13
13
Jan 10, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: unpack the results. what did they do for the plaintiffs involved in larger biotech and patent laws? jorge: there were a lot of effects. the immediate effect on the market was literally the day the decision was announced, competing labs announced they were now offering rocco -- testing. some at half the price. competition was introduced into the marketplace immediately. that gave access to many more people. it broke the monopoly. but, the implications were much broader than just this one company. the aclu was not out to get myriad genetics. this was a case about a principal. all of those patents covering human genes, though technically they still remained on the books. they are not enforceable at all. whether it is cystic fibrosis or whatever the case may be, the jeans are not patentable. this had an interesting effect. it has enabled more research to occur. it has taken away some barriers to more advanced forms of testing. there was a lot of hesitation. myriad is still doing fine. they are profitable com
susan: unpack the results. what did they do for the plaintiffs involved in larger biotech and patent laws? jorge: there were a lot of effects. the immediate effect on the market was literally the day the decision was announced, competing labs announced they were now offering rocco -- testing. some at half the price. competition was introduced into the marketplace immediately. that gave access to many more people. it broke the monopoly. but, the implications were much broader than just this one...
314
314
Jan 8, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 314
favorite 0
quote 0
it was susan's good jewelry. dick horton heard the story firsthand from the friend. >> she calls us and says, i found the jewelry in her underwear. >> now what did that mean? >> susan was very a very disciplined individual, she would have never hidden it in her underwear. all after sudden it just clicks that he's trying to make it look like a robbery. >> now this was the reasoninging a the prosecutor saw it. the doctor wanted police to believe the crime had started as a robbery. what do robbers take? jewels. he hid his wife's jewelry before the 911 forces arrive, fully intending to get it out of the house some time later, but he never had a chance to do that or tell the cops the robber never got the jewels. that's because he was put back in the police car and never got back in the house again. and finally there was the story told by blood. the medical examiner had determined that susan had been strangled with two neckties, but her fatal injuries came from being bludgeoned with a blunt object, a murder weapon neve
it was susan's good jewelry. dick horton heard the story firsthand from the friend. >> she calls us and says, i found the jewelry in her underwear. >> now what did that mean? >> susan was very a very disciplined individual, she would have never hidden it in her underwear. all after sudden it just clicks that he's trying to make it look like a robbery. >> now this was the reasoninging a the prosecutor saw it. the doctor wanted police to believe the crime had started as a...
17
17
Jan 3, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: michelle singletary has a new book, "what to do with your money when crisis hits." ♪ susan: michelle singletary has a new book, "what to do with your money when crisis hits." was there anything about the covid economy that made it different? michelle: i think the scope of it. the complete shutdown, i should not say complete, near shutdown of so many businesses. i think it was a wake-up call for a lot of people. let me rephrase that. i think it was a wake-up call for a lot of people that they had so little to sustain them through such a long, economic downturn. the fact of the matter is, there have been economic crises and there will continue to be economic crises in the future. susan: statistics about the past year and a half to just women overall, particularly women of color were impacted at a greater degree than even others in the pandemic economy. what are you learning from your social interactions, social media presentations about the particular challenges people like that faced? michelle: i think we always knew that there were so many, millions of people living paycheck-to-paych
susan: michelle singletary has a new book, "what to do with your money when crisis hits." ♪ susan: michelle singletary has a new book, "what to do with your money when crisis hits." was there anything about the covid economy that made it different? michelle: i think the scope of it. the complete shutdown, i should not say complete, near shutdown of so many businesses. i think it was a wake-up call for a lot of people. let me rephrase that. i think it was a wake-up call for...
14
14
Jan 17, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: you mentioned to the italians. i read that european space agency's were involved in a follow-up mission. can you explain their role? nancy: yes. they have a mission called hera. it is going to rendezvous in 2026. this is so exciting because i rendezvous, i mean orbit. it will stay in the system for many months so it will be able to make some detailed measurements that will really complement dart'd miss -- dart's mission. they will be able to see the crater on the asteroid made by dart. it will be able to get this tricky measurement that we are not able to get with dart >> we can get the --dart. we can get the shape of the asteroid but the other mission will be able to get that mass specifically. these combined missions will aid planetary defense in a way that is bigger than either one could do on their own. it is there a couple mentally. hera team members are on the dart investigation team so we are working together. >> is there any other country in the world -- russia for example that is working on similar project
susan: you mentioned to the italians. i read that european space agency's were involved in a follow-up mission. can you explain their role? nancy: yes. they have a mission called hera. it is going to rendezvous in 2026. this is so exciting because i rendezvous, i mean orbit. it will stay in the system for many months so it will be able to make some detailed measurements that will really complement dart'd miss -- dart's mission. they will be able to see the crater on the asteroid made by dart....
54
54
Jan 2, 2022
01/22
by
KSTS
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
susan castellanos: ¡oh!, pues, yo pienso que, definitivamente, ahorita, para todas las familias, la situación es muy crítica, especialmente, porque muchos lugares están siendo cerrados, entonces, la cantidad de, de personas desempleadas, es altísima, entonces, debido a eso, es por eso que nosotros estamos haciéndole la invitación, yo, como, como ciudadana, que he sido ayudada, o he acudido a second harvest para la ayuda de la comida; de la misma manera, nosotros, o yo misma, como mi experiencia, invito a otras personas para que no les dé pena, es, no es, este, no les debe de dar pena, no, porque es una situación en la que cualquier persona puede estar, y además no vas a dejar a tu hijo sin un plato de comida, en la mesa; eh, los niños no saben, no saben si, si papá o mamá, o abuelita o abuelito, quien esté al cuidado de ellos, o quien sea su tutor, eh, son, o tienen las posibilidades para, para darles un plato de comida, y entonces, qué mejor, que second harvest para ir con ellos; ellos no les
susan castellanos: ¡oh!, pues, yo pienso que, definitivamente, ahorita, para todas las familias, la situación es muy crítica, especialmente, porque muchos lugares están siendo cerrados, entonces, la cantidad de, de personas desempleadas, es altísima, entonces, debido a eso, es por eso que nosotros estamos haciéndole la invitación, yo, como, como ciudadana, que he sido ayudada, o he acudido a second harvest para la ayuda de la comida; de la misma manera, nosotros, o yo misma, como mi...
14
14
Jan 3, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: we are about out of time. i want to invite people to find your work online through your column. it is indicated by the washington post. you have a great website with lots of financial advice. michelle singletary, thank you for spending an hour with c-span. michelle: thank you for having me. ♪ [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2022] announcer: altar acuity programs are available on their website or as a podcast at c-span.org -- all q and a programs are available on our website or as a podcast at c-span.org. announcer: c-span is your unfiltered view of government. we are funded by these television companies anymore including comcast. >> you think this is just a community center? it is more than that. >> can't get partnering with committee center so students from low income families can get that was that they need to be ready for anything. announcer: comcast s
susan: we are about out of time. i want to invite people to find your work online through your column. it is indicated by the washington post. you have a great website with lots of financial advice. michelle singletary, thank you for spending an hour with c-span. michelle: thank you for having me. ♪ [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2022]...
34
34
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 34
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: did they ever face any consequences? ben: they were all arrested within one week of the voyage. he was arrested and accused of this crime. he was able to evade justice entirely. a lot of the history tells you that he was clever and had his alibi of being on the deck and its regular steamboat on the run. and he had met up with a steamboat and ate dinner with the passengers, so that was his alibi. that's part of it. the real story with why he got away with it is the federal judge and mobile was one of his best friends. it was the first steamboat he built after. so 10 to 15 years later, this judge who has a steamboat named after him is the one in charge of the case and threw it out and let him off immediately as soon as the ship happened. foster was the only one who faced legal jeopardy because he brought it back and have not checked in at the port. the reason why you check in at the port is that's how they would charge taxes and anything you would have to pay. so he was facing a thousand dollar fine. the judge kept delayin
susan: did they ever face any consequences? ben: they were all arrested within one week of the voyage. he was arrested and accused of this crime. he was able to evade justice entirely. a lot of the history tells you that he was clever and had his alibi of being on the deck and its regular steamboat on the run. and he had met up with a steamboat and ate dinner with the passengers, so that was his alibi. that's part of it. the real story with why he got away with it is the federal judge and...
64
64
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
KPIX
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
>> susan benedetto: that's a painting that you did. >> cooper: susan and tony have been together for more than 30 years. she's now his full-time caregiver. how much does tony understand about what's going on around him at any given time? >> susan benedetto: every day is different. tony-- late at night, sometimes early in the morning, he's more alert, if i can use that word. so, i'll tell him, "tone, you're going to be on '60 minutes'." he's, like, "great." i said, "you remember that show, '60 minutes'?" he's, like, "i do." but in any other given moment, he won't know. >> cooper: i mean, he recognizes you. >> susan benedetto: he recognizes me, thank goodness. his children, you know. we are blessed in a lot of ways. he's very sweet. he doesn't know he has it. >> cooper: he doesn't know he has alzheimer's. >> susan benedetto: nuh-uh. >> cooper: what he does know is that he's at home, not performing on stage. he'd continued to sing after his diagnosis... but the pandemic took him off the road. susan says it's been hard on him. >> susan benedetto: it was gayatri devi, our doctor, who said
>> susan benedetto: that's a painting that you did. >> cooper: susan and tony have been together for more than 30 years. she's now his full-time caregiver. how much does tony understand about what's going on around him at any given time? >> susan benedetto: every day is different. tony-- late at night, sometimes early in the morning, he's more alert, if i can use that word. so, i'll tell him, "tone, you're going to be on '60 minutes'." he's, like, "great."...
21
21
Jan 19, 2022
01/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
susan? on the deaths within _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, we - be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, we regard | deaths within 28 days, we regard this as a leading indicator and something we monitor very carefully, but as the secretary of state has said it does not take into account people who have died with covid who have had a diagnosis, and sadly we will see some people, particularly the elderly, dying within 28 days of a case of covid. we look very carefully at the 0ns data, released weekly, in the last two weeks it has always liked because the death registrations need to come through. —— it has always lagged. we need to monitor the number of deaths we rc and andy 0ns are monitoring that are on the death certificate, related to the death in some way. if those diverged we will discuss it further and highlight the reasons. 0n th
susan? on the deaths within _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, _ be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, we - be in this country. susan? on the deaths within 28 days, we regard | deaths within 28 days, we regard this as a leading indicator and something we monitor very carefully, but as the secretary of state has said it does not take into account people who have died with covid who have had a...
98
98
Jan 12, 2022
01/22
by
KNTV
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
>> susan: i am fit as a fiddle. now that i know why i'm having all those awful, tummy turning premonitions. >> johnny: hmm. and why is that? >> susan: oh, because you are not my precious little johnny. he would never do what you did to his wife. >> johnny: what do you mean i'm not johnny? >> susan: i mean you are the mean, mean, mean devil himself. and as god is my witness, i am gonna put an end to your reign of terror once and for all! >> male announcer: like sands through the hourglass, so are the "days of our lives." [soft orchestration] ♪ ♪ >> johnny: grandma susan, i think you should go lay down. you're obviously not yourself. >> susan: don't you touch me! don't you touch me. you're the one who's not himself. >> johnny: don't be silly. you don't have to be afraid of me. >> susan: i am not afraid! i'm not afraid! i'm not afraid because i've got god on my side. >> johnny: you're being-- you're being ridiculous. it's me, your dear, sweet johnny. >> susan: oh, there is nothing sweet about you. i can smell the b
>> susan: i am fit as a fiddle. now that i know why i'm having all those awful, tummy turning premonitions. >> johnny: hmm. and why is that? >> susan: oh, because you are not my precious little johnny. he would never do what you did to his wife. >> johnny: what do you mean i'm not johnny? >> susan: i mean you are the mean, mean, mean devil himself. and as god is my witness, i am gonna put an end to your reign of terror once and for all! >> male announcer:...
16
16
Jan 16, 2022
01/22
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
let me move on to this, susan. even some of the president's liberal allies in the media, first of all, they were saying, well, the speech is too little too late, why do it now and, of course, the fact that he didn't have the votes and didn't look like that was going to change. and that, i think, has morphed into a more general negative assessment of where joe biden's presidency is after one year. on msnbc saying he's not inspiring, he's not in command. it seems like it might be kind of a turning point one year in in the way the media assess the biden presidency. >> well, finally. [laughter] i mean, it's just so obvious now. he hasn't been able to accomplish anything. he keeps going up to congress, kind of sets himself up for these stories because he goes to congress, and it's as though he's going to try to rally democrats, his own party, to go along with his agenda. and we all know ahead of time it's not going to work, and so he sets himself up leaving 0-3 now. and, you know, you can't ignore a story like that. tha
let me move on to this, susan. even some of the president's liberal allies in the media, first of all, they were saying, well, the speech is too little too late, why do it now and, of course, the fact that he didn't have the votes and didn't look like that was going to change. and that, i think, has morphed into a more general negative assessment of where joe biden's presidency is after one year. on msnbc saying he's not inspiring, he's not in command. it seems like it might be kind of a...
42
42
Jan 30, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
susan had little time to mourn. she was busy caring for karlyn's daughter vale in texas while her father, maliek, was on active duty in south carolina. susan was also doing everything she could to help solve the case. investigators asked again and again, who would want karlyn dead? >> i would say you know, i am racking my brain and i wish i could tell you but i just cannot think of anyone. >> detectives cast a wide net. they spoke with karlyn's roommate marisa multiple times. they were curious about the soldier karlyn had the brief relationship with before she married maliek. could her death have been the result of a love triangle gone bad? >> their line of questioning made me think that they were looking at the soldier that she was involved with. >> the guy she was having the fling with at work? >> yes. >> what kind of questions did they ask about him? >> what their relationship was like. did he love her? did she love him? did maliek know? >> did you have to check into the soldier that she had the little side thing
susan had little time to mourn. she was busy caring for karlyn's daughter vale in texas while her father, maliek, was on active duty in south carolina. susan was also doing everything she could to help solve the case. investigators asked again and again, who would want karlyn dead? >> i would say you know, i am racking my brain and i wish i could tell you but i just cannot think of anyone. >> detectives cast a wide net. they spoke with karlyn's roommate marisa multiple times. they...
21
21
Jan 15, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
susan, let me start with you. your united parish church in brook line is predominantly white and have had a tradition of singing songs that have originally been composed by enslaved african people. so tell us briefly about this royalty program and the conversations that led up to creating it. >> so yes, i mean, we are predominantly white, but that's -- we're also a pretty diverse congregation as well. not completely white for sure. but we have struggled -- i have struggled with using spirituals for many, many years because, well, first of all they're incredibly wonderful music and i want to use them and i want to sing them with both the choirs and the congregation. but there's a lot of political baggage around that and a lot of feelings that need to be addressed. it was complicated. what kind of gave us the final push was when george floyd was murdered. we were taking a moment of silence in our moment of prayer, and i wanted to play a spiritual i had recorded a couple years ago with cello and violin, and it create
susan, let me start with you. your united parish church in brook line is predominantly white and have had a tradition of singing songs that have originally been composed by enslaved african people. so tell us briefly about this royalty program and the conversations that led up to creating it. >> so yes, i mean, we are predominantly white, but that's -- we're also a pretty diverse congregation as well. not completely white for sure. but we have struggled -- i have struggled with using...
36
36
Jan 28, 2022
01/22
by
FBC
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: recovering. coming back from the 11% selloff after earnings which was the worst since november. wall street is concerned about growth, no new car models. the target price, 1087. kathy woods, her arc innovation fund is down 43%. one for top holdings is tesla stock. stuart: why are you holding two of your three phones? susan: because one is for work. what is personal. what is international. the main reason apple -- stuart: you are an apple girl. thank you, see you later. one popular veteran owned bar in washington dc is losing its liquor license because they wouldn't enforce the vaccination mandate but they are getting help. susan: go find the page raised 16,$000. the name resonates and it is veteran owned. they are not following the dc law. customers must show their photo id and their vaccine passports. they are not requiring their staff to wear masks. they got two warnings and a fine and another fine that was hired warning number 5 a suspension. stuart: when do they get it back? there is no guara
susan: recovering. coming back from the 11% selloff after earnings which was the worst since november. wall street is concerned about growth, no new car models. the target price, 1087. kathy woods, her arc innovation fund is down 43%. one for top holdings is tesla stock. stuart: why are you holding two of your three phones? susan: because one is for work. what is personal. what is international. the main reason apple -- stuart: you are an apple girl. thank you, see you later. one popular...
8
8.0
tv
eye 8
favorite 0
quote 0
susan athletes spend their entire lives readying to compete. and when we skip on olympic psycho many will h out have countries. the boy caught it by not sending. their athletes tended to suffer next time were is 4 years generation in athletics. well, i was one of those athletes. i competed and track and field in the 1980 usaa limping trials. i didn't make the team, but i was there with all the athletes. did, and that they weren't going to moscow. and it was a terribly demoralizing experience that made us step to coal about our government made us feel that we were just on being used by our government. and it led to a really strong feeling among that generation of athletes that government governments shouldn't do because are politically effective and they only punish the athlete. and so actually if you pay close attention, you'll find out that that has been a consensus since the end of the cold war. and there has been no boy of that kind in which had to keep home the athlete since the end of the car. so that's why what we're talking about now is
susan athletes spend their entire lives readying to compete. and when we skip on olympic psycho many will h out have countries. the boy caught it by not sending. their athletes tended to suffer next time were is 4 years generation in athletics. well, i was one of those athletes. i competed and track and field in the 1980 usaa limping trials. i didn't make the team, but i was there with all the athletes. did, and that they weren't going to moscow. and it was a terribly demoralizing experience...
30
30
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
KGO
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
you heard susan collins. it was totally inappropriate, and i believe that trump is losing ground, that there will be other candidates, including my own governor who is anti-science among other things, but popular in the party. >> even susan collins who didn't vote for donald trump, who voted to convict him last year cannot rule out supporting him in 2024 even after a statement like yesterday. >> well, i think that it makes sense for people to want to preserve freedom of action. you don't know how the environment might change. there are a lot of republicans, a lot of conservatives who said at the 2016 campaign cycle they wouldn't support donald trump. then things changed. we could condemn them or praise them for that. the reality is politics, the environment moves very quickly. >> there's a column in the "washington post" suggesting that donald trump may be -- his hold on the republican party may be weakening slightly. do you buy that? >> if you're looking at public opinion surveys, the number of people who id
you heard susan collins. it was totally inappropriate, and i believe that trump is losing ground, that there will be other candidates, including my own governor who is anti-science among other things, but popular in the party. >> even susan collins who didn't vote for donald trump, who voted to convict him last year cannot rule out supporting him in 2024 even after a statement like yesterday. >> well, i think that it makes sense for people to want to preserve freedom of action. you...
9
9.0
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 9
favorite 0
quote 0
susan: we need to go past nice words and talk about debt relief. emerging markets need a lot of help with investment to avoid some of the greenhouse gas emitting industrialization we went through here. we need to help them leapfrog head and build green from the start. jonathan: setting up the week ahead with economic data on top, payrolls on friday. 150,000 is the median estimate. 400,000 is the low. look at some of these names looking for a soft print on friday. bryson of wells fargo. ethan harrison, bank of america looking for seven hikes. a lot of these banks expected a soft print on friday largely due to omicron. they are still looking for an active said this year. >> wages and benefits under altogether -- there is some other data there as well. 14% monthly rent increase. the payroll does not drive with that. you have massive negative real income growth. >> the rental side of the story will provide that upside pressure to keep inflation elevated, to keep that story persisting. that rental story will create some will -- real upward pressure. >>
susan: we need to go past nice words and talk about debt relief. emerging markets need a lot of help with investment to avoid some of the greenhouse gas emitting industrialization we went through here. we need to help them leapfrog head and build green from the start. jonathan: setting up the week ahead with economic data on top, payrolls on friday. 150,000 is the median estimate. 400,000 is the low. look at some of these names looking for a soft print on friday. bryson of wells fargo. ethan...
27
27
Jan 12, 2022
01/22
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
ted cruz tweeted, susan, he said: protect american interest. defend our allies, sanction putin's pipeline now. here is senator bob menendez on that. >> i don't think that sanctions on nord stream 2 at this point in time. if we have the mother of all sanctions against him personally and russia which is what my legislation will do then ultimately that is a real deterrent. >> bret: susan? >> there is an argument that senior administration officials have made to reporters this week that one should wait until russia invades before levying that very serious sanction against. not that they wouldn't do it ever. but they think it's not the moment to do it until they have got military action by russia to sanction against. this has been a big dilemma. we don't know what putin's intentions are or if he desires to have a way to step down. maybe is he making these nonnegotiable demands that we say are out of the question rejected so that he has a pretext to invade. and we presumably will find out pretty quickly because a window for invasion is right upon us.
ted cruz tweeted, susan, he said: protect american interest. defend our allies, sanction putin's pipeline now. here is senator bob menendez on that. >> i don't think that sanctions on nord stream 2 at this point in time. if we have the mother of all sanctions against him personally and russia which is what my legislation will do then ultimately that is a real deterrent. >> bret: susan? >> there is an argument that senior administration officials have made to reporters this...
6
6.0
Jan 11, 2022
01/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 6
favorite 0
quote 0
susan ferrechio is chief congressional correspondent at the washington examiner. susan, i wonder for our viewers who do not know your publication, tell us more about it. we are a news website in a magazine based in washington, dc. our team of reporters cover breaking news, congress, the white house, politics in general, elections, and we also have a team of opinion columnists added into the mix. we are grateful for you joining us. and ourfinal guest is zing tsjeng, editor in chief of vice uk. and, zing, for people who don't know vice well, what is your editorial remit in charge of vice uk? we are a global youth culture website. we have a tv film studio, we are on tiktok, social media channels, snapchat. and we also publish a website, very retro in this time and age for our gen 2 audience and we have audiences all over the world from la to new york and london and asia. we are at a stage where websites are retro — that's where we have got to. unfortunately, if you're talking to people who are 18 and 19 years old, it very much is. all right. point taken. let us go
susan ferrechio is chief congressional correspondent at the washington examiner. susan, i wonder for our viewers who do not know your publication, tell us more about it. we are a news website in a magazine based in washington, dc. our team of reporters cover breaking news, congress, the white house, politics in general, elections, and we also have a team of opinion columnists added into the mix. we are grateful for you joining us. and ourfinal guest is zing tsjeng, editor in chief of vice uk....
17
17
Jan 29, 2022
01/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
.— you breezy, susan. thank you for that undate- _ you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile - you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile a - you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile a fierce i that update. meanwhile a fierce winter storm bringing heavy snowfall is sweeping across the us east coast. across the us east coast with forecasters warning of "historic" blizzards, hurricane force winds, power outages and travel chaos. five states have declared emergencies. more than 4000 flights have been cancelled. the governors of new york, newjersey and virginia have made emergency declarations, urging people to stay home and hunker down, travelling only ifjourneys are essential. about 75 million people are thought to be in the path of the storm — the fourth to hit the east coast this month. more news for you at 4 o'clock. now on bbc news, it's time for click. this week: swinging satellites! and fruit. sensors to keep the city that never sleeps lit up. and using tech
.— you breezy, susan. thank you for that undate- _ you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile - you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile a - you breezy, susan. thank you for that update. meanwhile a fierce i that update. meanwhile a fierce winter storm bringing heavy snowfall is sweeping across the us east coast. across the us east coast with forecasters warning of "historic" blizzards, hurricane force winds, power outages and travel chaos. five states...
74
74
Jan 27, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
susan worked for over a decade at a hair salon. after a lifetime of work, they are still worried about affording the essentials. when i was in the legislature, i fought the retirement tax because it was wrong. let's make it right. we can keep our word to dick, susan, tim, and every michigander who worked hard and played by the rules. i am ready to work across the aisle to roll the retirement tax and say 500,000 households in michigan an average of 1000 bucks a year. let's talk about cutting taxes for people working full-time but who still cannot get ahead. it is time to increase the michigan earned income tax credit. the eitc is a bipartisan tax break for families, offered at the federal and state levels. it is part of the refund you get when you file your taxes. in 2010, michiganders received almost $3000 tax refund from the combined eitc. a year later, taxes on working families went up to pay for a big tax giveaway for big corporations. that they did not need. that is not right. restoring the eitc lifts more than 22,000 people ou
susan worked for over a decade at a hair salon. after a lifetime of work, they are still worried about affording the essentials. when i was in the legislature, i fought the retirement tax because it was wrong. let's make it right. we can keep our word to dick, susan, tim, and every michigander who worked hard and played by the rules. i am ready to work across the aisle to roll the retirement tax and say 500,000 households in michigan an average of 1000 bucks a year. let's talk about cutting...
25
25
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
not how wayne and susan lapierre are conducted themselves with you know, some seriousness. so despite all of this bizarre behavior mismanagement corruption cronyism the nra still became incredibly powerful. what do you attribute that to i mean, is it is it chris cox? who was their chief lobbyist for so many years is it just the fact that they had they were flush with cash. i mean it if it wasn't the brilliant strategist at the top, which doesn't sound like wayne lap here. is then how do you account for how they've become so influential? you know, i i think that they actually some some level of arrogance developed during the obama years when they were flush with money and it was easy for them to kind of push this message that the obama white house or the obama administration was a threat to people's gun rights or wanted to restrict people's ability to have firearms. it was easy to sell that message to fundraise and increase membership and that worked for a time. in fact, it worked until one of the greatest successes of the nra, which is the election of donald trump. they wen
not how wayne and susan lapierre are conducted themselves with you know, some seriousness. so despite all of this bizarre behavior mismanagement corruption cronyism the nra still became incredibly powerful. what do you attribute that to i mean, is it is it chris cox? who was their chief lobbyist for so many years is it just the fact that they had they were flush with cash. i mean it if it wasn't the brilliant strategist at the top, which doesn't sound like wayne lap here. is then how do you...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
15
15
Jan 2, 2022
01/22
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
thank you. >> thank you susan. >> you skated right through that one, susan. >> susan, the wheels never came off. >> okay. let's roll on to number 8 then. okay. so we're on item 8 by-law amendments. do you want me to go through the same points as last time? >> i would appreciate it. >> this item was heard at operations committee. it is a commission item. i'm going to briefly present some of the reasons behind the by-laws changes. the commission's last approved updates to the by-laws in 2010 when they added the capital and operations meeting to the structure and reduced the monthly commission meetings from two to one. the changes today are a result of various recommendations, the first is that voters approved prop c in 2020 amending the city charter to remove the requirement that those serving must be u.s. citizens and registered voters. the by-laws are being amended to reflect that change. and next, equitable decision making, we have included more in inclusive language. we removed gendered language from the entire document. lastly, we have made changes the follow through with recommenda
thank you. >> thank you susan. >> you skated right through that one, susan. >> susan, the wheels never came off. >> okay. let's roll on to number 8 then. okay. so we're on item 8 by-law amendments. do you want me to go through the same points as last time? >> i would appreciate it. >> this item was heard at operations committee. it is a commission item. i'm going to briefly present some of the reasons behind the by-laws changes. the commission's last approved...
33
33
Jan 23, 2022
01/22
by
CNNW
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
so all of this together, what does it tell you, susan? >> well, look, i think it represents a next stage in the crisis and one the ukrainians have been concerned about. they have been pushing very hard on president biden and his administration not only to impose sanctions before there's a russian invasion and send further arms shipments but they were worried about exactly this kind of order coming from the state department, a fear of what is the morning going to look like in kyiv, is there going to be a sense of increased alarm? is this u.s. government sending an official signal about what might happen? it could affect the political climate inside ukraine as well that the u.s. has made a decision like this. >> and so, steve, you mentioned earlier this is something russia is paying attention to. what do you think the message to russia is? >> how russia interprets this will be extremely interesting. on the one hand they could interpret it in terms of, okay, the americans are pulling out their essential personnel and, by the way, a lot of ot
so all of this together, what does it tell you, susan? >> well, look, i think it represents a next stage in the crisis and one the ukrainians have been concerned about. they have been pushing very hard on president biden and his administration not only to impose sanctions before there's a russian invasion and send further arms shipments but they were worried about exactly this kind of order coming from the state department, a fear of what is the morning going to look like in kyiv, is...
12
12
Jan 9, 2022
01/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
susan. — you are facebook or twitter. susan. are _ you are facebook or twitter. susan, are you _ you are facebook or twitter. i susan, are you uncomfortable with twitter taking decisions about which politicians can and cannot reach the kind of scale that twitter offers? i cannot reach the kind of scale that twitter offers?— that twitter offers? i think social media _ that twitter offers? i think social media in _ that twitter offers? i think social media in general - that twitter offers? i think i social media in general has, you — social media in general has, you know. _ social media in general has, you know, tried to tip the scales— you know, tried to tip the scales because they can. you're right, _ scales because they can. you're right, they— scales because they can. you're right, they are privately owned and they— right, they are privately owned and they can do what they want. they've — and they can do what they want. they've banned a lot of conservative voices, they found people — conservative voices, they found people who have wanted to talk m
susan. — you are facebook or twitter. susan. are _ you are facebook or twitter. susan, are you _ you are facebook or twitter. i susan, are you uncomfortable with twitter taking decisions about which politicians can and cannot reach the kind of scale that twitter offers? i cannot reach the kind of scale that twitter offers?— that twitter offers? i think social media _ that twitter offers? i think social media in _ that twitter offers? i think social media in general - that twitter offers? i...
16
16
Jan 11, 2022
01/22
by
KRON
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> supervisor susan ellenberg an auto lee called the current system of care fractured saying the current crisis is decades in the making and requires a large scale response. they say the focus should be on workforce shortages that hurt the ability to provide services, especially for the most acutely ill residents and children who need more access to mental health. help. the national institute for mental health. >> states that right here in santa clara county, more than 50,000 of our 263,000, 500 and rolled students, they from some mental illness and less than half will receive treatment. this is just not acceptable. we have to do better. >> they say covid-19 has, of course, underlined the need to improve services. >> local comedians and so many others are paying tribute tonight to bob second. the actor and comedian was found dead yesterday in his hotel room in orlando. an autopsy report found no foul play. no drug use, but an official cause of death could take weeks well for us. rob nesbitt joins us live now with more on how seconds career affected the bay area and the local comedy scene
. >> supervisor susan ellenberg an auto lee called the current system of care fractured saying the current crisis is decades in the making and requires a large scale response. they say the focus should be on workforce shortages that hurt the ability to provide services, especially for the most acutely ill residents and children who need more access to mental health. help. the national institute for mental health. >> states that right here in santa clara county, more than 50,000 of...
83
83
Jan 25, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
simone and susan are staying with us. coming up next, how the trump big lie is inspiring dozens of republican backed bills to change arizona's elections, well arizona's kyrsten sinema does nothing. that's when the 11th hour does continues after the shows break. break. 11th hour does hm... i know how difficult these calls can be. not with schwab. nina made it easier to set up our financial plan. we can check in on it anytime. continues after the show break. break. our goals change. planning can't be that easy. actually, it can be, carl. look forward to planning with schwab. schwab! ♪♪ napoleon was born and raised to conquer. but he was just kind of over it, you know. watching prime video he realized he should follow his dreams. so he ordered a microphone with prime next day delivery. now the only thing he cared about conquering was his audience. prime changes everything. your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly deliver
simone and susan are staying with us. coming up next, how the trump big lie is inspiring dozens of republican backed bills to change arizona's elections, well arizona's kyrsten sinema does nothing. that's when the 11th hour does continues after the shows break. break. 11th hour does hm... i know how difficult these calls can be. not with schwab. nina made it easier to set up our financial plan. we can check in on it anytime. continues after the show break. break. our goals change. planning...
21
21
Jan 25, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
simone and susan are staying with us. coming up next, how the trump big lie is inspiring dozens of republican backed bills, to change arizona's elections. well arizona's kyrsten sinema does nothing. that's when the 11th hour continues after the show. when the 11th hou continues after the show i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80, what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at
simone and susan are staying with us. coming up next, how the trump big lie is inspiring dozens of republican backed bills, to change arizona's elections. well arizona's kyrsten sinema does nothing. that's when the 11th hour continues after the show. when the 11th hou continues after the show i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the...
4
4.0
Jan 15, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 4
favorite 0
quote 0
to murder susan casey. casey. >> that was quite a relief as you can imagine for brad. >> that was quite a relief as who has replayed the scene you can imagine for brad. countless times. who has replayed the scene countless times. saying goodnight to susie and pulling away before she got inside the apartment door. >> in hindsight it bothers me that i didn't wait and watch her. but there's no reason that anybody should be there. it's five in the morning. the whole town was dead. i just remember needing to get home. wanting to get home as soon as possible. it didn't cross my mind for a second that anything had happen. or that anyone was there. >> the gala little gesture he didn't make. brad holzer has all kinds of time to think about that. >> sometimes i think about it, yeah. i wonder what we would be doing right now. there could've been a future with her. >> susie was laid to rest on a sunny day in may, 2008. in the little cemetery outside her hometown. no one the slightest aware of how much more was still to
to murder susan casey. casey. >> that was quite a relief as you can imagine for brad. >> that was quite a relief as who has replayed the scene you can imagine for brad. countless times. who has replayed the scene countless times. saying goodnight to susie and pulling away before she got inside the apartment door. >> in hindsight it bothers me that i didn't wait and watch her. but there's no reason that anybody should be there. it's five in the morning. the whole town was dead....
31
31
Jan 20, 2022
01/22
by
CNNW
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
susan page, stick around. we will have much more to talk about and the implications of what it all means this morning. >>> also, a major development overnight into the investigation into january 6th. the supreme court just basically completely dismissed arguments from donald trump. and now the january 6th committee has its hands on key white house records. what have they learned already from what happened on january 6th? >>> plus, senate democrats suffering a major blow. senators manchin and sinema join republicans in syncing filibuster changes to the voting rights bill. >>> and an anti-vax folk singer wanted covid on purpose. what happened when she finally got it. brand, even when your clothes look clean, there's extra dirt you can't see. watch this. that was in these clothes... ugh. but the clothehes washed in tide- so much cleaner. if it's gogot to be clean it's t to be tide hygienic clean. ♪ i see trees of green ♪ ♪ red roses too ♪ ♪ i see them bloom for me and you ♪ (music) ♪ so i think to m
susan page, stick around. we will have much more to talk about and the implications of what it all means this morning. >>> also, a major development overnight into the investigation into january 6th. the supreme court just basically completely dismissed arguments from donald trump. and now the january 6th committee has its hands on key white house records. what have they learned already from what happened on january 6th? >>> plus, senate democrats suffering a major blow....
19
19
Jan 6, 2022
01/22
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
she did so in district 88, that also voted for senator susan collins. chloe first spoke at bioneers in 2014 when she had recently launched, divest harvard. starting with just a handful of students, the campaign rapidly ballooned into one of the biggest in the country. it helped spur the local divestment movement from fossil fuels that now has moved or committed $14 trillion in assets worldwide. born and raised in rural maine, after college, chloe was determined to return to her beloved home to serve that place and her fellow mainers. in 2018, she ran for the ate house of representatives and won. in 2019, she introduced the state's green new deal legislation, carefully customized to what her constituents had told her they most needed and wanted for their place. she did so with the notable backing of the state afl-cio union. how did chloe accomplish all this? that's what she's gonna describe for us. and now, the remarkable chloe maxmin, who's now reached the expectation defying age of 28. - hello everybody. my name ishloe maxmin, am cominto you from nlebo
she did so in district 88, that also voted for senator susan collins. chloe first spoke at bioneers in 2014 when she had recently launched, divest harvard. starting with just a handful of students, the campaign rapidly ballooned into one of the biggest in the country. it helped spur the local divestment movement from fossil fuels that now has moved or committed $14 trillion in assets worldwide. born and raised in rural maine, after college, chloe was determined to return to her beloved home to...
46
46
Jan 11, 2022
01/22
by
FBC
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
susan li at fox business. susan, this is a growing trend but an undeniable one. it has nothing to do with ultimately what the supreme court might decide on the administration's push for mandates and such. what do you think of it? >> well if meta looks across the way at silicon valley i would say google alphabet probably has more stricter vaccine mandates because they have to comply with government contracts. so over at alphabet and google you have to go have both shots of your vaccines in order to work there. now maybe it is not as strict as, say city group because that is something we've been covering right, neil? the first on wall street to say you have to be vaccinated or you will be fired by the end of this month. neil: right. >> but you know, i would say that look, if you have government contracts regardless what happens with the supreme court ruling and arguments being heard there, i think a lot of these companies that do want these lucrative, billions of dollars in contracts are mandating some pretty strict, pretty strict vaccine rules for the company. nei
susan li at fox business. susan, this is a growing trend but an undeniable one. it has nothing to do with ultimately what the supreme court might decide on the administration's push for mandates and such. what do you think of it? >> well if meta looks across the way at silicon valley i would say google alphabet probably has more stricter vaccine mandates because they have to comply with government contracts. so over at alphabet and google you have to go have both shots of your vaccines in...
72
72
Jan 15, 2022
01/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
still with us, victoria defrancesco soto and susan del percio. john katko just became the third republican who voted for impeachment to retire. did he have a choice here? >> not really, because first of all, new york isn't a democratically controlled when it comes to redistricting. his seat was not looking promising for him, especially since new york is, in fact, losing one congressional seat. add to that he was a target for conservatives. new york state has conservative party that was actively challenging him, and a primary was sure to happen. the ironic part is that he's someone who is seen as a centrist. he did better in 2020 in a democratic district than joe biden did by one point. so he is someone who could win a swing district, and yet the republicans will probably put up with conservatives that cannot. >> vickie, i think we all understand what donald trump's re-emergence means for republicans. what does it mean for democrats in 2022? >> well, i think -- let me back up, alicia, and really remark on how incredible the strategy is that donald
still with us, victoria defrancesco soto and susan del percio. john katko just became the third republican who voted for impeachment to retire. did he have a choice here? >> not really, because first of all, new york isn't a democratically controlled when it comes to redistricting. his seat was not looking promising for him, especially since new york is, in fact, losing one congressional seat. add to that he was a target for conservatives. new york state has conservative party that was...
42
42
Jan 31, 2022
01/22
by
CNNW
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
what do you think, susan? >> you know, first of all, i think it's an important effort to call russia to account in public and force them to come and answer what exactly they think they're doing. you see in nic's report the sort of gaslighting you're hearing from russian officials. how dare they ask us, that reflects this is an important tool in the tool kit of the biden administration. i think it's interesting they have chosen up until now, not to do this. it's such a destabilizing thing for russia to have sent more than 100,000 troops to the ukraine border. it's a little bit surprising that it's taken this long to get to this point but i think it also reflects an effort by the biden administration to change the conversation. we've been in the sort of unfortunate negotiating with ourselves and our allies, this crisis to a certain extent. lots of reports about d disagreements between the german and other allies, things like that. this puts the focus on russia's behavior and an effort to change the story line ba
what do you think, susan? >> you know, first of all, i think it's an important effort to call russia to account in public and force them to come and answer what exactly they think they're doing. you see in nic's report the sort of gaslighting you're hearing from russian officials. how dare they ask us, that reflects this is an important tool in the tool kit of the biden administration. i think it's interesting they have chosen up until now, not to do this. it's such a destabilizing thing...