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Jan 3, 2025
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all to yale and solomon. are you serious? can i make this offer. oh, yes. so so yale agrees to do that. and there was a moment when one of the one of the people who was coming up with the money, a wealthy family friend named daniel wadsworth, he lived in hartford and he wanted to do museum in hartford. ultimately the hartford atheneum. but the this is before that. and he says, all right, why don't we rotate them back and forth? yale and hartford and trumbull appalled because he doesn't want them, you know, moved back and forth, be damaged. and very poignantly, he says no one could repair them. and i can't, you know, my skills of portraiture are just gone. if they're damaged, you know, that's it. and so then he writes, the president of harvard, his alma, and says, look, if you you know, if yale being difficult here can, i leave them to harvard instead. now, this is the source of a campus legend, which heard that such clause exists in his that you know, if yale ever monkeyed with the conditions would get the pa
all to yale and solomon. are you serious? can i make this offer. oh, yes. so so yale agrees to do that. and there was a moment when one of the one of the people who was coming up with the money, a wealthy family friend named daniel wadsworth, he lived in hartford and he wanted to do museum in hartford. ultimately the hartford atheneum. but the this is before that. and he says, all right, why don't we rotate them back and forth? yale and hartford and trumbull appalled because he doesn't want...
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Jan 2, 2025
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if yale will pay an annuity i will leff them all to yale and sullivan says are you serious? i make this offer? oh, yes. so yale agrees to do that, and there was a moment when one of the -- one of the people who was coming up with the money, a wealthy family friend named daniel wattsworth. he wanted to do a museum in hartford, but this is before that. , they would be damaged, he said no one could repair them and i cannot anymore. ki my skills are gone. if they are damaged, that is it. he writes to the president of harvard, his alma mater, says, yale is being difficult, can't i leave these to harvard instead. this is the source of a campus legend which i heard, such a clause exists in his will. if yale ever monkeyed with the conditionh, harvard would get the painting, not true because wadsworth backed off. one of his stipulations was that he be buried beneath his standing portrait of washington after the battle of trenton. the gallery has been moved twice since he first built it and each time they had been respectfully disinterred and reburied. if you go to the yale art galler
if yale will pay an annuity i will leff them all to yale and sullivan says are you serious? i make this offer? oh, yes. so yale agrees to do that, and there was a moment when one of the -- one of the people who was coming up with the money, a wealthy family friend named daniel wattsworth. he wanted to do a museum in hartford, but this is before that. , they would be damaged, he said no one could repair them and i cannot anymore. ki my skills are gone. if they are damaged, that is it. he writes...
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Jan 2, 2025
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i had a yale being difficult he can, i leave them to harvard instead. now, this is the source of a campus legend, which heard that such clause exists in his that you know, if yale ever monkeyed with the conditions would get the painting's not true because because wadsworth back off you know and then the harvard scheme ended and one of his stipulations was that he be buried beneath his standing portrait of washing sand after the battle of trenton. and he and his wife were and the gallery has been moved twice since he first built a and each time they are have been respectfully disinterred and reburied. so if you go to the art gallery now colonel trumbull is there and and his wife sarah in the basement so fascinating and i guess we'll end on this one and this is the $32,000 question here. did trumbull ever offer any indication of a favorite painting of his or more the one that he took more pride in? well, he said of revolutionary paintings, if he had save one from a fire, it would be princeton. that's interesting, because people a lot of people kind of lik
i had a yale being difficult he can, i leave them to harvard instead. now, this is the source of a campus legend, which heard that such clause exists in his that you know, if yale ever monkeyed with the conditions would get the painting's not true because because wadsworth back off you know and then the harvard scheme ended and one of his stipulations was that he be buried beneath his standing portrait of washing sand after the battle of trenton. and he and his wife were and the gallery has...
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Jan 11, 2025
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jason stanley is a yale university philosophy professor.that does it for me. thank you for watching. stay right where you are. the katie phang show starts right now. >> this is the katie phang show live from telemundo
jason stanley is a yale university philosophy professor.that does it for me. thank you for watching. stay right where you are. the katie phang show starts right now. >> this is the katie phang show live from telemundo
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Jan 10, 2025
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a yale professor won the nobel prize on climate economics. you probably have never heard a summary of his work either. we went from a 50% increase in atmospheric co2 unit the current rate of warming we will warm another degree tread into surgery. there's a wide range of economic analysis and who knows what the world will be like in 80 years but the range of projection of the impacts from this continued warming range between 0.2% and 2% reduction in per the income three generations from now. so we are going to lose as few months may be a year of economic growth in the next 80 years. is that a crisis today? is that justification for all sorts of government policy change is? now look to. up to that what i call the true energy crisis today also stuff you don't hear about much a third of humanity, 2.5 billion people cook their daily meals burning wood done in agricultural waste inside of their homes and huts. i've been to many these places around the world to the world health organization estimates around 3 million people are killed every year but
a yale professor won the nobel prize on climate economics. you probably have never heard a summary of his work either. we went from a 50% increase in atmospheric co2 unit the current rate of warming we will warm another degree tread into surgery. there's a wide range of economic analysis and who knows what the world will be like in 80 years but the range of projection of the impacts from this continued warming range between 0.2% and 2% reduction in per the income three generations from now. so...
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Jan 9, 2025
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william nord house at yale, professor, nobel prize on economics, you probably never hear the summary of his work either. 50% increase in atmospheric co2. at the current rate of warming, we will warm another degree c toward the end of the century. a wide range of economic analysis we should critique. who knows what the world will be like in 80 years? the range of projections, impacts from this continued warming range between 0.2% and 2% reduction in per capita income three generations from now. we will lose a few months, a year of economic growth in the next 80 years. is that a crisis today? is that justification for crazy government policy changes? the trade-off, the true energy crisis today, stuff you don't hear about much, a third of humanity, 2.5 billion people cook their daily meals burning wood, dung and agricultural waste inside their homes and huts. i've traveled to many of these places around the world. world health organization estimates this kills 3 million people every year. that is the death rate of covid the last two years for which we shut down the world. these are low
william nord house at yale, professor, nobel prize on economics, you probably never hear the summary of his work either. 50% increase in atmospheric co2. at the current rate of warming, we will warm another degree c toward the end of the century. a wide range of economic analysis we should critique. who knows what the world will be like in 80 years? the range of projections, impacts from this continued warming range between 0.2% and 2% reduction in per capita income three generations from now....
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Jan 7, 2025
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think how expensive yale is. i'm not surprised to see federal judges not hire people who have gone through these schools, they are coming out crazy. this is divisive, if your class would pass muster with kkk, you are doing it wrong. loans students are taking out to pay for classes like this. will it help them thrive? absolutely not. it teaches students to mistrust their peers. i want to hire people who know how to get along with co-workers, i want my children to date and marry people with good personal relationships. it is not coming out of this. >> carley: ufc's dana white landed a big job in big tech. don't miss details. >> todd: rememberaed smugglers helping illegal migrants across into san diego county. this happened outside sanctuary city. beth van dine introduced bill to ban money from going to sanctuary cities, she will tell us how soon that bill could be pass the when she joins us next. >> todd: president-elect trump set to meet with senate republicans tomorrow to layout plans for his agenda. hes he wants
think how expensive yale is. i'm not surprised to see federal judges not hire people who have gone through these schools, they are coming out crazy. this is divisive, if your class would pass muster with kkk, you are doing it wrong. loans students are taking out to pay for classes like this. will it help them thrive? absolutely not. it teaches students to mistrust their peers. i want to hire people who know how to get along with co-workers, i want my children to date and marry people with good...
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Jan 12, 2025
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she went on to graduate from yale university with honors, and later earned a degree from stanford lawelcome to both of you. great to see you, viviana. it's been some years since you and i first spoke. and i mean, it's such remarkable joy to see the success that both of you have achieved despite the adversity that you faced. i just want to underscore, though, for americans who look at you, who see you as a lawyer and a remarkable success, your family was ripped apart as you were growing up. you, in spite of that, have achieved the success that you've achieved, maybe even because of it. but i want to go back to those days when you and i first met and we first talked and you were you were graduating from your undergraduate and your father was taken from you. tell me how that was. >> sure. >> well, first of all, thank you so much for having me again. it has been some time. >> at that time it was really intense and my family continues to feel the ramifications to today. >> i think i was very concerned about my youngest siblings, who at the time were around two and seven, being effectively
she went on to graduate from yale university with honors, and later earned a degree from stanford lawelcome to both of you. great to see you, viviana. it's been some years since you and i first spoke. and i mean, it's such remarkable joy to see the success that both of you have achieved despite the adversity that you faced. i just want to underscore, though, for americans who look at you, who see you as a lawyer and a remarkable success, your family was ripped apart as you were growing up. you,...
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Jan 12, 2025
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there was a sad image of yale, a bunch of rich entitled little snot cheering. when the american flag gets pulled down and put in the dirt. clay clarity is powerful, but it is also going to be abundantly clear. there are people on the political. i had a conversation with a very successful businessman, silicon valley, been a democrat, a man of the left, his whole whole life. and he said, i don't understand. where is this coming from on our college campuses? and it is the fruit of the ideology that took root starting the sixties and seventies and spread throughout our society. but i will say the contrast for anyone who is a defender or of the current administer nation, the contrast when the first university gets their funds cut, when the first prosecution is brought, will night and day. because i will ask you why on earth is merrick garland not prosecuted? why is the fbi not following the money? why are not interested if qatar or iran or others are funding this and they don't want to know? and sadly, part of the reason they don't want to know is many of the funder
there was a sad image of yale, a bunch of rich entitled little snot cheering. when the american flag gets pulled down and put in the dirt. clay clarity is powerful, but it is also going to be abundantly clear. there are people on the political. i had a conversation with a very successful businessman, silicon valley, been a democrat, a man of the left, his whole whole life. and he said, i don't understand. where is this coming from on our college campuses? and it is the fruit of the ideology...
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Jan 14, 2025
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she is a graduate of cornell, yale medical school, she has served previously in governments as chief operating officer at the center for medicare and medicaid services and she has served with great distinction and public acclaim as the health secretary of the north carolina centers for, sorry, department of health and human services of north carolina. dr. cohen will make some remarks to kick us off, then we will have a chat, then we will turn matters over to the audience. dr. cohen with respect to the topics that may be raised, i remind you, this session is on the record. dr. cohen: good evening, everyone. thank you for hosting us. i wanted to acknowledge in the audience, my deputy of the cdc makes things work. and my 12-year-old daughter has been with me today. [applause] dr. cohen: she has seen a long day of talking that i do as cdc director. she has been amazing so thank you for coming to new york with me today. it is great to be here. i want to start with some framing remarks as to where cdc is. it is an important moment when we are having this conversation because i think folks
she is a graduate of cornell, yale medical school, she has served previously in governments as chief operating officer at the center for medicare and medicaid services and she has served with great distinction and public acclaim as the health secretary of the north carolina centers for, sorry, department of health and human services of north carolina. dr. cohen will make some remarks to kick us off, then we will have a chat, then we will turn matters over to the audience. dr. cohen with respect...
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Jan 5, 2025
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and then it ends when i'm yale. but so i think when they got wind, when they started reading parts of it and they realized that i was being very honest, i was being very honest about some of the bad things that i did. in fact, all of the bad things that i did, i think are in here. it wasn't just praising myself and making everybody else look different. so and i think it was important. do think it was important to end it before we're adults, though? because i think in the adulthood that's one maybe more of the very different lifestyles because we have a very big range of socioeconomic outcomes in my family that would be more evident and maybe more for my siblings. some of them. mm hmm. so for you was it more like you felt like you had more in your life to dedicate to doing book or, like, truth? yes, but covid. oh, okay. covid project, soviet book. all right. yeah, that's. join the club. that's really awesome. i wonder how many books were written over. there is. that's probably one good thing. yes i think some of us m
and then it ends when i'm yale. but so i think when they got wind, when they started reading parts of it and they realized that i was being very honest, i was being very honest about some of the bad things that i did. in fact, all of the bad things that i did, i think are in here. it wasn't just praising myself and making everybody else look different. so and i think it was important. do think it was important to end it before we're adults, though? because i think in the adulthood that's one...
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Jan 14, 2025
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feeny, who told her to go to yale. [ laughter ] and was obviously, feeny was fight. worked her whole life to get into the school of her dreams, only to prioritize the needs of a boy over her own ambitions? although ultimately it worked out because she did become a successful lawyer on "girl meets world," even though i feel like she probably regrets not going to yale, and oh, [ bleep ], i've lost my mind. i've [ bleep ]. [ laughter ] i went on a "boy meets world" rant -- [ cheers and applause ] -- in the middle of "a closer look" because i have lost my mind. my parents were right. i should have gone outside more. [ laughter ] time-in. the point is, those tweets drove bannon and the hardline maga right out of their minds and now bannon is going all out against musk. >> this is central to how they gutted the middle class in this country. and we haven't fought these battles over years and years and years to allow american citizens of every race, ethnicity, religion, be gutted by the sociopathic overlords in silicon valley. we're not doing that. we're not doing that. we'r
feeny, who told her to go to yale. [ laughter ] and was obviously, feeny was fight. worked her whole life to get into the school of her dreams, only to prioritize the needs of a boy over her own ambitions? although ultimately it worked out because she did become a successful lawyer on "girl meets world," even though i feel like she probably regrets not going to yale, and oh, [ bleep ], i've lost my mind. i've [ bleep ]. [ laughter ] i went on a "boy meets world" rant -- [...
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Jan 11, 2025
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i was at yale when james tobin was there. he was janet yellen's phd advisor. i thought we had put all this on the scrapheap of history, but it's back. if it's not working any better this time, i would argue probably worse, i would think we were confronted with that choice -- maybe we will get into my view of what you want to call it, bidenomics, bidenflation, bidenitis, like a cute disease, when i'm in a particularly bad mood i call it bidenism. i think on the others, we see from trump 1.0, it is not a strict adherence to reagan's principles, but it's a pretty good 21st century adaptation, and it really worked for everybody. i will bring it back to number three, but igniting the private sector and the kind of balance across all income distributions and per capita labor and growth that we had, i thought was phenomenal. that's number one. number two, i think, as an economic historian and someone who has been in markets for 40 years, i actually think i'm starting to look like it now, but i think we are also at a unique moment geopolitically, and i could see in th
i was at yale when james tobin was there. he was janet yellen's phd advisor. i thought we had put all this on the scrapheap of history, but it's back. if it's not working any better this time, i would argue probably worse, i would think we were confronted with that choice -- maybe we will get into my view of what you want to call it, bidenomics, bidenflation, bidenitis, like a cute disease, when i'm in a particularly bad mood i call it bidenism. i think on the others, we see from trump 1.0, it...
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Jan 5, 2025
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that or not breastfeeding is going to make the difference between your kid like pole vaulting for yaleor struggling to ends meet and that's just simply not the case. so yeah i could go on and on about feeding, but i think we can move on to some more questions and discussion. of course, was very interested in what you had to say about gender, sex and and biological essentialism. so if you could address that confluence. interesting factors harms children. yeah, i'm just. if anyone or who in the audience has heard the term biological or determinism. i see a few people out in the hallway few people in. yeah, i see some people on the livestream as well i think some of them know, but it's, it's also known as biological determinism and essentially biological essentialism is the belief any specific trait or quality, whether it be behavior, demeanor or athleticism, personality, muscle tone, etc., etc. is primarily the result of what we think of as nature or as something that's coded and the genes and as in the essence of our bodies and lives in our bones and our blood and our tissues, rather th
that or not breastfeeding is going to make the difference between your kid like pole vaulting for yaleor struggling to ends meet and that's just simply not the case. so yeah i could go on and on about feeding, but i think we can move on to some more questions and discussion. of course, was very interested in what you had to say about gender, sex and and biological essentialism. so if you could address that confluence. interesting factors harms children. yeah, i'm just. if anyone or who in the...
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Jan 3, 2025
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timothy snyder, a yale university history professor and the author of "on freedom."s for your time tonight. >>> when we come back, perhaps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll explain next. i'll explain next. what if your mobile network wasn't just built to work out here... ...but was designed differently to also give you blazing fast wifi where you are most of the time? reliable 5g, plus wifi speeds up to a gig where you need it most. xfinity mobile. xfinity internet customers, ask how to get a free 5g phone and a second unlimited line free for a year. >>> fundamental force that unites us is not kinship or place of origin, or religious preference, love of liberty is a common blood that flows in our american veins. . ows in our american veins. . >>> as the nation prepares to celebrate the life and legacy of the late former president jimmy carter who passed away on sunday at the age of 100 tributes of praised carter tireless humanitarian efforts and his long and productive post presidency includ
timothy snyder, a yale university history professor and the author of "on freedom."s for your time tonight. >>> when we come back, perhaps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll explain next. i'll explain next. what if your mobile network wasn't just built to work out here... ...but was designed differently to also give you blazing fast wifi where you are most of the time? reliable 5g, plus wifi speeds up...
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Jan 5, 2025
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now is joanne freeman an award winning historian and professor of history and american studies at yaleniversity. she is the author of "field of blood." joanne, on the saturday after january 6th last year you were together with us on the show and we were still literally the early hours, we were still trying to make sense of the attack on the capitol, we had no sense of how this was going to unfold, and you said to me at that time that this will have had an enormous impact on the american public. talk to me about that impact. i just spoke to jamie raskin who said our fight for democracy is not over despite the fact that hakeem jeffries said in congress we accept the results of congress and there are no election die national hurricane center on his side of the conference, the fight for democracy is still there. >> very much so. here is the thing, you can't unring that bell. so what we saw was an attack on our government, on the government that represents all americans that we agree to abide by under the pact that unites us, the constitution. that was an attack on the government, an attack
now is joanne freeman an award winning historian and professor of history and american studies at yaleniversity. she is the author of "field of blood." joanne, on the saturday after january 6th last year you were together with us on the show and we were still literally the early hours, we were still trying to make sense of the attack on the capitol, we had no sense of how this was going to unfold, and you said to me at that time that this will have had an enormous impact on the...
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Jan 9, 2025
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about the atrocities being committed by the hours of, for some time, the roll them bucks into the yale sedan bar tree and observatory, excuse me, the human rights watch. honestly, international. all of them have readings, reports that say that those atrocities were committed, effectively amount to genocide. um, so this is not exactly as surprising. what is surprising is the timing. i think it's very interesting that divided instruction chose to throw this grenade effectively in the jump directions, template ministrations way, because they are the ones who are going to have to deal with the different magic full out with. also naming the united arab emirates and their engagement with the r as s. all right. out of my jang. your reaction as the special envoy, the african union, special envoy on preventing genocide. how do you view this decision by washington? especially when itself, the us itself has been accused of facilitating severe human rights abuses and genocide in the gaza strip. what difference do you think this determination is going to make into that? well, it is very sad. i mean
about the atrocities being committed by the hours of, for some time, the roll them bucks into the yale sedan bar tree and observatory, excuse me, the human rights watch. honestly, international. all of them have readings, reports that say that those atrocities were committed, effectively amount to genocide. um, so this is not exactly as surprising. what is surprising is the timing. i think it's very interesting that divided instruction chose to throw this grenade effectively in the jump...
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Jan 6, 2025
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he graduated from yale law school. i'd like eric right. and this, he's the best selling author who was once a darling of the new york times. are there commonalities between poor whites for blacks, for latinos? absolutely. there are things that are shared across, across different groups. and i think that we should take some inspiration for it from it some recognition that, that we are sort of in this together in 2016, he called donald trump in 80 at i'm in denver trump guy. i never liked him and suggested that he could be an american hitler. the 4 years later he changed his tune when he launched his campaign for ohio senate, i wasn't always nice, but the simple fact is, he's the best president of my lifetime. any reveal the corruption in this country, like nobody else debates a few years ago. and i think a lot of people across political spectrum had a lot of respect. but now we see him pretending to be an idiot. are you a racist? do you hate mexicans? and i got your thinking was that we're focused on this order in ukraine. i don't get to be
he graduated from yale law school. i'd like eric right. and this, he's the best selling author who was once a darling of the new york times. are there commonalities between poor whites for blacks, for latinos? absolutely. there are things that are shared across, across different groups. and i think that we should take some inspiration for it from it some recognition that, that we are sort of in this together in 2016, he called donald trump in 80 at i'm in denver trump guy. i never liked him and...
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Jan 4, 2025
01/25
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he graduated from yale law school. i'd like direct brightens. he's the best selling author who was once a darling of the new york times. are there commonalities between poor whites for blacks, poor latinos, especially there are things that are shared across, across different groups. and i think that we should take some inspiration for it from it some recognition that, that we are a sort of in this together in 2016, he called donald trump and edith, i'm endeavor, trump guy. i never liked him and suggested that he could be an american hitler. but 4 years later he changed his tune when he launched his campaign for ohio senate, i wasn't always nice, but the simple fact is, he's the best president of my lifetime. any reveal that corruption in this country, like nobody else debates a few years ago. and i think a lot of people across political spectrum had a lot of respect. but now we see him pretending to be an idiot. are you a racist? do you hate mexicans? and i got your thinking was that work focused on this order in ukraine. i don't going to be hon
he graduated from yale law school. i'd like direct brightens. he's the best selling author who was once a darling of the new york times. are there commonalities between poor whites for blacks, poor latinos, especially there are things that are shared across, across different groups. and i think that we should take some inspiration for it from it some recognition that, that we are a sort of in this together in 2016, he called donald trump and edith, i'm endeavor, trump guy. i never liked him and...
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Jan 3, 2025
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timothy snyder, a yale university history professor and the author of "on freedom."ps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll explain next. i'm a retired school librarian. i'm also a library board trustee, a mother of two, and a grandmother of two. about five years ago, i was working full time, i had an awful lot of things to take care of. i needed all the help i could get. i saw the commercials for prevagen. i started taking it. and it helped! i was better able to take care of all those little details. people say to me, "barbara, you don't miss a beat." prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription. [uplifting music] arearn: saint jude-- they gave it 110% every time. and for kenadie to get treatment here without having to pay anything was amazing. have you always had trouble with your weight? same. discover the power of wegovy®. with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. and i'm keeping the weight off. i'm reducing my risk. wegovy® is the only weight-management medicine
timothy snyder, a yale university history professor and the author of "on freedom."ps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll explain next. i'm a retired school librarian. i'm also a library board trustee, a mother of two, and a grandmother of two. about five years ago, i was working full time, i had an awful lot of things to take care of. i needed all the help i could get. i saw the commercials for prevagen. i...
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Jan 13, 2025
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she is a graduate of cornell, yale medical school. she has served previously in governments as chief operating officer at the center for medicare, medicaid services. she has also served with great distinction and great public acclaim as the health secretary of the north carolina centers -- sorry, the department of health and human services north carolina. we are going to have a three-part event this evening. dr. cohen is going to make some brief remarks to kick us off, then she and i are going to have a chat until about 7:00, then we will turn matters over to the audience and we welcome your questions on all topics. dr. cohen is catholic, and with respect to topics that might get raised, i remind you that this session is on the record. dr. cohen. dr. cohen: thank you. good evening, everyone. first thank you dr. varmus for hosting us here. it is an honor to share the stage with you. i also want to acknowledge any audience is my deputy of cdc is here. she makes the things work while i get to talk on stage. also, my 12-year-old daughter
she is a graduate of cornell, yale medical school. she has served previously in governments as chief operating officer at the center for medicare, medicaid services. she has also served with great distinction and great public acclaim as the health secretary of the north carolina centers -- sorry, the department of health and human services north carolina. we are going to have a three-part event this evening. dr. cohen is going to make some brief remarks to kick us off, then she and i are going...
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Jan 8, 2025
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g-man, is great book not a republican guy but a yale history pulitzer prize winner laying out history of j. edgar hoover legacy in the fbi, how this was an institution that was created to be corrupt from the beginning the same one that used illegal collected tapes to threat martin luther king, jr. into committing suicide is used to target political opponents of a different persuasion. where does corruption come from it comes something you should predict that exist for a bureaucracy that is between local prosecutors at the local level and say other police enforcement arms like the u.s. marshals that haven't been corrupted in the same way as the fbi. so this is what the situation looks like today. that's the status quo. and in more detail plans, for easier we have a short version more detailed versions right now up on vivek ramaswamy 2024.com laying out even more detailed reorganization plans. this is deeply prague mat egg take the employees at the fbi, 20,000 of them are in nonsession functions many of them were poured into building names j. edgar building right here in washington, d.c
g-man, is great book not a republican guy but a yale history pulitzer prize winner laying out history of j. edgar hoover legacy in the fbi, how this was an institution that was created to be corrupt from the beginning the same one that used illegal collected tapes to threat martin luther king, jr. into committing suicide is used to target political opponents of a different persuasion. where does corruption come from it comes something you should predict that exist for a bureaucracy that is...
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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about the atrocities being committed by the hours of, for some time, the roll them bucks into the yale sedan bar tree and observatory, excuse me, the human rights watch, obviously, international. all of them have readings, reports that say that those atrocities were committed, effectively amount to genocide. um, so this is not exactly as surprising. what is surprising is the timing. i think it's very interesting that divided instruction chose to throw this grenade effectively in the jump directions, template ministrations way because they are the ones we're going to have to deal with the different magic full out with also naming the united arab emirates and their engagements with the r as s, all right, out of my jang. your reaction as the special envoy, the african union, special envoy on preventing genocide. how do you view this decision by washington? especially when itself the us itself has been accused of facilitating severe human rights abuses and genocide. in the gaza strip, what difference do you think this determination is going to make into that? well, it is very sad. i mean,
about the atrocities being committed by the hours of, for some time, the roll them bucks into the yale sedan bar tree and observatory, excuse me, the human rights watch, obviously, international. all of them have readings, reports that say that those atrocities were committed, effectively amount to genocide. um, so this is not exactly as surprising. what is surprising is the timing. i think it's very interesting that divided instruction chose to throw this grenade effectively in the jump...
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Jan 8, 2025
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if it was raining we would go bowl in the bowling yale downstairs in the white house and just have some time together. >> as you sit in this office, mrs. carter, is there a moment you remember of the time you spent in the white house coming here? rosalynn: i remember the first day when he was, after the inauguration i came walking in the door and he was sitting behind the desk it was really did >> impressive? rosalynn: impressive. and then i remember when the panama canal treaty was signed and he called me on the laps vote and i came running over but i was in and out. the last day that we were in the white house, the day of the inauguration, president reagan, i came home several times to tell him you have to gretzkied for the inauguration because he was still working on the hostage situation. there were a lot of momentous occasions. president carter: the last two nights i was president i never went over to the white house. i stayed here three or four days negotiating with ayatollah khomeini through algerians to get the hostages released and inauguration morning 10:00 we were successful
if it was raining we would go bowl in the bowling yale downstairs in the white house and just have some time together. >> as you sit in this office, mrs. carter, is there a moment you remember of the time you spent in the white house coming here? rosalynn: i remember the first day when he was, after the inauguration i came walking in the door and he was sitting behind the desk it was really did >> impressive? rosalynn: impressive. and then i remember when the panama canal treaty was...
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Jan 9, 2025
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and rarely, even on the most enlightened campuses, harvard, yale, princeton, other colleges, and they have a serious problem on those campuses, as well, and rarely is a rapist on a college campus expelled. the justice department says over half of the sexual abuse on a campus is perpetrated by rapists, who once they get on a college campus, know that they can satisfy their sexual desires with impunity. so they become habitual rapists. this is what we need to correct in our own country. in foreign countries,, you have women whose sexual organs are abused, horribly mutilated, honor killings, other things which our country is not guilty of. but it happens in every country around the world. it is the worst overall human rights abuse there is, and the men are responsible for it. it is the same thing we had during the civil rights time. a lot of white people felt segregation was not right, but we benefited from it. we got the best jobs, the best education, we were the ones to determine the outcome of a jury case. so why should we give up this privilege even though we know it is wrong? now me
and rarely, even on the most enlightened campuses, harvard, yale, princeton, other colleges, and they have a serious problem on those campuses, as well, and rarely is a rapist on a college campus expelled. the justice department says over half of the sexual abuse on a campus is perpetrated by rapists, who once they get on a college campus, know that they can satisfy their sexual desires with impunity. so they become habitual rapists. this is what we need to correct in our own country. in...
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Jan 4, 2025
01/25
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scientists and former un scientist and noble prize winning scientist and nasa scientists and harvard and yalets all prepared to go. donald trump green lit it, but his staff slow walked it till it was too late to do before the 2020 election. this time around if he does the climate committee and does red team blue team, it'll be the first ever by a government pushback of the un climate report and the shot heard round the world and first time a narrative changer on climate change. no longer would the only narrative be we have ten years left till we die and need climate action and stop allowing gas-powered cars and this would change the whole narrative and help argentina, help eastern european countries all who were itching to join president trump when i call it a klexit, a climate exit. we have to do it similar to brexit but on climate. rachel: hopefully it'll put an end to all the child slaves in africa digging for cobalt for this ageneral dam it i just want a dishwasher that works and i want the slave labor in s chinao end and i want a dish wash their works and don't have to clean the dish bef
scientists and former un scientist and noble prize winning scientist and nasa scientists and harvard and yalets all prepared to go. donald trump green lit it, but his staff slow walked it till it was too late to do before the 2020 election. this time around if he does the climate committee and does red team blue team, it'll be the first ever by a government pushback of the un climate report and the shot heard round the world and first time a narrative changer on climate change. no longer would...
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Jan 3, 2025
01/25
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timothy snyder is a yale university history professor and the author of on freedom.ome back, perhaps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll expert plain next. xpert p lawmakers are trying to shut down planned parenthood. the health care of more than 2 million people is at stake. our right to basic reproductive health care is being stolen from us. planned parenthood believes everyone deserves health care. it's a human right. future generations are beginning to lose the rights we fought for. the rights for ourselves, our kids, and our grandkids. gone. just like that. i can't believe this is the world we live in, where we're losing the freedom to control our own bodies. last year, politicians in 47 states introduced bills that would block people from getting the sexual and reproductive care they need. where does it end? planned parenthood fights for you every day. but we need your support now more than ever. visit this website, call, or scan the code on your screen, with your $19 monthly gift. help
timothy snyder is a yale university history professor and the author of on freedom.ome back, perhaps the most important legacy for the late former president jimmy carter is something he didn't leave behind. i'll expert plain next. xpert p lawmakers are trying to shut down planned parenthood. the health care of more than 2 million people is at stake. our right to basic reproductive health care is being stolen from us. planned parenthood believes everyone deserves health care. it's a human right....
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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many of you know, it was part of this program, it was conducted by a young associate professor at yale university who recruited about 70 people from every walk of life, blacks, whites, teachers, students, business people, laborers. he would put the subjects on a chair in one room. they had a dial on the table in front of them. they were told that dial was applying a shock, an electric shock to a subject who sat in the other room who was a confederate. he was an actor. but he pretended to be tied to a chair. when the electricity went off, he would scream. he would see what level it was and scream appropriately and struggle and plead and beg and cry. many of the subjects when they were told to do it, the doctor would stand behind them with the white lab uniform on. the iconography of medical authority. he'd say turn it off, down and higher and turn it down and turn it higher. many of the subjects were weeping. they were pleading with him. don't make me turn it up more. but when he told them to turn it up, they did so anyway. 67% of the subjects who he recruited turned it up to 250 volts
many of you know, it was part of this program, it was conducted by a young associate professor at yale university who recruited about 70 people from every walk of life, blacks, whites, teachers, students, business people, laborers. he would put the subjects on a chair in one room. they had a dial on the table in front of them. they were told that dial was applying a shock, an electric shock to a subject who sat in the other room who was a confederate. he was an actor. but he pretended to be...
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Jan 13, 2025
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wray had deep experience, yale law, a justice department official on 9/11, and years in private practice overthrow the 2020 election. >> our job, as investigators at the fbi, is to follow the facts wherever they lead, no matter who likes it. and i add that last part because one of the things that i've seen over my 7 1/2 years as fbi director is that people often claim to be very interested in independence and objectivity until independence and objectivity lead to an outcome they don't like. you know, truth is truth, not necessarily what either side wants it to be. and ultimately all we can do at the fbi is make sure we stay focused on doing the work in the right way, following our rules, and not letting preferences, partisan or otherwise, drive or taint the approach. >> and were those the rules followed in starting the investigations against the president-elect? >> we tried very hard to make sure that we stayed faithful to those principles and those rules in every investigation that i can think of that's been occurred on my watch. >> >> reporter: trump is also livid about the fbi search
wray had deep experience, yale law, a justice department official on 9/11, and years in private practice overthrow the 2020 election. >> our job, as investigators at the fbi, is to follow the facts wherever they lead, no matter who likes it. and i add that last part because one of the things that i've seen over my 7 1/2 years as fbi director is that people often claim to be very interested in independence and objectivity until independence and objectivity lead to an outcome they don't...
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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it is time to protect our american citizens against criminal illegal yale yens and i ask -- aliens and i ask my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to strongly support this bill and with that i yield back. >> gentleman reserves. gentleman from maryland is recognized. >> gentleman reserves. gentleman from california is recognized. >> i reserve. >> maryland reserves. california is recognized. >> thank you, madame speaker. yielding two minutes to the gentleman from north carolina, mr. harris. >> madame speaker, i rise today in strong support of hr-29, the laken riley act and the american people have suffered under the biden administration disastrous open border policies that have allowed millions of illegal aliens to flood our communities. one of those illegal aliens was jose yllbara. and despite multiple arrests on his record and in addition to the illegal status, he was released under biden administration.in months later, as we all know, he murdered 22-year-old nursing student laken riley. there's no other way to put it. taxpayers direct result of president biden's direct refusal to e
it is time to protect our american citizens against criminal illegal yale yens and i ask -- aliens and i ask my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to strongly support this bill and with that i yield back. >> gentleman reserves. gentleman from maryland is recognized. >> gentleman reserves. gentleman from california is recognized. >> i reserve. >> maryland reserves. california is recognized. >> thank you, madame speaker. yielding two minutes to the gentleman from...