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Feb 9, 2015
02/15
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FOXNEWSW
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peed yaw britain kau added the visitor to wikipedia is a visitor to a public rest room. >> wikipedia is just as accurate as professionally edited encyclopedias. >> they no longer print encyclopedias. >> i love the old encyclopedia. but i love candles, too. i wouldn't give up my electric lights. >> you hired a ph.d. in philosophy it failed. >> it failed, yeah. >> wikipedia without a central plan it succeeded. they were pretty full-time with this for nothing. >> if it is interesting you will do it for free. the group of people who say look we have all of this information we are going to make sure we are good. the jij having no editor the top sounds risky. any one can add pages. what's to stop people from mosting horrible stuff of me for xavrp. >> typically within five minutes. >> anna nicole cynthia dismith . >> somebody wrote the entire energy and wrote something vulgar. >> wikipedia shows whales shows that voluntary exchange works best. american medicine is dominated by central planners. 7 out of $8 were paid not by the patient but by someone else. government or insurance company. so
peed yaw britain kau added the visitor to wikipedia is a visitor to a public rest room. >> wikipedia is just as accurate as professionally edited encyclopedias. >> they no longer print encyclopedias. >> i love the old encyclopedia. but i love candles, too. i wouldn't give up my electric lights. >> you hired a ph.d. in philosophy it failed. >> it failed, yeah. >> wikipedia without a central plan it succeeded. they were pretty full-time with this for nothing....
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Feb 20, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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if you look at things like text messages, services like search or wikipedia or health information, that can be delivered for relatively cheap. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. if you are thinking about building something to be offered for free, he needs to be cheap. -- it needs to be cheap. we found a series of services that can be offered that will still be profitable to the operator. this would be something like 911 in the u.s.. even if you do not have a phone plan, you can always i will 911 and if there is a fire or a crime, you can get basic health. we think the internet should have something like this as well. if you do not have a data plan, you should have access to basic health information, basic communication tools. and it will vary from country to country. when we launched in zambia -- in there, hiv is a big issue. so we used resources about staying healthy. emily: we have spoken to top at executives who have want to expand to developing markets. they are six -- are excited to advertise through internet.org. how do they advertise? mark: we need t
if you look at things like text messages, services like search or wikipedia or health information, that can be delivered for relatively cheap. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. if you are thinking about building something to be offered for free, he needs to be cheap. -- it needs to be cheap. we found a series of services that can be offered that will still be profitable to the operator. this would be something like 911 in the u.s.. even if you do not have a phone...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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the university student using the internet to use wikipedia to look up the information and save moneyn books that she needed for an exam. it is pretty crazy. within weeks, these new experiences start to come back. that's really what we are here to do. the internet is a big enabler that helps connect people to the modern economy. if we can help do that, then that is amazing. emily: what's the likelihood internet.org could help you get back into china? ♪ emily: what kind of data are you gathering about these users, and how do you use that data? mark: it is not an different -- any different from how people use facebook normally. the biggest thing we had to do to make internet.org work is to connect with the different operators in these countries, for example airtel in zambia, to make it easy to buy data when they want to do more things. for example, you may be browsing facebook and see a link to news or see a video you want to watch. you know that is rich media, so that cannot be covered for free. we can make it so if you tap on it, it is easy to pay. it is good for everyone. it lets the
the university student using the internet to use wikipedia to look up the information and save moneyn books that she needed for an exam. it is pretty crazy. within weeks, these new experiences start to come back. that's really what we are here to do. the internet is a big enabler that helps connect people to the modern economy. if we can help do that, then that is amazing. emily: what's the likelihood internet.org could help you get back into china? ♪ emily: what kind of data are you...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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whereas, if you look at things like text -- so text messages, services like search or wikipedia or basicinancial or health information, that can actually be delivered for relatively cheaply. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. so if you are thinking about building something that operators are going to offer for free, it needs to be pretty cheap for them to do. and we've basically figured out a series of services that people can offer and that actually ends up being profitable for the operators. and the model that we consider this to be most similar to is 911 in the u.s. so even if you have not paid for a phone plan, you can always dial 911, and if there is a crime or a health emergency or a fire, you get basic help. and we think that there should be an equivalent of this to the internet as well. where even if you haven't paid for a data plan, you can always get access to basic health information or education or job tools or basic communication tools. and it will vary country by country. so for example, when we launched in zambia, there, hiv is a really big is
whereas, if you look at things like text -- so text messages, services like search or wikipedia or basicinancial or health information, that can actually be delivered for relatively cheaply. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. so if you are thinking about building something that operators are going to offer for free, it needs to be pretty cheap for them to do. and we've basically figured out a series of services that people can offer and that actually ends up being...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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is it a good thing if somebody thinks the internet is wikipedia?>> about 85% of the people in the world live within wireless coverage. only about 1/3 of the world is online. there is a huge delta that needs to be filled. it is not an infrastructure problem. it is an awareness problem. what are the benefits i can get from being online? it is a cost problem that they cannot afford data. one of the things we in cooperation with governments and other companies are trying to do is figure out, are there business models and ways to address the awareness and cost issue? one is by providing some free basic services. about a month ago, internet.org rolled out an app in zambia which provides basic services. facebook is on there, so is wikipedia, so are a number of maternal health organizations. >> that is the curated stuff i was referring to. >> things that are important to get to the people in that country. we will see how it works. so far, there is good interest. that is a way to started -- to start addressing the access problem. we think that is a good thi
is it a good thing if somebody thinks the internet is wikipedia?>> about 85% of the people in the world live within wireless coverage. only about 1/3 of the world is online. there is a huge delta that needs to be filled. it is not an infrastructure problem. it is an awareness problem. what are the benefits i can get from being online? it is a cost problem that they cannot afford data. one of the things we in cooperation with governments and other companies are trying to do is figure out,...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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is it a good thing if somebody thinks the internet is wikipedia?>> about 85% of the people in the world live within wireless coverage. only about 1/3 of the world is online. there is a huge delta that needs to be filled. it is not an infrastructure problem. it is an awareness problem. what are the benefits i can get from being online? it is a cost problem that they cannot afford data. one of the things we in cooperation with governments and other companies are trying to do is figure out, are there business models and ways to address the awareness and cost issue? one is by providing some free basic services. about a month ago, internet.org rolled out an app in zambia which provides basic services. facebook is on there, so is wikipedia, so are a number of maternal health organizations. >> that is the curated stuff i was referring to. >> things that are important to get to the people in that country. we will see how it works. so far, there is good interest. that is a way to started -- to start addressing the access problem. we think that is a good thi
is it a good thing if somebody thinks the internet is wikipedia?>> about 85% of the people in the world live within wireless coverage. only about 1/3 of the world is online. there is a huge delta that needs to be filled. it is not an infrastructure problem. it is an awareness problem. what are the benefits i can get from being online? it is a cost problem that they cannot afford data. one of the things we in cooperation with governments and other companies are trying to do is figure out,...
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Feb 20, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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i had been involved in wikipedia . i was saying, what if you tried it with a book? in the early days, we had bbs and newsgroup. i said, how would those tools compare the ones we had today? put -- we put a draft of a chapter out. i did it on seven or eight places. medium has a collaborative tool. some people from the old days were saying, no, we didn't drop acid at first, it was later that night. dan bricklin said here is how we did visit count -- visivou count. it is still in the rudimentary stages. this is kind of interesting. let's find a way to you via the royalties and the payment system. have an easy payment system so that people together can create a book with the author acting as a curator instead of controlling the whole thing. then, say we've gotten this book, put up your original code for the darwin kernel that you put in the operating system, or for new limits. show me the pictures and codes. all of that can be put into a collaborative space with an author trying to keep the narrative going but giving all of this material that was crowd sourced and having
i had been involved in wikipedia . i was saying, what if you tried it with a book? in the early days, we had bbs and newsgroup. i said, how would those tools compare the ones we had today? put -- we put a draft of a chapter out. i did it on seven or eight places. medium has a collaborative tool. some people from the old days were saying, no, we didn't drop acid at first, it was later that night. dan bricklin said here is how we did visit count -- visivou count. it is still in the rudimentary...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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if you look at things like text messages, services like search or wikipedia or health or financial information, that can be delivered for relatively cheap. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. if you are thinking about building something that operators are going to offer for free, it needs to be pretty cheap for them to do. we basically figured out a series of services that people can offer and it will still be profitable for the operators. the model we consider this to be most similar to his 911 in the u.s. even if you haven't paid for a phone plan, you can always dial 911 and, if there is a crime or fire emergency, you can get basic help. we think the internet should have something equivalent to this as well. if you do not have a data plan, you should have access to basic health information, basic communication tools. and it will vary from country to country. when we launched in zambia -- there, hiv is a big issue. one of the free services that the government wanted to include were services you can learn about hiv and different aspects of maternal health. differen
if you look at things like text messages, services like search or wikipedia or health or financial information, that can be delivered for relatively cheap. it can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastructure. if you are thinking about building something that operators are going to offer for free, it needs to be pretty cheap for them to do. we basically figured out a series of services that people can offer and it will still be profitable for the operators. the model we consider this...
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Feb 2, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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msnbc who is here at the game today and, chris, this chris matthews the seahawks said every time i wikipediaris matthews. >> matthews made that play right before the half. six seconds to go who do you throw it to you, of course a guy that doesn't have a catch all year and then down the field against arrington, up maybe a little pushoff, gets away with it. he has been the difference in the game. >> "hardball's" chris matthews. we kept hearing that. the real chris matthews, the elder one also joined in on the fun sending a congratulatory tweet after the first half and msnbc tweeted out this photo of our chris matthews saying this is the best super bowl i have ever had. but we would hear that chris matthews, chris matthews as we were in the stands there and be confused why are they talking about chris matthews and so we've got the chris matthews during the super bowl. we have seahawks receiver chris matthews and being this unlikely star that was completely great, the 25-year-old had four passes for more than 100 yards which was just absolutely amazing to see but it was confusing when we were in
msnbc who is here at the game today and, chris, this chris matthews the seahawks said every time i wikipediaris matthews. >> matthews made that play right before the half. six seconds to go who do you throw it to you, of course a guy that doesn't have a catch all year and then down the field against arrington, up maybe a little pushoff, gets away with it. he has been the difference in the game. >> "hardball's" chris matthews. we kept hearing that. the real chris matthews,...
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Feb 26, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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obviously, i had been busy with wikipedia, just things that when you're busy with the web you do. i thought, what if i tried tofgjñ it with a book? in the early days of the internet, we had the used net, and i said, how were those tools compared to the tools we have today? i was looking for places where i could publish a chapter or put a draft of a chapter up and let people say, no, here's something interesting, or i was there or here's a photograph or you should tell the story this way. i did it on maybe seven or eight places. i don't want to name the ones that aren't as good but without blowing smoke that's why he's here. when i put it on medium it has a collaborative tool so people can just put in-line comments. suddenly, some people from the old days like stewart brand were saying, no no no. we didn't drop on the first of these saying it was actually later that night. but dan brickland, who was an old friend of yours, said this is how we did visical. he gave me all the stuff. so i started incorporating that in, and it's still if i may say so, in the rudimentary stages. i would
obviously, i had been busy with wikipedia, just things that when you're busy with the web you do. i thought, what if i tried tofgjñ it with a book? in the early days of the internet, we had the used net, and i said, how were those tools compared to the tools we have today? i was looking for places where i could publish a chapter or put a draft of a chapter up and let people say, no, here's something interesting, or i was there or here's a photograph or you should tell the story this way. i did...
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some joker changed his wikipedia page to read he'll be known for gift wrapping a super bowl trophy.ok took three years you know? we're in playoffs. and comes down to players making plays you know? i think he's toing to be a tremendous head coach one day. >> tom brady named super bowl mvp. and brady wants to give it to his teammate malcolm butler. he wants to give the chevy colorado to butler. brady made $150 million in his career and browns receiver has been suspended again. will miss 2015 season after violating nfl substance abuse policy for the third time testing positive for alcohol a violation of the 0 drinking stipulation part of his return. to nba last time clay thompson went off for 34 points. this is just 11 days ago, all about clay. he hit 11 threes and warriors have beaten kings seven times and coach expects sacramento will be paying attention to clay this time around. >> that is not like it came out of the blue. >> third quarter did. >> he can get on it at any time. right? maybe this team because it happens, so easily. maybe they'll be ready to go. >> tim durbin trying co
some joker changed his wikipedia page to read he'll be known for gift wrapping a super bowl trophy.ok took three years you know? we're in playoffs. and comes down to players making plays you know? i think he's toing to be a tremendous head coach one day. >> tom brady named super bowl mvp. and brady wants to give it to his teammate malcolm butler. he wants to give the chevy colorado to butler. brady made $150 million in his career and browns receiver has been suspended again. will miss...
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Feb 17, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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i went to the wikipedia page. i liked him in a lot of ways. i think when someone like eddie murphy comes out and just says i'm proud of this and happy to be here, sometimes it's so nice when people are not always on, they just -- i love that sincerity, too. >> it was an extremely human moment. >> yeah, it was great. it was -- to even have participated around the fringes of the institution of "snl" in a way is a privilege. you feel like you have been let into that -- a company that is really special in some ways. and they always, for people who are not the core of that, they -- lauren michaels has created an incredibly generous -- i think there has always been -- people on that show say thank you to each other. they -- i can't explain it. they really lift each other up and they lift you up and they make you feel like you can do it. >> in some ways it is sort of -- there is no way it gets run anyways, they're asking people to come and take a huge risk, right? yeah -- yes, yes, they ask you to do something that is different in the modern age of t
i went to the wikipedia page. i liked him in a lot of ways. i think when someone like eddie murphy comes out and just says i'm proud of this and happy to be here, sometimes it's so nice when people are not always on, they just -- i love that sincerity, too. >> it was an extremely human moment. >> yeah, it was great. it was -- to even have participated around the fringes of the institution of "snl" in a way is a privilege. you feel like you have been let into that -- a...
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Feb 27, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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you google the name and go to wikipedia and you will find that is an offshoot of a group from al qaeda in iraq. it was proven to be a cia operation to give us a reason to be in iraq after all these years. the whole thing is that the whole war on isis is bogus. these people -- they might be a couple of hundred terrorists. that might be true. beyond that, they are not threatening to take over the whole world. this is another cia operation to keep the military people involved in the middle east as long as they want to keep them there. obama, give them credit. they try to get rid of people in the middle east, but they couldn't do it. they said, we got a be there, we got a be there. google the term isis and go to wikipedia and then read about it being a cia creation to justify the war in iraq and use it to justify the occupation of iraq. if people use -- host: can you tell us about yourself? caller: i am pretty famous. people know me. i'm a pretty well-known left-winger. i've advocated using marijuana. i'm advocating being against the government and basically nonviolent revolution for about
you google the name and go to wikipedia and you will find that is an offshoot of a group from al qaeda in iraq. it was proven to be a cia operation to give us a reason to be in iraq after all these years. the whole thing is that the whole war on isis is bogus. these people -- they might be a couple of hundred terrorists. that might be true. beyond that, they are not threatening to take over the whole world. this is another cia operation to keep the military people involved in the middle east as...
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Feb 20, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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eye 46
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i had been involved in wikipedia . i was saying, what if you tried it with a book? in the early days, we had bbs and newsgroup. i said, how would those tools compare the ones we had today? put -- we put a draft of a chapter out. i did it on seven or eight places. medium has a collaborative tool. some people from the old days were saying, no, we didn't drop acid at first, it was later that night. dan bricklin said here is how we did visit count -- visivou count. it is still in the rudimentary stages. this is kind of interesting. let's find a way to you via the royalties and the payment system. have an easy payment system so that people together can create a book with the author acting as a curator instead of controlling the whole thing. then, say we've gotten this book, put up your original code for the darwin kernel that you put in the operating system, or for new limits. show me the pictures and codes. all of that can be put into a collaborative space with an author trying to keep the narrative going but giving all of this material that was crowd sourced and having
i had been involved in wikipedia . i was saying, what if you tried it with a book? in the early days, we had bbs and newsgroup. i said, how would those tools compare the ones we had today? put -- we put a draft of a chapter out. i did it on seven or eight places. medium has a collaborative tool. some people from the old days were saying, no, we didn't drop acid at first, it was later that night. dan bricklin said here is how we did visit count -- visivou count. it is still in the rudimentary...
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Feb 13, 2015
02/15
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FOXNEWSW
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>> i read wikipedia and i didn't see it there. >> andy you dated brian williams in the 90s and he hadlare for the dramatic. >> that was one of the things i loved about him. >> where do you think his head is at now? >> you have a 9/11 truther who shot one wife and assaulted another supporting brian williams. >> allegedly. >> this is almost as bad as dan rather supporting him. it has sunk to that level. now there is a story with seal team 6 that he said he traveled with seal time 6 and they sent him -- someone from seal team 6 sent a thank you note after they killed bin laden. >> no one sends thank you notes. that's how you know it is fake. >> along with a piece of the stealth blackhawk helicopter. in is next to impossible for that to have happened. but at least with this one there is an easy way to deal with it. have him produce the note or the piece of the helicopter but he hasn't done that. not only is he never going back to his job, but he won't be the only person at nbc news to lose his job over this. >> nobody else was joining in on the tall tales were they? >> there is stuff he s
>> i read wikipedia and i didn't see it there. >> andy you dated brian williams in the 90s and he hadlare for the dramatic. >> that was one of the things i loved about him. >> where do you think his head is at now? >> you have a 9/11 truther who shot one wife and assaulted another supporting brian williams. >> allegedly. >> this is almost as bad as dan rather supporting him. it has sunk to that level. now there is a story with seal team 6 that he said...
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Feb 21, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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one thing that drove me nuts, they can look up facts on wikipedia. teach them how to think. people don't understand history or science and so forth are not people who will become a high order thinkers. i would say in answer to your question the wrong selection poorly implemented. others and that it was probably a good idea. >> right here. >> mack you leave the from the international charter school. to build upon that. what i found more compelling was a story people may experience supreme court clerk, self reflection that you did, we can argue about that. if you feel comfortable the about getting to colombia and feel like there was a game going on and no one should the rules with you ties into what was said and it is important to understand, to see you as a tight industry or somebody who was always there. >> let me commend you because he is opening up a school that is in that curriculum i have been talking about. the reason people feel passionate about it, my life is a tribute to the fact that teachers in queens did not let my view describe what they thought i was capable of
one thing that drove me nuts, they can look up facts on wikipedia. teach them how to think. people don't understand history or science and so forth are not people who will become a high order thinkers. i would say in answer to your question the wrong selection poorly implemented. others and that it was probably a good idea. >> right here. >> mack you leave the from the international charter school. to build upon that. what i found more compelling was a story people may experience...
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Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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you can go to wikipedia. but i want to mention what a tiger and champion he is right now in the congress. it is one thing to be there in 1965. frankly, i am jealous. that must have been a time when almost every day there was the passage of transformative legislation that has shaped our country even today. it is not so easy now to have that kind of dedication and passion. many of us have seen john has been a fighter when it comes to the government surveillance and leading legislation to put limits on government surveillance of all americans. john was the leader on health care for so long and still is. single-payer? that is john conyers. [applause] h.r. 676. we have been fighting for that. i still think we are heading in the right direction. john is now the ranking member and hopefully we are still going to see him as the chairman once again of the judiciary committee, will be leading us. this is day two of wonderful honors for john conyers. some of you were in the room yesterday when this magnificent portrait
you can go to wikipedia. but i want to mention what a tiger and champion he is right now in the congress. it is one thing to be there in 1965. frankly, i am jealous. that must have been a time when almost every day there was the passage of transformative legislation that has shaped our country even today. it is not so easy now to have that kind of dedication and passion. many of us have seen john has been a fighter when it comes to the government surveillance and leading legislation to put...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or steal quarters from parking meters.rd to think why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at who goes into politics. >>> not quite a year ago, the mayor of charlotte, north carolina was arrested in an fbi sting for taking thousands in bribes. the city council chose a state senator to fill his shoes. when he resigned to take over, there was a vacancy in the senate seat. under the rules of the democratic party, 49 people gathered in a charlotte church to choose the new senator for the open seat. 49 people, there were four candidates. the winner with a grand total of 25 votes, was this guy. his name is jeff jackson. although really the biggest winner of the night was his stepson, because mr. jackson promised if he won, he would get his kid a puppy. he's an army veteran, served in afghanistan and serves as an assistant district attorney, prosecutor. you probably have heard that snowy, icy weather has been pounding north carolina and much of the southeast. senator jackson arrived at work this morning at the nort
politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or steal quarters from parking meters.rd to think why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at who goes into politics. >>> not quite a year ago, the mayor of charlotte, north carolina was arrested in an fbi sting for taking thousands in bribes. the city council chose a state senator to fill his shoes. when he resigned to take over, there was a vacancy in the senate seat. under the rules of the democratic party, 49 people...
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Feb 17, 2015
02/15
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WTXF
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>> according to wikipedia. >> okay, i'm sending out an instagram. >> oh, lovely. >> okay, while do you i talk about this? i love this story from yesterday. chloe kardashian and philly's own amaros got into twitter feud. all calling each other out because kylie jenner didn't like whatever his name; and anyway we'll keep an eye on this particular fight. >> yes. >> and bring you updates throughout the week. >> yes. >> south philly girl. how have a great fat tuesday great mardi gras, be safer out on the roadways, w brookside chocolate now has a crunch. brookside crunchy clusters - crispy multi-grains and sweet fruit-flavored pieces dipped in rich dark chocolate. discover brookside crunchy clusters. 2xh@s! >>> live from new york city it's "the wendy williams show." today straight from last night's live finale, winner of the celebrity apprentice leeza gibbons is here. and runner geraldo rivera is here. plus, wendy is breaking down all of today's super juicy hot topics. now, here's wendy! >> wendy: ta da! ♪
>> according to wikipedia. >> okay, i'm sending out an instagram. >> oh, lovely. >> okay, while do you i talk about this? i love this story from yesterday. chloe kardashian and philly's own amaros got into twitter feud. all calling each other out because kylie jenner didn't like whatever his name; and anyway we'll keep an eye on this particular fight. >> yes. >> and bring you updates throughout the week. >> yes. >> south philly girl. how have a...
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Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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i read that on wikipedia, what is that? thomas allen harris: my colleague and i were working on that, and i was advising her and so i am not sure if she is still making a project, but it was a project i was advising her on. brian lamb: if i said this myself, i would be ostracized, "queer africans seeking exile in canada." thomas allen harris: she is canadian, so she is talking about this, but there is also the queer aspect, i am an openly queer person. brian lamb: why do you use queer is that of gay? thomas allen harris: it doesn't really matter, you could use african-american or black, but i think in terms of civil rights on the continent, people are being killed because of their sexual orientation, and i don't think there is enough support within the lgbt and large lgbt movement, and the larger civil rights movement, to raise the awareness about what is going on there. it is really, really important. brian lamb: more from your film this is part of the story of photographs of slave families "through a lens darkly," let's w
i read that on wikipedia, what is that? thomas allen harris: my colleague and i were working on that, and i was advising her and so i am not sure if she is still making a project, but it was a project i was advising her on. brian lamb: if i said this myself, i would be ostracized, "queer africans seeking exile in canada." thomas allen harris: she is canadian, so she is talking about this, but there is also the queer aspect, i am an openly queer person. brian lamb: why do you use queer...
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as though he doesn't have access to wikipedia and can look people up, with access to the best intelligence sources on earth. and to contrast between the way we conduct themselves and the way they conduct themselves yes it is very telling it is very important but meaningless unless you go there on the ground and kill them. we've been bombing heck out of syria. they have been actually gaining territory. melissa: we'll move to the market in one second. it is really rallying. jack, i want to give you a second to weigh in. >> i think this action speaks to their desperation trying to find new ways to. 6,000 of their fighters dead. my stop story. five new airstrikes in last 24 hours, buildings vehicles and men. i choose to focus on that. melissa: why didn't he say that then? he doesn't talk about that. we'll get more into this a little bit later into the show. i want to direct your attention to the markets. we're in rally territory. we're looking at a market huge jump there, up 272 points. energy stocks leading the way. they are enjoying a nice bump of fourth straight day of higher oil prices whi
as though he doesn't have access to wikipedia and can look people up, with access to the best intelligence sources on earth. and to contrast between the way we conduct themselves and the way they conduct themselves yes it is very telling it is very important but meaningless unless you go there on the ground and kill them. we've been bombing heck out of syria. they have been actually gaining territory. melissa: we'll move to the market in one second. it is really rallying. jack, i want to give...
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Feb 19, 2015
02/15
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faculty and students at howard university will research and rewrite black history related entries on wikipediathe edit-a-thon will be held at the research center at 10:00 a.m. and will last until 4:00. >>> we're seeing the damage the bit are cold can you cause. you're being look live at the courthouse in prince george's county whi will be closed today after the extreme temperatures caused a pipe to burst there. we'll show you what you can do to avoid a similar fate in your home or busi. >>> 13 outside right now. >>> right now "news 4 today," the bitter cold taking its toll on more than just you and your family. the damage caused by the weather that has a local courthouse closed. >>> most of you will be stepping outside to windchills below zero. the coldest spot at this hour as you look at the map appears to be hagerstown, matter landryland. windchills at negative 8. >> tom kierein is here with the areas under a windchill advisory. >> we have a huge area under windchill advisories. it remains in day, tonight and from n. to friday morning. all of virginia, just about all of maryland and eastern
faculty and students at howard university will research and rewrite black history related entries on wikipediathe edit-a-thon will be held at the research center at 10:00 a.m. and will last until 4:00. >>> we're seeing the damage the bit are cold can you cause. you're being look live at the courthouse in prince george's county whi will be closed today after the extreme temperatures caused a pipe to burst there. we'll show you what you can do to avoid a similar fate in your home or...
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Feb 19, 2015
02/15
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but watson had something the humans don't, to learn at a ferocious rate and learned from wikipedia and there's watson that got better and better and then they went on national tv and played ken jennings, the champion of jeopardy. watson won, as you may know not just $75,000, but now watson is being used in all sorts of other applications. there's a call center in south africa that answers questions and watson is powering that question/answer system. there are legal versions of watson, runs in the cloud now. a banking version my students actually -- a team of students of mine work with ibm to create a version of watson that has read the dodd-frank rules and helps. [ laughter ] >> explain them to companies and apparently there's billions of dollars at stake there. versions of watson in a medical diagnosis, describe your symptoms close to english and does a good job diagnosing however obscure it may be. if watson is not today's best medical i do og nos decision, i expect it will be in five years and in the cloud and you may very well be going to your first or second opinion to versions of
but watson had something the humans don't, to learn at a ferocious rate and learned from wikipedia and there's watson that got better and better and then they went on national tv and played ken jennings, the champion of jeopardy. watson won, as you may know not just $75,000, but now watson is being used in all sorts of other applications. there's a call center in south africa that answers questions and watson is powering that question/answer system. there are legal versions of watson, runs in...
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Feb 10, 2015
02/15
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. >> is there a descrepancy as to whether she was born in 37 or 39 on wikipedia. will look at the that later. >> but first dave warren is stepping in for sue serio who was under the the weather. her cough yesterday had us all worried. >> we just missed a big storm here because we are talking about snow sleet, rain and freezing rain. all this mostly to the south of philadelphia but it is what is already coming down that caused the problems this morning. we had this freezing rain and then got cold enough for sleet snow and ice to change back to snow. now we have dusting of snow on top of ice. all untreated surfaces are very slippery. that first step outside could be a slick one. you have to clear off your car with the ice. treated road as far as my drive-in was just wet. treated road with the temperatures there to help just a bit but a lot of the untreated surfaces still have ice coating and there is still more coming down. this is the radar that shows the snow, the sleet, the the ice, all across delaware and south jersey, it is not moving north but going directly e
. >> is there a descrepancy as to whether she was born in 37 or 39 on wikipedia. will look at the that later. >> but first dave warren is stepping in for sue serio who was under the the weather. her cough yesterday had us all worried. >> we just missed a big storm here because we are talking about snow sleet, rain and freezing rain. all this mostly to the south of philadelphia but it is what is already coming down that caused the problems this morning. we had this freezing...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or steal quarters from parking meters.o think why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at who goes to politics. meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue... and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it's red, white and blue. log on to learn more. introducing preferred rewards from bank of america the new banking rewards program that rewards our customers, every day. you'll get things like rewards bonuses on credit cards... extra interest on a savings account... preferred pricing on merrill edge online trades and more... across your banking and investing get used to getting more. that's the power of more rewarding connections. that's preferred rewards from bank of america. ♪ there's confidence. then there's
politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or steal quarters from parking meters.o think why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at who goes to politics. meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue... and a...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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wikipedia, yeah and they said something about that. >> that's right.o this to much. [ laughter ] i think i can crack this case. >> jimmy: well, i wasn't sure if you were born there or just raised there. >> i was born and raised. born and raised there. >> jimmy: born and rasied. and american comedy was there at the time? >> yeah, that's all i used to listen to american standup before bed. i use to have all of richard pryor albums. i had every single album by richard pryor, and i would listen to it every night before i went to bed. to the point -- i pretty much knew every single album of his by heart. and have you not heard richard pryor's comedy, until you've heard it secondhand through the voice of a a 9-year-old white british boy. [ laughter ] that's how it's supposed to sound. >> that's really how it -- yeah. >> what you want to do is listen to a little white british boy saying, "not many black people get bit by snakes. [ laughter ] because they be strolling to smooth in the woods. [ laughter ] they be like snake." yeah, that's right. >> jimmy: that
wikipedia, yeah and they said something about that. >> that's right.o this to much. [ laughter ] i think i can crack this case. >> jimmy: well, i wasn't sure if you were born there or just raised there. >> i was born and raised. born and raised there. >> jimmy: born and rasied. and american comedy was there at the time? >> yeah, that's all i used to listen to american standup before bed. i use to have all of richard pryor albums. i had every single album by richard...
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Feb 7, 2015
02/15
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wikipedia >> host: william is calling from arkansas.. >> caller: more comment than a question. i would appreciate it, if it has already been answered and discussed but i would like to thanks c-span for the wonderful presentation made available to all of us and the like to express my deepest appreciation to walter isaacson for presenting to us an accurate and determined portrayal of the less familiar may be neglected or forgotten characteristics of so many of our great people. one other comment i would like to make is i have a deep affinity for ben franklin. i had the good fortune as a you to work at a small country print shop that printed community weekly newspaper and old ban would have been right at home. i did the printing on all washington hand press. and became the operator of the press later. >> guest: you probably see the great connection of somebody like that who believes in the spread of information creates a postal system makes it open so i do admire that part of benjamin franklin that like me and you worked at a newspaper col
wikipedia >> host: william is calling from arkansas.. >> caller: more comment than a question. i would appreciate it, if it has already been answered and discussed but i would like to thanks c-span for the wonderful presentation made available to all of us and the like to express my deepest appreciation to walter isaacson for presenting to us an accurate and determined portrayal of the less familiar may be neglected or forgotten characteristics of so many of our great people. one...
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Feb 17, 2015
02/15
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i was on my laptop, and went to the wikipedia show.lize the show was almost canned. >> i thought chris was incisive and poignant. and i liked it in a lot of ways. i think when eddie murphy comes out and just simply says i'm proud of this and really happy to be here sometimes it's so nice when, you know, people aren't always on. i love that sincerity too. >> it was an extremely human moment. >> it was. it was great. it was -- you know to have even participated around the fringes of the institution of "snl" in a way is a privilege. i mean, you feel like you've been let in to that -- a company that's really and in some ways. and they always, you know, for people who aren't the core of that, they are -- lorne michaels has created this incredibly generous -- there's always been i think, this real -- like people on that show, they say thank you to each other. >> that's interesting. >> i can't explain it. they really lift each other up and they lift you up, and they make you feel like you can do it. >> in some ways it's sort of -- there's no
i was on my laptop, and went to the wikipedia show.lize the show was almost canned. >> i thought chris was incisive and poignant. and i liked it in a lot of ways. i think when eddie murphy comes out and just simply says i'm proud of this and really happy to be here sometimes it's so nice when, you know, people aren't always on. i love that sincerity too. >> it was an extremely human moment. >> it was. it was great. it was -- you know to have even participated around the...
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Feb 24, 2015
02/15
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i had been involved with editing wikipedia, doing the things where you as a natural citizen of the webou're doing. i said what if you tried it with a book? in the early days of the internet, we had the bbs and news groups and news net and i said how would those tools compare to the tools we have today? i was looking for places where i could publish a chapter or put a draft of a chapter up and let people say no, here's something interesting. i was there. here's a photograph. or tell -- you should tell the story this way. i did it on maybe seven or eight places. i don't want to name the ones i want as good but without blowing smoke, when i put it on media, it has a collaborative tool, so people can just put in line comments. people from the old days like stewart brand were saying no no, no, we didn't drop -- on the first of -- it was later that night. okay. let me get that one right. but dan brickman an old friend of yours, said here is how we did visical and why it was an important bridge. i started incorporating that in and it is still, if i may say so in the rudimentary stages i would
i had been involved with editing wikipedia, doing the things where you as a natural citizen of the webou're doing. i said what if you tried it with a book? in the early days of the internet, we had the bbs and news groups and news net and i said how would those tools compare to the tools we have today? i was looking for places where i could publish a chapter or put a draft of a chapter up and let people say no, here's something interesting. i was there. here's a photograph. or tell -- you...
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Feb 2, 2015
02/15
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coordinator named him the hard bull and this chris matthews the sea hawks chris matthew, every time i wikipediaother day. >> a little hardball with chris matthews down the field. this is the one. this offense was stuck in the mud until matthews made that play. six seconds to go who do you throw it too? then down the field up maybe a little push-off. gets away with it. he has been the difference in the game. >> and our chris matthew is also a game changer for msnbc. you see, they aren't that different. thanks very much, we'll be right back. curl up with their favorite man. but here's the thing: about half of men over 40 have some degree of erectile dysfunction. well, viagra helps guys with ed get and keep an erection. and remember, you only take it when you need it. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours
coordinator named him the hard bull and this chris matthews the sea hawks chris matthew, every time i wikipediaother day. >> a little hardball with chris matthews down the field. this is the one. this offense was stuck in the mud until matthews made that play. six seconds to go who do you throw it too? then down the field up maybe a little push-off. gets away with it. he has been the difference in the game. >> and our chris matthew is also a game changer for msnbc. you see, they...
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Feb 3, 2015
02/15
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and this chris matthews, the seahawks' chris matthews said i can't believe it, every time i wikipedia myself it keeps coming up with the other side. >> all right. here we go. a little hardball with chris matthews, down the field, this is the one. >> oh, my god. what a catch. wow. anyway, despite the seahawks', matthews had a great night scoring a touchdown before halftime. he had plenty of fans on social media throughout the game. the #chrismatthews has been tweeted out thousands of times since last night. what's even more amazing is this other chris matthews' back story. this time last year, the 25-year-old was playing for the canadian football league and working two jobs in the offseason. one as a security guard and another at a footlocker. anyway, he got the call from the seahawks in february to try out and his response at first, according to "sports illustrated," was "i don't get out of work until 9:00 p.m., i don't know if i can make it." a few minutes later matthews' agent called saying, are you out of your mind? he made the flight but also made the seahawks practice squad. he w
and this chris matthews, the seahawks' chris matthews said i can't believe it, every time i wikipedia myself it keeps coming up with the other side. >> all right. here we go. a little hardball with chris matthews, down the field, this is the one. >> oh, my god. what a catch. wow. anyway, despite the seahawks', matthews had a great night scoring a touchdown before halftime. he had plenty of fans on social media throughout the game. the #chrismatthews has been tweeted out thousands of...
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Feb 7, 2015
02/15
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his wikipedia page even says he owns a da vinciment luke grew up in san francisco and made a mint in the real estate market. he's known as lucky luke. while meeting with his lawyers in the federal courthouse, he slipped out of custody and out the front door. lucky luke was indicted this summer on mail fraud charges for allegedly not paying for $11 million in art including a pi casso and this $3 million degall sculpture of a balance erin a. in the newsroom, andrea borba, kpix5. >> he has done time for tax evasion and poaching trout. he's now on california's most wanted. >>> some wildlife confiscated while entering the country isn't being destroyed, it's being sent to the prairie. don ford shows us what happens when the animals get to the oakland zoo. >>reporter: these are amazon tree boas, smuggled on a ship from south america to miami, part of the illegal international exotic pet trade. federal agents found them. now the oakland zoo is trying to save them. >> they are really dehydrated, they had ticks that had to be hand picked off of them. they are not in good condition at all. >>re
his wikipedia page even says he owns a da vinciment luke grew up in san francisco and made a mint in the real estate market. he's known as lucky luke. while meeting with his lawyers in the federal courthouse, he slipped out of custody and out the front door. lucky luke was indicted this summer on mail fraud charges for allegedly not paying for $11 million in art including a pi casso and this $3 million degall sculpture of a balance erin a. in the newsroom, andrea borba, kpix5. >> he has...
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Feb 24, 2015
02/15
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. >> i should tell you this appeared on his wikipedia page shortly after the incident today. february 23rd 2015 representative barbieri learned if a woman swallows a pill it will not end up in her vagina. and then the relevant footnotes, which are a.m. accurate. according to the associated press today, the idaho bill to add these new restrictions on doctors which representative barbieri reported his bill pass today. and representative barbieri is on the board of a crisis pregnancy center. to be fair when he went to the last anti-abortion crisis pregnancy board member meeting they were talking about how the baby comes out of the lady's tum tum. you could see where he could get confused. that guy's bill passed today, even within shin bone connected to the knee bone problem. that was basically the character of the news today. we are not even getting to the freakishly giant rats the size of cats turning up in england and totally immune to all standard rat poisons. we're not getting to that today which is also in today's news because for all the things that are hard to believe in
. >> i should tell you this appeared on his wikipedia page shortly after the incident today. february 23rd 2015 representative barbieri learned if a woman swallows a pill it will not end up in her vagina. and then the relevant footnotes, which are a.m. accurate. according to the associated press today, the idaho bill to add these new restrictions on doctors which representative barbieri reported his bill pass today. and representative barbieri is on the board of a crisis pregnancy center....
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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so don't always trust wikipedia. another notable thing in the neighborhood was hopkins brick yard. hopkins were two brothers from georgetown who set up a brickyard in the 1850s. as you can see, they just spread all over the area, because even though la fant had planneded it, the streets didn't go through. it was just basically a big field. so when they were extending massachusetts avenue, hawkins brick yard was right in the way, so they had to knock some of those out, put the avenue through, and then some of the more prominent early residents into the 1870s were complaining that the smoke from the kilns was coming through their homes at night so there was an act of congress to close down the hawkins brickyard. this is basically how everything looked until about 1871 when congress passed the organic act which gave washington a governor, presidentially-appointed governor, henry cook legislative assembly and a house of delegates, and it also created a five-member board of public works, of which alexander vause shepherd was on the board. he wasn't the director of the board. actually, t
so don't always trust wikipedia. another notable thing in the neighborhood was hopkins brick yard. hopkins were two brothers from georgetown who set up a brickyard in the 1850s. as you can see, they just spread all over the area, because even though la fant had planneded it, the streets didn't go through. it was just basically a big field. so when they were extending massachusetts avenue, hawkins brick yard was right in the way, so they had to knock some of those out, put the avenue through,...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or quarters from parking meeters.think sometimes why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at people who go into politics. but today we have a kufrcure for that feeling and that story is next. >> dreen aandrea mitchell reports weekdays on nbc at noon. if you're not on the largest, most reliable network, what are you giving up? verizon. why do i cook? because i make the best chicken noodle soup. because i make the best chicken noodle soup. because i make the best chicken noodle soup. for every way you make chicken noodle soup, make it delicious with swanson®. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours, but aleve can last 12 hours... and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are you? aleve, proven better on pain. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours.
politicians who steal speeches from wikipedia or quarters from parking meeters.think sometimes why anyone would want to go into politics when you look at people who go into politics. but today we have a kufrcure for that feeling and that story is next. >> dreen aandrea mitchell reports weekdays on nbc at noon. if you're not on the largest, most reliable network, what are you giving up? verizon. why do i cook? because i make the best chicken noodle soup. because i make the best chicken...
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Feb 20, 2015
02/15
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and it's the kind of thing where we now use the wikipedia exercise for undergraduates. it's the kind of thing that teaches something about how to operate in another mode that is also very useful to your scholarship. >> i work on the emma goldman papers. and i consider emma goldman to have been one of the great public intellectuals of our time. i totally respect everybody on the panel, so this has been a real joy but i, i guess i'm very aware of the fact that to be a public intellectual you also have to have a certain am of privilege. and for example when i think of emma goldman, i think, well, she was an immigrant and her citizenship was sort of iffy, and if you're too eloquent and too out there, then you're more vulnerable. so one of the things i wanted to say is that almost all of the government records that i have on emma before her deportation and also clay carson before martin luther king got shot was all about their eloquence. and that that was something that was terrifying. to the powers that be. so i think it's -- i just think that there is power in words, as yo
and it's the kind of thing where we now use the wikipedia exercise for undergraduates. it's the kind of thing that teaches something about how to operate in another mode that is also very useful to your scholarship. >> i work on the emma goldman papers. and i consider emma goldman to have been one of the great public intellectuals of our time. i totally respect everybody on the panel, so this has been a real joy but i, i guess i'm very aware of the fact that to be a public intellectual...
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Feb 26, 2015
02/15
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host: more on the fcc from wikipedia's website.s an independent agency created to regulate interstate communications by radio, wire satellite, and television. the fcc works toward six goals and areas of broadband competition, the spectrum, the media, public safety, and homeland security. the fcc took over wire communication regulations from the interstate commerce commission. it is mandated jurisdiction covers 50 states. fifth -- varying degrees of oversight. the fcc is funded entirely by regulatory fees. it has an estimated fiscal budget of about $335 million proposed fiscal budget in 2012. you get it has -- you get an idea of the fcc's budget. completely paid for by regulatory fees. john, fairfax station, virginia. caller: good morning. thank you for c-span, a real public service. i want to comment on immigration, and i have a proposal that may be some of your other callers could respond to. what if the president put 100% of the immigration service staff and resources on the border to stop illegal immigration, and did not focus o
host: more on the fcc from wikipedia's website.s an independent agency created to regulate interstate communications by radio, wire satellite, and television. the fcc works toward six goals and areas of broadband competition, the spectrum, the media, public safety, and homeland security. the fcc took over wire communication regulations from the interstate commerce commission. it is mandated jurisdiction covers 50 states. fifth -- varying degrees of oversight. the fcc is funded entirely by...
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Feb 24, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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wikipedia lists the all-time world record at 12 feet two inches.a top 50 nfl prospect entering the combine. but teams are taking a look. >> i bet the olympic team is also like hey, what's up. >> and nasa for his defying gravity. >> that's incredible. i could watch that all day. >> it's i just love seeing what humans are capable of. great story. >>> all right. on to this fascinating story. there's a woman who may have recruited these three british teenagers to leave home and join isis in syria with her. investigators are now focusing on axa mahmoud as they search for the missing girls. what can be done to prevent that kind of recruiting? >>> scott walker wants to run for president, the media asks him about what rudy giuliani said about the president not loving america. at a walker event. he says -- no no no that's a media gotcha game. is it? "inside politics" takes it on for you. major: ok fitness class! here's our new trainer ensure active heart health. crowd: yayyyy! heart: i'm going to focus on the heart. i minimize my sodium and fat... gotta kee
wikipedia lists the all-time world record at 12 feet two inches.a top 50 nfl prospect entering the combine. but teams are taking a look. >> i bet the olympic team is also like hey, what's up. >> and nasa for his defying gravity. >> that's incredible. i could watch that all day. >> it's i just love seeing what humans are capable of. great story. >>> all right. on to this fascinating story. there's a woman who may have recruited these three british teenagers to...