SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 31, 2011
10/11
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SFGTV
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us. so any harm that comes to any dispensaries in this town, like in divinity tree, there are supporters. they're the ones that are giving us the madison. i would like to grow it myself. can someone help me do that? i have got my landlord on my back. i need that for my dispensary. and i do not get my medication, i am concerned. i will fight the federal government. i have learned from the leaders in the cannabis committee not to start here in city government. i got recorded on the radio saying not only is this a local city issue, a state issue, but ultimately the federal government is the pressing cannabis. we need to address the federal government. who is going to help us? [applause] supervisor avalos: next speaker, please. >> i am and medical patient peter i am speaking for people that cannot speak english or the american language. we need that medical marijuana. i am a patient. thank you. gracias. [applause] >> good morning peter i am from divinities tree. it is so encouraging to hear the patience speak. i want to remind you folks -- thank you very much for considering this resolution. no, i view this as an attack on landlords and ag
us. so any harm that comes to any dispensaries in this town, like in divinity tree, there are supporters. they're the ones that are giving us the madison. i would like to grow it myself. can someone help me do that? i have got my landlord on my back. i need that for my dispensary. and i do not get my medication, i am concerned. i will fight the federal government. i have learned from the leaders in the cannabis committee not to start here in city government. i got recorded on the radio saying...
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Oct 1, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN2
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of meeting a possible sewer, her future husband, told a friend agree that the madison had asked to see me this evening. all of uslive from madison's acquaintances forever changes on this contrast. he was mad figure in the little guy. the contrast is a moral dimension, too. james madison was a great man who helped build a republic. he was also an ambitious and sometimes small word man who stumped, spoke, counted votes, pulled wires, scratched back some steps in. he would not be afraid of the contrast. for his deepest thinking told him that the builders of liberty had to know and sometimes use the materials of passion and self-advancement. before is the continuation of politics by other means, it makes sense to introduce madison on the battlefield, even a dubious one. americans ignore him there, too because we divide our words into two categories. those are the bad pestering washington's crossing, pickett's charge, d-day him those we ignore his unseemly or botched or both. but our present experience of asking us and in iraq may eliminate the war of 1812. they were miscalculations and disasters in mr. madison's wor
of meeting a possible sewer, her future husband, told a friend agree that the madison had asked to see me this evening. all of uslive from madison's acquaintances forever changes on this contrast. he was mad figure in the little guy. the contrast is a moral dimension, too. james madison was a great man who helped build a republic. he was also an ambitious and sometimes small word man who stumped, spoke, counted votes, pulled wires, scratched back some steps in. he would not be afraid of the...
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Oct 20, 2011
10/11
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WJLA
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use of a medicine to put him to sleep. >> we are in pharmacological never never land. it is a potentially dangerous dosage. >> he showed the court a video that demonstrated the proper use of the madison. in a surgical setting and the patient was never left alone. >> i am asked every day i am in the operating room, are you going to give me the drug that killed michael jackson? i get that question daily. this is a fear that patients do not need to have. >> the defense will present their witnesses after the prosecution is done. expected among them, their own propofol expert. >>> still ahead, check your refrigerator. there is a bad salad recall. >> a day at a high-school get too spirited. >> in montgomery county teacher accused of choking a student spent the entire day on the keurig has over 200 varieties from 20 leading brands including green mountain coffee. it's the way to brew everyone's favorite cup in under a minute. way to brew. captioned by the national captioning institute --www.ncicap.org-- >>> we're nearing closing arguments for in montgomery county teacher accused of physically assaulting her first grade students. >> she was back on the stand testifying in her own defense. >>
use of a medicine to put him to sleep. >> we are in pharmacological never never land. it is a potentially dangerous dosage. >> he showed the court a video that demonstrated the proper use of the madison. in a surgical setting and the patient was never left alone. >> i am asked every day i am in the operating room, are you going to give me the drug that killed michael jackson? i get that question daily. this is a fear that patients do not need to have. >> the defense will...
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Oct 21, 2011
10/11
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COM
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those were the days. >> we could use some of that again. but so what madison does is he invents the first national political party to oppose hamilton. and he-- the first step he takes, he and his best friend thomas jefferson, his eight years older best, best friend, they take a vacation in the summer of 171. they leave philadelphia, the capital to go to new york city, and they go up the hudson to lake george and lake champlain, and their they're canoeing, fishing, and then they come back to new england, to new york, and they go back. but there's a lawyer in new york city who's a good friend of hamiltons and he writes him a letter in philadelphia and says there's a passionate courtship between these two men. and enemies of yours in new york state. so they're collecting political allies. in another state. >> jon: that is the best road trip movie i could ever imagine. i imagine them in like a convertible and then you here like, i feel good,nd then they're like driving. how do they-- is their goal at this point to create the two party system or is their goal merel
those were the days. >> we could use some of that again. but so what madison does is he invents the first national political party to oppose hamilton. and he-- the first step he takes, he and his best friend thomas jefferson, his eight years older best, best friend, they take a vacation in the summer of 171. they leave philadelphia, the capital to go to new york city, and they go up the hudson to lake george and lake champlain, and their they're canoeing, fishing, and then they come back...
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Oct 2, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN2
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well, forrand had to look at the manuscript and figure out where madison made changes in 1921, roughly. fortunately as he tells us, it wasn't so hard to do because the ink madison used in 1921 faded in a different way than the ink he used in the 1780s. so he could pull this off. and then if you look at his version, he has little devices by which a scholar or a very interested educated reader can look and see when -- which version of the document was written. look, this is a treasure trove for historians, and for jurist. in 1987, james hudson, who was the chief of the manuscript division at the library of congress, published an article on this, and he pointed out that many states did not even have published versions of their debates. and that those that existed were flawed, hopelessly flawed, because they were bias temperatures the federalists. the federalists often paid for their publication, and there's no reason why they should gift publish to the opposition. there was considerable amount hudson was right. pennsylvania was the worst. they published only the supreme speeches of two federalists, james thomas and
well, forrand had to look at the manuscript and figure out where madison made changes in 1921, roughly. fortunately as he tells us, it wasn't so hard to do because the ink madison used in 1921 faded in a different way than the ink he used in the 1780s. so he could pull this off. and then if you look at his version, he has little devices by which a scholar or a very interested educated reader can look and see when -- which version of the document was written. look, this is a treasure trove for...
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Oct 27, 2011
10/11
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KTVU
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george and i have tickets-- four free passes to the knicks-bulls game at madison square garden. aah! can you go? tell kramer to meet uscorner at 7:00. all right. we're going to pick you up in a limo. that's right, baby doll. when we pick you up, i'm murphy, and george is o'brien. i can't tell you now. it's a long story. i am serious. ok. ok, bye. driver, we have to make a little stop first. i know. he knows? he knows? where are we going? why are we pulling off here? maybe it's a shortcut. we're going to grand central. there's no traffic. driver, why are we getting off this exit? to pick up the other members of your party. right. the other members of our party. what other members of our party? i didn't know we were in a party. the jig is up. we never should've started this jig. it was a good jig. it was a terrible, terrible jig. they're going to know you're not o'brien. there could be more than one o'brien who ordered a limo. you don't look like any o'brien. you should've been o'brien. do i still have to be murphy? yes! it makes no sense me being murphy. i'm seinfeld. you're murphy! let's jump out of the car. we're doi
george and i have tickets-- four free passes to the knicks-bulls game at madison square garden. aah! can you go? tell kramer to meet uscorner at 7:00. all right. we're going to pick you up in a limo. that's right, baby doll. when we pick you up, i'm murphy, and george is o'brien. i can't tell you now. it's a long story. i am serious. ok. ok, bye. driver, we have to make a little stop first. i know. he knows? he knows? where are we going? why are we pulling off here? maybe it's a shortcut. we're...
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Oct 25, 2011
10/11
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WBAL
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the singer brought up his need for a steep medications. >> he talked about intravenously to madison. -- intravenous sleep medicine. he used the word juice. >> last week schaefer testify for the prosecution that the actions were unconscionable and unethical. the lieutenant governor took the stand today in the trial against the senator. as david explains, the defense attorneys hope the testimony will refuse to the extent of his involvement. >> anthony brown took the witness stand for the defense against state senator ulysses. the lieutenant governor described him as "lacking in organizational skills." the defense is trying to plant doubt that the senator did not intend to do anything wrong. he is charged with extortion and lying to the fbi. prosecutors claim that the senator was paid to injured $45,000 to do legislative favors for the grocer. the statute has the word "knowingly" in it. they have portrayed him as not very bright or astute and he paid little attention to detail. the lieutenant has known him since 1994. he was his campaign manager. he says he was a mentor personally unprofessionally. lieutenant said he is an h
the singer brought up his need for a steep medications. >> he talked about intravenously to madison. -- intravenous sleep medicine. he used the word juice. >> last week schaefer testify for the prosecution that the actions were unconscionable and unethical. the lieutenant governor took the stand today in the trial against the senator. as david explains, the defense attorneys hope the testimony will refuse to the extent of his involvement. >> anthony brown took the witness...
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by and before the presidential election of course old madison thurman some. investor in us were bitterly disappointed. both because of the cancun two thousand and country condition and the relationship friendship between you and blood in your party are there to even talk humiliate the new president viktor usually in publicly but now either i think due to victoria over due to the trial and the sentence. has got back all the support of your green investors because solidly to support so so so what you're implying is that the political preferences the political situation in ukraine is changing today because the because of the trial yes yes and. i think if you were was not arrested the result would be so dramatic and so she understood the rest of very favorable for her politically and that's why looking at her behavior and what how he offended the jack church how her how the whole shirt under the jacket and the rules of behavior in the courts themselves i think he was emotional wanted to be arrested for some time being who for the same claims that you buy europe's pressure she w
by and before the presidential election of course old madison thurman some. investor in us were bitterly disappointed. both because of the cancun two thousand and country condition and the relationship friendship between you and blood in your party are there to even talk humiliate the new president viktor usually in publicly but now either i think due to victoria over due to the trial and the sentence. has got back all the support of your green investors because solidly to support so so so what...
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hope to achieve tonight as well as the greek arms purchases let's go live to marshall bacchis a global investment strategist at madison street partners he's joining us on the line now from denver usa. very good evening to you thanks for being live on r.t. right now the e.u. has already announced several for its a pleasure eyes of its bailout fund at the same time as telling investors there are serious losses you want to vest yourself would you put money into the bailout fund right now. no i wouldn't i think it's fundamentally unfair look for the problem of the of the whole. e.c.b. or brought the eurozone economy is one of financial architecture you've got to go back to this flawed financial architecture would started with with the currency union without a fiscal union but we were all told that one ball was the same as another whether it be an italian bond or a german board and now effectively the rules of the games have been have been changed in the bank has been forced to take this haircut in effect they're being punished for the wrong thing. but i guess you know the argument is even if you have fifty percent haircut even more some people are sayin
hope to achieve tonight as well as the greek arms purchases let's go live to marshall bacchis a global investment strategist at madison street partners he's joining us on the line now from denver usa. very good evening to you thanks for being live on r.t. right now the e.u. has already announced several for its a pleasure eyes of its bailout fund at the same time as telling investors there are serious losses you want to vest yourself would you put money into the bailout fund right now. no i...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 26, 2011
10/11
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SFGTV
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save the slots in this car year because there is a $1.9 million reserve balance that is available, but what happens in your out years? >> paris madison for dcwy. we included in the reserves. we're using $1.9 million. it is my understanding at this point in time that these are one-time funds in using it at this time for one-time funding. we will be working to see what will happen going forward. maybe i did not understand the question. did i answer the question? supervisor chu: you are hitting added that we have this one- time source available for this purpose, but i would imagine the need will continue on to of the child-care slots, so i am wondering what is the plan moving forward for this? will it require a replay toward the starioritzation within your funding? >> there are cost pressures on the city in terms of ongoing commitment, but it is hard to imagine doing this for just this year and unraveling it, though it will be part of our strategizing together with first five of what the priorities are within the portfolio investments, in making sure we are supporting the title five providers to our system and helping support low- income families. this is important. not to say that ever
save the slots in this car year because there is a $1.9 million reserve balance that is available, but what happens in your out years? >> paris madison for dcwy. we included in the reserves. we're using $1.9 million. it is my understanding at this point in time that these are one-time funds in using it at this time for one-time funding. we will be working to see what will happen going forward. maybe i did not understand the question. did i answer the question? supervisor chu: you are...
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the un per se. dick holbrooke when he was alive used to say blaming the un for many of those assertions is like blaming madison square garden for the poor basketball record of the new york knicks it's the people who inhabit the building who make the decisions the states who are responsible so occasionally they come together in the first persian gulf war in one nine hundred ninety one was one occasion in libya another occasion in between there were lots of dismal occasions on which no decisions were made but occasionally and i would say libya is the most recent example. what comes together is the politics the capacity the moral argument and the legal argument and there is action next door in syria none of those happens to be present so there is no action it's hard to blame the united nations rather than its one hundred ninety three members ok well ruth i mean if we can stick with libya i mean look at nine hundred seventy three i guess we can agree or disagree on this on one form or another but a resolution was passed but it. was given a mandate because of the resolution to do far far more than what that resolut
the un per se. dick holbrooke when he was alive used to say blaming the un for many of those assertions is like blaming madison square garden for the poor basketball record of the new york knicks it's the people who inhabit the building who make the decisions the states who are responsible so occasionally they come together in the first persian gulf war in one nine hundred ninety one was one occasion in libya another occasion in between there were lots of dismal occasions on which no decisions...
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Oct 4, 2011
10/11
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MSNBC
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use your position as governor to change these things? >> steve, does he get past it? >> within the republican primary, yes. >> in the general? >> he's a flawed candidate in the general. >> steve, joe madisongreat to have you with us. >> thank you. >>> dick cheney wants president obama to apologize for killing another terrorist? shooter is in the "zone" next. >>> and if republicans paid more attention to what ronald reagan said about taxes, they wouldn't be accusing president obama of class warfare. you won't want to miss this one. we're america's natural gas and here's what we did today: supported nearly 3 million steady jobs across our country... ... scientists, technicians, engineers, machinists... ... adding nearly 400 billion dollars to our economy... we're at work providing power to almost a quarter of our homes and businesses... ... and giving us cleaner rides to work and school... and tomorrow, we could do even more. cleaner, domestic, abundant and creating jobs now. we're america's natural gas. the smarter power, today. learn more at anga.us. wait a second... with olay challenge that. new regenerist wrinkle revolution... relaxes the look of wrinkles instantly, and the look of deep
use your position as governor to change these things? >> steve, does he get past it? >> within the republican primary, yes. >> in the general? >> he's a flawed candidate in the general. >> steve, joe madisongreat to have you with us. >> thank you. >>> dick cheney wants president obama to apologize for killing another terrorist? shooter is in the "zone" next. >>> and if republicans paid more attention to what ronald reagan said...
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Oct 4, 2011
10/11
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MSNBCW
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use your position as governor to change these things? >> steve, does he get past it? >> within the republican primary, yes. >> in the general? >> he's a flawed candidate in the general. >> steve, joe madison, always great to have you with us. >> thank you. >>> dick cheney wants president obama to apologize for killing another terrorist? shooter is in the "zone" next. >>> and if republicans paid more attention to what ronald reagan said about taxes, they wouldn't be accusing president obama of class warfare. you won't want to miss this one. [ female announcer ] starbucks via® is planted the same... ♪ ...harvested the same... ♪ ...and roasted the same as our other premium coffees. ♪ it only makes sense it would taste the same. so, try it for yourself. buy a pack of 100% natural starbucks via® ready brew. we promise you'll love it or we'll send you a bag of starbucks coffee. it's the starbucks via® taste promise. look for it at starbucks stores and where you buy groceries. and people. and the planes can seem the same. so, it comes down to the people. because: bad weather, the price of oil those are every airline's reality. and solutions will not come from 500 tons of metal and a paintjob. th
use your position as governor to change these things? >> steve, does he get past it? >> within the republican primary, yes. >> in the general? >> he's a flawed candidate in the general. >> steve, joe madison, always great to have you with us. >> thank you. >>> dick cheney wants president obama to apologize for killing another terrorist? shooter is in the "zone" next. >>> and if republicans paid more attention to what ronald reagan...
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Oct 23, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN
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it was the introduction that government would take care of us for madison. we moved in the cover -- in the way that the government would take over our educational standards. we had a department of education. the family is supposed to be responsible for this. to deliver this powernd authority to washington d.c. has been very detrimental to us. one other area that occurred during this period of time, as so many things were changing, it was th issue of money. the issue of money -- a major cape -- change occurred in 1971 when this country rejected the issue of honest money. it issuedn an age of a spendthrift government. since that time, the spending has exploded, the deficits have exploded. the money supply has exploded. at the same time, our personal liberties have been undermined. there is a direct correlation with this. biblically, there is a strong admonition about honest money. isaiah talked about the debasement of the currency. debasement is inflation. diluting the mail -- metals or clipping declines. -- the coins. it was wrong. in leviticus, they say that
it was the introduction that government would take care of us for madison. we moved in the cover -- in the way that the government would take over our educational standards. we had a department of education. the family is supposed to be responsible for this. to deliver this powernd authority to washington d.c. has been very detrimental to us. one other area that occurred during this period of time, as so many things were changing, it was th issue of money. the issue of money -- a major cape --...
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Oct 12, 2011
10/11
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WJLA
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the rainy days ahead of us. -- we had our fun in tehhe sun. off and on showers especially today. take a look at the rainfall totals. madison over half an inch.umberland a quarter of an inch. this does include the rainfall we saw yesterday evening and through the overnight hours. not just rain since midnight. most of the rain is in the shenandoah valley. and along the blue ridge. even stafford county, another sprinkle. what roads around the beltway. but no active rain showers at this moment. here is the wider view. most of the rate is in west virginia. however, notice from southern virginia all the way to the carolinas, more developing showers. that will continue to push northward. not rated consistently all day but often on times of rain. often on showers. the heaviest being west of blue ridge. temperatures are anywhere from the upper 50's. temperatures will not move all that much. fluctuating a few degrees throughout the day today. we will call it 64 the high. tomorrow and friday a chance of a few showers. still looks like we will see sunshine and clearing by the weekend. what is the latest on the roads? >>> brunswicks service is suspended
the rainy days ahead of us. -- we had our fun in tehhe sun. off and on showers especially today. take a look at the rainfall totals. madison over half an inch.umberland a quarter of an inch. this does include the rainfall we saw yesterday evening and through the overnight hours. not just rain since midnight. most of the rain is in the shenandoah valley. and along the blue ridge. even stafford county, another sprinkle. what roads around the beltway. but no active rain showers at this moment....
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Oct 7, 2011
10/11
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MSNBCW
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the republicans want nothing to do with that. joining me tonight sirius xm talk show host joe madison. good to have you with us tonight. e strategy the president had at his press conference telling the senators, look, if you don't vote for it you have to go home and explain it. he seems to be more aggressive. what do you make of it? >> i think he is aggressive and i disagree with boehner. i know for a fact the president is not campaigning. what he is doing is what he said he would do. he is taking the message to the people. you are right, they are not only not going to vote for it, which they have to explain why they are not going to vote for it but they are not going to cast a vote and particularly in the house, because here's what is going to happen. the people who are in new york, california, chicago, even dayton, ohio, where i was born, they are now in the streets. once they take a vote and they vote against it as they will, now these members of congress become a target. so the target now goes not only on wall street, but they also will go to the mem members of congress and that's what they don't want, ed. that's wh
the republicans want nothing to do with that. joining me tonight sirius xm talk show host joe madison. good to have you with us tonight. e strategy the president had at his press conference telling the senators, look, if you don't vote for it you have to go home and explain it. he seems to be more aggressive. what do you make of it? >> i think he is aggressive and i disagree with boehner. i know for a fact the president is not campaigning. what he is doing is what he said he would do. he...
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Oct 19, 2011
10/11
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WUSA
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the mall 9th and madison. homecoming for howard universities looks great for both events. beautiful weekend. that's three out of four for us with sunshine on sunday. >> we'll take >>> the consensus throughout the capital's locker room today was, yes, we won four straight and we're undefeated but we're not happy with the way they played. if they're not happy with tonight's performance, they may just be crazy. alex ovechkin hosting florida. first period caps on the power play. johanson seeks the puck. to the third kanuble with the pass. under a minute to go. simmons passes the puck. caps win 3-0. go to 5-0 for the first time in franchise history. but they're still not satisfied. >> we have to keep rolling. we have to keep going. i think it's a good thing. we haven't played the way we want to. tonight was a little better. we just have to keep on going. >> the suspense is over early this week for terrapin nation. they announced today that freshman quarterback cj brown would be the starter when the terps travel to tallahassee on saturday. danny o'brien has struggled all season long and was finally benched for good. since then b
the mall 9th and madison. homecoming for howard universities looks great for both events. beautiful weekend. that's three out of four for us with sunshine on sunday. >> we'll take >>> the consensus throughout the capital's locker room today was, yes, we won four straight and we're undefeated but we're not happy with the way they played. if they're not happy with tonight's performance, they may just be crazy. alex ovechkin hosting florida. first period caps on the power play....
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Oct 14, 2011
10/11
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WUSA
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staring to pick up some of the rain returning, especially south and west of town around madison and ruckersville. we see the yellows and oranges and will watch that move toward us later this morning and be with us through early afternoon. showers and storms through midday. we get to around 70, 71 we finish with sunshine and 78. >>> thank you, howard. in sports,. >> reporter: it was 1999 the last time the skins were in first place this late in the season. hopefully they stay there. dc is counting on rushing offense to score and it is hoping for help in the passing game as well. >> we have to go out there and examine our technique and releases and make sure we are in the right place at the right time. >>> no word on the status of chris cooley for this weekend's game. he was limited at practice thursday. the coach said he had to get his knee drained to relieve swelling. >>> the washington caps are a perfect 9-0 to start their season. that includes a win last night over at their big rivals, the penguins. dc had a big lead but with less than four minutes left the penguins scored a power play goal and that knotted it up at 2 all. it stayed that way until halfway thro
staring to pick up some of the rain returning, especially south and west of town around madison and ruckersville. we see the yellows and oranges and will watch that move toward us later this morning and be with us through early afternoon. showers and storms through midday. we get to around 70, 71 we finish with sunshine and 78. >>> thank you, howard. in sports,. >> reporter: it was 1999 the last time the skins were in first place this late in the season. hopefully they stay...
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Oct 10, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN
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so i will use the federalist papers, the writings of madison, but i willnd jay, not use it because they the drafters of the constitution. those papers to show what those words meant to the society that adopted. that is the same thing i do with legislation. what do those words mean? what is the fair understanding of them? once i find that, that is my answer, and that understanding does not change. for example, whether the death penalty is proscribed by the eighth amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. the death penalty may be a very bad idea, but no american ever voted to adopt a constitutional provision that eliminated it, that eliminated that as an option. the living constitutionalists will say times have changed and it is up to meet to decide what is cruel and unusual punishment. that is a constitution and has no bite if the constitution means whatever we would like to mean today. why have a constitution? you don't need a constitution for that. all you need is a legislature. they will express the current attitude of society much better than my court will. we don't kn
so i will use the federalist papers, the writings of madison, but i willnd jay, not use it because they the drafters of the constitution. those papers to show what those words meant to the society that adopted. that is the same thing i do with legislation. what do those words mean? what is the fair understanding of them? once i find that, that is my answer, and that understanding does not change. for example, whether the death penalty is proscribed by the eighth amendment, which prohibits cruel...
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Oct 13, 2011
10/11
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KQEH
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using home as people to leave it to other people. that is crazy. in wisconsin, take back the land madisonand rebuilds abandoned homes. ♪ housing is a human rights ♪ that is why we stand and fight >> this is a movement that started a few years ago. we're not coming down from on high. we're coming from the streets where things are happening, where the cuts are happening here in madison. >> the system is set up to empoverish people. along with the poverty that these programs are causing, also the criminalization of poverty -- tavis: your action is not just immoral, but unethical and illegal, that you would just take over a home that is anti -- for those who think that your behavior is immoral and illegal, how do you respond? >> to start off, housing is a human right. we all agree that we have a right to live. why are we talking about housing -- but that is how you have to talk about it in a capitalistic society, i own this property. >> the nation depends on how it treats its poor. ok? this is not great. i was homeless for seven years. it was a difficult thing to try to pull yourself up when
using home as people to leave it to other people. that is crazy. in wisconsin, take back the land madisonand rebuilds abandoned homes. ♪ housing is a human rights ♪ that is why we stand and fight >> this is a movement that started a few years ago. we're not coming down from on high. we're coming from the streets where things are happening, where the cuts are happening here in madison. >> the system is set up to empoverish people. along with the poverty that these programs are...
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Oct 10, 2011
10/11
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the society that adopted them? and so, i will use, i will use the federalist papers, the writings of madison, hamilton and j., but i won't use it because they were the drafters of the constitution. j. was not one of the drafters. those papers to show what those words meant to the society that adopted them. and that the same thing i do with legislation. what do those words mean, what's that their understanding of them. and once i find that, that's my answer. and that understanding does not change, so for example, whether the death penalty as prescribed, is proscribed by the eighth amendment which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. death penalty may be a bad idea but no, no american ever voted to adopt a constitutional provision that eliminate it as an option. so, you know, now, the living constitution will say, times have changed and it's up to me to decide what's going on in unusual punishment. that's a constitution that has no bite. if the constitution means whatever we would like it to me today, why have the constitution? you don't need one for that. all you need is a legislature. they will express -- in fac
the society that adopted them? and so, i will use, i will use the federalist papers, the writings of madison, hamilton and j., but i won't use it because they were the drafters of the constitution. j. was not one of the drafters. those papers to show what those words meant to the society that adopted them. and that the same thing i do with legislation. what do those words mean, what's that their understanding of them. and once i find that, that's my answer. and that understanding does not...
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Oct 23, 2011
10/11
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the incident happened at ft. madison in the '70s, it was hard to get a knife. so i made a knife out of bone, out of a t-bone steak. we usedback in the day. i sharpened it down and i was going to stab the guy with it. before i could stab the guy with it, they had busted me with it. they saw it in my hand. they took it. the name stuck. the guys in the penitentiary called me t-bone. >> but it was taylor's desire to rise to the top of the gang hierarchy on the outside what led him to conduct the cold-blooded murders. for which he will spend the rest of his life behind bars. it happened at a ruckus party in waterloo, iowa. when police arrived to shut it down, taylor grabbed one of the officer's pistols. >> i just shot the man three times, right? everybody broke and run. and the other police, he was still down, right? so i ran over there and i shot him three times. it wasn't because i was on no drugs or alcohol. i wasn't impaired, you know. >> and afterwards? >> trying to get away, it wasn't no remorse or nothing. i wasn't even thinking about turning myself in or nothing like that, right? i hid for about five or six days in the
the incident happened at ft. madison in the '70s, it was hard to get a knife. so i made a knife out of bone, out of a t-bone steak. we usedback in the day. i sharpened it down and i was going to stab the guy with it. before i could stab the guy with it, they had busted me with it. they saw it in my hand. they took it. the name stuck. the guys in the penitentiary called me t-bone. >> but it was taylor's desire to rise to the top of the gang hierarchy on the outside what led him to conduct...
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Oct 29, 2011
10/11
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CNN
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the smart phone feature used to fix miss spellings. but once in a while it inserts words the phone user never intended. website founder gillian madisonmissions a day. her business idea came to life after she was burned one too many times. >> kind of the straw that broke the camel's back. i sent an e-mail to a friend of mine asking her if she had ever fondled herself. i meant to ask her if she had ever googled herself. >> that was one year ago this october. now she said she gets 1.25 million page views a day and lots of doubters who stay texts cannot be real. >> again, just from the sheer volcanoe volumes of submissions i get, i refuse to believe there are millions of people making up fake auto correct. madison explains, people can't replicate some auto corrections because the feature corrects differently for each user. learning if what's commonly typed. >>> that person has definitely typed that into their phone before. so that's kind of an insight into their psyche. we're communicating, typing, talking so fast, we're not even saying, hey, let me look at what i'm sending before i'm hitting send. >> fast but not so fast to not take tim
the smart phone feature used to fix miss spellings. but once in a while it inserts words the phone user never intended. website founder gillian madisonmissions a day. her business idea came to life after she was burned one too many times. >> kind of the straw that broke the camel's back. i sent an e-mail to a friend of mine asking her if she had ever fondled herself. i meant to ask her if she had ever googled herself. >> that was one year ago this october. now she said she gets 1.25...
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Oct 19, 2011
10/11
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us in times of peace standing armies without the consent of our legislators and headquartered large bodies of armed troops among us. this value is reflected in the federalist papers and the father of our constitution, james madison, wrote a standing military force with an overgrown executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. the means of defense against foreign danger have been always the instruments of tyranny at home. discord value and this heritage is today reflected in such places as the third amendment which prohibits peacetime quarter of soldiers in private homes without consent and in the 1878 federal criminal statute still on the books today which prohibit willfully using the military as -- unless expressly authorized by congress or the constitution. this brings me to the point of my remarks today. there is danger in overmilitarizing our approach to al qaeda and its affiliates. there is risk in permitting and expecting the u.s. military to extend its powerful reach into traditional areas could a clear reserve for civilian law enforcement in this country. against an unconventional non state actor that does not play by the rules, operates in secret, observes no geographic boundaries, constantly
us in times of peace standing armies without the consent of our legislators and headquartered large bodies of armed troops among us. this value is reflected in the federalist papers and the father of our constitution, james madison, wrote a standing military force with an overgrown executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. the means of defense against foreign danger have been always the instruments of tyranny at home. discord value and this heritage is today reflected in such...
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Oct 24, 2011
10/11
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the ink is barely dry. "what kind of government have you've given us?" "a republic, madam, if you can keep it." all of our founders, adams, madison, they all worried about this. can we keep it together? the only thing i would say is that surely on the other side of that quote, i end on optimism. there is a person in this audience that has said to me with in this past month from this state that we're going down. what evidence do you have that it is not true. buck up. i would say they are paying close attention. every great leading nations eventually have gone down. in every one of them, i am quite certain people were at the in denial or did not see a coming or said it cannot happen here. if we fall prey to that, we may suffer the consequences sooner than we need to. i think it is premature. we should never surrender to the fatalism about these things. this is based on faith. i admitted. it has been well said that democracy always was a leap of faith. there is time to deal with the daunting arithmetic. it will not be easy. there is time to restore a growth rate that gives us a chance to put people back to work, rebuild the importan
the ink is barely dry. "what kind of government have you've given us?" "a republic, madam, if you can keep it." all of our founders, adams, madison, they all worried about this. can we keep it together? the only thing i would say is that surely on the other side of that quote, i end on optimism. there is a person in this audience that has said to me with in this past month from this state that we're going down. what evidence do you have that it is not true. buck up. i would...
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candidacy and he also praised president hu i liked him so moved all the updates on madison as we got them ok thank you marina we hope you'll keep us posted on what's happening on that russian calling investment fund thanks very much for that ok now let's take a look at how the markets are doing all of those trading year four day high investors bet that lower crude stockpiles in the u.s. indicate that fields amount may increase and the world's largest economy brant is trading at one hundred and three dollars per barrel. is eighty two dollars a barrel this hour ok now let's cross over to asia where stocks rallied on thursday helped by positive cues from wall street after a better than expected u.s. jobs figures japan's nikkei end of the day up almost one point seven percent hong kong among the leading imbalances with the hang sang ending over five and a half percent in the black and european stocks are high in early trading with banks leading the gains investors are waiting for the latest rate decisions from the european central bank and the bank of england magnetics is up four point nine percent leading gains for the banking sector
candidacy and he also praised president hu i liked him so moved all the updates on madison as we got them ok thank you marina we hope you'll keep us posted on what's happening on that russian calling investment fund thanks very much for that ok now let's take a look at how the markets are doing all of those trading year four day high investors bet that lower crude stockpiles in the u.s. indicate that fields amount may increase and the world's largest economy brant is trading at one hundred and...
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Oct 22, 2011
10/11
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the 1930's. >> richard is joining us from wellington, florida. we are within a the shlaes and james madison. >> you mentioned the important role of the publication, houses in new york. -- publication houses in new york. i visited the elite special collections and went to the will keep files. i was very struck by the role and campaign of people like john whitney, william harding jackson, the managing director of the whitney co., and of william mcilvaine in the chicago area. i would like to know if you would talk a little bit about their role in the campaign and, more broadly, the level of support from melbourne and b. j. h. whitney companies in new york that stem from mr. willkie's time in new york in 1949 and maybe before that. thank you so much. >> he actually passed away in 1944. >> wendell willkie was a corporate man. he worked a commonwealth and southern, which was a company put together to wire the south korean the united states. -- to wire the southern united states. it would not be surprising if you heard names like that associated, but not all establishment republicans with money wo
the 1930's. >> richard is joining us from wellington, florida. we are within a the shlaes and james madison. >> you mentioned the important role of the publication, houses in new york. -- publication houses in new york. i visited the elite special collections and went to the will keep files. i was very struck by the role and campaign of people like john whitney, william harding jackson, the managing director of the whitney co., and of william mcilvaine in the chicago area. i would...
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Oct 7, 2011
10/11
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using rock as its cause. with the nightwatchman, it is guerrilla warfare. i like tel mobile i can be, too. for example, when the union uprising was occurring in madison, i saw that one day on tv. i was there playing to 100,000 people on the steps of the capital the not be the next day. i have two boys under two, and there is definitely a balancing act that takes place. i second job was about to be born the day i went to madison. my wife knew what i was thinking when i watched that protest in madison. we agree that our borders are going to be union men. it is crucially important to be present in the lives of your children. they are my most important cause that i fight for, but i feel an added responsibility that i want to leave them a better world than the one we have now. i don't want to leave this mess around for them to clean up. i want to swing as hard as i can to straighten things out for them. tavis: you went to school where? >> harvard university. tavis: i am curious undertake as to the e. lee culture in our society. it seems to me that as a guy who came out of harvard, i would think what they would teach you is you should not speak ill of anot
using rock as its cause. with the nightwatchman, it is guerrilla warfare. i like tel mobile i can be, too. for example, when the union uprising was occurring in madison, i saw that one day on tv. i was there playing to 100,000 people on the steps of the capital the not be the next day. i have two boys under two, and there is definitely a balancing act that takes place. i second job was about to be born the day i went to madison. my wife knew what i was thinking when i watched that protest in...
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Oct 22, 2011
10/11
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us here in places like indiana. i would argue, yes, it can happen again. he is a game changer. count on it. he is not the left will keep. >> the author of "the forgotten man." james madison, prof. of history at indiana university. david willkie, the grandson of, wendell willkie. we thank the russellville historical society for letting us conduct this program here. as we look typical life and career of wendell willkie, a passed away in the fall of 1944. >> window welty, republican candidate for the presidency of the united states in 1940, taken suddenly at age 52. dominated by popular acclaim, wendell willkie won the admiration of all his countrymen for his energy, policy, and forthright courage. he spent the last years of his vigorous life in an effort to promote mutual understanding and good will among all nations. they talk with churchill in london and shared experiences with britain's average pokes. -- folks. he visited and talk with the people of russia, of the middle east, and of china, renewing his strong faith in a unity of all people. a great american and world citizen who will be sorely missed in the critical years ahead. >> the contenders features profiles of k
us here in places like indiana. i would argue, yes, it can happen again. he is a game changer. count on it. he is not the left will keep. >> the author of "the forgotten man." james madison, prof. of history at indiana university. david willkie, the grandson of, wendell willkie. we thank the russellville historical society for letting us conduct this program here. as we look typical life and career of wendell willkie, a passed away in the fall of 1944. >> window welty,...
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Oct 9, 2011
10/11
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again, believed that, that the northern majority in congress would use this tariff to strangle the southern commerce. and mason was opposed to it, to the tariff. james madison comes to gunston hall in late 1783 after this tariff issue's come up, and madison leaves convinced that mason really doesn't have much interest in remaining in the union. that if union breaks up after the revolutionary war, that mason appears to be prepared to live with it. another device of sectional issue comes up the next year in 1784, has to do with access to the mississippi river which is controlled by the spanish at this point. and the spanish close the port of new orleans to american shippers. this is a major problem for american settlers in the southwest because they rely on the mississippi river to get their crops to market. the responsibility for dealing with the problem falls to john jay. jay is the secretary of foreign affairs for congress under the articles of confederation. jay just happens to be from new york which doesn't help. and, um, jay seems willing to agree to the spanish, seems willing to accept the spanish decision to close the mississippi if spain will make so
again, believed that, that the northern majority in congress would use this tariff to strangle the southern commerce. and mason was opposed to it, to the tariff. james madison comes to gunston hall in late 1783 after this tariff issue's come up, and madison leaves convinced that mason really doesn't have much interest in remaining in the union. that if union breaks up after the revolutionary war, that mason appears to be prepared to live with it. another device of sectional issue comes up the...
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movement the good and evil from all over the country will begin a prolonged occupation of freedom plaza in washington d.c. and like madison wisconsin like tell us where we are not leaving. well earlier i spoke to somebody who is a part of this idea that israel cartoonist columnist and author ted rall i asked him to tell me a little bit more about this movement and what those involved hope to achieve. well the american left has been essentially asleep for the last forty years and since nine eleven we've been waiting for the for the reawakening well the arc of the financial crisis that began in two thousand and eight has weakened has woken people up and now the question is how things are going to unreliable in terms of the system politically militarily economically so looking for a new future a lot of people are scared but a lot of people see an opportunity to take our country in a new direction so the occupy wall street movement the october two thousand and eleven movement they're part of a whole new approach demonstrating in the past what we would do is we would show up at ten o'clock in the morning get a parade permit march around and chant sl
movement the good and evil from all over the country will begin a prolonged occupation of freedom plaza in washington d.c. and like madison wisconsin like tell us where we are not leaving. well earlier i spoke to somebody who is a part of this idea that israel cartoonist columnist and author ted rall i asked him to tell me a little bit more about this movement and what those involved hope to achieve. well the american left has been essentially asleep for the last forty years and since nine...
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Oct 24, 2011
10/11
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it was the introduction that government would take care of us for madison. moved in the cover -- in the way that the government would take over our educational standards. we had a department of education. the family is supposed to be responsible for this. to deliver this power and authority to washington d.c. has been very detrimental to us. one other area that occurred during this period of time, as so many things were changing, it was the issue of money. the issue of money -- a major cape -- change occurred in 1971 when this country rejected the issue of honest money. it issued in an age of a spendthrift government. since that time, the spending has exploded, the deficits have exploded. the money supply has exploded. at the same time, our personal liberties have been undermined. there is a direct correlation with this. biblically, there is a strong admonition about honest money. isaiah talked about the debasement of the currency. debasement is inflation. diluting the mail -- metals or clipping declines. -- the coins. it was wrong. in leviticus, they say th
it was the introduction that government would take care of us for madison. moved in the cover -- in the way that the government would take over our educational standards. we had a department of education. the family is supposed to be responsible for this. to deliver this power and authority to washington d.c. has been very detrimental to us. one other area that occurred during this period of time, as so many things were changing, it was the issue of money. the issue of money -- a major cape --...
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Oct 18, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN
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, the fact that he had kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies without consent of legislatures. bodies of armed troops among us. this was reflected in the federalist papers, and james madison wrote, a standing military force with an overgrown executive will not be safe to liberty. the means of defense against foreign danger has been always the instrument of terror in the at home. -- tyranny at home. this is reflected in places like the third amendment. and in the 1878 federal criminal statute. which prohibits will fully using the military escoraa posee comititus. this brings me to the point of my remarks today. there is danger in over militarizing our approach to al qaeda and it's awful lot since. there is risk in permitting and expecting the u.s. military to extend its powerful reach into traditional areas typically reserved for civilian law enforcement in this country. against an unconventional non- state actor that does not play by the rules, operates in secret, observes the geographic limits, constantly metastasizes and continues to look for opportunities to export terrorism to our homeland, we must use every tool at our disposal. the military should not and cannot be
, the fact that he had kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies without consent of legislatures. bodies of armed troops among us. this was reflected in the federalist papers, and james madison wrote, a standing military force with an overgrown executive will not be safe to liberty. the means of defense against foreign danger has been always the instrument of terror in the at home. -- tyranny at home. this is reflected in places like the third amendment. and in the 1878 federal criminal...