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46
Dec 8, 2020
12/20
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whent we emerge from the wilderness we learned what apollo 11 had achieved. we had landed on the moon and the moon that seemed so impossibly far away. we should never forget what we can do, what we all of us can do, the impossible when we open our eyes to the challenge and work together to meet it. i returned home to the west and as i return home to the west i am clear i'd about even or troubled by how far away our destination is and i am optimistic that we will get there like we always have. [applause] >> it is truly my honor today to commend the senior senator from new mexico , my longtime partner in the chamber, my good friend tom udall for his years of service to our great state of new mexico into our nation. before i speak about tom i would like to quickly take a moment to recognize the service of the service over the last two years and congresswoman small served for a time in senator udall's office and for these last two years in the house of representatives she has dedicated herself to delivering resources to the people of southern new mexico and i'm v
whent we emerge from the wilderness we learned what apollo 11 had achieved. we had landed on the moon and the moon that seemed so impossibly far away. we should never forget what we can do, what we all of us can do, the impossible when we open our eyes to the challenge and work together to meet it. i returned home to the west and as i return home to the west i am clear i'd about even or troubled by how far away our destination is and i am optimistic that we will get there like we always have....
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137
Dec 28, 2020
12/20
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KPIX
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here, there is more of a cule now to call no work together reach until, tregionly towork together, whentomes to, for instance, on how to vaccinate your population? >> governor: this virus doesn't stop at state lines or party lines. this is a common enemy. that is always how we have looked at it. trying to learn from the best science. this being a novel virus, we've learned an incredible amount. when i share information, i get the benefit of all of the cleveland clinic and all of the experts wer we're talking to. >> brennan: will you coordinate those strategies on who goes first and who goes last? >> >> governor: we share a lot of information. we were on the phone with a lot of the governors just a few days ago, and one of the issues was what is the priority. there is a censu consensus of what we call the a1 group, people who are risking their lives every single day, as well as where we have taken the most losses, and that is in our nursing homes. i think there will be more a lack of consensus among people in general when you get beyond that first group. >> brennan: governor whitmer, we'r
here, there is more of a cule now to call no work together reach until, tregionly towork together, whentomes to, for instance, on how to vaccinate your population? >> governor: this virus doesn't stop at state lines or party lines. this is a common enemy. that is always how we have looked at it. trying to learn from the best science. this being a novel virus, we've learned an incredible amount. when i share information, i get the benefit of all of the cleveland clinic and all of the...
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Dec 10, 2020
12/20
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KQED
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. >> life does not diminish whent you der.zaidis are there about catching something or doing something -- the anxieties are there about catching something or doing something. both of us want to have it done. >>ns as vaccinat continue, a warning from the medicine regulator. two nhs staff with a history of suffered side effects.ions >> if wegt need to strn our advise now that we have had this experience in the vulnerable populations, the groups who have been selected as a priority, we get that advice immediaty. >> the two staff numbers are well again. those who experience significant other degree actions are being told to avoid the jack for now. experts say of the thousands who have received the jab, serious reactions where rare. at a care home, a sta residents were receiving their jobs. by the end of the year, 4 million doses of the vaccine should have arrived in the u.k. and gps will selrtering vaccines next week. for the most senior scientific advir, a warning. this is no time for complacency. >> we have an important light at
. >> life does not diminish whent you der.zaidis are there about catching something or doing something -- the anxieties are there about catching something or doing something. both of us want to have it done. >>ns as vaccinat continue, a warning from the medicine regulator. two nhs staff with a history of suffered side effects.ions >> if wegt need to strn our advise now that we have had this experience in the vulnerable populations, the groups who have been selected as a...
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59
Dec 19, 2020
12/20
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KNTV
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whent undetected until late 2018. when prosecutors discovered dna taken from the crime scene in the women's homes. closely matched one of his family members. on a dna matching site. and it provided closure to the individuals that were wrongfully being looked at. there were so many people that were being looked at as potential suspects. >> there is a law in california called elder parole. after he has served 25 years, he will be allowed today apply for parole. when he's 85. prosecutors say even then, they will fight against any early release. wanting to make sure that he is never a free man again. >> up next. first in the room. back of the line. the group behind the chant and protest at stanford medical center. >> decade of working in the field. the special christmas surprise for a dozen farm workers in the bay area. >> tracking those dropping temperatures. i'll have more details on how low we'll go for tomorrow. >>> about 200 healthcare workers got vaccinated today. the hospital set up a temporary clinic. among the 20
whent undetected until late 2018. when prosecutors discovered dna taken from the crime scene in the women's homes. closely matched one of his family members. on a dna matching site. and it provided closure to the individuals that were wrongfully being looked at. there were so many people that were being looked at as potential suspects. >> there is a law in california called elder parole. after he has served 25 years, he will be allowed today apply for parole. when he's 85. prosecutors say...
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51
Dec 20, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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returns whented they came up. the way the members of the court were to be picked is that the bill forming this commission cited certain circuits and in those days the supreme court justices still rode circuit. we want such and such a judge in from the circuit and that. it came with two democrats and two republicans and those four guys were to pick the fifth member and they had to be from associate justices. nobody wanted the chief justice. and everybody believed this was going to be david davis, a fat judge from illinois who had been run in lincoln's campaign in 1860. but the day before congress is going to vote on this bill, the democrats in the illinois legislature, along with some greenbackers, third party, elect david davis as the next u.s. senator from illinois to replace a republican, blackjack logan. davis refuses to serve on this. he says, i am not a judge anymore. he refuses to serve on this electoral commission. so they -- the four guys pick another guy named joseph bradley from new jersey. what happens?
returns whented they came up. the way the members of the court were to be picked is that the bill forming this commission cited certain circuits and in those days the supreme court justices still rode circuit. we want such and such a judge in from the circuit and that. it came with two democrats and two republicans and those four guys were to pick the fifth member and they had to be from associate justices. nobody wanted the chief justice. and everybody believed this was going to be david...
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Dec 13, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 53
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so there is an ability to cruit and set up an organization easier whent comes to those ideologies. but the last thing i would mentn is we needo talk really about the mixing of ideology. it is not a clear-cut as it used to be. in the good old days 15, 20 years ago i could tell you that i was an al qaeda guy, and thatadical that would be easy from the bucket. right now you're seeing this mixing of white nationalist is also inte whose a member who give a proud boy's meeting the buckets maket harder. the government really needs the buckets you can put resources against buckets. i can have a squad that is intel because we think that is important. but what happens when it mixes back-and-forth? analso comes full circle. how do you train up for moderation technology companies to understand the ideology in a way that's easi. >> host: one of things it's constantly talked about and think about deterring radilization and oer parts of the world is to talk abo the causes that led to that radicalization. whether it's vlence whether it's discrimination whether it's once or the oer when you look at
so there is an ability to cruit and set up an organization easier whent comes to those ideologies. but the last thing i would mentn is we needo talk really about the mixing of ideology. it is not a clear-cut as it used to be. in the good old days 15, 20 years ago i could tell you that i was an al qaeda guy, and thatadical that would be easy from the bucket. right now you're seeing this mixing of white nationalist is also inte whose a member who give a proud boy's meeting the buckets maket...
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212
Dec 9, 2020
12/20
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CNNW
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that's the number of death threats whent off the charts. you can't ring that bell in this toxic political environment. look at the threats against governor whitmer and northam here and once you start agitating and pouring carosene on the fire, it is hard to put it out. it is important for me to stand up for me and my family. >> your ten-year-old child was asked whether you will be executed, i mean as a new d dad -- i can't imagine what that -- how do you deal with that? >> i am not sure you can, right? those things are hard. i listen to the michigan congresswoman how she's doing h. when you have family members and collateral damage effectively from these attacks on your character and your person, i don't take that lightly. that's not acceptable behavior. that's not how people should act in a civil society. i has to stop. >> how do things change? i am still stunned after all the shamelessness we have seen the last four years and all the lies. i am stunned on how the president turned on people who works very hard for the good of the country,
that's the number of death threats whent off the charts. you can't ring that bell in this toxic political environment. look at the threats against governor whitmer and northam here and once you start agitating and pouring carosene on the fire, it is hard to put it out. it is important for me to stand up for me and my family. >> your ten-year-old child was asked whether you will be executed, i mean as a new d dad -- i can't imagine what that -- how do you deal with that? >> i am not...
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107
Dec 12, 2020
12/20
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eye 107
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the international system but, again, the perfect case stu of the fact that china does not sit still whent's under pressure. xi jinping is under tremendous pressure, i argue. xi jinping isacing internal backlash at home and criticized by prominent figes, tycoon who had a following of millions of peop. they criticized him for being incompetent, xi for being im-- incompetent. but xi doesn't back dow from this pressure. in fact, he escalates. so during the same year that china has been suffering from covid, it has picked a fight with ind. it is pressuring and bullying australia for saying, we need thorough investigationf the originsf covid. is pressuring europeans to remove any languagef campaigns around covid. it is cohortsing, intimidatg taiwan as we speak. it marched into hong kong and removed the status, hope for any democracy in hong kong during this period of time. as xi gets more compensated he will compensate with aggression and that's what we have been seeing. t me wrap up before i turn it over to general mcmaster for comments and corey for questio and comments by saying the book, does
the international system but, again, the perfect case stu of the fact that china does not sit still whent's under pressure. xi jinping is under tremendous pressure, i argue. xi jinping isacing internal backlash at home and criticized by prominent figes, tycoon who had a following of millions of peop. they criticized him for being incompetent, xi for being im-- incompetent. but xi doesn't back dow from this pressure. in fact, he escalates. so during the same year that china has been suffering...
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78
Dec 10, 2020
12/20
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KQED
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. >> schifrin: whent comes to solutions, you heard under secretary mcprson saying keeping the chain ofmand in the investigation process keepsc commandersountable. do you think the investigations process should be removed from the chain of command? >> absolutely. we've long advocatedr removing commanders from the investigative process. un, they alway say that it goes to good order and discipline. but i'd like to point to manesy militahat do not have commanders in their chain of command, like the brit. the brits-- commanders in the british army do not get o make the decision abou awhen how crimes are prosecuted. and they don't have a problem with good order aind disci in the british army. so why is it that we would have that problem in the u.s.? unless we have poor leadership. good order and discipline is the result of good leadership. and, clearly, there s a failure of leadership here. there's been a failure of leadership on this topic for decades. >> schifrin: ellen haring, thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> woodruff: we want to look now at what the pandemic is doing t
. >> schifrin: whent comes to solutions, you heard under secretary mcprson saying keeping the chain ofmand in the investigation process keepsc commandersountable. do you think the investigations process should be removed from the chain of command? >> absolutely. we've long advocatedr removing commanders from the investigative process. un, they alway say that it goes to good order and discipline. but i'd like to point to manesy militahat do not have commanders in their chain of...
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230
Dec 28, 2020
12/20
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KQED
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eye 230
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like the house was able to pass the $2,000 bill, and what happens now is what happens in the senate, whentis the replicans in charge, not the democrats, like in the house where it is nancy pelosi.th bu bigger point, you're right, wasn't really about policy as much as it was about branding a messaging. donald trump's message from the very beginning of his ti as a candidate to the end of his presidency has been about, you know, i'm thonly one who can fix this. i, alone, can do this.th that eveg else is sort of rigged against me. hetalks, of course, a lot about the fact, unfounded, that the election was rigged againstim, that the media is rigged against him. in this case, it isng ss, right? he wants to keep making the claim that washington is so dysfunctional, they can't help you. i can help you. and so he will leave not necessarily with getting an accomplishmt -- a policy accomplishment -- but he has his message he is going tocontinue to put forward for the foreseeable future, which is to continue to destabilize an already dy and to make that where he spends so much histime in the next few -
like the house was able to pass the $2,000 bill, and what happens now is what happens in the senate, whentis the replicans in charge, not the democrats, like in the house where it is nancy pelosi.th bu bigger point, you're right, wasn't really about policy as much as it was about branding a messaging. donald trump's message from the very beginning of his ti as a candidate to the end of his presidency has been about, you know, i'm thonly one who can fix this. i, alone, can do this.th that eveg...
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77
Dec 19, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 77
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discussed whents municipal boards of health were just starting to come into their own, into the middleecades of the 19th century, we do not get more centralized public health authority until after the civil war. there will be vigilante enforcement. we are talking about texas in the middle decades of the 19th century. there was a frontier mentality. i lived in texas for 11 years and there is still a frontier mentality and a lot of texas. [laughter] in the 19th century, it was even more pronounced. there are pictures we can show of actual vigilante enforcement of trains which had hordes of ians.ng galveston ow this is the wharf in galveston showing people fleeing by boat, but they often try to flee by train. there was an incident in houston -- this happened in houston and dallas -- but in houston, they were met by a policy of people wielding shotguns and bludgeons. basically forcing them to turn around. this contributed to a tendency delet quarantine. letc quarantine. we know they were assimilated. this is very well documented among historians of infectious disease and we can see that in
discussed whents municipal boards of health were just starting to come into their own, into the middleecades of the 19th century, we do not get more centralized public health authority until after the civil war. there will be vigilante enforcement. we are talking about texas in the middle decades of the 19th century. there was a frontier mentality. i lived in texas for 11 years and there is still a frontier mentality and a lot of texas. [laughter] in the 19th century, it was even more...