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Jan 1, 2020
01/20
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participants who he gathered and we see people who at least look to us to be african-american, puerto rican, we see trans people, you will energy of the participants. we see camping, we see same-sex affection and intimacy in the fred mcdarrah photographs. so we see some of what was going on during the week of the rioting. >> author, historian and professor at san francisco university, marc stein, who is joining us from christopher street in greenwich village, new york, thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you so much for having me. up next we visit the rise up exhibit in washington d.c.. to learn about the stonewall riots, and how they served as a catalyst for the modern lgbtq rights movement. >> welcome to the museum, i'm patty vice president of exhibits and clinton. here we are at the prologue of our newest exhibit, rise up stonewall and the lgbtq human rights movement. stonewall was an event in the summer of 1969, an uprising and a gay bar in new york city. that propelled forward, the modern-day lgbtq rights movement. this is where we tell that story, of how ordinary american
participants who he gathered and we see people who at least look to us to be african-american, puerto rican, we see trans people, you will energy of the participants. we see camping, we see same-sex affection and intimacy in the fred mcdarrah photographs. so we see some of what was going on during the week of the rioting. >> author, historian and professor at san francisco university, marc stein, who is joining us from christopher street in greenwich village, new york, thank you so much...
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Jan 17, 2020
01/20
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for those who say ... for those who say that we should not take action, i say that climate inaction is just as deadly as climate denial. this is the year for climate action. it's time to pass a washington law for washington jobs, for washington drivers and washington children, and let's bring this success home this year. we deserve it. now, these are not our only tasks this year. we need to make sure more of our children get early learning opportunities, that we address diversity and equity, especially in the workplace, that we pass common sense gun safety measures, that we continue to make investments in k-12 including special education, that we protect our kids from tobacco and vaping and help foster care children earlier and more frequently and provide more beds and we need to save the southern resident orcas. we stand together ... in these endeavors we stand together with tribal governments who inspire us with their stewardship. the good news is we can do these things. we can because we are the state t
for those who say ... for those who say that we should not take action, i say that climate inaction is just as deadly as climate denial. this is the year for climate action. it's time to pass a washington law for washington jobs, for washington drivers and washington children, and let's bring this success home this year. we deserve it. now, these are not our only tasks this year. we need to make sure more of our children get early learning opportunities, that we address diversity and equity,...
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Jan 7, 2020
01/20
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but it's who we are.ve more great research universities and the united states of america that all the rest of the world combined. all the rest of the world combined. when i did the cancer initiative, the moonshot in the biden cancer initiative, we are on the verge of being able to cure cancers. fundamentally alter diabetes can be able to bring best to make sure we have an answer to alzheimer's. if we don't, guess what. every single solitary bed in america today will be filled with an alzheimer's patient in 20 years and it will cost us $258 billion a year and were not investing in making sure what we can do and we can do so much. every major idea has come out of one of those great research universities. they are not owned by the government. they are owned by you, los alamos and in california, but e thinks that's a defense department. it's owned by the people of california. it's part of the university of california. every major change, and we're better stock the nation in the world with the best and brighte
but it's who we are.ve more great research universities and the united states of america that all the rest of the world combined. all the rest of the world combined. when i did the cancer initiative, the moonshot in the biden cancer initiative, we are on the verge of being able to cure cancers. fundamentally alter diabetes can be able to bring best to make sure we have an answer to alzheimer's. if we don't, guess what. every single solitary bed in america today will be filled with an...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 21, 2020
01/20
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so i know the folks who have worked on this including power who really is my policy director but has led this effort and worked with his team and others to make this a reality, i know a lot of them are saying oh, my god, mayor, what else can we do? we are working hard every single day to get this done. and we have more to do. people are counting on us to do more. and doing more means that we have a place for people to go. yesterday when i was out at the embarcadero and the hot team, they were out there talking to people, they were able to fortunately get three people to commit to a shelter bed at the embarcadero navigation center, but that was three people. there were a lot of other folks that refused service. and some of those people were having a number of challenges. and as a result, we needed, of course, to do more. and doing more means that we meet people where they are, whether there is a mental health challenge, whether there is a substance use challenge, we need to make sure that we have a place for everyone to go when we're offering assistance. so part of my goal is to provi
so i know the folks who have worked on this including power who really is my policy director but has led this effort and worked with his team and others to make this a reality, i know a lot of them are saying oh, my god, mayor, what else can we do? we are working hard every single day to get this done. and we have more to do. people are counting on us to do more. and doing more means that we have a place for people to go. yesterday when i was out at the embarcadero and the hot team, they were...
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Jan 22, 2020
01/20
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ALJAZ
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is surrounded by people who are now in jail during this campaign the notion that he who never heard to talk about corruption anywhere else on the planet would somehow rather that he was trying to root out corruption in ukraine is fanciful and farcical. and yet people could say with a straight face so that trump a. i can hear it go yeah i believe that it's nonsense when again all he wanted was an announcement and the good thing is joe biden's actually benefiting the very person he was trying to her is benefiting he alone is in iowa you do know that there are a lot of americans who see it the other way i mean one of the fascinating is to watch in the polling every week on this shift you know one week it's 51 percent of americans want to see the president impeached and convicted and removed from office and now this week it's the other way around this week there was a new gallup poll that shows just today that 51 percent of americans are are do not want to see the president convicted and impeached and removed and so you've got this kind of interesting slide back and forth in the middle
is surrounded by people who are now in jail during this campaign the notion that he who never heard to talk about corruption anywhere else on the planet would somehow rather that he was trying to root out corruption in ukraine is fanciful and farcical. and yet people could say with a straight face so that trump a. i can hear it go yeah i believe that it's nonsense when again all he wanted was an announcement and the good thing is joe biden's actually benefiting the very person he was trying to...
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Jan 3, 2020
01/20
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ALJAZ
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embassy in fact e-mailed out to americans who are thinking of traveling to iraq or who are in iraq they should prepare a will they should draft a will and they should designate beneficiaries in their life insurance policy i think that's all good advice we are now in an incredibly dangerous situation we the united states has assassinated one of the leading military and political leaders not just in iran but in the entire region it's an incredibly dangerous force that we're on it's a very stark assessment from you to say that this is a dick the russian of war on iran including we are talking about a significant figure in the iranian military and political establishment is this a war indeed as you've described it that both the united states or iran a fully prepared for. i mean you know but i think for americans or others around the world to think about it it's him or into to consider what the united states has done by assassinating us and so on the money would be tantamount to the iranians assassinating perhaps our secretary of defense or our commander of the central command it's an incred
embassy in fact e-mailed out to americans who are thinking of traveling to iraq or who are in iraq they should prepare a will they should draft a will and they should designate beneficiaries in their life insurance policy i think that's all good advice we are now in an incredibly dangerous situation we the united states has assassinated one of the leading military and political leaders not just in iran but in the entire region it's an incredibly dangerous force that we're on it's a very stark...
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Jan 31, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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and who couldn't.ane and who couldn't. there were 200 people of british nationality, we were told, who were in wuhan, and of those 200,83 british citizens are actually on that plane, so not all of those british nationals who were in wuhan have actually got onto that plane. and all of this, of course, comes as we've had the first two cases confirmed in the uk of the new strain of coronavirus. those two people from the same family, who had been staying in a hotel in yorkshire, we are told, are now being treated at an nhs hospital in newcastle that specialises in infectious diseases. we can go to caroline davies, our correspondent at raf brize norton, watching these pictures as that plane just taxis on that runway at raf brize norton. caroline, just talk us through in a bit more detail about what will happen now with the people on that plane. as you said, there are 83 british nationals on board, 27 foreign nationals. there are some eu citizens on there as well. we understand they will be flown onwards to
and who couldn't.ane and who couldn't. there were 200 people of british nationality, we were told, who were in wuhan, and of those 200,83 british citizens are actually on that plane, so not all of those british nationals who were in wuhan have actually got onto that plane. and all of this, of course, comes as we've had the first two cases confirmed in the uk of the new strain of coronavirus. those two people from the same family, who had been staying in a hotel in yorkshire, we are told, are...
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Jan 2, 2020
01/20
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these are people who are much admired for who they are and what they do. here at the museum, our mission is to promote understanding of the importance of the free press and the first amendment. we hope more people will come and visit this exhibit because stonewall, the events at stonewall and rise up, stonewall and the lgbtq rights movement, really tells the story of how everyday americans used their first amendment freedoms, freedom of press, religion, assembly, petition, speech, to rise up, act up, push back and advocate for change. that's what we're all about here at the museum, explaining to people the story of the first amendment. this movement, the story of the lgbtq movement, really embodies everything about the first amendment. >> you can watch this or other "american artifacts" programs at any time by visiting our website c-span.org/history. >>> all week we're featuring american history tv programs as a preview of what's available every weekend on c-span3. lectures in history, american artifacts, reel america, the civil war, oral histories, the pr
these are people who are much admired for who they are and what they do. here at the museum, our mission is to promote understanding of the importance of the free press and the first amendment. we hope more people will come and visit this exhibit because stonewall, the events at stonewall and rise up, stonewall and the lgbtq rights movement, really tells the story of how everyday americans used their first amendment freedoms, freedom of press, religion, assembly, petition, speech, to rise up,...
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Jan 14, 2020
01/20
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ALJAZ
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who worked at nasa who had his phone taken that he feared maybe you know the data was downloaded into a government computer so part of the reason that people are so afraid is that we have already seen this before and at the time of the muslim ban people were openly talking about how bad could this get are going to be internment camps which at the time sounded you know apoplectic and crazy but with this president it just seems like nothing is out of bounds and so the prospect of us going to war with iran and what that's going to mean for us here at home we can't take for granted that the protections that we enjoy are going to be guaranteed for us so it's i think that's why people are so afraid and we're already seeing you know we've seen what this guy does to us in times of peace and in times when we actually had a diplomatic deal with iran what's going to happen if there's an all out war this is going to constrain him the sky i think the president of the united states money on the not enough to keep the non-scholarly. yeah i mean no i just it was really saddening to see that timeline
who worked at nasa who had his phone taken that he feared maybe you know the data was downloaded into a government computer so part of the reason that people are so afraid is that we have already seen this before and at the time of the muslim ban people were openly talking about how bad could this get are going to be internment camps which at the time sounded you know apoplectic and crazy but with this president it just seems like nothing is out of bounds and so the prospect of us going to war...
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Jan 26, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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and someone like constantine erns, the head of channel 1 who i write about in one of the chapters whois an interesting guy because he has this background as an era quasi hippy who was making shows about german art house films while wearing a black leather motorcycle jacket and with long hair, grew into being the premiere and the most powerful propaganda of the putin era. while that's a fascinating transformation for me and one he takes no small amount of pride in, he likes to position himself as this counterculture rebel even though he yields power over the country. -- he wields power over the country. there is some degree of continuity or maybe less contradiction or maybe compromise in his case because he's someone who despite his tastes in art house film and choosing to put the off beat quirky american television series fargo on prime time on channel 1, he never stopped believing in the central or premier authority of the state. for him, it's not a contradiction. that's what makes him interesting to me, something that a friend of his told me for the -- for my profile of the chapter
and someone like constantine erns, the head of channel 1 who i write about in one of the chapters whois an interesting guy because he has this background as an era quasi hippy who was making shows about german art house films while wearing a black leather motorcycle jacket and with long hair, grew into being the premiere and the most powerful propaganda of the putin era. while that's a fascinating transformation for me and one he takes no small amount of pride in, he likes to position himself...
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qualify for food stamps who qualify for emergency funds who qualify for these things actually don't use them so we have it strong reserves in terms of helping those who are in poverty that we're not actually using at all but moreover i think that you're right in pushing this on congress because congress can do something now i have a lot of a lot of anger when it comes to things. getting done in the senate right now the senate is obviously republican led and they are you know backing up on everything so i don't think that it's going to go very far there but i do think that for democrats in the house for the house that is that has passed hundreds of bills that are you know in the graveyard of the senate right now i think that this is one of their chances to again showcase that they can work through impeachment and get legislation done at the same time i want to ask you this question. because you know i feel like this is one of those things that immigration there's a little bit of fight for it there's a lot of work service to it but you don't see people really following through on it s
qualify for food stamps who qualify for emergency funds who qualify for these things actually don't use them so we have it strong reserves in terms of helping those who are in poverty that we're not actually using at all but moreover i think that you're right in pushing this on congress because congress can do something now i have a lot of a lot of anger when it comes to things. getting done in the senate right now the senate is obviously republican led and they are you know backing up on...
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who just happened to also be the brother of joseph schmitz who i work. with on the campaign we'll throw you in jail you can do it i was under sealed indictment of some nature i couldn't raise money and they basically told me if you don't plead guilty to this we're going to come after you with various charges that at the end of the day at 29 years old i wanted to continue with my life and i just threw in the towel so yes there are 14 days in prison it was 11 once and then leave $100.00 in fines for it have you said is through all of this why did i need this why do i get involved in the 1st place you had dealings in the middle east i imagine you a successful. would you need it oh you know i was i have to say i felt relatively compared to other people who were in this industry and in washington at my age i was very successful but one thing i do say to everybody who asked me the same exact question is i don't i wouldn't change a thing i wouldn't change anything about working for both ben carson and donald trump because i think the 2016 election was certainly
who just happened to also be the brother of joseph schmitz who i work. with on the campaign we'll throw you in jail you can do it i was under sealed indictment of some nature i couldn't raise money and they basically told me if you don't plead guilty to this we're going to come after you with various charges that at the end of the day at 29 years old i wanted to continue with my life and i just threw in the towel so yes there are 14 days in prison it was 11 once and then leave $100.00 in fines...
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Jan 6, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN
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susan: who was michael o'donnell?id: michael o'donnell was a young man who found himself in vietnam in 1970. he was a songwriter and a poet and a helicopter pilot and a hero and ultimately a casualty of the vietnam war. susan: how did you encounter his poetry? david: i first came across it in a book by harold evans. there was a section of the vietnam war in that section there's a small photograph of michael o'donnell. below that it said this young man wrote this poem, the poem i just read. below that it said, shortly after writing this poem, his helicopter was shot down and he remains missing in action. that book was published about 20 years ago. and at that time, michael was still recorded as missing in action. i was very curious about who this young man was. the poem moved my deeply. and i wanted to learn more about why he wrote it, who he was and what the story was behind the poem. and one thing led to another. and here we are. susan: 20 years of effort, so how did the book come about at this particular time? david
susan: who was michael o'donnell?id: michael o'donnell was a young man who found himself in vietnam in 1970. he was a songwriter and a poet and a helicopter pilot and a hero and ultimately a casualty of the vietnam war. susan: how did you encounter his poetry? david: i first came across it in a book by harold evans. there was a section of the vietnam war in that section there's a small photograph of michael o'donnell. below that it said this young man wrote this poem, the poem i just read....
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Jan 13, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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i go talk to anybody who will talk to me.epublican and make my pitch for this agency and what i began to discover over time is that if people listen to it, i'm getting the same two answers from almost everybody. first answer is ha. that's actually a good idea. you could actually make a real difference, structural change and second,don't even try . you'll be up against wall street, up against big banks and against all the republicans, you're going to be up against half the democrats . you can't get it done. i get. big structural change is hard . but it was the right thing to do.[applause] so we got in that fight and we took on wall street and we took on the big donors and we took on the republicans and in 2010, president barackobama signed that agency into law . we won. cfpb, the nerd squad. i love this. yes. because here's the thing, you know what that agency has done? they have forced the banks in this country to return more than $12 billion directly to people they cheated. we can make governments work for the people. so thi
i go talk to anybody who will talk to me.epublican and make my pitch for this agency and what i began to discover over time is that if people listen to it, i'm getting the same two answers from almost everybody. first answer is ha. that's actually a good idea. you could actually make a real difference, structural change and second,don't even try . you'll be up against wall street, up against big banks and against all the republicans, you're going to be up against half the democrats . you can't...
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Jan 30, 2020
01/20
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ALJAZ
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who you were what. the bible and the what i can and when it was me who led the serger if they were at the leading. in part to our humvees friends is deadly rivals and the enemies who posed as friends. india a nation of 1300000000 people deeply religious desperately divided i think good clean you know day they should which is potentially catastrophic what's causing this crisis of identity jim is making them to get back down but it pleases off his insistence and why is it getting what. joining me are just us here on my journey in search of india's so. coming soon on al-jazeera. al-jazeera explores prominent figures of the 20th century and how rivalries influenced the course of history steve jobs so much better marketeers land bill gates 1st apple is going green than stuff on bill made software what it is today will change the world to high tech visionaries whose breakthroughs inspired a digital revolution jobs and gates face to face on al-jazeera. or. you're watching all jews there with me so robert in do
who you were what. the bible and the what i can and when it was me who led the serger if they were at the leading. in part to our humvees friends is deadly rivals and the enemies who posed as friends. india a nation of 1300000000 people deeply religious desperately divided i think good clean you know day they should which is potentially catastrophic what's causing this crisis of identity jim is making them to get back down but it pleases off his insistence and why is it getting what. joining me...
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Jan 15, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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athletes who can no longer compete, parents who can't carry their children and people who were once activehousebound, lonely, and have told us they often feel suicidal because of the pain. we've set up a database of 100 people — and done detailed research into how the mesh has affected them. some of those patients are here in the studio today — along with surgeons, politicians and lawyers. get in touch if you've been affected. plus we've been leaked footage from a promotional video from ten years ago for one type of mesh — which shows how it can become rock hard inside the body. it's still being sold to the nhs. again you can see how stiff this mesh is. this is a mesh tumour. you can see what it looks like on the back table, how hard this mesh is. you can picture why she could feel this mesh in essentially every movement. hi, welcome to the programme. we're live until 11 this morning. today we're talking mesh. thank you for some of your messages. donato on email, "now my fifth repair awaiting a consultation now or looking at going private. i have never been given options other than mesh no
athletes who can no longer compete, parents who can't carry their children and people who were once activehousebound, lonely, and have told us they often feel suicidal because of the pain. we've set up a database of 100 people — and done detailed research into how the mesh has affected them. some of those patients are here in the studio today — along with surgeons, politicians and lawyers. get in touch if you've been affected. plus we've been leaked footage from a promotional video from ten...
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Jan 7, 2020
01/20
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MSNBCW
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you know, everybody who truly engages in democracy, who pitches in five bucks, who even shows up to votegether can bring our voices to our democracy and make our government work for us. and that's why i say i think that's the heart of what 2020 is all about. >> what do you tell people who believe that president trump is going to be re-elected? they don't want him to be re-elected. they want him out of office, but they look at the state of the country. they look at the fact that the country elected him in 2016. they look at what's going on in terms of politics, in terms of the democratic primary and they don't feel hopeful that he's going to be a one-term president. >> i say to folks like that think about what was so badly broken in this country that we would elect donald trump. start there. and think about what donald trump ran on. he ran on corruption, right? he ran on he was going to drain the swamp. he ran on the fact that the whole process was broken, and that excited enough people across the country to carry him across the finish line. let's never forget, 3 million more people voted
you know, everybody who truly engages in democracy, who pitches in five bucks, who even shows up to votegether can bring our voices to our democracy and make our government work for us. and that's why i say i think that's the heart of what 2020 is all about. >> what do you tell people who believe that president trump is going to be re-elected? they don't want him to be re-elected. they want him out of office, but they look at the state of the country. they look at the fact that the...
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Jan 28, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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people who are convicted of the kind of offences he's been convicted of, rapists who have a proven tracknotjust once, he's going to do it again. security chiefs are expected to decide today whether the chinese firm huawei can help to develop the uk's sg telecoms network. 00:04:22,249 --> 2147483051:38:55,840 borisjohnson is chairing a meeting 2147483051:38:55,840 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 of the national security that is in the last five years. lawyers and professionals in the field, who say that courts are regularly granting child contact — often unsupervised — to perpetrators of abuse, including in some cases those with criminal convictions, for offences as serious as child sex abuse, rape, serious violence and even murder. after our investigation, the issue was raised in parliament, and within days the government announced a review of the family justice system to look at whether the courts are failing to protect children and victims of abuse. and what do we know about how the government's review has progressed ? it was only meant to last for three months? it was announced as a three—mo
people who are convicted of the kind of offences he's been convicted of, rapists who have a proven tracknotjust once, he's going to do it again. security chiefs are expected to decide today whether the chinese firm huawei can help to develop the uk's sg telecoms network. 00:04:22,249 --> 2147483051:38:55,840 borisjohnson is chairing a meeting 2147483051:38:55,840 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 of the national security that is in the last five years. lawyers and professionals in the field, who...
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Jan 5, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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they would snap up anybody who majored in german in college, or people who do japanese.me of them were women who had graduated from bible colleges and had become missionaries, because that was the other respectable occupation for a college-educated woman, missionary. a young woman named virginia knew japanese because she had been a missionary, and she read the japanese surrender message before everyone did beat it -- everyone did, because she was a translator working that japanese system. >> i read your book as part of the asu program as well, and was interested in the background of the people we are aware of involved in co-breaking, -- in code breaking, like stanford and so forth. ould you give us a little of the context? ms. mundy: thank you for mentioning that. an important female pioneer was agnes driscoll, a texas schoolteacher who joined the navy during world war i. there was a brief period when women were recruited into the navy during world war i, she joined, then the women were discharged after world war i. actually able actually a law was written to bar women f
they would snap up anybody who majored in german in college, or people who do japanese.me of them were women who had graduated from bible colleges and had become missionaries, because that was the other respectable occupation for a college-educated woman, missionary. a young woman named virginia knew japanese because she had been a missionary, and she read the japanese surrender message before everyone did beat it -- everyone did, because she was a translator working that japanese system....
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Jan 14, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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but there are seven individuals who are disabled, those who are not able to work, that it may provide longer-term support. ideally people get back to work in snap as a stepping stone. but if they don't have jobs and their communities, and there are not job training opportunities, it is difficult. and there many barriers people face to work. ms. muller talked about employment and training programs. i think that is very important we sought in the last farm bill that there are ten pilot programs for employment training programs. we should see what works out of those in the results of those programs. but the truth is there's not job training for every snap participant who wants to better their skills to get work. so if we really want to get people back to work, which i think is a shared goal, let's invest in those employment and training programs so that snap is a temporary assistance. but just taking food away from people is not the motivator that's going to all of a sudden have somebody then seek work. they are looking for work, they just don't have jobs or training opportunities and th
but there are seven individuals who are disabled, those who are not able to work, that it may provide longer-term support. ideally people get back to work in snap as a stepping stone. but if they don't have jobs and their communities, and there are not job training opportunities, it is difficult. and there many barriers people face to work. ms. muller talked about employment and training programs. i think that is very important we sought in the last farm bill that there are ten pilot programs...
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Jan 1, 2020
01/20
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LINKTV
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who was the man in charge of delay and denial, the man who sent people back. you know, there's a very and fry rescue committee, the emergency rescue committee which eleanor roosevelt has, again, something to do with creating. but varian fry i is prevented from carrying out his work by the state department by breckenridge long. you know, eleanor roosevelt says to fdr, he's a fascist, whwhy don't you u fire him? and fdr said, don't use that word. and she says, well, he is, you know, like that. amy: so after world war ii, after fdr dies, and eleanor roosevelt -- what is her famous quote to a repororter? blanche: the story is over. the story is over.r. amy: but i it wasn't. blanche: no. amy: talk about truman's choice to bring her into the u.n. delegation and what this led to, perhaps what she considered her greatest accomplishment in her life. blanche: harry truman appoints her to the united nations to its first meeting in london in 1946. and her children are there when she gets the phone call, and she e is tempteded to say she can't possibly do it. she knows not
who was the man in charge of delay and denial, the man who sent people back. you know, there's a very and fry rescue committee, the emergency rescue committee which eleanor roosevelt has, again, something to do with creating. but varian fry i is prevented from carrying out his work by the state department by breckenridge long. you know, eleanor roosevelt says to fdr, he's a fascist, whwhy don't you u fire him? and fdr said, don't use that word. and she says, well, he is, you know, like that....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 14, 2020
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who have used it who are current providers or not.nd the mentors get trained about how to talk with consumers and how to help them. those mentors will sit with consumers while they make the phone calls, while they interview, and will help guide them through the whole process, will talk to them about things like communication skills and how to best advocate for yourself. and then also as i said, the consumer handbook, which i forgot, which i will make sure you all get, also has pullout pages about here are good questions to ask, this is what you should do in this situation, but the whole idea is to try to build the consumer up so that they can handle it on their own. >> but there are some consumers that are not capable. >> yes >> is that -- >> so for those consumers who are not able to hire and fire on their own but are sill stihl able to live at home and in -- still able to live at home and community, they would go to home bridge. home bridge would send their providers or their employees, and they will send them out to do the work. >>
who have used it who are current providers or not.nd the mentors get trained about how to talk with consumers and how to help them. those mentors will sit with consumers while they make the phone calls, while they interview, and will help guide them through the whole process, will talk to them about things like communication skills and how to best advocate for yourself. and then also as i said, the consumer handbook, which i forgot, which i will make sure you all get, also has pullout pages...
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has the biggest budget who's the top this guy in the world. and that's something. for the state the media is supposed to be there to say hey we're not supposed to cheerlead some things like this we're actually supposed to stand up and say not just how can we pay for health care but how can we pay for invading another country again how could we pay for things like that but we don't see that i don't think very often that a lot of our branches of me don't see the deficit next to the dow you really don't that's a great point that's a great point and for our last topic of the day the 2020 summer olympic games in tokyo this year will not be featuring any kind of political protest or speeches by the c.b.s. news reports that the international olympic committee cited the olympic charter states that athletes are banned from protesting while on the field of play in the olympic village and during medal and during the medal another official ceremonies the committee did say that athletes could still get political unprecedented outside the olympic village in
has the biggest budget who's the top this guy in the world. and that's something. for the state the media is supposed to be there to say hey we're not supposed to cheerlead some things like this we're actually supposed to stand up and say not just how can we pay for health care but how can we pay for invading another country again how could we pay for things like that but we don't see that i don't think very often that a lot of our branches of me don't see the deficit next to the dow you really...
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Jan 22, 2020
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there are three who came from vietnam who will be participating this afternoon and i think that for a number of reasons i want to introduce them, but including, in reference to the past discussion, one of the key ways of talking about what has gone on, what is the harm of the war, is to have the faces and the voices of individual people and we're fortunate to have tran te wan was an agent or an survivor will be part of agent orange survivor who will be on the panel this afternoon. we have nguyen fu will be talking about an effort of projetc renew to clear the landmines and unexploded ordnance. and we have van lai who himslef is a victim of exploding unexploded ordnance. i also want to take a moment to mention two people who are not part of the book but who played a key role in helping to organize this conference and particularly the panel of wednesday afternoon. that is terry province and john mcauliff from the vietnam peace peace commemoration committee. now it is a great pleasure to introduce chris appy. he is a professor, historian at the university of professor of massachusetts am
there are three who came from vietnam who will be participating this afternoon and i think that for a number of reasons i want to introduce them, but including, in reference to the past discussion, one of the key ways of talking about what has gone on, what is the harm of the war, is to have the faces and the voices of individual people and we're fortunate to have tran te wan was an agent or an survivor will be part of agent orange survivor who will be on the panel this afternoon. we have...
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Jan 8, 2020
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who lived in a trailer park for 40 years. then she got a letter from a private equity group telling her that they just bought out her trailer park and they were raising the brent more than 60 percent. i'm proud to support senator warren on behalf of so many people who are going broke because they got sick. i'm proud to support her on behalf the parents of children with disabilities simply want to see the child be able do you get the kind of education that they deserve. [applause]. i'm proud to supporter on behalf of folks who is it too often have been the victims of police brutality. . [screaming]. and they just want to be treated the same like everybody else. [applause]. i am proud to supporter on behalf of each and every one of those migrants out there that is simply dreaming of a better live in the united states of america. so that we can continue say for the years to come, nobody could no more kids in cages out nor more rain families, no more playing games. we can do things in a better more effective and more humane way.
who lived in a trailer park for 40 years. then she got a letter from a private equity group telling her that they just bought out her trailer park and they were raising the brent more than 60 percent. i'm proud to support senator warren on behalf of so many people who are going broke because they got sick. i'm proud to support her on behalf the parents of children with disabilities simply want to see the child be able do you get the kind of education that they deserve. [applause]. i'm proud to...
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who.did he send in some of europeans never lost their suspicion of native americans and resorted to military force to displace them to spain out of accord with the word and spirit of the us constitution but in the new world might was still right. by the turn of the 20th century the indigenous people had been decimated only 237000 made of americans remain. they lost 98 percent of their land to the invaders and they had to wait until $948.00 to be granted full civil rights in all states nearly 80 years after the 1st african-americans won the right to vote. 500 years of colonization and displacement for some for others 500 years of the american dream. soon after the dawn of the 21st century that dream came under brutal attack on september the 11th 2001 the world trade center was targeted as a symbol of the ideals. of the western world. almost 3000 people were killed in the attack people over groups in all corners of the earth. but the open society whose foundations had been laid by the courag
who.did he send in some of europeans never lost their suspicion of native americans and resorted to military force to displace them to spain out of accord with the word and spirit of the us constitution but in the new world might was still right. by the turn of the 20th century the indigenous people had been decimated only 237000 made of americans remain. they lost 98 percent of their land to the invaders and they had to wait until $948.00 to be granted full civil rights in all states nearly 80...
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Jan 10, 2020
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she is a fighter for people who need a voice. she's a fighter for everyday americans that simply want a shot. so i know that that's the kind of president that she's going to be. here's the thing. we're meeting at a very special moment in this entire campaign cycle. we're less than a month away from when the voting starts in iowa. february 3 is the iowa caucus. that's right. somebody is counting. 27 days. and look, i have tremendous respect for everybody who is running in this race. this is perhaps the most talented field of people, an there's an embarrassment of rich -- of riches, people who have great vision, great integrity, a great track record, experience. it's been said many times in many different campaign seasons but you know what, i think this is more true this year than ever before. any one of the folks running would make a better president than the president we have sitting in the oval office today. [applause] but here's the thing that i saw. so many times when we would get out there and i'd be having a conversation wit
she is a fighter for people who need a voice. she's a fighter for everyday americans that simply want a shot. so i know that that's the kind of president that she's going to be. here's the thing. we're meeting at a very special moment in this entire campaign cycle. we're less than a month away from when the voting starts in iowa. february 3 is the iowa caucus. that's right. somebody is counting. 27 days. and look, i have tremendous respect for everybody who is running in this race. this is...
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Jan 4, 2020
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president, is that you don't concept allize people who who disagree with you as being fully american,in the hateful rhetoric spewed in your tweets and speeches. and make no mistake, your supporters feed on that hate. you may not have caused hate to take root in america as i've noted in the past, oppression is at the root of the american experiment. but your words and actions has given permission to american bigots to shout their hatred, to spew it online and in the public sphere. in the worst cases, to explode in the violence of hate crimes all over this country. you know it's not too late to turn over a new leaf, mr. president, by setting a better example for the millions of americans who look up to you, like is it too hard to offer well wishes, even with a simple tweet to civil rights icon and congressman john lewis, who has been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer? it would restore human decency to the oval office. hopefully your formals will follow suit before more blood is spilled. as always, i'll be praying for all of you. more on that in just a moment. ld s s s i'm your mo
president, is that you don't concept allize people who who disagree with you as being fully american,in the hateful rhetoric spewed in your tweets and speeches. and make no mistake, your supporters feed on that hate. you may not have caused hate to take root in america as i've noted in the past, oppression is at the root of the american experiment. but your words and actions has given permission to american bigots to shout their hatred, to spew it online and in the public sphere. in the worst...
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Jan 20, 2020
01/20
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the bodies of 11 ukrainian citizens who died when a passenger plane was shot down by iran will return to kiev. also while lebanese testers have turned their rage on parliament with a 2nd night of violence. welcome to al-jazeera we start in libya where warring sides and world leaders have agreed to help secure a fragile truce in the hope it will develop into a full cease fire at a summit in germany they also committed to reinforcing a weapons of balgo as more from berlin. it was the most important gathering to and libya's conflict in many years but from the start german chancellor angela merkel was struggling to narrow differences between libya's rivals the prime minister of the tripoli based government of national accord phase assad was with used to sit down with warlords highly for hafta leaving merkel shuttling back and forth to convince major powers to help secure a permanent cease fire and stop. flow of arms into the water on country. nothing here 1000000 there. everyone with an agreement including the regional organizations the arab league a you and of course the african union th
the bodies of 11 ukrainian citizens who died when a passenger plane was shot down by iran will return to kiev. also while lebanese testers have turned their rage on parliament with a 2nd night of violence. welcome to al-jazeera we start in libya where warring sides and world leaders have agreed to help secure a fragile truce in the hope it will develop into a full cease fire at a summit in germany they also committed to reinforcing a weapons of balgo as more from berlin. it was the most...
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is being impacted by who's who there's disease represents the stakeholders. i mean for you i'll take i'll take a wide example for exist on the media it's not only on those stages but everywhere you know like the amazons fires were all heard about it we all felt deeply concerned when the amazons fire but there's a lot of indigenous people who lost their homes because of the engine is fires who maybe done it and that the 1st race in continues in the amazons it didn't stop. we don't hear much of those indigenous people voices not anymore at least in canada there is they're building oil pipelines and they're impacting the people homes and we're not hearing about this ingenious people much who are one of the main stakeholders for climate change who are suffering on the ground we need to understand that if people want to take as d.g.'s people i'm talking. the one who are in the streets if they want to take this disease seriously they need to see that people that corporates and international organizations who present as disease or present as the fires as the g.'s ne
is being impacted by who's who there's disease represents the stakeholders. i mean for you i'll take i'll take a wide example for exist on the media it's not only on those stages but everywhere you know like the amazons fires were all heard about it we all felt deeply concerned when the amazons fire but there's a lot of indigenous people who lost their homes because of the engine is fires who maybe done it and that the 1st race in continues in the amazons it didn't stop. we don't hear much of...
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Jan 26, 2020
01/20
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for the people who are not sports fans, who are in depth in what's been going on on the senate floor and impeachment and everything else? right. >> kobe bryant was one of those figures that -- he will be remembered whenever they write the history of the nba as one of its greatest players. and sometimes -- especially today, we are prisoners of the moment, an automatic prisoner to what happened five years ago. if it happened before our lifetime we think oh, that didn't matter. even if you take into consideration people who have seen basketball for 50, 60 years, kobe bryant was one of the greatest basketball players of all time. 6'6", an incredible talent and ability, and an incredible desire to win. he had a game we just celebrated the anniversary of, he scored over 80 points, the second-most points in an nba game. at times people would think he was selfish as a player. but he was so supremely talented that he would think that the shot that he took was better than any shot anybody else on his team could have taken at that point. and almost always he was right. >> sure. >> but he also -
for the people who are not sports fans, who are in depth in what's been going on on the senate floor and impeachment and everything else? right. >> kobe bryant was one of those figures that -- he will be remembered whenever they write the history of the nba as one of its greatest players. and sometimes -- especially today, we are prisoners of the moment, an automatic prisoner to what happened five years ago. if it happened before our lifetime we think oh, that didn't matter. even if you...
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Jan 15, 2020
01/20
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who has made decisions. i will look at my position on the iraq war first. i wasn't in the senate for that vote, but i opposed that war from the very beginning. in my first campaign for senate, i ran against a republican who ran ads against me on it, but i stood my ground. when i got to the senate, i pushed to bring our troops home. then i have dealt with every issue from afghanistan to keeping our troops with good health care after what we saw with walter reed and being part of an effort to improve the situation for our troops in a very big way with our education and with their jobs and also with their health care. i think right now what we should be talking about, though, wolf, is what is happening right now with donald trump. donald trump is taking us pelmel toward another war. we have a very important resolution. we just found out today that four republicans are joining democrats to go to him and say, you must have an authorization of military force if you're going to go to war with iran. that is so impor
who has made decisions. i will look at my position on the iraq war first. i wasn't in the senate for that vote, but i opposed that war from the very beginning. in my first campaign for senate, i ran against a republican who ran ads against me on it, but i stood my ground. when i got to the senate, i pushed to bring our troops home. then i have dealt with every issue from afghanistan to keeping our troops with good health care after what we saw with walter reed and being part of an effort to...
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Jan 21, 2020
01/20
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we have lost our ability to see your intrinsic value is in who you are, who you love, what for.tand upng] >> hello, somebody. >> and then when it comes to 21st century, the we don't need leaders who play war.going to going to war does not make you strong. standing up and trying to bring the globalether on stage, that is our strength and that is what senator sanders is committed to. we can't play with this thing. sister justy, a stopped by to remind you that is with each other. that whether we are black or whether we are brown, indigenous, whether we're asian-american, gay or straight, christian,theist, muslim, buddhist, whatever we identify as, our strength is and that is why, iowa, this movement is so important, because senator sanders, we are , we are a multipf sanders building a multicultural, multiracial, multi-gender, hello somebody, movement. that is what we are doing. that's what it has to be. and the reverend dr. martin luther king jr. understood that, because before he was assassinated he was assembling poor people from all walks of life. andrstanding that we rise we are all t
we have lost our ability to see your intrinsic value is in who you are, who you love, what for.tand upng] >> hello, somebody. >> and then when it comes to 21st century, the we don't need leaders who play war.going to going to war does not make you strong. standing up and trying to bring the globalether on stage, that is our strength and that is what senator sanders is committed to. we can't play with this thing. sister justy, a stopped by to remind you that is with each other. that...
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Jan 22, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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i think the people who are more effective are the ones who act like journalists, likejohn oliver, whohan, say, me doing a kind of drama based on the situation. will you go back to political comedy or not, do you think? oh, yes. imean... yes. i mean, it depends what the form is. i‘m just about to do a sci—fi series on hbo that‘s coming out that‘s set 40 in the future, you know. this is avenue 5. but it‘s sort of looking at today, really. 0k. all sci—fi is looking at today, really. well, thank you very much forjoining us. pleasure. and good luck with the personal life of david copperfield. it is out on general release on the 24th, i think. yes. thank you. bbc newsroom live is coming up next. have a good day. hello, good morning. a decent start for the favoured few but that the exception to essentially a dry day for most parts of the british isles. still really rather cloudy, more cloud perhaps than we saw across southern britain during the course of yesterday and for that you have to thank the high pressure drifting further towards the atlantic, so there is a moist flow across the north
i think the people who are more effective are the ones who act like journalists, likejohn oliver, whohan, say, me doing a kind of drama based on the situation. will you go back to political comedy or not, do you think? oh, yes. imean... yes. i mean, it depends what the form is. i‘m just about to do a sci—fi series on hbo that‘s coming out that‘s set 40 in the future, you know. this is avenue 5. but it‘s sort of looking at today, really. 0k. all sci—fi is looking at today, really....
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Jan 21, 2020
01/20
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in fair to the american people who deserve the whole truth and who deserve representatives who will seekir behalf. anthony zircher is in washington for us. we are two hours in right now, what can you tell us so far? i think the interesting thing when you look at these arguments back and forth is what happened before those arguments even began. republican senate majority leader mitch mcconnell had released what he saw as the trial rules yesterday, and he made some last minute modifications to them. initially he said that both sides would get two days and 2a hours to make their opening statements. he a p pa re ntly make their opening statements. he apparently changed that, handwriting on the resolution to three days in 24 on the resolution to three days in 2a hours, giving both sides a little more time. there was also a rule that the senate would have to vote on whether to accept the evidence that the house of representatives had already compiled in their hearings for consideration in the trial. he changed that to now the evidence could be introduced unless there was an objection from some
in fair to the american people who deserve the whole truth and who deserve representatives who will seekir behalf. anthony zircher is in washington for us. we are two hours in right now, what can you tell us so far? i think the interesting thing when you look at these arguments back and forth is what happened before those arguments even began. republican senate majority leader mitch mcconnell had released what he saw as the trial rules yesterday, and he made some last minute modifications to...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 23, 2020
01/20
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, and who advance justice. so in london, we see all of the learning outcomes of this degree program. social justice for all people of the city and county of san francisco and beyond. diversity in all its forms. integrity in all that we do. accountability to all whom we serve. excellence. educating students like london breed to become compassionate and effective leaders who humanely manage organizations. providing and facilitating interactions between government, for-profit and nonprofit sectors to provide ethical and workable solutions to societial needs. i join with her many fellow usf alumni of the city and county of san francisco on asking blessing for mayor london breed this day and every day as she brilliantly fulfills her leadership of justice and hope into a future of inclusiveness, peace, and prosperity for all. so i ask you to join me in raising a hand of blessing. we ask god to bless london breed with the seven gifts of the holy spirit. wisdom, understanding, council, piety, and fear of the loving god
, and who advance justice. so in london, we see all of the learning outcomes of this degree program. social justice for all people of the city and county of san francisco and beyond. diversity in all its forms. integrity in all that we do. accountability to all whom we serve. excellence. educating students like london breed to become compassionate and effective leaders who humanely manage organizations. providing and facilitating interactions between government, for-profit and nonprofit sectors...
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Jan 26, 2020
01/20
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power, who would end danger liberty, who would try to steal an election. and one of the specific examples, perhaps the chief one that you read about in the federalist papers of why you need impeachment is a president who might seek to gain re-election through improper means. they weren't all-seeing, but they foresaw that a donald trump might arise one day, and that's why we have impeachments. next point. they talk about, they defied subpoenas because they were illegal, whatever, etc. they talk -- not today -- about why are we coming to, you know, why are we impeaching the president before we waited for court resolution on subpoenas. well, we started issuing subpoenas back in april which are still in the courts. and the danger to the republic from this president remaining in office does not allow us to wait for that. but beyond that, a core crime of this president, article two of the impeachment -- what we've been talking about is article one, that he sought to subvert abuse of power, he sought to subvert the power of government for private political gain,
power, who would end danger liberty, who would try to steal an election. and one of the specific examples, perhaps the chief one that you read about in the federalist papers of why you need impeachment is a president who might seek to gain re-election through improper means. they weren't all-seeing, but they foresaw that a donald trump might arise one day, and that's why we have impeachments. next point. they talk about, they defied subpoenas because they were illegal, whatever, etc. they talk...
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Jan 31, 2020
01/20
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somehow, he fitted the profile who shot at somebody who might have done something to draw attention to stop this got out to the press, he was treated appallingly by the press. terrific performances, cathy bates as the mother who sees the media closing in on him. it is a solitary story, about what happens when somebody is thrust completely u njustly when somebody is thrust completely unjustly into the spotlight. it is a shame, therefore, that the figure of the central journalist who shame, therefore, that the figure of the centraljournalist who breaks the centraljournalist who breaks the story is itself guilty of some really crass, sexist stereotyping, which is to do with the film itself wanting to say, look how badly media art. but actually falls into some vilification of her character which is unwarranted and unfair. although clint eastwood knows how to do simple stroke dramas, he is very good at no fuss, you look at his best stuff, it is just a shame that mac as i say, a story about the misrepresentation of somebody in at the public, it is a shame that it falls into self with the rep
somehow, he fitted the profile who shot at somebody who might have done something to draw attention to stop this got out to the press, he was treated appallingly by the press. terrific performances, cathy bates as the mother who sees the media closing in on him. it is a solitary story, about what happens when somebody is thrust completely u njustly when somebody is thrust completely unjustly into the spotlight. it is a shame, therefore, that the figure of the central journalist who shame,...
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Jan 10, 2020
01/20
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i literally find it difficult to imagine how my friend marco, who is smart, who listens carefully, who caring about these things, how he could emerge from that meeting and say that it was good. it was terrible. i think it was an unmitigated disaster. >> joining us now is ed markey of massachusetts. senator, here is a question i haven't asked you before. who do you agree with, mike lee or marco rubio? >> you know, actually it is a good day for america when you can ask that kind of a question, when the republican party is actually having a debate over a trump policy. so, you know, i attended the same briefing that senator lee did, a frustrating, you know, session where information was grudgingly being dispensed by the cabinet officials of donald trump. and it was almost a tag team where each one of the senators who was asking a question was trying to elicit another small morsel of information from them. and then what they announced after 75 minutes like it was a game show, time's up. we're sorry. we don't have any more time for you to continue to try to get us to give you the specifics o
i literally find it difficult to imagine how my friend marco, who is smart, who listens carefully, who caring about these things, how he could emerge from that meeting and say that it was good. it was terrible. i think it was an unmitigated disaster. >> joining us now is ed markey of massachusetts. senator, here is a question i haven't asked you before. who do you agree with, mike lee or marco rubio? >> you know, actually it is a good day for america when you can ask that kind of a...
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Jan 11, 2020
01/20
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who is showing up more? who is showing up at a surprising level? that could be key.ong moderates, biden leads. buttigieg right behind him. sanders and warren lagging. liberal voters, suddenly sanders takes the lead slightly over warren. very liberal voters, sanders, warren running away with it. biden barely registering it. some huge, seismic gaps in this thing. so turnout, and who's turnout, we always say it's a clooe shea, but it's true. big deal. >>> right now we are joined by stephanie ruhle, veteran of the investment and business world and happens to be our newly named nbc news senior business correspondent. where does she find any time to live? and charlie sykes, founder and editor at large of the bulwark and a frequent guest of ours. good evening to you both and welcome. steph, your reporting this morning on one michael bloomberg gave a lot of democrats a reason to fill their lungs with air. can you share it with the good folks watching tonight? >> without a doubt. mike bloomberg is in this campaign, in it to win it. you know he has spent a tremendous amount of
who is showing up more? who is showing up at a surprising level? that could be key.ong moderates, biden leads. buttigieg right behind him. sanders and warren lagging. liberal voters, suddenly sanders takes the lead slightly over warren. very liberal voters, sanders, warren running away with it. biden barely registering it. some huge, seismic gaps in this thing. so turnout, and who's turnout, we always say it's a clooe shea, but it's true. big deal. >>> right now we are joined by...
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Jan 13, 2020
01/20
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those who survived and those who gave all of their tomorrows that we might have all of our todays.nt truman rightly recognized our debt to the heroic men and women in the service of our country can never be repaid. they have earned our undying gratitude. america will never forget their sacrifice. and so today we thank you especially to those who are here, who were part of this great series of the battles in world war ii, and to their families. we remember those voices now silent who rest from their labors and sacred fields of honor throughout this land on foreign soil. especially, we hold sacred the memory of those who gave their lives in the struggle of peace, symbolized by the 4048 gold stars on the freedom wall. they shall shine like the sun in the kingdom of their father. they fought together as brothers in arms. they died together, and now they sleep side by side. to them, we have a solemn obligation. we pause in a moment of silence to remember the fallen at the battle of the bulge. they shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old. age shall not weary we them, nor the yea
those who survived and those who gave all of their tomorrows that we might have all of our todays.nt truman rightly recognized our debt to the heroic men and women in the service of our country can never be repaid. they have earned our undying gratitude. america will never forget their sacrifice. and so today we thank you especially to those who are here, who were part of this great series of the battles in world war ii, and to their families. we remember those voices now silent who rest from...
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Jan 8, 2020
01/20
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who in this field of candidates impresses you as someone who may not win, but who is going to be in good shape to run again or becomes -- comes out of this campaign as an enhanced political figure in america who winds up in the cabinet of the next president or is an enhanced figure? who is going to be some of the people, may lose on caucus night but will be longer-term winners? >> the obvious choice is of course buttigieg. his name had been bandied about by democrats, but clearly his ability to mount a national campaign as the mayor of south bend has been impressive. it would suggest he will have a future, although if he does not win and the democrats do not take the white house, exactly where he will be spending this time and what platform will be available to him is uncertain. castro is another person who, although did not do particularly well this time around, may be able to reformulate his approach and do better next time. but again, there is just so much uncertainty even between now and caucus day, i hesitate to write anybody in or anybody off. david y: we are forecasters. i have no
who in this field of candidates impresses you as someone who may not win, but who is going to be in good shape to run again or becomes -- comes out of this campaign as an enhanced political figure in america who winds up in the cabinet of the next president or is an enhanced figure? who is going to be some of the people, may lose on caucus night but will be longer-term winners? >> the obvious choice is of course buttigieg. his name had been bandied about by democrats, but clearly his...
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Jan 28, 2020
01/20
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miriam cline cass to move, who fled nazi -- casanov, who fled nazi europe as a child in 1941. an educational specialist for holocaust studies at miami-dade county public schools, and director of the holocaust institute at the university of miami, miriam has dedicated her life to educating the new generation of teachers and students about the horrors of the holocaust. mr. speaker, as we enter this new elected, we recommit ourselves to ensuring that never again means never again. e will never stop fighting hateful anti-semitism and discrimination, wherever and whenever it appears. in this house, the people's house, we stand together united against hate. we stand together in pledging never again. never again. thank you, and i yield back. mr. weber: i thank the gentlelady from florida and i yield to another gentlelady rom florida. ms. wasserman schultz: i thank the gentleman for yielding. mr. speaker, today we remember the six million jews and millions of others who were systemically murdered in the darkest chapter of human history. last week i had the privilege of traveling with
miriam cline cass to move, who fled nazi -- casanov, who fled nazi europe as a child in 1941. an educational specialist for holocaust studies at miami-dade county public schools, and director of the holocaust institute at the university of miami, miriam has dedicated her life to educating the new generation of teachers and students about the horrors of the holocaust. mr. speaker, as we enter this new elected, we recommit ourselves to ensuring that never again means never again. e will never...
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that explains a lot of people who are. in the formal it's a juror b o responsible who work. for progressives there are errors there they don't want to jeopardize their career for 3 weeks it's not going well in fact we're not in progress i think it is definitely time for the united states to remove its troops we've been there 80 years we have killed over 150000 afghans some of whom are colophon some of whom are you know various militia groups but the great majority are afghan civilians who only want peace here and there for free something they really here for care and so a lot of the inspector general is speaking out after documents he tried to keep secret were leaked those words leaked after year after year after year of this same nonsense being repeated so it's possible for these things to build and steamrolled but the united states has a has a president who campaigned on ending this war and is that out repeating the tired old lies that he's about to win it in a day which are not unique to this war that they come with every war every occupation and there's not even been a r
that explains a lot of people who are. in the formal it's a juror b o responsible who work. for progressives there are errors there they don't want to jeopardize their career for 3 weeks it's not going well in fact we're not in progress i think it is definitely time for the united states to remove its troops we've been there 80 years we have killed over 150000 afghans some of whom are colophon some of whom are you know various militia groups but the great majority are afghan civilians who only...
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Jan 22, 2020
01/20
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who are you? i'm his mother, that's who.y, this was a film about amorous deck chairs that he made with his father. he met his friend and writing partner michael palin at oxford, and on leaving university, got a job at the bbc. twice a fortnight was a hint of things to come. silly, inventive and with a bit of history thrown in. but it was a children's programme, do not adjust your set, in which you could see the template for python. well, all the teams are divided into two teams — a and b. and b are the winners. laughter. you can make it more complicated if you want to. i'd like to restate our position on agricultural subsidies and their effect on our commonwealth relationships. the surrealism, the lack of punchlines, the soul of python owed much to terryjones. he cared a lot. mike, terry gilliam and myself always tended to be on one side, and then eric, john and graham were on the other side if there was a split like that. so, i think mainly it was in method, i think, thatjohn and i locked horns because i thinkjohn does like
who are you? i'm his mother, that's who.y, this was a film about amorous deck chairs that he made with his father. he met his friend and writing partner michael palin at oxford, and on leaving university, got a job at the bbc. twice a fortnight was a hint of things to come. silly, inventive and with a bit of history thrown in. but it was a children's programme, do not adjust your set, in which you could see the template for python. well, all the teams are divided into two teams — a and b. and...
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Jan 19, 2020
01/20
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byis because this election definition is about who is going to be president on that day, who will lead our country forward in the era that begins the moment the trump right, it's going to require a president capable of unifying the american people. who will be even more divided than we are now. just think about it for a minute. doing it in a way that actually rises to meet the biggest challenges that our country faces. to be able to take bold steps and do it in a way that will galvanize and not polarize an american majority ready to get that done. alle that at its stake in the values that we hold dear is americans, from our love of country, but not the kind of love of country that is cartoonishly imitated in the chest thumping of a president who thinks he's promilitary. [applause] the love ofieg: country that begins with the knowledge that our country is made of people. you can't love a country if you hate half of the people in it. [cheers and applause] aof -- mayor buttigieg: country with deep moral positions that recognizes that when food is being cut from hungry children, or childre
byis because this election definition is about who is going to be president on that day, who will lead our country forward in the era that begins the moment the trump right, it's going to require a president capable of unifying the american people. who will be even more divided than we are now. just think about it for a minute. doing it in a way that actually rises to meet the biggest challenges that our country faces. to be able to take bold steps and do it in a way that will galvanize and not...
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Jan 15, 2020
01/20
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who are voiceless. madam olemnly today, speaker, in memory of the supreme court's tragic decision in roe v. wade. 47 years ago. this appalling decision. since that time more than 60 million innocent human beings have been killed in the name of abortion and convenience. throughout our history, americans have been the very first to protect the defenseless around the world, repeatedly, through the centuries. yet here at home we have allowed our very most vulnerable to come under vicious attack. under vicious attack. and as the father of five children and the grandfather of 16 beautiful grandchildren, i have no manufacturer important duty personally than to protect the lives of all americans. and as members of congress, we have that same duty to protect all americans, especially the ones who have no voice. nd i am proud to and i am proud to support the steps taken by the trump swradmrgs -- administration who is the most pro-life president in the history of this country. and his fight to save innocent lives
who are voiceless. madam olemnly today, speaker, in memory of the supreme court's tragic decision in roe v. wade. 47 years ago. this appalling decision. since that time more than 60 million innocent human beings have been killed in the name of abortion and convenience. throughout our history, americans have been the very first to protect the defenseless around the world, repeatedly, through the centuries. yet here at home we have allowed our very most vulnerable to come under vicious attack....
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Jan 29, 2020
01/20
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who remind me of the solutions.ome of them are not even voters yet. i'm thinking about someone i met ago,mitsburg about a week she came to an event like this one, a high school student, and she stood up to ask about the border. she explained why he was on her mind. earlier, herears father had walked out on their whaty and she knew exactly family separation means to her and was able to relate, had the moral imagination to see how that pain her family had gone through connects her to the five-year-olda salva dorian boy on the board and -- border of texas that she has never met. she understood how it is so important, that when it comes to the board anything else we do, we have to do it in a way that is consistent with our values and laws. people here already get now we have to make sure washington gets the message, and that's what my campaign is about. thate freely acknowledge if your main criterion for voting or caucusing if you are -- is you are looking for someone with the most washington establishment experience un
who remind me of the solutions.ome of them are not even voters yet. i'm thinking about someone i met ago,mitsburg about a week she came to an event like this one, a high school student, and she stood up to ask about the border. she explained why he was on her mind. earlier, herears father had walked out on their whaty and she knew exactly family separation means to her and was able to relate, had the moral imagination to see how that pain her family had gone through connects her to the...
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Jan 20, 2020
01/20
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they think it is about who is up and who is down.t is about our country, it is about our kids' futures, and it is about us together. some of us put ourselves out there and do this against some pretty difficult -- host: the first part from the debate, the leading candidate saying you are likable enough, then an emotional moment for hillary clinton. guest: i think carl cameron asked the question at the debate. he used to be with wmur and then fox. obama's answer was a little less than genuine. hillary, i think, was being honest in her tears there. i think she was at the late stages of a campaign that was not going as well as she thought it was going to go, and opened up about it. obama is a guy who did not do a lot of on the ground campaigning in new hampshire that year and -- i think he won, didn't he? host: he did. guest: but he was not on the ground as much or as accessibly. host: sorry, actually he did not. hillary clinton defeated him by 2.6. guest: it is the expectations game. same thing with mccarthy. mccarthy did not beat lbj,
they think it is about who is up and who is down.t is about our country, it is about our kids' futures, and it is about us together. some of us put ourselves out there and do this against some pretty difficult -- host: the first part from the debate, the leading candidate saying you are likable enough, then an emotional moment for hillary clinton. guest: i think carl cameron asked the question at the debate. he used to be with wmur and then fox. obama's answer was a little less than genuine....