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Mar 29, 2024
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maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted as the date based on bishop usher's calculations, which we described last lecture. and judge ralston is going to hear this and said, i've heard enough. and he says, this scientific testimony is inadmissible. first of all, the non-expert mind can comprehend what we mean by descended from a lower order of animals. something more primitive than humans. we don't need experts to dance on the head of a pin. but he also says the question of evolution that's not what's on trial here. the question is, did scopes teach it? that's it. the state is allowed to say what's taught. scopes taught it. that's what's
maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted...
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Mar 24, 2024
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well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. anotheth oe to be enslaved. that's from this vantage point. it's kind of hard to get in touch with the okay, so let's go the next group, just the housekeeper, you know, and then, you know, tear her down or anything but but they alsohey didn't want to give her a whole lot of credit for anything. judge charles landis, a noted jurist in lancaster county back in the 19th century, wrote a defense of stephens and smith, a very detailed defense. in fact, he says at the beginning of it, i've researched this, so don't you dare question anything i say. and here he did make a couple of mistakes. but anyway, he wanted to defend against the scurrilous attacks that that thomas dixon d.w. had said. and he tiaekn.20latheote tus urisanmiop an of honorable thaddeus stevens. oh yeah i don't have to read all these to you. just the housekeeper. yes. thomas. frederick woodley and i received his biographer. and these guys, you know they they really that
well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. anotheth oe to be enslaved. that's from this vantage point. it's kind of hard to get in touch with the okay, so let's go the next group, just the housekeeper, you know, and then, you know, tear her down or anything but but they alsohey didn't want to give her a whole lot of credit for anything. judge charles landis, a noted jurist in...
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Mar 26, 2024
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and then an assistant scientist at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health talks about efforts that women lead in harmful chemicals in drinking water. celebrating their 20th anniversary of our annual studentcam documentary competition, this year, c-span askschool students across the country to look forward while considering the past. purchase events are given the option to look 20 years into the future orin the past. in response, we have received inspiring and thoughtful documentaries from over 32 students from across 42 states. "innocence held hostage: navigating past and future conflicts with iran." >> its evidence that in the next 20 years, the united states must make more policy that places heavy restriction in all americans traveling to iran. not only will we see less hostage taking, but the united states will no longer have to participate in negotiations with iran. >> the top documentaries and are on c-span every morning and throughout the day beg on april 1. you can watch each of the 150 award-nn films any time. >> view of government. we are funded by these television co
and then an assistant scientist at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health talks about efforts that women lead in harmful chemicals in drinking water. celebrating their 20th anniversary of our annual studentcam documentary competition, this year, c-span askschool students across the country to look forward while considering the past. purchase events are given the option to look 20 years into the future orin the past. in response, we have received inspiring and thoughtful...
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Mar 5, 2024
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fentanyl crisis and how he is dealing with that and also the large mental health>> i am a fellow in johns hopkins and research and intellectual history and i think the most important issue the danger artificial intelligence poses to our civilization in ways it might undermine our ability to have a fully unemoyed our culture. >> i'm from st. louis missouri and i'd like the president to take care of the border because we are giving too many people daily goals in here and it' overwhelming a lot of crimes. >> i'm from new jersey and i would like to see anything related to israel and gaza and palestine. it. thursday at 8 p.m. eastern on the c-span, c-span now, the free app or online on an the greatest town on earth is the place you call home and at spark light it's our home to and we are all greatest challenge. that's why spark light is working around the clock to keep you conne we are doing our part so it's a little easier to do yours. >> service along with these other television providers giving you a front row seat into democracy. >> a discussion on efforts to prevent conflict and foster pe
fentanyl crisis and how he is dealing with that and also the large mental health>> i am a fellow in johns hopkins and research and intellectual history and i think the most important issue the danger artificial intelligence poses to our civilization in ways it might undermine our ability to have a fully unemoyed our culture. >> i'm from st. louis missouri and i'd like the president to take care of the border because we are giving too many people daily goals in here and it'...
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Mar 2, 2024
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conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers becoming writers. i think that people seem to see it as an anomaly that physicians should also be writers. i often think that given how we are privy to the most moments in people's lives and we're sort of, you know, on in the front row of drama sometimes we're not just in the front row, but on the stage on stage. and you're an often you're a catalyst, some way of improving it or making it worse. and so you wonder why i wonder why more physicians don't write. but yeah, we have a very illustrious core of, you know, well-known physician writers. somerset maugham actually
conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers...
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Mar 13, 2024
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marty makary the professionor of health policy at johns hopkins university. the health minister, her statement ending the routine prescription of puberty blockers will help insure that care is based on evidence, expert clinical opinion as is in the best interest of the child. do you support this move? >> i do because the u.k. did this the right way. they did an objective review. commissioned a group of scientists to look at all the evidence and they concluded from the formal review there was not enough evidence to support the safety and effectiveness of puberty blockers. in particular they looked at a study from a clinic that is now scheduled to be closed where they looked at kids who got puberty blockers. a third of them had worsening, declining mental health and about another third had no improvement whatsoever. a third had no benefit and no improvement. that was a wake-up call to the doctors in the u.k. and that's when they said look we have no evidence to support this. let's put this on hold for now. >> bill: you just heard our reporter from london, greg
marty makary the professionor of health policy at johns hopkins university. the health minister, her statement ending the routine prescription of puberty blockers will help insure that care is based on evidence, expert clinical opinion as is in the best interest of the child. do you support this move? >> i do because the u.k. did this the right way. they did an objective review. commissioned a group of scientists to look at all the evidence and they concluded from the formal review there...
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Mar 9, 2024
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hopkins university from hopkins. he got a rhodes scholarship. this is a guy who came out of the you know, off the streets. they came in. he came and he kind of white house fellowship. he was he got into the he ran for and got a job to be head of the robin hood foundation is the largest anti-poverty organization in new york is a big, huge thing. west came in there he had no experience running anything he ran it beautifully for six or seven years. and then his friend said, you ought to run for office and ran for and he ran for office. he'd never done that before. he ran. and a big major feel at 15 different people in democratic primary. it was one in which and he swept it 20 points. he got into the general swept it by 20 points is. now, governor, he's a big champion of national service. he and gavin newsom are talking a lot about how do we ends of the country, both about both coasts of the country, how can we more of this? he's a guy. everybody wants him to run now in 2028. i don't know whether he's going to make it or
hopkins university from hopkins. he got a rhodes scholarship. this is a guy who came out of the you know, off the streets. they came in. he came and he kind of white house fellowship. he was he got into the he ran for and got a job to be head of the robin hood foundation is the largest anti-poverty organization in new york is a big, huge thing. west came in there he had no experience running anything he ran it beautifully for six or seven years. and then his friend said, you ought to run for...
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Mar 10, 2024
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hopkins of advanced international studies. her latest book is, quote, the twilight of democracy the seductive lure of by the way. when i recall a lot of the book titles that we've heard about during this festival, i'm tempted to think there's more than a little pessimism here about the future. ezra klein min is a columnist for the new york times, where he also hosts the ezra klein podcast at a young age. he has a storied career in journalism and as a is new york times best seller is entitled why we're polarized. another optimistic take on where we are in america. let me start with this and i guess i'll start with you, ezra. how polarized are we? how did we get here? and has the polarization ever been this serious and this dangerous in modern times? oh, nice easy question for 830 in the morning. well, thank you all for me. one of the tricky things about talking about polarization is you have to always ask polarized over what? it's a word we tend to use in the singular when it mean many different things. so are we more polarized
hopkins of advanced international studies. her latest book is, quote, the twilight of democracy the seductive lure of by the way. when i recall a lot of the book titles that we've heard about during this festival, i'm tempted to think there's more than a little pessimism here about the future. ezra klein min is a columnist for the new york times, where he also hosts the ezra klein podcast at a young age. he has a storied career in journalism and as a is new york times best seller is entitled...
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Mar 11, 2024
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he was this canadian whmo ultime residency system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father ofo, so much of the medicine that we practice today. and when i went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that a woman presents with heart disease or a heart attack is atypical relative to the man. let's sit with that for a second. we are greater than 50% of the population is the number one killer of women in the united states. and somehow our symptoms are not average, are not typical. that's simply ridiculous. and it and it really highlights this how important thethe wordso describe women's health disease become so important. and for me, it was necessary to go back inime to understand who laid the groundwork for this. now, of course, sir william osler did amazing. absolutely incredible things for medicine and had so many discoveries. but when it came to heart
he was this canadian whmo ultime residency system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father ofo, so much of the medicine that we practice today. and when i went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that a woman presents with heart disease or a heart attack is...
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Mar 18, 2024
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hopkins university. >> most voucher holders in the u.s. live in moderate to high poverty neighborhoods. and frankly, we've privatized public housing in the u.s. and that means that landlords are our housing providers. and the program rests on our ability to not only get their participation, but meet their needs as well. stephanie: across the country, the number of vouchers is determined by annual funding from congress. but studies have found that funding hasn't kept up with rental prices. another problem is housing supply, says kevin corinth with the conservative american enterprise institute. >> if we can only build, build, build, and build some more. that's the only way we have a potential chance of getting families access to these high opportunity areas that have been demonstrated to have major successful outcomes for themselves and for their kids. stephanie: a lack of affordable housing has led to a surge in homelessness in cities like san francisco, los angeles, and new york. but here in seattle, one of the nation's least affordable c
hopkins university. >> most voucher holders in the u.s. live in moderate to high poverty neighborhoods. and frankly, we've privatized public housing in the u.s. and that means that landlords are our housing providers. and the program rests on our ability to not only get their participation, but meet their needs as well. stephanie: across the country, the number of vouchers is determined by annual funding from congress. but studies have found that funding hasn't kept up with rental prices....
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Mar 10, 2024
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and ultimately founded the system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father of so, so much of the medicine that we went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present problem, that heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that aoman presents with heart disease or a heart attack is atypical relative to the man. let's sit with that for a second. we are greon is the number one killer of women in the united states. and somehow our symptoms are not average, are not typical. ■ really highlights this how important the legacy of the words that we choose to de become so important. and for me, it was necessary to go back in time to understand who laid the groundwork for this. now, of course,absolutely increr medicine and had so many discoveries. but when it came to heart disease and going back to his original wrote about women's heart disease, it's really shocking. case after case after case,
and ultimately founded the system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father of so, so much of the medicine that we went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present problem, that heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that aoman presents with heart disease or a heart attack is atypical relative to the man....
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Mar 30, 2024
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in international relations from johns hopkins university, his areas of expertise are national security, nato, european politics and security with a focus on europe and the baltic states. we have hudson's own luke coffey, a senior fellow, has an extensive body of work on european security, as well as peter rough, senior fellow, director, center on europe and eurasia. luke and peter published a policy paper on this particular issue. wanted to give some opening remarks for folks on the panel. andrew, start with you. thanks so much for being here. andrew: thank you for inviting me. i am honored to be here speaking to this audience. i just actually returned from finland and poland about 10 days ago. also stopped over on the way here and i have to tell you that the news is both good and concerning. so let me do the half full, half empty, hopefully i will end at the half full kind of position here. the nato enlarge. to bring sweden and finland is a strategic game changer for the alliance and for the region. it has given the alliance the strategic depth that it needed in that region. it has tr
in international relations from johns hopkins university, his areas of expertise are national security, nato, european politics and security with a focus on europe and the baltic states. we have hudson's own luke coffey, a senior fellow, has an extensive body of work on european security, as well as peter rough, senior fellow, director, center on europe and eurasia. luke and peter published a policy paper on this particular issue. wanted to give some opening remarks for folks on the panel....
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Mar 26, 2024
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this johns hopkins civil engineer expert telling us let's be real about how long it rebuild. this structure stretch a mile and a half and so high above the port, it will take, he said, we're talking five to ten years. and it will be a massive infrastructure project that will cost an awful lot of money. yes, the federal government is promising to come in with money to help start the process. but first they have got to clear the wreckage from the collapsed bridge out of the water, hallie. >> tom costello, thank you. kevin, the director of the center for transportation research at the university of tennessee. kevin, you heard tom talking there about the ship going something like 8 knots and the secretary discussing the unique circumstances here, the incredible unique circumstances that led to the catastrophic collapse of this bridge. talk us through next steps. what is the biggest priority for investigators moving forward? >> the biggest step is to understand what happened with the ship, to make sure that sort of thing doesn't happen again. the neck step, remove the debris from
this johns hopkins civil engineer expert telling us let's be real about how long it rebuild. this structure stretch a mile and a half and so high above the port, it will take, he said, we're talking five to ten years. and it will be a massive infrastructure project that will cost an awful lot of money. yes, the federal government is promising to come in with money to help start the process. but first they have got to clear the wreckage from the collapsed bridge out of the water, hallie....
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Mar 25, 2024
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in te relations from johns hopkins university, his areas of expertise are national security, nato, european politics and security with a anc states. we have hudson's own luke coffey, a senior fellow, has an extensive body of work on european security, as well as peter rough, senior fellow, director,>c center on europe and eurasia. luke and peter published a policy paper on this particular issue. wanted to give some opening remarks for folks on the panel. andrew, start with you. thanks so much for being here. andrew: thank you for inviting me. i am honored to be here speaking to this audience. i just actually returned from fian poland about 10 days ago. also stopped over on the way here and i have to tell you that the news is both good and concerning. so let me do the half full, half empty, hopefully i will end at n here. the ■mto■ enlarge. to bring sweden and finland is a strategic game changer for the alliance and for the region. it the strategic depth that it needed in that region. it has transformed the security equation around the baltic. it has severely complicated russian military
in te relations from johns hopkins university, his areas of expertise are national security, nato, european politics and security with a anc states. we have hudson's own luke coffey, a senior fellow, has an extensive body of work on european security, as well as peter rough, senior fellow, director,>c center on europe and eurasia. luke and peter published a policy paper on this particular issue. wanted to give some opening remarks for folks on the panel. andrew, start with you. thanks so...
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Mar 26, 2024
03/24
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he's a professor of civil and systems engineering johns hopkins university. welcome to the program. so obviously the focus is still quite righty on rescue efforts, but inevitably they will be questions raised over how this could have happened a yeah, and i agree point to i think, you know, we're going to try to have lessons learned. maybe not a bridge failure that we're looking at here, but a kind of infrastructure system failure with such a large container, ship striking the bridge and then causing the collapse of last night. and not withstanding that, it was hit by a ship. i mean, does this raise any issues about the, the strength of, of america's transport infrastructure in general? yeah, i mean, i don't think that the individual bridge um, uh, we have specific structural concerns about it as a bridge. but it's interesting to know the, this is not the 1st bridge to be a hit and destroyed by by ship traffic. um, there is a relatively famous one in us history and 1980 in tampa which led to a, a large number of changes in the way we protect bridges in the united states. including an
he's a professor of civil and systems engineering johns hopkins university. welcome to the program. so obviously the focus is still quite righty on rescue efforts, but inevitably they will be questions raised over how this could have happened a yeah, and i agree point to i think, you know, we're going to try to have lessons learned. maybe not a bridge failure that we're looking at here, but a kind of infrastructure system failure with such a large container, ship striking the bridge and then...
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Mar 26, 2024
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i'm well, ben schafer is a professor of civil and systems engineering at johns hopkins university. he explains how this bridge collapsed off to be initial impact. uh the thing that jumps out at me um when i, when i see the failure and you really zoom in and study it, is that once they, uh, the, the chef hits the concrete pierce, they essentially disintegrate. and rather than you see some twist or buckle or precipitating a van, which propagates through the bridge, you just see the bridge move vertically downward. it was supported all of its gravity load coming through that tear, and then that was removed. and so it just moves vertically downward and everything you see that happens after that is just the chain of events where the weakest link sales as that one part is removed. and so it's a balance structure. and so it takes a few seconds for the one span to fail, and then the balance is lost. and then the 2nd span sales on the other side of it's it's, it's very dramatic. and in troubling. but it all starts with that. i did notice a shift, right? even when you look at the images, it'
i'm well, ben schafer is a professor of civil and systems engineering at johns hopkins university. he explains how this bridge collapsed off to be initial impact. uh the thing that jumps out at me um when i, when i see the failure and you really zoom in and study it, is that once they, uh, the, the chef hits the concrete pierce, they essentially disintegrate. and rather than you see some twist or buckle or precipitating a van, which propagates through the bridge, you just see the bridge move...
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Mar 2, 2024
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she's a senior cnn contributor and a professor of history at johns hopkins university first of all, it's judeo christian values, not judo, of course. but secondly what is he talking about? >> okay, so first of all, leave it >> up to senator tuberville to actually get the entire phrase wrong, which is no surprise because this is somebody who has described himself as a christian nationalists and before his actually fended off right here on cnn, accusations of being a white christian nationalist. so this is very much in tune in and keeping with his understanding of what nationalism is and what christianity is. essentially what we're seeing from somebody like tuberville is a dog whistle. in fact, it's not even a dog whistle. it's a megaphone. >> and it's really meant to be this kind of call to arms, not just from maga. mag of followers across the country, but really for white christian nationalists who believed that the united states is a place that is founded on christian values and really should be a space that is for white people, right? it's a deeply xenophobic, at times bigoted and raci
she's a senior cnn contributor and a professor of history at johns hopkins university first of all, it's judeo christian values, not judo, of course. but secondly what is he talking about? >> okay, so first of all, leave it >> up to senator tuberville to actually get the entire phrase wrong, which is no surprise because this is somebody who has described himself as a christian nationalists and before his actually fended off right here on cnn, accusations of being a white christian...
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Mar 15, 2024
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to this the tablets will work faster if scientists from the american johns hopkins university came to their unexpected conclusion. they found that most drugs begin to act only after passing through the stomach. for dissolving the tablets, the following were obtained : standing or lying on your back - 23 minutes, on the right side - 10 minutes, on the left as much as 100. well, now, what news from the world of science and technology did we recognize as the most interesting this week: first place - the hot five ! neither eggs, nor sperm, nor even a uterus are needed for reproduction, scientists from the weizmann institute in israel said they had created a way to produce so -called synthetic embryos. complex technology makes it possible to take so-called stem cells from an adult organism (the experiments included mice), modify them, divide them into several groups, place them in special conditions and force them to form real embryos. it was decided to limit the experiment. period of mouse pregnancy, during these 8 days the embryos managed to form all the main organs, including the brain
to this the tablets will work faster if scientists from the american johns hopkins university came to their unexpected conclusion. they found that most drugs begin to act only after passing through the stomach. for dissolving the tablets, the following were obtained : standing or lying on your back - 23 minutes, on the right side - 10 minutes, on the left as much as 100. well, now, what news from the world of science and technology did we recognize as the most interesting this week: first place...
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Mar 19, 2024
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hopkins school of international studies. and great to see as always really appreciate it. what do you make of secretary austin's comments about this price that russia has paid. >> does that >> even resonate inside of russia? do they even hear that message? do they know the price they paid? >> yes, i think people do know the price. i mean, they may not know the exact numbers. of course, russia conceals the number of casualties from its own people. the russians don't advertise how many airplanes they've lost or how many large ships they've lost. ukrainian drones and nor do they talk much about the number of refineries for you so that the cranial have managed to hit in the last few weeks using drones but people of course feel those effects. they may not be able to articulate it. they may be forbidden to speak about it. you can be arrested in russia for criticizing the war. if somebody overhears you even in a restaurant that happened a few months ago to a couple and in central russia, so they feel it, they know things are wrong
hopkins school of international studies. and great to see as always really appreciate it. what do you make of secretary austin's comments about this price that russia has paid. >> does that >> even resonate inside of russia? do they even hear that message? do they know the price they paid? >> yes, i think people do know the price. i mean, they may not know the exact numbers. of course, russia conceals the number of casualties from its own people. the russians don't advertise...
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Mar 5, 2024
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. >> i may postdoc fellow at johns hopkins university. i do research in intellectual history and social theory. and i think the most important issue that i would love to see the president addressed in the state of the union is the danger that artificial intelligence poses to our civilization, taken in the way in which i think it ability to have a fully employed economy. and might threaten our culture. >> i am from st. louis, missouri, and i would like the president to take care, te bordo many people illegals in here, and it's getting overwhelming at a lot of time. >> i am from new jersey, and what i would like to see is the present address is anything related to gossip and palestine. that's very important right now and it just looks -- choosing to look it. >> watch the state of the union address live thursday at 8 p.m. eastern on c-span, c-span now a free mobile video app or online at c-span.org. >> represented dan bishop, former trump white house senior advisor stephen miller, and texas attorney general ken apec accountability, immigrati
. >> i may postdoc fellow at johns hopkins university. i do research in intellectual history and social theory. and i think the most important issue that i would love to see the president addressed in the state of the union is the danger that artificial intelligence poses to our civilization, taken in the way in which i think it ability to have a fully employed economy. and might threaten our culture. >> i am from st. louis, missouri, and i would like the president to take care, te...
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Mar 22, 2024
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otis brawley, a professor of oncology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. broglie, i'm sorry, we were interrupted before with breaking news out of out of russia. but i just want to continue the conversation because again the palace is not saying what form of cancer this is but it was in catherine's words, major abdominal surgery. and that after putting her after the surgery, doctors discovered this cancer and chemotherapy started in late february. judge, for people i talked to dr. in the last hour who was talking about colorectal cancer and how now the recommended age for having tests done for anybody checkups done for anybody on that has been lowered. can you just talk about the forms of what potentially what kind of a domino cancers there are. and when in people have something checked out >> sure. >> and i can full disclosure was a co-author of the american american cancer society guideline that recommended that people start screaming at 45 instead of 50. >> that for for colorectal cancer for colorectal cancer? >> yes. then why why why lowered the age and
otis brawley, a professor of oncology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. broglie, i'm sorry, we were interrupted before with breaking news out of out of russia. but i just want to continue the conversation because again the palace is not saying what form of cancer this is but it was in catherine's words, major abdominal surgery. and that after putting her after the surgery, doctors discovered this cancer and chemotherapy started in late february. judge, for people i talked to dr....
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Mar 22, 2024
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otis brawley, a professor of oncology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. bala. yeah. you've assumed heard what catherine has said. i'm wondering what stands out to you from a medical standpoint? she said she she had this major abdominal surgery in january. it was in late february, started chemotherapy that the cancer that initially when she wanted for the surgery, they did not believe that there was cancer. she says she found out later that there was yeah. >> this is we of course all hope the best for this poor woman who has to go through this in a very public way this does happen. you can have, for example, and ovarian cyst or a problem with the ovary that leads to lung abdominal surgery then the pathologist a day or two or three after the surgery while examining the specimen, finds out that there actually was a cancer. there that happens. we also sometimes see it with colon cancer. we then very frequently will give people what we call ageing thank chemotherapy. that's a person where there's no evidence that they have disease left in their body, but there's still the
otis brawley, a professor of oncology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. bala. yeah. you've assumed heard what catherine has said. i'm wondering what stands out to you from a medical standpoint? she said she she had this major abdominal surgery in january. it was in late february, started chemotherapy that the cancer that initially when she wanted for the surgery, they did not believe that there was cancer. she says she found out later that there was yeah. >> this is we of...
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Mar 26, 2024
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and a scientist at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health talks about efforts to limit lead and harmful forever in drinking water. join in the conversation live at 7:00 eastern wednesday morning on c-span, c-span nowmobile appt c-span.org. quick c-span is your unfiltered view of government. we are funded by these television companies and more, including buckeye broadband. ♪ bucke broadband supports c-span as to public service along th these other television providers, giving you a front row seat to democracy. /r >> so help me god, so help me god. >> congratulations, mr. speaker. >> the historic nature of my speakership is not lost on me. this will be the first time in the history of the commonwealth of virginia that we have had a this -- [laughter] and as handsome as this. [laughter] no, y'all laughing at? it's true. let me stop. it's an honor and prilebe electe first black speaker of the house of delegates 405 years after the founding o the longest continuous democratically elected body in the western hemisphere. hemisphere. also, coincidentally, 405 years after the first
and a scientist at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health talks about efforts to limit lead and harmful forever in drinking water. join in the conversation live at 7:00 eastern wednesday morning on c-span, c-span nowmobile appt c-span.org. quick c-span is your unfiltered view of government. we are funded by these television companies and more, including buckeye broadband. ♪ bucke broadband supports c-span as to public service along th these other television providers, giving you...
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now royal reporter, elie hall and professor ecology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. otis brawley. thank you both for being here. this has been something that has captivated the world for many weeks now, i mean, it goes from the salacious online gossip to the extraordinary empathy and concern that people are showing right now, given what we're talking about here. ellie, kensington palace that we may released this video. she's by herself but talking about the support she has and her husband and beyond what was the reaction to how she presented in that moment telling the world what she had been diagnosed. >> it was obviously extraordinarily brave of her and not just because of the diagnosis, because no one was expecting it back when she first was hospitalized, kensington palace said that her condition was non-cancerous. so this was a huge surprise. this diagnosis assist to absolutely everyone and i think she wanted to own it. i think she wanted to show that she is going to stand there and face the world. and take care of herself. >> i wonder if if they were throwing eve
now royal reporter, elie hall and professor ecology and epidemiology at johns hopkins university dr. otis brawley. thank you both for being here. this has been something that has captivated the world for many weeks now, i mean, it goes from the salacious online gossip to the extraordinary empathy and concern that people are showing right now, given what we're talking about here. ellie, kensington palace that we may released this video. she's by herself but talking about the support she has and...
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Mar 16, 2024
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hopkins university and a ba in biology from northwestern. welcome. senator jim tell, u.s. senator from missouri, which time he was a member of the senate armed services and energy and national resources committee. he was vice chair of the bipartisan commission of the prevention of wmd proliferation and terrorism. it has concluded that unless action is taken, a biological event in the united states is likely. he has criticized the federal government's readiness to deal with major public health crises. so have i, senator. mr. kenneth wayne steen serving as the undersecretary of intelligence and analysis at the department of homeland security. he was confirmed by the united states senate in june 2022. the office of intelligence and analysis, he's a member of and the department liaison to the u.s. intelligence community. he serves as the chief intelligence officer for dhs and reports directly to the dhs secretary and director of national intelligence. he also previously served as a commissioner on the bipartisan commission on bio defense as a me
hopkins university and a ba in biology from northwestern. welcome. senator jim tell, u.s. senator from missouri, which time he was a member of the senate armed services and energy and national resources committee. he was vice chair of the bipartisan commission of the prevention of wmd proliferation and terrorism. it has concluded that unless action is taken, a biological event in the united states is likely. he has criticized the federal government's readiness to deal with major public health...
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Mar 8, 2024
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here with us to break it all down, cnn contributor and associate professor of history at johns hopkins. leah, right. our cnn political analyst and new york times white house correspondent, zolan kanno-youngs, cnn political commentator and former senior adviser to hillary clinton, karen finney and cnn political commentator and republican strategist alice stewart. karen finney, let me start with you, because we went into this with everyone saying, what a big night and high stakes moment it was for president biden. and he needed to show, you know, style, not just substance. how do you think he did a plus of course, well, i mean, come on, let me deliver the goods here. no, but i mean, in that clip we just played, right? he was having fun with it. i mean, it was pretty predictable that republicans were going to misbehave, dave. >> and they walked right into that trap as they usually do. >> he kind of goaded them into it. yeah, but he knew that it was not going to take much to get them to go there. >> they went there and he was ready for it. and it's sort of interesting that now the modern,
here with us to break it all down, cnn contributor and associate professor of history at johns hopkins. leah, right. our cnn political analyst and new york times white house correspondent, zolan kanno-youngs, cnn political commentator and former senior adviser to hillary clinton, karen finney and cnn political commentator and republican strategist alice stewart. karen finney, let me start with you, because we went into this with everyone saying, what a big night and high stakes moment it was...
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Mar 7, 2024
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you know, there were experts john hopkins university, just like recently that we're expecting a worst casualty event, the potential an additional $70000.00 casualties by august 5th, things continue to move without any kind of peace or even slow down in the conflict . but now we're contending with a potential invasion into rasa. we're looking at 1500000 people who are already starving, suffering from overcrowded conditions, lack of medical access, and without a feasible means to deliver and search lots and lots of 8. then we're looking at a mass casualty event in the coming months. now your team travel to egypt. jordan ends who is relevant because i've been junior, i think it was in that. is it 10? is it just very briefly what you found in terms when you, you spoke to those who fled the fights and also those involved in, in the age provision? and certainly, i mean, our, our research painted a very different picture than what the, as really is painted up the i, c, j, right? we saw a routine, an arbitrary denial of basic humanitarian goods. and one case we spoke with an n g o, we told us
you know, there were experts john hopkins university, just like recently that we're expecting a worst casualty event, the potential an additional $70000.00 casualties by august 5th, things continue to move without any kind of peace or even slow down in the conflict . but now we're contending with a potential invasion into rasa. we're looking at 1500000 people who are already starving, suffering from overcrowded conditions, lack of medical access, and without a feasible means to deliver and...
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researchers from johns hopkins university programmed their machine which has been in the works for many years. in such a way that she performed one of the most difficult surgical procedures: suturing sections of intestine on a living organism, where tissues move, and laparoscopically through minimal incisions. the operation was carried out on four pigs, and the robot never made a mistake; it is not always possible for a person to sew so hermetically. according to the creators, in the future, even ambulances may be equipped with independently operating robots. i really, really enjoyed throwing dishes from the balcony and destroying the room. actress ksenia traister shares her impressions of filming the most anticipated magical film of this spring with visitors to the skating rink in gorky park and listeners of russian radio. ksenia played the main role in the adventure comedy flying ship. love is waiting for you, yes, this is a story from a well-known cartoon , with your favorite characters it will play in a new way in the cinema, who is vanya, i dreamed of such a girl, how beautiful , a
researchers from johns hopkins university programmed their machine which has been in the works for many years. in such a way that she performed one of the most difficult surgical procedures: suturing sections of intestine on a living organism, where tissues move, and laparoscopically through minimal incisions. the operation was carried out on four pigs, and the robot never made a mistake; it is not always possible for a person to sew so hermetically. according to the creators, in the future,...
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Mar 3, 2024
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now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hoin was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you sedeon the sl, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical marker on the site where it but there are gentlemen that have purchased land in very close proximity to the original location that are now rebuilt in an■çtavern and. hope to have that complete by the 250th anniversary on passamaquoddy advice, congress developeth from to conduct a naval campaign to capture the british principal naval base located in halifax, nova scotia. the committee presented its recommendation to the full congress on the 9th of november, and the fgress resolved. i quote that two battalions of marines be raised, that they be distinguished by the names of second battalion of american marines making the 10th in november. the official of
now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hoin was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you sedeon the sl, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical marker on the site where it but there are gentlemen that have...
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Mar 20, 2024
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there is a study from johns hopkins that points to shortages for those who need it. these drugs are not specifically for weight loss, but they're being used for them. can you give me a sense of what is happening? the studdedy was 1800 people. shortage is real and what is the drug, what are the drugs used for for their primary use? >> absolutely. this is really important, and the other leading health story really that we're talking about across the country. these medications are called glps for short. they can treat type 2 diabetes. what we're seeing here is major indication if you have type 2 diabetes or in some cases if you are overweight and have a bmi greater than 30. now we have the medications like zepbound that are on the market that actually the indication is weight loss. the problem here that you're highlighting is that the risk is that thousand dollars a month, ten times what we're seeing in other countries that have these exact same medications. it's being marked up here in the united states. it's unfortunate that that's what's happening. that is causing pe
there is a study from johns hopkins that points to shortages for those who need it. these drugs are not specifically for weight loss, but they're being used for them. can you give me a sense of what is happening? the studdedy was 1800 people. shortage is real and what is the drug, what are the drugs used for for their primary use? >> absolutely. this is really important, and the other leading health story really that we're talking about across the country. these medications are called...