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Aug 18, 2017
08/17
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black america young black america ♪ ♪ young black america young black america young ♪ every year south jersey sends more and more tax money to trenton, but gets less and less back thanks to steve sweeney and chris christie. here's the sweeney-christie record eight years of underfunded schools. huge tax breaks for themselves and their rich friends while we pay more. and homestead rebate funding for seniors cut in half next year. don't believe the fake news from his wealthy donors. steve sweeney stands with chris christie, not with south jersey. whatit's up to you, like with tampax pearl.od? you get ultimate protection on your heaviest days, and smooth removal for your lightest. tampax pearl. and pocket pearl, for on the go. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: my thanks to rami malek, kathryn hahn, meek mill, the-dream! [ cheers and applause ] and the roots, right there, from philadelphia, pennsylvania. [ cheers and applause ] stay tuned for "late night with seth meyers." thank you for watching. have a great night. i hope to see you tomorrow. bye-bye, everybody! [ chee
black america young black america ♪ ♪ young black america young black america young ♪ every year south jersey sends more and more tax money to trenton, but gets less and less back thanks to steve sweeney and chris christie. here's the sweeney-christie record eight years of underfunded schools. huge tax breaks for themselves and their rich friends while we pay more. and homestead rebate funding for seniors cut in half next year. don't believe the fake news from his wealthy donors. steve...
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Aug 18, 2017
08/17
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black america young black america ♪ ♪ young black america young black america young ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: my thanks to rami malek, kathryn hahn, meek mill, the-dream! [ cheers and applause ] and the roots, right there, from philadelphia, pennsylvania. [ cheers and applause ] stay tuned for "late night with seth meyers." thank you for watching. have a great night. i hope to see you tomorrow. bye-bye, everybody! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> announcer: from 30 rockefeller plaza in new york, it's "late night with seth meyers." tonight -- micheal moore, from "fargo," actress carrie coon, music from little big town, featuring the 8g band with roy mayorga. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] ladies and gentlemen, seth meyers. [ cheers and applause ] >> seth: good evening, i'm seth meyers, this is "late night," how is everybody doing tonight? [ cheers and applause ] good to hear. in that case, let's get to the news, everybody. president trump went on twitter this morning, to call monuments of the confederacy, and anti-union generals beau
black america young black america ♪ ♪ young black america young black america young ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: my thanks to rami malek, kathryn hahn, meek mill, the-dream! [ cheers and applause ] and the roots, right there, from philadelphia, pennsylvania. [ cheers and applause ] stay tuned for "late night with seth meyers." thank you for watching. have a great night. i hope to see you tomorrow. bye-bye, everybody! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ [...
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Aug 8, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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young. there is young where a young kid is dressed up like fighter man. another way on another halloween pitcher where -- daughter dressed up and comes into the oval office and he lies down in lift her up in the air. so those unique moments that you can't plan and you don't know they are about to happen. that tells you a lot about his personality. what he's like as a person. not just him waiting in the situation are agonizing what's happening. this pictures are important and they tell you a lot. but the other ones i mentioned tell you what is like as a person. >> to the president ever next the photo you chose? >> it didn't really work that way. he trusted me if we were going to make public a picture i would put an appropriate picture, if you look at some of the earlier pictures where he was dealing with the economic crisis on you could say these are not the conditional pictures you see, he had his head in his hands. i was trying to be truthful to how he was dealing with this. i think people thought they were appropriate to make public so the public could s
young. there is young where a young kid is dressed up like fighter man. another way on another halloween pitcher where -- daughter dressed up and comes into the oval office and he lies down in lift her up in the air. so those unique moments that you can't plan and you don't know they are about to happen. that tells you a lot about his personality. what he's like as a person. not just him waiting in the situation are agonizing what's happening. this pictures are important and they tell you a...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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african-americans, young latinos, young mexicans, young asian-americans can look at that stage and say, i'm part of the story. charlie: exactly. american story. as one of them said to me, it made me feel like i was truly an american. >> maybe for the first time. >> we always had a complicated life in politics for the most part. charlie: he had koch. manuel's dad.g in the other day i was going to your office and some lady screams, hey, hey! she says you have to write a book about parenting. ok. all in 30 seconds. so it's definitely changed our lives for the better. and to use everything that hamilton and everything that "hamilton" has brought to do very good things. aham windham, the hamilton initiative, the prize sweep stakes that we do now that raise millions of dollars for institutions and do it with opening. every time "hamilton" has an opening, we have a sweepstake. in the united states. >> there are three "hamilton" companies running right now, one in san francisco, one in chicago and one in new york. and within one year there will be five when we add london to the m
african-americans, young latinos, young mexicans, young asian-americans can look at that stage and say, i'm part of the story. charlie: exactly. american story. as one of them said to me, it made me feel like i was truly an american. >> maybe for the first time. >> we always had a complicated life in politics for the most part. charlie: he had koch. manuel's dad.g in the other day i was going to your office and some lady screams, hey, hey! she says you have to write a book about...
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Aug 16, 2017
08/17
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. >> president trump today praised young young >>> caught on tape, a boy rescued from a man with a knife. a hotel security guard snuck up on that man and wrestled him to the ground and the man go away. chinese officers got -- he said he spent his money and he was trying to rob someone before he was stopped. >>> all right. there's a big event happening next monday. perhaps you've heard it of. melissa and the great day morning show is going to be watching the solar eclipse. >> they're partying from 1:00 to 3:00 aviation -- it peaks around 2:40 and we're taking the first 600 people. you'll get special glasses and you'll be required to sign a waiver. to learn more, go to our wusa9 facebook page and the forecast has changed a little bit. >> it's partly cloudy. i don't see a crystal clear day with crystal canadian day, but we'll take partly cloudy. it's a long process. clouds go by, you'll be able to see it. let's talk about how dark it's going to get because a lot of folks asking this. this is -- this is an estimate. on a normal day, clear day, really clear day in august, this is what it woul
. >> president trump today praised young young >>> caught on tape, a boy rescued from a man with a knife. a hotel security guard snuck up on that man and wrestled him to the ground and the man go away. chinese officers got -- he said he spent his money and he was trying to rob someone before he was stopped. >>> all right. there's a big event happening next monday. perhaps you've heard it of. melissa and the great day morning show is going to be watching the solar...
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go ahead on the annual war game simulating a military conflict with an isolated country young young says the drills are a provocation the u.s. maintains they're merely defensive in nature they share some seventeen and a half thousand pentagon troops are expected to take part done done emeritus professor at king's college cambridge in the u.k. says there will be retaliation if gang attacks american soldiers. this very dangerous situation because the waters happened in the past when north korea has actually attacked. has always been that is attacked south korean military or naval targets obviously if it is attacked american forces i mean there would be retaliation i don't know you should ever think of the declared intention to use what could be nuclear armed. weapons as an empty threat because it is possible to use them and they have been used before and they are used the results are absolutely appalling and i don't think north korea wants to risk a nuclear war i mean it would have to be crazy to do so and actually not all crazy . looks at how us foreign policy sometimes goes against the w
go ahead on the annual war game simulating a military conflict with an isolated country young young says the drills are a provocation the u.s. maintains they're merely defensive in nature they share some seventeen and a half thousand pentagon troops are expected to take part done done emeritus professor at king's college cambridge in the u.k. says there will be retaliation if gang attacks american soldiers. this very dangerous situation because the waters happened in the past when north korea...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
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KYW
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the lieutenant told me tonight that it is unclear if the young young victim was utilize the when hit. >>> thank you. >>> new tonight be police are investigating racist graffiti that wilmington. in the 600 block of bader avenue this morning, police found a car covered in a swats and several racial epithets. the incident is being vrted as a hate crime. >>> police in chester county made an arrest over racist and ant anti-sunsetic graffiti. he's behind bar tonight at the chester county prison police say he passed associations were i white supremacy groups >>> a camden county father about to endure another trial pleads guilty to manslaughter in death of his three-year-old son. david creato junior is facing the prospect of up to ten years in prison. david spunt is live in camden with more on what creato's lawyer is saying. david? >> reporter: authorities here at the camden county prosecutor's office declined to do an on camera interview but you can bet they're relieved this case has been going on almost two years and broken a lot of hearts here in south jersey. october 13th, 2015, three-yea
the lieutenant told me tonight that it is unclear if the young young victim was utilize the when hit. >>> thank you. >>> new tonight be police are investigating racist graffiti that wilmington. in the 600 block of bader avenue this morning, police found a car covered in a swats and several racial epithets. the incident is being vrted as a hate crime. >>> police in chester county made an arrest over racist and ant anti-sunsetic graffiti. he's behind bar tonight at the...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
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KYW
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the lieutenant told me tonight that it is unclear if the young young victim was utilize the when hit. >>> thank you. >>> new tonight be police are investigating racist graffiti that wilmington. in the 600 block of bader avenue this morning, police found a car covered in a swats and several racial epithets. the incident is being vrted as a hate crime. >>> police in chester county made over racist and ant anti-sunsetic graffiti. he's behind bar tonight at the chester county prison police say he passed associations were i white supremacy groups >>> a camden county father about to endure another trial pleads guilty to manslaughter in death of his three-year-old son. david creato junior is facing the prospect of up to ten years in prison. david spunt is live in camden with more on what creato's lawyer is saying. david? >> reporter: authorities here at the camden county prosecutor's office declined to do an on camera interview but you can bet they're relieved this case has been going on almost two years and broken a lot of hearts here in south jersey. october 13th, 2015, three-year-old bran
the lieutenant told me tonight that it is unclear if the young young victim was utilize the when hit. >>> thank you. >>> new tonight be police are investigating racist graffiti that wilmington. in the 600 block of bader avenue this morning, police found a car covered in a swats and several racial epithets. the incident is being vrted as a hate crime. >>> police in chester county made over racist and ant anti-sunsetic graffiti. he's behind bar tonight at the chester...
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hear it the president took time to inform the public that the us army is locked and loaded against young young it was the latest in a spate of talking tough from the american leader. north korea. make it work threats to the united states. they will be met with fire fury. like the world never see the people that would question that statement was it. maybe it wasn't tough enough so that if there is a state that has nothing to do with there that's a statement while the style of war of words for now western media reports the pentagon has plans for a preemptive strike on north korea's nuclear facilities but that's raising fears across the border in seoul as explains so what if mr trump goes forward and all these roughly two dozen north korean missile launch sites testing grounds and other facilities go boom there is no way kim jong il won't take revenge what are they going to aim at. the north korea's sovereignty and dignity our army will launch the merciless own trip decision strikes from the ground. under water so they'd better stop being reckless and even without the stuff trump wants to wipe ou
hear it the president took time to inform the public that the us army is locked and loaded against young young it was the latest in a spate of talking tough from the american leader. north korea. make it work threats to the united states. they will be met with fire fury. like the world never see the people that would question that statement was it. maybe it wasn't tough enough so that if there is a state that has nothing to do with there that's a statement while the style of war of words for...
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Aug 26, 2017
08/17
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young people any kind of way. young people pay attention. young people's b.s meter is on point. they know when we are being phony, they know when we are expressing love. they know when we want them around and when we don't. they know for example, boys especially, who we tend to see as naturally naughty. naturally naughty, and who are always going to give us a difficult time and we call them bad and trouble and criminal in their presence, we are naming something. we are putting something into motion, we are planting seeds, just like we would if we named someone gifted. if we say that girls are angry, angry black girls are loud and sassy and disrespectful, we are planting seeds. these are not things i am making up. these are phrases or words i have picked up from literature. they are documented research reports about these words being used in the presence of young people and what that means. so for gender nonconforming or lgbtq students, if we call them defiant or messy, if we say that they are a problem we are setting certain things in motion. we are helping us see them. we're hel
young people any kind of way. young people pay attention. young people's b.s meter is on point. they know when we are being phony, they know when we are expressing love. they know when we want them around and when we don't. they know for example, boys especially, who we tend to see as naturally naughty. naturally naughty, and who are always going to give us a difficult time and we call them bad and trouble and criminal in their presence, we are naming something. we are putting something into...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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young. >> young young young. >> sure was. that was a team. ars in fill, chris? >> mike schmidt on that team. >> john kruk. >> i think mike schmidt was done at that point. he was gone. >> sad day for phillies fans. >> 55 is so young. >> so young. >>> all right. well let's switch gears a little bit and go ahead and talk about the rain because tuck i know you're busy this morning watching it all. >> there you go. >> yeah, i am. in fact so busy i forgot to come up don the weather on time. >> okay. we're seeing the radar right now. rains coming down. >> flash flood watch. in effect. now i'm out of breath. you'll have to carry this. [ laughter ] >> all right. here's the deal. i'm downstairs looking at some latest stu going to have some issues with flash flooding. plash flood watch in effect at 9:00 o'clock this morning through tonight. and that rain will come down heavy at times. all right. 71 now in washington. cool out there with the cloud cover. daytime highs only expected to be in the mid to upper 70s. as we're looking at rain that's moving in.
young. >> young young young. >> sure was. that was a team. ars in fill, chris? >> mike schmidt on that team. >> john kruk. >> i think mike schmidt was done at that point. he was gone. >> sad day for phillies fans. >> 55 is so young. >> so young. >>> all right. well let's switch gears a little bit and go ahead and talk about the rain because tuck i know you're busy this morning watching it all. >> there you go. >> yeah, i am....
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guide the rest of the reason nevertheless the state department was now clearly communicating with young young in a language that needs no translation. is he exacerbating the president spoke to him to kim jong un in a language that secretary tillerson has said and said this morning in the kind of language that kim jong un will understand have the president of the united states keep threatening to destroy north korea this is how shall i put it this is not the language of democracy is by the way an act of war as well the north koreans either have a nuclear deterrent or they're pretending to but the only reason if they do have it the only reason they've got it is to keep themselves from being exterminated by the u.s. let's say the worst happens it could wipe out south korea it wipe out japan it could do just. to china the damage to russia i mean this is then of course all the u.s. troops in south korea would all be killed too but this is this is not anything anybody should want why is this the u.s. is business why is south korea own north korea's they'd like to be a why is it on by the u.s. this
guide the rest of the reason nevertheless the state department was now clearly communicating with young young in a language that needs no translation. is he exacerbating the president spoke to him to kim jong un in a language that secretary tillerson has said and said this morning in the kind of language that kim jong un will understand have the president of the united states keep threatening to destroy north korea this is how shall i put it this is not the language of democracy is by the way...
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young young war and. french authorities arrest the main suspect in a car. or group of soldiers. police are investigating. an employee criticizing versity policy. but he does get a job offer from wiki leaks. just after eight pm this witness the evening here in moscow you're with international my names you know neil welcome to the program our top story this hour i made growing tensions between north korea on the united states president has emphasized the strength of america's nuclear arsenal he said his actions had renovated modernized u.s. weapons america will never be overtaken as the world's greatest superpower earlier president gave a strong warning to north korea pyongyang then threaten to strike the u.s. pacific territory of guam. make it work. they will be met with fire fury. like. never seen before trump made the rather explosive statement while the washington post actually published an article claiming that their reporters have read this latest u.s. defense report which says that north korea has managed to build these small nuclear warheads a small enough to fit inside missiles so rather alarming information but this washington post article well they did not present any sort of evidence to prove how they managed to get their hands on this on this document and despite that the story's been picked up by the american mainstream media has been widely reported and here's a sample of what those reports are like now confirming a u.s. intelligence assessment on north korea that was first reported by the washington post earlier today in the assessment is that north korea now has a weapon a nuclear weapon that is small enough to fit on a missile u.s. intelligence analysts believe the north could now produce a miniaturized nuclear warhead that can fit inside its missile and north korea become a full fledged nuclear power it may have crossed a key threshold something the world has been fearing for years the north has successfully developed many nuclear warheads on top of this washington post article things to a boiling point on cheers day when the u.s. flew to b. one b. bombers over guam with its allies in japan and south korea and after that drill while the president made that statement saying that he's respond to threats from north korea with fire and theory and that prompted pyongyang to release a statement saying that they are considering striking the u.s. base in guam now bear in mind that is true i mean throughout the years and also this year alone north korea has conducted numerous missile tests which angered the international community but at the same time the u.s. is also increasing its military presence significantly in the region we're talking about sending an air carrier is conducting regular military drills setting and troops and also fighter jets to the region and in terms of rhetoric while president obama has long been quite aggressive towards north korea and some would even go as far as saying that he's being provocative here's a sample of the u.s. officials have commented on north korea in the past the year of strategic patience . with the north korean regime has failed many years that it's failed united states is prepared to use the full range of our capabilities to defend ourselves and our allies one of our capabilities lies with our considerable military forces this is a little appear should a nation if you compare it to our capabilities they don't come near to being even close to it compared to all the chance that we could end up. being a major major conflict with north korea. absolutely tensions are higher than ever as gone way beyond just a war of words china and russia have been calling on all sides to remain calm and to seek a political solution to all of this and meanwhile australia and new zealand who are countries that are countries in the asia pacific region also u.s. allies and they could suffer greatly if a conflict is to break out on the korean peninsula they have also come out to weigh in on what they thought about translate to statements because i think the comments are not helpful and informative satiric teams everyone wants to avoid military confrontation the global community led by the security council including trauner and russia. all united in seeking to bring the maximum economic pressure on north korea to bring them to their senses without conflict have to wait and see whether trump will take their advice but certainly the escalating tensions on the korean peninsula has got a lot of people worried. trump's words have also been widely condemned by u.s. lawmakers congressman eliot engel has called the latest remarks reckless he say's that trump is undermining america's security and putting its allies in danger we've got reaction from a number of analysts they believe that the u.s. president is taking huge risks by ratcheting up the tension. definitely think that the north korean leadership including supreme leader kim jong un has look to the examples of libya and iraq to see what happens in leaders when they gave up their nuclear weapons and particularly since july since last month when north korea tested two intercontinental ballistic missiles their leadership has taken a stronger stance against negotiations they've made it very clear that north korea's nuclear program is not on the negotiating table unless the u.s. changes its stance against north korea i think president trumps rhetoric calling for war and calling for destruction calling for unprecedented fire and fear is the wrong message to say by the u.s. president of his time and this is definitely the wrong thing to do you cannot have the president of the united states warmongering against d p r k where as the us secretary of state is calling d p r k not an enemy of the united states. to another story we're closely following this our french authorities have arrested a man suspected of plotting a car into a group of soldiers in the north of paris earlier today six were injured two seriously the suspect who was driving a black b.m.w. was detained on a motorway after being chased by police bringing us more on that is charlotte dubinsky. a suspect who was driving the car involved in the attack has been arrested on a highway between paris and. it's been confirmed that the man arrested on a northern highway in france between bologna and cali is the suspect that police have been searching for he was arrested by elite forces and we understand that he was shot five times during that arrest and a police officer was also injured as they tried to apprehend a man he was the person who they believe was behind the attacks which took place just a few hundred meters behind me at the opening of a soldier's barracks at around quarter past eight local time in paris this morning the local mayor has described this as a deliberate act and said this is what he saw take place. he said there were a dozen officers at the entrance at seven fifty seven in the morning when a car which was parked at the end of the road rammed into the mid speed while they were approaching their vehicle they did not choose the location by charms there are many police officers in the cameras are everywhere on the video we can see the attacker and how the attack took place the place is symbolic just as the eiffel tower or paris airport or not they came to this town where antiterrorist forces are doing their remarkable job the local mayor also talked about the place of this attack as being symbolic and that's because the main intelligence agency and it's also a staging point for soldiers who are based to this is what residents have been telling us. i heard a loud bang and ten minutes of shouting i went outside with my wife we saw two bodies on the ground there was a lot of noise we saw a deployment of cars firemen ambulances security and then we saw the injured being taken away one person was on the stretcher and legs the most severely injured two others with less serious looking wounds were in a wheelchair as paris prosecution office has opened an investigation into this case and they are pursuing charges of attempted murder of security forces in connection with a terrorist and to price now one of the reasons why it's been suggested that this place may have been strategically chosen is because it's where the main intelligence agency and it's also a staging point for soldiers who were assigned to protect prominent sites in paris . now paris is no stranger to attacks it's been under a state of emergency for the whole of france has been under a state of emergency since november two thousand and fifteen when there were those coordinated attacks here in this city and since then bonsa seen a number of large scale terror attacks the president mcauliffe has said that one of his aims in his first year the presidency is to remove that state of emergency by november of this year whether that's plausible or not remains to be seen. charlotte toobin ski well french acuity forces have been the target of a number of terror attacks this year. to the globe the. christian hunter is a former u.k. army intelligence officer he say's the terrorists are targeting flaws in security one of the other features about this in this particular attack is that it took place during a shift change over. that around eight o'clock paris time and you know that's one of the other things that terrorists look look for when they're carrying out hostile reconnaissance they're looking for patterns they're looking for vulnerabilities they're looking for you know cameras security forces they the weapons that equipment carried by the security forces their own vulnerabilities if you like but certainly something like a shift change over where people aren't potentially as alert as they might be or where briefings are taking place you know that something is being carried out by criminals and terrorists across the world in the past they're all certain things that could be done certainly looking it's not setting patterns by the security forces that's one looking at putting in protective security measures counter-violence you know during those sort of vulnerable periods or vulnerable locations that's another and certainly education and training of the general public i think is something this wonderfully inadequate across europe. wiki leaks is offering a job to a google engineer who is sucked over an internal corporate memo the web giant's move has sparked a debate over free speech in corporations wiki leaks editor julian assange accused google of censorship on tweeted it's not fair to fire employees for freely expressing their thoughts engineer james them or was fired after sending a memo criticizing google's diversity policies his bosses say breach their code of conduct caleb maupin looks now at what was in the memo in corporate boardrooms across america the buzz word is meritocracy ideology isn't supposed to matter employees are supposed to be hired judged and promoted based on their skills and ability however the high tech firm known as google seems to be straying from this free market ideal and now employees can be fired if they step away from the liberal social justice party line they recently fired an employee and sent out this memo portions of the memo violate our code of conduct and crossed the line by advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace so what is it that he said what stereotypes was he promoting well here are the fatal words i'm simply stating that the distribution of preferences and abilities of men and women differ in poets' you to biological causes and that these differences may explain why we don't see equal representation of women in tech and leadership now those are fighting words as far as some people are concerned and the guy is not going to win any popularity contests to be fair by having a top employee make comments like this google opens itself up to the danger of lawsuits and allegations of discrimination in hiring but is there an ideological criteria for working at google let's take a look at where some of this thought crime logic leads. google won't fix john with unconscious bias training when they keep employing people who are proud of their conscious bias honestly if no one is fired over this google should just admit the commitment to women is window dressing the article is publicly supported by many people internally that's the question how many privately supports agree or subscribe there are many people google who share this guy's views they do pit performance reviews and interview people they discriminate yes the usa heralds itself as the land of the free and the home of the brave but on certain college campuses in silicon valley and in other parts of the country there's an atmosphere brewing where if you have the wrong political opinions or cultural views there can be very harsh consequences. r.t. new york. locals in the northern italian city of ventimiglia have been rallying against the opening of a new refugee shelter for on accompanied miners there after one thousand signatures were collected in a petition to be presented to them or two hundred people gathered outside the city hall to voice concerns about their safety they say since the partial closure of the nearby border with france the figures i come like to cali jungle spring we spoke to some of. our people we can't take it anymore the city has been invaded we have lost our freedom here it is not our city anymore it's not even a city now it's just a huge refugee shelter it's been done with taxes to me the government loses and we pay our constitution talks about the people's sovereignty. the sovereignty of where is it the state has to listen to us starting with the mayor but no one does. i'm a shop owner and tourism inventor miller is not looking good and she basically has no tourism anymore and everyone is working less and less and i know that today's demonstration could backfire because it will give the town even more bad publicity but we really want this to be over and we can't leave here any more our women can't go out at night alone anymore it's impossible they are always in groups of four or five the situation is degrading and we can't take it any. less former vice chair of the european council on refugees and exiles joins me now to discuss this situation further very welcome to the program just all not last point were listening to people from the tarn speaking what can the italian authorities do to address the concerns of the locals and they seem to have a lot and indeed prevent the city from becoming like callaway. well this is a terrible tragedy all around is near term in first of all it's a tragedy for the refugees because nobody wants them in their backyard anymore and that's true throughout europe and we see the disgraceful derogation of any kind of humanitarian obligation to help people fleeing from most spots in the world that we see on the television every day like syria and south side but also i have enormous sympathy for the people of vented media nobody in a quiet peaceful and touristic town wants to see suddenly thousands of foreigners descending upon them and in their view making their streets they're safe or whatever but already we know there's been loss of life because when people do get across the border to france they're sent back immediately by the french to to italy we know also that some people have lost their lives trying to negotiate the very dangerous rocky terrain which forms the border there between italy and france and that's a terrible tragedy in itself but you know the french and the italians are caught between the devil in the deep blue sea on one hand the french are perfectly entitled to send people back to italy something known as the dublin convention which is basically that anybody landing in europe and claiming asylum has to do so in the first safe country they reach so if they've come into italy from albania or somewhere wherever it might be or from north africa then they are really meant to claim asylum there and not to just be pushed and i'm afraid the italians because faced with this enormous number of thousands hundreds of thousands of people coming through lampedusa or in italy very simply get into the habit of just shunting people up the spine of italy and saying well you know not here. going claim asylum in france can also put a point another point to what some of the locals were seeing to us keith they were saying that they have seen an uptick in crime they're saying because there are a lot of teenage boys there the there's not enough being done to look after them define themselves with more time on their hands on things happen maybe they don't have enough food for instance so they steal it are the migrants committing crimes because a lack of anything to do is that partly the fault of the local authorities and the lack of a proper plan put in place there. well i think. the absence of provisional adequate provision i should say i mean some charities as you know are trying to provide food and clothing but there's not enough that clearly is going to lead people to desperate measures to to feed in and clothe themselves i mean i think when you mention young people the other problem of course is the the there exploitation of young people under the age of eighteen and and some of these people are are being exploited in the most awful way including sexual exploitation so that's another added worry but i have sympathy with the italians but you know really the the organization that i'm afraid is most of the fault here is the european union itself it has failed to live pretty shape except only as strong as its member states and if the member states don't want to tango than the european union can dance at all but it has been a whole series of broken commitments of undertakings to try to spread this load of refugee coming into europe through certain countries in particular because that's where there are the c. external borders of europe or close to and there has been really no serious commitment or of continuing commitment to spread this burden you know you look at a country like sweden very large numbers of syrian refugees very many other count
young young war and. french authorities arrest the main suspect in a car. or group of soldiers. police are investigating. an employee criticizing versity policy. but he does get a job offer from wiki leaks. just after eight pm this witness the evening here in moscow you're with international my names you know neil welcome to the program our top story this hour i made growing tensions between north korea on the united states president has emphasized the strength of america's nuclear arsenal he...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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young -- young ones. >> tonight at 6:00 a rookie firefighter responding to an overnight fire was critically hurt. not by the flames but by a fire truck. we'll have an update on his condition. >>> plus, tragedy in anne arrundel county. a four-year-old girl and her uncle drown in a backyard pool. we'll take a closer look at what went wrong. >>> and a woman claims a virginia man held her and her two children hostage in a house for two years. tonight what we've learned about the suspect. the news at 6:00 starts right now. >> ♪ >> all right, we are going to get to those stories in just a moment but we have storms that have been moving through the area this afternoon. hi there. i'm tony perkins. >> and i'm shawn yancy. let's get to sue palka. what's going on. >> shawn tony we just got a new warning for montgomery county and loudoun county. you know how most of the rest of this week we have been worried about flash flooding. this is different. the concern is gusts to 60 that could be taking down trees. so, this is the big picture. you can see not everyone is seeing rain. but as we get in closer on the severe thunderstorm warning, this is going to be for west central montgomery county and east central loudoun county until 6:30 and the storm is moving north at about 20 miles an hour but the concern is strong winds there could be able to take out a couple of limbs or trees and also block roads. so, this is exactly what we don't need. i also want to say that if this radar picture looks a little distorted to you, it's because the national weather service radar site at sterling virginia is right there so this storm probably is a lot worse looking than it appears on radar right now because it's kind of going underneath the antenna there. also wanted to mention we're monitoring other areas that are seeing some strong and building storms like around the lake ridge dale city area. this storm also moving slowly about 15 to 20 miles an hour and a check of the culpeper area, there's a storm down in that region that is also continuing to move to the north and it also appears to be getting stronger. all of that will continue to be watched through the evening hours. we have the marginal risk for severe weather to continue between now and when the sun goes down but again that's severe thunderstorm warning until 6:30 for parts of loudoun and montgomery and we want you to be aware of falling trees as well as limbs. we'll let you know if we get any other warnings. tony, over to you. >> thank you very much. we want to turn to a developing story now this from anne arrundel county where two people accidentally drowned in a neighbor's swimming pool. marina marraco is working to get more information. >> reporter: tony this happened roughly 1:30 in the afternoon and it happened in house you see behind me, that wooden fence, that's the pool where these two victims drowned today. take a look at skyfox. you'll see a better landscape view here of this now, we're learning from anne arrundel county fire that several children along with a 51-year-old adult were at this pool. the victims don't live at this home but they did have permission to be at the pool here. now, we're learning that that four-year-old victim jumped into the deep end, it was several minutes before anyone noticed that she was in the deep end of that pool. and that's when the 51-year-old uncle also jumped into the pool. we're told he, too, did not know how to swim. the children then ran to a nearby neighbor's home. they got a neighbor. the neighbor showed up. she was unable to retrieve them from the pool. she called 911 and anne arrundel county fire and police took roughly four minutes to arrive here on the scene. they tried their best to save that four-year-old and that 51-year-old man but unfortunately when they transported them to the hospital to baltimore washington medical center we have learned that both that four-year-old and that 51-year-old man have died t now, of course we're still learning to work more details as to how exactly this all are in relation to the residents here of this home in severna park. as soon as we get those details of course we'll pass them along to you. live tonight in anne arrundel county marina marraco fox5 local news. >> a rookie d.c. firefighter is in critical condition tonight. a ladder truck hit him as he was responding to an overnight house fire on capitol hill. that truck hit dane smothers jr. on f street northeast pinned him between two fire vehicles. we're told his injuries are traumatic t smothers was knocked unconscious. medics revised him with cpr he's only been on the job for a few months. >> seeing somebody injured this early in his career is really disheartening for the youngs 'cause they haven't yet learned how to bond with all of us yet and they haven't learned how to cope with this ty >> per protocol the firefighters involved are being tested for drugs and alcohol. >> a stafford county sheriff's deputy is recovering after being exposed to the powerful drug fentanyl during a call for an overdose. it started when the deputy moved to arrest a couple yesterday in stafford. you see them here, david chambers and samantha stout were found unconscious in a van parked at the goddard school. after their arrest, the officer followed up with stout at the hospital. that's when staff noticed his speech was slurred. it was later determined he was accidentally exposed to fentanyl when he was handling the drugs found in the van. that deputy has been treated with naloxone. >> ♪ >> new tonight patients of a doctor accused of sexual assault who used to work for kaiser permanente are suing the company. keiser says it fired dr. brian williams. fox5's matt ackland learned mor
young -- young ones. >> tonight at 6:00 a rookie firefighter responding to an overnight fire was critically hurt. not by the flames but by a fire truck. we'll have an update on his condition. >>> plus, tragedy in anne arrundel county. a four-year-old girl and her uncle drown in a backyard pool. we'll take a closer look at what went wrong. >>> and a woman claims a virginia man held her and her two children hostage in a house for two years. tonight what we've learned about...
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young young continues with this nuclear weapons program the d.p. arky must choose to stop isolating itself and stand down its bissett of nuclear weapons the d.p. arky should seize any consideration of actions that would lead to the end of its regime and the destruction of its people. his words come after tweets by president trump emphasizing the strength of america's nuclear arsenal he said one of its first drops and second power was ordering the modernization of the country's weapons and he added the u.s. will never be overtaken as the world's superpower his comments follow even stronger words aimed directly at pyongyang as leader north korea. make it even worse threats to the united states. they will be met with fire and fury. like the world has never seen. north korea for its turn slams chum's comments as nonsense and went on to say no serious dialogue is possible with a u.s. president who it described as a guy bereft of reason nevertheless the state department said trump was now clearly communicating with problem young in a language that needs no translation is he exacerbating the president spoke to him to kim jong un in a language that secretary tillerson has said and said this morning in the kind of language that kim jong un will understand have the president of the united states keep threatening to destroy north korea this is how shall i put it this is not the language of democracy is but by the way an act of war as well the north koreans either have a nuclear deterrent or they're pretending to but the only reason if they do have it the only reason they've got it is to keep themselves from being exterminated by the u.s. let's say the worst happens it could wipe out south korea japan it could do just. to china the damage to russia i mean this is then of course all the u.s. troops in south korea would all be killed too but this is this is not anything anybody should want why is this the u.s. is why is so korea only north korea they'd like to be a why is it owned by the u.s. this would be such a hor
young young continues with this nuclear weapons program the d.p. arky must choose to stop isolating itself and stand down its bissett of nuclear weapons the d.p. arky should seize any consideration of actions that would lead to the end of its regime and the destruction of its people. his words come after tweets by president trump emphasizing the strength of america's nuclear arsenal he said one of its first drops and second power was ordering the modernization of the country's weapons and he...
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Aug 16, 2017
08/17
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men in opposition to step up and speak on unnecessary situations that we find ourselves in as young -- youngcountry a lot of times. i'm proud of him. >> coach jack del rio said he will let hess team leaders discuss how they want to handle the situation. the raiders play the rams this weekend. we will see if marshawn stays seated. >>> well, an east bay dog who has been rescued more than once. a good story. we will explain it next. this is the new comfort food. grown right here in california, with absolutely no antibiotics ever. a better way to grow, a better way to eat. and it starts with foster farms simply raised chicken. california grown with no antibiotics ever. >>> okay. finally tonight, call it puppy love or love at first sight, a good samaritan who helped save a puppy has decided to adopt her. you might recall the story a couple of weeks ago. a person called walnut creek police after spotting this dog locked in a car in 97 degree heat. an officer got the dog out and turned her over to animal control. now, the person who first saw penny the puppy has adopted her and penny is doing fine
men in opposition to step up and speak on unnecessary situations that we find ourselves in as young -- youngcountry a lot of times. i'm proud of him. >> coach jack del rio said he will let hess team leaders discuss how they want to handle the situation. the raiders play the rams this weekend. we will see if marshawn stays seated. >>> well, an east bay dog who has been rescued more than once. a good story. we will explain it next. this is the new comfort food. grown right here in...
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as the world's greatest superpower before the out trump and given a stark warning to north korea young young men threaten to strike the u.s. pacific territory of guam. make it work ranch to the united states. they will be met with fire fury. like the world has never seen before trying to make the rather explosive statement while the washington post actually published an article claiming that their reporters have read this latest u.s. defense report which says that north korea has managed to build these small nuclear warheads a small enough to fit inside missiles so rather alarming information but this washington post article well they did not present any sort of evidence to prove how they managed to get their hands on this on this document and despite that the story's been picked up by the american mainstream media has been widely reported and here's a sample of what those reports are like now confirming a u.s. intelligence assessment on north korea that was first reported by the washington post earlier today in the assessment is that north korea now has a weapon a nuclear weapon that is sma
as the world's greatest superpower before the out trump and given a stark warning to north korea young young men threaten to strike the u.s. pacific territory of guam. make it work ranch to the united states. they will be met with fire fury. like the world has never seen before trying to make the rather explosive statement while the washington post actually published an article claiming that their reporters have read this latest u.s. defense report which says that north korea has managed to...
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Aug 18, 2017
08/17
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young people ? necessary to add more stress to young people? it feels immensely unfairto me young people? nder so much stress and even when they do well it's often said they're so they do well it's often said they're so much easier these days than they used to be. this is a move to make the exams tougher than they've been for a while. it seems like grade inflation in a sense, i personally think if you are going to change education make it feel like you are learning things in a more holistic way. you are actually understanding the subject. my worry is when i talk to friends with kids who are older than mine is there's so much pressure to learn the facts and to pass the thing rather than knowing things which a different thing. i feel this is getting you more stress but are you understanding the world better? it's often said that children at school now, we are trying to train them to do jobs that don't even exist yet. how do we even know that we are teaching them the right things? i personally think that if you are going to get so stressed about something at that age you are going to have str
young people ? necessary to add more stress to young people? it feels immensely unfairto me young people? nder so much stress and even when they do well it's often said they're so they do well it's often said they're so much easier these days than they used to be. this is a move to make the exams tougher than they've been for a while. it seems like grade inflation in a sense, i personally think if you are going to change education make it feel like you are learning things in a more holistic...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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young people. how we can inspire young people. and how lin and tommy and our creative team have create aid show that looks like america today so that young african americans, young latinos, young mexicans, young asian americans can look at that stage and say, "i'm part of the story." >> rose: exactly. >> "that's my story." >> rose: the american story. >> right. >> rose: as one of them said to me, you know, it made me feel like i was truly an american." >> yes. maybe for the first time. >> rose: exactly, exact. how has it changed your life, louis? >> we always had a complicated life in politics for the most part, which is what i have -- >> mayor koch. >> most of my life. now i love being lin-manuel's dad. >> rose: do you. >> i love being lin-manuel's dad. and people stop me in the street-- the other day i was going to your office, and some lady screamed, "hey! hey! lin-manuel's dad!" she comes. she says, "you have to write a book about parenting. let me take a selfie with you." i'm like, okay. only 30 seconds. so it's definitely changed our lives for the better. and to use everything that "hamilton" and that everything that "hamiltons" th
young people. how we can inspire young people. and how lin and tommy and our creative team have create aid show that looks like america today so that young african americans, young latinos, young mexicans, young asian americans can look at that stage and say, "i'm part of the story." >> rose: exactly. >> "that's my story." >> rose: the american story. >> right. >> rose: as one of them said to me, you know, it made me feel like i was truly an...
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Aug 26, 2017
08/17
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young people and their families are bringing assets to our classrooms, we are in trouble. if we're not immediately start each day with each young person assuming there's beauty and goodness and wisdom in such young person, we are in trouble. we should be thinking of ways to notice, tap into, draw upon the beauty in our young people, the was american people in order to do our jobs. if we start with our own agendas, we're lost. there are folks like the ones mentioned earlier who talk and write and think and offer resources about culturally relevant pedagogy, culturally sustaining pedagogy, and about culturally responsive pedagogy. guess what i just did? another three. don't know why. all three of those ideas are organized about the fact that every single family has something that we can pull upon or that is really interesting, a book called youth, learning on their own terms. it features three young people. it was not intentional. three young people who express their beauty and wisdom through art. one was a writer, another was a dj. another was, what is it called when you spray the walls with paint? graffiti artists, thank you. the book was about these educators finding that create a space and the
young people and their families are bringing assets to our classrooms, we are in trouble. if we're not immediately start each day with each young person assuming there's beauty and goodness and wisdom in such young person, we are in trouble. we should be thinking of ways to notice, tap into, draw upon the beauty in our young people, the was american people in order to do our jobs. if we start with our own agendas, we're lost. there are folks like the ones mentioned earlier who talk and write...
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trump threatens north korea with fire and fury stresses the strength of america's nuclear arsenal young young warns it may strike the u.s. pacific territory. also ahead this hour french authorities arrest the main suspect in a car. or group of soldiers in part it's. investigating. google's decision to stock an employee for criticizing its diversity policy. but he does get a job offer from wiki leaks.
trump threatens north korea with fire and fury stresses the strength of america's nuclear arsenal young young warns it may strike the u.s. pacific territory. also ahead this hour french authorities arrest the main suspect in a car. or group of soldiers in part it's. investigating. google's decision to stock an employee for criticizing its diversity policy. but he does get a job offer from wiki leaks.
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Aug 5, 2017
08/17
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young. there's one where a young kid is dressed up like spider-man, putting him in a web. another one where he on another halloween picture where ben rosen's daughter dressed up in an elephant costume, comes into the oval office and he lies down on the floor of the office and puts her up in the air. so it's those, like, unique moments that you key in, new over in know they're going to happen. it tells you a lot about his personality, what he is like as a person. and not just the weighy pictures of him in the situation room, or him agonizing over what is happening in syria, those kind of pictures are important and tell you a lot about his presidency but the other ones i mentioned tell you a lot about him as a person. >> host: did the president ever nix a photo you chose? >> guest: didn't really work that way. i think he trusted me if we were going to make public a picture, would pet out an appropriate picture. i think if you look at some of the early pictures we released, where he was dealing with the economic crisis and you would say these are not the pictures you see, his head in his hands. we were in this terrible economic situation, but i was trying be truthful to how he was dealing with this in his meetings. i think people thought they were appropriate to make public so that the public could see that how he was doing. then for then during the next presidential campaign they were used by the opposition and put in the wrong context. so that's the risk you take when you make public pictures like that. it's hard to control that they're shown in the proper context. >> host: ever a time when the president said, not now? >> guest: no. but i know him so well that i could tell when he needed some space, or i also came to learn if he had a one-on-one meeting with someone, where he really wanted to have a private conversation, that he didn't ever say this to me but i could sense it. he wanted me to make sure i got my pictures but then just kind of back out of the room. so i sort of learned how to do that over the course of the first six months. you have to learn how to do your job and how to do it in a way that he is comfortable with. >> host: would your camera click audibly? >> guest: it's a very good question. when i first started at the white house, i had to choose what kind of equipment to purchase for me and my staff, and the overright decision was choosing the quietest camera that at that time was made, and so this is why i -- at the time i chose the canon. very quiet shutter, didn't shoot with motor drives or a flash. tried to be what i call small footprint, not to disturb what is going on, use the quiet cam remark not the motor drive, not the flash. i think that helps a lot. >> host: your first time at the white house? >> guest: it was not. so, was also a white house photographer -- not the chief photographer but i was on the white house staff during the last five years of the reagan administration. and i'm either younger than i look or i was 12 at the time. idahoes say i was 12 at the time. so, i was in my 20s, and it was a good training ground for the second time around, because i sort of knew what needed to me bun issue knew the white house really well. knew how the logistics of being on the road worked. i think that helped a lot. having had that previous experience. >> host: could you good a whole day -- well, first of all, what were the differences between being on the staff at the reagan house and being the chief at the obama white house? >> guest: well, the biggest difference was i knew -- i had already established a relationship with president obama before he was president. so that had already been established. didn't know reagan at all. i wasn't -- my personal views tend to be more on the obama side than the reagan side, but i look at it as an opportunity to document history. with reagan, reagan was much more formal than president obama in that he would always wear a coat and tie, never take his suit coat off. president obama was much more informal. he would take his coat off. he was used to having a meeting with staff. with head of state always left his coat on. but much more informal. he would do things that weren't on the schedule all the time, and reagan pretty much stuck to his schedule. he was much younger than -- president obama was much younger than president reagan so he had a young family two young girls so that whole aspect of documenting that part of history. those kind of differences. one thing they were both similar in is they had similar dispositions in that took a lot to get ronald reagan mad or angry. same is true with president obama. not -- i saw both of them get mad and angry, but it would take a lot for that to happen. they both had this sort of even keel about them, that is probably the one similarity. >> host: on a typical day, could you go the entire day with president obama and basically never exchange words because you're both doing your jobs? >> guest: yeah. i did talk to him a lot, but i also knew my role as the observer. my job is documenting for history, but yet i was also established a friendship with him. so we did banter a lot but there would be days -- maybe like it would be 4:00, and there'd be a moment where we're alone and he'd say, how are you doing today? i'm doing great. how are you doing some and then talk about a game or this -- t
young. there's one where a young kid is dressed up like spider-man, putting him in a web. another one where he on another halloween picture where ben rosen's daughter dressed up in an elephant costume, comes into the oval office and he lies down on the floor of the office and puts her up in the air. so it's those, like, unique moments that you key in, new over in know they're going to happen. it tells you a lot about his personality, what he is like as a person. and not just the weighy pictures...
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Aug 25, 2017
08/17
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young people any kind of way. because young people pay attention. young people -- it's on . -- >> will take you live now to a brief pro forma session of your senate and then will come right back to our coverage of this urban education conference. the presiding officer: the senate will come to order. the clerk will read a communication to the senate. the clerk: washington, d.c., august 25, 2017. to the senate: under the provisions of rule 1, paragraph 3, of the standing rules of the senate, i hereby appoint the honorable rob portman, a senator from the state of ohio, to perform the duties of the chair. signed: orrin g. hatch, president pro tempore. the presiding officer: under the previous order, the senate stands adjourned the senate stands adjourned >> senate pro forma sessions continue until congress returns for legislative work on september 5. right now on c-span2 we go back alive to the urban school conference. >> in the presence of young people and what that means. so for nonconforming student or lgbtq students come if we call them defined or messy,
young people any kind of way. because young people pay attention. young people -- it's on . -- >> will take you live now to a brief pro forma session of your senate and then will come right back to our coverage of this urban education conference. the presiding officer: the senate will come to order. the clerk will read a communication to the senate. the clerk: washington, d.c., august 25, 2017. to the senate: under the provisions of rule 1, paragraph 3, of the standing rules of the...
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Aug 4, 2017
08/17
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young people, how we can inspire young people. and tommy and our creative team have created a show that looks like america today so that young youngn-americanstinos, young mexicans, young asian-americans can look at that stage and say, i'm part of the story. charlie: exactly. american story. jeffrey: that is my story. charlie: as one of them said to me, it made me feel like i was truly an american. jeffrey: maybe for the first time. charlie: exactly. how is it changed your life? luis: we'll is had a complicated life and politics for the most , part. charlie: he had koch. nuel'si love being lin-ma dad. people stop me in the street. the other day of was going to the office and some lady screamed hey, hey! ,lin-manuel dad.anuel's i have to take a selfie with you. it has changed our life for the better. to use everything that hamilton has bought -- brought to do very good things. the graham windham, the hamilton initiative, the prize sweep -- sweepstakes we do now that raises millions of dollars for that we do with openings. every time "hamilton" has an opening, we have a sweepstakes. in the united states. charlie: how many performances are ther
young people, how we can inspire young people. and tommy and our creative team have created a show that looks like america today so that young youngn-americanstinos, young mexicans, young asian-americans can look at that stage and say, i'm part of the story. charlie: exactly. american story. jeffrey: that is my story. charlie: as one of them said to me, it made me feel like i was truly an american. jeffrey: maybe for the first time. charlie: exactly. how is it changed your life? luis: we'll is...
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Aug 28, 2017
08/17
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young people, front line people, expand medicaid coverage of trauma informed counseling and services to more schools. enable more kids to benefit from these curriculum. provide proven mental health perhaps to help young people. young people are 21 times more likely to go to a school clinic than another clinic for care. we want to make sure we're there to help them. our bill will enlist community leaders. jay and joy luster, i met jay in the course of this project. thousands of students in chicago are taking advantage of that now. mentors from the ymca urban warriors programs. coach wayne garden, he has been on front lines of battle 42 years, am i right, wayne on that? he moved into lawndale neighborhood, raised his family there and never left. wayne, thank you for all you have done with mike and others in the community. [applause] one of my friends went to jerusalem and saw a program there dealing with trauma and violence decided to bring it back here. let me give a shout out to pastor chris harris from bright star church in brownsville. [applause] chris, thank you so much. we need to have the best practices that come out of these experiences and the ones we learned from around the country to make this better. mak
young people, front line people, expand medicaid coverage of trauma informed counseling and services to more schools. enable more kids to benefit from these curriculum. provide proven mental health perhaps to help young people. young people are 21 times more likely to go to a school clinic than another clinic for care. we want to make sure we're there to help them. our bill will enlist community leaders. jay and joy luster, i met jay in the course of this project. thousands of students in...
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Aug 15, 2017
08/17
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neighborhood, but i mean, it's not fair, that's not fair. >> she always stood up it sounds like from a young, young you said she died for this country. >> she did. it's sad that the world lost a great person in order, i mean the world had to lose a great person in order to start a conversation. the conversation has not been as or the topic has not been so vocal and so loud until now, and it's sad, because you sit in the history class and i help my kids with homework and they learn about the civil rights movement and you see those things and you feel horrible, but you never had, you know, to live through it. so you only know what you see. you only know the pain that you hear people speak about. it's 2017. this should have never happened. >> she helped you personally, felicia, in one of your, if not your deepest time of need in your life, you were struggling with all of these medical bills. it was very, very difficult, and you were in desperate need of help and she came to help you. what did she do? >> well, one of my friends who also works at the law firm, you know, told me come by and talk to heath
neighborhood, but i mean, it's not fair, that's not fair. >> she always stood up it sounds like from a young, young you said she died for this country. >> she did. it's sad that the world lost a great person in order, i mean the world had to lose a great person in order to start a conversation. the conversation has not been as or the topic has not been so vocal and so loud until now, and it's sad, because you sit in the history class and i help my kids with homework and they learn...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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young. too young. >> while piersol might act as a father figure to mccaffrey, the crime that brought him to prison cost him his relationship with his own child. and he admitted when we first met him, he wasn't honest about the crime. >> you asked me in the dorm what i was here for. i gave you a bs story. other people were around. i haven't taken into my confidence, so to speak. >> how many times have you been to prison? >> twice. >> both times on assault. >> yes. my friends and family know my history, and i'm just not, you know, i'm done putting up fronts and facades. i've lived too many years like that. i'm incarcerated in florida for failure to register an e-mail address by a sex offender. and that stems from a charge that i had up in new york, statutory rape charge where i slept with a teenage girl. there are some people in here that have done some really bad things to very youngldren, things like that. i'm not in that category. i'm not a predator. i'm labeled as a sex offender, but i don't live my life as a sex offender. i've made some mistakes, like everybody else in here, fell in love with somebody and just, you know, made some bad choices. >> how old was this young lady and how old were you? >> she was 14. i was 33 at the time. like i said, you can't help who you fall in love with and how you feel about people. i mean, some people are, as they say, old souls and things like that, but you know, it was a very intelligent young woman, young lady. >> piersol's freedom wasn't the only thing he lost when the relationship was discovered. >> how did you know this girl? >> a friend of the family. >> okay. >> yeah. she was my daughter's best friend, actually. >> does your daughter still speak to you? >> not since that day. >> at santa rosa, piersol is hardly alone when it comes to dealing with hardship. inmate anthony cruzado recently found himself at a new emotiona
young. too young. >> while piersol might act as a father figure to mccaffrey, the crime that brought him to prison cost him his relationship with his own child. and he admitted when we first met him, he wasn't honest about the crime. >> you asked me in the dorm what i was here for. i gave you a bs story. other people were around. i haven't taken into my confidence, so to speak. >> how many times have you been to prison? >> twice. >> both times on assault. >>...
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Aug 3, 2017
08/17
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WTTG
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> seeing somebody injured this early in his career, you know, is really disheartening for the young -- youngirefighter responding to an overnight fire was critically hurt. not by the flames but by a fire truck. we'll have an update on his condition. >>> plus, tragedy in anne arrundel county. a four-year-old girl and her uncle drown in a backyard pool. we'll take a closer look at what went wrong. >>> and a woman claims a virginia man held her and her two children hostage in a house for two years. tonight what we've learned about the suspect. the news at 6:00 starts right now. >> ♪ >> all right, we are going to get to those stories in just a moment but we have storms that have been moving through the area this afternoon. hi there. i'm tony perkins. >> and i'm shawn yancy. let's get to sue palka. what's going on. >> shawn tony we just got a new warning for
> seeing somebody injured this early in his career, you know, is really disheartening for the young -- youngirefighter responding to an overnight fire was critically hurt. not by the flames but by a fire truck. we'll have an update on his condition. >>> plus, tragedy in anne arrundel county. a four-year-old girl and her uncle drown in a backyard pool. we'll take a closer look at what went wrong. >>> and a woman claims a virginia man held her and her two children hostage in...
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Aug 27, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN2
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young. there's one where a young kid is dressed up like spiderman zapping him into a web. there's another one where-- a halloween picture where ben rosen's daughter dressed up in an elephant costume and comes into the oval office and he lies down on the floor of the oval office and lifts her up in the air, so those like unique moments you see and you don't know they are about to happen and they happen and i think it tells you a lot about his personality and what he's like a person and not just pictures of him in the situation room or him agonizing over what's happening in syria took those pictures are important and they tell you a lot about his presidency, that the other ones i present-- mention to you a lot about him as a person. host: did the president ever next a photo that you chose? guest: it didn't really work that way, actually. i think he trusted me if we were going to make public a picture that i would put out an appropriate picture. i think if you look at some of the early pictures we released where he was dealing with economic crisis and you could say these are not traditional pictures you see where he has his head in his hands or because we were in this terrible economic situation, but i was trying to be truthful to how he was dealing with this in his meeting and i think people thought they were appropriate to make public so that the public could see that he was-- what he was doing. during the next presidential campaign they were used by the opposition and put in the wrong context, so that's sort of the risk you take when you make public pictures like that is it's hard to control that they are shown in the proper context. host: was there ever a time when the president said not now? guest: no, but i know him so well that i could tell when he needed some space or i also came to learn if he had one-on-one meeting with someone where he really wanted to have a private conversation that he didn't ever say this to me, but i could sense it. he wanted me to make sure i got my pictures, but then just kind of the back out of the room i learned to do that over the course of the first six months. you have to learn how to do your job and had to do it in a way that he's comfortable with. host: was your camera click audibly? guest: that's a very good question, i mean, when i first started at the white house i had to choose what kind of equipment to purchase for me and my staff and overwriting decision was two things, quiet and could would run at that time that was made so at the time i chose the canon , quiet shutter. i did not shoot with motor drives or use a flash. i tried to be what i call small footprint, not to disturb what was going on and use a quiet camera and not use the motor drive or flash. i think that helped a lot. host: your first time at the white house? guest: it was not. i was also white house photographer, not chief photographer, but i was on the white house staff during the last five years of the reagan administration and i'm either younger than i look or i was 12 at the time and i choose to say i was 12 at the time. know, so i was in my 20s and it was a good training ground for the second time around because i sort of knew what needed to be done. i knew the white house really well and i knew how the logistics of it being on the road works and i think that helped a lot having had that previous experiences. host: could you go a whole day-- first of all, what were the differences between being on the staff at the reagan white house and being the chief at the obama white house? guest: well, the biggest difference was i knew-- i had already established a relationship with president obama before he was president's, so that had already been established. i do not know reagan at all. i-- my personal views tended to be more on the obama side than the reagan site, but i looked at it as an opportunity to document history. i think with reagan, reagan was much more formal than president obama in that he would always wear a coat and tie. never take his sukkoth off. president obama was much more informal. he would take his coat off if he was having a meeting with his staff. he was much more informal. he would do things that weren't on the schedule of the time and reagan pretty much stuck to his schedule. he was much younger than president reagan, so he had a young family with two young girls, so there was that whole aspect of documenting that part of history. there were those differences. the one thing they were both similar in is they had similar dispositions in the bats it took a lot to get ronald reagan mad or angry. same is true with president obama and i saw both of them get mad and angry, but it would take a lot for that to happen. they both had this sort of even keel about them and that's probably the one similarity. host: pete souza, on a typical day could you go the entire day with president obama and basically never exchange words because you are both doing your job's? i did talk to him a lot, but i also knew my role as observer. my job is documenting for history, but yet i had this friendship with him, so we did banter a lot, but sure there would be days where maybe like it be 4:00 p.m. and there would be a moment where we were alone and he would say how are you doing today and i think i'm doing great, how are you doing and then we w
young. there's one where a young kid is dressed up like spiderman zapping him into a web. there's another one where-- a halloween picture where ben rosen's daughter dressed up in an elephant costume and comes into the oval office and he lies down on the floor of the oval office and lifts her up in the air, so those like unique moments you see and you don't know they are about to happen and they happen and i think it tells you a lot about his personality and what he's like a person and not just...
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young people in the community. we may be dealing with young people on both sides. two crews or two neighborhoods and we'll have foblgs that will go out and help mediate the conflict and work with those young people to give them an out. a lot of times young people don't want it to escalate. they're looking for a way to get out while saving face and not looking weak. so we're able to come work with them but that m could say out of the relationships that we built to be able to help them navigate the situation. >> tell us about some of the programs that you have. >> well, for we have our talk to a cop program and we use a therapy dog to reach out to the kids. kids graf state towavitate towa >> what is it do for them? >> it shows that we are just like them and it's funny because every time we go to the school and you see nus in uniform they push us aside just to see penny. but that's a great way to talk about a lot of things that concern them. and then we have our pal program that gears toward middle school where we talk about development, leadership roles and go on different field trips all over the we make sure that we have programs they can take advantage of. >> the programs are all free. >
young people in the community. we may be dealing with young people on both sides. two crews or two neighborhoods and we'll have foblgs that will go out and help mediate the conflict and work with those young people to give them an out. a lot of times young people don't want it to escalate. they're looking for a way to get out while saving face and not looking weak. so we're able to come work with them but that m could say out of the relationships that we built to be able to help them navigate...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
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KYW
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young, very young children in a house and there's a gun in the house, it's very important that that gun be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> reporter: one way to secure your weapon the philadelphia sheriff's office gives away gun locks for free no questions asked. from the children's hospital of philadelphia henry rosoff cbs3 "eyewitness news." >> police say a 14-year-old girl was distracted by her cell phone when she was hit by a car in abington montgomery county. the crash happened on the 900 block of highland avenue right near abington high school yesterday afternoon. the victim's teammates say the girl was on her way to cheerleading practice when she was hit. eyewitnesses told police she was looking at her phone on a video call with someone and police say that person also heard the crash. >> we were able to determine through speaking with some witnesses in the young lady was distracted on the face time on her cell phone which was obviously a contributing factor in the accident. >> yes, she was just walking the street. it's kind of surreal. that could happen to you in 10 seconds it's very scary. >> the driver did stop to help the girl. the teen is now recovering from serious injuries. >> one person is displaced this noon after an apartment fire in west philadelphia. fire crews responded to a home on the 700 block of south 51st street. we're told that the second floor was heavily involved by the time crews arrived. an eyewitness on the scene told cbs3 he lives on the first floor of the building and was awakened by his upstairs neighbor. >> i don't know what happened. he just came down crying, knocking on everybody door, yelling fire. >> the fire department says fortunately everyone made it out safely. >> police need your help identifying suspects warranted tour vandalism. surveillance video caught one of the suspects throwing an explosive device th
young, very young children in a house and there's a gun in the house, it's very important that that gun be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> reporter: one way to secure your weapon the philadelphia sheriff's office gives away gun locks for free no questions asked. from the children's hospital of philadelphia henry rosoff cbs3 "eyewitness news." >> police say a 14-year-old girl was distracted by her cell phone when she was hit by a car in...
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Aug 5, 2017
08/17
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WTXF
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if you break it down to young people, young people overwhelmingly want to see it legal. >> if corey booker was interested in helping law-enforcement and helping communities he would let the states decide. the challenges, newark faces different challenges than colorado and new jersey. >> the states will still decide. this is taking it off the nationalists and incentivizing states to decriminalize. >> senators booker's bill as presented would punish states by take away funding if they don't comply with his vision of how america should enforce criminal law. >> talk about the policy, let's go to the bottom line. somebody comes back to your job is for a job interview and they smell of ganja, they going to get higher? select corey booker tell a person, this is the consequence. >> either way, medical marijuana seems to be here to say and i think that's a good thing. i think were down a slippery slope on this. in new jersey, regards the corey bookie, murphy becomes governor you'll see it here. tweet me, let me know or tweet the show. legalize it across the board? would you smoke it on the streets?
if you break it down to young people, young people overwhelmingly want to see it legal. >> if corey booker was interested in helping law-enforcement and helping communities he would let the states decide. the challenges, newark faces different challenges than colorado and new jersey. >> the states will still decide. this is taking it off the nationalists and incentivizing states to decriminalize. >> senators booker's bill as presented would punish states by take away funding...
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Aug 26, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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young obama is young, and you can be double lucky. serve eight years as president and do some other good things. would o i assume you recommend the job to people if they want to be president of the united states. asked at ay was once press conference, what do you think about this job and would you recommend this job? right now, to others tenure but inish my would you recommend the job to young people, young leaders, scholars, if they want to be president of the united states. would you say it's worth the ggravation factor and the hard work to become factor. pres. clinton: yeah, in a heart beat. pres. bush: same. we're a good chance looking at a future president here.t the 60 graduates [applaus [applause]. host: so you would recommend it -- the highest calling of mankind i've often thought was private equity. but you would say that being of the united states is better than private equity, right? pres. bush: i don't know. 200,000 a year in pension. what do you make? [laughter] host: money isn't everything. [laughter] res. clinton: if we could just say one serious thing, i mean, i really ere are a lot of big questions floating around out there. arlos flynn, the mexican multibillionaire, a really smart guy gave a speech during the beinggn, and the campaign what it was, obviously, nobody was interested in asking about but he said i believe that this will be the first revolution
young obama is young, and you can be double lucky. serve eight years as president and do some other good things. would o i assume you recommend the job to people if they want to be president of the united states. asked at ay was once press conference, what do you think about this job and would you recommend this job? right now, to others tenure but inish my would you recommend the job to young people, young leaders, scholars, if they want to be president of the united states. would you say it's...
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Aug 12, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN
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richer, or the rigged economy, resonates with republicans, with white more with young people of color, young women, young millennials, obviously young millennials is redundant, but, then a message like hillary clinton ran on, such as breaking down barriers. it was not economics, it was inclusive, but it minor -- she might not have been the best messenger for that. we need to know that inclusion is not just about civil rights agenda, which is critical, but it is also about an economic justice agenda as well. about been reading a lot work from jesse jackson's campaign and going back to the populace, and they built a multicultural coalition. they talked about what economic rights mean, to control your life. about not being controlled by a corporation, not being controlled by history, or a racial category, that truly having the freedom to determine your own destiny. i think there are a lot of messages around back that are already resonating with people and it is our job to pick them up. >> alright, will open it up. if you do not mind, keep your questions to one minute or less. as concise as you possibly can
richer, or the rigged economy, resonates with republicans, with white more with young people of color, young women, young millennials, obviously young millennials is redundant, but, then a message like hillary clinton ran on, such as breaking down barriers. it was not economics, it was inclusive, but it minor -- she might not have been the best messenger for that. we need to know that inclusion is not just about civil rights agenda, which is critical, but it is also about an economic justice...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
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KYW
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young, very young children in the hospital and there is a gun in the house, it is very important that gun, be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> reporter: one other way to render your weapon safe philadelphia sheriff's office gives away free gun locks no questions asked, live from the children's hospital of philadelphia, henry rossoff for cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >>> a 14 year-old girl distract by her cell phonies struck by a car in montgomery county this happened yesterday afternoon right across the street from abington high school in the 900 block of highland high school. victim was face timing while crossing the street and simply didn't see the car coming. "eyewitness news" has learn that the girl was on her way to cheer leading practice and we spoke to her teammates. >> just went along face timing friend, whoever it was and that could happen to you, in 10 seconds is very scary. >> very scary indeed. police say driver did stop to help the victim. officials rush the little girl to the hospital with serious injuries and authorities have questioned and released the driver. >>> man accused in the road rage killing on the chester county highway is due in court , david desper is set to be arraigned on first degree murder. desper is accused of fatally shooting bianca roberson on route 100 in west goshen township. this happened back in june, police say roberson and desper were trying to merge in the same lane at the same time when the shooting occurred. desper is due in court today at 9:15 this morning. >>> a surprise guilty plea by david creato, junior, camden county father accuse had of killing his year-old son. creato, who was set to go on trial next month pleaded guilty to manslaughter yesterday avoiding a possible murder conviction and now face s 10 years behind bars, after admit to go playing the role in the death of his son brandon back in october of 2015. creato's first trial, ended in a hung jury. >> if he had not admitted to anything he could not get benefit of this deal. it would have been irresponsible, foolish frankly for him not to take this deal. >> three-year old brandon's body was found in the park about a half mile from his dad 's haddon township home, creato will be sentenced on september 29th. >>> police in chester county charged a man after finding racist, anti sematic gra feet any coatsville and valley township. office's rested 24 year-old george of coatsville yesterday , the graffiti was found tuesday on a car, garage door and wall of the convenient store. results from the chester county prison on $150,000 bail he admits to having pennsylvania association was white supremacy groups. >>> thirty-five you this dollars reward is being offered to help solve a cold case on the main line. six two-year old denise barker was found dead inside of her home on heatherstone drive-in tredyffrin township in june of last year, she died of blunt force trauma, citizens crime commission announced the reward yesterday for anyone with information leading to an arrest and conviction, her family continues to seek justice for her death. >>> she was probably my best friend, she would probably say that and i can, just a good person. we lost a tremendously good person and it is just not right. >> anyone who may have information on barker's death is asked to contact the citizens crime commission at 215-546-tips, callers can remain anonymous. >>> opening statements are scheduled for september 6th in the corruption trial of new jersey senator bob menendez. a jury of six men and six women plus four alternates was selected yesterday, menendez is accused of taking campaign donations and gifts from his wealthy friend, florida eye doctor salmon megan in exchange for political influence. both men are on trial. >>> a passenger injured in tuesday's train crash in upper darby is suing septa darryl robson said he was knocked unconscious and suffered a head injury when norristown high speed line slammed in the park train at 69th street station. his suit claims that the train over shot the previous station national transportation safety board is investigating what caused that crash, federal officials say 33 people were injured including the train's operator. >>> well, philadelphia parking authority's parking app called meter up will be back in operation by mid to late fall, meter up app allows drivers to pay for parking with the smart phone and add more time remet ly. the app went dark about four months ago after ppa had problems with the company behind the app, a new vendor is in place and customers will to have fork over a 40 cents user fee. >> the vendors in atlanta, georgia they have seven years experience in the u.s. so their main business is the pay by phone parking application. >> if you want to use meter up again you'll have to down load new app once it goes live in a few months. >>> a scare on the school us about a driver is facing charges after students on board called their parents in fear, disturbing things deputies found on the driver when she was stopped. >>> and southern texas getting ready for tropical storm harvey we will show you how people there are preparing for severe weather, we will be right how dixie ultra plates?roved with two pounds of steak. in each hand. dixie ultra. stress tested so you can stress less at dinner. ♪ lysol max cover kills 99.9% of bacteria, even on soft surfaces. one more way you've got what it takes to protect. the organizer of a rally has turned himself in. university of police had, warrant out for chris cantwell in the white supremacist rally almost two weeks ago. cantwell is accused of illegally using tear gas during protest and causing bodily injury, with malicious intent. >>> bus driver in georgia is facing charges after police say she was drunk while taking dozens of students to school. video shows tense moments on the way to high school in atlanta monday morning. several of the 31 kid on that bus told their parents about the incident right away. soon after police arrested the driver. they found multiple bottles of tequilla and vodka. >> she was going 60 or 70 up there from what it seemed like she turn in the ditch because it is just pure ditch there. she hit a driveway and we started to move. >> i was scared for my life. >> district won't tolerate behavior that jeopardizees student safety. >> school district fired that driver, she's charged with a dui while driving children and more than a dozen counts of child endangerment. >>> preparations are underway in texas for tropical storm harvey, plywood is flying off of the shelves in corpus christie as people there get ready to board up their homes, sandbags in high demand with some stores placing a limit on how many bags one person can buy. city is offering free won so people do to have fill bags themselves, some people say it is better to be prepared then sorry. >> it is almost a necessity, you know, just a precaution but not really nervous at all. i have been through storms before. >> we just have to be prepared just in case. >> officials say city is prepared for the storm and how clean the storm drains to prevent flooding. >>> about an hour from houston , in galveston people there are not taking any chances either. people are rushing to stock up on food before harvey hits, they are bracing themselves for torrential rain and extreme flooding, most businesses already have sandbags in place, experts say that the tropical storms could be a hurricane sometime friday >> the season, when does the hurricane season technically start. >> a little while ago, yeah and we're nearing the peak of hurricane season. >> all right. >> it could get even more active. here at home it is just cooler , in humidity. >> beautiful. >> perfect. >> fantastic weather heading our way, not just today but for the next several days, how about that. here's a live look outside at center city, you can see we are dry, different store friday this storms, we had those nice one last but things looking much better out there. temperatures checking in on the cool side of things, you probably need a light jacket when taking the dog out for a walk this morning. 68 degrees in philadelphia. sixty in allentown. we have 54 in mount pocono. 65 degrees, right now in wildwood. sixty-four in atlantic city. dew points are very comfortable right now things feeling very pleasant in the mid 50's out there we have fantastic feeling weather, as we head in the next several days and all thanks to this area of high pressure canadian area of high pressure will be promoting, sunshine for next several days, low humidity, morning low temperatures in the 60's and really just a expect particular lar forecast , can't ask for much more, especially this time of the year. sunny skies, low humidity day, look for high temperature right around 83 degrees north wind filtering in that dryer air for us. partly cloudy and comfortable overnight low right around 63. another cool night in store, down the shore a fantastic beach day on tap, we have a le risk of rip currents, which is great, still swimming near garden beaches, plenty of sunshine, seeing temperatures in the mid 70's to the lower 80's with the north wind at five to 10 miles an hour. eyewitness weather seven day forecast i will sound like a broken record you never want to stop playing, sunshine today, sunshine tomorrow, sunshine saturday, sunshine sunday, sunshine monday, and then temperatures feeling really comfortable, meisha, what about traffic. >> like you said earlier we hit jackpot with this weather, this forecast looks amazing. because of that we know weather and traffic work hand to hand. when weather goodies, commute is good as well. we are seeing nice dry roadways, still dark, still early we are dealing with construction, crew is still out there but they are getting ready to move out of the way. one area route one at oxford valley was closed both directions that is starting to dwindle down now. we might see crew was their lights on but they are finishing up. over tonight resurfacing project, gulph mills between gulph mills and belmont and westbound between gladwynn and blue route this camera is showing you around blue route area and what we will be working w levels are still obviously light we can expect that all through 4:00 he clock hour and we will see what happens as we push in the 5:00 . vine street expressway opened, that is great for those heading out to the vine, thumbs up there and we have construction there, north bound between oxford circle and cottman avenue those outer lanes are closed, jim and rahel back to you. >>> birthday party to day at philadelphia zoo. >>> we will show you who is turning one when "eyewitness news", >>> money watch's roxana saberi joins us live from the new york stock exchange, good morning roxana. investors are looking to wyoming, for important news for people who like to shop for groceries on line, what is latest there. >> reporter: good morning, investors are waiting to hear from fed chair janet yellin she and other central bankers are expect to speak in wyoming give their take on the global economy. yesterday stocks here on wall street gave up gains from the day before, dow jones fell 87 points and nasdaq finished 19 points down. amazon is coming much closer to buying whole food, whole food shareholders and federal trade commission approved a nearly $14 billion deal yesterday, two co now need to finalize a deal set to big changes to help people shop for groceries on line, jim and rahel. >>> samsung yesterday revealed its new, long awaited, i should say, smart phone, is it what we expected? >> reporter: many ways it is note eight does have a larger screen and two rear cameras, which is neat when you take photo phone stores both and also offers a stylist to use to write messages and phone could be unlock. samsung says it has extensive ly tested batteries and that they are safe, last year defective batteries caused galaxy note seven to catch fire and explode, and note eight goes on sale september 15th in the u.s. and will cost $930, jim and rahel. >> very expensive, 700, 8900. >> for a minute here based on your expression, maybe you were considering this. >> no, i'm an iphone person, i can't make the switch, too much for me but interesting. >> reporter: it is a life change, i agree. >> we will check in the next hour. >> you bet. >>> is there a birthday celebration at philadelphia zoo today. >> zoo's throwing a party for amani little gorilla is turning one, there is birthday girl, we shot this video a few months ago. her party kicks off at 10:30. kid can make birthday card and learn more about her friends there will be presents and of course birthday cake all are welcomed to attend. >> happy birthday amani. >> pretty name. >> it is, it is. >> we are getting a break from the humidity just in time for her birthday party. >> yes, and also nice day to have lunch outside. >> we have a gorgeous stretch, heading our way, i'll let you know how long it will last in your full forecast c if you like cinnamon toast crunch then you'll love strawberry... french toast... and new apple cinnamon toast crunch. from our crazy delicious family to yours. crave those crazy squares >>> all right. nothing like a little bean tore get your morning started, here's a live look at bethlehem where it is right around 60 degrees, we're dry, we have a gorgeous forecast in store as we head in the afternoon, temperatures right now across the delaware and lehigh valleys, checking in the 50's and 60's, cool start to the morning 68 degrees in philadelphia, 62 in wilmington , we are at 59 in reading, 62 at trenton right around 64 in atlantic city, up to 70 down the shore in wildwood, dew point is very comfortable especially for this time of the year, 55 right now in philadelphia, that is making for a very refreshing start, to your thursday morning, and today here's what you can expect, sunny skies, and low humidity all thanks to the canadian area of high pressure we're forecast continuing a high temperature this afternoon right around 83 degrees, a gorgeous day on tap, we will have your seven day forecast coming up in a bit. lets go to meisha with a look at traffic. what is going on. >> in the world of travel things are looking good, still early, just heading toward that 5:00 o'clock hour, nice and dry, and chelsea pointed out it will be a gorgeous day to day and serves as a nice commute. so far so good. construction route one northbound is closed, exit off oxford valley and reenter oxford valley in both directions and now just north bound side. refur facing on the schuylkill eastbound between gulph mills and belmont and gladwynn and blue route you can see some cones still on the roadway but it will in the slow you down just yet, it will maybe deeper in the 5:00 but this is what you are working with congestion levels are just not out there. ninety-five south coming around s curve, your neighbors out there this morning looking good there, construction crew is here roosevelt boulevard northbound between oxford circle and cottman avenue outer lanes right now are closed, excuse me, but looking outside, betsy ross bridge, one area will start to get slow too but not until, right around 5:30 we will see a switch but betsy ross bridge two lanes westbound within lane ease bun closed and more construction in the next 10 minutes, jim, over to you. >>> well, this little piggy's back home new jersey state troopers found this piglet last thursday, he was running around, commercial township in cumberland county and they named him norris. one trooper with experience with farm animals took him home and cared for him. troopers looked for other and soon farmer came looking for him and now norris is back home. >> adorable. >> cute stuff. >> well, coming up in the next hour of cbs-3 "eyewitness news" is there only one winner to the giant power ball jackpot and we are live with where that winning ticket is sold. >>> who could forget this dramatic video right here near major new developments in the case of the car that plunged from a parking garage. >>> there are new developments this morning in the controversy surrounding former 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick we will have details when we come right back. >>> well, this is one lucky store, is there only one, jackpot, winning ticket for last night's, power ball, where we're live with more on where it was sold and tell you where, one and two million-dollar winners could be today. >>> a tragic accident, overnight in south philadelphia, youngoy now fighting for his life, police say he mistakenly shot himself in the face, we are live with an update on his condition. >>> we are getting closer to the weekend and fall-like temperatures on the horizon get ready for sunshine and lower humidity today. >>> it is thursday, august between the fourth good morning i'm jim donovan. >>> i'm rahel son
young, very young children in the hospital and there is a gun in the house, it is very important that gun, be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> reporter: one other way to render your weapon safe philadelphia sheriff's office gives away free gun locks no questions asked, live from the children's hospital of philadelphia, henry rossoff for cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >>> a 14 year-old girl distract by her cell phonies struck by a car in montgomery...
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. >> we have five young, very young, children in the house and there is a gun in the house, that is very important that gun be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> police say bye was rushed to methodist hospital by family members and quickly transferred to children's hospital. despite income critical condition we are told the boy is conscious and expected to survive. >>> surprise guilty plea by david creato, junior, camden county father accused of killing his three-year old son creato who was set to go on trial next month pleaded guilty to manslaughter avoiding a possible murder conviction. he faces 10 years behind bars after admit to go playing a role in the death of his son brandon back in october of 2015. creato's first trial ended in a hung jury. >> if he had not admitted to anything he could not get benefit of this deal. it would have been irresponsible and foolish for him not to take this deal. >> his body was found in the park half mile from his dad's haddon township home. creato will be sentenced on september 29th. >>> in lighter news, small town of water
. >> we have five young, very young, children in the house and there is a gun in the house, that is very important that gun be in a safe location where children don't have access to it. >> police say bye was rushed to methodist hospital by family members and quickly transferred to children's hospital. despite income critical condition we are told the boy is conscious and expected to survive. >>> surprise guilty plea by david creato, junior, camden county father accused of...
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young young islands, the 2014 sony cyberattack that drove a film from theaters across the country and took a big bite out of our own freedom of expression. the 2015 landline incident that blue the legs off two south korean and cos. the chemical perforation of syria killing scores of children in that country, the burglary of the bangladesh bank. the attack that killed kim jong un? don't take this as an endorsement of preemptive war. i fully endorse the vision of what we call strategic compassion. there is a great think tank a buzzword for someone. but look. let's not -- i need to be convinced by someone that deterrence is working. >> is it fair to say deterrence has not? >> my definition of deterrence is not a perfect one but is the avoidance of a second korean war which i'm not saying -- josh is around this morning. that there have obviously been cases where north korea -- north korea tends to do things it figures it can get away with and that is what we have to be, their resourceful, cunning, clever but fundamentally if my definition, have we avoided another full-scale war on the peninsula, the answer is yes. maybe that is too starkest definition but i can think of things being far worse than they are. does it work perfectly? no, it does not work perfectly but i would say big picture it has. and -- i would say if we are moving toward where that is our policy perhaps the definition changes which gets into josh's point which is it should be to deter north korea from doing things against american interests. the only thing not on the list was developing a uranium enrichment program when we thought everything was hunky-dory during the great framework. the question is if this is our policy whether that is our policy for containment on the road toward denuclearization, stopping the next korean war or is the standard ensuring they don't do anything against us, america or its allies. >> your point is well taken. clearly the requirements, my definition of deterrence or anything else, the requirements, we have 2 up our game. that is self-evident. there cannot be a situation in which north korea concludes that it is not in some significant measure to be held accountable for its actions so we are in a new environment, what samantha mentioned as well. this is an extraordinarily capable place. and we have tended historically to be far too dismissive of north korea. >> deterrence has worked well on us. we have been phenomenally deterrent and over the last 25 years there has been actions we haven't wanted to take because they seem very ugly but over 25 years what has occurred is the choices of options for us have been more restricted. this happens in a foreign war, of course that is incredibly important but if you take a slightly more encompassing view of deterrence in terms of the adversaries capability, intentions and will, clearly the answer is no, it hadn't worked because on every single dimension especially on the cyberfront, there will is there, intentions are there and capabilities ramping up. >> next question if anyone else has a question. right here. >> good morning. i have two questions. first, for the trump administration the condition the us provided, you have to give up your nuclear program but this seems to be impossible so actually to some extent we have to admit they have this nuclear power. do you think it is possible in the near future that the trump administration will to some extent change or say that it is possible -- as long as you can stop developing your power there would be this chance for dialogue, do you think there's a possibility there and if not do you think there is a dead end there and the second question is for anthony. you mentioned sections of the chinese entities to think it is to undermine relations between the us and china. for trump and his administration it will continue to expand this kind of sanctions like you mentioned to areas like key banks in china. >> i would say quickly that the administration, to my observation and awareness has groped its way towards trying to get a consistent message of discipline is the argument, there hasn't been a lot. there has been very little depending which day of the weekend who you are listening to you could hear very different things from the administration. that said, i don't think there is anything -- i may be wrong, that the administration indicated, unless you, quote, give up your nuclear weapons capability, i don't know how we would define that that there are no circumstances under which we would have, quote, dialogue. look at what secretary of state rex tillerson said as an example of that. there is a lot of wiggle room, flexibility in what he said, so at some level that is a recognition that wherever we may be headed and no one is assuming at this point as a precondition that you will see these things go away. but you might look at various kinds of activities and the like but i wouldn't characterize it the way you did but i would say this. it is terribly important for the trump administration to the degree that it can to have a coherent message. i don't hear it, not yet. >> on that there was some confusion when secretary tillerson went to asia, i would say it is not a precondition but if we are going to have a repeat of the past two major times we tried to do this we are going to fail. only way negotiations with north korea will work is if north korea demonstrates a commitment to denuclearization and that will come with a large bill on the us side. to your question on china, these are companies and individuals and banks that are violating us law, companies that advertise themselves as the key conduit between north korea and china. these are companies capable people are discovering on their own. the largest bank in the world has more customers than the united states as citizens in this country could certainly use some of their economic power to look at these networks. that is the way to avoid these sanctions. the chinese have had numerous opportunities to do that and response to this week's sanctions have just been rhetoric from the chinese side. the suggestions that the chinese are going to harm of the relationship has been overblown. >> how do we address china's concerns if they do comply and freeze north korea that your regime ultimately collapses and millions of north koreans stream over the border and it creates all kinds of instability for china. how do we argue they are not doing something that could jeopardize their own interests. >> on the issue with north koreans streaming over the border, that is something the united states and china should start talking about right now, something the chinese don't want to have those conversations because it suggests regime change or regime transformation, that is the ultimate way toward denuclearization so on the chinese side if they would be open to those conversations we might have to have those and we are at the very beginning of this escalation. at some point-the chinese and the north koreans will change their approach. we don't have to get to the most extreme measures at the beginning of this process. >> a couple things. the image of millions of north koreans streaming across the chinese border is one of the oldest clichÉs of conversations about north korea. we don't think about it, we just say it. very unlikely to happen even in a situation of regime collapse. anyone who has worked with refugees around the world knows people do not up and leave their homes and become destitute residents of refugee camps unless they have to do it to save their own lives. unless there is a civil war in north korea in which thousands of people are dying as in syria you are not going to see that scenario. that said, the chinese don't want to talk about this. i agree with anthony that it is difficult, any understanding of history leads us to the conclusion that the regime in north korea as it is today is not going to last forever. it's ending will create challenges and problems and therefore the united states, china, if we are going to be responsible powers we need to talk about the contingencies and understand what our respective interests are in that situation and try to diminish the level of mistrust the chinese have about what we might do. >> there are, shall we say to use the term the chinese like to use, contradictions in chinese policy of a very profound sort although the chinese don't like to talk about it. they have had, i have written about this. we have this all from records, diplomatic archives and the like, the chinese have their own failure with north korea that has been very profound, going back to the earliest days, setting aside the frictions of the 50s and 60s but beginning with deng xiaoping, trying to show that kim il sung, once you could achieve if you changed your orientation and without getting into the gory details, that failed profoundly. it failed again after kim jong-il had a stroke. the chinese made a calculation, you get this youngkid who spent time in switzerland. maybe this time the system will open up. it didn't happen that way. particularly after the execution of -- the chinese are reluctant to there is this. what we need is a private or dare i say confidential discussion with china because the other aspect, this is a big puzzle, for all the arguments about chinese assertiveness and big bed china, if i could use a phrase from richard nixon, when it comes to north korea china is a pitiful helpless giant, they -- paying said things to north korea -- to president obama, he said comparable things to donald trump, that basically -- this kid bite the hand that feeds him, not only is he ungrateful but he is putting at risk x why the. but paying for reasons that we don't have time to explore, dips his toe in the water and pulled them out and i do get it, the chinese are not looking for convulsive upheaval if they can avoid it. they remind us they are the ones with the 850 mile border with north korea, it is an, quot
young young islands, the 2014 sony cyberattack that drove a film from theaters across the country and took a big bite out of our own freedom of expression. the 2015 landline incident that blue the legs off two south korean and cos. the chemical perforation of syria killing scores of children in that country, the burglary of the bangladesh bank. the attack that killed kim jong un? don't take this as an endorsement of preemptive war. i fully endorse the vision of what we call strategic...
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young people, front line people, expand medicaid coverage of trauma informed counseling and services to more schools. enable more kids to benefit from these curriculum. provide proven mental health perhaps to help young people. young people are 21 more likely to go to a school clinic than another clinic for care. we want to make sure we're there to help them. our bill will enlist community leaders. jay and joy luster, i met jay in the course of my education, started a project, com classrooms. thousands of students in chicago are taking advantage of that from now. mentors from the ymca urban warriors programs. coach wayne garden, and mike like mike, he has been on front lines of battle 42 years, am i right, wayne on that? he moved into lawndale neighborhood, raised his family there and never left. wayne, thank thank you for all u have done with mike and others in the fate community. [applause] one of my friend went to jerusalem jerusalem, saw a program there dealing with trauma and violence decided to bring it back here. let me give a shoutout to pastor chris harris in bright star church in brownsville. chris, thank you so much. [applause] we need to have the best practices come out of these experiences and ones we
young people, front line people, expand medicaid coverage of trauma informed counseling and services to more schools. enable more kids to benefit from these curriculum. provide proven mental health perhaps to help young people. young people are 21 more likely to go to a school clinic than another clinic for care. we want to make sure we're there to help them. our bill will enlist community leaders. jay and joy luster, i met jay in the course of my education, started a project, com classrooms....
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they went through congress but they haven't been softened and nuff for senior opinion figures young claude young the e.u. commission president saying that it's if there was any any impact on european businesses that there would be a response within days now what type of response is still unknown at the nuclear option could be the one not many people would want to go down would be the implementation of sanctions by the european union on the united states or on u.s. interests but a lot of this comes down to gas and energy supply and the amount that europe relies on russia for that of course it's also raised questions over the reasoning behind these particular sanctions because one of the alternate main supply is could of course be imports of u.s. gas are we now are joined by paul gunter of american businessmen and member of several russian border thanks for coming and joining us here in our international the studio today discussing all this and see russia sanctions are also to iran and north korea and so on and so forth trump himself called this bill significantly from. that's the case why did he
they went through congress but they haven't been softened and nuff for senior opinion figures young claude young the e.u. commission president saying that it's if there was any any impact on european businesses that there would be a response within days now what type of response is still unknown at the nuclear option could be the one not many people would want to go down would be the implementation of sanctions by the european union on the united states or on u.s. interests but a lot of this...
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young. well -- [ laughter ] young as in, like, um, young as in, like, under the age of, you know, legal. [ laughter- okay, i was 16 years old. >> jimmy: okay, good. >> that's what i mean. >> jimmy: yeah, that's perfect. yeah. you're 16. >> i was young. >> jimmy: yeah, yeah, yeah. >> i was 16. >> jimmy: well, i'm 17. so i get it. that makes sense. >> i was barely driving. [ light laughter ] barely driving. >> jimmy: yeah, yeah, yeah. i want to talk to you about -- you have two really cool movies, very interesting movies. "to the bone," the first one i want to talk to you about -- this is about eating disorders. >> mm-hmm. it's about a young -- yeah, a a young woman suffering with anorexia who goes into a rehab facility to get better. >> jimmy: you're getting great reviews for that. and congratulations on that. >> thank you. >> jimmy: what made you want to do that? is it -- >> yeah, no, i've been very vocal recently about my experiences with eating disorders myself, as a a teenager. and i think it's -- you know, it's a subject matter that's considered quite taboo to talk about but it's so important t
young. well -- [ laughter ] young as in, like, um, young as in, like, under the age of, you know, legal. [ laughter- okay, i was 16 years old. >> jimmy: okay, good. >> that's what i mean. >> jimmy: yeah, that's perfect. yeah. you're 16. >> i was young. >> jimmy: yeah, yeah, yeah. >> i was 16. >> jimmy: well, i'm 17. so i get it. that makes sense. >> i was barely driving. [ light laughter ] barely driving. >> jimmy: yeah, yeah, yeah. i want...
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Aug 25, 2017
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young tomorrow. and canoeists and wheat and jimmy young have won the first gold medals in the canoe sprint world championships in the czech republic. young that is all from sports stay with me, will carry. the team, it is good night. —— will perry. lots of events and sport and we can. we will look at the uk forecast in a moment. first of all, i will show you the latest satellite picture of will perry. you see a defined by developing there. it is strengthening and has strengthened over the last few hours. but this is a rainfall forecast. it will still be rating in texas into the start of next week. catastrophic, life—threatening flooding forecast asa life—threatening flooding forecast as a result of the prolific rain. a few showers around for us. parts of scotland, working through northern england, and some will be had tomorrow morning. a scattering of showers in the north—east of scotland, the north—east of england, the pennines, but elsewhere, it is mainly dry. if you get a shower, it won't last long. a mixture of cloud and sunshine. 18 is a low 20s. cricket continuing at headingley, and it is looking fine to the next few days. is warmi
young tomorrow. and canoeists and wheat and jimmy young have won the first gold medals in the canoe sprint world championships in the czech republic. young that is all from sports stay with me, will carry. the team, it is good night. —— will perry. lots of events and sport and we can. we will look at the uk forecast in a moment. first of all, i will show you the latest satellite picture of will perry. you see a defined by developing there. it is strengthening and has strengthened over the...
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Aug 10, 2017
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i can see that, but are you saying that young teenagers, teenagers and young adults, beautiful women youngevidence for that with police reports and, you know, what have you. but specific to the fashion industry. specific to the fashion industry. specific to the fashion industry, there is, you know, what i'm saying is the environment is created where there is more possibility of that happening, and more could be done by the agencies to keep these girls safer. and of course anyone can set up safer. and of course anyone can set up as an agent, anyone safer. and of course anyone can set up as an agent, anyone can safer. and of course anyone can set up as an agent, anyone can set up as if the dog about. yougov yeah. —— can set up as a photographer. yeah. would more regulation help? there is regulation at the moment, there is a code of employment agencies, and the employment business regulation is 2003, and what that seeks to do is it seeks to put some kind of duty on agencies, that is to save modelling agencies, that is to save modelling agencies, to protect models. so for example they have got
i can see that, but are you saying that young teenagers, teenagers and young adults, beautiful women youngevidence for that with police reports and, you know, what have you. but specific to the fashion industry. specific to the fashion industry. specific to the fashion industry, there is, you know, what i'm saying is the environment is created where there is more possibility of that happening, and more could be done by the agencies to keep these girls safer. and of course anyone can set up...
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he was as young as young as two years old when his parents took him to iraq and to fight but the truly remarkable return story here is the story of the two sisters that you've seen the clip as well deja and fatima know what they're both from the russians republic of dagestan and their former neighbor and playmate a seven year old neighbor and playmate recognized them in one of our videos and she showed the video to their grandparents so we were we went to film the grandparents and then showed the vast video to the sisters check it out. buried in there under the gun for an attacker look at the new border usually gated area in fear that if you know what their school photo shoot all the time go and if it does god quickly i too might get discouraged he was. looking at privacy. mom approach it could mean for those who put them on the screen while maliciously just so. this was a mom when you only have a mom or dad. and then there's a. new person if you coached together i did. stoop. look at these girls they're what probably five maybe seven years old so imagine just being taken from home and
he was as young as young as two years old when his parents took him to iraq and to fight but the truly remarkable return story here is the story of the two sisters that you've seen the clip as well deja and fatima know what they're both from the russians republic of dagestan and their former neighbor and playmate a seven year old neighbor and playmate recognized them in one of our videos and she showed the video to their grandparents so we were we went to film the grandparents and then showed...
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young as young as two years old when his parents took him to iraq and to fight i still but the truly remarkable return story here is the story of the two sisters that you've seen the clip as well deja and. now what they're both from the russians republic of dagestan and their former neighbor and playmate a seven year old neighbor and playmate recognize them in one of our videos and she showed the video to their grandparents so we were we went to film the grandparents and then showed the vast video to the sisters who are in. their care than they were. further there if you know that's what they're for school for sure you know what i'm going to expect that god quickly i too might get discouraged he. looking at privacy. mom of course it could mean. the school mom allegedly just so. this was a mom i know never. did. and then there's a. new person if you coach to go to. just don't do. look at these girls there were probably five maybe seven years old so imagine just being taken from home and taken miles away to another part of the world in a war zone and spend like almost half of your life there i mean just remembering your former peaceful past is remarkable in itself given all the iran is experienced these children have been through what kind of mental and physical state are the in when they get home. really their mental and physical health well they've been in or in an orphanage so it's kind of better like for example miriam when she was just brought to one of the orphanages she was in such distress she could barely say her name but still when she calmed down a little bit when professionals work with her this is the story that she told us. they each. day it would. look it over no matter what over there just to go there when they chose that and that. will. kill you ok. so these five children their home now they're safe the have a family again but it's important to remember that this is not the case for the many orphans who are still in iraq who still have who still have not been recognized so this is there's still a lot of work to be done. meanwhile in the city of mosul where those orphans we just saw managed to escape the u.s. led operation to liberate it from i saw has been declared a success despite the inconceivable human cost it was once home to around it here million people mark is in mosul to witness the aftermath a word of warning you might find the content of the report upsetting. he kept this up for a needy ten months. u.s. led coalition and the rockies won but you can still smell the ashes this probably won't shock you the destruction in mosul a city in ruins it's already been shown you've probably also heard about the thousands killed the civilian suffering what you will likely haven't heard of is the smell it's noisy eating repulsive and it's everywhere the sort of smell that makes us in stink these sick the smell of rotting bodies. the sickly odor permeates near the entirety of the old city under the rubble hundreds and hundreds of corpses jihad ists as well as civilians families this is what rescuers have collected just this morning three suspected isis fighters two women and two children this is again just the first few hours of this morning from buildings right around us and they're still not done. most of them are women and children they called this a victory you'd never think the smell of victory would make you rich. forty. five. i was. covering the market even the collection they did what was. it describable this is what they do day long day route i did you see it was not the type. it's hard. work in more ways than one there are booby traps and they exploded jet bombs rockets shells and munitions and the bodies decomposing in the sweltering heat. there was no precision here these was carpet bombing annihilation hundreds buried under rubble hundreds blocks in basements starving choking to death it will take months to dig up all the bodies months more of trauma. what i see here makes me cry you can bring anyone here and they will break down in tears because we are all human beings. there are some things you couldn't sail camera like the fact that he and many rescuers have trouble sleeping after all they see and no wonder it is after all a city of corpses of sea from mosul iraq. a libyan a mom and switzerland is causing outrage over reports he's preaching messages of hate against the society that's taken him in and also that he's been provided with benefits including unemployment payments we've spoken to georg has led the editor of swiss prime time current affairs t.v. program which obtained the old year of the a man allegedly calling to destroy thorough called nonbelievers be found out that the man who calls himself up on what on originally from libya is preaching hate in a mosque into said to be you have to alter recording he is saying several things for example they are asked to destroy them all and get back to his glory they also found out that he is tearing several times to syria to preach in a private islam t.v. station that is telling also to saudi arabia we are ready. he's a tour guide for believers in make up rejected documents on several levels before publishing we have to be very very sure at the moment to put on what's on he's still one of the main subject of the public discussion it is a problem of course to diversity to freedom of speech and to democratic rules or strong of an open society of course and hate speech ing is bringing it in danger of course now according to the audio recording obtained by this with t.v. channel the preacher has called for all the enemies of islam to be punished including jews christians hindus shia muslims and russians and he also believes those who befriends nonbelievers all cursed so let's take a closer look at the a man whose words are stirring up such anger his name is abu down he came to switzerland via multi and italy around two decades ago explaining that he'd been pursued by the libyan authorities after being given residency status he's since received over half a million euros in social benefits the or counsellor again says it's outrageous for the a mom to threaten the society he's living in. never learned truman or french so it was not possible to integrate him in the top market so it was not possible that he has got to work so he got this social welfare of course the views are not excluding him it is from the social welfare particle of the morning exactly from the society he is preaching against already before the investigation to all federal authorities who are excluding. from startles next steps are in discussion. belgian police have launched investigations into one hundred eighty nine terror related incidents since the beginning of twenty seventeen as according to the country's federal prosecutor that means an average of twenty three cases are opened every month peter all of a has the details. the focus has switched away from trying to look at boats that perhaps could trying come from europe to go to turkey to cross the border to become what was known as foreign fighters in syria that shifted away now following the most recent terror attacks that we've seen if we look at manchester if we look at the boss alone at these were all done in-house as it were they were done in country and that's why the belgian police have switched their focus particularly if we look at a boss alone a terrorist cell that was uncovered in to the north of the catalan capital there abdel barky s.r.t. was named as the the ringleader the ringmaster the radicalize are now within a community that was well pretty well integrated and that's why what the authorities are wanting to see is a register of just who comes and gives speeches now the reason for this is of course that a saturday himself had actually been in belgium but before the attacks took place the bombings at the airport and at the and the metro system in brussels what the belgian prosecutors are putting forward is that they want to see a register of just which foreign in a coming into their country and giving speeches i will ask the muslim executive to tell every mosque in belgium who the rooted most remote to report but. ultimately though this is well it's the belgian authorities looking at the threat that exists and how that threat is changed and looking at how they can adapt and develop their tactics to stop further possible terror attacks. civilians have been killed in a suspected thousand dead coalition as strike on yemen's capital medics they at least fourteen people including children died in a bombing in on friday morning we should warn you the pictures were about to show are disturbing. middle east correspondent paula has more on friday's deadly bombing in yemen this follows a suspected saudi led air strikes overnight thursday into the early hours of friday morning now rescuers say that they continuing to pull bodies to residential buildings this happened in the southern neighborhoods of the yemenite capital of sana'a in what is distinctly ways eventually area there are no military installations they have whatsoever most of the people that say they are pulling a woman and children. they targeted this house in the middle of the night so why would they do that there were no soldiers or officials there only civilians. there were families in this house women children why bomb women and children now this comes after the united nations launched a probe into another suspected saudi led coalition bombing earlier in the week that happened on a hotel in the capital and in that incident some forty one people were killed many of them also women and children our office in yemen has been gathering more information about an asteroid by coalition forces a hotel in some governorate on wednesday the twenty third of august in all these cases in which civilians were killed and injured witnesses told the yemen team that had been no warnings that in the attack was imminent it comes against the backdrop of a diet humanitarian situation that is really just been getting worse since the saudi made coalition began its strikes back in two thousand and fifteen there were thousands of people who have been killed there are millions of people who are starving without access to basic necessities. we and all of this has led to an outbreak of cholera we are hearing from the world health organization that they have some half a million suspected cases of people suffering from cholera that they are aware of we are also hearing from the red cross which says that some fifty foot seven percent of people don't have access to clean water and roughly the same number of people are suffering from famine so certainly a diet humanitarian situation in yemen as we witness yet again fresh air strikes now it hasn't been established whether riyadh was actually behind friday's strike but the saudi coalition's campaign has been largely criticized since its intervention in twenty fifteen despite that the gulf not likely still enjoys the support of many western countries earlier we spoke to a coordinator for the international red cross she describes the situation in son are for us to try again three main buildings in the neighborhood residential area which is really nearby and as i am actually leaving and some are we heard them pretty loud and around two o'clock in the morning those targets they are not seeing hours military objectives are such and that civilians are the most people who suffered from the dark and for sure this is something which is unacceptable and this is against the international military rule to do it is that really got us. as you know yemen is having this current war since more than two years the public health system is almost collapsing. the staff the medical staff is not paid for almost one year they are almost working on a voluntary basis they don't have medication many people are suffering from lack of insulin which is not existing or all actually treatment for dialysis and one of the reasons why be needed to step further in this response and. to bring it to even end so long last year and this scare in two years to the country. americans are making a stand to say free speech is more important than offending any individual or group that's at least according to the latest survey by post around misson those who responded are also off if they would be willing to die to defend the right to free speech with seventy three percent of respondents saying they would or less discuss this further now in bring in our guest director of the u.s. middle east alliance to support john had john and also tighe barry from the code pink movement you're both very welcome to the program it's very good to see you now we're seeing there's been a two percent rise since twenty fourteen in americans who believe free speech is more important than offending others isn't that a significant at this moment in time a question to john hunter please first show i think that shows that americans still firmly believe in the right of free speech in trying in our first amendment to the constitution and despite the left's war on free speech. that the american people stand firmly in the camp of being able to express themselves freely is such a fundamental right it's a god given right and americans hold dear it's something that we've fought for and that we're not going to relinquish easily tighe barry do you agree with john. well of course not but i also find it unusual that it's a god given right i think it's a right that all people around the world and especially americans hold dear the fact that we can speak truth to power but we never the founders of the constitution and the authors never envisioned that the the the provocateurs the most the person that would use hate speech would be sitting in the white house they never understood that the weaponized or of this free speech mentality would be in the white house and a handful of those who supposedly are using free speech but basically are provoked tours and strategist a handful of people who are trying to provoke violence and to disrupt and dismantle democracy in the world so i don't i suppose the question is whether you know that knowing a tween free speech and hate speech could and should both be allowed. i mean listen sure sure there's been a constitutional law on on not being able to cross fire in a crowded building etc etc but your other guest has a comment about the weaponize or of free speech in the white house talking about how you hate speech with veterans that is laughable. trump condemned everything went on in charlottesville and look what happened a few days later in boston where. i'm located people call for free speech rally in boston there was cordoned off by the police you couldn't even attend the rally and forty thousand strong came out to condemn those from the far left funded by george soros and i'm sure the other gases probably receive some funding from george soros those people who hold the free speech near and dear we just do it out of out of passion for for i again our god given right that are trying to knock. constitution but we're not resorting to violence it's always the left that resorts to the violence in boston the anybody walking with the flag anybody showing support for our elected president was attacked the the they showed no tolerance they brook no note dissent they will not accept any anyone's views but their own and if you're going to have. you know the if the powers given to these fascists the left factions in tif and other groups and they also believe that the arbiters of what is acceptable and what is not you going to live in a very repressive society all of the soviet union china etc etc will not be able to speak out the people who speak and speak for for free speech who call out the haters they will be called haters just like the whole movement to criticize to be in the criticism of islam islamic fundamentalist i'm sorry it's only been said time to me live at c.n.n. world. what is right is wrong yes i mean obviously this is this is what i'm talking about the weaponized station of free speech using false narratives cut saying that were funded by soros i could say i was out on the natal send or some of the other rich right people that fund these people let's talk about boston bust and a handful of haters people who who are against you will very much it all with a hater of power what is your evidence and surely hater they will cry oh sure everyone is your evidence for the waiters these these handful of people that showed up in boston where forty thousand strong came out peacefully nonviolently protesting these provocateurs that i was in charlotte is not at the least are they were not beaten by these by these provocateurs there's this handful of people compared to the thousands that showed up to. and the people from religious groups from free speech groups from peace groups that showed up to nonviolently protest these hate filled groups that showed up with weapons sticks mace they had their own access to tear gas these are the people that are showing up on the other side there are a small handful of provocateurs they have these people like milo and steve bannon and richard spencer these are all right supposedly these guys are. glue klux klan these guys are nazis these guys are people that want to take away your freedom of speech later in life yes they are screaming fire in a crowded theater that's what they're doing they're trying to provoke did that happen boy it happened in charlotte we will see the response of that you will doubt that we are not a fascist a fascist i doze. that perpetuate fascist speech like this gentleman here so i guess the big question is what's the crux to what you're writing for the great work fascist speech that i promote that's a lie that is a lie are you just that you called me about s. and i what you are defending people like your garbage all you like but you're jumping on about your mileage like stephen bannon these people that were go organizing in in boston this handful of people that were coming out with disgusting signs of naziism things that people fought and died for in the one nine hundred forty often were things that people have bought and died already in the bank when they crushed these words or organization what is your evidence gentlemen if i could bring you back to the wealthy by having run their name on the free from the street i don't want to know whether you think the they were let me read a blank and were told that it was not more real in the us and that will have any real impact if you fast. of course not it's a look at the left wants to erase our history and look at some of these things should be up for discussion whether we should be gratifying those who fought for the confederacy to preserve slavery of course not but you know that your your guests won't tell you who is behind sleeve you of course it was the left it was the democrats who are the party of slavery the party of jim crow they will tell you that the people who stood up for sleep against leverage and been paid for with the a lives with the republicans the conservatives who believe in the sanctity of human life who are now fighting for to make abortion illegal the democratic party of those on the left always took the side of the of the can i order i want is a so this is just all in all it's news why are we listening to this this is you know you know you've already got three balls that's a fact a matter of telling you there's a democratic party is not problem hard already of the day we have no comparison to the to eight hundred sixty s. there is that is america true democratic party and the republican party is that eight hundred sixty s. absolutely effect the people have perpetuated a lot of change but but the ranks of the democratic party and this is the remote their only looked hard at loyalty over all you michael you my friend you in cali hardy of send out there was no part of it really r.d. of series of mentality of slavery that came out of europe tying you there is no hardy atlee who had the defended it that went to war in korea now and say this is all these i want this is exactly is wrong not want to be this is who have been now using freedom the plantation say whatever he wants its another year as i act it's not a factual course and you are here to out of the fact is you want it you want to shut it down let them sad is the fact is there are young might well it could be watching you that are listening to you and you're perpetuating hate speech and why untruths you don't know who i am or what i think and say ok one thing i stand for. to bring it to go ahead i can't talk about the democratic party right here along the grocer and among a lot of people my age is here i said you know did mitt excuse me at tike there's no you have to have a real being how you raise the memorials in public places removed of course whether our leader should go through these dances but symbols your work in. the civil war when he was released the bloodiest war in american he has on which i mean the americans not i was was to when you say that lasted a little years here and organise it was a rehab you have to live with these symbols of racism white.
young as young as two years old when his parents took him to iraq and to fight i still but the truly remarkable return story here is the story of the two sisters that you've seen the clip as well deja and. now what they're both from the russians republic of dagestan and their former neighbor and playmate a seven year old neighbor and playmate recognize them in one of our videos and she showed the video to their grandparents so we were we went to film the grandparents and then showed the vast...