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May 31, 2018
05/18
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there are plenty of opportunities to engage on these issues in the private sector and academia and think tanks. -- like the hudson institute. i think it is simply a matter of remaining current in the literature, coming to events like these, and being mindful of unexpected opportunities that will present themselves. as an illustration of that, i can offer my own background as an example. i started working on these issues by accident. i was a young lawyer in washington, d.c. with a federal judge when i got hired to work on administrative law issues with the justice department which was in august of 2001. three weeks later, administrative law suddenly seemed less important. we had to get very smart on national security and counterterrorism issues very quick. it was that happenstance of being there at that moment of time that i began to develop an interest and focus on these issues. of course, we pray there is never a comparably cataclysmic career shift for anyone who is in this room. me of your -- remind second question. >> the long-term capabilities, there has been quite a bit of innovatio
there are plenty of opportunities to engage on these issues in the private sector and academia and think tanks. -- like the hudson institute. i think it is simply a matter of remaining current in the literature, coming to events like these, and being mindful of unexpected opportunities that will present themselves. as an illustration of that, i can offer my own background as an example. i started working on these issues by accident. i was a young lawyer in washington, d.c. with a federal judge...
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May 30, 2018
05/18
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in the early 2000 there was very popular in academia, for obvious reasons, there was an over focus on trying to find ideology behind the putin regime. it took ideology i think much too seriously in trying to understand how the kremlin, now there hasn't been in the mainstream enough interrogation of these deceased mentalities, what they need come with a russian pastels ask him to believe about certain things and now it is publicly propagated s and pumping them in to institutions answer network institutions, from the whole secret service world, there really is a world of ragged schools and private hunting lodges and in the bureaucracy and enter the military. i think that when we talk about russia, a comment that one receives from russian officials and myriad, myriad top of it you're talking about fragments, fragments remains of the 1990s. there is a point here which is that certainly the discussion in the media we get is an over focus on a generation of ambitious 1990s oligarchs, heavily criminalized but have the sort of western global financial ambitions. there isn't enough discussion
in the early 2000 there was very popular in academia, for obvious reasons, there was an over focus on trying to find ideology behind the putin regime. it took ideology i think much too seriously in trying to understand how the kremlin, now there hasn't been in the mainstream enough interrogation of these deceased mentalities, what they need come with a russian pastels ask him to believe about certain things and now it is publicly propagated s and pumping them in to institutions answer network...
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May 30, 2018
05/18
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pete: doctor, we cover a lot of crazy stories about academia. great to cover a good one like this. you are a veteran. probably aren't many college veterans who are vets how much of your own background colors your decision here. >> i was a soldier in the gulf war and after that have been connected to the department of defense ever since. i have done research. psychologist by training. done research over the years on veterans issues. i started the national center for veterans studies at the university of utah. so i have been connected and sensitive and aware of veterans issues from the very beginning of my career. and we have been attentive to veterans' challenges. as you know, we have been at war for quite a number of years now. so we feel like we need to do a part -- we need to do some of the lift and we need to help. pete: good on you doctor, for students and parents watching where can they go to get more information. go to the university of memphis. go to our web paige memphis.edu. number of connection. we will help you. we will assist those students and connect them to the right
pete: doctor, we cover a lot of crazy stories about academia. great to cover a good one like this. you are a veteran. probably aren't many college veterans who are vets how much of your own background colors your decision here. >> i was a soldier in the gulf war and after that have been connected to the department of defense ever since. i have done research. psychologist by training. done research over the years on veterans issues. i started the national center for veterans studies at the...
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May 29, 2018
05/18
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the alan bloom, compared the tyranny of feminism in academia to khmer rouge. he was writing at a time when women accounted for 10% of college tenured faculty. it is worth looking back at what was considered annoyingly outrageously politically correct in the 1980s, the last time we have this debate. having to -- not being able to call indigenous people "indians" or use terms like african-americans. adding women or people of color civthe western curriculum, not making gay jokes "retard" as the next set. new words stick in your throat the way we are used to talking and thinking natural and normal. -- normal by definition. the new terms and concepts that have social utility stick and those that don't fall away. if you go back to the 1970s, ms. stuck around and women with a y didn't. i hope that someday, we will look back and marvel that gender-neutral pronouns ever seen like an existential threat. i also don't think it is clear that that might not happen because if you look around the world right now there are plenty , of places that have indeed dialed back cosmop
the alan bloom, compared the tyranny of feminism in academia to khmer rouge. he was writing at a time when women accounted for 10% of college tenured faculty. it is worth looking back at what was considered annoyingly outrageously politically correct in the 1980s, the last time we have this debate. having to -- not being able to call indigenous people "indians" or use terms like african-americans. adding women or people of color civthe western curriculum, not making gay jokes...
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May 29, 2018
05/18
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general hayden said the intel community like law enforcement officers, like people in journalism, like academia, the one thing they have in common that donald trump is attacking is they are fact-based. they don't always get the facts right but they are driven by facts and that is something that obviously doesn't play in donald trump's benefit so he has to attack. do you agree with general hayden's assessment? >> i do. we ran into this almost immediately on january 6 of 2017 when we went up to trump tower to brief then president-elect and his team on the intelligence community assessment and right a away and i think the president has been consistent that anything that casts doubt on the legitimacy of his election he has problems with. so that was the bad news, the truth to power we were serving up to him and that's been an issu issue. we have alternative facts and relative truth and that's anathema to anyone in the information business. >> one thing you used to do in your previous incarnation is you used to go up every january and february and give the threat briefing and line up the major threa
general hayden said the intel community like law enforcement officers, like people in journalism, like academia, the one thing they have in common that donald trump is attacking is they are fact-based. they don't always get the facts right but they are driven by facts and that is something that obviously doesn't play in donald trump's benefit so he has to attack. do you agree with general hayden's assessment? >> i do. we ran into this almost immediately on january 6 of 2017 when we went...
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May 28, 2018
05/18
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brian: i want to ask you about academia. one of your funders, nicholas brady was a senator and secretary of the treasury. [video clip] >> i, nicholas brady, do solemnly swear i will support the constitution of the united states. >> i come from 30 years in the banking business. and though you don't hear the term anymore, i was always taught the best loan you could make was a character loan. one that looked beyond hard numbers and took a leap of faith and counted on the character and strength of the individual involved. [end video clip] brian: this man comes from the republican party, paid money for this course, does that matter? has he tried to steer you in a certain direction? john: no. we had one piece of advice from nick when the money came through. backndowment was set up in 2006. i asked him, mr. brady, thank you for your generosity. what should we do with your money? he said, teach common sense. that is all he ever said. it was wonderful advice that allowed us huge leeway. he has never tried to tell us, do this, do that
brian: i want to ask you about academia. one of your funders, nicholas brady was a senator and secretary of the treasury. [video clip] >> i, nicholas brady, do solemnly swear i will support the constitution of the united states. >> i come from 30 years in the banking business. and though you don't hear the term anymore, i was always taught the best loan you could make was a character loan. one that looked beyond hard numbers and took a leap of faith and counted on the character and...
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May 28, 2018
05/18
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we engage the private sector and academia as needed. we bring in as many people as we can, because we recognize it is going to be and all of the above type of activity to answer these priority areas at the veterans administration's, as defined. >> actually, that is a perfect marriage, if you will. -- been able to do that, and thereby do away with stigma. --. do away with the -- to work with outside groups and make this a seamless as possible. i am going to come back to you with one more. these research partnerships have the potential to accelerate scientific breakers and healthcare systems and bio sciences. should the department replicate this model in other fields of research? and, what steps can we as congress take to facilitate that? >> i think the answer is yes, in terms of replication. our focal point right now has been on the veterans health data, and on the precision medicine data set, because of its unique complexities. because it comes with annotations with handwritten notes, with data streams, and imagery, and the collections
we engage the private sector and academia as needed. we bring in as many people as we can, because we recognize it is going to be and all of the above type of activity to answer these priority areas at the veterans administration's, as defined. >> actually, that is a perfect marriage, if you will. -- been able to do that, and thereby do away with stigma. --. do away with the -- to work with outside groups and make this a seamless as possible. i am going to come back to you with one more....
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May 28, 2018
05/18
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by the british academia. to patient data. and establish the course or relationship between smoking and lung cancer. help us transform healthcare outcomes today. i did announce that we will use the artificial intelligence. the fact that we wanted to see at least -- that we are seeing 50,000 people a year diagnosed in the early stages. we are also committed to the highest possible standards and using data and that's what we call for the data protection bill. and innovation. they give huge opportunity for us to improve services to the patients. they are very pressed for sherry to their views. can i raise another issue. last week the education secretary told the house that they understood and he would work with them to bear down on those. on friday i met with the secretary have teachers. they wanted to help them prepare. the increase in incidence and contributions. i'm looking for to meeting him and i'm sure that's gonna be as he will know. it is providing for the cash increase for every school and every region. it is important t
by the british academia. to patient data. and establish the course or relationship between smoking and lung cancer. help us transform healthcare outcomes today. i did announce that we will use the artificial intelligence. the fact that we wanted to see at least -- that we are seeing 50,000 people a year diagnosed in the early stages. we are also committed to the highest possible standards and using data and that's what we call for the data protection bill. and innovation. they give huge...
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May 26, 2018
05/18
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i was treated well in this country when i go to into academia, and our students need to be prepared for the world. host: all right. in some other headlines, the "washington post" reports that president trump's now former attorney met with russians at trump's tower. at trumpohen met tower in new york days before the inauguration with a russian billionaire who was sanctioned this year by the u.s. government. host: charlie is on the line calling from roslyn heights, new york. charlie, do you think that college commencement speeches have become too political? caller: no, not at all. the conservatives have been political since the beginning of time in this country, and when the liberal progressives start speaking up and getting more political, all of a sudden they say it is more political. i think it is good to educate the students of reality and the world, just like the other speaker said. i think there is some confusion as to be in a progressive and be at a liberal is. it is not just being a woman or a black -- that does not mean you are a progressive. just because they are a woman or a bl
i was treated well in this country when i go to into academia, and our students need to be prepared for the world. host: all right. in some other headlines, the "washington post" reports that president trump's now former attorney met with russians at trump's tower. at trumpohen met tower in new york days before the inauguration with a russian billionaire who was sanctioned this year by the u.s. government. host: charlie is on the line calling from roslyn heights, new york. charlie, do...
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May 26, 2018
05/18
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a pleasure to see all old friends from the intelligence community, from the think tank and world of academia and other agencies around town. and even some media friends i have made over the years, so thank you for having me today. in the interest of time i'm going to cut right to the chase, and try to identify a core question. and give you my thoughts on that core question and hopefully frame the discussion that we have on the panel, but also during the q and a. so, the core question i have been thinking a lot about is what exactly is putin going to do in the next six years, now that he has won reelection? does have a strategy? what does he really seek to achieve during this timeframe? i'm not even going to get into whether he is running again in 2024. some of you may have seen that story out of of chechnya. their already floating balloons for a story that somebody might want to put in the constitution for 2024, that is a whole -- what's to amend the constitution for 2024, that is a whole subject unto itself. i'm going to focus on the next six years. so if i look -- by the way, i think every
a pleasure to see all old friends from the intelligence community, from the think tank and world of academia and other agencies around town. and even some media friends i have made over the years, so thank you for having me today. in the interest of time i'm going to cut right to the chase, and try to identify a core question. and give you my thoughts on that core question and hopefully frame the discussion that we have on the panel, but also during the q and a. so, the core question i have...
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May 26, 2018
05/18
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i was treated well in this country when i go to into academia, and our students need to be prepared for the world. host: all right. in some other headlines, the "washington post" reports that president trump's now former attorney met with russians at trump's tower. at trumpohen met tower in new york days before the inauguration with a russian billionaire who was sanctioned this year by the u.s. government. host: charlie is on the line calling from roslyn heights, new york. charlie, do you think that college commencement speeches have become too political? caller: no, not at all. the conservatives have been political since the beginning of time in this country, and when the liberal progressives start speaking up and getting more political, all of a sudden they say it is more political. i think it is good to educate the students of reality and the world, just like the other speaker said. i think there is some confusion as to be in a progressive and be at a liberal is. it is not just being a woman or a black -- that does not mean you are a progressive. just because they are a woman or a bl
i was treated well in this country when i go to into academia, and our students need to be prepared for the world. host: all right. in some other headlines, the "washington post" reports that president trump's now former attorney met with russians at trump's tower. at trumpohen met tower in new york days before the inauguration with a russian billionaire who was sanctioned this year by the u.s. government. host: charlie is on the line calling from roslyn heights, new york. charlie, do...
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May 25, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 43
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in the early 2000s it was very popular in academia, for obvious reasons there was an overfocus on trying to find ideologies behind the putin regime. it took ideology, i think, much too seriously in trying to understand how the kremlin worked. now there haven't in the mainstream enough interrogation of the besieged fort tress, what they mean, what the russian establishment has come to believe about certain things and how it's propagating ideologies and pumping them into institutions and network institutions from the whole secret service world, it really is a world of private schools and private hunting lodges and into the bureaucracy and into the military. i think that when we talk about russia a comment that one receives from russian officials and then media, media, media sock puppets is you're talking about fragment remains of the 1990s. they do have a point here which is that the -- certainly the discussion in the media we get is an overfocus on a generation of ambitious 1990 oligarchs heavy criminal lysed, but you have these sort of western global financial ambitions and there isn't e
in the early 2000s it was very popular in academia, for obvious reasons there was an overfocus on trying to find ideologies behind the putin regime. it took ideology, i think, much too seriously in trying to understand how the kremlin worked. now there haven't in the mainstream enough interrogation of the besieged fort tress, what they mean, what the russian establishment has come to believe about certain things and how it's propagating ideologies and pumping them into institutions and network...
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May 25, 2018
05/18
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partnershipse with labs, academia and the private sector are important. a concerted effort here well lead to innovation tied to design and development of the next generation supercomputing. two better health care in our strategy for medicine. it could inform when and how to treat our veterans. they specialize in healthcare with dlg experts. and a better government within public and private partnerships. thank you and i look forward to answering your questions. we now recognize mister meek for his testimony. and members of both subcommittees think you for having me here today. on september 112001 i waspt running operations for goldman sachs. as i watch the first responders running into the courage of that day. i'm still a financial services executive.to shoulder strong as a charitable organization committed to improving the lives of our servicemen, and veterans. it started with a quest from an forward operating base. for the deployed troops. we assembled and sent over 75,000 supplies. as the words went down we contemplated shutting down. in retrospect one
partnershipse with labs, academia and the private sector are important. a concerted effort here well lead to innovation tied to design and development of the next generation supercomputing. two better health care in our strategy for medicine. it could inform when and how to treat our veterans. they specialize in healthcare with dlg experts. and a better government within public and private partnerships. thank you and i look forward to answering your questions. we now recognize mister meek for...
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May 24, 2018
05/18
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law enforcement, academia we could go down the list, science. as general hayden said, all of the fact-based institution this is country has built its foundation on over the past several centuries. and i wonder if you do have to be a psychiatrist to figure out that that's donald trumps intent. >> i don't know if you have to be a psychiatrist or just a political analyst. he is going for the jugular. he's fighting as hard as he can to save himself and his presidency and he's attacking targets that let's be honest the public has had some suspicion for. the idea that there's a cabal of elitists in washington, that's something americans have felt for a couple centuries, this suspicion toward washington and central pow er. it's the cynical way that it's being exploited that i find disturbing. we depend on these agencies for our security as a country and bashing them everyday the way the president does causes harm. and to bash the news media -- it was only a decade or so that the arrival of cnn to cover a demonstration or protest in eastern europe and g
law enforcement, academia we could go down the list, science. as general hayden said, all of the fact-based institution this is country has built its foundation on over the past several centuries. and i wonder if you do have to be a psychiatrist to figure out that that's donald trumps intent. >> i don't know if you have to be a psychiatrist or just a political analyst. he is going for the jugular. he's fighting as hard as he can to save himself and his presidency and he's attacking...
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May 23, 2018
05/18
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KDTV
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palmilla: esta noche, el yo antes y y yo despuÉs, conocerÁ una academia en que ponen en marcha una disciplina entre jÓvenes problemÁticos logrando dar un giro completo. ramon: no se pierda la historia completa esta noche en vivo. palmira: asÍ llegamos al final de noticias univisiÓn 14. ramon: gracias y si estÁ comiendo, buen provecho. nos vemos con mÁs informaciÓn esta noche. gracias. martes 22 de mayo hizo sus principales noticias. reducen drÁsticamente la compensaciÓn económica un obrero mexicano que sufre un accidente por su poca educaciÓn y no saber inglÉs. parece injusto pero es legal. recomendaron al congreso hoy entre gritos de no mÁs odio activistas protestan contra la visita de maÑana del presidente donald trump a nueva york y el hambre es deborah la moral de las tropas venezolanas, muchos soldados estÁn viendo la baja por escasez de comid
palmilla: esta noche, el yo antes y y yo despuÉs, conocerÁ una academia en que ponen en marcha una disciplina entre jÓvenes problemÁticos logrando dar un giro completo. ramon: no se pierda la historia completa esta noche en vivo. palmira: asÍ llegamos al final de noticias univisiÓn 14. ramon: gracias y si estÁ comiendo, buen provecho. nos vemos con mÁs informaciÓn esta noche. gracias. martes 22 de mayo hizo sus principales noticias. reducen drÁsticamente la compensaciÓn económica un...
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May 22, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN3
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we engage the private sector and academia as needed. we recognize it's going to be an all of the above type activity to answer these areas. >> that's a perfect marriage, if you will, we're able to do that. there by, do away with the stigma, the nonability to work with nonoutside groups and to make this as seamless as possible. still going to come back for one more. these research partnerships have the potential to accelerate scientific breakthroughs and health care delivery systems and bio sciences. should the department replicate this model in other field of research and what steps can we take to facilitate that? >> i think the answer is yes in terms of replication. our focal point now has been on the veterans health data and on the precision medicine data set because of its unique complexities. it comes with annotations with handwritten notes, with data streams and imagery and the collections of multi modal data that talks to a situation in unique ways that is going to test how we develop predictive technologies, artificially intellig
we engage the private sector and academia as needed. we recognize it's going to be an all of the above type activity to answer these areas. >> that's a perfect marriage, if you will, we're able to do that. there by, do away with the stigma, the nonability to work with nonoutside groups and to make this as seamless as possible. still going to come back for one more. these research partnerships have the potential to accelerate scientific breakthroughs and health care delivery systems and...
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May 22, 2018
05/18
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la palabra machismo es una actividad de prepotencia de los hombres hacia las mujeres segÚn la real academia, el problema es que los machistas seÑores no nacen, y hay quienes opinan que su comportamiento es asÍ por la crianza de reciben y lo que aprenden a su alrededor es decir en el hogar, para analizar este tema recibimos a la psicÓloga marÍa rodriguez y tambiÉn a lorena farÍas, nutricionista y creadora de no es dieta quien acaba de dar a luz a mateo que estÁ hermoso. >> bienvenidos. >> bienvenido mateo, mira Él no tiene problemas en la vida. >> estÁ hermoso. >> felicidad. >> doctora marÍa bienvenida. >> yo creo que la primera pregunta que tendrÍamos que hacer es cÓmo identificar a un hombre o a un niÑo que tiene tendencias machistas. >> bueno la realidad es que por el comportamiento y sobre todo por la manera que se expresa, no es que evite a las niÑos o que prefiera jugar con niÑos eso no es asÍ, es simplemente por el rechazo, por la agresividad por la manera que menosprecia a los niÑos ahÍ podemos ver una relaciÓn un poco mÁs grosera hacia el lado femenino. >> mientr
la palabra machismo es una actividad de prepotencia de los hombres hacia las mujeres segÚn la real academia, el problema es que los machistas seÑores no nacen, y hay quienes opinan que su comportamiento es asÍ por la crianza de reciben y lo que aprenden a su alrededor es decir en el hogar, para analizar este tema recibimos a la psicÓloga marÍa rodriguez y tambiÉn a lorena farÍas, nutricionista y creadora de no es dieta quien acaba de dar a luz a mateo que estÁ hermoso. >>...
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May 22, 2018
05/18
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FBC
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reporting around this informant said they were involved in many administrations, a long-term career in academia, it is natural they would be on the list. maria: house republicans want a second special counsel to look deeper into hillary's personal server on the ongoing russia investigation, that is another thing devon nunez is looking at and we are looking at hillary clinton's first email. >> a special calls for additional special councils to wander around town to follow that up. and it will be on the hill in those committees. maria: next johnston coming from the white house to a screen near you, a production deal with netflix could have him on some shows producing others. we will tell you about it. and elon musk's human is closer to reality. he is showing up incredible images. back in a moment right here. [music playing] (vo) from day one, we always came through for our customers. it's how we earned your trust. until... we lost it. today, we're renewing our commitment to you. fixing what went wrong. and ending product sales goals for branch bankers. so we can focus on your satisfaction. it's a
reporting around this informant said they were involved in many administrations, a long-term career in academia, it is natural they would be on the list. maria: house republicans want a second special counsel to look deeper into hillary's personal server on the ongoing russia investigation, that is another thing devon nunez is looking at and we are looking at hillary clinton's first email. >> a special calls for additional special councils to wander around town to follow that up. and it...
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May 21, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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so he built up his own academia and all of these organizations. maybe if the democrats feel endangered enough they would do the same. there are additional recordings. is that something you've heard as well. do you think they will ever see the light of day. i don't know about it. it doesn't surprise me as a possibility. because they reported everything. it was so meticulous in deliberate and there were scientists and doctors psychologist measuring to make sure that when they waterboarding people they measured their oxygen level so they didn't die. it wouldn't surprise me if there were other records i don't know if there are more videotapes or not. most of these people were on. there is some examples of people trying to destroy the video. water boarded 88 times. they can be incompetent when it comes to that. thank you so much. in terms of your contact we hear a lot about accusations made. in terms of your contacts with people who had worked in the state department or cia or career people how are these people doing. i think at the morale is just terr
so he built up his own academia and all of these organizations. maybe if the democrats feel endangered enough they would do the same. there are additional recordings. is that something you've heard as well. do you think they will ever see the light of day. i don't know about it. it doesn't surprise me as a possibility. because they reported everything. it was so meticulous in deliberate and there were scientists and doctors psychologist measuring to make sure that when they waterboarding people...
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May 21, 2018
05/18
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again, it's frustrating, steve, to see the mainstream media and others in academia now as well, take that hamas narrative and run with it at the end of the day, there is not much that separates hamas from isis over the past several years. hamas has fired rockets, missiles at israel suicide bombings, terror tunnels and all the rest. steve: i know it still, each the parents have reached out. nothing from the principal. eric, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you, steve. steve: going to step aside. jonathan turley coming up next. non-small cell lung canc . .non-small cell lung canc who'd say no to a...? who wouldn't want a chance to live longer. opdivo (nivolumab). over 40,000 patients have been prescribed opdivo immunotherapy. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you experience new or worsening cough; chest pain; shortness of breath; diarrhea; severe stomach pain or tenderne
again, it's frustrating, steve, to see the mainstream media and others in academia now as well, take that hamas narrative and run with it at the end of the day, there is not much that separates hamas from isis over the past several years. hamas has fired rockets, missiles at israel suicide bombings, terror tunnels and all the rest. steve: i know it still, each the parents have reached out. nothing from the principal. eric, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you, steve....
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May 21, 2018
05/18
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concur over the last two years we've made a lot of progress in promulgating such advice to not only academia with respect to the threats to other nations dates who are producers in the proprietary data we will continue to do that and work with associations and i would concur with your point the private sector leadership of the ceo level needs to be more active in the obtaining security clearances so that it can get done in a more effective and efficient manner. >> i want to pick up on the vice chair man's point with respect to zte specifically come and thank you for the visit we had in our office i thought it was helpful. in 2012, the houston solutions committee issued a nonclassified bipartisan report on national security issues posed by the chinese telecom companies, and one of them was zte. the report concluded the risks associated with zte provision of equipment to the u.s. critical infrastructure could undermine american national security interests. do you agree with that report? >> i do. >> now they recommended that the united states should be viewed with suspicion by continued penetra
concur over the last two years we've made a lot of progress in promulgating such advice to not only academia with respect to the threats to other nations dates who are producers in the proprietary data we will continue to do that and work with associations and i would concur with your point the private sector leadership of the ceo level needs to be more active in the obtaining security clearances so that it can get done in a more effective and efficient manner. >> i want to pick up on the...
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May 21, 2018
05/18
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they owned the press and the academia and bit the centrism and liberalism and they did not feel they needed to build up a counter establishment and charles koch wanted to take it over so we pulled up his own craft and academia and all of these organizations. maybe if the democrats feel endangered enough they will do the same. >> anything else? yes. >> [inaudible] there is a report that there are additional recordings of the torture sessions and tylan that gina was not able to destroy and they said something is that what you've heard as well? do you think those tapes will ever see the light of day? >> i don't know about it but it does not surprise me as a possibility because they recorded everything. one of the things i cannot believe what i was doing the book was in the beginning anyway was it was so meticulous and deliberate and it was there were scientists and doctors and psychologists measuring to make sure that when the water boarded people they measured their oxygen levels so that they did not die but they go right up to the edge of dying and it would not surprise me if there we
they owned the press and the academia and bit the centrism and liberalism and they did not feel they needed to build up a counter establishment and charles koch wanted to take it over so we pulled up his own craft and academia and all of these organizations. maybe if the democrats feel endangered enough they will do the same. >> anything else? yes. >> [inaudible] there is a report that there are additional recordings of the torture sessions and tylan that gina was not able to...
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May 20, 2018
05/18
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also, it have to do with the -- has to do with the changing labor force composition in academia. there are fewer tenured track slots. there are often 200 applicants for a single job. but, that is one of the reasons why we have put so much effort in the past five years into thinking hard about what a phd is for. what is the purpose of the history phd? is it only to become a professor? 25% of all history phd's are not professors of any kind. they are not lecturers, adjuncts, teaching at the college level. some of them are teaching high school, but a lot of those history phd's are in the private sector. or they work for the government, , the public-sector, investment banking, marketing. just about everything. so, what we are trying to do now is to help graduate programs rethink their phd program in terms of how they prepare people for a variety of careers. susan: how much hunger is there among the academy in particular to learn digital technology? and are you, in fact, helping to train people on the importance of using twitter, of having a facebook presence, blogs? james: we don't h
also, it have to do with the -- has to do with the changing labor force composition in academia. there are fewer tenured track slots. there are often 200 applicants for a single job. but, that is one of the reasons why we have put so much effort in the past five years into thinking hard about what a phd is for. what is the purpose of the history phd? is it only to become a professor? 25% of all history phd's are not professors of any kind. they are not lecturers, adjuncts, teaching at the...
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May 17, 2018
05/18
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individual businesses, industries as a whole, academia, government, we all have a role to play in moving the needle forward. and one critical area where i see government playing a critical role is what i call a convener of conversations. and that is to bring people around the table and put the important issues and needs on the table with the right people so that we can have an open dialogue to ensure that the needs of tomorrow are being addressed by our schools and our education system so we can prepare for that workforce. and it's important in doing so that we break those silos down so that we can have good important conversations. and there is no easy fix there is sometimes communication and language differences. but it's really important to have those conversations. and to use a term that i heard this morning, that's stefani pashman used from the allegheny conference, it's the information gap. how do we ensure that we're fulfilling that information gap and making sure that those conversations exist? and i'll tell you, in the conversations that we had in new york city government, it's
individual businesses, industries as a whole, academia, government, we all have a role to play in moving the needle forward. and one critical area where i see government playing a critical role is what i call a convener of conversations. and that is to bring people around the table and put the important issues and needs on the table with the right people so that we can have an open dialogue to ensure that the needs of tomorrow are being addressed by our schools and our education system so we...
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May 17, 2018
05/18
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i love academia. no plans to consider coming here? i have no plans. but you are not ruling it out. look, all ican you are not ruling it out. look, all i can say is i am very happy with my currentjob. later today president trump's business team, led by us treasury secretary steven mnuchin, will host the vice premier of china, liu he, for trade talks in washington. it is the second round of talks aimed at heading off a damaging trade war between the two sides following their meetings in beijing two weeks ago. the us has threatened to impose punitive tariffs on up to $150 billion in chinese goods, demanding a rebalancing of their trading relationship. the bbc‘s robin brant reports from dongguan, in southern china, which could be hit hard. if the trade war comes, this is where china will feel it — really feel it. dongguan is near the south coast, a place once dubbed the workshop of the world. in this factory, oil, lubrication, is everywhere. the smell of it is in the air, the feel of it under your feet. they make precision metal parts here, and they reckon up to 300 could be hit by
i love academia. no plans to consider coming here? i have no plans. but you are not ruling it out. look, all ican you are not ruling it out. look, all i can say is i am very happy with my currentjob. later today president trump's business team, led by us treasury secretary steven mnuchin, will host the vice premier of china, liu he, for trade talks in washington. it is the second round of talks aimed at heading off a damaging trade war between the two sides following their meetings in beijing...
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May 16, 2018
05/18
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the smug of academia when professors who never ran a business in their lives, they live off taxpayers nickel, they're teaching this kind of stuff to students who really don't understand in the real world how jobs are created and what creates homelessness; right? >> right. well, they're teaching ideas based on emotion, not on actual facts. you can't look at any country in history ever that has been run by a purely socialist communist government. we always point to venezuela because that's because it's a key modern failure of socialism. it doesn't work on a national level or a citywide level. if you look at seattle, it has pumped millions and millions of dollars into the homelessness crisis and no reform has actually been accomplished. so what makes us think that them getting millions dollars more revenue from amazon alone is actually going t cba homelessness? . liz: everybody wants to fix the homeles problem. but the way to answer the question is how do you do it? and jfk said the best form of welfare is a job. and the rich didn't start out on third base. steve jobs, larry, howard schu
the smug of academia when professors who never ran a business in their lives, they live off taxpayers nickel, they're teaching this kind of stuff to students who really don't understand in the real world how jobs are created and what creates homelessness; right? >> right. well, they're teaching ideas based on emotion, not on actual facts. you can't look at any country in history ever that has been run by a purely socialist communist government. we always point to venezuela because that's...
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May 16, 2018
05/18
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deep—seated prejudices and stereotypes are preventing ethnic minority staff from gaining senior positions in academia. baroness amos, who's director of the school of oriental and african studies is with me now. could you outlined the scale of the problem is you see it? it is a huge challenge. less than 1% of our professors, from lack and minority ethnic backgrounds. that is a very low number. we are seeing increasing numbers of young people from this committee is going to university, we are seeing two trends. 0ne committee is going to university, we are seeing two trends. one is a high dropout rate and a lot of universities are trying to do something about that. we are also seeing, even when you make sure that you standardise intensive entry qualifications and so one, black and minority ethnic students leaving university with fewer firsts and upper seconds, for example. clearly a cultural issue that we have to deal with. could a cultural issue that we have to dealwith. could you put a cultural issue that we have to deal with. could you put your finger on what that issue is? why is there that problem?
deep—seated prejudices and stereotypes are preventing ethnic minority staff from gaining senior positions in academia. baroness amos, who's director of the school of oriental and african studies is with me now. could you outlined the scale of the problem is you see it? it is a huge challenge. less than 1% of our professors, from lack and minority ethnic backgrounds. that is a very low number. we are seeing increasing numbers of young people from this committee is going to university, we are...
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May 16, 2018
05/18
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i would say definitely my earlier experiences in academia impacted my choices of attending university so late. give us some examples? in my primary school was quite a mixed area, so mainly white but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was predominantly but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was predominantly black. there were a lot of issues with a troublesome year group as we had energy, there were threats of cancelling the prom and in the end we had to get a black male head of year just to have that we had to get a black male head of yearjust to have that person to sit down and understand us. it made a world of difference, it really did, had to be labelled as that troublesome individual because they don't understand where you are coming from. were you label that troublesome individual because of the colour of your skin? definitely. in school, for example, if you had a gripe with someone, to be able to have a discussion and work things out, it could never be left as that, it had to be the uproar of this and this and
i would say definitely my earlier experiences in academia impacted my choices of attending university so late. give us some examples? in my primary school was quite a mixed area, so mainly white but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was predominantly but there were a lot of mixes and my year group was predominantly black. there were a lot of issues with a troublesome year group as we had energy, there were threats of cancelling the...
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May 15, 2018
05/18
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committee that encompasses diverse representation from law enforcement, civil rights organizations, and academia. have posted a series of meetings to hear perspectives from hate crime survivors, academic experts, advocacy leaders and law enforcement officials on best practices to combat hate. the end product will be a summary report outlining the action items detailing the discussions on the advisory group and will be released between the summer and early fall of 2018. it is a very competent of documents that we will clearly make available to this committee. today i would like to focus on challenges law-enforcement faces when it comes to hate crimes. as you have heard from the last two presenters, over the years, one of the greatest barriers to confront the overcoming hate violence has been the lack of statistical data on the occurrence and nature of these crimes. participation of the reporting system, which like the rest of the ucr is voluntary. while participation has increased over the year, but dissipation levels are seriously lacking. we know that figures -- the figures, as reported to the
committee that encompasses diverse representation from law enforcement, civil rights organizations, and academia. have posted a series of meetings to hear perspectives from hate crime survivors, academic experts, advocacy leaders and law enforcement officials on best practices to combat hate. the end product will be a summary report outlining the action items detailing the discussions on the advisory group and will be released between the summer and early fall of 2018. it is a very competent of...
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May 15, 2018
05/18
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e promulgated such awareness and threat to not only academia and industry with respect to the threat to china and other nations who are stealing our proprietary data and trade secrets. we'll continue to do that and work with the association. i concur with your point. the private sector, leadership that is at the c.e.o. level needs to be a little bit more active in terms of obtaining security scleernses so that information that is classified can get to them in a more effective and efficient manner. >> thank you, mr. chairman. i want to pick up, mr. evanina, on the vice chairman's work to v.t.e. specifically, and thank you for the visit we had in our office. i thought it was very herphepful. now, in 2012 the house intelligence committee issued a nonclassified bipartisan report on national security issues posed by the chinese telecom companies. one of them was z.t.e. senator wyden: the report concluded the risks associated with z.t.e.'s provision of equipment to u.s. critical infrastructure could undermine american national security interests. do you agree with that bipartisan report? m
e promulgated such awareness and threat to not only academia and industry with respect to the threat to china and other nations who are stealing our proprietary data and trade secrets. we'll continue to do that and work with the association. i concur with your point. the private sector, leadership that is at the c.e.o. level needs to be a little bit more active in terms of obtaining security scleernses so that information that is classified can get to them in a more effective and efficient...
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May 14, 2018
05/18
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and once you get all the academia behind you, it still comes down to who are those who are less fortunate that we need to give more concern to? and that's where we are. and i'm hopeful that eventually that we can get there because they are the ones who wake up tomorrow with nothing on the table. and i yield back, mr. chairman. >> are there other amendments to title iv? well, everybody had a five-minute bite at the apple. are there other amendments? recognize mr. walsh for five minutes. >> that's why i'm going to yield to one of those smart people, mr. mcgovern. >> i thank the gentleman for yielding. i'm amazed at how this markup has evolved. in the beginning, my friends on the other side were talking about how these provisions were the greatest thing since slice bread. they were wonderful and then mr. davis basically said don't pay attention to what's in the bill. you may think it's bad but this is the beginning of a process. it will change and change and maybe get better. here is a radical idea. why don't we start off with the very best product we can? rather than something that nobody k
and once you get all the academia behind you, it still comes down to who are those who are less fortunate that we need to give more concern to? and that's where we are. and i'm hopeful that eventually that we can get there because they are the ones who wake up tomorrow with nothing on the table. and i yield back, mr. chairman. >> are there other amendments to title iv? well, everybody had a five-minute bite at the apple. are there other amendments? recognize mr. walsh for five minutes....
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May 13, 2018
05/18
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BLOOMBERG
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almost everybody i have talked to -- democrats, republicans, people in industry, people in academia -- they say this is years away. what i think a lot of these companies are looking for is two things. the first is standards, how good does the ai need to be? what does it need to do? the other thing they are looking for is to understand the current regulatory environment. spencer mentioned health care, things like hipaa, the health care privacy law, how is that going to apply if ai is making decisions about your health or aiding in a diagnostic? i think what the industry wants to know is how exactly to think about those issues before they look at any kind of new, broad-based ai regulation act. emily: you know so much about how much these companies are lobbying congress, what they're asking for, and what kind of money they are spending. talk to us about how lobbying efforts have changed or evolved over the last year under the trump administration. ben: i think you see this interesting aspect of lobbying in the trump administration. there are a lot of people who go straight to the white h
almost everybody i have talked to -- democrats, republicans, people in industry, people in academia -- they say this is years away. what i think a lot of these companies are looking for is two things. the first is standards, how good does the ai need to be? what does it need to do? the other thing they are looking for is to understand the current regulatory environment. spencer mentioned health care, things like hipaa, the health care privacy law, how is that going to apply if ai is making...
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May 13, 2018
05/18
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things, one of the great gentlemen these two have is they have the ability to write definitive works in academia that we can all understand, and that is a rare, rare gift. one of the reasons why david and molly and don and marie and gay, we all work to create this series, the vision fork, was for this, and to promote this sense of civic education and remembrance of the founding, and by design, this is why this year's program has closed with these two individuals. on that note, a last, quick question. the state of civic education in america today and historical literacy, which piggybacks off what we just talked about, professor woods? as i say, the tail being written by the academics is tale of americanhistory, is a tale of oppression. these are stories that should be told, but not at the exclusion of the other stories. there are alternative facts, lots of facts out there. the question is, how focused should you be on all the negative facts? hoe one wants to hide the fact that the treatment of the native peoples was atrocious over the long run. although not everyone was out to eliminate them, it
things, one of the great gentlemen these two have is they have the ability to write definitive works in academia that we can all understand, and that is a rare, rare gift. one of the reasons why david and molly and don and marie and gay, we all work to create this series, the vision fork, was for this, and to promote this sense of civic education and remembrance of the founding, and by design, this is why this year's program has closed with these two individuals. on that note, a last, quick...
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May 11, 2018
05/18
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of a maturity level that should be of a college age when it comes to whether it's emotion or academ academia, their intelligence. safe spaces are a disgusting idea to try to take students that are in their formative years to go from high school to adulthood and be putting them in an area where it's ok if you get offended by ideas. the real world is not like that. >> bill: how many schools have you spoken at? >> oh, a couple dozen in the past year. everywhere from northern california to miami to virginia and texas. all across the country. >> bill: very interesting. thanks for coming on, ok? make campus great again. i think there's something to that slogan. thank you, lauren, for coming on today. >> thanks for having me. >> julie: the time and the place are set. what else do we know about next month's summit between president trump and kim jong un? details straight ahead. kage was making me feel like i couldn't spend time with my grandson. now depend fit-flex has their fastest absorbing material inside, so it keeps me dry and protected. go to depend.com - get a coupon and try them for yourself
of a maturity level that should be of a college age when it comes to whether it's emotion or academ academia, their intelligence. safe spaces are a disgusting idea to try to take students that are in their formative years to go from high school to adulthood and be putting them in an area where it's ok if you get offended by ideas. the real world is not like that. >> bill: how many schools have you spoken at? >> oh, a couple dozen in the past year. everywhere from northern california...
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May 10, 2018
05/18
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that came from government, academia, business, working together for how it evolves. i think you see the same thing in ai. reporter: today a select committee at the white house was formed across government agencies. the head of r&d for those government agencies to figure out how to use artificial intelligence better. the head of the white house science and technology office said this will increase productivity. artificial intelligence will help in health care and possibly save lives. it will mean displacement and some job losses. on that front industry leaders want to see the white house and this administration put money forward for training. already the trump administration has put in $200 million per year for stem and computer science training. the industry come on top and behind that added $300 million a year for that. with all the privacy concerns mostly at the white house they're concerned with the loss of possibly non-tech jobs. melissa. melissa: he wardlaw recognize, thank you for that. david: tensions escalating between israel and iran to say the least. is the
that came from government, academia, business, working together for how it evolves. i think you see the same thing in ai. reporter: today a select committee at the white house was formed across government agencies. the head of r&d for those government agencies to figure out how to use artificial intelligence better. the head of the white house science and technology office said this will increase productivity. artificial intelligence will help in health care and possibly save lives. it will...
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in the west in the halls of government academia and the media which will echo they continually talk about russia and sometimes china as revisionist or revanche just powers against they don't there's two different world orders we're talking about they refer to the liberal world order not to the un stablished world order they're talking about the world order that they believe started with bretton woods and continued up through the collapse of the soviet union and came to its biggest height of union polarity of u.s. led western hegemony during the one nine hundred ninety s. and what they're talking about is russia and china returning to positions of great power status in the world are blocking their control of the world whereas russia and china and i'm not going to stand for it k.k. from a realist perspective and of course from a relativist position of weakness little to the us prefer the rules bound system in one thousand nine hundred five established by the un. whereas the us regards the principle un prince of the security council principles un charter principles of sovereignty and non int
in the west in the halls of government academia and the media which will echo they continually talk about russia and sometimes china as revisionist or revanche just powers against they don't there's two different world orders we're talking about they refer to the liberal world order not to the un stablished world order they're talking about the world order that they believe started with bretton woods and continued up through the collapse of the soviet union and came to its biggest height of...
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May 10, 2018
05/18
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they teach this in academia because this is an industry. it's a moneymaking multitrillion dollar industry that i wrote a book about. this bias is nonsense, and michael knows it. >> first of all -- >> laura: i will let you respond. i want to show a chart so people get some sense of where we are with unemployment. black unemployment, i guess whoopi goldberg thinks it's all obama. this is what it looks like. it's at 6.6%. it is a record low. that is something to celebrate. i don't care whether you are a democrat or republican. it has occurred under donald trump's watch. michael. >> okay, let me address a couple things. kevin come i don't know if you didn't get the memo but we are not colored people anymore. that's just not how we refer to each other anymore. let me address the unemployment record. if you look at when president obama came into office office, served in .5 is with the african-american on a plumbing record is. now it's a little under 7%. has president trump done some things that if contributed to that? yes. president obama dropped
they teach this in academia because this is an industry. it's a moneymaking multitrillion dollar industry that i wrote a book about. this bias is nonsense, and michael knows it. >> first of all -- >> laura: i will let you respond. i want to show a chart so people get some sense of where we are with unemployment. black unemployment, i guess whoopi goldberg thinks it's all obama. this is what it looks like. it's at 6.6%. it is a record low. that is something to celebrate. i don't care...
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May 10, 2018
05/18
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our country that have specific expertise and cutting-edge technology that have prominent positions in academia and then they recruit them for projects on china or the chinese government and often times we don't have an understanding of what that program was or whether there was a quid pro quo. >> if they have a robust engineering program we have a lot of international researchers coming in and working in partnership with the university. we have the researcher engineer from china working on some stuff and he goes back to china maybe someone from maryland follows him back. i don't know. what the university be in jeopardy that they wouldn't be able to see the future federally funded research dollars? >> if that individual applied for the grant, the educational grant, they would have to certify whether or not they have participatehadparticipated in ae program in the past and from there they can decide. is that person to us-based researcher working with the chinese researcher? >> it's a us-based person as a part of their program. >> not to pummel a dead horse here but that is a problem the certific
our country that have specific expertise and cutting-edge technology that have prominent positions in academia and then they recruit them for projects on china or the chinese government and often times we don't have an understanding of what that program was or whether there was a quid pro quo. >> if they have a robust engineering program we have a lot of international researchers coming in and working in partnership with the university. we have the researcher engineer from china working...