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Apr 5, 2024
04/24
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amy: yuval abraham, that is your codirector.l adra accepting the award for best international documentary. can you talk about what he said? >> basel calls for germany to respect you in resolution and stop the arming of israel and he spoke about tens of thousands of palestinians in gaza who were killed and called for his ceasefire. i want to say one last thing when i got back home to jerusalem, i remember -- we were working on the found, me and basel, basel told me when he was a young boy he slept with his shoes on because he knew the army could knock down the door at any time and he was so used to it as a child that he would have shoes on all the time so he would be ready to run if soldiers entered the village. when we were sleeping in masafer yatta, we would always have shoes on because the army entered and took the computer from the house and collected equipment. my house and jerusalem, after all of these things happening i was thinking, i don't have to sleep with shoes on. there is no chance that a foreign military is going t
amy: yuval abraham, that is your codirector.l adra accepting the award for best international documentary. can you talk about what he said? >> basel calls for germany to respect you in resolution and stop the arming of israel and he spoke about tens of thousands of palestinians in gaza who were killed and called for his ceasefire. i want to say one last thing when i got back home to jerusalem, i remember -- we were working on the found, me and basel, basel told me when he was a young boy...
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Apr 28, 2024
04/24
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but yuval, thank you very much for your time. >> thanks, yuval. >> thanks, yuval. >> that's the jewishk you very much. now, folks, i want to play this clip of jacob rees—mogg from yesterday now, benjamin, i'm sure whereas one on this that that's an unacceptable way to treat anybody. never mind an elected representative of the people who was there to debate at a university . and do you think, do university. and do you think, do you worry that universities are not breeding grounds for speech and debate and reaching conclusions on ideas, and actually now of hatred and censorship? yeah. >> i mean, you know, for radio listeners, that was jacob rees—mogg being aggressively harangued by a group of students at cardiff university. and it's, you know, politicians of all different stripes have come out and condemned this because you know, in the light of the two mps that have been murdered, you can't imagine how nerve racking that is. you know, i think what's going on is completely deplorable. it is way beyond the normal, healthy levels of discomfort and debate that universities exist to harbour.
but yuval, thank you very much for your time. >> thanks, yuval. >> thanks, yuval. >> that's the jewishk you very much. now, folks, i want to play this clip of jacob rees—mogg from yesterday now, benjamin, i'm sure whereas one on this that that's an unacceptable way to treat anybody. never mind an elected representative of the people who was there to debate at a university . and do you think, do university. and do you think, do you worry that universities are not breeding...
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Apr 15, 2024
04/24
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my name is yuval noah harari and this is my brief but spectacular take on what it means to be human.find additional brief but spectacular episodes online at pbs.org/ newshour/brief. there is a lot more online, including a look at the strides made registering voters and improving election safeguards in the swing state of michigan that is on our website, pbs.org/newshour. amna: and join us again tomorrow night, for our next report from here in ukraine. we will take a look at russia's intensifying attacks on ukraine's energy system. the impact that is having on the ukrainian people and the war. and that is the newshour for tonight. from kyiv, i'm amna nawaz. geoff: and i'm geoff bennett, for all of us here at the pbs newshour, thanks for joining us and have a good evening. >> major funding for the pbs newshour been provided by. ♪ >> on an american cruise line's journey, along the columbia and snake rivers, travelers retrace the route forged by lewis and clark more than 200 years ago. american cruise lines modern riverboats travel american landscapes to historic landmarks , where you can
my name is yuval noah harari and this is my brief but spectacular take on what it means to be human.find additional brief but spectacular episodes online at pbs.org/ newshour/brief. there is a lot more online, including a look at the strides made registering voters and improving election safeguards in the swing state of michigan that is on our website, pbs.org/newshour. amna: and join us again tomorrow night, for our next report from here in ukraine. we will take a look at russia's intensifying...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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on your wedding day yuval to love your spouse as jesus loved. i come here freely, give myself fully, until death, and i'm open to new life coming out of that. >> that is wonderful. we will take a pause and dig much deeper when we come back. please rejoin us when we talk about marriage, the sacrament thereof. >>> welcome back. we are talking with the director of the office of marriage and family life, a ministry of the archdiocese of san francisco. you just described a kind of grand, utterly significant, wonderfully fruitful, but let's say difficult way of life. a vocation that we want and have undertaken. we wanted so badly, we envy those whose marriages look good. you are one of the main, one of the main projects of your office is marriage preparation. what you described is something that has to kind of be taught and implicated in people train for it in a way. do you have a boot camp, or how do you tell me how to get married and what to do, what is the preparation? >> a lot of things we do is exactly that, it couples ready, and one of them is c
on your wedding day yuval to love your spouse as jesus loved. i come here freely, give myself fully, until death, and i'm open to new life coming out of that. >> that is wonderful. we will take a pause and dig much deeper when we come back. please rejoin us when we talk about marriage, the sacrament thereof. >>> welcome back. we are talking with the director of the office of marriage and family life, a ministry of the archdiocese of san francisco. you just described a kind of...
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Apr 4, 2024
04/24
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BBCNEWS
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but let's talk to the journalist behiond the story from +972 magazine and local call, yuval abraham.talk about the details of your investigation in a moment or two, but tell me a little more about the sources for this particular investigation and the story. particular investigation and the sto . . ~ particular investigation and the sto . ., ~ particular investigation and the sto . ., ., ., ., story. thank you for having me. for this story. — story. thank you for having me. for this story. i — story. thank you for having me. for this story, i spoke _ story. thank you for having me. for this story, i spoke with _ story. thank you for having me. for this story, i spoke with six - story. thank you for having me. for this story, i spoke with six israeli i this story, i spoke with six israeli intelligence officers, i think some of them might be described as whistle—blowers. they were drafted for the military, many of them said they were shocked by the atrocities of october the 7th, and i think at least some of them felt that they were responsible for killing entire palestinian families. i
but let's talk to the journalist behiond the story from +972 magazine and local call, yuval abraham.talk about the details of your investigation in a moment or two, but tell me a little more about the sources for this particular investigation and the story. particular investigation and the sto . . ~ particular investigation and the sto . ., ~ particular investigation and the sto . ., ., ., ., story. thank you for having me. for this story. — story. thank you for having me. for this story. i...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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BBCNEWS
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and yuval levkovsky, a very young, talented singer, is singing it. we released it today.t's a song of hope. it's talking about our heroes because each and every one of the hostages is our heroes, not only mine or my family, but our state and our citizens heroes. state and our citizens are heroes. and, you know, we end the song saying in a day of shadow and hope and storm, "we pray for you to come home". and this is what it is all about. israel cannot go on. i don't think the world should go on unless we have them back home. they must come home. come home. that's all we ask for. let them come home. bring them home now. the un is warning that hunger is imminent in parts of northern gaza — and aid charities say the health system is on the verge of collapse. earlier, my colleague lyse doucet spoke to cindy mccain head of the world food programme.— spoke to cindy mccain head of the world food programme. famine is imminent in _ world food programme. famine is imminent in the _ world food programme. famine is imminent in the north. _ world food programme. famine is imminent in t
and yuval levkovsky, a very young, talented singer, is singing it. we released it today.t's a song of hope. it's talking about our heroes because each and every one of the hostages is our heroes, not only mine or my family, but our state and our citizens heroes. state and our citizens are heroes. and, you know, we end the song saying in a day of shadow and hope and storm, "we pray for you to come home". and this is what it is all about. israel cannot go on. i don't think the world...
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Apr 4, 2024
04/24
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BBCNEWS
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the journalist behind the story is yuval abraham from +972 magazine and local call. managed to mark 37,000 palestinians in gaza as suspected low—level hamas orjihad militants. now, the way it works is, for people who don't know, like, the machine scanned most of the population in gaza, collecting surveillance information, and it gave each individual a rating between one to 100 based on how likely the machine thought that individual belonged to a military wing. it has a list of indicative features which are really small signs that could be, like, somebody is in a whatsapp group with the militants or somebody that replaces phones all the time, that raise or lower your rating. now, sources said, and this is very, very important, that this machine, when they were using it, the idf, knew that in approximately 10% of the cases, it was making what was regarded as errors. so it was marking people who were complete civilians or had a very loose connection to hamas. and the supervision in place for the first six weeks of the war was so minimal that one source says they would s
the journalist behind the story is yuval abraham from +972 magazine and local call. managed to mark 37,000 palestinians in gaza as suspected low—level hamas orjihad militants. now, the way it works is, for people who don't know, like, the machine scanned most of the population in gaza, collecting surveillance information, and it gave each individual a rating between one to 100 based on how likely the machine thought that individual belonged to a military wing. it has a list of indicative...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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and we will talk to investigative journalist and film maker yuval abraham about the israeli military'se looking for adults 45 and under to be in our hpv vaccination ad. sound like you? nah...not me. in a relationship. if you're sexually active and unvaccinated, it could still be you. i'm too old if you're under 45, you're not. for most people, hpv clears on its own. but for those who don't clear the virus, it can cause certain cancers. wow... gardasil 9 is a vaccine given to adults through age 45 that can help protect against certain hpv-related cervical, vaginal, vulvar, anal, and certain head and neck cancers, such as throat and back of mouth cancers, and genital warts. gardasil 9 doesn't protect everyone and doesn't treat cancer or hpv infection. these diseases may have many causes. your doctor may recommend screening for certain hpv-related cancers. routine cervical cancer screenings are still needed. you shouldn't get gardasil 9 if you're allergic to the vaccine, its ingredients, or yeast. tell your doctor if you have a weakened immune system, are pregnant, or plan to be. the most
and we will talk to investigative journalist and film maker yuval abraham about the israeli military'se looking for adults 45 and under to be in our hpv vaccination ad. sound like you? nah...not me. in a relationship. if you're sexually active and unvaccinated, it could still be you. i'm too old if you're under 45, you're not. for most people, hpv clears on its own. but for those who don't clear the virus, it can cause certain cancers. wow... gardasil 9 is a vaccine given to adults through age...
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Apr 26, 2024
04/24
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i'm going to start a little with one of my favorite other authors besides the three of you i know yuval noah harari, the author of sapiens, the history of humankind mind and 21 lessons for the 21st century, both in his books and also in recent interviews, talks about story and how there is a difference between fact and story and that the stories are the things where we our our values and our values then are outcomes. so just briefly, for the three of you, you all brought three stories to this audience today and to all of your readers, you know, what are the values that arise from, your writing these particular stories. wow. all right, tim, i'm going to start with you because you're right here. wow. okay. well, thank you, rabbi tom, for the thomas fine no title. okay. no titles for the for the totally specific and easy question to off with. yeah. why a story. and thank you all for being here. so you know where my mind goes when you say that. is that maybe the primary difference in this political age, this cultural age, this american age, this moment that we're living through between fact
i'm going to start a little with one of my favorite other authors besides the three of you i know yuval noah harari, the author of sapiens, the history of humankind mind and 21 lessons for the 21st century, both in his books and also in recent interviews, talks about story and how there is a difference between fact and story and that the stories are the things where we our our values and our values then are outcomes. so just briefly, for the three of you, you all brought three stories to this...
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Apr 29, 2024
04/24
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i'm yuval levin v, and it's
i'm yuval levin v, and it's
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Apr 1, 2024
04/24
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first, i too want to say thank you to you, yuval adam, 13. it's good to be on a panel with. two old friends, gary and brian. today, i'm going to briefly enumerate three common misconceptions about declaration of independence put forward grand historical claim, and then once again briefly enumerate six enduring lessons surrounding the declarations. but a little background and all of that in 10 to 12 minutes. and we need appreciate i think that the us declaration of independence changed the course of democracy. the west before the and the creation of the united states before the declaration, the creation of the united states democracy had a bad was thought to a regime that was prone to descent into demagoguery and dictatorship. after declaration of independence, after the birth, the united states and democracy acquired a good name. it became a an essential ingredient of political justice around the world. how did that happen? it happened in significant measure because of the alliance that the declaration of independence, right between. young democracy and rights, fundamental r
first, i too want to say thank you to you, yuval adam, 13. it's good to be on a panel with. two old friends, gary and brian. today, i'm going to briefly enumerate three common misconceptions about declaration of independence put forward grand historical claim, and then once again briefly enumerate six enduring lessons surrounding the declarations. but a little background and all of that in 10 to 12 minutes. and we need appreciate i think that the us declaration of independence changed the...
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Apr 28, 2024
04/24
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i'm yuval levin v, and it's my pleasure to welcome you to this discussion of timken this wonderful and important new book family how our culture made raising kids much harder than it needs to. tim is a senior fellow here at aei and a columnist at the washington examiner. his work is a lot of us know he focuses on family and on civil society, on religion, american politics. he's published widely beyond his columns, too, in the new york times, the wall street journal, the washington post, the atlantic and elsewhere. you see on tv a lot. tim's work is unique. he describes broad social trends by beginning from the experience of real people. he thinks from the bottom up, not from the top down. and for that reason, i think he has an understanding of how people thrive and how people fail. what holds together, what divides us. that is just deeply humane and sympathetic, even as it's always rooted in some moral fundamentals. his goal really is to prove your grandmother was right. if you want to be happy, you should get married. you have kids, you should go to church. you should show up for your
i'm yuval levin v, and it's my pleasure to welcome you to this discussion of timken this wonderful and important new book family how our culture made raising kids much harder than it needs to. tim is a senior fellow here at aei and a columnist at the washington examiner. his work is a lot of us know he focuses on family and on civil society, on religion, american politics. he's published widely beyond his columns, too, in the new york times, the wall street journal, the washington post, the...
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Apr 1, 2024
04/24
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thank you, yuval, for giving us. the chance to hear that expansive conversation. and professor wood, thank you very much that. i am speaking about the declaration of independence this morning and sharing with you my plans for an essay for the volume. i have been working and writing about the declaration of independence for 20 years. at this point that was not anything i ever actually expected to occur in my life. it emerged actually because of an accident. i taught the declaration of independence and a night course for low income adults as of course in the humanities that had the purpose of giving them chance to reconnect with the educational system based on an approach to education. that is about reflection, agency and empowerment really intense engagement with good texts, liberal arts style. the course was one where my students many had not completed high school. so there was a sort of conundrum how do you give a sort of university of chicago's style education to night students in this way and the solution was the end of the day, not to compromise on the quality
thank you, yuval, for giving us. the chance to hear that expansive conversation. and professor wood, thank you very much that. i am speaking about the declaration of independence this morning and sharing with you my plans for an essay for the volume. i have been working and writing about the declaration of independence for 20 years. at this point that was not anything i ever actually expected to occur in my life. it emerged actually because of an accident. i taught the declaration of...