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Apr 5, 2015
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try to tell the war from their perspective as opposed from a us narrative. that being said, one of the themes the novel engages was relativism. there are a lot of issues we see in the us with corruption or insider attacks, which is a novel thing. shorthand. green blue attack. so those type of actions, at face value we see them in the media, morally reprehensible. why would someone do that? what drive someone to do that? what is the system that they are operating in, embezzling money, the only choice offering to them. and the ambition to take one of these attacks, feel it back. a a spoiler alert, but by the time that takes place you might not agree with the action, but at least you are able to see all the decisions that lead up to that in terms of the reduction of opportunities that they have. that understanding, i hope there is a little bit of a bridge that has been built. often times we can be reductive. >> how you think the afghans feel? >> it is hard to say. there is such a large swath. the afghan taliban taliban like us much, much less. it is difficult to
try to tell the war from their perspective as opposed from a us narrative. that being said, one of the themes the novel engages was relativism. there are a lot of issues we see in the us with corruption or insider attacks, which is a novel thing. shorthand. green blue attack. so those type of actions, at face value we see them in the media, morally reprehensible. why would someone do that? what drive someone to do that? what is the system that they are operating in, embezzling money, the only...
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Apr 9, 2015
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narrative. over and over fen. again. don't take my word for it. the number of times they use that narrative i felt in fear of my life -- >> aren't the police telling the truth in some of those narratives? >> i'm sure they are in some of those narratives but in our community, when we start this video a lot of us were shocked but many of us were saying this is where so-and-so said or this is where he said. >> you're not surprised. >> finally they got caught. finally they got caught. so now while people in the murnt communityminority community say the police aren't lying or aren't weren't truthful. we can look at the situation in inkster michigan or south carolina. >> you are going to go to south carolina tonight right? >> i'm going to go on saturday. >> what are you going to do on saturday? >> i'm going to visit my friend chris stewart i'm president of the national bar association so i'll be supporting him. >> as he's handling this case. your article in "time" magazine comes out tomorrow. >> i do. >> thank you for joining us. >> thank you for covering this important matter. >>
narrative. over and over fen. again. don't take my word for it. the number of times they use that narrative i felt in fear of my life -- >> aren't the police telling the truth in some of those narratives? >> i'm sure they are in some of those narratives but in our community, when we start this video a lot of us were shocked but many of us were saying this is where so-and-so said or this is where he said. >> you're not surprised. >> finally they got caught. finally they...
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Apr 10, 2015
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questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativeat scott was the guilty party. another reason why north charleston city hall on thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board. >> we will have to have an outside independent agency to -- to leading to a significant movement from here, to quote: for maureen le pen, the goal has always been to convince voters that her party is what it means to be french. joan of arc, they have adopted her as a symbol. but it's the more recent history that is proving to be a hindrance, which is why john's opinions on no longer required indeed, not even when it comes to his own daughter. national front may b united front. not for that family not at the moment. >>> malaysia has toughened its controversial law, imposing a minimum jail term of three years. and has allowed to block online media editions. they passed an anti terrorism bill reintroducing the tension without trial. >>> the world health organization has called for a travel restrictions from countries affected by ebola
questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativeat scott was the guilty party. another reason why north charleston city hall on thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board. >> we will have to have an outside independent agency to -- to leading to a significant movement from here, to quote: for maureen le pen, the goal has always been to convince voters that her party is what it means to be french....
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Apr 20, 2015
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one is their efforts and successes on social media and the need for us to respond to that, to counter the narrative they are spreading so affect of late and so far. -- so effectively and so far. the other is their apocalyptic narrative. of course, it is impossible for me to know for sure whether they really believe the end times are coming, or whether they are capitalizing on widespread belief in muslim-majority countries, that they will witness the end of times. so are they manipulating people? are they spending this narrative -- spinning this narrative about the end of time as a recruitment drive? or, do they really believe it? part of what they anticipate will occur is that there will be a battle both the between sunni and shia, and a battle between isis and rome, which many people interpret as the west. they want to carry out the minor signs and the major signs leading up to the end times. it is really important that we understand this. groups that believe, that have an apocalyptic narrative, are often quite unpredictable and often have the potential to be extremely violent. brian: i will show
one is their efforts and successes on social media and the need for us to respond to that, to counter the narrative they are spreading so affect of late and so far. -- so effectively and so far. the other is their apocalyptic narrative. of course, it is impossible for me to know for sure whether they really believe the end times are coming, or whether they are capitalizing on widespread belief in muslim-majority countries, that they will witness the end of times. so are they manipulating...
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Apr 7, 2015
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guest: at "rolling stone" they use narrative techniques that allow for the reader to be somew hat misledques of fiction. they also suggest that the -- it is a position where it is hard for the fact checking department -- it notes that magazine journalism is different in the sense that it tries very much to be about storytelling. you cannot let that get in the way of the fundamentals. that is absolutely true. if you have written books and down a magazine piece, the fundamentals come first of finding out whether the story was true and only then can you figure out what is a compelling lead to do it. there is reconstructed dialogue based on one witness. it's written in a way that there are multiple witnesses to that. [no audio] host: the conversation to our viewers and having them weigh in on the rolling stone story. the phone lines are on your screen. we are talking with tom rosenstiel via skype. a veteran and author of journalism about the report. i want to ask you, what do you think the impact is on journalism? guest: i don't know that there is a lasting attack. it is the same thing that
guest: at "rolling stone" they use narrative techniques that allow for the reader to be somew hat misledques of fiction. they also suggest that the -- it is a position where it is hard for the fact checking department -- it notes that magazine journalism is different in the sense that it tries very much to be about storytelling. you cannot let that get in the way of the fundamentals. that is absolutely true. if you have written books and down a magazine piece, the fundamentals come...
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Apr 20, 2015
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us out of iraq and syria, it is clear that he really wants us there and indeed, needs us there to fulfill his narrativebout the final battle and the end times. brian: zawahri, where is he? jessica: i assume he is in pakistan. brian: we haven't found him? jessica: i can't speak to the government. i don't know personally who he is. brian: he is head of al qaeda now. we will run some videos of people can see what he looks like. brian: what is your sense of why , what are they trying to do? what's the point? jessica: baghdadi's point is to spread this caliphate around the whole world. that is his fantasy. that he will be able to establish a sharia-based state under his leadership around the world. but he also is trying to fulfill a narrative about the end times and the apocalypse. brian: so sharia law, have you studied that? jessica: no, i really haven't. i understand it only as much as terrorists try to promote it. brian: we have people who spend their lives in this country saying that it is coming and we are not stopping it and someday we will live under sharia law. if we did, what impact would it have o
us out of iraq and syria, it is clear that he really wants us there and indeed, needs us there to fulfill his narrativebout the final battle and the end times. brian: zawahri, where is he? jessica: i assume he is in pakistan. brian: we haven't found him? jessica: i can't speak to the government. i don't know personally who he is. brian: he is head of al qaeda now. we will run some videos of people can see what he looks like. brian: what is your sense of why , what are they trying to do? what's...
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Apr 8, 2015
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us initiatives. the third factor is the counter narrative. counter narrative is very important because it tackles the content language, and we need as i said in the beginning to develop, to do so. so these are the characteristics of the joint project that you all of aspire to, and i would like to congratulate the islamic council tasha atlantic council to have triggered these initiatives of studying the issue from those from a complement to perspective. thank you. >> before turning opening up the discussion let me just pose one additional question for you. the efforts that you've outlined are primarily prophylactic in the sense that trying to prevent the spread of violent extremist ideologies or perhaps to counter the argument. but there are unfortunately some however small number who've already gone over to the other side. and you have given us hope that some point in the future daesh will be defeated and then we have these people who went over and we can't jail them all. what do we do with them? i think one aspect of what morocco was doing,
us initiatives. the third factor is the counter narrative. counter narrative is very important because it tackles the content language, and we need as i said in the beginning to develop, to do so. so these are the characteristics of the joint project that you all of aspire to, and i would like to congratulate the islamic council tasha atlantic council to have triggered these initiatives of studying the issue from those from a complement to perspective. thank you. >> before turning opening...
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Apr 20, 2015
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us. >> keep the narrative going. >> and they would have to admit they made a mistake which we know this administration doesn't do. that they basically handed iraq over to isis and lost all the gains we made. they're so concerned z. along with our weapons. >> with reputational management of this president that they don't care about admitting reality let along wrongdoing. >> wouldn't they have to commit to doing something about it? if you say this city is being retain and that we are going to let it go and you admit that then you admit that's a problem. >> you have to be proactive then and then the public would demand it. >> we hope the public would demand it. perhaps what the white house is also conscious of just like the general, maybe they're not going to demand it because they believe what the white house is saying about it. >> i don't know how many people still believe them. i can't conceive the white house would believe that anymore. >> i think harris is right in the idea that i'm not sure the american public is committed to really going and doing anything about this with people and
us. >> keep the narrative going. >> and they would have to admit they made a mistake which we know this administration doesn't do. that they basically handed iraq over to isis and lost all the gains we made. they're so concerned z. along with our weapons. >> with reputational management of this president that they don't care about admitting reality let along wrongdoing. >> wouldn't they have to commit to doing something about it? if you say this city is being retain and...
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Apr 24, 2015
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>> sometimes there's a procedure used where a narrative statement is made byes the defendant not subject to cross-examination. >> be a allocution. >> you can put your client on in that situation. depending on how extensive they want his testimony to be, it may not apply here. >> what about monday when his defense attorney judy clarke, very suckself as keeping her -- successful at keeping her clients off death row what does she have to do. >> make it a mitigation case. what is the case to spare his life? the statute lays out a number of factor. was his role minor, controlled by someone else, under duress, something in his background that made him who he was or made him commit this act, and so she has to make the case that perhaps his role was minimal, perhaps he was controlled. i just don't know that will be enough. that's not to suggest he'll get death because maybe as paul callan suggests the jury says maybe life in jail is worse than the death penalty. >> especially if he wanted death. a lot of survivors want him to get life. >> getting back to judy clarke, highly regarded, considered
>> sometimes there's a procedure used where a narrative statement is made byes the defendant not subject to cross-examination. >> be a allocution. >> you can put your client on in that situation. depending on how extensive they want his testimony to be, it may not apply here. >> what about monday when his defense attorney judy clarke, very suckself as keeping her -- successful at keeping her clients off death row what does she have to do. >> make it a mitigation...
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Apr 26, 2015
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us here. >> the relevant is the narrative being built by people inside the apartment and the special treatmentonnected to the relationship that is decades long with the sheriff there. he allegedly said he can do what he wants and if you have a problem with it you can talk to the sheriff there, and i am paraphrasin paraphrasing. let's talk about the sergeant that attributed that to the deputy. he said mr. bates was driving a personal car with police equipment pulling people over and making traffic stops, and he then when called on it, donated the car but continued to drive it and then continued to make traffic stops for which he had not received the training to do. that goes back to the question if there is special treatment? you have provided documents saying at the time of the shooting that he was properly trained and cnn cannot verify those documents, but while he was working there before this shooting back in 2009, explain for us his training level related to those specific traffic stops. was he working outside the rules of the program? >> you know, that's what the investigation found, that
us here. >> the relevant is the narrative being built by people inside the apartment and the special treatmentonnected to the relationship that is decades long with the sheriff there. he allegedly said he can do what he wants and if you have a problem with it you can talk to the sheriff there, and i am paraphrasin paraphrasing. let's talk about the sergeant that attributed that to the deputy. he said mr. bates was driving a personal car with police equipment pulling people over and making...
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Apr 9, 2015
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acting in the same environment are choosing to use violent or kinetic force and actually further demonizing and inadvertently contributing to the narrativethat attracts more people to these groups? how do we continue and ensure there is effectiveness in what we are doing to address these causes juxtaposed with other actors that are using violent force? dr. abaddi: thank you. success has a tremendously delicious taste. once you taste it, we get addicted to it. with such mega initiatives, we definitely need to generate some samples to be tasted. and just by the stages of the job, the work come and make it possible to take the outcomes of what you are doing. -- the work, and make it possible to taste the outcomes of what you're doing. you just let it grow and grow without presenting samples to be tasted, then it will be very hard to continue and to persevere. this is why the approach should be based on this, to make it possible to evaluate and to measure through indices and indicators how successful we were in tackling the issue. this is what provides sustainability in tackling the job. >> thank you very much. please join me in thanking not
acting in the same environment are choosing to use violent or kinetic force and actually further demonizing and inadvertently contributing to the narrativethat attracts more people to these groups? how do we continue and ensure there is effectiveness in what we are doing to address these causes juxtaposed with other actors that are using violent force? dr. abaddi: thank you. success has a tremendously delicious taste. once you taste it, we get addicted to it. with such mega initiatives, we...
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Apr 18, 2015
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their efforts and successes on social media, and the need for us to respond to that, to counter the narrativeading effectively. the other is there apocalyptic narrative. it's impossible for me to know for sure whether they really believe the end times are coming, or whether they are capitalizing on widespread belief in muslim majority countries that they will witness the end of times. like sunday night at eight eastern and >> congress established the veterans history project is a part over the full life project at the library of congress. it collects oral histories and makes them accessible to the public. up next week hear from senator thomas carper of delaware, a new flight officer. medieval -- na val flight officer. david: we are here with the veterans history program to discuss your them accessible to the public. career in the navy reserve. today is the 14th of september and we are on capitol hill. thank you for your time. i would like to open up the floor with a question, talking about your youth and your interest in the military and what eventually lead you to the navy rotc program. sena
their efforts and successes on social media, and the need for us to respond to that, to counter the narrativeading effectively. the other is there apocalyptic narrative. it's impossible for me to know for sure whether they really believe the end times are coming, or whether they are capitalizing on widespread belief in muslim majority countries that they will witness the end of times. like sunday night at eight eastern and >> congress established the veterans history project is a part...
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Apr 10, 2015
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shot as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativescott was the guilty party. another reason why north charleston city hall on thursday, there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed. and not just for the introduction of the more police controlled cameras. >> we will have to police the police. we would have to have an outside, independent agency to investigate the police department. >> but that was exactly why it was decided that the officer that killed george knight's cousin darryl could resume his duties. charleston, south carolina. >>> the biggest gun lobby in the u.s. is gathering for its annual meeting in the state of tennessee. more than 70,000 people, including some republican presidential hopefuls are expected to attend this week's national rifle association convention. the n.r.a. has successfully mobilized its political power to blunt most gun control proposals. >>> now, one person has been killed and several have been injured following a large tornado that hit the u.s. state of illinois. the
shot as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativescott was the guilty party. another reason why north charleston city hall on thursday, there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed. and not just for the introduction of the more police controlled cameras. >> we will have to police the police. we would have to have an outside, independent agency to investigate the police...
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Apr 10, 2015
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it could have been used to support the original police narrative that scott was the difficulty party.ther reason why at north charleston city haula thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed not just the introduction of more police-controlled cameras. >> we no longer are going to have the police policing the police. we would have to have an outside independent agency to investigate the police department. >> reporter: but that was exactly how it was decided of the officers that killed george knight's cousin darryl could resume their duties. >>> the biggest gun lobby in the u.s. is gathering for its an mull meeting. more than 70,000 people are expected to attends this this weekend's national rifle association convention in the u.s. state of tennessee. tom ackerman reports. >> reporter: as america becomes more and more urban the share of households that owns guns has steadily declined. but the sheer number of guns in private hands keeps growing. and so does the power of the national rifle association. which claims a membership of more than 3
it could have been used to support the original police narrative that scott was the difficulty party.ther reason why at north charleston city haula thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed not just the introduction of more police-controlled cameras. >> we no longer are going to have the police policing the police. we would have to have an outside independent agency to investigate the police department. >> reporter: but that was exactly...
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Apr 10, 2015
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. >> the epa has created new numeric water quality criteria to replace the former narrative evaluation usedmany state parks. >> if we keep letting phosphorus go up, nobody wants to swim in that. >> senator john barrasso. senator barrasso: undermining the work at the state level to manage our natural resources and to protect the air and our water. >> this does not appear to be the case at wekiva. >> we have had good cooperation a lot of times at the federal level. >> there is money out there for the feds. >> between all of the agencies involved the federal epa, state and county governments, there are a lot of regulations being put in and being enforced to maintain the health of the river. >> part of the reason why the river has been so well maintained is because of the corporation of various states and agencies in florida. >> saltwater drives the plants out and kill them. >> we all work for the same state, and so having the relationships with each other and helping each other when needed. >> in the end, it is the strong support of the visitors. >> is one of the last passions -- it is one of
. >> the epa has created new numeric water quality criteria to replace the former narrative evaluation usedmany state parks. >> if we keep letting phosphorus go up, nobody wants to swim in that. >> senator john barrasso. senator barrasso: undermining the work at the state level to manage our natural resources and to protect the air and our water. >> this does not appear to be the case at wekiva. >> we have had good cooperation a lot of times at the federal level....
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Apr 25, 2015
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how do we transfer from that level of biological understanding into the way we use our past and organize narratives? i think the two can help each other. we have two sides of the brain. there are some neuroscientist that are bestsellers now. there is another, he uses a language that i think i have accurate. another labeled it system one and system to thinking. are you familiar with this? it's worth knowing about area there is huge literature on it. they do this again with imaging research. this is the idea. how are they ever going to prove this? when they get this proved, it could get depressing. he talks it great length about system one and system to thinking. all this means is that you and i in our brain have two ways of thinking. system one is essentially what we might call intuition. we just react. we have a fast immediate automatic intuitive response. blinking -- good example. it's just a natural response. system to thinking is basically reasoning. longer slower rational, analytical. hard. it's much easier just to instinctively react to something. that's why we have arguments. it's an instinct
how do we transfer from that level of biological understanding into the way we use our past and organize narratives? i think the two can help each other. we have two sides of the brain. there are some neuroscientist that are bestsellers now. there is another, he uses a language that i think i have accurate. another labeled it system one and system to thinking. are you familiar with this? it's worth knowing about area there is huge literature on it. they do this again with imaging research. this...
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Apr 18, 2015
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to pull the information i need to recreate a crisis and i did it in a way that reads like a narrative. i use a lot of dialogue which i didn't make out. was all a can from the meeting itself so it is fun to read, takes you through the suspense of the crisis. i got started on this in 2011 on the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attack. i got to meet an interview the people in this situation room that way, the head of the situation room traveling with president bush she explained to me what george bush did that day, all the places he went, all his conversations and all the stuff. gave me an insight into a profound presidential crisis and then the following year i did the same thing for the 50th anniversary of the cuban missile crisis, a group of newspapers from miami herald, kansas city star a fort worth, anchorage, sacramento and wire services mcclatchy tribune news service and had the good fortune of having a journal from one of kennedy's advisers that had never been published before. he is head of fema, back in the office of emergency preparedness and was in many of them and kept his children g
to pull the information i need to recreate a crisis and i did it in a way that reads like a narrative. i use a lot of dialogue which i didn't make out. was all a can from the meeting itself so it is fun to read, takes you through the suspense of the crisis. i got started on this in 2011 on the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attack. i got to meet an interview the people in this situation room that way, the head of the situation room traveling with president bush she explained to me what george...
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Apr 17, 2015
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is that unusual this kind of -- it seems those pictures -- tell us at bit more about how that came out and the difference in the narrative. >> reporter: well it used to be a usual occurrence in this kind of conflict especially when soldiers would move into areas that are really under the control of the rebels such as the one we are in now. but since december when the farc announced their ceasefire, there have been no instance of an attack of this level. there had been skirmishes when solds and the farc met, but never this kind of blatant attack never this number of casualties. and that's why the government here is saying that they clearly essentially violated their ceasefire and that's why the government is responding with resuming aerial raids and so forth. we'll have to see -- everybody here really is expecting more explanation from the farc negotiators, and essentially many here are speculating if this was decided from the farc it was orchestrated to try to pressure the government to essentially accept a full truce going to a full bilateral ceasefire, but that seems unlikely, what seems that might have happened here i
is that unusual this kind of -- it seems those pictures -- tell us at bit more about how that came out and the difference in the narrative. >> reporter: well it used to be a usual occurrence in this kind of conflict especially when soldiers would move into areas that are really under the control of the rebels such as the one we are in now. but since december when the farc announced their ceasefire, there have been no instance of an attack of this level. there had been skirmishes when...
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Apr 9, 2015
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narrative he may have led the officer to feel threatened may have acted aggressively. that all plays into their effort to lead the public to believe these actions were justified, that he usedreason. >> what about other cases? you talk about they have the power of narrative in so many of them. other case where we take the police at their word on what happened. in many cases reporters have no other options. there's no witnesses, to bystanders no video. we learned in the michael brown case you can't always trust witness accounts at times. what do you think about that brian? >> you bring up the important fact. even eyewitness testimony, when they believe they're telling the truth may not be the truth. video challenges the balance of power. not just the existence but when its comes out, coverage changes, considerations change and amount of coverage change. all those change as a result of this video like this one. >> nick when looking at the story you wrote -- i have to say before the video came out, your story reflects a lot of local reporting we saw -- this isn't something you pulled out of thin air. this is what local reporters suggested as they were working on information th
narrative he may have led the officer to feel threatened may have acted aggressively. that all plays into their effort to lead the public to believe these actions were justified, that he usedreason. >> what about other cases? you talk about they have the power of narrative in so many of them. other case where we take the police at their word on what happened. in many cases reporters have no other options. there's no witnesses, to bystanders no video. we learned in the michael brown case...
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Apr 9, 2015
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and this is the narrative that they use every time in these shootings. we were fortunate and this family was blessed to get access so we could have the truth in this particular case, and it explodes the previous narratives. your common sense question is going to continue to go unanswered. i don't think that law enforcement has gotten wake-up call just jet. i really don't. if you think about these as sit-ins and die-ins and some of the organized ways in which the dream defenders are trying to raise awareness. if you look at their assistance in michael brown's funeral. their attitude their positionalty, they're still defensive. we haven't had the kind of conversations to lead to resolution and rebuilding the public trust with law enforcement. >> and finally, mr. henderson, the discrepancy between the police report and the video tape your thoughts? >> i think it's a real problem. as i said before it goes beyond mere lies. it drifts into an area of perjury, which is real accountability in terms of what this officer was willing to say, and then beyond that wha
and this is the narrative that they use every time in these shootings. we were fortunate and this family was blessed to get access so we could have the truth in this particular case, and it explodes the previous narratives. your common sense question is going to continue to go unanswered. i don't think that law enforcement has gotten wake-up call just jet. i really don't. if you think about these as sit-ins and die-ins and some of the organized ways in which the dream defenders are trying to...
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Apr 2, 2015
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try to door stop him going to lunch, but the iranian foreign minister is talking to us and getting the iranian narrative out there. even though iran is the weaker party at the talks, they are the supplacant they are the tough negotiator. i feel they are the ones that are dictating a lot of what is going on here in lausanne. >> thank you, elise labott. >>> 11 minutes past the hour. we are following breaking news. gunmen storming a university in kenya. students attacked. plus hundreds of prisoners linked to al qaeda. they escaped prison in yemen. >>> grim recovery at the crash site of germanwings flight 9525 as the new video claiming of a video surfaced. were the last minutes of the flight recorded? we are live with the latest next. well, a mortgage shouldn't be a problem your credit is in pretty good shape. >>pretty good? i know i have a 798 fico score thanks to the tools and help on experian.com. kaboom... well, i just have a few other questions. >>chuck, the only other question you need to ask is, "what else can you do for me?" i'll just take a water... get your credit swagger on. become a member of ex
try to door stop him going to lunch, but the iranian foreign minister is talking to us and getting the iranian narrative out there. even though iran is the weaker party at the talks, they are the supplacant they are the tough negotiator. i feel they are the ones that are dictating a lot of what is going on here in lausanne. >> thank you, elise labott. >>> 11 minutes past the hour. we are following breaking news. gunmen storming a university in kenya. students attacked. plus...
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the narrative that is being used in washington by the administration is that if this is about who sets the rules? does china set the rules for trade or do we set the rules? that might be the way we should talk about it in the united states but that must sound pretty weird overseas. do you have a thought on this? >> i think the chinese often will bring that up. they say is you're rebalanced toward asia containment and we say no. they say why his tpp aimed against us? i think the answer to that is the proper answer to that is we should be willing to have chinese participation. i think the administration has said so when china is able to live up to those standards so if you think of it is open-ended trade agreements open-ended in the sense that they are not permanently exclusive, excluding others then it's more understandable. >> let me go to one last question and i will turn to all of you. it's not only from the book but here's the kind of intellect that would give assault perspective and sacred one of the great problems of being the world's only superpower and having to deal with region
the narrative that is being used in washington by the administration is that if this is about who sets the rules? does china set the rules for trade or do we set the rules? that might be the way we should talk about it in the united states but that must sound pretty weird overseas. do you have a thought on this? >> i think the chinese often will bring that up. they say is you're rebalanced toward asia containment and we say no. they say why his tpp aimed against us? i think the answer to...
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Apr 10, 2015
04/15
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hospital as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrative that scott was the guilty party. >> another reason why a north charleston city hall on thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed and not just the introduction of more police controlled cameras. >> we no longer can have the police policing the police. we will have an outside agency to police the lease democratic. >> that was how it decided that the officer who killed george knight's cousin could resume duties. >> barack obama and cuba's rule castro have spoken on the phone ahead of a historic meeting of the summit of the may. obama signaled he could remove cuba from the u.s. list of state sponsored terrorism. secretary of state john kerry said he made progress in talks with cuba's foreign minister. >> few people back then were certain of a brighter future, fewer probably thought we could turn the tide. well today the tide has turned, and it has been turning for sometime thanks to the efforts of everybody in the region itself. >> lucia newm
hospital as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrative that scott was the guilty party. >> another reason why a north charleston city hall on thursday there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed and not just the introduction of more police controlled cameras. >> we no longer can have the police policing the police. we will have an outside agency to police the lease...
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Apr 22, 2015
04/15
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standards and environmental standards, but i don't think it's been pronounced as a fail use, and i think the narrativet all trade is bad. all trade agreements have failedl!=j÷ just isn't true. you know, we have a trade surplus with 11 of the 14 trade agreements we have in place, not a deficit, a surplus. it's not a secret agreement. it doesn't favor the wealthy and leave everyone behind. >> so elizabeth warren is wrong? >> i think she's absolutely wrong. >> what are some people like chuck schumer, probably going to be the leader of the senate, which is he switching from the big city, pro-trader, to an anti-trader? i can't figure this out. >> i think you've got to talk to chuck. >> was nafta a good deal? was nafta a good deal? >> i think nafta did a couple of things that were important. it integrated the north american economy. mexico and canada are important trading partners. >> right. >> we sell a lot of stuff to them. they sell a lot of stuff to us. the problem with nafta that i identified when i was running for senate long before i was in the oval office was the labor agreements and the environment
standards and environmental standards, but i don't think it's been pronounced as a fail use, and i think the narrativet all trade is bad. all trade agreements have failedl!=j÷ just isn't true. you know, we have a trade surplus with 11 of the 14 trade agreements we have in place, not a deficit, a surplus. it's not a secret agreement. it doesn't favor the wealthy and leave everyone behind. >> so elizabeth warren is wrong? >> i think she's absolutely wrong. >> what are some...
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Apr 5, 2015
04/15
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disciplines and mental necessity to make sense out of things and to put them together are forcing us to construct a narrativeians always have to do this. but you have to make a reality check to yourself. to what extent am i constructing something that may not have existed? to what extent is that construction not serving the aims of perceiving the past more clearly but unfulfilling our own impulse to have a story to tell? boy, i am going to begin to frighten myself with this. [laughter] >> it seems to me like the thread has to be -- let's say jackson is the thread. there are all these subdivisions. if we use jacksonian america that paints a large umbrella. there are all these pieces underneath. jacksonian democracy or jacksonian reform. there are these subjects on in -- sub-jacksonian periods as well. whatever the historian has an interest in will be the driving core of what jacksonian america is all about. for me, i happen to think jacksonian democracy and the application is politics. you can use the cliche term of age of the common man. we know the ulcerative fraud with that. that is usually how it is prese
disciplines and mental necessity to make sense out of things and to put them together are forcing us to construct a narrativeians always have to do this. but you have to make a reality check to yourself. to what extent am i constructing something that may not have existed? to what extent is that construction not serving the aims of perceiving the past more clearly but unfulfilling our own impulse to have a story to tell? boy, i am going to begin to frighten myself with this. [laughter] >>...
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Apr 6, 2015
04/15
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. >> there is a selection of this i willlous tree i illustrative narrative saying that this methodology should not ever be used but this is an example where you learn to be cautious about knowing in advance what it is that you think you're trying to illustrate. >> she said that she believed one rape victim in july. she said she was hesitant to push her source for fear of retraumatizing a victim of sexual assault. >> serena eardley wrote about sexual assault at on u.s. universities. jackie a pseudo nym said that she was raped at at a fraternity and called for help but her story soon began to fall apart. in december, a month after the story was published rolling stone issued a policy on its webs and initiated the review from the columbia journalism school. that review was released sunday night and is sharply critical of eardley and "rolling stone." three failures of reporting stand out. they involved basic even routine journalistic practice not special investigative effort. and if these reporting pathways had been followed, rolling stone very likely would have avoided trouble. she failed to corroborate jackie's
. >> there is a selection of this i willlous tree i illustrative narrative saying that this methodology should not ever be used but this is an example where you learn to be cautious about knowing in advance what it is that you think you're trying to illustrate. >> she said that she believed one rape victim in july. she said she was hesitant to push her source for fear of retraumatizing a victim of sexual assault. >> serena eardley wrote about sexual assault at on u.s....
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Apr 10, 2015
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shot as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativewas the guilty party. another why at the city hall there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed. >> we are going to have to police -- police the police. we will have to have an outside independent agency to -- to investigate the police department. >> reporter: but that was how it was decided that the police officers that shot darrell could resume their duties. >>> nigh-- nigerians will head to the polls on saturday to choose state governors. our correspondent reports from the northern city. >> reporter: one of the most powerful governors in nigeria. he presides over millions of people and controls huge resources, but most importantly, he and his colleagues across the country, have enormous influence on state and national decisions. ignoring them has cost the current ruling party a lot in last month's elections. >> it was very critical and very important. it was playing a very important role in making some checks and balances in the national [ inaudibl
shot as he ran away questions have been raised as to whether it could have been used to support the original police narrativewas the guilty party. another why at the city hall there were demands for an independent civilian police review board to be formed. >> we are going to have to police -- police the police. we will have to have an outside independent agency to -- to investigate the police department. >> reporter: but that was how it was decided that the police officers that shot...
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Apr 28, 2015
04/15
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you know in our business sometimes, it's difficult for us to sort of change the narrative as quickly as the they're tisk may be changing around you. so i read a line to you that says the streets of baltimore are still tense. is that the reality there? is that a fair statement? >> well, tony, i think that it's fair to say that there's tension, sort of with a sort of sense of festivity here. it's a little too strong, but we have a new orleans style brass band at this intersection and now you probably hear that thunderry sound behind us, and that's a drum line, complete with cheer leaders as well. so this has really become the public square if you will in baltimore. we have lines of riot police, and heavy vehicles on one side and hundreds of people on the other, voicing their opinions, and as well as celebrating if you will. i think celebrating in the community and hope for positive change. one of the interesting things that i want to point out tony, in the line of riot police, there's a barrier set up, men women, children and families, in a buffer zone between the police and the crowds
you know in our business sometimes, it's difficult for us to sort of change the narrative as quickly as the they're tisk may be changing around you. so i read a line to you that says the streets of baltimore are still tense. is that the reality there? is that a fair statement? >> well, tony, i think that it's fair to say that there's tension, sort of with a sort of sense of festivity here. it's a little too strong, but we have a new orleans style brass band at this intersection and now...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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us. labour wanted the narrative since the last election and have not really developed one.y are getting there with this inequality idea. they want people to talk about immigration. so far, that has not happened. it does seem as if all the parties are scrambling for that covert strategy and arne'ten't really capable of reaching out a lot further and therefore are not trying to do that. mark: david, we will see a lot more in the coming weeks. coming up we will be looking at your favorite stories from bloomberg's digital outlet including china's war on golf courses. ♪ mark: these are our picks from the bloomberg digital hemisphere. an interview to the orange county register. where is your money, he was asked. it is mostly concentrated in cash. that is not great. i think most asset prices are being pushed by central banks to really elevated alevels. he says central banks are trying to grade his wealth gap between asset prices and fundamental. very interesting when a man like this says something like that. caroline: money where his mouth is. manus: the chinese government literal
us. labour wanted the narrative since the last election and have not really developed one.y are getting there with this inequality idea. they want people to talk about immigration. so far, that has not happened. it does seem as if all the parties are scrambling for that covert strategy and arne'ten't really capable of reaching out a lot further and therefore are not trying to do that. mark: david, we will see a lot more in the coming weeks. coming up we will be looking at your favorite stories...
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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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us. last week i was in pennsylvania in harrisburg talking to a legislator that clearly was like, you know, people are addicts, they make those choices, we have to punish them. is so what is a narrative we can use those of us who are experienced that tell us what you're saying in your week that we could use for naysayers who are in positions of authority and power to actually make those changes? if it's fluffy or, you know feel good or you want to hug a thug kind of thing which i think -- >> well, thank you for work you're doing because that's sorely needed and really important. i guess what i would say is we've had a massive dehumanization of addicts in america, britain and all sorts of other places. there's no other minority i can think of where when they die, lots of people say, well, they brought it on themselves, when amy winehouse i died lots of people were saying, well they put it on themselves. even a homophobic perp if elton john died wouldn't go, good. it's about humanizing addicts and telling the real stories and it's part hi about people just coming out, you know? like how did we change -- you know 1963, the stone will rise right? 2000 years of gay people being persecuted
us. last week i was in pennsylvania in harrisburg talking to a legislator that clearly was like, you know, people are addicts, they make those choices, we have to punish them. is so what is a narrative we can use those of us who are experienced that tell us what you're saying in your week that we could use for naysayers who are in positions of authority and power to actually make those changes? if it's fluffy or, you know feel good or you want to hug a thug kind of thing which i think --...
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Apr 21, 2015
04/15
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acting in the same environment are choosing to use violent or kinetic force and actually further sort of demonizing and inadvertently attributing the narrative that attracts more people to these groups? so how do we continue and ensure there is effectiveness in what we are doing to address these causes juxtapose with other actors using violent force? >> thank you. success has a tremendous, tremendously delicious taste. once we do taste it we get addicted to it. so in such mega initiatives we definitely need to generate some samples to be tasted and this by f fractioning the job, the work, make it possible to taste some of the outcomes of what you are doing because it allows you to gain confidence about what you are doing whereas if you just let it grow and grow without presenting samples to be tasted, then it will be very hard to continue and to persevere and this is why the approach should be based on this. to make it possible to vulnerize and measure to indicateors and how successful we are and this requires sustainability in the job. >> thank you very much. please now join me in thanking not just dr. abbadi but as well mr. bouaida for the
acting in the same environment are choosing to use violent or kinetic force and actually further sort of demonizing and inadvertently attributing the narrative that attracts more people to these groups? so how do we continue and ensure there is effectiveness in what we are doing to address these causes juxtapose with other actors using violent force? >> thank you. success has a tremendous, tremendously delicious taste. once we do taste it we get addicted to it. so in such mega initiatives...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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certified this is an enormous amount of work and building on that we very narrative teams within those clinics with highly trained let me use lingo here r s p smart people not licensed but who are very highly trained and integrated with the clinics and the patients love them so i can't be more tickled than that with our hillside practices we've wrapped services around the practices but now have patient and advisors and pharmacy i was and case martin luthern king, jr. we're dogging those around quality and experience so we're happy with that coming up we feel pretty good we struggled around behavorial health, i you know it is a campfire out to open tim it has come we put up - >> you know this is why we have people in the audience actually they've been more cooperative. >> this is on the public record. >> thank you, commissioner and i feel okay about that. >> it's fine (laughter). >> it's like uncracking an egg. >> what we've done on the providers side has been focused trying to focus attention on the health care providers in those groups who we had a list of that are available to be responsive to the primary care physicians
certified this is an enormous amount of work and building on that we very narrative teams within those clinics with highly trained let me use lingo here r s p smart people not licensed but who are very highly trained and integrated with the clinics and the patients love them so i can't be more tickled than that with our hillside practices we've wrapped services around the practices but now have patient and advisors and pharmacy i was and case martin luthern king, jr. we're dogging those around...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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us. we live in separate narrative streams. sometimes our facts dang, they're different. very different. and that makes it very hard for us to have a good discussion or solution. the living room conversations is invitation to start reconnecting at the core this have initiative is one small simple tool is about making the human connection. most people think it's our intellect and actually it's our emotion that's guide us. i like you and i hear was say and i'm more likely to believe you and remember it and i'm more likely to be sitting there trying to figure things out with you in a way that's going to try to make you happy. if we can just start having a relationship, then our potential for solving all of these issues -- now i could have living room conversation about the arizona structure because i bet you people across the board would say, hey, that's not fair. i would like to change that. we're sending up flags all the time this is the tribe i'm in and if you're not in that tribe then you're kind of careful about what you say and then you don't really get real until you'r
us. we live in separate narrative streams. sometimes our facts dang, they're different. very different. and that makes it very hard for us to have a good discussion or solution. the living room conversations is invitation to start reconnecting at the core this have initiative is one small simple tool is about making the human connection. most people think it's our intellect and actually it's our emotion that's guide us. i like you and i hear was say and i'm more likely to believe you and...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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us. we are living, increasingly, in a narrative stream. when i talk about an issue with my conservative friends, sometimes our fact, they are different. they are very different. that makes it difficult for us to have a good discussion and solution. the conversations are an invitation to start reconnecting , and that the core of this initiative is one small, simple tool. it is about making that human connection. most people think it is our intellect that guides us but actually, our emotions guide us. when i like you, i hear what you say, and it has a lot -- i am more likely to remember it and believe you. and i am more likely to be sitting there trying to figure things out with you in a way that will try to make you happy. if we can just start having relationships, then our potential for solving all these issues, i would love to have living room conversations about the arizona structure. i bet you, people across the board would say, that's not there. i would like to change that. but we are sending up flags all the time. this is the tribe i a
us. we are living, increasingly, in a narrative stream. when i talk about an issue with my conservative friends, sometimes our fact, they are different. they are very different. that makes it difficult for us to have a good discussion and solution. the conversations are an invitation to start reconnecting , and that the core of this initiative is one small, simple tool. it is about making that human connection. most people think it is our intellect that guides us but actually, our emotions...
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Apr 1, 2015
04/15
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and i think that winning back the narrative and using tools such as the ones that you're financing is almost as important as considering military support for ukraine, which i support very strongly. thank you. >> thank you. am basbassador ambassador? >> chairman corker ranking member menendez. thank you for this chance to testify. it's an honor to be here. i've been asked to talk about -- sorry. aye been asked to talk about kremlin aggression in ukraine and how to counter it. but in order to take the subject on properly, we need a wider lens. the reason for the simple there are influence people in the united states and especially in europe who do not understand the gravity of this crisis. they don't understand it because they think the crisis is simply about ukraine and moscow's aggression there. with that narrow understanding they oppose the strong measures necessary to counter kremlin aggression and secure vital american interests not simply important interests. the crisis that we face is as i think almost every senator said, a crisis of kremlin revisionism. mr. putin does want to ov
and i think that winning back the narrative and using tools such as the ones that you're financing is almost as important as considering military support for ukraine, which i support very strongly. thank you. >> thank you. am basbassador ambassador? >> chairman corker ranking member menendez. thank you for this chance to testify. it's an honor to be here. i've been asked to talk about -- sorry. aye been asked to talk about kremlin aggression in ukraine and how to counter it. but in...
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Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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>> what's really happening here is i think an almost entirely false narrative, a word i didn't used to like but i have to use it here, has been perpetuated i think largely by the american left. but a great many journalists have bought into this. college administrators across the country under pressure to some extent from the administration, from the government, are accepting this as fact. you see it echoed, even throughout this by the comments of the president of the university of virginia, teresa sullivan. when the charlottesville police department came out and said they could find no evidence that this crime actually happened, the thing that she wanted to point to was something in their report that said that indeed the university had been simympathetic to this woman who claimed to have been raped and that they had treated her properly. she should not have been treated properly. she's a liar. at the university of virginia, there's an honor system and it used to work. if you told a whopper like this, damaging the university, and obviously not true, you would be out of there. you'd be g
>> what's really happening here is i think an almost entirely false narrative, a word i didn't used to like but i have to use it here, has been perpetuated i think largely by the american left. but a great many journalists have bought into this. college administrators across the country under pressure to some extent from the administration, from the government, are accepting this as fact. you see it echoed, even throughout this by the comments of the president of the university of...
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Apr 24, 2015
04/15
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. >> it's interesting you mentioned a narrative and reminding us is important saying they have a largeian community and there is controversy about the way events are handled especially those who died in world war i how are people reacting and what is the feeling like right now? >> well morgan turkey is a very patriotic society and it's difficult to walk in any of the squares or streets without huge flags and much like the u.s. where you see people hanging flags outside their homes and so forth, there is a very strong sense of nationalism here and that is why it's difficult for people to accept some of the criticism that is levelled against turkey needless to say it's not only patriot and they say 100 been killed and say it's less and historians in the past few weeks say they uncovered masked graves belonging to turks killed by armenians a say there were masked killings inflicted on the turks themselves so the controversy continues but as you say they are marking 100 years since world war one the battle of gallipoli and there have been world leaders including prince charles as well as t
. >> it's interesting you mentioned a narrative and reminding us is important saying they have a largeian community and there is controversy about the way events are handled especially those who died in world war i how are people reacting and what is the feeling like right now? >> well morgan turkey is a very patriotic society and it's difficult to walk in any of the squares or streets without huge flags and much like the u.s. where you see people hanging flags outside their homes...
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Apr 1, 2015
04/15
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what is a narrative that we can use for those of us whose experience tell us what you're saying in your book that we can use for naysayers and things like back? or positions of authority and power to make those changes? >> you may think it's like fluffy or feel-good or you want to have a thug kind of than what i think is great. >> that is sorely needed and really important. i guess what i would say is we have had a massive dehumanization and american britain and other places. there's no other minority i can think of where when they die lots of people say they brought it on themselves bear member went and the whitehouse guide or the kid from glee lots of people were saying they brought it on themselves. even a person at alton john guide wouldn't say good. it would be really extreme if they did that. it's about humanizing addicts and telling the story so it's about people coming out. like how did we change? 1963 the riots, two theaters in in -- 2000 years ago people were being persecuted. the defenders of people the pro-position was to say they are not evil, they are sick. that was the pr
what is a narrative that we can use for those of us whose experience tell us what you're saying in your book that we can use for naysayers and things like back? or positions of authority and power to make those changes? >> you may think it's like fluffy or feel-good or you want to have a thug kind of than what i think is great. >> that is sorely needed and really important. i guess what i would say is we have had a massive dehumanization and american britain and other places....
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Apr 16, 2015
04/15
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he has helped us change the narrative from that of war to peace, which is great.is helping his people. i like leaders who advocate for peace. i know that someone else that netanyahu. i think we should have a different category for who is the person who advocate for war the most or the most manipulative. when it comes to people who were talking about gays and lesbians, it is amazing that these people are christians. i have not seen any group of people with so much hatred in their hearts as those christians who call and say jesus jesus. who did jesus loved the most? the outcasts of society. you come on television and you say that there is something wrong with those people, who made them? host: thanks for the call. one of our regular tweeters says lorne michaels? how many times has snl jumped the proverbial shark? vladimir putin is also on the list. good morning. caller: am i on? host: yes. caller: influential people. a man named bill w. he founded alcoholic's anonymous. host: john, you get the last word. caller: i would put elon musk on that list. he is reinvigorati
he has helped us change the narrative from that of war to peace, which is great.is helping his people. i like leaders who advocate for peace. i know that someone else that netanyahu. i think we should have a different category for who is the person who advocate for war the most or the most manipulative. when it comes to people who were talking about gays and lesbians, it is amazing that these people are christians. i have not seen any group of people with so much hatred in their hearts as those...
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Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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officer had followed all procedures and felt he was threatened and had to use deadly force against walter scott. that narrative changed somewhat after the -- changed somewhat after a bystander to that incident apparently had shot the video one that happened on saturday morning, turned that video over to the family the family's attorneys then turned that video over to "the new york times." "the new york times" posted that video on their website tonight and we've got a little bit of tape i want to play from just earlier this evening. the mayor from north charleston mayor keith sumpmy explaining what happened and the decision made to bring murder charges against this police officer. >> we do not look at the responsibility we have lightly. we take the role that when do wrong, we do wrong. the lesson that we take out of this and hopefully the general public takes out of it, is that when an incident occurs, give us the appropriate time to investigate. find out exactly what happened and we will act accordingly. >> the mayor of north charleston explaining that the officer in this case made a bad decision. there have b
officer had followed all procedures and felt he was threatened and had to use deadly force against walter scott. that narrative changed somewhat after the -- changed somewhat after a bystander to that incident apparently had shot the video one that happened on saturday morning, turned that video over to the family the family's attorneys then turned that video over to "the new york times." "the new york times" posted that video on their website tonight and we've got a little...
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Apr 27, 2015
04/15
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FBC
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that turned out to be a false narrative and took a lot of us to the cleaners.s are very different. you've seen values come back up. but we're still off the highs. 15% from where we were. people are using it for more prudent things for the time being. paying off student loan debt. making home improvements. again, i think it's reasonable -- >> that raises a question, which is this when would you use a product like this? and what shouldn't you use a product like this for? >> yeah. good rule of thumb, this thing better be improving your quality of life. any time you're taking a cashout refinance. you're saving money on a monthly basis. but you're just extending the payments. no great mystery for it. you don't want to be paying for a car or lavish vacation for the next 30 years. do things that make your life better. student loans. home improvements. reasonable investments. maybe small business. don't be speculative. and don't be reckless. >> good advice. thank you. >> thanks gerri. gerri: a programming note for you, coming up all next week, our user's guide to real
that turned out to be a false narrative and took a lot of us to the cleaners.s are very different. you've seen values come back up. but we're still off the highs. 15% from where we were. people are using it for more prudent things for the time being. paying off student loan debt. making home improvements. again, i think it's reasonable -- >> that raises a question, which is this when would you use a product like this? and what shouldn't you use a product like this for? >> yeah. good...