has delivered a sobering message to congress just as president biden announces plans to withdraw troops from afghanistan by september 11th. burns told lawmakers once the troops leave, our ability to collect intelligence in afghanistan and act on threats will diminish, but the president says it's time to end our longest war. >
university school of public health, slamming the cdc decision on twitter saying, quote, we're in a pandemic. short pause to alert folks is reasonable. waiting when it's unlikely to change what we know is not. meantime, worries about vaccinations lagging while the virus rages in michigan. since last week covid deaths have spiked 39%. icus were seeing 25% more patients. and as for the johnson & johnson vaccine, the cdc advisory panel is hoping to make a decision within the next ten days....
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Apr 1, 2021
04/21
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BBCNEWS
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worry. yes, we conducted a study with the office for national statistics and the university of leicester whereonths of one in eight. there was a high risk of being read admitted to hospital in that same time period of 30% or so, and there was a high risk of chronic diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular events, kidney disease and liver disease. so, this is not a denying event by any stretch, so we have to think more about the chronic effects and make sure that people are monitored who need to be investigating possible treatments. and ijust wonder, if there's anything we saw in the report by our health editor, somebody who had lost a lot of weight. is there something tangible that we could be doing in order to mitigate the seriousness of these effects? i order to mitigate the seriousness of these effects?— these effects? i think the best messare these effects? i think the best message to — these effects? i think the best message to take _ these effects? i think the best message to take from - these effects? i think the best message to take from this - these effects? i think the best message
worry. yes, we conducted a study with the office for national statistics and the university of leicester whereonths of one in eight. there was a high risk of being read admitted to hospital in that same time period of 30% or so, and there was a high risk of chronic diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular events, kidney disease and liver disease. so, this is not a denying event by any stretch, so we have to think more about the chronic effects and make sure that people are monitored who need...
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Apr 9, 2021
04/21
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CSPAN
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universe. [laughter] >> other times and other places. since you are the transportation secretary, travel is a big part of what you have to worry about. two americans eager to get back overseas whether biplane or by cruise ship, you know there have been questions about the cruise industry, especially as we have seen the guidance. there is concern about specifics. specific benchmarks, have you been in touch with the cdc about that industry's concerns, and could industry leaders say that we should be treated more like the airlines, what would you say? sec. buttigieg: bottom line is safety. i am the secretary of transportation. i can't wait for all of us to be on the move as much as possible and as safely as possible, but it has to be safe and responsible. airplanes have one safety profile, cruise ships have another, vehicles have another. each one needs to be treated based on what is safe for that sector. i certainly care a lot about seeing the cruise sector thrive, and i know the cdc is hopeful that a lot of these operators will be in a position to be sailing by midsummer, and laying out the specific dates that they need to get through
universe. [laughter] >> other times and other places. since you are the transportation secretary, travel is a big part of what you have to worry about. two americans eager to get back overseas whether biplane or by cruise ship, you know there have been questions about the cruise industry, especially as we have seen the guidance. there is concern about specifics. specific benchmarks, have you been in touch with the cdc about that industry's concerns, and could industry leaders say that we...
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Apr 10, 2021
04/21
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KNTV
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>> reporter: a troubling sign as health officials worry about the spread of covid variants sweeping europe and now spreading in the u.s. the university of chicago issued a stay at home this week in response to a cluster of cases. >> put a damper on everyone's mood. had a little hope and it hit again. >> reporter: another reminder that the crisis isn't over, even as more states begin to loosen restrictions in an effort to get back to normal. according to the cdc, new daily covid cases have been climbing for three weeks now. meanwhile, back here at coney island, there are several covid safety measures in place, including social distancing markers on the ground, lots of plexiglas as well as hand sanitizing stations and guests asked to purchase tickets in advance. back to you. >> kathy park along coney island. kathy, thanks so much. >>> the trial against derek chauvin resumes monday after an emotional day in court for the family of george floyd. on friday, the medical examiner that conducted the autopsy took the stand and dealt the defense another blow. megan fitzgerald is in minneapolis with more. good morning to you. >> reporter: krist
>> reporter: a troubling sign as health officials worry about the spread of covid variants sweeping europe and now spreading in the u.s. the university of chicago issued a stay at home this week in response to a cluster of cases. >> put a damper on everyone's mood. had a little hope and it hit again. >> reporter: another reminder that the crisis isn't over, even as more states begin to loosen restrictions in an effort to get back to normal. according to the cdc, new daily...
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i worry that climate change has become a kind of political abstraction people have lost track of the drive to protect their bar but they love david keith of harvard university as one of the most controversial climate researchers believes it's high time we had an emergency plan his idea is to create a sort of screen using dust particles which would reflect the sun's rays weakening or even hold in global warming. first big pilot project names copecks keeps being postponed and there's still too much opposition. what it hears is that something that might in combination with emissions cuts reduce the overall climate risk maybe substantially that's the evidence we have for climate calls so the question is to what extent that solar church or reduce climate rest actually harm people if art like extreme storms extreme temperature sea level rise those are research questions that we don't know the answer to. so called solar radiation management is a gamble little research has been dom on the risks and yet it could be a last life line when it comes to turbin global warming. in practice it would mean at least 10000 aircraft injecting the stratosphere every 2 years the p
i worry that climate change has become a kind of political abstraction people have lost track of the drive to protect their bar but they love david keith of harvard university as one of the most controversial climate researchers believes it's high time we had an emergency plan his idea is to create a sort of screen using dust particles which would reflect the sun's rays weakening or even hold in global warming. first big pilot project names copecks keeps being postponed and there's still too...
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Apr 10, 2021
04/21
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ALJAZ
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friday night as we saw and now there is a worry that this could go on this is not going away by no means. of the robert schumann center the european university institute she says that it was clear well before the referendum that briggs it would be dangerous for northern ireland and the current events were predictable. it's happening because there's an impossible problem there once the left is in the markers in the customs union it has an international border with the arn and it's a member state of the women mainly so a border has to go somewhere and from the beginning it was realised that you can't simply couldn't police the 300 crossings of the land border and people who live on that border voted decisively against bretz so they simply would not give their consent so then the only result to get the kind of brecht's that the boris johnson wanted which was sovereignty 1st breakfast was that there he had to a border in the irish sea having himself said that no british prime minister was doing so and this has undermined. the loyalist. their sense that london will take care of them it has raised issues of identity the demographics in northern ir
friday night as we saw and now there is a worry that this could go on this is not going away by no means. of the robert schumann center the european university institute she says that it was clear well before the referendum that briggs it would be dangerous for northern ireland and the current events were predictable. it's happening because there's an impossible problem there once the left is in the markers in the customs union it has an international border with the arn and it's a member state...
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Apr 14, 2021
04/21
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FBC
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skiddishness, going, no matter how small the figures, six in a universe of 6.8 million doses administered, is it going to prompt the paws? are they worriedet a satisfactory answer? >> so i will give you the answer, neil, i let you decide if it is satisfactory but their basic argument is that the way the protocols have worked on this, that the fda saw a problem, they announced they had a pause, should he l give everyone confidence in the system. if you get a warning light on a car should you have confidence your entire car is running smoothly or be concerned about your engine? in the administration view it should give you the confidence in the system and the car. that is the sort of the analogy what i think the white house is trying to portray. the tripwires worked. they found a problem. they hit a pause and this shouldn't increase vaccine hesitancy. now that said, they are concerned about vaccine hesitancy and they're trying to convince more americans to make sure they go ahead and get the vaccine and one of their touchstones on all of this is transparency. so what they keep falling back to we're going to be transparent. that we'll have
skiddishness, going, no matter how small the figures, six in a universe of 6.8 million doses administered, is it going to prompt the paws? are they worriedet a satisfactory answer? >> so i will give you the answer, neil, i let you decide if it is satisfactory but their basic argument is that the way the protocols have worked on this, that the fda saw a problem, they announced they had a pause, should he l give everyone confidence in the system. if you get a warning light on a car should...
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Apr 15, 2021
04/21
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KPIX
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worried hesitancy surrounding all vaccines will increase. around one in five americans are unwilling to get any shot according to a national poll out of monmouth university >>> starting this morning all adults in california will be eligible for a covid vaccine. new guidelines include everyone 16 and up. bay area counties already loosened their rules days in advance. >>> today the former police officer who killed daunte wright will make her first court appearance in brooklyn center, minnesota. >> just shot him! >> officer kim potter says she mistook her firearm for her taser. she's charged with second degree manslaughter. she was released from jail after posting bond. if convicted potter could receive a maximum of ten years in prison and a $20,000 fine. >>> last night marked the 4th straight evening of demonstrations. police fired chemical spray at protesters outside brooklyn center police department. about two dozen people were eventually arrested. >>> a few miles south in minneapolis, derek chauvin trial continues. a retired forensic pathologist took the stand for the defense and said george floyd's death was not a homicide. >> all of his injuries were
worried hesitancy surrounding all vaccines will increase. around one in five americans are unwilling to get any shot according to a national poll out of monmouth university >>> starting this morning all adults in california will be eligible for a covid vaccine. new guidelines include everyone 16 and up. bay area counties already loosened their rules days in advance. >>> today the former police officer who killed daunte wright will make her first court appearance in brooklyn...
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Apr 16, 2021
04/21
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FOXNEWSW
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university of michigan. they feel the variants are driving it. too much relaxation of restrictions if you're not vaccinated. the b-1 17 united kingdom variant is all over the place in michigan. they are worriedant from canada. the u.k. one is wildly contagious. the vaccine covers that. the more people that get vaccinated the better and how it worked in israel and that's how it worked in the united kingdom. if you look at israel you see 85% of the adult population vaccinated only 300 cases yesterday and they are wide open. michigan we're not there yet. >> trace: we have to go, dr. siegel. i have to ask you if you were making the decision, would you have paused the johnson & johnson vaccine? >> absolutely not. that sent a message of fear and distrust that leads to non-compliance. they needed to laser focus on the problem, not pause anything. >> trace: good to see you, sir. thank you so much. you wonder a lot of people i know were supposed to get the johnson & johnson vaccine. they didn't get it and had to reschedule until next week, maybe the week after to get their vaccination and -- >> dana: i go for shot number two this afternoon. >> trace: which one? >> dana: pfizer, here we go. hopefully
university of michigan. they feel the variants are driving it. too much relaxation of restrictions if you're not vaccinated. the b-1 17 united kingdom variant is all over the place in michigan. they are worriedant from canada. the u.k. one is wildly contagious. the vaccine covers that. the more people that get vaccinated the better and how it worked in israel and that's how it worked in the united kingdom. if you look at israel you see 85% of the adult population vaccinated only 300 cases...
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333
Apr 28, 2021
04/21
by
CNNW
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worry about getting the vaccine. let's talk about this because we really have. to let's talk with a professor of medicine and surgery at george washington university. what was your thought when you heard this coming from such a popular voice in media? >> well, joe rogan is wrong. i'm hoping that he was just trolling for new subscribers, but that kind of -- he has a pretty big platform and that's really destructive. look. what we know is over the last two months, particularly with the new uk variant, the b.1.1.7. variant, this variant has been infecting and hospitalizing young folks, up 50% in the last couple of months. through the course of this pandemic, almost 2,500 people under the age of 30 in the united states have died from this. but this virus doesn't have to kill you to hurt you, you know. everyone, i think, knows now somebody suffering from long hauler symptoms from this virus. the young are the reservoir in this community. the only way to put this virus down once and for all is to immunize, inoculate, vaccinate young people, and that needs to be done. joe rogan should really walk this back and get educated. >> it's bad science. it just is
worry about getting the vaccine. let's talk about this because we really have. to let's talk with a professor of medicine and surgery at george washington university. what was your thought when you heard this coming from such a popular voice in media? >> well, joe rogan is wrong. i'm hoping that he was just trolling for new subscribers, but that kind of -- he has a pretty big platform and that's really destructive. look. what we know is over the last two months, particularly with the new...
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110
Apr 24, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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eye 110
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universities the things we haven't even thought of so far. >> tom, jobs we haven't even conceived of yet. that might sound a little too futuristic for those who are worrieds today, right? so, what about right now? what about people who are worried, losing their current jobs as we look to the future? how do they realistically make the transition? >> look, alex, i think it's very, very clear that this infrastructure program is going to create millions of good-paying jobs, mostly union jobs, across the country. i think that much is absolutely clear. but you bring up a good point, which is, there are going to be industries which are going to decline as a result of this change to a clean energy economy, and it's absolutely critical for the government to take care of those people and make sure that as this disruptive change happens, that the people of the united states are put first. the government has a very specific job here. that is to set up the framework for this change. to put in rules, to fund research, to put in incentives. basically so the private sector can create those innovative entrepreneur new jobs across this country. and let me say this. if we
universities the things we haven't even thought of so far. >> tom, jobs we haven't even conceived of yet. that might sound a little too futuristic for those who are worrieds today, right? so, what about right now? what about people who are worried, losing their current jobs as we look to the future? how do they realistically make the transition? >> look, alex, i think it's very, very clear that this infrastructure program is going to create millions of good-paying jobs, mostly union...
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i'm worried that climate change has become a kind of political abstraction evil has lost track of the drive to protect their part but they lots. of harvard university has one of the most controversial climate researchers in believes it's high time we had an emergency plan is idea is to create a sort of screen using dust particles which would reflect the sun's rays weakening or even holding global warming here 1st big pilot project names copecks keeps being postponed and there's still not too much opposition. but it is is it something that might be a combination with emissions cuts reduced overall climate risk maybe substantially that's the evidence we have for climate calls so the question is to what extent the solar charger reduce climate rest actually harm people of iraq like extreme storms extreme temperature sea level rise. those are research questions that we don't know the answer to. so course sona radiation management is a gamble little research has been dominant the risks and yet it could be our last line find when it comes to terms being global warming. in practice it would mean at least 10000 aircraft injecting distances for every 2 years
i'm worried that climate change has become a kind of political abstraction evil has lost track of the drive to protect their part but they lots. of harvard university has one of the most controversial climate researchers in believes it's high time we had an emergency plan is idea is to create a sort of screen using dust particles which would reflect the sun's rays weakening or even holding global warming here 1st big pilot project names copecks keeps being postponed and there's still not too...
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261
Apr 4, 2021
04/21
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MSNBCW
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eye 261
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university of florida and spoke to anphosphorus, and they said that's true. this is definitely acidic but not radioactive. so to assure people, the flooding is a concern but there are no worries at this point about toxicity that could affect human health. back to you. >> you said you spoke to some residents that live in the area, a mom of a young child. is this something that they had been warned of may actually happen, something that has been developing as we've been seeing reported for some time? >> reporter: absolutely. so the initial leak we are told started earlier in the week. the woman, the mom that i interviewed said she had been sitting on this for three or four days. yesterday is when they were trying to fortify that leaky wall, realized they couldn't and that's when manatee county officials issued a mandatory evacuation for everybody out here. just to give you a snapshot, i asked them what percentage of people are staying behind? is it half? less than half. more than a quarter? they said, yes, more than a quarter. so you're talking about a substantial number of families, 60, 70, 80, i'm not sure, who are staying back and some of whom are having parties as all this
university of florida and spoke to anphosphorus, and they said that's true. this is definitely acidic but not radioactive. so to assure people, the flooding is a concern but there are no worries at this point about toxicity that could affect human health. back to you. >> you said you spoke to some residents that live in the area, a mom of a young child. is this something that they had been warned of may actually happen, something that has been developing as we've been seeing reported for...
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Apr 6, 2021
04/21
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CNNW
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eye 70
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of the challenges is, yes, americans are feeling better. more confident, more americans are getting shots in arms. the administration worries, though, about scenes like this. these are fans at baylor universityrating, understandably, their championship in the ncaa basketball championship last night but look at all those people gathered very closely together, this, texas rangers, arlington, texas, yesterday, the rangers the only team in baseball to say we will fill the entire stadium with fans right now. dr. anthony fauci looks at that scene, some of the fans are wearing masks but the doctor looks at that, more than 38,000 people packed into a stadium and he says too soon for that. >> you see the pictures of the texas rangers stadium essentially crowded, we don't want to declare victory prematurely. we're looking at kind of a race between the vaccine, which is highly efficacious, and a real -- i don't want to say surge, because surge means you get a really high increase, we're seeing it start to creep up now. whether it explodes into a real surge or not remains to be seen. i think that the vaccine is going to prevent that from happening. >> let's get insights on all of this right now from our
of the challenges is, yes, americans are feeling better. more confident, more americans are getting shots in arms. the administration worries, though, about scenes like this. these are fans at baylor universityrating, understandably, their championship in the ncaa basketball championship last night but look at all those people gathered very closely together, this, texas rangers, arlington, texas, yesterday, the rangers the only team in baseball to say we will fill the entire stadium with fans...
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117
Apr 7, 2021
04/21
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KPIX
tv
eye 117
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worry, we already leaked this data" is not a great defense. that's like your babysitter going "hey, i didn't lose your kids. i never knew where they were to begin with." quarantinewhile, university of his vault. check it out: >> the sophomore from kansas city, top score of 14.75 against the buckeyes. >> same vault as diab. oh, and he sticks the landing! not sure what that is. >> i think it's his vaccine. >> vaccine card. >> stephen: boom! "kiss my ass-tra-zeneca!" that is a very cool way to raise awareness about vaccination, because it really makes it seem like the vaccine is the reason he could do that, which is why the f.d.a. wants all doses to come with the label "side effects may include fever, body aches, and nailing a kaza-matzu one and a half." quarantinewhile, in colorado "a scientist taught a.i. to generate pickup lines" using a language model known as gpt-3 to create a squad of courtship bots. because nothing says romance like "squad of courtship bots." who can forget shakespeare's famous lines: "o, romeo, romeo. please fill out this captcha. click all the boxes with traffic lights." so how good are these bot-generated come-ons? buckle up and prepare to be swept off your
worry, we already leaked this data" is not a great defense. that's like your babysitter going "hey, i didn't lose your kids. i never knew where they were to begin with." quarantinewhile, university of his vault. check it out: >> the sophomore from kansas city, top score of 14.75 against the buckeyes. >> same vault as diab. oh, and he sticks the landing! not sure what that is. >> i think it's his vaccine. >> vaccine card. >> stephen: boom! "kiss...