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Apr 21, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN3
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1950s is being the certain way. it's not the literal things as much as sort of the interpretive things and i kind of wanted to get in and do the literal reading of this period before all the other interpretations sort of emerge. um, okay, so it is now we're 25 minutes in i see down in the q&a section. there's already create questions uh, i don't know how many of them. will be interesting and how many might just be, you know, i know is that i think that's or whatever. so i was considering, you know reading a little bit about this book from this book and talking about it. i think i'm gonna maybe read for two minutes. okay? um, just the very beginning of book the introduction, you know. the 90s began on january 1st of 1990 except for the fact that of course, they did not decades are about cultural perception and culture can't read a clock. the 1950s started in the 1940s the 60s began when john kennedy demanded we go to the moon in 1962 and ended with the shooting at kent state in may of 1970. the 70s were conceived the
1950s is being the certain way. it's not the literal things as much as sort of the interpretive things and i kind of wanted to get in and do the literal reading of this period before all the other interpretations sort of emerge. um, okay, so it is now we're 25 minutes in i see down in the q&a section. there's already create questions uh, i don't know how many of them. will be interesting and how many might just be, you know, i know is that i think that's or whatever. so i was considering,...
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Apr 20, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN3
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but you somehow believe the way you view the world and the way your mind operates was a static thing, and that the experiences you had in the past where experienced by a version of you but they were experienced by a version of you that's actually an alien, at least to the person that you are now. so that was sort of my goal i also think it's a consequence that the 90s were the last decade of the 20th century but i have a sense that it may be the last decade where that to make sense, where you can frame a period of time, and say there were these sort of immutable values and shared characteristics and sort of but even those people who didn't enjoy it, who found themselves that against it or found themselves as ideologically adversarial with what was going on in the time these fellows had full understanding that this was this, kind of, she had experience that maybe was invisible at the time but seems very clear now. one thing i want to talk about, because, you know, i'm promoting this book, so i take a lot of interviews, do a lot of podcasts. set out to a magazine that interviewed me. he
but you somehow believe the way you view the world and the way your mind operates was a static thing, and that the experiences you had in the past where experienced by a version of you but they were experienced by a version of you that's actually an alien, at least to the person that you are now. so that was sort of my goal i also think it's a consequence that the 90s were the last decade of the 20th century but i have a sense that it may be the last decade where that to make sense, where you...
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Apr 14, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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to this person, talk this way. haven't socialized kids into how to use social media. we have enough science to begin to do that, the culture of cure ration, talk about how social media makes it easy to act in ugly ways to other people and i'm curious what effect teaching people how this works might have on their actual behavior. another thing we can do that is more challenging, people who are designing programs, my hope is they use this science to change the way these platforms operate to make it more challenging to get stuck in an echo chamber characterized by rumination of a sort that can lead to violence and moral outrage, from the power of social companies to leverage the science, to inform how their product operates and the hope is they begin to do that. a great question. >> my question is about rumination. you described it in a negative context around ruminating on a negative experience but can we ruminate on a positive experience that can lead to a negative outcome? >> great question. i don't know of any wor
to this person, talk this way. haven't socialized kids into how to use social media. we have enough science to begin to do that, the culture of cure ration, talk about how social media makes it easy to act in ugly ways to other people and i'm curious what effect teaching people how this works might have on their actual behavior. another thing we can do that is more challenging, people who are designing programs, my hope is they use this science to change the way these platforms operate to make...
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Apr 15, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 51
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how much can we choose to be a certain way versus another way? what is actually what is what is freedom to what extent is freedom always a delusion, but i'm curious to you sort of say a little bit more like if we are gonna take up this i don't know this prerogative of this perspective of like addiction can show us things that are broader than just this particular experience. we'd call addiction. what what would some of those kind of mysteries of the human condition be for you? yeah, i my mind actually goes to the americanness of some of those stories not because it's uniquely american some of those characteristics of a dictionary were just talking about but because we see it reflected in i think in our reactions to american-ness and our ideas about americanists and over and over again across cultures. i saw people construct and identity around addiction and reaction to addiction against addiction or even for addiction i mentioned thomas to quincy, but then there are also a lot of folks who really found it necessary in american culture to define t
how much can we choose to be a certain way versus another way? what is actually what is what is freedom to what extent is freedom always a delusion, but i'm curious to you sort of say a little bit more like if we are gonna take up this i don't know this prerogative of this perspective of like addiction can show us things that are broader than just this particular experience. we'd call addiction. what what would some of those kind of mysteries of the human condition be for you? yeah, i my mind...
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Apr 1, 2022
04/22
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LINKTV
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eye 37
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global citizens this way. that is a big step forward, those films and much of what we have around us falls into the category ofhe way things are that we can all see, adding science to the way things are, what we can't see but we have experts tellings, th together is what we need to move forward. and then creation occurs. you have the science, you have the observation and now you can make up ne things to he the world whh is happening all the time. i mean, the amount of creativity that's been going on during thitime, it's just amazing. - do we alsoee something like people, there's a bit of maybe a change in values that there's more space for companionship, maybe love, compared to direct rays of money? is that a shift that too? - i imagine there is how much that continues after everything opens up and people can get back to making money i don't know, but we should watch the births that take place nine months from now - your discovery of the flies. was that in the recent months or-- - no, i'm afraid to tell you th
global citizens this way. that is a big step forward, those films and much of what we have around us falls into the category ofhe way things are that we can all see, adding science to the way things are, what we can't see but we have experts tellings, th together is what we need to move forward. and then creation occurs. you have the science, you have the observation and now you can make up ne things to he the world whh is happening all the time. i mean, the amount of creativity that's been...
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Apr 10, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 29
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find the way to do it then find the way to do it. then you are forced to go inside this idea that works impossible and suddenly you find ways that you can do it and this is what happened any employees walk out or did you escort anyone out who didn't want to comply no, no, we didn't have that and in fact, everybody worked extremely extremely extremely diligently they all wanted the best. even those that they felt that cannot be done. they are the ones that eventually made it done and you know, once they the first month when so many things that were thinking are yeah impossible we were made possible that created a very different mindset in the remaining eight months. so the same people were trying to having this attitude in every obstacle. we were facing in front of us albert era essentially a visor life for 1993. i think you you joined the company are you burned out? is this your swan song now or even reinvigorated? i think i'm reinvigorate every year and i think that every year i'm becoming better manageable better better business pe
find the way to do it then find the way to do it. then you are forced to go inside this idea that works impossible and suddenly you find ways that you can do it and this is what happened any employees walk out or did you escort anyone out who didn't want to comply no, no, we didn't have that and in fact, everybody worked extremely extremely extremely diligently they all wanted the best. even those that they felt that cannot be done. they are the ones that eventually made it done and you know,...
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Apr 2, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN3
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eye 42
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of practicing polarization a way. that is so extreme. that doesn't allow for the traditional type of rivalries that at the end allowed. and countries to govern themselves. i always say that polarization is like cholesterol is good cholesterol and bad cholesterol. there is good polarization and bad polarization good polarization is the one that allows the exchanges that acts and the defenses of different groups, but end up having an agreement that allows the country to be governed. bad polarization is the one that makes the division so deep that makes it impossible for the polarized groups to act to you know to find some level of consensus and all of these of course is nurtured amplify the and add it with great potency by post truth. which is in the past we used to call it propaganda, but this is bigger than propaganda. this is not just a minister like gables that that was hitler's minister of propaganda or there is a ministry of propaganda in china. this is not that this is that plus a society where the diffusion of p
of practicing polarization a way. that is so extreme. that doesn't allow for the traditional type of rivalries that at the end allowed. and countries to govern themselves. i always say that polarization is like cholesterol is good cholesterol and bad cholesterol. there is good polarization and bad polarization good polarization is the one that allows the exchanges that acts and the defenses of different groups, but end up having an agreement that allows the country to be governed. bad...
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Apr 24, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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eye 51
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n ~' t long way to go. thank you so much for talkin: long way to go. you so much for talking us _ long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through _ long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through the - long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through the papers. i for talking us through the papers. you will be back later but for now, thank you. lizzy and david will be back again at 11:30. next on bbc news, travellers: a culture in crisis. a warning you may find some of the details in this programme upsetting. our kids spend more time at the graveyard burying someone through suicide than we actually do living an ordinary life. in the irish travelling community, more than one in ten deaths are suicides. it is a real—life consequence of travellers' lives. we live in the shadows of racism, discrimination, and oppression daily. human rights organisations say this is one of the most discriminated against ethnic groups in europe. our ireland is one that| continues to grievously fail our travelling community. and the stark statistics
n ~' t long way to go. thank you so much for talkin: long way to go. you so much for talking us _ long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through _ long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through the - long way to go. thank you so much for talking us through the papers. i for talking us through the papers. you will be back later but for now, thank you. lizzy and david will be back again at 11:30. next on bbc news, travellers: a culture in crisis. a warning you may find some of...
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Apr 21, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 76
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he put into it but in summer of 2015 i sat down and found inevitably a way to my own subject and way of writing about my own subject that i hope is a unique way. in the first part of hells angels, it is a fast burn basically a long paragraph that sets up the stakes for the rest of the work, percussive and filled with a series of emotion, very energized. you can feel the motorcycles rolling down the interstate waving chains around and causing a menace. hunter is riding with them not as a member officially but in the spiritual sense observing their behaviors and attitudes and relationship with the world and his own relationship in the process which my time in the marine corps when i was a member of the organization was largely taken the same way. i was a participant watching the marines around me as they live generally and fought war specifically. the marine corps is not the hells angels. i saw similarities between those groups, nevermind a direct connection between veterans and motorcycle clubs. one of the earliest struggles i had, they are somber by artistic design, they are very hea
he put into it but in summer of 2015 i sat down and found inevitably a way to my own subject and way of writing about my own subject that i hope is a unique way. in the first part of hells angels, it is a fast burn basically a long paragraph that sets up the stakes for the rest of the work, percussive and filled with a series of emotion, very energized. you can feel the motorcycles rolling down the interstate waving chains around and causing a menace. hunter is riding with them not as a member...
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82
Apr 15, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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eye 82
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one has to be way more, i think, scientific, in a weird way, and way more thoughtful, and these changesithin a day. you know, just flip a switch and suddenly silk doesn't involve a certain kind of water, and whether it is made in italy or france or china. these are global questions forfashion. have you reflected during the pandemic over what the future of fashion might look like? i think the future of fashion for me is exciting, because the future of the world and life is exciting. i mean, peoplejust went into outer space, and people who aren't even astronauts can go, civilians? i think it's really exciting, and it too will affect how we dress. once again, i'm going to say it. lifestyle, possibilities are unlimited. boundaries, that will affect fashion. well, you have certainly lived through some amazing milestones, and i think what has been so interesting during this pandemic is people really getting to see a lot of your personality on social media. yes, a bit too much actually! and commenting on how great you look, i mean, a photo of you in a sports bra went viral, and i wasjust wonde
one has to be way more, i think, scientific, in a weird way, and way more thoughtful, and these changesithin a day. you know, just flip a switch and suddenly silk doesn't involve a certain kind of water, and whether it is made in italy or france or china. these are global questions forfashion. have you reflected during the pandemic over what the future of fashion might look like? i think the future of fashion for me is exciting, because the future of the world and life is exciting. i mean,...
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Apr 13, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 33
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that way. don't figure out a way to solve problems in the broad general interest. if the general election decided who wins then people could go to congress and work for the general electorate and they would go there as proud democrats and proud republicans, but they would be incented to solve problems in the general interest and final five voting changes that whole system. it's already been adopted in alaska. so you'll watch alaska's results. the winner will not be chosen in any primary in alaska. it'll be chosen by a majority of general election voters and so the key point of final five voting is that it not that it's going to change who wins. necessarily, but that it will change what winners do what they have the freedom to do which is solve problems what they're incentive to do again solve problems and what they and on who's behalf. they're doing it. a majority of general election voters and we own these rules of election. we can change them alaska did it. we have other campaigns and other states for this year. so that's that's my whole book. there is a piece of
that way. don't figure out a way to solve problems in the broad general interest. if the general election decided who wins then people could go to congress and work for the general electorate and they would go there as proud democrats and proud republicans, but they would be incented to solve problems in the general interest and final five voting changes that whole system. it's already been adopted in alaska. so you'll watch alaska's results. the winner will not be chosen in any primary in...
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122
Apr 26, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN
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eye 122
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i think the ways and means committee is a great way to do that, not just with tax policy, but international trade, social security, medicare. very important topic. host: kim brady -- a very important topic kim brady talks about is inflation. what can be done right now to combat inflation? guest: we need to quit injecting money into the economy like has done -- but none over the last 15 months. the are at a place where inflation is such a heavy tax on folks who can afford it the least. so it will not be just one bill necessarily, but i think fostering policies, we need to get trade policies back in place to reduce tariffs, to assist with bringing our supply chain back online and into a productive fashion. host: how much impact our supply chain issues having on that inflation number? guest: i think it is huge. between inflation and then the associated labor shortage, i mean i went to get an oil change yesterday and they told me i had to wait four or five hours, or get up an appointment two weeks in advance. not exactly the way it was before the pandemic, or even within the pandemic for a whil
i think the ways and means committee is a great way to do that, not just with tax policy, but international trade, social security, medicare. very important topic. host: kim brady -- a very important topic kim brady talks about is inflation. what can be done right now to combat inflation? guest: we need to quit injecting money into the economy like has done -- but none over the last 15 months. the are at a place where inflation is such a heavy tax on folks who can afford it the least. so it...
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in the way that it eats in the way that it grows in the way that it, as of eyes are, we are going to have to find ways of socializing, which did is not direct contact. we went out to find ways of survival in a space where we're not as closely knit as we used to be. the coroner virus pandemic may have brought many challenges for families in social innovators. but it is brought a many good lessons to consider for the future. for those who don't get their food delivered and are keen on going to the supermarket. other ways of procuring food have emerged during the pandemic. ready the columbia capital bogota now has over 4000 urban gardens that are keeping entire family supplied with home grown fruit and vegetables. and aside from providing food, many find the gardening itself. quite therapeutic sheesh. wrecking in the garden is the perfect start to the day for the egg gutierrez, he found a small green strip in front of his house. it was the 1st city garden of its kind to be officially approved in pa gotta blow without going through implant. the idea of creating a garden in the distorted
in the way that it eats in the way that it grows in the way that it, as of eyes are, we are going to have to find ways of socializing, which did is not direct contact. we went out to find ways of survival in a space where we're not as closely knit as we used to be. the coroner virus pandemic may have brought many challenges for families in social innovators. but it is brought a many good lessons to consider for the future. for those who don't get their food delivered and are keen on going to...
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Apr 18, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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eye 64
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i never thought about going way out of my way to preserve youth in a fanatical, obsessive way. in the world on a daily basis, and because of that, i am more envisioning them as my muses. and i think when you don't think about ageing in that way, maybe it is in a way better. maybe, i don't know, it is healthier, or maybe it's a way of dealing with ageing that is productive, if that makes any sense. so, i always said that vodka cocktail, a lot of sleep, but work. work is the magic elixir here, it really is. it keeps your mind occupied. and when your mind is occupied, i think everything else follows. well, you are certainly changing the perspective of what it means to be 72, and how age influences... well, i don't think any woman is thrilled by that, in a way, but at the same time, i'm kind of proud of it because i think it speaks to other women — and i don't meanjust women, i think it speaks to men. ageism has always existed. i see it in a child — in my goddaughter, val. i see it that she wants to do more, she wants to be an adult. "why can't i go out with you guys for dinner? "w
i never thought about going way out of my way to preserve youth in a fanatical, obsessive way. in the world on a daily basis, and because of that, i am more envisioning them as my muses. and i think when you don't think about ageing in that way, maybe it is in a way better. maybe, i don't know, it is healthier, or maybe it's a way of dealing with ageing that is productive, if that makes any sense. so, i always said that vodka cocktail, a lot of sleep, but work. work is the magic elixir here, it...
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Apr 24, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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eye 62
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he . of his way to say thank you. you didn't vote for me because you liked my policies, he voted to keep out my opponent and he went out of his way to thank them for that. let's look at the same story but to get a quick overview of the front pages, let's go to the financial times. they had in mind there, macron on track for election win after fighting off le pen challenge. david, what do you make of it? just pen challenge. david, what do you make of it?— pen challenge. david, what do you make of it? just picking up on what lizzie was saying, _ make of it? just picking up on what lizzie was saying, the _ make of it? just picking up on what lizzie was saying, the fact - make of it? just picking up on what lizzie was saying, the fact is - make of it? just picking up on what lizzie was saying, the fact is that l lizzie was saying, the fact is that yes he _ lizzie was saying, the fact is that yes he has— lizzie was saying, the fact is that yes he has managed to secure a convincing — yes he has managed to secure a convincin
he . of his way to say thank you. you didn't vote for me because you liked my policies, he voted to keep out my opponent and he went out of his way to thank them for that. let's look at the same story but to get a quick overview of the front pages, let's go to the financial times. they had in mind there, macron on track for election win after fighting off le pen challenge. david, what do you make of it? just pen challenge. david, what do you make of it?— pen challenge. david, what do you make...
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Apr 22, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 38
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and he did it in a way. that was kind of very open and not heavy-handed, you know, not like this is what i believe and this is what you should think. i'm not you know, he was trying to force some ideological line on you and he came across as a guy who was trying to make sense of really complicated political circumstances in the way that a lot of his viewers were right and i think that really resonated and so it doesn't come off for you know on first glance you could watch some of these episodes and think well, you know, isn't that nice that he's talking about young people. you know, who are alert, you know questioning the wisdom of their elders or maybe not maybe you know, it's nice that he's saying something positive about service men or about prisoners or something, you know, and he had these various ways on the television show of introducing discussion about these issues that were important to him. but like i say not in a way where he was kind of forcing it down anybody's throat, you know, so didn't feel
and he did it in a way. that was kind of very open and not heavy-handed, you know, not like this is what i believe and this is what you should think. i'm not you know, he was trying to force some ideological line on you and he came across as a guy who was trying to make sense of really complicated political circumstances in the way that a lot of his viewers were right and i think that really resonated and so it doesn't come off for you know on first glance you could watch some of these episodes...
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Apr 23, 2022
04/22
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LINKTV
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eye 94
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i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i will lay my frown and all mye
i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i'll be on my way. ♪ ♪ i will lay my frown and all mye
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140
Apr 18, 2022
04/22
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CNNW
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eye 140
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or this way if the army is coming this way. so what they are trying to do they want to preserve the territorial integrity of their country. however, if they are going to dislodge the russians here, here, and here, they will have to find a series of tactics and a strategy to really move these russians out. and that's going to be a really tall order. i think the way the off-ramp looks, a status quo ante, everything stays the same. that means these areas may stay russian. at the very least, this one will stay russian. that of course is -- you know, it's not a defeat. basically you go back to where you were before and it's a stalemate. that's what we're looking at here. i think we will see a stalemate if the ukrainians continue to perform as well as they have. . >> that's a profound statement. the stalemate could be an off-ramp, counter to what zelenskyy's aim is. what could dislodge these areas around donetsk and north of the donbas? . >> you will have to have a lot of offensive operations. this will look very different from what
or this way if the army is coming this way. so what they are trying to do they want to preserve the territorial integrity of their country. however, if they are going to dislodge the russians here, here, and here, they will have to find a series of tactics and a strategy to really move these russians out. and that's going to be a really tall order. i think the way the off-ramp looks, a status quo ante, everything stays the same. that means these areas may stay russian. at the very least, this...
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49
Apr 3, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
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eye 49
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it is because that's the way russian czar. one problem with this view is that similar reparations of energy companies to ways around the same time as algeria bolivia chad ecuador dubai senegal and venezuela and if we look at our countries in 1946 to 2010 what we see is when oil prices are high naturalization sara much more common so like a lot of russian politics the takeover was driven less by prudence background a russian history but, not a credit grill. russian see putin's russia as led by a unique leader overseeing a unique country. i argue we should view putin's russia as a personal autocracy. this is about talk or see led by residual giving countries a pattern of politics that differ from autocracy that are led by a military such as contemporary myanmar or contemporary china or the soviet union. attackers seize rule based on a mixture of personal popularity and propaganda and in performance they do deliver some goods in order to gain popular support and they also rely on coercion like all autocrats do but they try to avo
it is because that's the way russian czar. one problem with this view is that similar reparations of energy companies to ways around the same time as algeria bolivia chad ecuador dubai senegal and venezuela and if we look at our countries in 1946 to 2010 what we see is when oil prices are high naturalization sara much more common so like a lot of russian politics the takeover was driven less by prudence background a russian history but, not a credit grill. russian see putin's russia as led by a...
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61
Apr 18, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 61
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well and i think it goes both ways too, right? i think a lot of us sort of come to america without the realization that we're sort of stepping into this centuries long battle between like the forces of fusion in the forces of inclusion and i think that disconnect is sort of part of just american mythology where american mythology it they're sort of this weird paradox where it promotes itself through this exceptionalism yet sort of precludes the existence of the empire that it's created, you know, like we when we think of the american empire, we don't really think about at least when i learned about it in school about but the philippines or guam or a lot of the other nations that that jonathan talks about. we really just think of the american empire as a sort of collection of states, but if we trace back what what does that even mean, right, this is a settler colonizer nation right like this. this was never this was a nation purely built on like the bones of other people right like one of the chapters in my book that i find a reall
well and i think it goes both ways too, right? i think a lot of us sort of come to america without the realization that we're sort of stepping into this centuries long battle between like the forces of fusion in the forces of inclusion and i think that disconnect is sort of part of just american mythology where american mythology it they're sort of this weird paradox where it promotes itself through this exceptionalism yet sort of precludes the existence of the empire that it's created, you...
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77
Apr 20, 2022
04/22
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MSNBCW
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eye 77
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way.e's made abbott do. he's resorted to ridiculous stunts like trying to bus people from the border. all to keep up with the -- >> out here, actually. >> it is amazing. how much does the white house keep an eye on desantis? >> a lot. florida is a major state. he's not a fringe state. he's a governor of one of the largest states in the country which is a political swing state. it could be up for grabs. >> i think it is. it is still treated that way. >> so of course they're keeping an eye on desantis. he might be the republican nominee in 2024 if trump were to not run. >> so i just want to sit back and put your political -- when you watch, this is a guy who is unafraid to put his hand on the hot stove. >> and one could argue that much has been -- i was critical of governor desantis, and still am, during the height of covid, but if you really look at the numbers, florida actually came out all right. he has a story to tell. >> and the economy is strong. >> and the economy is strong. but the t
way.e's made abbott do. he's resorted to ridiculous stunts like trying to bus people from the border. all to keep up with the -- >> out here, actually. >> it is amazing. how much does the white house keep an eye on desantis? >> a lot. florida is a major state. he's not a fringe state. he's a governor of one of the largest states in the country which is a political swing state. it could be up for grabs. >> i think it is. it is still treated that way. >> so of course...
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50
Apr 10, 2022
04/22
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KPIX
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eye 50
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the ways in which we hear one another. the ways in which we listen. and you've written at fantastic book which has to do with understanding and hearing other people's stories and ways in which they are heard. and ways in which you listen to them. so let's jump right in and ask you what led you to this? and tell us the background. >> i think your assessment is exactly right. i worry a great deal about us the art ersing anymore. wee verydive tha cohuman beings anhil sues yeo ildhood ted many ally in20 i ke my fir eaern cha and to refugee camps right when they were coming over. and in those camps, i would say , it is when i started listening to refugee stories. i found the best of humanity and i heard about the worst of humanity and what had happened to people. and i made subsequent trips. many years later, in looking at this world we are living in, i said i wanted to do something. we often forget there are people involved. real people. and that's what led to this book. >> you use this wonderful to real people. as you were talking, it occurs to me that l
the ways in which we hear one another. the ways in which we listen. and you've written at fantastic book which has to do with understanding and hearing other people's stories and ways in which they are heard. and ways in which you listen to them. so let's jump right in and ask you what led you to this? and tell us the background. >> i think your assessment is exactly right. i worry a great deal about us the art ersing anymore. wee verydive tha cohuman beings anhil sues yeo ildhood ted...
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Apr 26, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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, the way it's streamed, the way people listen to it, the numbers of songs that are being put out theree public space? well, it's mathematically intensifying because of the numbers. you know, as ed said in his statement, there's millions and millions of songs being put into the world every year now and there are only so many notes. and if the idea that we can access something, therefore it's more than likely that we heard it persists, then it doesn't really speak to a fair way of how music gets to people. just because something is possible, doesn't mean it's likely. and i think that's a really important part of all of this. there are millions and millions and millions of combinations of notes out there. coincidences happen. so, the more numbers we have, the more coincidences will happen. so, in that way, it is intensifying. # i'm in love with the shape of you #. we push and pull like a magnet do...#. is this, in a sense, about the scale of what you do, the degree of success you've had? because one hears the phrase, no hit, no writ, in the record business. i mean, is it the case that peo
, the way it's streamed, the way people listen to it, the numbers of songs that are being put out theree public space? well, it's mathematically intensifying because of the numbers. you know, as ed said in his statement, there's millions and millions of songs being put into the world every year now and there are only so many notes. and if the idea that we can access something, therefore it's more than likely that we heard it persists, then it doesn't really speak to a fair way of how music gets...
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Apr 19, 2022
04/22
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eye 33
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are there ways in which the 3p autocrats escalate? was wondering do you think we will ever get to the point where they just referred and no longer need the faÇade of democracy that they are pretending to uphold now? >> yes and the way that can happen for example there is no scenario in which russia will not need this prosperous in the next five years. russia's economy is going through a crater in many significant ways. what would you do if you are putin and you have somehow managed to occupy ukraine and have the government there. then he has the authority in a nation that is essentially very poor and the russian people, what do they do brexit the economic performance and stability in their legitimacy in the government and if you have people on the street and you have people questioning your authority, like we have seen aroundde the world they start regressing. the economy goes down and repression even that is where my two books coincide. "the revenge of power" explains the recent trends and conditions that make it power easier to acqu
are there ways in which the 3p autocrats escalate? was wondering do you think we will ever get to the point where they just referred and no longer need the faÇade of democracy that they are pretending to uphold now? >> yes and the way that can happen for example there is no scenario in which russia will not need this prosperous in the next five years. russia's economy is going through a crater in many significant ways. what would you do if you are putin and you have somehow managed to...
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16
Apr 19, 2022
04/22
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NTV
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eye 16
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by the way, i've already looked.nd they have, of course, now you know how. uh-huh and suddenly you really win. you are such a stepanovich dancer, but do n’t tell me anything, you said that you had already deleted this video a long time ago. i'm silent, i can, i can. hmm well done m. in general, this parsley, this loginov teacher in the military department yesterday puts the key. zhenya vasilevsky to one of his students. lyokha seems to be a married man, and zharov witches want the same about the same as not to buy on the bag that you want to buy your wife. so this loginov caught vasilevsky for e, a cheat sheet, you understand, and besides the fact that we retake the boiler, he also forced him to clean the room. uh. it's understandable. yesterday vasilevsky rustled in the office alone without supervision, what are you doing? loginov had already left by that time, so some good guy left the key, decided to avenge the failure and threw a grenade into the box. well, this is pure idiocy. he is the first to be suspected. mo
by the way, i've already looked.nd they have, of course, now you know how. uh-huh and suddenly you really win. you are such a stepanovich dancer, but do n’t tell me anything, you said that you had already deleted this video a long time ago. i'm silent, i can, i can. hmm well done m. in general, this parsley, this loginov teacher in the military department yesterday puts the key. zhenya vasilevsky to one of his students. lyokha seems to be a married man, and zharov witches want the same about...
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Apr 14, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 70
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it's not very clear which way would be thehe optimal way so ty have to make choices like all of us.n you think they will recommend the fourth shot like israel? >> in the date about that, i think there is a need. i can't speak about them and they make the decision. >> one of the biggest premises of the book, it usually takes eight to ten years to get something approved, tested and manufactured get it took pfizer and other companies months. how can you summarize why that happened, how that happened? >> first of all, we didn't try to improve the process, we had to reinvent them they have to think out of the box. i think it was the manufacturing. pfizer was making 200 millionon doses vaccine every year so i asked not to make 300 of the vaccine, they still try to do it within so they had to reinvent everything. you need to think from scratch and we designed reengineer everything. the second piece you need to really do things and parallel and believe that nothing is impossible. a lot of ideas are protected without going into ways to say it's impossible. it tells you know, find a way to do
it's not very clear which way would be thehe optimal way so ty have to make choices like all of us.n you think they will recommend the fourth shot like israel? >> in the date about that, i think there is a need. i can't speak about them and they make the decision. >> one of the biggest premises of the book, it usually takes eight to ten years to get something approved, tested and manufactured get it took pfizer and other companies months. how can you summarize why that happened, how...
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Apr 13, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN3
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and when will that be out by the way? we're hoping 2020 but when you finish that book, what do you think? we will conclude about gerald ford's politics where he fits on the spectrum, you know, i hesitate to predict only because people are unpredictable. i do believe i think people will be surprised. that for much of his career in the house. forward actually was something of an insurgent. he was not the kind of amiable. party wheel horse you know that he was seen as want to became minority leader. um he was elected as an insurgent who took on? and isolationist incumbent republican beat him in the primary. with the support of organized labor in his first term he signed a petition for world government. world federalism, i mean not the sort of thing you associate with good old jerry, you know. and of course and and that's what that's the best part of for me it isn't that i'm trying to prove it agenda. it is that i am. pleasantly surprised and you know to find that the real gerald ford. turns out to be frankly much more intere
and when will that be out by the way? we're hoping 2020 but when you finish that book, what do you think? we will conclude about gerald ford's politics where he fits on the spectrum, you know, i hesitate to predict only because people are unpredictable. i do believe i think people will be surprised. that for much of his career in the house. forward actually was something of an insurgent. he was not the kind of amiable. party wheel horse you know that he was seen as want to became minority...
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28
Apr 29, 2022
04/22
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ALJAZ
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eye 28
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every single step of the way you can just ask me about those mother ramadan and how many ways i fell flat on my face. and i'm sure how anyway, let's count the ways if i can be honest here, so the muslims will immediately understand that but last night was the 27th night and it was many muslims, especially sunday muslims considered the most sacred night, not only of ramadan, but of the entire year, it's called the night of power, and i was actually traveling, promoting the boat the last few days and didn't go to the mosque where i was, where i was based lots few days because i wanted to get my rest. and i wanted to make sure i could spend the whole night at the moss and you know, among the many things that went wrong, i mean one was actually just absolutely comic that i finally made it to the mosque far later than i want it to get there and i enter the prayer and there's a special supplication that's at the end of that or where, where services, where are the mom and the whole congregation? we really just open up our, our heart and soul and just beg god for forgiveness. and for all the
every single step of the way you can just ask me about those mother ramadan and how many ways i fell flat on my face. and i'm sure how anyway, let's count the ways if i can be honest here, so the muslims will immediately understand that but last night was the 27th night and it was many muslims, especially sunday muslims considered the most sacred night, not only of ramadan, but of the entire year, it's called the night of power, and i was actually traveling, promoting the boat the last few days...
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Apr 7, 2022
04/22
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, way, way below the federal sentencing guile and send -- guidelines and way, way below what was recommended. a very liberal d.c. prosecutor. when this issue was raised the democrats responded well federal judges across the country since the defendants below the sentencing guidelines especially with child. her record is not below the guidelinesay in sentencing way below -- prosecutors and then we examine how does she sentenced a child case compared to other federal judges. one could compare apples-to-apples. when it comes to the possession of child pornography the average for judges is 60 months a little over five years. judge jackson's average in 29.2 months and the national average sentence is child pornography to a longer sentence than your typical crime page. judge jacksn sentence defendants to a shorter sentence than your typical crime when it concerns possession of child pornography it's a 57% difference. but it's evena more disturbing n the second category nets distribution of child pornography. distribution of child pornography the national average is 135 months, 11 years. all the ti
, way, way below the federal sentencing guile and send -- guidelines and way, way below what was recommended. a very liberal d.c. prosecutor. when this issue was raised the democrats responded well federal judges across the country since the defendants below the sentencing guidelines especially with child. her record is not below the guidelinesay in sentencing way below -- prosecutors and then we examine how does she sentenced a child case compared to other federal judges. one could compare...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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102
Apr 11, 2022
04/22
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SFGTV
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eye 102
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the standard way is having more eyes on the street, but there's other culturally significant ways to do that, and one those ways is lighting up the streets. but what better way and special way to do that is by having old, historic neon signs lighting up our streets at night and casting away our shadows. >> when i see things coming back to life, it's like remembering how things were. it's remembering the hotel or the market that went to work seven days a week to raise their money or to provide a service, and it just -- it san francisco is surrounded on three sides by water, the fire boat station is intergal to maritime rescue and preparedness, not only for san francisco, but for all of the bay area. [sirens] >> fire station 35 was built in 1915. so it is over 100 years old. and helped it, we're going to build fire boat station 35. >> so the finished capital planning committee, i think about three years ago, issued a guidance that all city facilities must exist on sea level rise. >> the station 35, construction cost is approximately $30 million. and the schedule was complicated because
the standard way is having more eyes on the street, but there's other culturally significant ways to do that, and one those ways is lighting up the streets. but what better way and special way to do that is by having old, historic neon signs lighting up our streets at night and casting away our shadows. >> when i see things coming back to life, it's like remembering how things were. it's remembering the hotel or the market that went to work seven days a week to raise their money or to...
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47
Apr 25, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 47
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she said you know the way you think about paying your taxes and your bills she was that's the way i think about living and dying every day walking to a room like this i say what could happen that we have security. well, you know, what's you know, where's the exit what would happen if you're shooting me it stays with them all of the time right? so it's always been challenging difficult, of course for all of us in all generations, so beginning of time to be adolescents. right, but i think that the the addition of the the public events and and the discourse has made that even more challenging and you can see it's direct correlation between the number of news alerts one gets on our telephone with a with a rate of anxiety. it's just really difficult for young person to put this into difficult enough for us to put this into perspective, but certainly difficult for a younger person to do that. and again, that's just another added way in terms of all the other concerns that folks have around social relationships body image the use of technology etc. it's this chaos. i think that is i'm having det
she said you know the way you think about paying your taxes and your bills she was that's the way i think about living and dying every day walking to a room like this i say what could happen that we have security. well, you know, what's you know, where's the exit what would happen if you're shooting me it stays with them all of the time right? so it's always been challenging difficult, of course for all of us in all generations, so beginning of time to be adolescents. right, but i think that...
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79
Apr 19, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN
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eye 79
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including the way we nominate presidential candidates, including our media, including the way we finance things. and then just anecdotally, i would say, i don't know if people remember about my high school debate partner was a guy named steve daines. steve and i have some pretty radical different views on to master politics. but we talk. we share opinions, our families know each other. by the way, i'm very happy that steve, senator daines went to kyiv. what i find is that if you're on tv or on twitter, god forbid and you are not interacting directly with people it is easy to think of them as being evil. and stupid and reactionary or radical communists, fascists. but when you talk to people and you interact with them it is harder to do that. and i think anecdotally, that is true every time. i say this as a democrat at the hoover institution, by the way. i think modality in doing that on the microlevel can help us get to the macro level we want, which i think is where most americans are, purple, not red and blue. >> well, thank you both. i respect and am grateful for your optimism. >> you
including the way we nominate presidential candidates, including our media, including the way we finance things. and then just anecdotally, i would say, i don't know if people remember about my high school debate partner was a guy named steve daines. steve and i have some pretty radical different views on to master politics. but we talk. we share opinions, our families know each other. by the way, i'm very happy that steve, senator daines went to kyiv. what i find is that if you're on tv or on...
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43
Apr 22, 2022
04/22
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ALJAZ
tv
eye 43
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way beyond the arctic circle. and that is the greenland ice cap. and we're here because the arctic is changing, and this is changing faster than ever. events never seen before, made headlines across the world. the ice cap melted at a record rate, the water it created in 24 hours enough to entirely cover an area. the size of florida in 5 centimeters of water. great chunks of the she collapsed and drifted off into the promotion. and it's been so warm. there's been rain, not snow on the summit for the 1st time on record. so what did it mean, and why does it matter? what is, what happens on the ice sheet has global implications, where the ice capital part of the plan is natural system and that system has been breaking down. we use this iceberg as a kind of canvas and put a map of europe on top of it. and then superimpose greenland, you can see what a colossal land mass it is. and then if we put the ice cap on top of that, well as vast, it's more than a 1000 kilometers from east to west and move in 2000 kilometers from
way beyond the arctic circle. and that is the greenland ice cap. and we're here because the arctic is changing, and this is changing faster than ever. events never seen before, made headlines across the world. the ice cap melted at a record rate, the water it created in 24 hours enough to entirely cover an area. the size of florida in 5 centimeters of water. great chunks of the she collapsed and drifted off into the promotion. and it's been so warm. there's been rain, not snow on the summit for...
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50
Apr 12, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 50
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here is the thing, how many of you grew up this way?e's no limit to what you can't get done if you don't care who gets the credit? i've lived my whole life, by the way, more women know that than men. and that is true. in anyny project you are working on in a given moment over time it is absolutely not true so imagine you and your friend from college start a tech company after college and it's super successful but you are the inside one, your friend is the outside one, you sell it and garbage both of you, you've done an amazing job but which one of you, the inside one with the one associated with the public space has the greater opportunity for the next startup? the one associated with the success, the one who got the credit. those with credit have more power toe advance i guess just like the rich get richer, those with credit get more credit. it now proven, with my co-author and i've had it repeatedly and it stillll happens but i push forward because i know unless you get that platform, can't in the end make things happen. as a man who
here is the thing, how many of you grew up this way?e's no limit to what you can't get done if you don't care who gets the credit? i've lived my whole life, by the way, more women know that than men. and that is true. in anyny project you are working on in a given moment over time it is absolutely not true so imagine you and your friend from college start a tech company after college and it's super successful but you are the inside one, your friend is the outside one, you sell it and garbage...
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134
Apr 15, 2022
04/22
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kostya: i think that in some ways yes and in some ways no.i think in baseball terms, baseball circles, he is recognized as a partner. outside of the game, probably not. you can't underestimate what a big venue baseball was at that time. it really was america's game. people of all genders and ages watched it, to integrate it at that level was remarkably effective. maybe. he was a religious man. his conviction that this was in addition to all of the things we talked about earlier, this was the right thing to do. with evidence in what he chose to do. i think he probably has not gotten the recognition he deserved, but he used to downp lay it. he had a very healthy sense of self when it came to his abilities to run a baseball team but he always deflected acceptance. he would not accept praise for robinson. he would say, i am praised for bringing in jackie but he was just the best man for the job. all i did was hire him. he downplayed what he had done. in some ways he knew what he , was, a facilitator. but the real groundbreaker, the person they're
kostya: i think that in some ways yes and in some ways no.i think in baseball terms, baseball circles, he is recognized as a partner. outside of the game, probably not. you can't underestimate what a big venue baseball was at that time. it really was america's game. people of all genders and ages watched it, to integrate it at that level was remarkably effective. maybe. he was a religious man. his conviction that this was in addition to all of the things we talked about earlier, this was the...
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31
Apr 24, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN3
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eye 31
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they've been following this in a methodical way way for a really long time. one of the things that i was able to do when i was in congress and serving on the intel committee was whenever i would travel somewhere i would always stop in the capitals of some of our friends. i would always try to stop and brussels and talk to eu partners and the eu disinformation lab or disinfo lab is this technical title the work that they're doing on this is is pretty fantastic the german marshall fund has a dashboard that tracks this kind of stuff. there's a there's a there's a great company basin israel called siabra, they track fake accounts the amount of fake accounts that are out there are shocking right? and so so the ability to separate and understand this and what is the motivations right when when i was in the cia recruiting spies and still in secrets, you always start with what is that motivation of that individual potentially work with you and so we have to understand the motivation of many of these actors. and this issue is is i don't want to say easier. you just pr
they've been following this in a methodical way way for a really long time. one of the things that i was able to do when i was in congress and serving on the intel committee was whenever i would travel somewhere i would always stop in the capitals of some of our friends. i would always try to stop and brussels and talk to eu partners and the eu disinformation lab or disinfo lab is this technical title the work that they're doing on this is is pretty fantastic the german marshall fund has a...
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55
Apr 19, 2022
04/22
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 55
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but i really liked the way they portrayed the storyline, right, because it was in a light—hearted wayks at me, i really will faint. some of the issues that the main characters had to go through are not nice issues, right, so it could have been a dark storyline and a dark film to watch. but i think they really portrayed in a light—hearted way, which i thought was great. wasjess a role model for you? yeah, i think she was. i think she kept her head down, she worked hard, she stuck to the process, even when there were barriers in her way with her parents and the issues that come with that, she still knew what she wanted to go out and achieve, and i think that's really, really important for young people to see. what's crazy is thatjess was probably, for a lot of south asian girls, the only role model that looked like us and was from the same background and she wasn't real, which is sad. yeah, it is sad, it is sad, and when you think about that, the fact that we had to really use our imagination in that sense and look at a film and think, oh, ok, that is possible, but it was a film, right.
but i really liked the way they portrayed the storyline, right, because it was in a light—hearted wayks at me, i really will faint. some of the issues that the main characters had to go through are not nice issues, right, so it could have been a dark storyline and a dark film to watch. but i think they really portrayed in a light—hearted way, which i thought was great. wasjess a role model for you? yeah, i think she was. i think she kept her head down, she worked hard, she stuck to the...
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66
Apr 3, 2022
04/22
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 66
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back on the thames and back to winning ways. a first win in four - to winning ways.ays. a first win in four attempts for— to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford _ to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and _ to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and back - to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and back on i to winning ways. a first win in four i attempts for oxford and back on top once again. it attempts for oxford and back on top once aaain. .,, , . attempts for oxford and back on top once aain. ., , . . attempts for oxford and back on top once auain. . , , . . ., once again. it has been a dream. for me, for once again. it has been a dream. for me. for years _ once again. it has been a dream. for me. for years or— once again. it has been a dream. for me, for years or more, _ once again. it has been a dream. for me, for years or more, i _ once again. it has been a dream. for me, for years or more, i have - once again. it has been a dream. for me, for years or more, i have been i me, foryears or
back on the thames and back to winning ways. a first win in four - to winning ways.ays. a first win in four attempts for— to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford _ to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and _ to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and back - to winning ways. a first win in four attempts for oxford and back on i to winning ways. a first win in four i attempts for oxford and back on top once again. it attempts for oxford and...
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44
Apr 13, 2022
04/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 44
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ways.e is no magic tool. people often ask me journalists often ask whatt is the one thin, what is your favorite tool? what is the one tool you should used to manage her chatter? i don't have a favorite tool third what i know is that people generally use multiple tools. but the challenge i think we all face is hey, what is the combination of healthy tools that works best for you to help that you manage your chatter? quick so it's go into depth than on each of the different tools, different boxes of tools if you will. so looking at self. what self-control kinds of tools i mean meditation, faith, we have ritual, we have all kinds of tools that can help us structure, reorder things in our heads. can you go through some examples of self-help first? >> so, one kind of tool that is useful for helping people manage chatter on their own is what we call distancing tools. they're a bunch of these are talk about in the book i will tell you about two. first thing to keep in mind about chatter is booming
ways.e is no magic tool. people often ask me journalists often ask whatt is the one thin, what is your favorite tool? what is the one tool you should used to manage her chatter? i don't have a favorite tool third what i know is that people generally use multiple tools. but the challenge i think we all face is hey, what is the combination of healthy tools that works best for you to help that you manage your chatter? quick so it's go into depth than on each of the different tools, different boxes...
17
17
Apr 10, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 17
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so that's a move from the we in the us all the way to the global way and i think that's worth thinking about because there was no real global we after the 1918 19 pandemic so, you know in speaking of the wii you brought up at the end all those great points and all the things to consider. quality was the one that keeps coming to mind. we have seen an increase in wealth concentration at the top during this pandemic. and is there any equivalent that occurred during the 1918 1919 pandemic? yeah, so, you know, i i recently challenged my students actually last month to think about this the relationship in the 1918-19 pandemic and world war one with the inequality that rose in the 1920s that eventually you know was a part and parcel of the great depression and it strikes me that there isn't a direct connection and historians have tried to explore the ways in which the economy of the 1920s was related to the pandemic and one of the ways in which they talk about it is is simply that a significant part of the us and western populations of working age were cut down in their prime. and so there we
so that's a move from the we in the us all the way to the global way and i think that's worth thinking about because there was no real global we after the 1918 19 pandemic so, you know in speaking of the wii you brought up at the end all those great points and all the things to consider. quality was the one that keeps coming to mind. we have seen an increase in wealth concentration at the top during this pandemic. and is there any equivalent that occurred during the 1918 1919 pandemic? yeah,...
9
9.0
Apr 23, 2022
04/22
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NTV
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eye 9
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in my oven, by the way, in this form you can later serve it.huh very and comfortable and beautiful so and here legs seasoned with salt and pepper. the side that i salted and peppered so again salt and pepper. well, while the legs are fried with you, let's take care of the vegetables. i offer classics, onions, carrots, bay leaves, you know everything in an incredible way. pairs well with this wonderful duck meat. that's what you know, after all, a duck, almost wild meat has such a taste. yes, this is so saturated, therefore, probably, we perceive a duck more festively than even a chicken. although the chicken, too. and i think it can save anyone situation. so there is garlic. look how round the slices are. cut into fairly large pieces. let's not forget that very interesting processes are going on here. well, you understand that we seal the legs, that is, we need to fry in such a way that they remain juicy inside. we continue to deal with vegetables, as i said, carrots are also in such plump sticks, i cut them somewhere half a finger thick. i hav
in my oven, by the way, in this form you can later serve it.huh very and comfortable and beautiful so and here legs seasoned with salt and pepper. the side that i salted and peppered so again salt and pepper. well, while the legs are fried with you, let's take care of the vegetables. i offer classics, onions, carrots, bay leaves, you know everything in an incredible way. pairs well with this wonderful duck meat. that's what you know, after all, a duck, almost wild meat has such a taste. yes,...
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which just look for ways to keep things stirred up so they can find a way to use their products. i mean, you know, is there, is there a connection? look, any time, any large corporate interest have great influence over a government. it cannot be to the benefit of the people of that nation. but even the lobby, a sun k street, arguably didn't us the pentagon to us for 778000000000 dollars this year for the military budget. you think joe biden thinks that the, giving them extra is of price? we're paying the same office? i mean, i know, you know, i, because i will tell you, i think, you know, we made a mistake in personalizing this, i know because i know i know joe by the loaner for more than 50 years. i don't. i don't think that he shouldn't charge us to express, but i do say that he has spent a fairly loyal servant of a system that supports that approach. and that that's a problem which a bipartisan problem. it's the reason why hardy politics doesn't work. it's the reason why the system is not serving the american people. well. that last national defense authorization appropriation
which just look for ways to keep things stirred up so they can find a way to use their products. i mean, you know, is there, is there a connection? look, any time, any large corporate interest have great influence over a government. it cannot be to the benefit of the people of that nation. but even the lobby, a sun k street, arguably didn't us the pentagon to us for 778000000000 dollars this year for the military budget. you think joe biden thinks that the, giving them extra is of price? we're...
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Apr 21, 2022
04/22
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there is more rain on the way, snow on the way for the sierra too. >> when you see clouds that dark, i always feel like that means that rain is coming, but not necessarily, right? the color of the clouds doesn't necessarily mean when it is going to start dumping rain. >> they look more ominous because of the contrast between the heavier clouds and still bright sky on the right side of the screen with the sun trying to peek through. we are looking showers that will make their way in this evening and make their way farther inland with a generally wet thursday on the way for us. rain continuing to move in and by tomorrow afternoon, even overnight, we have the possibility of actual thunderstorms in the bay area. no thunderstorms out there right now. leftover showers are going to be moving out as we head towards midday on friday. so, fairly wet for the next 24 to 36 hours and then things are going to continue to dry out. right now we're just the beginning stages of this storm system. showers making their way across the bay. heavier rain now falling for parts of marin county and sonoma cou
there is more rain on the way, snow on the way for the sierra too. >> when you see clouds that dark, i always feel like that means that rain is coming, but not necessarily, right? the color of the clouds doesn't necessarily mean when it is going to start dumping rain. >> they look more ominous because of the contrast between the heavier clouds and still bright sky on the right side of the screen with the sun trying to peek through. we are looking showers that will make their way in...
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by the way, also from your role. as i mentioned earlier to mr. grover, who had the idea that we might sound out at that time with the soviet union, how they would react as if we suggest that we could commit to a set of neutrality. he asked the indian prime minister in confidential meeting in switzerland, in not to know the $53.00 to sound the to find out what these are the distribute union, how the reaction would be. initially, it was a little skeptical as far as i, a minister while ago. but 2 years later, it happened, we agreed, the austin delegation agreed on a memorandum on utility in the negotiations was moscow. and initially the western powers were rather skeptical in particular. the british and united states, these are the you're trying to do, but ultimately they understood that this was a rational measure of the real quality because each of the bowers could be sure that austria would not be used on for a, for any military attacks by their adversaries, you have positive and inspiring historical example a quite
by the way, also from your role. as i mentioned earlier to mr. grover, who had the idea that we might sound out at that time with the soviet union, how they would react as if we suggest that we could commit to a set of neutrality. he asked the indian prime minister in confidential meeting in switzerland, in not to know the $53.00 to sound the to find out what these are the distribute union, how the reaction would be. initially, it was a little skeptical as far as i, a minister while ago. but 2...
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Apr 7, 2022
04/22
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BBCNEWS
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the best way of _ according to energy providers.rding to energy providers. tt;e: best way of weaning ourselves according to energy providers. t"t9 best way of weaning ourselves off gases wind power and onshore wind is the fastest and cheapest is that we welcome the consultations and pilot programmes which will help us prove local communities want wind power if it can drive down their energy costs. and of course we won't build it where people don't want it. however, remember, gas still heats 25 million homes and many feel this strategy�*s focus on future power supply ignores the current crisis and the need to reduce demand. emil; and the need to reduce demand. only last week, and the need to reduce demand. only last week. we — and the need to reduce demand. only last week, we saw _ and the need to reduce demand. 0�*le last week, we saw energy bills going up last week, we saw energy bills going up in the middle of a very real cost of living crisis, which is causing people real hardship. all we have todayis people real hardship. all we
the best way of _ according to energy providers.rding to energy providers. tt;e: best way of weaning ourselves according to energy providers. t"t9 best way of weaning ourselves off gases wind power and onshore wind is the fastest and cheapest is that we welcome the consultations and pilot programmes which will help us prove local communities want wind power if it can drive down their energy costs. and of course we won't build it where people don't want it. however, remember, gas still...