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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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detective velasquez called barbara, got herself invited over to barbara's house. barbara seemed to have no problem talking about david. she said she cared about him a lot. and i say, well, how is david as a father well, david became abusive towards johnny physically and emotionally, verbally. >> wait a minute this was a whole new wrinkle up until now, everybody about david's history has been squeak y clean. >> as an investigator and as a mom, i begin to say, did you ever call the police she said, oh, no, i -- i never called the police, she says, i just thought he would change she proceeds to tell me that i documented the injuries with photographs. never produced any photographs for me >> for us, by the way, barbara changed her story. said it was really her father, not her, who accused david of abusing his son. >> my dad was looking into counselors and having him, you know, evaluated and stuff like that, because i would just be like, this is david, you know, what are you talking about >> but, of course, the detective couldn't talk to barbara's father about abuse or
detective velasquez called barbara, got herself invited over to barbara's house. barbara seemed to have no problem talking about david. she said she cared about him a lot. and i say, well, how is david as a father well, david became abusive towards johnny physically and emotionally, verbally. >> wait a minute this was a whole new wrinkle up until now, everybody about david's history has been squeak y clean. >> as an investigator and as a mom, i begin to say, did you ever call the...
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Jan 14, 2019
01/19
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detective velasquez called barbara got herself invited over to barbara's house. barbara seemed to have no problem talking about david. >> she said she cared about him a lot. and i say, well, how is david as a father? well, david became abusive towards johnny physically and emotionally, verbally. >> wait a minute. this was a whole new wrinkle. up till now, everything about david's history had been squeaky-clean. >> as an investigator and as a mom, i began to say, did you ever call the police? she said, oh, no. i never called the police. she says, i just thought he would change. she proceeds to tell me that, i documented the injuries with photographs. never produced any photographs for me. >> barbara changed her story, said it was really her father, not her, who accused david of abusing his son and today she questions the allegation. >> by dad was looking to counselors and having them evaluate it and stuff like that because i would just be like, this is david, you know, what are you talking about? >> but, of course, the detective couldn't talk to barbara's father a
detective velasquez called barbara got herself invited over to barbara's house. barbara seemed to have no problem talking about david. >> she said she cared about him a lot. and i say, well, how is david as a father? well, david became abusive towards johnny physically and emotionally, verbally. >> wait a minute. this was a whole new wrinkle. up till now, everything about david's history had been squeaky-clean. >> as an investigator and as a mom, i began to say, did you ever...
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Jan 16, 2019
01/19
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barbara: ok, thank you very much. brent: back here in studio three, the brexit fallout continues with helena. helena:'m raid so. essentially the city of london is just bleeding jobs right now. more and more european banks announcing their plans to move those positions out of london, moving them to other financial centers. even if brexit hasn't actually happened yet, it is certainly having a very real impact on the world of banking. once britain has officially left the european union, london-east banks will the longer be able to conduct operations with eu ones without being subject to a host of other regulations. one reason why frankfurt has made itswnwn video l looking to trtract those e fleeing the bret financial fallout. >> nice to meet you. my name is furt. frankfurt. >> frankfurt? oh, i have heard of you. rereporter: ththis video was pod online several months ago. it is aimed at the family of the brexit uprooted banker who is not so keen on moving away from a world-class city like london. the british capital is eu
barbara: ok, thank you very much. brent: back here in studio three, the brexit fallout continues with helena. helena:'m raid so. essentially the city of london is just bleeding jobs right now. more and more european banks announcing their plans to move those positions out of london, moving them to other financial centers. even if brexit hasn't actually happened yet, it is certainly having a very real impact on the world of banking. once britain has officially left the european union,...
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Jan 29, 2019
01/19
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barbara, i want to start with you. we have just heard that one of the key votes this evening known as the cooper amendment has failed to pass. what does that mean? barbara: it means that this day is going rather to theresa may. it looks like it at this point in time, because the first three amendments failed, and those were the ones brought by the opposition. the cooper amendment you mentioned was one that would have tied the hands of government to prevent a no deal, and that would have been a power grab by parliament in order to sort of hedge in theresa may and make certain things impossible for her. now that has been voted down, so it means that parliament is not going to take control. it means that theresa may and her conservative party is going to keep control of brexit. but it does not mean that the evening is going to end with some sort of clear result. but still, things are going her way. brent: it begs the question, why are we seeing this debate going on and these amendments? alex, why are we seeing that tonigh
barbara, i want to start with you. we have just heard that one of the key votes this evening known as the cooper amendment has failed to pass. what does that mean? barbara: it means that this day is going rather to theresa may. it looks like it at this point in time, because the first three amendments failed, and those were the ones brought by the opposition. the cooper amendment you mentioned was one that would have tied the hands of government to prevent a no deal, and that would have been a...
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vale she is standing by the houses of parliament good evening to you barbara i want to start with you i mean we've just heard that one of the key votes this evening which is known as the cooper amendment has failed to pass what does that mean. it means that this day is going rob the two trees of my looks like it at this point in time because the first three amendments failed failed and those were the ones brought by the a position not the coop amendment you mentioned was one that would have tied the hands of government that prevented no deal and then it would have been a sort of paragraph by a prominent in order to sort of hedge and trees in may and make certain things impossible for her now that has been voted down so it means that problem is not going to take control that means that treason may and her conservative party is going to keep calling throw off breaks it but it does not mean that the evening is going to end was some sort of clear result but it is still things are going home and the question why are we seeing this debate going on in these amendments. why why are we seeing
vale she is standing by the houses of parliament good evening to you barbara i want to start with you i mean we've just heard that one of the key votes this evening which is known as the cooper amendment has failed to pass what does that mean. it means that this day is going rob the two trees of my looks like it at this point in time because the first three amendments failed failed and those were the ones brought by the a position not the coop amendment you mentioned was one that would have...
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ards a month of a very very clear there barbara about the european union's position is the e.u. is it prepared is it ready to see the u.k. leave with no deal we're talking about a mega hard exit hard brecht's. basically the e.u. doesn't want this because of course they always reiterate this would be horrible for britain but it would also be banned for the rest of the european union however at this point in time the question that the european leaders have to put themselves through chichi clearly doesn't make any sense to throw further concessions to the british because the way they have shown so far that they don't honor the agreements they have set down at the same table and sort of agreed upon that they then turn around and say i don't know we don't like it take it or take it out rode away we want something else how reliable are they as partners also they know that the tory party is if it sticks together no going to be driven for the months and years to come by the hardline brits to choose within its own rose now how would hope promising is that for the future that britain says
ards a month of a very very clear there barbara about the european union's position is the e.u. is it prepared is it ready to see the u.k. leave with no deal we're talking about a mega hard exit hard brecht's. basically the e.u. doesn't want this because of course they always reiterate this would be horrible for britain but it would also be banned for the rest of the european union however at this point in time the question that the european leaders have to put themselves through chichi clearly...
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Jan 13, 2019
01/19
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but barbara wanted to be her own boss. with so many oil rigs running, anybody could start a business. she told her employer she was leaving and took some mops, buckets and cleaning supplies on her way out. barbara convinced a few company men to transfer their business to her and made the rounds to other rigs with new business cards and cake. only a few men said they were too clean to hire a maid. i like dirty men, she would joke. if you're clean, i don't have no work. we realized that we'd stayed in the same farmhouse near the wild bison truck stop at different times and traded some gossip. but as often happened in williston, she disappeared without warning several weeks later. her coffee pot was gone, her room was empty. a blond, portly south carolina woman who worked at wal-mart took her place. she had lived a different lifestyle years ago, she told me, but when i inquired further, she told me she didn't want to say it out loud. a few months later she suggested i take my printer off the kitchen table and put it back in m
but barbara wanted to be her own boss. with so many oil rigs running, anybody could start a business. she told her employer she was leaving and took some mops, buckets and cleaning supplies on her way out. barbara convinced a few company men to transfer their business to her and made the rounds to other rigs with new business cards and cake. only a few men said they were too clean to hire a maid. i like dirty men, she would joke. if you're clean, i don't have no work. we realized that we'd...
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Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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step two -- barbara forecloses on the thermometer property. step three -- she pays off the bank that still has a lien on it. finally, willis herron's pride and joy is back in his family, free and clear. step four may be the hardest part -- getting the darn thing working again. for that, it's back to yesco. >> we ended up having to put a new computer in it, new drivers, software, and new l.e.d. lighting. >> so how much did it cost to fix the thermometer? >> about $150,000. >> family members, most of whom live a couple of hours away, take rotating shifts in baker to protect the tower from vandals. >> here's where we've been the last four months. >> what? >> yeah. >> you said you lived on the property. i thought there was a house. you've been living in this? >> this is it. >> willis' grandson, dan, a recent law-school graduate, takes a break from job hunting to help set up the gift shop. >> i painted everything, and i fixed the drywall, and... i don't know. all kinds of stuff. >> family members don't get paid. profits from the shop barely cover t
step two -- barbara forecloses on the thermometer property. step three -- she pays off the bank that still has a lien on it. finally, willis herron's pride and joy is back in his family, free and clear. step four may be the hardest part -- getting the darn thing working again. for that, it's back to yesco. >> we ended up having to put a new computer in it, new drivers, software, and new l.e.d. lighting. >> so how much did it cost to fix the thermometer? >> about $150,000....
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basal in london thank you barbara. and here in germany the latest events in london have been received with pleas for clarity and for unity this is what vice chancellor and finance minister all off shots at the say a tradition here to look into to go to course the focus in future must know be on the remaining twenty seven e.u. member states they have shown in the last two years that they can act cohesively and achieve a lot together. so let's get more now from simon young who is at the german parliament which is debating the voting on the country's own brags that legislation today simon welcome we just heard there the german vice chancellor saying that. based should a centrally forget the brits let's look after ourselves now is this a similar tone that we're hearing also from other german leaders. is there i don't think that's the message that german politicians exactly want to send they certainly don't want to be seen as blocking any potential moves towards a solution in a way out of this brics it mass but equally that
basal in london thank you barbara. and here in germany the latest events in london have been received with pleas for clarity and for unity this is what vice chancellor and finance minister all off shots at the say a tradition here to look into to go to course the focus in future must know be on the remaining twenty seven e.u. member states they have shown in the last two years that they can act cohesively and achieve a lot together. so let's get more now from simon young who is at the german...
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visa on the story for us tonight in bucharest barbara excellent reporting thank you very much. here in berlin germany's parliament today remembered the victims of the nazi regime in commemorations marking the seventy fourth anniversary of the liberation of the auschwitz concentration camp but nazis murdered an estimated six million jews as well as hundreds of thousands of sinti roma disabled and gay people with more than a million people killed at auschwitz alone the keynote address was given by historian holocaust survivor saul friedland. saul friedlander has spent his whole life trying to understand the inhumanity of the holocaust as a young jewish boy his parents hit him from the nazis in a french boarding school he describes the last time he saw them. what was going on inside them when they saw their little boy fighting tooth and nail to stay with them as i was removed from their room. it was the last time i ever saw them. so will it still be. in his speech to the german parliament commemorating the holocaust the historian pointed out that millions of germans already knew w
visa on the story for us tonight in bucharest barbara excellent reporting thank you very much. here in berlin germany's parliament today remembered the victims of the nazi regime in commemorations marking the seventy fourth anniversary of the liberation of the auschwitz concentration camp but nazis murdered an estimated six million jews as well as hundreds of thousands of sinti roma disabled and gay people with more than a million people killed at auschwitz alone the keynote address was given...
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analyst alex forrest whining it's good to have all of you here on the program barbara let me start with you in one been so unprecedented defeat for the british prime minister and yet she plans to carry on how do you explain that. under normal circumstances after a defeat as frustrating as we have seen it tonight as devastating and as really just complete and total because what can she say if she has a certain own party against her on this breakfast a deal after in normal times the prime minister would have stood up and said sorry ladies and gentleman this is it i stepped down but we're not in normal times in british politics and so she had even beforehand because this was of course it defeat that everybody knew was about to happen it was only a question about the size of it it's so even the forehead she had said she will stay on she will fight for her breaks it till the very end and we don't know when and where that end would probably come the twenty ninth of march shows some of the dates in the future. reason may is sort of not playing according to the rules anymore these are extraordi
analyst alex forrest whining it's good to have all of you here on the program barbara let me start with you in one been so unprecedented defeat for the british prime minister and yet she plans to carry on how do you explain that. under normal circumstances after a defeat as frustrating as we have seen it tonight as devastating and as really just complete and total because what can she say if she has a certain own party against her on this breakfast a deal after in normal times the prime...
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Jan 21, 2019
01/19
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barbara: she did not. it takes a certain amount of cold-blooded this to take plan a that was roundly defeated, blow the dust off and say here it is. this is the plan. just vote for it. i will listen to your objections. what i do with those objections means -- remains unclear. i will take him to brussels and we will see what happens. that is what she did. in a way it is admirable. theresa may does what she does best, she just carries on and does not swerve left or right. brent: who was she trying to win over with her address in parliament, today? barbara: that was completely clear. all of this was for her own party and for her coalition partner, the northern irish do you pay -- dup. they were the ones that gave her this incredible defeat. they are the ones that she now tries to convince. it was relatively weak. their objections to the brags a deal --brexit deal go deeper. there is a larger group of monks -- amongst the brexiteers. they are fighting for a hard brexit. they want a total and clear break from t
barbara: she did not. it takes a certain amount of cold-blooded this to take plan a that was roundly defeated, blow the dust off and say here it is. this is the plan. just vote for it. i will listen to your objections. what i do with those objections means -- remains unclear. i will take him to brussels and we will see what happens. that is what she did. in a way it is admirable. theresa may does what she does best, she just carries on and does not swerve left or right. brent: who was she...
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that was barbara in london well you case decision to leave the e.u. has dominated british politics for the last two years leaving little time for politicians to focus on other issues such as health care or education or jobs that's making many people feel bad up with the endless obsession with. every day abdul's a fostex up the newspapers at his small london kiosk and every day he gets more and more frustrated with the headlines. each and every day if you see everybody in didn't mind because it makes it because it does but soon like. people are suffering you know only everybody everybody and everything in mind first when you wake up but it's it when you sleep except for london is the chaos over at westminster has become business as usual on tuesday the rejection of theories amaze briggs it deal today the vote of no confidence against the prime minister. so for me is driving me crazy get on with it do it and it's and it's true what the votes it i thank everything sinnott they have a mill set that many make a decision i'm on my all the novela everyone kn
that was barbara in london well you case decision to leave the e.u. has dominated british politics for the last two years leaving little time for politicians to focus on other issues such as health care or education or jobs that's making many people feel bad up with the endless obsession with. every day abdul's a fostex up the newspapers at his small london kiosk and every day he gets more and more frustrated with the headlines. each and every day if you see everybody in didn't mind because it...
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our barbara based on the story for so long and barbara as always thank you. well the israeli military says its jets have struck iranian military targets in syria including its munitions facilities and an intelligence site the announcement is a rare departure from israel's normally ambiguous statements concerning its activities in syria the strikes were in response to a rocket fired by iranian forces towards israel on sunday that itself was a response to an earlier israeli air raid near the airport in damascus. explosions in the skies over damascus on monday morning the syrian observatory for human rights says some syrians have been killed israel's military has confirmed that it targeted at radian and syrian positions including arsenals and training camps out seen in this footage during a visit to chad yesterday israeli prime minister binyamin netanyahu called it an early warning of a long term military strategy. it's one of the newly permanently pursue a policy of attacking iranian positions in syria and everyone who tries to harm. the policy was developed af
our barbara based on the story for so long and barbara as always thank you. well the israeli military says its jets have struck iranian military targets in syria including its munitions facilities and an intelligence site the announcement is a rare departure from israel's normally ambiguous statements concerning its activities in syria the strikes were in response to a rocket fired by iranian forces towards israel on sunday that itself was a response to an earlier israeli air raid near the...
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vessel joins us from the remaining in capital tonight good evening to you barbara the european parliament voted today to recognize one why there was the legitimate president of venezuela now is that also the position of the european union tonight now it's up to the european foreign ministers and the problem is that every single country every nation has to decide that by itself this is not something that can be done by just a common resolution and saying the e.u. supports but every single country has to say yes we want to do that now you already mentioned earlier the ultimatum that was set by the big pharm by spain france germany and the u.k. trying to force majeure into new elections and threatening to modernise immediately recognize swine if you wouldn't follow their demands and that is the one side and other countries here have been very stringently asked and begged to sort of get in line and to support this line and also from their side and say ok we stand by that and we also will recognize. that is the one side and the other side is what the e.u. can do as a whole and that's sort of o
vessel joins us from the remaining in capital tonight good evening to you barbara the european parliament voted today to recognize one why there was the legitimate president of venezuela now is that also the position of the european union tonight now it's up to the european foreign ministers and the problem is that every single country every nation has to decide that by itself this is not something that can be done by just a common resolution and saying the e.u. supports but every single...
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Jan 17, 2019
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barbara ehrenreich, welcome to democracy now! talk about the shutdown, its effect on workers, and what you are demanding. >> i could say that my co-author on this beast is -- he's is a longtime union organizer who was in fact the director of organizing for the teamsters them also worked for government workers, unions, so there is a lot of experience that goes into this little op-ed we did for "the new york times." -- an hourint is point is, don't just take this lying down. yes, there is a blue flu and people are looking for other jobs and everything, but look at the way airport workers and federal employees in general are being treated. they are being treated in a mean and humiliating fashion. when trump said this week, essentially, you can come back we can tell you when you will get paid. when? when the shutdown is over. that is not how you respectfully treat american workers. work for money. otherwise, it is in violation of the 13th amendment, which bans involuntary servitude and slavery. on federalre a ban workers striking? >>
barbara ehrenreich, welcome to democracy now! talk about the shutdown, its effect on workers, and what you are demanding. >> i could say that my co-author on this beast is -- he's is a longtime union organizer who was in fact the director of organizing for the teamsters them also worked for government workers, unions, so there is a lot of experience that goes into this little op-ed we did for "the new york times." -- an hourint is point is, don't just take this lying down. yes,...
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Jan 21, 2019
01/19
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barbara winslow talking about her early life, political career and legacy in this 15-minute interview recorded at the american historical association's annual meeting. >> professor barbara winslow, author of this book on shirley chisholm. who was she? >> she was among many things, the first african-american woman elected to congress from brooklyn in 1968. and after the inauguration of 116th congress, many of the woman who had just been elected were photographed under her portrait which hangs in the capitol. >> what motivated her? why was she interested in politics and why was she elected? >> she was interested in politics beginning in college at brooklyn college. she was active in the naacp, she founded a black woman's sorority, she supported a woman who was running for president at brooklyn college, and she was active in the harriet tubman society. so she began her political activism as a college student. she got a job working in a day-care center but politics was her passion. and she got involved in brooklyn politics which at that time was all white and all male. and she worked with
barbara winslow talking about her early life, political career and legacy in this 15-minute interview recorded at the american historical association's annual meeting. >> professor barbara winslow, author of this book on shirley chisholm. who was she? >> she was among many things, the first african-american woman elected to congress from brooklyn in 1968. and after the inauguration of 116th congress, many of the woman who had just been elected were photographed under her portrait...
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so what's it looking like let's go longer now neither of us barbara v's or barbara good morning do we know anything about teresa mayes plan b. yes we know a bit and it seems that it happened exactly as we expected last week plan b. is in fact plan a because what reason may if you look at the media here this morning and from the information that emerged over the weekend what's the reason may want to do today is go back to parliament and say listen i will somehow magically remove the backstop or sort of make it so make it's shrink within the divorce agreement so that in fact then the hardline tory breaks cheers and to do you can happily agree to it that is more or less what she wants to do she did make a move last week for some cross party talks at those because to reason they wouldn't budge on her red light and she didn't even want to help about a customs union was the opposition for instance and so what is left it's only left that she will go back and say let's try again once more with feeling ok let's mind our view is that the backstop is the plan to avoid that hard border with irela
so what's it looking like let's go longer now neither of us barbara v's or barbara good morning do we know anything about teresa mayes plan b. yes we know a bit and it seems that it happened exactly as we expected last week plan b. is in fact plan a because what reason may if you look at the media here this morning and from the information that emerged over the weekend what's the reason may want to do today is go back to parliament and say listen i will somehow magically remove the backstop or...
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Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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host: barbara winslow, thank you for your time. >> thank you. this was great. >> you are watching american history tv only on c-span3. the 70tharch anniversary of the founding of the state of israel and the creation of human rights. next on american history tv, james loeffler talks about his book "rooted cosmopolitans: jews and human rights in the 20th century." loeff talk professor ler profiles two jewish boys who assisted with the war crimes of nazi war criminals and founded -- the human rights.
host: barbara winslow, thank you for your time. >> thank you. this was great. >> you are watching american history tv only on c-span3. the 70tharch anniversary of the founding of the state of israel and the creation of human rights. next on american history tv, james loeffler talks about his book "rooted cosmopolitans: jews and human rights in the 20th century." loeff talk professor ler profiles two jewish boys who assisted with the war crimes of nazi war criminals and...
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Jan 24, 2019
01/19
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barbara: mr. trump has called on other countries in the rllion to suit, and many have.s the u.ping that this will be the turning point for venezuela. barbara plett-usher, bbc news, sshington. laura: for more,ke a short time ago to the director of the atlantic council's latin american program. this is a very dramatic day in venezuela. the mass protests and now president trump recognizing the opposition leader as interim president. just how volatile and precarious is the position of president maduro right now >> maduro is facing reaction against his regime le he has never seen before. there were monumental protts two years ago. today's protests are nationwide. hundreds of thousands of people in the streets. not just protesting against maduro and the humanitariant crisis, otesting for a return to demracy. we are in a historic moment with juan guaidÓ assuming interim presency of venezuela today and two weeks after guaidÓ himself assumed the presidency of the national assembly, this marks a seachange
barbara: mr. trump has called on other countries in the rllion to suit, and many have.s the u.ping that this will be the turning point for venezuela. barbara plett-usher, bbc news, sshington. laura: for more,ke a short time ago to the director of the atlantic council's latin american program. this is a very dramatic day in venezuela. the mass protests and now president trump recognizing the opposition leader as interim president. just how volatile and precarious is the position of president...
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Jan 23, 2019
01/19
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the bbc's barbara plett-usherrt re barbara: is this the man set to become venezuela's new leader, juan guaidÓ? he was sworn in as head of the opposition national assembly earlier this month. today he took matters a step further, as hundreds of thousands marched in antigovernment protests, he declared himself interim president of the country. that is the signal president trump had been winting for. wiinutes he recognized the move, calling mr. guaidÓ the legitimate elected leader, heomising to back him with ght of u.s. economic and diplomatic power. >> are you considering a military option fo venezuela? pres. trump: we are not considering anything, but all options are on the table. >> does that mean -- pres. trump: all options, always. .l options are on the tab barbara: it was a coordinated bid to oust nicolas maduro, the hard left president blamed for venezuela'sic profound econom crisis. he has responded by breaking off diplomatic relations with the u.s. for months already, americha official been criticizing israel as a disastrous -- criticizing his rule as a ansastrous dictatorship.
the bbc's barbara plett-usherrt re barbara: is this the man set to become venezuela's new leader, juan guaidÓ? he was sworn in as head of the opposition national assembly earlier this month. today he took matters a step further, as hundreds of thousands marched in antigovernment protests, he declared himself interim president of the country. that is the signal president trump had been winting for. wiinutes he recognized the move, calling mr. guaidÓ the legitimate elected leader, heomising to...
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barbara hazel joining us from bucharest thanks barbara. now in other news as many as twelve p. twelve people skills may have died as a result of a deep freeze that is gripping the american midwest weather colder than and arctic a has grounded flights crippled infrastructure and brought life to a standstill for tens of millions of people the polar vortex is a mass of freezing air that normally spins around the north pole in winter but it has slips southwards to the u.s. . chicago the windy city no stranger to wicked winter weather but this week's lows haven't been this brutal in decades breathing can be painful even dangerous and that's not only the case in america's third largest city six u.s. states have recorded temperatures colder than antarctica weather stations across large parts of canada and the u.s. have register temperatures at minus thirty degrees celsius or more factor in the wind chill and it's more than minus fifty the culprit for the cold chaos a massive subzero air called a polar vortex so named because it normally stays put around the north pole but this week it
barbara hazel joining us from bucharest thanks barbara. now in other news as many as twelve p. twelve people skills may have died as a result of a deep freeze that is gripping the american midwest weather colder than and arctic a has grounded flights crippled infrastructure and brought life to a standstill for tens of millions of people the polar vortex is a mass of freezing air that normally spins around the north pole in winter but it has slips southwards to the u.s. . chicago the windy city...
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are we going to go to barbara in just me just as my producer ok we can go to barbara so barbara can resume a can she get any changes to this agreement any assurances that she has already received from the european union. to me so you've been asking me brant yes we'll start with the question was meant for you that you know sorry. yes as if she does get the problem here is that video of he the northern irish hardliners who are sort of at the core of this whole of this whole trouble in this whole problem and that they have really really sort of dark themselves in that they have said that they would not budge unless the it backs up a small this removed now that is something that the e.u. cannot give them if you look to brussels i mean there are certain discussions nobody will do this openly but they do exist that they they might somehow put some sort of time limit on the backs of even though it's very long gone let's think about five years for instance is that going to change the opinion of the d u p and off the bretts that hardliners it is doubtful because if you look at what the brics and ha
are we going to go to barbara in just me just as my producer ok we can go to barbara so barbara can resume a can she get any changes to this agreement any assurances that she has already received from the european union. to me so you've been asking me brant yes we'll start with the question was meant for you that you know sorry. yes as if she does get the problem here is that video of he the northern irish hardliners who are sort of at the core of this whole of this whole trouble in this whole...
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Jan 31, 2019
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speaking first is ambassador barbara lee. barbara joined the institute last year after completing ,ervice in the state department a very distinguished career of diplomatic service that ended as a tour of the american ambassador to the united arab emirates. previously barbara had served as assistant secretary of state on two occasions, she knows the region certainly better than almost any person that i have ever met, and i'm really delighted to have her as a colleague here at the washington institute. speaking after barbara b ambassador dennis ross. know, has more than a quarter-century experience in a rare way of experience in the sense that he has served white house tours for both democratic and republican presidents. you don't see that much. int level of bipartisanship one person's professional career much anymore. dennis served most recently in the obama administration, and i'm delighted that he's with us after returning from his own inp, several weeks abroad israel with other travels around the region. table,the foreign o
speaking first is ambassador barbara lee. barbara joined the institute last year after completing ,ervice in the state department a very distinguished career of diplomatic service that ended as a tour of the american ambassador to the united arab emirates. previously barbara had served as assistant secretary of state on two occasions, she knows the region certainly better than almost any person that i have ever met, and i'm really delighted to have her as a colleague here at the washington...
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Jan 16, 2019
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barbara starr at the pentagon. >>> this just in. nancy pelosi is asking president trump to move the date of the state of the union. we'll tell you why ahead. i like your card, but i'm absolutely not paying an annual fee. discover has no annual fees. really? yeah. we just don't believe in them. oh nice. you would not believe how long i've been rehearsing that. no annual fee on any card. only from discover. our big idaho potato truck and we're going to find it. awe man. always look for the grown in idaho seal. means they won't hike your rates over one mistake. see, liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. switch and you could save $782 on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ you're smart,eat you already knew that. but it's also great for finding the perfect used car. you'll see what a fair price is and you can connect with a truecar certified d
barbara starr at the pentagon. >>> this just in. nancy pelosi is asking president trump to move the date of the state of the union. we'll tell you why ahead. i like your card, but i'm absolutely not paying an annual fee. discover has no annual fees. really? yeah. we just don't believe in them. oh nice. you would not believe how long i've been rehearsing that. no annual fee on any card. only from discover. our big idaho potato truck and we're going to find it. awe man. always look for...
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Jan 24, 2019
01/19
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barbara ress. the former executive vice president of the trump organization and author of "all alone on the 68th floor: how one woman changed the face of construction." jack o'donnell, chief operating officer of trump plaza and casino and co-author of "trump: the inside story of the real donald trump." jack o'donnell, of course, being the most successful american with the name o'donnell and not related to me, of course. joy, i want to start with the woman we just heard, faye smith. that is the real face of this shutdown right now today. people who are on the verge of losing their homes. she is going to be evicted in washington, d.c. donald trump has done a lot of evictions. >> yes. >> you know, in his life. his father has done a lot of evictions. they know from their end of it how that works. and mitch mcconnell is the person who now will be as responsible as donald trump for faye smith getting evicted if she does. >> yeah, and not only doing evictions. if you follow history as tony schwarz and oth
barbara ress. the former executive vice president of the trump organization and author of "all alone on the 68th floor: how one woman changed the face of construction." jack o'donnell, chief operating officer of trump plaza and casino and co-author of "trump: the inside story of the real donald trump." jack o'donnell, of course, being the most successful american with the name o'donnell and not related to me, of course. joy, i want to start with the woman we just heard, faye...
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let's get the latest now from our correspondent in london barbara basler is there barbara so the parliament has voted to keep theresa may in power but will that make it any easier for her to solve the brics that puzzle. not really terry because of course nothing has changed i mean isn't that for months nothing has changed because she's as weak as she was before this vote of no confidence her conservative party has decided to stand up really to sort of keep the hold of government and not to sort of dare to go out into new elections and so to reason may is still clinging on at the problem now is that she has to come up with something until monday and this is just about three days from now and she doesn't have much time to do that what she should have done at the beginning of this very process talk to all the other parties in parliament and somehow figure out which majority could lie and that is her task at the moment and it is a very difficult one because her own party the hard line breaks a cheer and a heart of brakes that and the other side the opposition want a soft approach that as you me
let's get the latest now from our correspondent in london barbara basler is there barbara so the parliament has voted to keep theresa may in power but will that make it any easier for her to solve the brics that puzzle. not really terry because of course nothing has changed i mean isn't that for months nothing has changed because she's as weak as she was before this vote of no confidence her conservative party has decided to stand up really to sort of keep the hold of government and not to sort...
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barbara to the possibility of a hard break leaving the e.u. with a deal at all and the possibility of a second to break referendum are those chances hi you're to not. that's hard to say because the second bricks at referendum that's all in the hands of palm and i mean that is that labor and the other opposition parties and a handful of conservatives would have to gang together and vote for it and say this is really what we want this is the way for what this is the way out of the impasse and that is that is this thing that reason maybe from from her own side is very likely not to suggest because i mean we've just heard her she just repeats on and on endlessly she is about to deliver the breaks that everybody in the meantime must be thinking about delivering pizza you know it's the surge it's a phrase that sort of really stuck sticks in everybody's mind and it will be very hard for her to sort of deviate from that it's a little i was thinking more like delivering a delegate is like the just asian period for an elephant it's been so long now but
barbara to the possibility of a hard break leaving the e.u. with a deal at all and the possibility of a second to break referendum are those chances hi you're to not. that's hard to say because the second bricks at referendum that's all in the hands of palm and i mean that is that labor and the other opposition parties and a handful of conservatives would have to gang together and vote for it and say this is really what we want this is the way for what this is the way out of the impasse and...
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Jan 27, 2019
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host: barbara winslow, thank you for your time. >> thank you. this was great. announcer: interested in american history? visit our website. tv schedule,our preview programs and watch college lectures, chores, films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. year, c-span is touring cities across the country, exploring american history.
host: barbara winslow, thank you for your time. >> thank you. this was great. announcer: interested in american history? visit our website. tv schedule,our preview programs and watch college lectures, chores, films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. year, c-span is touring cities across the country, exploring american history.
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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hello i'm barbara sarah this is al jazeera live from london also coming up. a child and the doctor reported dead in the latest protest the man being sudan's president stepped down. from cancels the u.s. house speaker's trip to afghanistan in a rout over the shutdown as polls show that his approval ratings are forming and kenyans bury the victims of tuesday's attack on a nairobi hotel carried out by the young group al shabaab. the death toll in a car bomb attack at a police academy in the colombian capital bogota has now risen to ten it's the biggest attack against the police or military facility in the city in over a decade the vehicle rammed into the academy grounds and then blew up shattering the windows of apartments in the area around the building president even rushed to the scene from the west of the country where he'd been attending a meeting on security. this is an attack on a sense of learning where there were unarmed young people and students it's an attack not just against oregon state. police alone it is a tough against home society this terrorist
hello i'm barbara sarah this is al jazeera live from london also coming up. a child and the doctor reported dead in the latest protest the man being sudan's president stepped down. from cancels the u.s. house speaker's trip to afghanistan in a rout over the shutdown as polls show that his approval ratings are forming and kenyans bury the victims of tuesday's attack on a nairobi hotel carried out by the young group al shabaab. the death toll in a car bomb attack at a police academy in the...
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Jan 14, 2019
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the second statue is of barbara jordan. they are located at the austin international airport and on the ut campus. this is one of four statues honoring african-americans on the ut campus. it represents the triumph of white and black people from austin to come together and celebrate and honor the life of a great texas woman. barbara jordan was a native of houston. in the texast state senate in 1997, first elected to that body since 1883. she ran successfully in 1973 for the 18th district, become the first woman from a southern state to serve in the u.s. congress. we know she led a distinguished career in that body, best known as a member of the house judiciary committee during the 1974 watergate hearings, which investigated the illegal conduct of richard nixon. in the fall of a ut student 2002, group called the orange jackets began a discussion with a number of student organizations on that campus to recognize an outstanding woman. in a their view the campus lakhs statues of female role models. the orange jackets were establ
the second statue is of barbara jordan. they are located at the austin international airport and on the ut campus. this is one of four statues honoring african-americans on the ut campus. it represents the triumph of white and black people from austin to come together and celebrate and honor the life of a great texas woman. barbara jordan was a native of houston. in the texast state senate in 1997, first elected to that body since 1883. she ran successfully in 1973 for the 18th district, become...
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joining us now live from london the state abuse barbara vai's all barbara do we know anything about teresa mayes plan b. yeah we know and we fear that her strategy today is going to come from the little self-help book for politicians if you fail try again try harder because what is going to be more or less likely is that plan b. is planned a she's going to come back with the exit deal from the european union and to present it again and say ok i will talk to brussels again just one more time and try to wrest further concessions about the back stuff that you mentioned from them and then she will try to woo her own rose so own party the hard line breaks and cheers and the extremely skeptical northern irish do you p.d. in order to support her so she just does the whole thing again like one small was feeling ok well barber of the trade secretary for britain liam fox has come out saying that remain parliamentarians are trying to hijack. what does he mean by that . what he means is that the ten spy parliamentarian see across party lines to somehow wrest control over this completely derailed break
joining us now live from london the state abuse barbara vai's all barbara do we know anything about teresa mayes plan b. yeah we know and we fear that her strategy today is going to come from the little self-help book for politicians if you fail try again try harder because what is going to be more or less likely is that plan b. is planned a she's going to come back with the exit deal from the european union and to present it again and say ok i will talk to brussels again just one more time and...
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it's real like barbara said it spits bang on field and and the reason here is it's again the u.k. negotiating with itself in brussels the institutions but also the twenty seven member states who are observing this very carefully to wonder how come that the u.k. parliament really believes or some in the u.k. parliament will find out really believe that the backs of could be renegotiated that a solution could be found to something that was fought over for over the period of two years lots of you negotiators from the u.k. side and from the e.u. side worked hard on finding a solution for the backstop the solution for the border between the republic of ireland and northern ireland that is and how come that now after those two years and a compromise that has has been found between the negotiators someone believes it could be reopened and a magic new solution could be found so gail given that a newsman to from brussels what are they hoping for from today from parliament today. well that's a really good question i guess my my crystal ball is as polished as yours what they're hoping for is
it's real like barbara said it spits bang on field and and the reason here is it's again the u.k. negotiating with itself in brussels the institutions but also the twenty seven member states who are observing this very carefully to wonder how come that the u.k. parliament really believes or some in the u.k. parliament will find out really believe that the backs of could be renegotiated that a solution could be found to something that was fought over for over the period of two years lots of you...
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vevo she is outside britain's houses of parliament good evening to you barbara maybe you have found more clarity than it seems the rest of us have been able to find tonight i mean where are we what happens next. what happens next is off course sprint tests that problem and the government have to run through this whole rigmarole off more or less formal motions there will be the vote of confidence as we have heard that series of may will likely is likely to win as we has i have also heard and that will give her enough scare you to come back on monday and then come back and then come back it was a so-called plan b. which is going to be just plain a in another cloak just sort of in a different verbiage and then things would go from there and then as alex is said polly will do will try to to take more control from government now after tonight's defeat something that seems quite clear is that normal rules in british politics don't apply anymore because under normal rules after this defeat treason may should have stood up and said i'm very sorry about this but i resign that would have been
vevo she is outside britain's houses of parliament good evening to you barbara maybe you have found more clarity than it seems the rest of us have been able to find tonight i mean where are we what happens next. what happens next is off course sprint tests that problem and the government have to run through this whole rigmarole off more or less formal motions there will be the vote of confidence as we have heard that series of may will likely is likely to win as we has i have also heard and...
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they don't do correspondent barbara faisal is in london outside the houses of parliament welcome barbara the debates begun the vote is tonight what sign is that of the government staving off what looks like a bit what looks likely to be a humiliating defeat. all observers here phil say that the government has absolutely no chance in this world stave off the feat tonight the only question open is really how big is it going to be something that hundreds of former own conservative party hard parliamentarians will leave to reserve a sort of deal down and others expect even more whatever the outcome it means that reason may just has to come back to problem and. present play and be back tonight she has to go through this first the debate is ongoing and she will sort of ended she will have the last word on that however everybody has heard those throughout the last weeks and months knows that she is into endless repetition off her own arguments for the deal and for some kind of breaks it and it is not going to sway anybody and change anything it is a formality bought a painful one for the for th
they don't do correspondent barbara faisal is in london outside the houses of parliament welcome barbara the debates begun the vote is tonight what sign is that of the government staving off what looks like a bit what looks likely to be a humiliating defeat. all observers here phil say that the government has absolutely no chance in this world stave off the feat tonight the only question open is really how big is it going to be something that hundreds of former own conservative party hard...