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Apr 25, 2018
04/18
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LINKTV
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yoyou need to youou now bece resisidents a. lang lang today. . iran to deal.. russell's. at leading as. mhm and. eleven and s. around around onon can use these.. michaeluts a yess yeses a nationallyly. when speaking about bangerz. all known the roundd as you do it year round round returnees on the on their weapons and i've got. a long on and i. was gonna honestly because they won't. get around to into medicall t that will allow u to allow a limits is a. it all comes around. the small the outside of that walters is not just in the interesting thing. about a. it's sad that these these. he's only going to comprising as i'm about on a level is in brussels thank y much. we will make me a* towards downtown we all the how allah tensions with. yeah. demonstration. retrieves the count count yeah local police. station and the coming to my my sister called all protest as a decal on the fashion. this conversation. yeah main opposition cecil in a touching announced. reasonings extremist. last night. after almost two weeks. the restrictions the streets three year upon our thirty get. p
yoyou need to youou now bece resisidents a. lang lang today. . iran to deal.. russell's. at leading as. mhm and. eleven and s. around around onon can use these.. michaeluts a yess yeses a nationallyly. when speaking about bangerz. all known the roundd as you do it year round round returnees on the on their weapons and i've got. a long on and i. was gonna honestly because they won't. get around to into medicall t that will allow u to allow a limits is a. it all comes around. the small the...
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Apr 27, 2018
04/18
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LINKTV
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i i i youou know. so you know the afghan leaders there's's a diverget personality i i think think out out into into ththe limelight. country for you. you know you know that if the the structure up for. you know you know has a person. in a regulation which has an intentional. agent outut there very y wel ask from from more more mor. something that's been around round times i've been here years. quest when really how it might change and conglomerates. conference i are and and and you is not trolling able make man i'm trying to read about a y young at heart. somemeone hoses. immediaiate intention and s good scalability issues general clear redditt reddit yeah. rate reliance on the contintt way way but i mean how. old is out now is that would that would require. great deal of this dystopia reddit reddit yes yeah. reliant i but i don't think rhetoric. actually like lightly knowing nothing of course first of all that is between from from our markel. killed it was it was amazing that within my most exciting b
i i i youou know. so you know the afghan leaders there's's a diverget personality i i think think out out into into ththe limelight. country for you. you know you know that if the the structure up for. you know you know has a person. in a regulation which has an intentional. agent outut there very y wel ask from from more more mor. something that's been around round times i've been here years. quest when really how it might change and conglomerates. conference i are and and and you is not...
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65
Apr 6, 2018
04/18
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LINKTV
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when youou put money in,n, youe sosomeone a fr shohower,omome brbread,r a cucup coffee.e. it's just one of the features the bin n hoodestaururan where the rich p pay for the p poor. outside,e, it looks like any otr eatiting place in madrid. but the entire profits made dung t the d go toto pviding free m meals for the p poor ine evening. the proprietor is fatherngngel, a caolic p prit who's s de it hihis mission toto fight povered hunger. faer a angelthe momost imptantnt things herare community, frieship, and gngnity. reporter: gngnity ght seem like a dtant dre to ma ving on thstreet drid haseveralhousand homele people. the modest upturn in the spanish economy has yet to reach them. but they can get help in what's become known as the church o o the poor.. here in n st. antony's's, anyono needs it can bed down, getet a mealal, or simply y celebrate . the church is always open. faer a angelas lononbeen coconcerned about t the needyd ththe marginalized in society. it's's a concern s shared by e francicis. faththerngel: the first ining i heararhim say was thate want a urch tt t
when youou put money in,n, youe sosomeone a fr shohower,omome brbread,r a cucup coffee.e. it's just one of the features the bin n hoodestaururan where the rich p pay for the p poor. outside,e, it looks like any otr eatiting place in madrid. but the entire profits made dung t the d go toto pviding free m meals for the p poor ine evening. the proprietor is fatherngngel, a caolic p prit who's s de it hihis mission toto fight povered hunger. faer a angelthe momost imptantnt things herare community,...
80
80
Apr 2, 2018
04/18
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LINKTV
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youou can only kick a dog so many times and d pretty soon he's going to turn around and bite you. >> we havave a lot ofof people telling us ththat the lanand is morere importanant than i its pple. >> there is no impact from what we have done or whwhat we planan to do in thehe future reregarding uranium m mine development.. >> we need more production, more efficiency, more incentives, and that memeans buildiding a new gegeneration of safe, clc, nuclear p power plants in t this cocountry. >> they're not telling you the truth. i'm realally disgusted, and i'm against this mill. >> ♪ for t the one that fefeels >> i guess, initialally, going into the film, i probably feltt that t the mimill was a bad ide, lilike, why would ananyone want to ushsher back inin an industsy that had obviously shortened people's l lives and had created a a lot of environmentalal havoc inin the area? so, i wasas going to o do the fm in this cocommunity lolooking at the proros and consns withihin that community. but what i found, which surprised me, is ththat in that region, almost everyone was unanimously for thi
youou can only kick a dog so many times and d pretty soon he's going to turn around and bite you. >> we havave a lot ofof people telling us ththat the lanand is morere importanant than i its pple. >> there is no impact from what we have done or whwhat we planan to do in thehe future reregarding uranium m mine development.. >> we need more production, more efficiency, more incentives, and that memeans buildiding a new gegeneration of safe, clc, nuclear p power plants in t this...
290
290
Apr 5, 2018
04/18
by
KQED
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eye 290
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>>coecrrif youou ye hav a 25% tariff on $5il0 bli oonfmp idorteds goo o nuret cost isut abo $152. llion to.s uon. csursme or buneesssd an that wl ilbe abebsord by one ethos o.tw that's -- in ntcoext,s it' bt .1% of p,gd lessn tha .1% ofp.gd just for ntcoext,t' is the equivalent of autbo27in 1 cent es.e in ginasole icpr to s t'heto t gngoi completely damagthe ece ony.om erth ae is sllmari pce that y ou fwillee l. . >> rht >> i butt' tseo th gngoi to unrmde tineheec y.onom s>>os it' at ttha prerovalbali so cuphaan tt lbwiosur rs has een hdiolngp u to talkhe t alumuminar tiffs they have been imngposi erthe. you belveie we cldou feel itf i the erwerext edendedera wars a sendcor ohi trd impitos oionf ?ftarises y >> acextly. yri isk se.ther hat's why saw t mheartske g. this moinrn th mkearrets a jitryte whent i comes toth.is th a nreotd useto thisle sty of negotiaonti , ik.thin y wouereo t see an eslaontif, iou ye wero t see tlexacyha weet s saw today, a a thimis te -- a f titorat t respseonn the iwot beuld a erconcn. ats thi time it is not a n. rnc its we grow theno ecomy,s i se tory t
>>coecrrif youou ye hav a 25% tariff on $5il0 bli oonfmp idorteds goo o nuret cost isut abo $152. llion to.s uon. csursme or buneesssd an that wl ilbe abebsord by one ethos o.tw that's -- in ntcoext,s it' bt .1% of p,gd lessn tha .1% ofp.gd just for ntcoext,t' is the equivalent of autbo27in 1 cent es.e in ginasole icpr to s t'heto t gngoi completely damagthe ece ony.om erth ae is sllmari pce that y ou fwillee l. . >> rht >> i butt' tseo th gngoi to unrmde tineheec y.onom...
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43
Apr 14, 2018
04/18
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BLOOMBERG
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youou look at your phone, send something.out 5g is that for the first time we will see machines communicating with each other over mobile networks. being 100d end up times faster than what we have now, with speeds that could reach 20 gigabit per second. in plain english, that means downloading of full hd movie in seconds. it will also increase total bandwidth, which we will need to accommodate the growing internet of things. we are talking about a class of devices like internet connected refrigerators, thermostats, dog collars. but they will enable many more. >> things like utility, factories, machines that are not connected, suddenly they are all connected and have real-time monitoring. >> but perhaps the biggest advance will be a huge reduction in communication like time, known as latency. the network of driverless cars will need the speed up to ping each other multiple times per second to avoid collision. near instantaneous data transfer could allow doctors to perform surgery remotely with robotics elbow. so how will this
youou look at your phone, send something.out 5g is that for the first time we will see machines communicating with each other over mobile networks. being 100d end up times faster than what we have now, with speeds that could reach 20 gigabit per second. in plain english, that means downloading of full hd movie in seconds. it will also increase total bandwidth, which we will need to accommodate the growing internet of things. we are talking about a class of devices like internet connected...
43
43
Apr 9, 2018
04/18
by
LINKTV
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eye 43
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we can help youou. we can brinn specialists. we can help you set up, under the auspices of the ununion, an enterpririse that wl serve this community in all kinds of ways. and we will go to the community because we're based in it and urge people to buy from this co-op rather than from where they've been buying. we can begin to develop a network." that's what mondragon did. that's how t they grew that way. everybody helped everybody else. i don't know what all the benefits would be, but let me make a suggestion. a labor movement that has been declining without interruption for 50 years better come up with something new because what it's been doing hasn't worked. i'm not being disrespectful. i mean, i don't have the numbers. the graph that i teach in my classes of what has happened to unions is unambmbiguous. ththe line goes m here and it keeps going down. it's long overdue to change the strategica, and here's an idea. and wouldn't it be interesting if unionons became known in america not just for doing the work for collective barg
we can help youou. we can brinn specialists. we can help you set up, under the auspices of the ununion, an enterpririse that wl serve this community in all kinds of ways. and we will go to the community because we're based in it and urge people to buy from this co-op rather than from where they've been buying. we can begin to develop a network." that's what mondragon did. that's how t they grew that way. everybody helped everybody else. i don't know what all the benefits would be, but let...
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Apr 6, 2018
04/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 54
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[applause] though when youou were writing about were working with whatever the latest technologies had to be at the time in the forefront like us right now thinking about artificial intelligence and machine learning it was the same kind of thing when you were working with these technologies. can you talk about how women worked with those technologies and how they use them to make the significant contributions that they did ask >> the telephone was this amazing new technology, the first time they had been used in a war and it meant you could instantly communicate with soldiers in the field they could tell you friendly fire is coming in or there's an opportunit theo advance. sors commands were given by telephone and radio student. voices yet. they were not secure in terms of the security of the communications. it took the army to realize it took a doughboy and that was the work foword for a world war i iy soldier we say g.i. they would save doughboy. it took about 60 seconds to connect a call because you have to talk to somebody and figure out where to send it to come you were handling n
[applause] though when youou were writing about were working with whatever the latest technologies had to be at the time in the forefront like us right now thinking about artificial intelligence and machine learning it was the same kind of thing when you were working with these technologies. can you talk about how women worked with those technologies and how they use them to make the significant contributions that they did ask >> the telephone was this amazing new technology, the first...
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Apr 22, 2018
04/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 49
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you despair sometimes when you think about what youou have to . in some ways you are a novelist because you have your plot but there's also way you can approach that. so there is within that structure some freedom of style that you get to deal with. basically it's grinding. when nixon was in law school they called him gus which stood for gloomy gus which is just his personality but they also call them iron sides because he did not have a quick intellect. what he was was a great writer and he would go to the library and he would sit there and he would study and he would go to his part-time job and then he go back to his rented room in the woods. there's almost no part of this life that you can't spin on but there's a lot of craft as well. >> and timewise again just to give people a a sense of the tie commitment. >> my first three books have been six years from the time and ideas goes off and it hits the stores. >> it's quite extensive. before i asked jonathan i'm going toth alert you that in a w minutes i'm goinge, to ask for some questions from th
you despair sometimes when you think about what youou have to . in some ways you are a novelist because you have your plot but there's also way you can approach that. so there is within that structure some freedom of style that you get to deal with. basically it's grinding. when nixon was in law school they called him gus which stood for gloomy gus which is just his personality but they also call them iron sides because he did not have a quick intellect. what he was was a great writer and he...
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Apr 27, 2018
04/18
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FOXNEWSW
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here youou have an american company incubated in america by americans under the protection of american now working to undermine the most sacred of american rights, which is the freedom of expression. yet the congress, which is run by republicans right now, is doing precisely nothing about this. when you ask them, they mumble something about free markets and get back to deciding another tax cut for companies like youtube. the rest of us who live here, the one to care about free speech, are left to fend for ourselves. the big digital monopolies demand that we conform to their worldviews and they shut us down when we dissent. they have too much power. they are a threat to this country. it is time to complain while we still can. youtube isn't the only politicized part of google. internal memo written by google revealed by a lawsuit, managers are told to avoid rewarding people for following the white male culture of america, aspects included the meritocracy, belief and objectivity, individual achievement. ideas that nobody thought were re-specific until now. it's hard to believe this is eve
here youou have an american company incubated in america by americans under the protection of american now working to undermine the most sacred of american rights, which is the freedom of expression. yet the congress, which is run by republicans right now, is doing precisely nothing about this. when you ask them, they mumble something about free markets and get back to deciding another tax cut for companies like youtube. the rest of us who live here, the one to care about free speech, are left...
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Apr 20, 2018
04/18
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 99
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have youou seen the resemblance? there it is. if you are wondering what happened since the o.j.erica," i think it's gary. >> mark: data stormy's husband. amazingly. stormy has done a pervert, was a sketch of her husband. i wonder how many wives across america was brilliant. the left is waging an all-out war on conservative speech, a victim of that crusade is here to talk to us next. ♪im wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards. switching to allstate is worth it. where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. with exciting new dishes like lobdueling lobster tails.r. and lobster truffle mac & cheese. classics like lobster lover's dream are here too. so enjoy these 10 lobsterlicious dishes now. because lobsterfest ends april 22nd. jushis local miracle ear t at helped andrew hear more of the joy in her voice. just one hearing test is all it took for him to hear more of her laug
have youou seen the resemblance? there it is. if you are wondering what happened since the o.j.erica," i think it's gary. >> mark: data stormy's husband. amazingly. stormy has done a pervert, was a sketch of her husband. i wonder how many wives across america was brilliant. the left is waging an all-out war on conservative speech, a victim of that crusade is here to talk to us next. ♪im wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards....
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Apr 5, 2018
04/18
by
CSPAN2
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eye 38
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they ask all kinds of questions and youou have sensors all over the place and they say just relax. >> would you rather kick your dog or your cat. but what does that say about you. >> one thing in the book that i thoughfelt came across in all te right ways in your face and i'm not saying overwhelming that it needs tove be pushed is the perception of women in the intelligence world. it's something we should take more seriously and this started right in the beginning for training officer maybe haven't seen a woman before in his life, explain your first impressions of the cia. >> my instructor was a legend and was retired and told me at one point he'd only known women asoi secretaries and he kept saying are you sure you want to get into operations and i said i think so. but it was myself and another male colleague and we would sit in this little space together and he would face my colleague the entire time and never look at me so that was my introduction. >> you chalk it up to this is an old guy thinking about back in the day but is it fair to say thingsti haven't dramatically changed? >>
they ask all kinds of questions and youou have sensors all over the place and they say just relax. >> would you rather kick your dog or your cat. but what does that say about you. >> one thing in the book that i thoughfelt came across in all te right ways in your face and i'm not saying overwhelming that it needs tove be pushed is the perception of women in the intelligence world. it's something we should take more seriously and this started right in the beginning for training...
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228
Apr 26, 2018
04/18
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> tucker: youou are very deep person.s great to see you. >> thanks, tucker. >> tucker: rapper kanye west did something kind of amazing on twitter and articulated his support for president trump. what ifs tweets read, he is still tweeting right now, "you h trump but the mob cannot make me not to love him. we are both dragon energy. he is my brother. i love everyone. i don't agree with everything everyone does. that's was makes as individuals and we have the right independent thought." the president responded to this by tweeting, "thank you, kanye, very cool." after the tweets, west's twitter following plunged by more than 9 million followers. what do wewe make of all of thi? jason whitlock as an anchor with fox sports 1 and he joins us tonight. so, jason, i'm not sure i understand what is going on here. it seems may be kanye west decided that he is allowed, as a citizen of a free country to, just ate what he wants to say. whatat is your read on this? why did he write this? >> i think he wrote it because it is what he authe
. >> tucker: youou are very deep person.s great to see you. >> thanks, tucker. >> tucker: rapper kanye west did something kind of amazing on twitter and articulated his support for president trump. what ifs tweets read, he is still tweeting right now, "you h trump but the mob cannot make me not to love him. we are both dragon energy. he is my brother. i love everyone. i don't agree with everything everyone does. that's was makes as individuals and we have the right...
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143
Apr 5, 2018
04/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 143
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i doubt youou know their names. i never heard anybody mention that.e hired people to protect those kids, 17 were murdered because they didn't act but it's the nra's fault? that it's insane.e. that is pure politics. you're not taking it seriously if you reach that conclusion. >> there were a lot of people who failed those children that day. some of them were the people who didn't run into the building. a number of them were people who were in the statehouse in tallahassee and at capitol hill in washington, d.c. those people also failed. you could have acted after sandy hooklk. >> tucker: you are defending the people in power, as almost everyone on the left does. the people in power are blameless, they didn't do anything wrong. it is you who have committed no crime whatsoever, the guns in my closet, if i have them, would be no threat to anybody but i have to disarm, for the cops whose job it a was to protect the kid, they are cool. we can't blame them. >> i b didn't say that. i agreed with you. i said they share some blame. i said the blame didn't end w
i doubt youou know their names. i never heard anybody mention that.e hired people to protect those kids, 17 were murdered because they didn't act but it's the nra's fault? that it's insane.e. that is pure politics. you're not taking it seriously if you reach that conclusion. >> there were a lot of people who failed those children that day. some of them were the people who didn't run into the building. a number of them were people who were in the statehouse in tallahassee and at capitol...
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109
Apr 27, 2018
04/18
by
MSNBCW
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and with president trump you have an impest youous leader who wants to make a deal and that's -- >> somebody made a good point when this first came out. it was somebody close to the president. it was an anonymous quote for obvious reasons. listen, have you ever known donald trump to have had a bad in-person meeting with somebody? i want to move to the iran deal because i was stunned today that nobody asked the president about what his secretary of defense said the day before on capitol hill about the iran deal. here it is. >> i have read it now three times, all 156 pages or whatever it is. and i will say that it is written almost with an assumption that iran would try to cheat. so the verification, what is in there, is actually pretty robust. >> that's quite an endorse men of the iran deal, matthew. >> right, and baghdad nikki heyly would disagree, secretary of state mike pompeo would disagree. and national security adviser john bolton would disagree. mattis is going out on limb. part of this axis which includes macron and merkel in order to preserve the deal unlike three to work. >> he inne
and with president trump you have an impest youous leader who wants to make a deal and that's -- >> somebody made a good point when this first came out. it was somebody close to the president. it was an anonymous quote for obvious reasons. listen, have you ever known donald trump to have had a bad in-person meeting with somebody? i want to move to the iran deal because i was stunned today that nobody asked the president about what his secretary of defense said the day before on capitol...
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79
Apr 26, 2018
04/18
by
LINKTV
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eye 79
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as youou may recall, the first executive order, people rushed to the airport in a sense of cass was capapable -- probable n the u.s.s.. shifted to processing were people who are no longer in mid flight are being banned, but people who are banned to stop it is not as visible will stuff that makes it much more difficult to really understand the scope of the human impact the band has had. we thought it was important go to djibouti, which is where many yemeni applicants when to get there visas processed due to the fact the consulate in djibouti itself, the u.s. embassy in in 2015 due town the war in yemen. so many had to travel and make an arduous journey to djibouti in order to finish processing their visa petitions in order to rejoin their families. so most yemenis are actually the direct relatives, children, spouses, of u.s. citizens or u.s. lawful permanent residents. many of them headed to djibouti for their interviews. for the state of the supreme before it wasr lifted on december 4 or afterwards to attend an interview. what happened was the moment the stay was lifted in december, they rece
as youou may recall, the first executive order, people rushed to the airport in a sense of cass was capapable -- probable n the u.s.s.. shifted to processing were people who are no longer in mid flight are being banned, but people who are banned to stop it is not as visible will stuff that makes it much more difficult to really understand the scope of the human impact the band has had. we thought it was important go to djibouti, which is where many yemeni applicants when to get there visas...
179
179
Apr 18, 2018
04/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 179
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she stood, she didn't straddle anything when people appreciated the fact that what you saw was what youou got. i was lucky enough to have a quiet dinner with the president and mrs. bush last month, we went down and did an event at the bush library and the president and mrs. bush asked us up into the apartment they have there. and she looked a little extra frail but, you know, even in the condition that we now know she was in, it was a fun dinner. we talked about old times, we reminisced, we left a littlesc bit.al we talked about what was going on. she never let her personal situation impact the quality of the interaction she had with people. >> tucker:r: she just lived through relief the whole span of modern american history. 92 years. born before the great depression, and a world that no longer exists, she passes in thepa middle of a word that is becoming something completely different. i wonder how she responded to that. what did you make of it? >> tucker, she not only lived through it, she helped shape it. i think she was very aware of what a crucial time that she and the president spe
she stood, she didn't straddle anything when people appreciated the fact that what you saw was what youou got. i was lucky enough to have a quiet dinner with the president and mrs. bush last month, we went down and did an event at the bush library and the president and mrs. bush asked us up into the apartment they have there. and she looked a little extra frail but, you know, even in the condition that we now know she was in, it was a fun dinner. we talked about old times, we reminisced, we...
145
145
Apr 11, 2018
04/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 145
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. >> youou entered into a consent decree with the ftc which carried no financial penalty with facebook, is that correct?, >> is congresswoman, i don't remember if we had a financial penalty. >> you're the ceo ofco a compan you entered into a consent dece decree and you don't remember if there was a financial penalty. f >> i remember the consent degree. >> i would think a financial penalty would be, too.o. okay.y.we theas reasonon you probably dor remember it is because the ftc doesn't have the authority to issue financial penalties for first time violations.s. the reason i'm asking these questions, tsir, is because we continue to have these abuses is and these data breaches, but atm the same timee it doesn't seeme like future activities are so prevented, so i think that one e of the things that we need to look at in the future as we work with you and others in the industry is putting really robust penalties in place in in case of improper actions, and as that's why i asked these askedt questions. >> the gentle lady's time section period. the chair recognizes the whip os the house, mr..
. >> youou entered into a consent decree with the ftc which carried no financial penalty with facebook, is that correct?, >> is congresswoman, i don't remember if we had a financial penalty. >> you're the ceo ofco a compan you entered into a consent dece decree and you don't remember if there was a financial penalty. f >> i remember the consent degree. >> i would think a financial penalty would be, too.o. okay.y.we theas reasonon you probably dor remember it is...
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39
Apr 12, 2018
04/18
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 39
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youou check out tv , can watch us online and check out our charts and graphics. your terminal. you can send your questions. this is bloomberg. ♪ alix: i am watching commodities, don't roll your eyes. david: you are always watching commodities. alix: oil and aluminum off of their highs. this is been a monster week for both. aluminum at one point reaching the highest level since 2012 and oil reaching the highest since 2014. be talking about that on my show, commodities edge at 1:00 p.m. david: we are looking forward to that. how much of this is long-term and how much is short-term? there are threats about syria and pressure with china. fundamental,h is how much is a premium? don't miss that. that is this afternoon. this morning, we will get to bloomberg markets: the open. we've got mike swell of goldman sachs and michael purves of we did and company -- of we didn't -- jonathan: from new york city, i am jonathan ferro. this is the countdown to the open. ♪ coming up -- jonathan: coming up, switching from one narrative to the next. geopolitical risk replacing trade as
youou check out tv , can watch us online and check out our charts and graphics. your terminal. you can send your questions. this is bloomberg. ♪ alix: i am watching commodities, don't roll your eyes. david: you are always watching commodities. alix: oil and aluminum off of their highs. this is been a monster week for both. aluminum at one point reaching the highest level since 2012 and oil reaching the highest since 2014. be talking about that on my show, commodities edge at 1:00 p.m. david:...
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108
Apr 5, 2018
04/18
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 108
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youou want to get further, may argue that we have seen, if you look at big etf's in the u.s., s&p 500tail, as you when retail investors exit, the smart money should be coming back in and vice versa. a good time for smart money to come back in. guy: the most heavily shorted stocks yesterday in the united states rally the most. a squeeze factor. why did that other asset classes play? >> in the fx market, people try to get guidance from what equity markets are doing on volatility is doing. our view is that markets still have a lot of risk. that was the reason we saw a that people said risk or appetite should be into portfolios. we saw yesterday that wears an overreaction to what came out on the trade side. you need to look into what are the implications of what have been trade tariffs. -- ourumnists estimate economist estimate it will be "percent on each side of china and the united states. what the fed was saying, they have a number of a quarter percentage points. that is rounding errors. at the same time, we see the fiscal stimulus coming into the united states, which came effective fr
youou want to get further, may argue that we have seen, if you look at big etf's in the u.s., s&p 500tail, as you when retail investors exit, the smart money should be coming back in and vice versa. a good time for smart money to come back in. guy: the most heavily shorted stocks yesterday in the united states rally the most. a squeeze factor. why did that other asset classes play? >> in the fx market, people try to get guidance from what equity markets are doing on volatility is...
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102
Apr 12, 2018
04/18
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CSPAN
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youou live in an area where are likely to be in poverty, you're likely not to become wealthy. your wealth can be related to the area that you are born in. where you live. there are exceptions. but there are also persons who don't acquire the opportunity to become an exception. your life expectancy can be impacted by where you live. if you live in a war zone, your life expectancy will be impacted. and your personality can be impacted. if you live in a hostile environment, hostility all around you, it's likely to impact your personality. so where you live is important. which is why discrimination in housing is something that should not be tolerated. and i'm proud to say that there was a struggle that was overcome so that we could have this fair housing act. and i'd like to do this now. i'd like to give a bit of history of the fair housing act that was signed into law in 1968. april 11 of 1968. a little bit of history is important because if you understand the history, you can understand why i make the comment that the law itself was written in ink. but it was signed in a sense w
youou live in an area where are likely to be in poverty, you're likely not to become wealthy. your wealth can be related to the area that you are born in. where you live. there are exceptions. but there are also persons who don't acquire the opportunity to become an exception. your life expectancy can be impacted by where you live. if you live in a war zone, your life expectancy will be impacted. and your personality can be impacted. if you live in a hostile environment, hostility all around...
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77
Apr 3, 2018
04/18
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BLOOMBERG
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until theting infrastructure develops around rate, youou get the get the futures trading and then theto contracts and libor eventually gets -- guy: explain the differences. why are we doing this? why is it important? we know the backstory to libor. it is a reference rate and this is not one. well, it is, what it is constructed in a different way. why? aul: libor became theoretical level interbank loans -- into banks between banks. it is also different because it builds with collateral, as it isd to libor, and so supposedly a lot more robust and reliable and has liquidity and backing, and therefore, should be a safer reference rate. tom: and you don't need the tuxedo at lunch to make the number work. has there been a good study of this new reference rate? how many decimals is it off of libor? do we know what the normal differential will be on the two processes? >> one think that will be interesting is to see if it works with the libor spread worth it works independently. that is something we need to watch and we won't know for sure until we start to get a history and people can analyze
until theting infrastructure develops around rate, youou get the get the futures trading and then theto contracts and libor eventually gets -- guy: explain the differences. why are we doing this? why is it important? we know the backstory to libor. it is a reference rate and this is not one. well, it is, what it is constructed in a different way. why? aul: libor became theoretical level interbank loans -- into banks between banks. it is also different because it builds with collateral, as it...
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104
Apr 25, 2018
04/18
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 104
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youou start to see 3.25%, see people calling for the next bear market. and so, it is high. we are in the top quarter. i do not think we are yet seeing 4% ten-year treasuries in the market. staysne: jordan rochester with us for the hour. coming up, the conversation with the leadership of the credit suisse, tidjane thiam. he estimates the share price will have the biggest gain in europe. i've just seen him walk in the door, so we'll be with him shortly. this is bloomberg. ♪ tom: good morning, bloomberg surveillance. thrilled you are with us. thank you for your important comments, usually with alexander campbell. by thehunderstruck response from steve keene, no relation. outally gave a shout during the interview, as we tried to go from the old school thoughts of marx. we will get that out on twitter today. right now from london, jordan rochester with us on the foreign exchange market. the litmus test for the global system. jordan, a little philosophical here. does the secretary of the treasury -- i believe he will chime in in a bit -- does he want a strong
youou start to see 3.25%, see people calling for the next bear market. and so, it is high. we are in the top quarter. i do not think we are yet seeing 4% ten-year treasuries in the market. staysne: jordan rochester with us for the hour. coming up, the conversation with the leadership of the credit suisse, tidjane thiam. he estimates the share price will have the biggest gain in europe. i've just seen him walk in the door, so we'll be with him shortly. this is bloomberg. ♪ tom: good morning,...
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71
Apr 8, 2018
04/18
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LINKTV
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that did the organizing, were 2 other institutions that were important then, and that may susurprise youou. socialist paparties here in the united states and the communist party of the united states were powerful. they had a lot of people,e,nd they worked together with the c.i.o. and together, they went to the government at that time, and they said 2 things: "we represent the mass of working people, anand we don't want toto suffer the way we're suffering in this breakdown of capitalism. you gotta do something." and they addressed themselves to a kind of middle-of-the-road democratatic politician who had just gotten elected president on a program of a balanced budget-- franklin roosevelt. and they said to him, "you've gotta do something for the people." and the socialists and communists said, "you gotta do something for the people," but they added a little barb, "because we think that there's a better system, an alternative system, to capitalism. and if you keep performing as badly as you're doing in the depths of the depression, we're gonna try to establish that alternative." and they poin
that did the organizing, were 2 other institutions that were important then, and that may susurprise youou. socialist paparties here in the united states and the communist party of the united states were powerful. they had a lot of people,e,nd they worked together with the c.i.o. and together, they went to the government at that time, and they said 2 things: "we represent the mass of working people, anand we don't want toto suffer the way we're suffering in this breakdown of capitalism....