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Nov 9, 2021
11/21
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>> first off, congratulations to patrick. i've dealt with purdue pharma before, i haven't dealt with sacklers and it's really a nasty company. you know, you should be congratulated for your courage, your conviction, your cajones, i guess would be the best way to put it, great, great work. i didn't have any black limousine stalking my house, but there was a lot of threats of litigation from the attorney general of west virginia. when i got some leaked documents, i notified him that i was doing, going to do a story about his role in this lawsuit against the distributors, and he had one of his underlings call our lawyer and call and e-mail me that if we printed this story, it would be a case of actual malice, and that we would face court sanctions. so i don't know what that meant, if that meant i was going to jail or somebody was going to jail. it didn't happen. and he also, ag retaliated he launched an investigation into the newspaper, the gazette mail i was working at at the time and subpoenaed us for all of our personnel reco
>> first off, congratulations to patrick. i've dealt with purdue pharma before, i haven't dealt with sacklers and it's really a nasty company. you know, you should be congratulated for your courage, your conviction, your cajones, i guess would be the best way to put it, great, great work. i didn't have any black limousine stalking my house, but there was a lot of threats of litigation from the attorney general of west virginia. when i got some leaked documents, i notified him that i was...
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Nov 10, 2021
11/21
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i am sherry horowitz reported the washington post and i'm here with patrick and eric to talk about their book on the opioid epidemic which claimed the lives of more than 500,000 people nationwide the worst drug overdose epidemic in american history. i spent the last three years reporting for the washington post investigative team of the opioid crisis and i'm already writing a book myself on the epidemic with my colleague scott. i'm particularly thrilled to introduce you to two authors whose work in books i completely admire. patrick brad and keith in a word writer at the new york times bestseller empire of pain the secret history of the dynasty. eric i who won a pulitzer prize for his reporting on opioids at mayo and now a reporter in west virginia and the author a coal country fight against the drug companies that develop the opioid epidemic. patrick, let me start with you in your devastating, absolutely devastating portrait of the family and their role in that opioid epidemic. can you give us a brief description of empire of pain and tell us what led you to write this book. >> absolute
i am sherry horowitz reported the washington post and i'm here with patrick and eric to talk about their book on the opioid epidemic which claimed the lives of more than 500,000 people nationwide the worst drug overdose epidemic in american history. i spent the last three years reporting for the washington post investigative team of the opioid crisis and i'm already writing a book myself on the epidemic with my colleague scott. i'm particularly thrilled to introduce you to two authors whose...
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Nov 9, 2021
11/21
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i know around here everybody carries narcan including myself but maybe patrick has an idea. >> patrick wrote about protesters who went to the museum. >> right. >> i think that kind of protest had an impact, i think with the sackler's, it probably helps on some levels family, a story that can be told, the board members may not be but i do think public protest, getting out there on the street, letting people know you are watching, letting elected officials know, i think the state attorneys general who pushed really hard to extract from perdue, i think they were driven in part, the once really honest and out there and driving the story, and contact with community groups, they had seen and away it played out in their own communities and had seen outrage and there should be accountability here so i don't knowow that i can ever be enough but i think that level of engagement makes a difference. >> unfortunately, we are out of time. thank you to all of you watching and thank you to our extraordinary authors patrick keefe, eric
i know around here everybody carries narcan including myself but maybe patrick has an idea. >> patrick wrote about protesters who went to the museum. >> right. >> i think that kind of protest had an impact, i think with the sackler's, it probably helps on some levels family, a story that can be told, the board members may not be but i do think public protest, getting out there on the street, letting people know you are watching, letting elected officials know, i think the...
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Nov 14, 2021
11/21
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patrick and kay had survived. and detective kendall had some questions for kay. >> how do you know he came through the window? >> coming up -- kay describes, in horrifying detail, a night of terror. >> remember, if you do anything stupid, i have a gun, i will have you killed, and i have your husband. >> but does her story matched the evidence? when "dateline" continues. with type 2 diabetes will develop chronic kidney disease, or ckd. did you know ckd can lead to kidney failure and dialysis? kidney alert! ckd often has no symptoms until it's too late! help protect your kidneys. call your doctor for a uacr test. it shows one of the earliest signs for ckd. visit kidneyalert.com! is struggling to manage your type 2 diabetes it sknocking youthe earout of your zone?kd. lowering your a1c with once-weekly ozempic® can help you get back in it. oh, oh, oh, ozempic®! my zone... lowering my a1c, cv risk, and losing some weight... now, back to the game! ozempic® is proven to lower a1c. most people who took ozempic® reache
patrick and kay had survived. and detective kendall had some questions for kay. >> how do you know he came through the window? >> coming up -- kay describes, in horrifying detail, a night of terror. >> remember, if you do anything stupid, i have a gun, i will have you killed, and i have your husband. >> but does her story matched the evidence? when "dateline" continues. with type 2 diabetes will develop chronic kidney disease, or ckd. did you know ckd can lead...
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Nov 27, 2021
11/21
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patrick.— one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that — one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we _ one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need _ one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to - one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to do i one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to do is l the thing that we need to do is always— the thing that we need to do is always think in the face of this virus. — always think in the face of this virus. go — always think in the face of this virus, go earlier than you think you want _ virus, go earlier than you think you want to, _ virus, go earlier than you think you wantto, hard— virus, go earlier than you think you want to, hard than you think you want _ want to, hard than you think you want to, — want to, hard than you think you want to, and more geographically broader— want to, and more geographically broader than you think you want to, those _ broader than you think you want to, those of— broader than you think you want to, those of the —
patrick.— one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that — one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we _ one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need _ one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to - one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to do i one. patrick. you are quite right. the thing that we need to do is l the thing that we need to do is always— the thing that we need to do is always think in the face of this virus. —...
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. >> i meet patrick stein. that's when things changed. >> how would you describe patrick stein? >> you know, he's a farmer. >> this is what farming's all about, basically. >> patrick stein and his family were on "national geographic" in the '90s talking about the family farm, they showed them farming. >> only about two times a year that we as a family get together. >> when patrick stein came into the picture, things got amped up. >> i'd told the fbi about him. man, this guy, this guy is crazy. he's on a different level. he made the other guys look like boy scouts, you know? to me, it was like evil. >> patrick stein made it clear to dan that he wanted dan to come with him in a fringe militia group. so dan, going where the action is, agreed to leave the three percenters and go with patrick. >> so it's you, patrick, gavin, curtis. >> right. >> who was curtis allen? >> curtis allen, he was -- he'd been in the military. he was more cautious. the same hate, but he was more quiet. >> who's gavin wright? >> he -- he is -- he was a friend of curtis allen's. they owned a mobile home deale
. >> i meet patrick stein. that's when things changed. >> how would you describe patrick stein? >> you know, he's a farmer. >> this is what farming's all about, basically. >> patrick stein and his family were on "national geographic" in the '90s talking about the family farm, they showed them farming. >> only about two times a year that we as a family get together. >> when patrick stein came into the picture, things got amped up. >> i'd...
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patrick, thanks for your insights. patrick: thanks for having me. kristen: help us put these prices in perspective. they are rising very quickly. a year ago in the pandemic, they were very low. hat trick: exactly right. during the summer, they held relatively stable because the delta variant was keeping things in check. since the end of the summer around labor day, things have started to escalate. a lot of the reason is, energy issues have developed overseas, and the crisis if you will in areas of china where: victoria's are at record-low levels. as a result, china -- china, where coal levels are at record low levels. as a result, china is buying more natural gas. there have been shortages as well. that can be replaced by crude oil. essentially, we have had incredible rise in demand the best couple weeks, so oil prices have been hold higher -- have been pulled higher and that is why we are paying more. kristen: i read about our recent storms having an impact as well? is that right? patrick: we saw a kinks as a result of the daily news of rain we had
patrick, thanks for your insights. patrick: thanks for having me. kristen: help us put these prices in perspective. they are rising very quickly. a year ago in the pandemic, they were very low. hat trick: exactly right. during the summer, they held relatively stable because the delta variant was keeping things in check. since the end of the summer around labor day, things have started to escalate. a lot of the reason is, energy issues have developed overseas, and the crisis if you will in areas...
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i mean, i knew i knew patrick seal. you say he was an intelligence with the i don't say that i don't, it was his father. i don't think his father was. it was easily famous for the biographer of acids, father of amos, he patrick seal the late late patrick. yes. but term do you think today there's still lingering on their echoes of that in the corridors of langley in virginia. the ca, that quite trust the british, they're there intelligent services. he had class still matters. i don't know. i suspect less than i suspect less than, than formerly than done was the case. i think, i mean, the americans were looking around the world in the 10 years after the war and realizing that maybe they needed to get more involved, that isolationism was, was not doing them any favors. and they were looking at the way the british in the french had been running things and thought this isn't great. i yeah, but recently we had the afghanistan withdrawal. and according to, if we believe the press here, i mean, i don't know how close they are t
i mean, i knew i knew patrick seal. you say he was an intelligence with the i don't say that i don't, it was his father. i don't think his father was. it was easily famous for the biographer of acids, father of amos, he patrick seal the late late patrick. yes. but term do you think today there's still lingering on their echoes of that in the corridors of langley in virginia. the ca, that quite trust the british, they're there intelligent services. he had class still matters. i don't know. i...
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let's go back to patrick. patrick lee, the the, the us with the by the administration is sponsoring a democracy conference on december 10th and 11th. it's all going to be virtual. i think a 110 countries have been invited. we can look at the the list. ok, there's some interesting admissions and then there's some interesting additions which one good question. and it puts the entire idea of democracy into doubt in the 1st place. however, this is an interesting cudgel here. i mean, it seems to me that be like washington, the washington consensus is very, very nervous. it needs to convince itself that no leading the world in terms of democracy is if that is what is driving the world or this whole narrative of democracy versus a talk or see, falls apart like a house of cards. it's laughable in the 21st century. go ahead. yeah, it's, it's, it's the sort of contracts are just endless and i, i, i thought that they would die off at some point in the past, but no, they're going to expand the sort of thing. and it's even
let's go back to patrick. patrick lee, the the, the us with the by the administration is sponsoring a democracy conference on december 10th and 11th. it's all going to be virtual. i think a 110 countries have been invited. we can look at the the list. ok, there's some interesting admissions and then there's some interesting additions which one good question. and it puts the entire idea of democracy into doubt in the 1st place. however, this is an interesting cudgel here. i mean, it seems to me...
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Nov 16, 2021
11/21
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today vermont senator patrick leahy announced he will retire from the senate after eating terms. first elected in 1974, he is the senate temporary per tab. he announced his retirement this morning and the vermont state capital. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible] this room is very, very special and i thank you all for being here. not just because did i use to used toride my tricycle up and e halls but having grown up across the street my sister was here and my brother and we decided to gather here back in 1974. our parents and our children, my sister mary and i used the room to announce my candidacy for the united states senate. at that time i was a 33-year-old fourth term states attorney and he said i wanted to launch a campaign in vermont knowing that vermont had never sent a democrat to the united states senate or certainly not somebody my age, but i thought i understood the need and the values of vermont. i thought it was time for my generation to address. one of the people i read in preparing forg that was the parliamentarian edmund burke speech to the electors that served
today vermont senator patrick leahy announced he will retire from the senate after eating terms. first elected in 1974, he is the senate temporary per tab. he announced his retirement this morning and the vermont state capital. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible] this room is very, very special and i thank you all for being here. not just because did i use to used toride my tricycle up and e halls but having grown up across the street my sister was here and my brother and we decided to gather...
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Nov 16, 2021
11/21
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vermont senator patrick leahy announced he'll rely from the senate after eight terms. first elected in 1974, he's the senate pro tempore and the longest current senator. he announced his retirement in the vermont state capitol. >> good morning. [applause] >> i'm told i could take this off here, so i will. very nice, you all, this room, very, very excellent. and i thank you all for being here. it's special to both myself, not just because i used to ride my tricycle up and down these halls. [laughter] >> i actually did, a long time ago. i don't know what rules that broke. but having grown up right across the street, my sister mary is here and my brother, and decided to gather here back in 1974, our parents, our children, including son kevin was here, mark, may my sister mary and i used the room to announce my candidacy for the united states senate. at that time i was a 33-year-old, fourth term county states attorney and i said i wanted to launch a campaign in vermont, knowing that vermont has never sent a democrat to the united states senate and certainly never somebody
vermont senator patrick leahy announced he'll rely from the senate after eight terms. first elected in 1974, he's the senate pro tempore and the longest current senator. he announced his retirement in the vermont state capitol. >> good morning. [applause] >> i'm told i could take this off here, so i will. very nice, you all, this room, very, very excellent. and i thank you all for being here. it's special to both myself, not just because i used to ride my tricycle up and down these...
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Nov 3, 2021
11/21
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patrick: this is patrick fok, 150 miles west of beijing in northern china. as you approach by train, wind turbines stretch along the dry terrain for as far as the eye can see. but this is datong, - also known as china's coal capital. coal mining here dates back around 1,500 years. and as the country's economy opened up in the late 1970s industrial mining took off, fueling china's boom. >> conditions for workers today are much more comfortable than before. the work is not so tiring, after mechanization. the underground environment is not so bad. patrick: wang hongwei is a retired mine worker, in his 60s, and part of several generations. from datong that have lived off the coal produced here. his sons followed in his footsteps. shanxi province, where datong is, has a total of around 950 mines and according to 2018 figures from the world bank, employed close to 900,000 people. as part of efforts to tackle climate change, china has taken offline some of its dirtiest coal powered plants and sent workers to more renewable energy efforts. >> the mountains and field
patrick: this is patrick fok, 150 miles west of beijing in northern china. as you approach by train, wind turbines stretch along the dry terrain for as far as the eye can see. but this is datong, - also known as china's coal capital. coal mining here dates back around 1,500 years. and as the country's economy opened up in the late 1970s industrial mining took off, fueling china's boom. >> conditions for workers today are much more comfortable than before. the work is not so tiring, after...
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Nov 26, 2021
11/21
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CNNW
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>> patrick: yeah. the average wage of a miner is 60% greater than the average wage of all labors in the united states. that's pretty phenomenal. it's easy to see why people in mcdowell county want mining jobs. ♪ >> anthony: i'm staying in a town nearby, welch. there's no bar. >> miner: most of us just go get the beer, and head back on top of the ridge and drink it. >> anthony: wow. >> miner 2: in the name of the father, we'd like to gather here to thank you for this opportunity to support our families. please watch after us, keep us safe while we're underground working. amen. >> group: amen. >> patrick: what do you got? >> man 3: bear meat and chicken. >> anthony: oh, damn. >> patrick: i may just put my sandwich back here if you got bear meat. >> anthony: that's delicious. do you think the country as a whole, do you think they understand the coal business at all? what coal mining is about? >> richard: no. >> anthony: they don't understand at all. >> patrick: when you travel from new york to here, whe
>> patrick: yeah. the average wage of a miner is 60% greater than the average wage of all labors in the united states. that's pretty phenomenal. it's easy to see why people in mcdowell county want mining jobs. ♪ >> anthony: i'm staying in a town nearby, welch. there's no bar. >> miner: most of us just go get the beer, and head back on top of the ridge and drink it. >> anthony: wow. >> miner 2: in the name of the father, we'd like to gather here to thank you for...
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Nov 23, 2021
11/21
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BLOOMBERG
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tom: patrick, thank you so much. patrick armstrong, plurimi wealth management. i haven't heard that phrase in at least hours, bond vigilantes. where are the oil vigilantes? [laughter] lisa: where are the people looking at what the u.s. is doing, what china is doing, and south korea and india, and saying it is not going to matter for more than a day. they are coming out and saying that. that is what we are seeing in markets, people retrace some of this move. a lot of is muddy -- a lot of it is muddy, too. tom: i did the mass, and like i said, it is in the vicinity of. good morning, alison krauss. it is in the vicinity of selling douglas $.58 in england -- of $7.58 in england. those are numbers americans aren't used to. kailey: what that means is it is being felt by consumers on other side of the atlantic, but consumers in the u.s., too. it is still the highest we have seen in seven years, so real people are feeling it. do your point about whether or not it actually has an impact, is it so much about the actual impact on what a gallon of gas costs to you, or is it
tom: patrick, thank you so much. patrick armstrong, plurimi wealth management. i haven't heard that phrase in at least hours, bond vigilantes. where are the oil vigilantes? [laughter] lisa: where are the people looking at what the u.s. is doing, what china is doing, and south korea and india, and saying it is not going to matter for more than a day. they are coming out and saying that. that is what we are seeing in markets, people retrace some of this move. a lot of is muddy -- a lot of it is...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 19, 2021
11/21
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darilyn, miguel, patrick, all the folks who advocated and came to our office. thank you so much. with that, it is my absolute pleasure to introduce miguel gallarza to come up. above and beyond that, someone with a big heart who continues to reinvest time and again to people to make sure we are successful as a city. thank you, miguel. [ applause ] >> thank you everyone for being here and showing the support we've had all year for the last two or three years. it makes a difference. it shows we're engaged as a community. it shows we believe in the true spirit of the government because it can make a difference for all of our lives. i really appreciate all of my partners have worked really hard from the l.b. advisory committee. from those member that is don't get the recognition. dr. ansani, of course, darilyn and all of them that have taken part in helping us draft this and make sure that we had the right message that we listen to the right community members. people that were not part of the advisory committee, the well bonders and the patrick to make sure they engage with the small
darilyn, miguel, patrick, all the folks who advocated and came to our office. thank you so much. with that, it is my absolute pleasure to introduce miguel gallarza to come up. above and beyond that, someone with a big heart who continues to reinvest time and again to people to make sure we are successful as a city. thank you, miguel. [ applause ] >> thank you everyone for being here and showing the support we've had all year for the last two or three years. it makes a difference. it shows...
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Nov 10, 2021
11/21
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i'm a reporter with the "washington post" andos i'm here with patrick and eric to talk about their books on the opioid epidemic just claimed the lives of more than 500,000 people nationwide. at the worston drug overdose epidemic in american history. i spent the last three years reporting for the "washington post" investigative team about the opioid crisis and am already writing a book myself on my colleagues so i'm particularly thrilled to introduce you to two offers that their work i greatly admire. patrick, and award-winning writer at the new yorker is the author of a bestseller empire of pain the secret history of the dynasty. and eric won a pulitzer prize for his reporting on i opioids t the charles gazette and as a reporter at the mountain state spotlight in west virginia and isin the author of a cold county fight against the drug companies that developed the opioid epidemic. patrick, let me start with you and your devastating, absolutely devastating portrait of the family and their role in the opioid epidemic. can you give us a brief description of empire of pain and tell us what l
i'm a reporter with the "washington post" andos i'm here with patrick and eric to talk about their books on the opioid epidemic just claimed the lives of more than 500,000 people nationwide. at the worston drug overdose epidemic in american history. i spent the last three years reporting for the "washington post" investigative team about the opioid crisis and am already writing a book myself on my colleagues so i'm particularly thrilled to introduce you to two offers that...
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Nov 26, 2021
11/21
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back with more after this. ...patrick? nah fam, just your typical sneakerhead working here for the employee discount. but speaking of deals, i heard regular guys like me are getting the patrick price. that can't be real, right? listen, state farm offers rates that fit any budget... even yours, typical sneakerhead. wow, just anyone now? yeah... man, these just sold out then. for surprisingly great rates that fit any budget... like a good neighbor, state farm is there. call or click to get a quote today. (kate) this black friday, verizon is doing it better. a lot better. because right now, like a good neighbor, state farm is there. you can get iphone 13 pro on us. just bring in your old or damaged phone and we'll give you the phone everybody wants on america's most reliable network. on any unlimited plan. better? better. and everyone gets up to $800 off when they switch. okay, everyone say betteeeer. (all) betteeeer! (kate) black friday better with verizon. because everyone, everyone, everyone deserves better. shop online or
back with more after this. ...patrick? nah fam, just your typical sneakerhead working here for the employee discount. but speaking of deals, i heard regular guys like me are getting the patrick price. that can't be real, right? listen, state farm offers rates that fit any budget... even yours, typical sneakerhead. wow, just anyone now? yeah... man, these just sold out then. for surprisingly great rates that fit any budget... like a good neighbor, state farm is there. call or click to get a...
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seal the late late patrick's. yes. but m g think to they there's still lingering. ah, there echoes of that in the corridors of langley in virginia, the ca that quite trust the british there, they're intelligent services. he had class still matters. i don't know, i suspect less than i suspect less than, than formerly, than, than was the case. i think, i mean, the americans were looking around the world in the 10 years after the war and realizing that maybe they needed to get more involved, that isolationism was, was not doing them any favors. and they were looking at the way the british and the french had been running things and thought this isn't great. i have it recently, we had the afghanistan withdrawal. and according to, if we believe the press here, i mean, i don't know how close they are to the intelligence services. the government here were taken on the hope about the all afghanistan withdrawal. yeah. thought it wasn't going to happen. and the americans being which withholding information in case it leaks o
seal the late late patrick's. yes. but m g think to they there's still lingering. ah, there echoes of that in the corridors of langley in virginia, the ca that quite trust the british there, they're intelligent services. he had class still matters. i don't know, i suspect less than i suspect less than, than formerly, than, than was the case. i think, i mean, the americans were looking around the world in the 10 years after the war and realizing that maybe they needed to get more involved, that...
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Nov 19, 2021
11/21
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FBC
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hope was paying hunter biden through these sheets shall companies to represent millions from patrick, hunter biden through these companies, what you say to that? >> there's a lot you can do unfortunately in the lobbying arena that is legal but you've got to disclose things so that's what the u.s. attorney's office is looking at but whether or not it is a crime or not, it something every citizen has a right to know about, the son of the president of the united states was involved in this peddling for years with job cities obviously incompetent to do but people want access because of whose son he is it something classically a matter of public interest everybody should care about. liz: it is important. the text that came out from his laptop reportedly suggested hunter biden set up these show companies to avoid the registration as a foreign lobbyist general michael flynn got nailed for so he was evading having to register with the u.s. government at the foreign lobbyist, your final word? >> you don't think it was russian disinformation? liz: i don't know about that. what do you think? >>
hope was paying hunter biden through these sheets shall companies to represent millions from patrick, hunter biden through these companies, what you say to that? >> there's a lot you can do unfortunately in the lobbying arena that is legal but you've got to disclose things so that's what the u.s. attorney's office is looking at but whether or not it is a crime or not, it something every citizen has a right to know about, the son of the president of the united states was involved in this...
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Nov 13, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN3
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he promptly joined the new nixon administration in 199 working with daniel patrick moynihan and later working with domestic adviser john ehrlichman a special system to the president for urban affairs. he ultimately became head of government relations for chase manhattan bank and present ceo of the federal bank of pittsburgh. a special note jonas joined this evening by his daughter alexandria so welcome to both of you. john's new book "the last liberal republican" an insider's perspective on nixon's surprising social policy" reveals the influence of those of moynihan and ehrlichman and the broader demonstrations very at ease. these men who surrounded the president impacted american social policy for decades much of which we are only realizing now. richard nixon shocked democrats the extent of his -- he proposed a guaranteed family income and almost achieved a national health insurance program as a republican but i will save the rest of the conversations for these two gentlemen so pleased turn me in welcoming john roy price in frank gannon. [applause] b at the division of labor. it's a
he promptly joined the new nixon administration in 199 working with daniel patrick moynihan and later working with domestic adviser john ehrlichman a special system to the president for urban affairs. he ultimately became head of government relations for chase manhattan bank and present ceo of the federal bank of pittsburgh. a special note jonas joined this evening by his daughter alexandria so welcome to both of you. john's new book "the last liberal republican" an insider's...
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Nov 23, 2021
11/21
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joe patrick who i consider very rash. he will promote three of his captains to generals who do very well later on. each of these is going to have a mission. buford is going on the west. they are looking for stuart, screening the army and moving but they are separated. you can see that here comes buford on the base of south mountain. greg is moving toward manchester and westminster and kilpatrick is right in the middle. it is kilpatrick who is past finding stuart. here is stuart. riding into hanover. it is june 30th. you see the yankee rearguard moving through hanover and you know you have to find lee. what do you do? let him go or attack? kilpatrick is with custer, further north. he will return with more and more of his division. nightfall is going to put a end to fighting, stuart will waste a whole day fighting the battle with no significance. the problem with kilpatrick is when stuart leaves, he doesn't. he let stuart get away. kilpatrick will arrest his men. what do you think of patrick says in the morning? he's lookin
joe patrick who i consider very rash. he will promote three of his captains to generals who do very well later on. each of these is going to have a mission. buford is going on the west. they are looking for stuart, screening the army and moving but they are separated. you can see that here comes buford on the base of south mountain. greg is moving toward manchester and westminster and kilpatrick is right in the middle. it is kilpatrick who is past finding stuart. here is stuart. riding into...
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14
Nov 20, 2021
11/21
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BBCNEWS
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eye 14
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patrick gearey, bbc news. it's been a fascinating day in the premier league too, but it is time to pop out of the room if you don't want to know the day's football results as match of the day and in scotland, sportscene, follow soon on bbc one. there is growing expectation that manchester united will sack their manager, 0le gunnar solskjaer, following today's 4—1 defeat at watford. united have dropped to seventh place in the table and have had just one win in their last seven league games. top of the table chelsea had a 3—0 victory over leicester city. there were wins for new managers, steven gerrard and dean smith at aston villa and norwich. and liverpool are in second place after a 4—0 win over arsenal. celtic are into next month's scottish league cup final after defeating holders saintjohnstone1—0. while in the scottish premiership there were wins for dundee united and motherwell. st mirren and livingston drew 1—1. lewis hamilton will be on pole position for tomorrow's qatar grand prix, after an i
patrick gearey, bbc news. it's been a fascinating day in the premier league too, but it is time to pop out of the room if you don't want to know the day's football results as match of the day and in scotland, sportscene, follow soon on bbc one. there is growing expectation that manchester united will sack their manager, 0le gunnar solskjaer, following today's 4—1 defeat at watford. united have dropped to seventh place in the table and have had just one win in their last seven league games....
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7.0
Nov 2, 2021
11/21
by
KQED
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eye 7
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patrick, thanks for joining the newshour. ms. patrick, thank you so much, as always, for joining the "newshour". you heard it, voice mails, text messages where people are threatening election officials lives, even their children's lives. it seems beyond the pale. is this something you ever experienced as an election official? >> happy election day. thankfully it wasn't something that i experienced in my more than a decade of being a local election official, but i will tell you that this is something i have been hearing more and more frequently in the last six, seven, eight, nine months, and far too often we're getting targeted of the election officials that conducted that election freely and fairly, and this is absolutely exemplary of what i'm hearing from all across the country, in places where the former president won, in places where the current president won. >> you're hearing about election officials of all levels either quitting or retiring out of just these threats worrying them and their families. what do you worry will b
patrick, thanks for joining the newshour. ms. patrick, thank you so much, as always, for joining the "newshour". you heard it, voice mails, text messages where people are threatening election officials lives, even their children's lives. it seems beyond the pale. is this something you ever experienced as an election official? >> happy election day. thankfully it wasn't something that i experienced in my more than a decade of being a local election official, but i will tell you...
10
10.0
Nov 12, 2021
11/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 10
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patrick has scored some spectacular coals. ~ ., patrick has scored some spectacular ioals. . ., ., patrick has scored some spectacular oals. . ., ., ., ., ., goals. what about that for a finished? — goals. what about that for a finished? and _ goals. what about that for a finished? and there - goals. what about that for a finished? and there is - goals. what about that for a i finished? and there is another reason he _ finished? and there is another reason he is _ finished? and there is another reason he is not _ finished? and there is another reason he is not your - finished? and there is another reason he is not your average | reason he is not your average footballer. i reason he is not your average footballer.— footballer. i went to raise awareness _ footballer. i went to raise awareness for _ footballer. i went to raise awareness for climate - footballer. i went to raise - awareness for climate change stop footballer. i went to raise _ awareness for climate change stop at the lead _ awareness for climate change stop at the lead stryker is also one of the few high—profile sports s
patrick has scored some spectacular coals. ~ ., patrick has scored some spectacular ioals. . ., ., patrick has scored some spectacular oals. . ., ., ., ., ., goals. what about that for a finished? — goals. what about that for a finished? and _ goals. what about that for a finished? and there - goals. what about that for a finished? and there is - goals. what about that for a i finished? and there is another reason he _ finished? and there is another reason he is _ finished? and there is...
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8.0
Nov 27, 2021
11/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 8
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and again patrick vallance _ jab. that is right. and again patrick vallance was - jab. that is right. and again patrick vallance was saying | jab. that is right. and again i patrick vallance was saying he jab. that is right. and again - patrick vallance was saying he still thought it might be better that people are vaccinated, they might population has no vaccinations, the better. he said perhaps three things could happen from now on. —— has at their vaccinations. from having their vaccinations. from having their third jab, we may be better protected in any case from this new variant. secondly, there are some vaccines being manufactured which have a broader base that might be able to be more effective against other variance, and thirdly we may have to go to that stage and that is why the government is looking to buy time and bring in restrictions now, then we have to go to the stage where manufacturers have to modify vaccines. but in the meantime, the gap between having a second and third jab is being reduced to five months and thejoint third jab is being reduced to
and again patrick vallance _ jab. that is right. and again patrick vallance was - jab. that is right. and again patrick vallance was saying | jab. that is right. and again i patrick vallance was saying he jab. that is right. and again - patrick vallance was saying he still thought it might be better that people are vaccinated, they might population has no vaccinations, the better. he said perhaps three things could happen from now on. —— has at their vaccinations. from having their...
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28
Nov 4, 2021
11/21
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 28
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patrick: still hard to say. a big part of what went wrong was that they bought homes for more than they could sell them for. simple as that. they leaned into the very rapid home price appreciation this year. prices cooled on them, they went to sell homes and they couldn't get as much many as they wanted. along with they didn't have enough workers to repaint the walls, replace the carpets, do whatever at the repairs they wanted to do before they sold the homes. at the end of the day, they decided that they were wrong once in a big way and it was too big a risk that they would get bigger in this business and be wrong again. emily: what zillow got into this business, i remember thinking, that sounds like a hard business? was this really a legitimate business? patrick: it could be a legitimate business. the problem they want to solve is real, it is a real pain to try to sell your house especially if you're trying to buy a home at the same time. if somebody comes and gives you a cash offer and gives you flexibility f
patrick: still hard to say. a big part of what went wrong was that they bought homes for more than they could sell them for. simple as that. they leaned into the very rapid home price appreciation this year. prices cooled on them, they went to sell homes and they couldn't get as much many as they wanted. along with they didn't have enough workers to repaint the walls, replace the carpets, do whatever at the repairs they wanted to do before they sold the homes. at the end of the day, they...
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11
Nov 16, 2021
11/21
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 11
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patrick: we expect interest rates a little bit higher. i do not know if we see the peak in the cycle at about 1.75 where we were 12 days and a few months ago. i expect we will continue to climb higher and that reflects options and that is why a lot of these cyclical groups work. cyclical optimism will rise, success for a lot of these groups, and that is really where we expect the trend to go. jonathan: i want to build on this commentary, here are the -- here is the quote. "companies expanded profit margin -- margins. we expect profit margins will rise by 40 basis points in 2022 before declining in 2023 due to corporate tax reform." talk to me about what will happen to tax reform and what will happen to the earnings of these companies? patrick: we think margins will continue to climb higher and it really comes down to pricing power and fixed cost leverage. both of those will allow companies to continue to basically pack on costs down the chain and lever their machinery and equipment, which is a top leverage point. when it comes down to tax
patrick: we expect interest rates a little bit higher. i do not know if we see the peak in the cycle at about 1.75 where we were 12 days and a few months ago. i expect we will continue to climb higher and that reflects options and that is why a lot of these cyclical groups work. cyclical optimism will rise, success for a lot of these groups, and that is really where we expect the trend to go. jonathan: i want to build on this commentary, here are the -- here is the quote. "companies...
9
9.0
Nov 9, 2021
11/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 9
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rebecca, what reaction are you hearing to sir patrick �*s comments? they are really resonating here. walking around the conference you cannot forget that the problems of covid climate change are happening in tandem. today is about science and innovation, as sir patrick vallance said, science can be part of the solution, we have seen that with coronavirus, but it is not the only thing we need. we need big behavioural change, and if we are going to kurt emissions we need to make many changes, he says green choices need to be the easiest choices need to be the easiest choices and that if we do not take action we will see big problems in future. this has been echoed by any new report today published by the met office which looks at the issue of heat stress, where you get a combination of extreme heat and humidity. the heat warms up your body, you get hot, but if you have humidity or sweat cannot evaporate so you can't cool down, your internal temperatures rise can be deadly. we know it is already affecting 68 million people around the world today but of g
rebecca, what reaction are you hearing to sir patrick �*s comments? they are really resonating here. walking around the conference you cannot forget that the problems of covid climate change are happening in tandem. today is about science and innovation, as sir patrick vallance said, science can be part of the solution, we have seen that with coronavirus, but it is not the only thing we need. we need big behavioural change, and if we are going to kurt emissions we need to make many changes,...
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19
Nov 29, 2021
11/21
by
CSPAN2
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eye 19
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patrick spoke about his book in andthe author interview program "after words." here's a portion of that. i think what he's getting at is we live in a society where there there's a great deal of complexity as sometimes it's hard to figure out what's going on with a particular story, particularly i think if it intercepts in the legal system or the financial system. if you read the coverage into the business pages sometimes it's a little harder to see the forest through the trees. one thing i think about as a writer is kind of subverting that and taking situations that are maybe innately very complex. making the challenge for myself because i turn this into a great story, is there a way to translate the complexity into a narrative that has a kind of hook that will grab people, and so for me part of the reason i was interested in the family, i'm interested in the family story and dynamics that are interesting but i also thought that this was an opportunity to kind of tell a story about the opioid crisis and big pharma and i would argue the kind of corruption of medi
patrick spoke about his book in andthe author interview program "after words." here's a portion of that. i think what he's getting at is we live in a society where there there's a great deal of complexity as sometimes it's hard to figure out what's going on with a particular story, particularly i think if it intercepts in the legal system or the financial system. if you read the coverage into the business pages sometimes it's a little harder to see the forest through the trees. one...
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12
Nov 12, 2021
11/21
by
CNNW
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eye 12
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okay, patrick, paul. thank you both. we'll see i'm sure tomorrow and then next week as this continues on. >>> next call logs, poospeech, draft, memos and hand written notes. looks like the committee investigating the january 6th insurrection won't be getting those trump documents tomorrow. e you work with, together in one place. slack. where the future works. (man 1) oh, this looks like we're in a screen saver. (man 2) yeah, but we need to go higher. (man 1) higher. (man 2) definitely higher. (man 1) we're like yodeling high. [yodeling] yo-de-le-he... (man 2) hey, no. uh-uh, don't do that. (man 1) we should go even higher! (man 2) yeah, let's do it. (both) woah! (man 2) i'm good. (man 1) me, too. (man 2) mm-hm. (vo) adventure has a new look. (man 1) let's go lower. (man 2) lower, that sounds good. (vo) discover more in the all-new subaru outback wilderness. love. it's what makes subaru, subaru. ever notice how stiff clothes can feel rough on your skin? for softer clothes that are gentle on your skin, try downy free & gen
okay, patrick, paul. thank you both. we'll see i'm sure tomorrow and then next week as this continues on. >>> next call logs, poospeech, draft, memos and hand written notes. looks like the committee investigating the january 6th insurrection won't be getting those trump documents tomorrow. e you work with, together in one place. slack. where the future works. (man 1) oh, this looks like we're in a screen saver. (man 2) yeah, but we need to go higher. (man 1) higher. (man 2) definitely...
5
5.0
Nov 3, 2021
11/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 5
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we presented taylor's critique to patrick michaels, who rejects taylor's account. he says, his facts were scientifically documented, and he still thinks james hanson is wrong, and denies misleading. the public kato has not replied to the critique in spite of repeated requests. let's take a look at the economics. the oil industry strategy paper describes her large sums of money had to be given by the oil and energy industry to think tanks and organizations among recipients see fact well around the workers. the best thing to do is, is have the courage to do nothing. i get any money from the oil companies, we might get some and competitive enterprise institute. we don't disclose our dinars. however, some of our donors disclose that they fund us. the most notable being exxon mobil, which funded a number of groups for probably a decade. tax records, financial reports, and other documents show who exxonmobil funded after the strategy meeting from 1998 to 2006. 0 sh. the data shows that the world's major oil company in the years after the meeting donated at least $1200000
we presented taylor's critique to patrick michaels, who rejects taylor's account. he says, his facts were scientifically documented, and he still thinks james hanson is wrong, and denies misleading. the public kato has not replied to the critique in spite of repeated requests. let's take a look at the economics. the oil industry strategy paper describes her large sums of money had to be given by the oil and energy industry to think tanks and organizations among recipients see fact well around...