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Aug 17, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN
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he went -- he did not go to yale or harvard.e is a self-described hellraiser before he turned the corner and became a more serious person. he would have had a hard time. he does not meet the educational background and he would have been more controversial. ruth bader ginsburg would be controversial. they took stands along the way before they got there. the current route to the court really encourages keeping your head down and working hard. just like a silent version of jumping through all of these ever narrowing hoops. and again i do not think that is , helpful. susan: you referenced how presidents use to appoint politicians. we pulled these numbers from your book. because they are quite telling. before 1980, 14 u.s. senators, 17 house members, five continental congress members, one president, or two in your telling, 10 governors, five mayors, and 40 state legislators, sandra day o'connor was the last appointee with political experience. why the big change? prof. barton: it is a divided court and public opinion on it is divided
he went -- he did not go to yale or harvard.e is a self-described hellraiser before he turned the corner and became a more serious person. he would have had a hard time. he does not meet the educational background and he would have been more controversial. ruth bader ginsburg would be controversial. they took stands along the way before they got there. the current route to the court really encourages keeping your head down and working hard. just like a silent version of jumping through all of...
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Aug 2, 2022
08/22
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ESPRESO
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eye 5
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is also worth noting that analysts severely criticized the international monetary fund and they and yale scientists called last week's decision of the international monetary fund the biggest historical mistake of the fund during its existence precisely because the fund improved the forecasts of the russian economy from minus eight percent to -6%. the funds replied that these forecasts are made with sufficient accuracy and that -6% is still a very large figure, but scientists believe that the fund was trusted for nothing to russian statistics i know that you managed to communicate and tomorrow we will study what they told you, so i suggest you watch this interview where they talk about their research, super eh so instead of using russian statistics, they dug deeper and took data from other countries numbers of bank companies and other unusual sources, why do you think this approach to russia is the right way to look at fashion? grades at the end of the month, but now they have decided not to show in the report card those lessons that they fail and instead of showing the grades for reading
is also worth noting that analysts severely criticized the international monetary fund and they and yale scientists called last week's decision of the international monetary fund the biggest historical mistake of the fund during its existence precisely because the fund improved the forecasts of the russian economy from minus eight percent to -6%. the funds replied that these forecasts are made with sufficient accuracy and that -6% is still a very large figure, but scientists believe that the...
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Aug 27, 2022
08/22
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 21
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i went to yale one weekend and fell in love with yale. i just loved it. david: what to study there?nne: biology. david: did you want to go to medical school? anne: i thought about going to medical school. i loved research, but i can't say i was an incredibly talented researcher. i would say that detail and that precision, there was a lot of wonderful postdocs in the lab who helped me get through my research. what i loved the science. i loved molecular biology. like, it keeps me up at night that you have this incredible set of processes going on right now in your body. david: so, yale, you graduated and decided not to go to medical school. what did you do? anne: i am on the kaiser permanente board, and i sometimes joke that i may still go to medical school. it's the most interesting job you can have, i think. but i decided not to, and i very randomly got a job. i randomly got my resume sent to the wallenberg family in sweden, and they offered me a job. i did not know who they were, i did not know what it was. but i thought it was interesting. it was, like, a one-year opportunity, it
i went to yale one weekend and fell in love with yale. i just loved it. david: what to study there?nne: biology. david: did you want to go to medical school? anne: i thought about going to medical school. i loved research, but i can't say i was an incredibly talented researcher. i would say that detail and that precision, there was a lot of wonderful postdocs in the lab who helped me get through my research. what i loved the science. i loved molecular biology. like, it keeps me up at night that...
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Aug 14, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 16
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we supervised and deployed nine yale students. we gather data from interviews, questionnaires, will confirm that no real system actually existed. there were 35 hospitals in the state of california and 179 ambulances. there was no coronation. in 1968, a presidential nominee had recommended the telephone number, 911 p or at&t declared it was now available within connecticut. very few 911 systems existed, only covered 14% of the population. we created and cochaired the first state ems advisory committee consisting of all of the key stakeholders. to these monthly meetings we developed for respect, a detailed report, boil it down to 50 page document that we submitted to the governor, called emergency medical services for blue prints for a. fortunately, -- has just developed and purchased a training manual for any category of medical professionals, emergency medical technicians, emts. between 1971 and 1976, in connecticut, 6000 ambulance attendants were trained as emt. on a sunday morning in may, new york times headline, wealthy johnson
we supervised and deployed nine yale students. we gather data from interviews, questionnaires, will confirm that no real system actually existed. there were 35 hospitals in the state of california and 179 ambulances. there was no coronation. in 1968, a presidential nominee had recommended the telephone number, 911 p or at&t declared it was now available within connecticut. very few 911 systems existed, only covered 14% of the population. we created and cochaired the first state ems advisory...
46
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Aug 14, 2022
08/22
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 46
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david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?e: let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ millions have made the switch from the big three to xfinity mobile. that means millions are saving hundreds a year on their wireless bill. and all of those millions are on the nation's most reliable 5g network and most recommended wireless carrier. that's a whole lot of happy campers out there. and it's never too late to join them. get $450 off any new purchase of an eligible samsung device with xfinity mobile. or add a line to your plan today at xfinitymobile.com this is xfinity rewards. our way of showing our appreciation. with rewards of all shapes and sizes. [ cheers ] are we actual
david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?e: let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ millions have made...
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Aug 13, 2022
08/22
by
BLOOMBERG
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david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?hter] anne: let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ this is xfinity rewards. our way of showing our appreciation. with rewards of all shapes and sizes. [ cheers ] are we actually going? yes!! and once in a lifetime moments. two tickets to nascar! yes! find rewards like these and so many more in the xfinity app. manus: you are watching the best of the qatar economic forum. i'm manus cranny in doha.
david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?hter] anne: let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ this is...
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Aug 14, 2022
08/22
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 54
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david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok? let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ kailey: record-setting temperatures, deadly forest fires, receding rivers. in this episode of "bloomberg green," we are focusing on extreme weather. we'll explore the science behind the recent heatwave. >> it is going to get more extreme than it is now. i'm afraid that is inevitable. kailey: the consequences of extreme weather. >> there is overall low awareness that heat kills.
david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok? let's not talk about that. [laughter] listen, i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and so different. you know, i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say, like, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ kailey:...
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Aug 17, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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excuse me, that was the second time i dropped out of yale university. the first time i went over to become a teacher and i taught two semesters in saigon than i was in the merchant marine and various other things. i came back here and i went back to yale i was writing the book and i went back and i was interested in my experience in putting it on paper so i could understand. that's part of the reason most writers do this to understand yourself and to a lifetime engagement with writing itself. the book was rejected and it was very painful for me. i went back partly to destroy myself because i was suicidal. those of you who are young at that age perhaps know what i'm talking about . it's a very black and white feeling about life when you're, call it a teenager and you feel like you don't have any place in the world. so this book reflects a lot of that destructiveness but i couldn't do it. i couldn't go through with it and going into the military as an anonymous infantryman, and i insisted on infantry. insisted on vietnam as i was afraid to send me to germ
excuse me, that was the second time i dropped out of yale university. the first time i went over to become a teacher and i taught two semesters in saigon than i was in the merchant marine and various other things. i came back here and i went back to yale i was writing the book and i went back and i was interested in my experience in putting it on paper so i could understand. that's part of the reason most writers do this to understand yourself and to a lifetime engagement with writing itself....
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Aug 11, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
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the president of yale. he went far in 1802 as tending his students that they should take an oath never to vote for jefferson. he thought it was a real problem for the republic to be dominated by his opponents. he relieved only his party was going to save america and save the true tradition in 1776. he fought with the federalists we are going to turn the place into a monarchy. they reintroduced erica stocky. they made america just e a satellite of britain. >> literal hereditary aristocracy. ashley until 1989, it was a hereditary lobby. there were some like john adams by 1813 -- [inaudible] so, let's push a little bit more on this question of slavery. i was reading some of the letters that are cited in that report from june 18th and by taylor and new. such as a letter from thomas jefferson to james breckenridge. the very famous letter on the 22nd of april. both of which, as the archivist was pointing out in the direction, available in founders online. it seems to me, you are right, at least in the letter of 1
the president of yale. he went far in 1802 as tending his students that they should take an oath never to vote for jefferson. he thought it was a real problem for the republic to be dominated by his opponents. he relieved only his party was going to save america and save the true tradition in 1776. he fought with the federalists we are going to turn the place into a monarchy. they reintroduced erica stocky. they made america just e a satellite of britain. >> literal hereditary...
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Aug 18, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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excuse me that's a second time i dropped out of yale.er] the first time i went to asia to become a teacher. then i was in the merchant marines. and i came back here and went in my experience to put it on paper so we can understand it. and then to understand yourself and that led it was painful for me. i went back. so i was suicidal perhaps those of you don't know that so i had a feeling about life and you feel like you don't have a place but going into the military but i was afraid they would send me to germany or korea and wanted it to go should the real thing like i have read about it in novels and books and badge of courage. that is interesting because it is about fear. then after six months they brought me over october 67 but to say that it was messy and tgrotesque but then coming back with a whole different head on me where i was in the world and the world itself i knew a great injustice had been done for very. but there is a lot of racism in the third world and they took the brunt of our hatred. >> but just about you documenting ev
excuse me that's a second time i dropped out of yale.er] the first time i went to asia to become a teacher. then i was in the merchant marines. and i came back here and went in my experience to put it on paper so we can understand it. and then to understand yourself and that led it was painful for me. i went back. so i was suicidal perhaps those of you don't know that so i had a feeling about life and you feel like you don't have a place but going into the military but i was afraid they would...
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Aug 11, 2022
08/22
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 30
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david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?'s not talk about that. [laughter] i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and different. i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to look up everyday and say, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more importantly than private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ as you look at the company you have created, how do you think you are having an impact on the world? anne: we are by far and away the best entity to solve the question as to what does the human genome means, and how can he apply it to individuals? ♪ lisa: there is an old saying in finance that cash is king, but when it comes to payments, data suggests that is no longer the case. according to the latest world pay report, cash figures in 20 percent of transactions around the world.
david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?'s not talk about that. [laughter] i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and different. i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to look up everyday and say, i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more importantly than private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ as you look at the company you have created, how do...
99
99
Aug 13, 2022
08/22
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 99
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david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?et's not talk about that. [laughter] i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and different. i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ lisa: there is an old saying in finance that cash is king, but when it comes to payments, data suggests that is no longer the case. according to the latest world pay report, cash figures in 20 percent of transactions around the world. >> the payment-centered industry, from the beginning, has really focused on getting
david: if your children go to harvard rather than yale, will you be ok?et's not talk about that. [laughter] i want my kids to -- my kids are so interesting and different. i want them to be passionate. that is the only thing i care about. i want them to wake up every day and say i love what i'm doing. david: would you get upset if they wanted to something more important, like private equity? [laughter] anne: are you giving them a job offer? ♪ lisa: there is an old saying in finance that cash...
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Aug 30, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
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our program this evening features jeffrey garten, -- of the yale school of management and author of threeat camp david, how a secret meeting in 1971 transformed the global economy. richard fischer, former president and ceo of the federal reserve bank of dallas, joins us to moderate this discussion. you can purchase your copies of three days at camp david at -- our local bookstore partner. our audience receives a 10% discount from the online store by using the code dfw world. and remember, the code is good for any of the books in your shopping cart, not just jeffries. the council will continue to operate top tier virtual programming through the summer and into the beginning of fall, so continue to check out our website at -- four newly-scheduled events. and now, i would like to invite richard fischer to kick off the program. richard is the former president and ceo of the federal reserve bank of dallas, as i mentioned. and most importantly a recipient of the council's most prestigious honor, they ate neil mullin award. richard began his career in private banking before becoming an assistant
our program this evening features jeffrey garten, -- of the yale school of management and author of threeat camp david, how a secret meeting in 1971 transformed the global economy. richard fischer, former president and ceo of the federal reserve bank of dallas, joins us to moderate this discussion. you can purchase your copies of three days at camp david at -- our local bookstore partner. our audience receives a 10% discount from the online store by using the code dfw world. and remember, the...
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Aug 19, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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was 19 i wrote a novel that's very personal and it was my hope to justify because i dropped out of yale university to write this book -- note, excuse me, that was the second time i dropped out. [laughter] i went to asia to become a teacher in a top semesters and hours and bears of the things t and i came back here and went back to yale and i was writing a book and i was interested in my experience in putting it under paper so i could understand it, that's the reason most writers do this, understand yourself and it led to a lifetime engagement of writing itself. the book was rejected which was painful for me. i went back partly to destroy myself, i was suicidal, those of you young at that age perhaps know what i'm talking about, it's a very black and white feeling on life when you call it a teenager and you feel like you don't have a place in the world so this book reflects a lot of i that destructiveness but couldn't do it, i couldn't go through with it and going into the military as anonymous infantryman and insisted ond infantry, phenom because i was afraid they would send me to germa
was 19 i wrote a novel that's very personal and it was my hope to justify because i dropped out of yale university to write this book -- note, excuse me, that was the second time i dropped out. [laughter] i went to asia to become a teacher in a top semesters and hours and bears of the things t and i came back here and went back to yale and i was writing a book and i was interested in my experience in putting it under paper so i could understand it, that's the reason most writers do this,...
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Aug 5, 2022
08/22
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CNBC
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let's bring in yale school of management's jeffrey sonnenfeld.>> good to see you >> you have nine myths and it boils down to this russia is in trouble, on the verge, potentially, of imploding. you have nine myths. i want to bear down on three of them let's start with this one. russia is making up for lost western business in imports by replace them with imports from asia why is that a myth and untrue? >> putin's trying to pretend that they can pivot east for energy sales which, thof course, is not true, and trying to pretend that the companies that left, the 1,200 multinational companies that left aren't hurting them because they can substitute the imports from china. not only have their imports into russia as we've seen plummeted by more than 50%, but in fact, taking a look at china's own data they have the customs data as public and it's pretty reliable and what they're sending into russia from china has also plummeted more than 50%. they like to create this myth of bellicose several-reliance and the long-russian tradition saying they invented
let's bring in yale school of management's jeffrey sonnenfeld.>> good to see you >> you have nine myths and it boils down to this russia is in trouble, on the verge, potentially, of imploding. you have nine myths. i want to bear down on three of them let's start with this one. russia is making up for lost western business in imports by replace them with imports from asia why is that a myth and untrue? >> putin's trying to pretend that they can pivot east for energy sales...
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Aug 19, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 39
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and it was my big hope to justify my life because i dropped out of yale university to write this book and it it no, excuse me. that was a second time. i dropped out at the alien university the first time i went over to asia to become a teacher and i taught two semesters in saigon and then i was in the merchant marine and various other things i and i came back here and i went back to the yale and i was writing a book by the time i went back and i really was interested in experience my experience and putting it on paper so i could understand it. that's part of the reason most writers do this. to understand yourself and that led to a lifeline a lifetime engagement with writing itself. the the book was rejected and it was very painful for me. i went back partly to destroy myself. because i was i was suicidal those of you who were young at that age. perhaps know what i'm talking about. it's a very black and white. feeling about life when you're call it a teenager and you feel like you don't have any place in the world. you're dislocated. so this book reflects a lot of that. destruction des
and it was my big hope to justify my life because i dropped out of yale university to write this book and it it no, excuse me. that was a second time. i dropped out at the alien university the first time i went over to asia to become a teacher and i taught two semesters in saigon and then i was in the merchant marine and various other things i and i came back here and i went back to the yale and i was writing a book by the time i went back and i really was interested in experience my experience...
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27
Aug 13, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN2
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john hardy said so he was a great professor of law at yale.r ginsburg had her doubts about the way. >> which is why the argument coming up in the mississippi case to be decided by next june in the middle of a midterm election will be momentous. host: but the focus with a private right of action to explore this. >> and with a private attorney general some are impatient - - but of the rule of all the patient can say we would just empower citizens with the county of $10000 they say just way to california says wait intel california gets hate speech. i am all for private enterprise but not for outsourcing this kind of law. host: but you do welcome the court hearings. >> absolutely viability will change but you have to f confront the fact this is what makes us a problem pro-choice people say one person is involved that and say there are two individuals involved. host: do you really think it's the intractable problem with all we know about science posted 1973 do you think quick. >> and those that survive is the intrauterine medicine now that can do w
john hardy said so he was a great professor of law at yale.r ginsburg had her doubts about the way. >> which is why the argument coming up in the mississippi case to be decided by next june in the middle of a midterm election will be momentous. host: but the focus with a private right of action to explore this. >> and with a private attorney general some are impatient - - but of the rule of all the patient can say we would just empower citizens with the county of $10000 they say...
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47
Aug 15, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
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[laughter] you know, yale was sort of the conservative bible college, right? [laughter] in the early 1700s so that we can have an alternative to harvard. okay? almost all the colonial american colleges, the ivy league schools, most of them were founded in the colonial period, and they're almost all founded as colleges for the training of pastors. and almost nobody else goes to college. no women went to college. almost no men went to college in those days. and if you were a man who went to college, it was almost always in the colonial period to become a pastor, okay? so what they saw as a rise in immorality, enlightenment thought, more modern kind of my philosophy and theology, and then a third reason for the sense of crisis, this ongoing war with catholic france and spain and their native american allies. starting in the 1690s, the colonies but especially new england go through a couple of generations of imperial war between britain and the british colonies and then either france or spain. and in new england, the main issue is fighting against the forces of fr
[laughter] you know, yale was sort of the conservative bible college, right? [laughter] in the early 1700s so that we can have an alternative to harvard. okay? almost all the colonial american colleges, the ivy league schools, most of them were founded in the colonial period, and they're almost all founded as colleges for the training of pastors. and almost nobody else goes to college. no women went to college. almost no men went to college in those days. and if you were a man who went to...
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156
Aug 24, 2022
08/22
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CNNW
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a detailed analysis of russia data by yale economists is damning.lapsed, leading to widespread supply shortages while russian domestic production has come to a complete stand still. while europe is feeling energy pressure, the kremlin's oil and gas exports can't be shifted overnight to asia as some suggested. not only that, the foreign companies that left russia in the wake of the invasion account for some 40% of gdp. but some 500,000 workers fleeing the country, half of whom are highly educated, and they aren't coming back anytime soon. but the yale paper concludes that while putin is resorting to patently unsustainable fiscal and monetary intervention, looking ahead there is no path out of economic oblivion for russia as long as the allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure. so the kremlin's predictable talking point that international sanctions have utterly failed has about as much credibility as the black knight in monty python's holy grail. >> just a fish wound. >> but to quote another line in that film, t
a detailed analysis of russia data by yale economists is damning.lapsed, leading to widespread supply shortages while russian domestic production has come to a complete stand still. while europe is feeling energy pressure, the kremlin's oil and gas exports can't be shifted overnight to asia as some suggested. not only that, the foreign companies that left russia in the wake of the invasion account for some 40% of gdp. but some 500,000 workers fleeing the country, half of whom are highly...
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20
Aug 16, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 20
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doesn't matter if i went to harvard or yale or oxford. it doesn't matter. what matters is i'm filled with the holy spirit, and support the work of god. so farmers -- occasionally native americans are converted. occasionally slaves start standing up in the meetings saying i have a word from god for you. pastors like james davenport say listen to this brother, listen to this sister, he has something to say to us from the lord. there are no social settings anywhere else in colonial america where you will see women, slaves, native americans, standing up and addressing in a somewhat authoritative way white men. it doesn't happen anywhere else. you can understand the critics say this is crazy. you all are nuts. socially disruptive, moving out from religious, this is socially disruptive. the critics say this is a bunch of frenzy, what they call enthusiasm, means you are half crazy. that is what the critics said. it is a bunch of who we, but it doesn't really mean anything. not actually doing anything, critics say love, charity, devotion. what difference does the g
doesn't matter if i went to harvard or yale or oxford. it doesn't matter. what matters is i'm filled with the holy spirit, and support the work of god. so farmers -- occasionally native americans are converted. occasionally slaves start standing up in the meetings saying i have a word from god for you. pastors like james davenport say listen to this brother, listen to this sister, he has something to say to us from the lord. there are no social settings anywhere else in colonial america where...
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Aug 31, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
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by the way his classmates include hank paulson who they like to say is the most famous person at yale at that time was the inet garten. now we are going to talk about this fantastic look "three days at camp david." it is a remarkable summary of one of the key events that happened in the global financial world and i would also argue one of the great events are most important events in terms of really dealing with the u.s. role in the rest of the world and changing the dynamic of global policy as well as global financial markets. jeffrey, welcome. i want to open this up i ask you why you wrote the book and why you think this is the subject of crucial importance. >> thank you david. you know i've written several hooks and they are all about the global economy and the political dimension of the global economy but they had dwelt very much on trends and i wanted to try something else. i wanted to identify a single event really focus in on it and focus in on great detail so that you knew the people and you knew what was in their head and you knew what was influencing them in terms of the glo
by the way his classmates include hank paulson who they like to say is the most famous person at yale at that time was the inet garten. now we are going to talk about this fantastic look "three days at camp david." it is a remarkable summary of one of the key events that happened in the global financial world and i would also argue one of the great events are most important events in terms of really dealing with the u.s. role in the rest of the world and changing the dynamic of global...
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look back yale with a fine finish. but not enough to please the traveling support as on yom start the season as they ended the last number one in the capitol. well dot mando, so beach liver, kristen, india open match. one goal was enough for the home side to clean all 3 points, defender jonathan tar lost the ball outside his own box in the night when it allowing dot one captain mcelroy to force the ball over the line. it was the offensive calamity. all round from the visitors got wears on them in injury time. us keep our lucas right. it ski was sent off for handling the ball outside the box after buying the 5 buzzing fridays opened their results in from all saturdays matches. won't be live because in, in the late game. glad back feet half an i am. bremond said point with balls, but on the return to the top flight, mine's beat bolcom fryeburg thrust ox book. this more. when does the action to come on sunday to you're watching data, the news that's it from me up next are textual shipped. looks that smart farming and how
look back yale with a fine finish. but not enough to please the traveling support as on yom start the season as they ended the last number one in the capitol. well dot mando, so beach liver, kristen, india open match. one goal was enough for the home side to clean all 3 points, defender jonathan tar lost the ball outside his own box in the night when it allowing dot one captain mcelroy to force the ball over the line. it was the offensive calamity. all round from the visitors got wears on them...
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bernstein seething hatter did pull one back, but it was little more than a consolation. dody look back yale with a fine finish, but not enough to please the travelling support. as on yom start the season as the end of the last number one in the capital. the watching dw news coming up. look at how people conceived from anonymous spam doing this, demanding to know who the f bob this up. that's the well, it's biggest family film after the break. remember, you can always find more news on our website, a, d, w dot com and follow us on social media. stay tuned for more news on top of a.
bernstein seething hatter did pull one back, but it was little more than a consolation. dody look back yale with a fine finish, but not enough to please the travelling support. as on yom start the season as the end of the last number one in the capital. the watching dw news coming up. look at how people conceived from anonymous spam doing this, demanding to know who the f bob this up. that's the well, it's biggest family film after the break. remember, you can always find more news on our...
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bernstein seething, hatta did pull one back, but it was little more than a consolation. dody look about yale with a fine finish, but not enough to please the travelling support. as on yom start the season as they entered the last number one in the capitol. the watching d. w. news will leave you with some impressions of ice lands erupt in volcano during the week. i am eddie micah, gena. but don't forget us more coming up at the top of the r seduced agent. lou. a with every jenny is fun the drive. we've got all out use them one day in the foot of the.
bernstein seething, hatta did pull one back, but it was little more than a consolation. dody look about yale with a fine finish, but not enough to please the travelling support. as on yom start the season as they entered the last number one in the capitol. the watching d. w. news will leave you with some impressions of ice lands erupt in volcano during the week. i am eddie micah, gena. but don't forget us more coming up at the top of the r seduced agent. lou. a with every jenny is fun the...
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look back yale with a fine finish. but not enough to please the traveling support. as on yom start the season as the end of the last number one in the capitol. hundreds of thousands of people have turned out to celebrate canal parade in amsterdam. if the city is elder algae, p t q pride event for tele, other 80 boats representing various rights groups from bars and even the dutch military took part, transforming amsterdam famous canals into a massive party location. ah, ah, you're watching the w news live from berlin. stick around coming up next, a shift, looking at how modern technology is making farming more efficient and sustainable. thanks for watching. take care of a departure into the today. this means flying to a foreign planet. in the 16th century, the mental being of captain l.
look back yale with a fine finish. but not enough to please the traveling support. as on yom start the season as the end of the last number one in the capitol. hundreds of thousands of people have turned out to celebrate canal parade in amsterdam. if the city is elder algae, p t q pride event for tele, other 80 boats representing various rights groups from bars and even the dutch military took part, transforming amsterdam famous canals into a massive party location. ah, ah, you're watching the...
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Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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he's starting professor of law and political science at yale university. before joining yale staff faculty, he clerked for judge stephen breyer when he's on court of appeals for the first circuit. he's also a regular visiting adjunct professor at columbia law school and new author of the recently released book, "the words that made us: america's constitutional conversation, 1760-1840". joining us as moderator this evening is richard brookhiser, a senior fellow at the "national review" institute, senior editor of the "national review" and author ofev numerous books including give me liberty, a history of america's exceptional idea, and john marshall, the man to make the supreme court. he was a story and curator for new york historical 2004 exhibition alexander hamilton, the man who made -- was delighted to be able to work with him w active back t. and a 2008, president george w. bush awarded him the national humanities medal in a white house ceremony. tonight program will last an hour and 15 minutes for questions and answers. your questions canes be submitt
he's starting professor of law and political science at yale university. before joining yale staff faculty, he clerked for judge stephen breyer when he's on court of appeals for the first circuit. he's also a regular visiting adjunct professor at columbia law school and new author of the recently released book, "the words that made us: america's constitutional conversation, 1760-1840". joining us as moderator this evening is richard brookhiser, a senior fellow at the "national...
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Aug 12, 2022
08/22
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yale law school and formerly of morgan stanley.a, i cannot say how alone stephen roach was 20 years ago in saying this is a fed policy that is not congressional amended policy. there was a sophisticated to the links they would have to confront. lisa: you are concerned about what the notes would be over the weekend. the concessions for the big bears. how much will it be this? this structural inflation people are not accounting for. if the fed wants to get back down to the 2% limit, if they don't take the 3% view of things, are we further from that place people think? is it a lot less attainable because of this re-shoring, the separation of the two powers? tom: we will have to see. jeff degraff with neal dunn. we've had a 50% move, the retracement, off the bottom of this grim bear market. it is not any number of guesses over where we will go. dow futures up 108. we are all doing that. we are all in anticipation of what equity strategist will write this weekend. kailey: i can't wait to see any actual revisions to the year-end target f
yale law school and formerly of morgan stanley.a, i cannot say how alone stephen roach was 20 years ago in saying this is a fed policy that is not congressional amended policy. there was a sophisticated to the links they would have to confront. lisa: you are concerned about what the notes would be over the weekend. the concessions for the big bears. how much will it be this? this structural inflation people are not accounting for. if the fed wants to get back down to the 2% limit, if they don't...
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Aug 17, 2022
08/22
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that plays out over at yale law school in years working for attorney general and misery finally he ends up voting for and workingn for reagan and that's his journey back. if we tell that story it's a complicated story in the book and in the film but once you become a public conservative black man whose attack byhe the media and he has his battles with the left and that reaches the first peak the confirmation hearing and on today on the court. we tell that story in the film and the book, i should say we let -- tell that story. >> he referred to as the radical years but you also bring up the theme where he brings up the theme of circumstances controlling you rather you controlling circumstances. >> i think he would say that he was left by having a poor upbringing by his grandfather and lee's nuns he would not be who he is without them. he is constantly h referencing l important they are to him in the film when he talked about his current father in the book with the pictures of the two of them i think he feels he was left in the circumstances, other people might see it differently he was g
that plays out over at yale law school in years working for attorney general and misery finally he ends up voting for and workingn for reagan and that's his journey back. if we tell that story it's a complicated story in the book and in the film but once you become a public conservative black man whose attack byhe the media and he has his battles with the left and that reaches the first peak the confirmation hearing and on today on the court. we tell that story in the film and the book, i...
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Aug 9, 2022
08/22
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>> if you talk to people in that world, these societies which were called secret societies and in yale senior societies was this place where once you were selected it was one of the places you could totally be yourself because you were in a trusted cone of silence. later on in the 60s when there was a backlash against the elite culture people were seen as r leading the united states down the dark path into the vietnam war and therefore were in this act of what was seen then as stupidity plus they led everyone to question maybe the cold war was just a way for establishment elites to enrich themselves and the fact that there were all these societies meant clearly behind closed doors there were secret truths and paths being cemented which is why in that world of conspiracy theories the believers of history had been pulled behind the scenes by small confident elites and the brown brothers were quietly there and there were all these theories was he in bed with nazi germany and did they find the industrial machine prior to the rise of hitler. but i think in reality it really was a world wher
>> if you talk to people in that world, these societies which were called secret societies and in yale senior societies was this place where once you were selected it was one of the places you could totally be yourself because you were in a trusted cone of silence. later on in the 60s when there was a backlash against the elite culture people were seen as r leading the united states down the dark path into the vietnam war and therefore were in this act of what was seen then as stupidity...
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Aug 3, 2022
08/22
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this is a very fascinating studies by scientists at yale university, the same team that managed to richerecapitated pigs. now the latest one is to restore organ function in pigs that have been dead for over an hour, function in pigs that have been dead for overan hour, by function in pigs that have been dead for over an hour, by pumping a lick liquid around the body which surpasses inflammation and says the pig can stay alive. this fluid that scientists pump around the body essentially brings the organs back to life, so that's why the scientists are saying this to change our understanding of what we mean by life and death if it's now scientifically possible to essentially bring an animal back to life after it has already been dead. this could have really big implications for organ donors and also for these kind of processes to potentially be replicated in humans and. , . , , potentially be replicated in humans and. g ., , , .,., ., , and. james, it is extraordinary. of course it's— and. james, it is extraordinary. of course it's good — and. james, it is extraordinary. of course it's good
this is a very fascinating studies by scientists at yale university, the same team that managed to richerecapitated pigs. now the latest one is to restore organ function in pigs that have been dead for over an hour, function in pigs that have been dead for overan hour, by function in pigs that have been dead for over an hour, by pumping a lick liquid around the body which surpasses inflammation and says the pig can stay alive. this fluid that scientists pump around the body essentially brings...
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Aug 7, 2022
08/22
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us ambassador france a graduate of yale at the age of only 28 he was tasked in negotiate with vladimir lemmon at the paris treaty talks in 1919. in 1926 after leaving government and being very critical of woodrow wilson. he wrote a novel that outsold the great gatsby which was published during that same year. he later co-authored a biography of woodrow wilson. with sigmund freud he counted honoring matisse as a friend and ernest hemingway used to drop ice country estate outside paris and together they drank. very good wine. he had an 18,000 bottle wine cellar and they shot clay pigeons. let me read a few experts from a couple of letters that bullet wrote to president roosevelt some of which are deeply personal. in 1934 after having served in moscow for only a few months bullet wrote. i'm about homesick in many years. i have not had the sensation that i had a home. but in this past year talking about 1933. mrs. you and mrs. roosevelt have made me feel that i was a member of the family and the thing i miss so much is the afternoons and evenings with you in the white house. i'm much too f
us ambassador france a graduate of yale at the age of only 28 he was tasked in negotiate with vladimir lemmon at the paris treaty talks in 1919. in 1926 after leaving government and being very critical of woodrow wilson. he wrote a novel that outsold the great gatsby which was published during that same year. he later co-authored a biography of woodrow wilson. with sigmund freud he counted honoring matisse as a friend and ernest hemingway used to drop ice country estate outside paris and...
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Aug 12, 2022
08/22
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yale issued a report anything coming from here support. that's the most influential university in america at the time. more college presidents and any university at the time and yell basically said we should go back to the classics. ellen crappy yelling practice did start offering science nevertheless. the scientists was segregated. it was known as the ship. thanks, but they were put in a special place in chapel. that's you know, rather made to feel inferior, even though it had some very scientists as you know, that was not casein jefferson the word science in this period is used very broadly and it's more about methodology system and knowledge based on facts and that's an observation right? yes. that's right and experimentation. i was i was thinking a lot about the medical school there eva which came very prominent quickly and and was very important and and how it all but how it also illuminates both the inspired and forward looking nature of jefferson's vision, but ways in which sometimes leave that became implicated with slavery and rac
yale issued a report anything coming from here support. that's the most influential university in america at the time. more college presidents and any university at the time and yell basically said we should go back to the classics. ellen crappy yelling practice did start offering science nevertheless. the scientists was segregated. it was known as the ship. thanks, but they were put in a special place in chapel. that's you know, rather made to feel inferior, even though it had some very...
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Aug 29, 2022
08/22
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he is a professor of law and political science at yale university.ing yale's faculty he clerked for judge, now associate justice stephen breyer. he was judge on the u.s. court of appeals for the first circuit. akhil reed amar is a visiting adjunct professor at columbia law school and author of the recently released book the words that made us. americans constitutional conversation 1760 -- 1840. joining us as moderator this evening is richard brookhiser senior fellow at the national review institute. senior editor of the national review author of numerous books including give me liberty, a history of america's exceptional idea and john marshall the man who made the supreme court. curator for new york historical 2004 expedition alexander hamilton the man who made modern america. i was delighted to be able to work with him back then. and in 2008 president george w. bush awarded him the national humanities medal and a white house ceremony. tonight's program will lessen our including 50 minutes for questions and answers. your questions can be submitted vi
he is a professor of law and political science at yale university.ing yale's faculty he clerked for judge, now associate justice stephen breyer. he was judge on the u.s. court of appeals for the first circuit. akhil reed amar is a visiting adjunct professor at columbia law school and author of the recently released book the words that made us. americans constitutional conversation 1760 -- 1840. joining us as moderator this evening is richard brookhiser senior fellow at the national review...
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Aug 13, 2022
08/22
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it was a great professor of law at yale. ruth bader ginsburg had her doubts about the way they did it constitutionally which is why the argument coming up in the mississippi case be argued this fall and decided by next june in the middle of the midterm election. it's going to be momentous. >> but of course all the focus right now is on the texas law which creates this i think god, i'll hear what you think private right of action in order to explore this and sue your doctors and take it to the court. >> i know that some conservatives are impatient with making progress against roe versus wade and not recognizing that patience is required for constitutional government and the rule of law. patient conservative says will just empower citizens with a of $10,000 to sue people. someone has to say it has the conservatives wait a minute, just wait until california says aregoing to have a private action against the speech will give you $10,000 to drive people in . >> or against weapons that are on the books. >> i'm all for private ente
it was a great professor of law at yale. ruth bader ginsburg had her doubts about the way they did it constitutionally which is why the argument coming up in the mississippi case be argued this fall and decided by next june in the middle of the midterm election. it's going to be momentous. >> but of course all the focus right now is on the texas law which creates this i think god, i'll hear what you think private right of action in order to explore this and sue your doctors and take it to...