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Jun 28, 2014
06/14
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CSPAN2
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... >> guest: oh, well, that. that's different. those are different. those are different. yes, they are--they are--i just think that that's--betty friedan and the women's movement have done very bad things to american women and american men as a consequence. c-span: tell us some of those things. >> guest: that's a different issue. c-span: different entirely? >> guest: yes, different entirely. well, you see, this is a difficult--this modern period is a difficult time for women. it's also a time full of opportunity. and the opportunity was not given them by the women's movement that stormed around. the opportunity was created for women by medical technology, among other things. they are in better health and they stay alive longer and they stay young and strong and they don't--they're not sapped by having a dozen children, and so on. now--and this has given them new freedom, and freedom brings difficulties and fears, especially if it's entirely unprecedented. and so what you want to do to these women is give them cou
... >> guest: oh, well, that. that's different. those are different. those are different. yes, they are--they are--i just think that that's--betty friedan and the women's movement have done very bad things to american women and american men as a consequence. c-span: tell us some of those things. >> guest: that's a different issue. c-span: different entirely? >> guest: yes, different entirely. well, you see, this is a difficult--this modern period is a difficult time for women....
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Jun 22, 2014
06/14
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FBC
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>> well, it may have.may have, but i can't speculate that, but i know this, sir, i have spent 58 years working in the electric utility and coal industries and i'm scared to death for our country as a man who grew up poor for people on fixed incomes and people on the retirees and the poverty-stricken and people who manufacture a product. what he is doing is destroying the most reliable lowest cost power grid that the world has ever seen. >> that was part of it. hell hath no fury like a ceo scorn scorned. and he is letting the white house have it on regulations that robert murray believes is going to affect him. dagan, what do you think about it? >> well, if the white house would be honest with the american people, he they would say, we are going to push through the regulations and 40% of the electricity comes from the coal-fired power plants, and we are going to shut down many of the plants and your energy costs are going to go up. they have been going up, and double-digit increases in some of the recent ye
>> well, it may have.may have, but i can't speculate that, but i know this, sir, i have spent 58 years working in the electric utility and coal industries and i'm scared to death for our country as a man who grew up poor for people on fixed incomes and people on the retirees and the poverty-stricken and people who manufacture a product. what he is doing is destroying the most reliable lowest cost power grid that the world has ever seen. >> that was part of it. hell hath no fury like...
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Jun 22, 2014
06/14
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FBC
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>> well, that is right. but the problem is that the way it is handled now, speaking of inefficient is that it is really transferring the costs of money around from within the taxes that are already taken in, because we don't have a dedicated, enough dedicated money enough to keep up with inflation as jonas said. >> but is it going to be dedicated? it has been in the past. >> well, it should be. >> well, in washington, whether the government does it efficiently, who knows, because we would have nothing happening without it. so you have to keep up and there is not enough money to keep up with it, so do we legislate by crisis and wait for a bridge to collapse and watch the cars plunge into the water or figure out a dedicated source for highway funding. >> what do you think of that, john? >> well, i think that jonas' dog is on twitter and not jonas. that is why the pictures are so cute. >> and remember, #bulls and bears and get in on it on twitter. >> well, now is not the right time, and last year we had the seq
>> well, that is right. but the problem is that the way it is handled now, speaking of inefficient is that it is really transferring the costs of money around from within the taxes that are already taken in, because we don't have a dedicated, enough dedicated money enough to keep up with inflation as jonas said. >> but is it going to be dedicated? it has been in the past. >> well, it should be. >> well, in washington, whether the government does it efficiently, who...
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well i can say russia now they're out and saying when but now that route. i think it would be brazil argentina. and. like i said god argentina. brazil. south american team players i don't know the climate. expectation so you want. david talking to us from the sun today thank you very much indeed for your time enjoy the rest of the games i certainly were going to pick another team because i did have england and. i think costa rica is going to go for now because david have a good day good bye. this week austria signed a deal with russia to construct a south stream branch on its territory defying e.u. officials the commission is currently challenging really galatea of the project claiming that it doesn't comply with e.u. competition law and the forty billion dollar project is designed to carry russian gas to the center of europe already dependent on russia for third of its gas needs on a route that bypasses the current transit country ukraine but the company's c.e.o. he told a news conference after the signing he said europe needs russian gas europe will need
well i can say russia now they're out and saying when but now that route. i think it would be brazil argentina. and. like i said god argentina. brazil. south american team players i don't know the climate. expectation so you want. david talking to us from the sun today thank you very much indeed for your time enjoy the rest of the games i certainly were going to pick another team because i did have england and. i think costa rica is going to go for now because david have a good day good bye....
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Jun 27, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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probably ultimately negative for us at the pump as well. >> well, it's a limited amount. we don't know how much it's going to be. >> there are some reports it's going to be expanded. they asked the commerce department about whether or not they could get an actual definition on what it may be like. anything that goes through a distillery process can be exported. so, for me, i agree with these guys. xle, conaco-phillips. if you see wti start coming in, you might want to look at some of the names that haven't performed well this year. >> and the way they work, getting a little bit softer around the edges. we could see that next week, because there's going to be more of an election process in iraq. you talk about managing space, refiners have been waiting for them to crack for a while now. i would stay away from refiners. buy names. they've all had a good run, but i think the service names could continue. >> and i think conaco works. >> i like the e and p space a lot as a second half story. with russia and china's deal, that's going to send a lot of crude and natural gas the
probably ultimately negative for us at the pump as well. >> well, it's a limited amount. we don't know how much it's going to be. >> there are some reports it's going to be expanded. they asked the commerce department about whether or not they could get an actual definition on what it may be like. anything that goes through a distillery process can be exported. so, for me, i agree with these guys. xle, conaco-phillips. if you see wti start coming in, you might want to look at some...
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Jun 29, 2014
06/14
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FBC
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i happen to -- >> prove it to me. >> well, this is -- >> well, it is not quite round though. >> well, that is great. >> there is a name for it, but it is not quite round. >> charlie can prove it to you, neil, but i don't have time right now, and it is an interesting conversation, because the president and the there is no god-given right for electricity. >> is it the god-given right for the president to increase them 30%. >> and no we have a right -- >> no, no, no his decision. right to the epa. that is not a debate. >> there is a rule-making process. >> there no rule-makeing proces, and it is his process, and ben stein, that is my fear, it is his rule by edict. >> well, everything is his rule. first of all, adam to the contrary notwithstanding by no means all scientists believe that there is a global warming caused by manmade effects. by no means does scientists agree on that and this is one of the biggest myths of the liberals in the country, and if it is true, then of course, it is worthwhile the pay more electric bills, but it is not prov proved. we are assuming a fact that is not
i happen to -- >> prove it to me. >> well, this is -- >> well, it is not quite round though. >> well, that is great. >> there is a name for it, but it is not quite round. >> charlie can prove it to you, neil, but i don't have time right now, and it is an interesting conversation, because the president and the there is no god-given right for electricity. >> is it the god-given right for the president to increase them 30%. >> and no we have a right...
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you guys stick to the jokes well handled it makes sense. that. well it wonderful strong arming a lot of these polish face i think i'm getting. a pleasure to have you with us here on t.v. today i'm sure. the suspect. over the if you go did you know the price is the only industry specifically mention in the constitution which says that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy which recall books. will. never go on i'm sorry and on this show we reveal the picture of what's actually going on we go beyond identifying a problem to try to rational debate a real discussion critical issues facing our family member ready to join the movement then welcome to the big picture. or a bag of big picture on to our been coming up in this half hour natural gas boom has taken our country by storm over the past few years but now much of the anger of the oil again.
you guys stick to the jokes well handled it makes sense. that. well it wonderful strong arming a lot of these polish face i think i'm getting. a pleasure to have you with us here on t.v. today i'm sure. the suspect. over the if you go did you know the price is the only industry specifically mention in the constitution which says that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy which recall books. will. never go on i'm sorry and on this show we reveal the picture of what's...
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Jun 20, 2014
06/14
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FOXNEWSW
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>> well, from 2008?ople back then were not thinking about it the same way they are thinking about it, and it happens oftentimes that people will raise aware neness about it, and in to 2008, i was not particularly aware of it and now i have been made aware of it by many native americans who call it offensive and akin to the n-word and so obama was where everybody else was at that time. >> and how about gay marriage, for it, against it, for it? just checking. >> the naacp started to crackdown on these mascots and the chippewas are there with central michigan and the seminoles with florida, because they worked with the tribes the use them, but a lot of them fell by the wayside, so it was out there, but the redskins, it is a point of pride for the redskins and anybody who is a fan, it represents courage, and that is why it is okay and people are okay with it. >> it is interesting that you say that, because i lived in atlanta when the atlanta braves were on fire, and even jane fonda was doing the tomahawk cho
>> well, from 2008?ople back then were not thinking about it the same way they are thinking about it, and it happens oftentimes that people will raise aware neness about it, and in to 2008, i was not particularly aware of it and now i have been made aware of it by many native americans who call it offensive and akin to the n-word and so obama was where everybody else was at that time. >> and how about gay marriage, for it, against it, for it? just checking. >> the naacp...
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well it discriminates against morons and i'm for that. >> well, a lot of money is going toward food assistancesome would say i want to make sure that people receiving assistance are buying food. not drugs, liquor, or tobacco. >> for the first time i agree with michelle. let's drug test jamie diamond, all of their stockholders. see which one of them are taking ritilan ativan, xanax, klonopin, for the corporate welfare they're receiving the hundreds of billions of dollars and that's a conversation we'll have. >> let's take it further. let's not drug test anyone but let's also not steal from anyone. i hope we can all agree with that. and that's exactly what food stamps are. that's what it is. food stamps are your money is taken from you and it's given to people who the government says deserve it more than you do and of course to michelle's point with controls come more controls. they'll decide who should get it. what they can buy and what they can't buy. government isn't charity. if you want to help somebody you believe is needy, help them. but for government to make redistribution of wealth, par
well it discriminates against morons and i'm for that. >> well, a lot of money is going toward food assistancesome would say i want to make sure that people receiving assistance are buying food. not drugs, liquor, or tobacco. >> for the first time i agree with michelle. let's drug test jamie diamond, all of their stockholders. see which one of them are taking ritilan ativan, xanax, klonopin, for the corporate welfare they're receiving the hundreds of billions of dollars and that's a...
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all right well thank you very much for coming on to r.t. you we do have to leave it there that's the foreign affairs on this surge of thrift of it thank you. and look now more of the world security has been stepped up across afghanistan during voting in the second round of the presidential election the taliban have issued further threats to disrupt polling last saturday presidential front runner up to a lot of dollar escaped an assassination attempt when a suicide bomber attacked his convoy in the capital kabul. around president says the country has reached agreement with international mediators for it to restart enriching uranium and that the west will lift some sanctions imposed over the country's nuclear program the deal is expected to be finalized before the twenty eighth of june last november world powers and iran reached a temporary agreement under which iran's uranium enrichment program was limited in exchange for a partial easing of sanctions. citizens linked to the islamic state of iraq and syria say they kidnapped three teenagers
all right well thank you very much for coming on to r.t. you we do have to leave it there that's the foreign affairs on this surge of thrift of it thank you. and look now more of the world security has been stepped up across afghanistan during voting in the second round of the presidential election the taliban have issued further threats to disrupt polling last saturday presidential front runner up to a lot of dollar escaped an assassination attempt when a suicide bomber attacked his convoy in...
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Jun 12, 2014
06/14
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FOXNEWSW
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>> well, i think it's pretty bad. because you recognize that someone had to have directed people to falsify medical records. so it's not just the people who actually did the fudging. there's been some direction to do that because it's such a widespread problem. and i think the people who have served our country deserve better than this. as a matter of fact, as you may recall during the campaign i suggested we ought to give veterans vouchers if they want to go to a regular public hospital, regular private hospital, they ought to have that opportunity. some people just aren't able to get the care they need from our va system and that's got to change. >> did any of the participants, particularly the democratic ones at your forum today, governor, say we should go a little slow on that sort of talk because it does get in the way of public union workers and this notion that you can't willy nilly fire them? >> you can't go slow. you can't slow roll an issue like this. we're talking about america's veterans, they deserve the
>> well, i think it's pretty bad. because you recognize that someone had to have directed people to falsify medical records. so it's not just the people who actually did the fudging. there's been some direction to do that because it's such a widespread problem. and i think the people who have served our country deserve better than this. as a matter of fact, as you may recall during the campaign i suggested we ought to give veterans vouchers if they want to go to a regular public hospital,...
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Jun 23, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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. >> well, it's good to be back. i just wish you were down here. >> if you're real good, kids, kelly's going to speak portuguese for us today, too. >> no, that was butchered spanglish, unfortunately. >> i'm bill griffeth at cnbc headquarters because i'm back on "nightly business report," but we'll talk about that later. last week's rally sent the dow into record territory, as did the s&p, but we were on dow 17,000 watch on friday. looks like that's going to have to wait at least another day here, kelly. >>> oil prices also falling a little bit today, despite the continued fighting in iraq. where will oil and gasoline prices head from here? former shell oil president john hofmeister is here to weigh in on that. >> oil's also a hot topic at the university of dayton. the school is going green after divesting all of its fossil fuel investments. you're going to hear exclusively from the school's president about why he is doing this and his plan to have other university follow dayton's lead as well. >> yeah, bill, potentia
. >> well, it's good to be back. i just wish you were down here. >> if you're real good, kids, kelly's going to speak portuguese for us today, too. >> no, that was butchered spanglish, unfortunately. >> i'm bill griffeth at cnbc headquarters because i'm back on "nightly business report," but we'll talk about that later. last week's rally sent the dow into record territory, as did the s&p, but we were on dow 17,000 watch on friday. looks like that's going to...
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we're going to do a bit about well weakness and but we recently had him on the show i love well we sort of came up together is he more normal than you or i did i would you compare the two of you is nerd versions geek i love will and i feel like he will has so much more of the nerd crown than i have i mean you know i feel like i'm an early adopter to stuff but will is like an early early early adopters the guy was blogging in the year two thousand when what was on the show we asked him a few questions about you ok see how well he really knows you all right us or was he was always like newlyweds right how do you both spend a typical friday night a u.c.l.a. how do we spend it oh that's easy we we would drink beer and watch mystery science theater three thousand. probably watching ren and stimpy or mystery science theater on videotape oh you a swinger's. favorite board game oh man my favorite board game or the board game that we played you or they were board game no you played to get whatever. well she's what would he say is your favorite board game i don't know i think his is probably card
we're going to do a bit about well weakness and but we recently had him on the show i love well we sort of came up together is he more normal than you or i did i would you compare the two of you is nerd versions geek i love will and i feel like he will has so much more of the nerd crown than i have i mean you know i feel like i'm an early adopter to stuff but will is like an early early early adopters the guy was blogging in the year two thousand when what was on the show we asked him a few...
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well i'm reluctant to speak for the great doctor kelson but know well what she's saying is look that you and i have said this as well that budget deficits are not something that can be determined by government in other words you can't say we're going to cut and get a deficit of say three percent next year that's that's been the problem in the eurozone because what happens is that you know the lack of government spending interacts with other facets of the economy so if the economy starts to slow down as a result of government spending cuts then people will get thrown out of work demand will slow down tax revenues will slow will dissipate you'll have higher social welfare payments so as a result the deficit expand in other words there's nondiscretionary or in dodging this and by the same token if you have an improving economy than the deficits do start to come down which is why all the fiscal deficit hysteria that we had a few years ago was absolutely insane because it would take it was very deficit which helped to create a floor on demand and actually help the u.s. economy to recover
well i'm reluctant to speak for the great doctor kelson but know well what she's saying is look that you and i have said this as well that budget deficits are not something that can be determined by government in other words you can't say we're going to cut and get a deficit of say three percent next year that's that's been the problem in the eurozone because what happens is that you know the lack of government spending interacts with other facets of the economy so if the economy starts to slow...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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CSPAN3
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>> well, we make it easy. we make it easy because for some reason the department of defense decided to put in a discount for tobacco so not only when you buy it at the exchange do you get some breaks in terms of local taxes and state taxes that aren't collected on the tobacco product. there's a required 5% discount. it may be the best bargain that the military sells to its men and women in uniform. tobacco. good god. at this point in our history how can this be a fact? i'm glad you're doing this. i hope you'll hurry it along. >> the chairman may want to respond. >> i just want to make sure senator that the joint chiefs want to have a voice in this decision. we lead an uncommon life by choice but all the things you're talking about are legal and they are accessible and anything that makes anything less convenient and more expensive for our men and women in uniform given everything they are asked to do i've got concerns about it. i'm open-minded for review but i want you to understand that the chiefs will have t
>> well, we make it easy. we make it easy because for some reason the department of defense decided to put in a discount for tobacco so not only when you buy it at the exchange do you get some breaks in terms of local taxes and state taxes that aren't collected on the tobacco product. there's a required 5% discount. it may be the best bargain that the military sells to its men and women in uniform. tobacco. good god. at this point in our history how can this be a fact? i'm glad you're...
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well deal just this much feeds a family. a great. i know you had a difficult childhood but even that wasn't this bad. for girls or show. them there are no english and neither do i. i have a question for the show how do you live here without light the book even worse they don't have one five hundred no wife i know enough. to be honest and say this almost looks like the set for some blockbuster movie about a remote tribe. again just like you said is a roof for the what is it what it was is a deal. they've made a bed. these are mattresses. i need they just sleep on a leather scrap that's her bed for the night. in the library the lot of children street kids who died from drug abuse that police on used to call friends and death i'm sorry but what i've seen here is just overwhelming this guy that will. this for. all of us children. we're giving out blankets this evening. at one solve the problem this is just all desperate reaction to a desperate situation. what is to give children shouldn't have to sleep like this should. not. be my job to
well deal just this much feeds a family. a great. i know you had a difficult childhood but even that wasn't this bad. for girls or show. them there are no english and neither do i. i have a question for the show how do you live here without light the book even worse they don't have one five hundred no wife i know enough. to be honest and say this almost looks like the set for some blockbuster movie about a remote tribe. again just like you said is a roof for the what is it what it was is a...
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Jun 10, 2014
06/14
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MSNBCW
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>> well, i'm not shure what we are going to define as news. seen excerpts and reviews and read all of the things that you are certainly referring to, what this book sounds like is her accounting of significant portions and chapters of her tenure as secretary of state. regions of the world, and specific countries and specific instances and the interactions with the decisions she has made and accomplishments that she and the president has done together and to me, that is news as well, but it is how we define it. >> and she is also talking about sarah palin and the 2008 campaign with nbc cynthia mcfadden and let me play it for you. >> the day she was nominated the obama campaign did contact me and asked me if i would attack her and i said, attack her for what? being a woman? being on a ticket that is trying to draw at a tension? there is plenty of time to do what i think that you should do in politics which is to draw distinctions. >> and it did not take long for sarah palin to tweet about it, and said that it suggests that it makes the democrats
>> well, i'm not shure what we are going to define as news. seen excerpts and reviews and read all of the things that you are certainly referring to, what this book sounds like is her accounting of significant portions and chapters of her tenure as secretary of state. regions of the world, and specific countries and specific instances and the interactions with the decisions she has made and accomplishments that she and the president has done together and to me, that is news as well, but...
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thank you for being with us as well up next boom bust after the break. some people say freedom isn't free and they're right in fact freedom a only cost the price of a bottle of water or an old t. shirt fans celebrating the recent victory of the l.a. kings noticed that they were not alone what was believed to be a police drone was flying over them filming them i thought of moral contempt for drones or just for the hell of it the crowd began to throw random objects out until it was brought down i think this event makes two very big points firstly a lot of the surveillance state is not that hard to stop i mean there are satellite photos being taken of us all the time and n.s.a. spying on a communications but any camera or other device than throwing distance of a brick is at the mercy of us ninety nine percent and secondly generally if a crowd of people does something few ever get punished i mean if this drone was actually a police drone would they try to lock up the entire crowd for breaking it no they wouldn't and they couldn't for some reason if one perso
thank you for being with us as well up next boom bust after the break. some people say freedom isn't free and they're right in fact freedom a only cost the price of a bottle of water or an old t. shirt fans celebrating the recent victory of the l.a. kings noticed that they were not alone what was believed to be a police drone was flying over them filming them i thought of moral contempt for drones or just for the hell of it the crowd began to throw random objects out until it was brought down i...
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how well. it's more than just a european or anti european union that's not what we're about we're about an entire change in the way britain is governed and we posed to the to the current political class we want to remove these this professional class labor conservative it liberal democrats all the same sort of people cameron clegg you know. they all seem sort of person to none of them ever had a proper job in their lives we want to see real people going to real life experiences now that sort of people who stand for as members of parliament for ukip that sort of people we want people are fed up with professional politicians professional political class they want real people who had really experience is running the country and that's what we stand for that's great we want and what would you know what would you offer to people different that what cameron doesn't offer to them or any other professional politicians. what what what is it what is it good for and what you really are offering to the peo
how well. it's more than just a european or anti european union that's not what we're about we're about an entire change in the way britain is governed and we posed to the to the current political class we want to remove these this professional class labor conservative it liberal democrats all the same sort of people cameron clegg you know. they all seem sort of person to none of them ever had a proper job in their lives we want to see real people going to real life experiences now that sort of...
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Jun 27, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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so, they're acting well, as well as the small caps are acting well.he market continues to want to lift and see this, the glass is half full, rather than half empty. >> to this point, yes. james, you're the global investment strategist there at jpmorgan funds. what opportunities do you see overseas in the second half of the year? >> i see a lot of opportunities. europe, manufacturing activity is still doing well, despite perhaps lower gdp numbers. you see the same thing here in the united states. i still like the developed world, generally. if you look at emergent markets, if you have that longer time horizon and can really ride out volatility later on this year when central banks normalize their policies, at least here in the nalts, maybe the bank of england, if you have that longer time horizon, emerging markets make sense in a diverging portfolio. >> china's growth rate has been a question mark the first half of this year. what do you think's going on? >> their growth rate has been in question. gdp growth rates rates are slower so far this year, but
so, they're acting well, as well as the small caps are acting well.he market continues to want to lift and see this, the glass is half full, rather than half empty. >> to this point, yes. james, you're the global investment strategist there at jpmorgan funds. what opportunities do you see overseas in the second half of the year? >> i see a lot of opportunities. europe, manufacturing activity is still doing well, despite perhaps lower gdp numbers. you see the same thing here in the...
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Jun 2, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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four months of gains for the s&p and dow with fresh record highs as well. nasdaq up 3% as well.s 23 points above fair value. it was up .80% in may. the s&p was a point above fair value. 1.2% last week. and the nasdaq is up 3% in the month of may. up 4% last week just above fair value. nothing significant to call at the moment. here we stand with treasury yields and the european equity markets first. the ftse 100 is up .25%. the dax is up .10%. the ftse mlb is up .33%. the treasury yields, the jobs number at the end of the week. forecast to be near 15,000 on friday following the 288,000 increase in april. and as far as currency markets are concerned, the movement today is on euro/dollar now below 1.36. we were at 1.3615. we are below that now heading to the euro ecb meeting on thursday. what will they do? today, we had the final printing of pmis. over the week, the flash estimate. let's get more on what's happening in asia today with reaction to the china pmi at five-month lows. sri has all the details out of singapore. sri? >> hi, ross. that's right. the leadership came from chi
four months of gains for the s&p and dow with fresh record highs as well. nasdaq up 3% as well.s 23 points above fair value. it was up .80% in may. the s&p was a point above fair value. 1.2% last week. and the nasdaq is up 3% in the month of may. up 4% last week just above fair value. nothing significant to call at the moment. here we stand with treasury yields and the european equity markets first. the ftse 100 is up .25%. the dax is up .10%. the ftse mlb is up .33%. the treasury...
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Jun 14, 2014
06/14
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WPVI
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that worked out pretty well. starting thursday night here on abc. please say hello to sage steele. [ cheers and applause ] >> hi. >> jimmy: hi, how are you? i don't know if i've ever met a person named sage before. >> is that a good thing or a bad? >> jimmy: well, i think it's a nice name. are you named after wisdom or -- >> my dad had been drinking. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: for real? >> no, really. >> jimmy: oh, really? >> he was a great man. we're past that. military. military dad. retired army colonel. back in the day we were stationed at the canal zone, panama. >> jimmy: wow. >> dads weren't allowed upstairs in the delivery room at that time back in 1972. so he's pacing the kitchenette area downstairs in the basement. i know. i told you it's not sexy. the basement of the kitchen. and there was this like wallpaper with parsley, sage, rosemary, salt, thyme, paprika. like i could have been paprika. [ laughter ] this is definitely the lesser of many evils. and then he went upstairs and he said, mona, i've got the n
that worked out pretty well. starting thursday night here on abc. please say hello to sage steele. [ cheers and applause ] >> hi. >> jimmy: hi, how are you? i don't know if i've ever met a person named sage before. >> is that a good thing or a bad? >> jimmy: well, i think it's a nice name. are you named after wisdom or -- >> my dad had been drinking. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: for real? >> no, really. >> jimmy: oh, really? >> he was a great man....
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oh well. a lot like that. let's say the. least. sometimes for nothing the lead this season and. it's not just steve you'll be shocked if you see the stage take to be. teaching your mother to. play a little. there's a medium leave us so we leave that maybe. by the same motion suit your. play your party there's a ball. player shoes that no one is asking with the guests that you deserve answers from it's all politics only on our team. took place right close to. the first street. and i think pictures. on our recorders twitter. and instagram. could be in the know. on mom. welcome to the. show thirty five can just spend over six hundred billion euros on full keypad says thirty two one hundred fifty million degrees become. spill itself from st petersburg to france the trouble in situ the song. we've got the future covered. no c n n the m.s.m. b c news have taken some slightly but the fact is i admire their commitment to cover all sides of the story just in case one of them happens to be accurate. that was funny but it's closer to the truth from the right think. it's because when full a
oh well. a lot like that. let's say the. least. sometimes for nothing the lead this season and. it's not just steve you'll be shocked if you see the stage take to be. teaching your mother to. play a little. there's a medium leave us so we leave that maybe. by the same motion suit your. play your party there's a ball. player shoes that no one is asking with the guests that you deserve answers from it's all politics only on our team. took place right close to. the first street. and i think...
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well america. grew in chris allman let's get back to it americans have lost faith in the american dream according to a new poll from c.n.n. money for the first time ever nearly sixty percent of americans say the american dream is now unattainable young adults aged eighteen to thirty four are the ones most likely to feel that the american dream is unattainable sixty three percent i'm saying it's completely impossible sixty three percent of those polled also said that most children in the u.s. will be better off than their parents so isn't this just a complete repudiation of thirty four years of reaganomics. i will have to say that obama in two thousand and eight campaigned on hope and change and what we're seeing from this poll is that young people have no more hope and they're looking in their pockets and finding out they have no more change and the change they are getting they change they are getting from obama is not the change that they want and that's what this poll really support is what obama
well america. grew in chris allman let's get back to it americans have lost faith in the american dream according to a new poll from c.n.n. money for the first time ever nearly sixty percent of americans say the american dream is now unattainable young adults aged eighteen to thirty four are the ones most likely to feel that the american dream is unattainable sixty three percent i'm saying it's completely impossible sixty three percent of those polled also said that most children in the u.s....
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well . it's technology innovation all the developments from around russia we've got the future covered. i'm abby martin the stories we cover here are knocking on your new rights.
well . it's technology innovation all the developments from around russia we've got the future covered. i'm abby martin the stories we cover here are knocking on your new rights.
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the money no no law no well. why would. they say. this case is. sometimes for nothing. this season and. it's not just the story he'd still be jobst if you could you see the stage eight look to be. but the speech was that. the. lead. in genesis was huge and it vulgarized darwin science punishment for an uncommitted crying i was never the instrument for believing in eighty feeble minded still today so that if you don't know why. but i still don't know why. genetic improvement through forced sterilization the basis for nazi ideology they don't stop at just sterilizing and now go to the point of death. for years rarely discussed on till now i'd really rather not talk about that right. some people say that when it happens to me one time not a very nice one the curtain falls down. fit some point and i could no longer stand it i decided to kill myself. even i was scared of what i'd done but i punched her but i didn't understand where i didn't want a man raising his hand the woman should. run from him. everyone who sees this video to also speak to the children's father. my has
the money no no law no well. why would. they say. this case is. sometimes for nothing. this season and. it's not just the story he'd still be jobst if you could you see the stage eight look to be. but the speech was that. the. lead. in genesis was huge and it vulgarized darwin science punishment for an uncommitted crying i was never the instrument for believing in eighty feeble minded still today so that if you don't know why. but i still don't know why. genetic improvement through forced...
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Jun 22, 2014
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well, if you are doing a service job that can be done just as well as more cheaply in india come you are likely to lose her job. so trade in services of india and other low-wage countries does threaten american jobs. we in the united states are accustomed to seeing jobs go overseas. that's been had in the last six decades. in the past these were almost exclusively to call your shots, factory jobs. in other jobs that are potentially in shape ready or white collar jobs, office jobs, jobs in the service that are not necessarily entirely ordinary office work. potentially at risk are jobs that require considerable education and training to perform. jobs done by doctors, lawyers, architects committed years, even ultimately, god for bid, by professors. trade in services and the export of jobs to countries like india has the potential to trigger a substantial political backlash in the united states and other rich countries for two reasons. first, the jobs potentially at risk are much more numerous than in the past. there are many more white-collar service jobs than blue-collar fact or he job
well, if you are doing a service job that can be done just as well as more cheaply in india come you are likely to lose her job. so trade in services of india and other low-wage countries does threaten american jobs. we in the united states are accustomed to seeing jobs go overseas. that's been had in the last six decades. in the past these were almost exclusively to call your shots, factory jobs. in other jobs that are potentially in shape ready or white collar jobs, office jobs, jobs in the...
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Jun 26, 2014
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>> well, the fed policies certainly are making the well off wealthier. we seen big gains in stock prices and home values and those have benefitted wealthy households, but that's a side effect. that's not the goal. that's not what the fed is trying to do. they are trying to support economic growth that benefits everyone and the side effect is to make households wealthier. >> brian, your turn, make the case. >> first of all, if you borrow a lot of money with low interest rates that the fed is providing or if you're going to benefit more than if you lend money, right, with low interest rates. so if you want to try to separate the high income and low income but how much, whether they borrow or lend, you might be able to make that case. i don't believe that quantitative easing and low interest rates and fed activity is why the stock market is up. you know, you just reported nike or think of apple. i mean, these companies are making new products. they are selling them. they are helping their customers. it's not because of what the fed is doing, and those compa
>> well, the fed policies certainly are making the well off wealthier. we seen big gains in stock prices and home values and those have benefitted wealthy households, but that's a side effect. that's not the goal. that's not what the fed is trying to do. they are trying to support economic growth that benefits everyone and the side effect is to make households wealthier. >> brian, your turn, make the case. >> first of all, if you borrow a lot of money with low interest rates...
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Jun 29, 2014
06/14
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does well. i want to go back to the original point that none of this is perfect, and as long as with we are being holding accountable our government officials and as long as the american people and the workers are having some accountability, it is a good thing, but if there is waste and rampant waste, politics will correct itself at the voting booth. >> john, is that true? are we seeing that? and where is the accountability? >> look in theory, chuck is right. they should be accountable, but who do you vote for? 9% approval rate in congress ñ can, republicans and democrats and we are voting for the ta tallest midget here. and we have to say who can run the v.a., and we have to appoint a person who is not very good, and why is the bar so low and why do we accept the fact that politicians are doing subst substandard jobs across the board? somewhere in america, people have to step up to say, we won't accept this anymore. >> and to john's point, money promised back home. i will vote for the bum as lo
does well. i want to go back to the original point that none of this is perfect, and as long as with we are being holding accountable our government officials and as long as the american people and the workers are having some accountability, it is a good thing, but if there is waste and rampant waste, politics will correct itself at the voting booth. >> john, is that true? are we seeing that? and where is the accountability? >> look in theory, chuck is right. they should be...
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Jun 24, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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doing well.hank you. >> you've got a beautiful shop here. >> thank you. >> lot of history. >> a lot. >> by the way, that's a killer picture of your dad. >> thank you. >> when you took over officially--your dad passed two years ago? >> yes. >> is that when you officially kind of stepped in? >> yeah. >> how much money will this business lose this year? 100,000? >> no. less. >> and last year? how much did it make or lose? >> last year was 20,000. >> 20,000. and the year before? >> a loss of 20,000. 40,000. >> and if you had a couple bad months and you ran out of cash, what do you do? >> get a loan from the officer. >> your mom? >> yes. >> okay. and how much would you say she's put in here in the last... three years? >> probably close to 200,000 as loans. >> is that the only debt on your books? >> and we've used our line of credit at the bank. >> how much is that? >> 100,000. >> that's tapped out? >> yeah. >> over the years i've met a lot of second-generation business owners. what i'm concerned about
doing well.hank you. >> you've got a beautiful shop here. >> thank you. >> lot of history. >> a lot. >> by the way, that's a killer picture of your dad. >> thank you. >> when you took over officially--your dad passed two years ago? >> yes. >> is that when you officially kind of stepped in? >> yeah. >> how much money will this business lose this year? 100,000? >> no. less. >> and last year? how much did it make or...
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well we've actually heard from the c.e.o. of gas from alexei miller and he's been meeting with russia's prime minister dmitry medvedev and once again miller said that the ukraine's position is a form of blackmail. which is the position of the ukrainian side can be described as open blackmail the ukrainian government the prime minister wanted gazprom to allow ukraine to pay an ultra low price for gas like those in the customs union and if such low prices were not granted to kiev ukraine said it would not pay back its gas that to russia it also said it would take a gas without any payment and in volumes it needs of course such demands are unacceptable for the russian side that's why gas problem and to the prepayment method ten am this morning we also know that ukraine's prime minister arseniy yatsenyuk has imposed a state of emergency on the country's energy sector here of course now has to pay up front if it wants any gas of from russia now the price that russia was offering is three hundred eighty five dollars four thousand c
well we've actually heard from the c.e.o. of gas from alexei miller and he's been meeting with russia's prime minister dmitry medvedev and once again miller said that the ukraine's position is a form of blackmail. which is the position of the ukrainian side can be described as open blackmail the ukrainian government the prime minister wanted gazprom to allow ukraine to pay an ultra low price for gas like those in the customs union and if such low prices were not granted to kiev ukraine said it...
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one brutalized but secondly of course as well they're well used to social media and terms of projects and cells but the fact that in addition to the you know talking about you know police they know which way the executions and saying i've killed the shia dold you know that is going to by far in terms of across the region as i say in the neighboring governments all over the road will be very noticeable what is outgoing you know very keen whatever the past the things that will be have been the maliki government to buttress the maliki government against this against isis because his goal major repercussions with century for it's ok for iran and every other country in the region. whistleblower chelsea manning has accused the u.s. of lying about iraq the former us intelligence analyst on wiki leaks informants the american military has been controlling the media's coverage of the war in the country you can catch all the details later this hour in breaking this it. is sunday morning released in new york times op ed and titled the fog machine war and what she lays out all the ways that the mi
one brutalized but secondly of course as well they're well used to social media and terms of projects and cells but the fact that in addition to the you know talking about you know police they know which way the executions and saying i've killed the shia dold you know that is going to by far in terms of across the region as i say in the neighboring governments all over the road will be very noticeable what is outgoing you know very keen whatever the past the things that will be have been the...
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well during the u.s. led invasion of the country it took the allied forces twenty two days to reach baghdad the alternate goal of isis is to create a new slavic state merging parts of iraq and syria into one now it's believed that the movement grew out of al qaeda in iraq emerging from the cast of the two thousand and three invasion to date it has fifteen thousand fighters most of whom are thought to be from neighboring middle eastern countries but around two thousand are believed to have come from europe including britain isis has also become known for extreme brutality including widespread beheadings and crucifixions most of its funding is traced to southeast asia particularly indonesia the country with the biggest muslim population on earth and would following the arrest of high profile jihad is there it said extremists are now turning their attention to the conflicts in iraq and syria. let's discuss the issue further at michael maloof a former senior security policy analyst at the pentagon thanks for
well during the u.s. led invasion of the country it took the allied forces twenty two days to reach baghdad the alternate goal of isis is to create a new slavic state merging parts of iraq and syria into one now it's believed that the movement grew out of al qaeda in iraq emerging from the cast of the two thousand and three invasion to date it has fifteen thousand fighters most of whom are thought to be from neighboring middle eastern countries but around two thousand are believed to have come...
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right well. yeah the economy has come back on the basis again of these extraordinary measures the u.s. . federal reserve has been injecting in many months up to eighty five billion dollars into the national economy just basically creating that money out of nothing in order to keep interest rates low so that people continue to borrow money and go out and buy stuff. and it's only worked marginally i mean this is the this is the weakest recovery from a major recession in u.s. history. if you look at unemployment figures it's true that unemployment has gone down new jobs have been created but that's largely because we've redefined unemployment you know people who are have given up looking for work are simply not counted. and other other accounting tricks are being used also to to hide the situation from a so that we don't really see that we're at a historic turning point and the tragedy is there are things we could be doing to adjust and adapt to the end of growth if only we were honest with ourselve
right well. yeah the economy has come back on the basis again of these extraordinary measures the u.s. . federal reserve has been injecting in many months up to eighty five billion dollars into the national economy just basically creating that money out of nothing in order to keep interest rates low so that people continue to borrow money and go out and buy stuff. and it's only worked marginally i mean this is the this is the weakest recovery from a major recession in u.s. history. if you look...
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Jun 16, 2014
06/14
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does well as well. > yes. >> i agree with you. one of the key measures is this. you have to have a return if you are an equity investor. but you have to measure it the right way. return on equity but this is a bank with very strong capital base. if you have a weak capital base you will always be higher. if you do it on a conservative basis like that returns of 25%. it is not just last year. it is consistent. you don't find that. certainly it is better than any bank in asia. it is of course better than any bank in the u.s. or europe. >> at least he agrees with both of us. that is the important thing. >> retail banks in this survey. >> that can apply because clearly you are seeing a lot of the investment banks, british banks. >> canada. >> canada again. three banks from canada rank in this ranking as well. that is very encouraging. >> john, thanks for that. you can read more about the world's strongest banks in july in the july-august edition of bloomberg market magazine. in half an hour we will speak with the magazine's executive editor to get more on this story.
does well as well. > yes. >> i agree with you. one of the key measures is this. you have to have a return if you are an equity investor. but you have to measure it the right way. return on equity but this is a bank with very strong capital base. if you have a weak capital base you will always be higher. if you do it on a conservative basis like that returns of 25%. it is not just last year. it is consistent. you don't find that. certainly it is better than any bank in asia. it is of...
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well you like me to want your comedy news with some t.v. once a comedy news to be a bare fisted no holds barred fight to the dad. but the truth vampire fighting into the next in the corporate elite the billionaire freaks well they're going to run. well that's what you get with my new show for jack to night. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on our t.v. question for. a . is the good the bad of the very very part of a silly ugly the good. and when to a nation california tribe is paid air during the n.b.a. finals sixty seconds of an absolutely amazing ad it calls on the washington and al felt team to change its name yet is so effective you really need to see it fiery checco. forgotten. indian. novel. michel. you know what ensued survivor spirituous patriots. sitting boom i was the engine for. mother father son. daughter chief. believed. to run among. the. strong. native americans call themselves many things. the one thin
well you like me to want your comedy news with some t.v. once a comedy news to be a bare fisted no holds barred fight to the dad. but the truth vampire fighting into the next in the corporate elite the billionaire freaks well they're going to run. well that's what you get with my new show for jack to night. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on our t.v. question for. a ....
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Jun 3, 2014
06/14
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[applause] >> well, thank you, dr. hamre, for that really gracious introduction, and thank you to dr. hicks for your distinguished service to our country and to csis more putting on important forums such as this. i thought i'd make a few remarks this morning for about 20 minutes and then take questions as the standard format. next slide, please. >> [inaudible] apologies, technical issues. >> okay. which one hits it? that center button? okay, good. all right. [inaudible conversations] >> all right, good. i'm qualified now on this thing. [laughter] okay. so i'm going to talk about these four topics, and given that this is a military strategy forum, i'm going to try to move beyond my intelligence brief a little bit and talk about some of the implications for strategy, for national security strategy, defense strategy and intelligence strategy as we, as we look at these issues. before i do, one of the themes i'd like to leave you with is the tremendous change that's taken place in our intelligence capabilities over the past
[applause] >> well, thank you, dr. hamre, for that really gracious introduction, and thank you to dr. hicks for your distinguished service to our country and to csis more putting on important forums such as this. i thought i'd make a few remarks this morning for about 20 minutes and then take questions as the standard format. next slide, please. >> [inaudible] apologies, technical issues. >> okay. which one hits it? that center button? okay, good. all right. [inaudible...
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Jun 17, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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well, hello. >> how are you?marcus. >> hi, good. >> both: good to see you. >> i met a labor force in waycross that i was really impressed with their dedication and their effort, and i was impressed by the guys there. >> they're good. they're very good. >> considering what they have to work with. i think the inefficiency that i found there is bad, but fixable. and if you take good people and a bad process, and you can fix the process, then their output can grow dramatically. i want to figure out how to make more money. i mean, i don't spend my time-- i'm not a consultant. i don't put money in for fun. i put money in to make money... >> right. >> and if i don't think i can make money, then i don't do it. communication is a risk. it's very obvious to me here. do you guys think you can work together? >> should you be concerned about our relationship? i'm not gonna sit here and lie to you. absolutely. do i feel that nancy and i can come to some sort of terms if we develop a relationship and a partnership with you? i t
well, hello. >> how are you?marcus. >> hi, good. >> both: good to see you. >> i met a labor force in waycross that i was really impressed with their dedication and their effort, and i was impressed by the guys there. >> they're good. they're very good. >> considering what they have to work with. i think the inefficiency that i found there is bad, but fixable. and if you take good people and a bad process, and you can fix the process, then their output can...
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Jun 1, 2014
06/14
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well, it isn't going to work. it isn't going to work because that's not where the, ultimately, the majority of american people are going to come out intellectually, morally. and that's why, to go back to the beginning, for those of us who want to see this problem solved and solved fairly, getting involved in politics is the only solution. so -- >> before i open it up for questions, just let me bring one fact completely around. you mentioned senator paul douglas who was a very progressive senator and a friend of working people. senator paul douglas had a son. his name was paul douglas jr. paul douglas jr. grew up to be the ceo of the pittsdon coal company that i ended up striking for 15 months because he wanted to take away pensions and health care from active miners and the health care from retired miners and widows. >> you're kidding. >> we beat him. knox. [inaudible conversations] >> i never knew that. >> yeah. it was his son. and we reminded him of his dad's progressive underpinnings -- [laughter] to no avail,
well, it isn't going to work. it isn't going to work because that's not where the, ultimately, the majority of american people are going to come out intellectually, morally. and that's why, to go back to the beginning, for those of us who want to see this problem solved and solved fairly, getting involved in politics is the only solution. so -- >> before i open it up for questions, just let me bring one fact completely around. you mentioned senator paul douglas who was a very progressive...
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Jun 14, 2014
06/14
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KNTV
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well, thank you, timmy. good from my dad. >> seth: okay, well -- [ laughter ] well, thank you very much. thank you very much. >> this is awesome! >> seth: i'm glad you like it. >> i get to miss school to be here. >> seth: uh-huh. >> and i ate at that mcdonald's in times square on the second floor and i used a crap ton of ketchup. >> seth: that's really exciting. i'm glad you're having such a good time. now, in your letter that you sent, it said you love "late night" but you have some suggestions for the show. >> yeah. i had some ideas. >> seth: okay. >> do you mind if i -- >> seth: yeah, talk! that would be great. >> okay. [ laughter ] number one, you should do the show in a batman mask. >> seth: okay. why? >> well, because batman's cool. he can fight real hard and hates bad guys. and you can ask questions in this voice. you can be like -- [ batman voice ] "so, tell me when your new book's coming out? [ laughter ] i hear george clooney is a real prankster on set!" >> seth: that's really good, yeah. >> "do yo
well, thank you, timmy. good from my dad. >> seth: okay, well -- [ laughter ] well, thank you very much. thank you very much. >> this is awesome! >> seth: i'm glad you like it. >> i get to miss school to be here. >> seth: uh-huh. >> and i ate at that mcdonald's in times square on the second floor and i used a crap ton of ketchup. >> seth: that's really exciting. i'm glad you're having such a good time. now, in your letter that you sent, it said you love...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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CSPAN3
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so we said, "well, we'll see you next september." the playoffs is when everybody got well. you almost doubled the price of tickets and you sold out every game. and they saw that revenue going out the window, so they said, "okay, we'll talk to you. what do you want to talk about?" and so we had a list of things that we had to change. and one of the things that we knew was baseball was the only sport that had anti-trust exemption. the rest of us had to -- the rest of the sports had to go through anti-trust laws. so all of the agreements with the n.b.a. now are based on collective bargaining agreements. >> jim, will with work in college? is that a model for college? is that something that these young athletes should be looking at? >> i'm going to simplify it. i'm totally against the union in college. i don't like the ncaa. i think it's a greedy organization and a dictatorial organization and an organization that's totally unfair for the players. i mean, the players can't even get enough money to bring their parents to a game. but on the other hand, i think that we have all got
so we said, "well, we'll see you next september." the playoffs is when everybody got well. you almost doubled the price of tickets and you sold out every game. and they saw that revenue going out the window, so they said, "okay, we'll talk to you. what do you want to talk about?" and so we had a list of things that we had to change. and one of the things that we knew was baseball was the only sport that had anti-trust exemption. the rest of us had to -- the rest of the...