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Apr 6, 2024
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steven and they hated her too. and some of them thought that she she was the reason stephens was pushing for the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments because she was black and she wanted her people to run the south. i mean, just unbelievable and but this goes on for years and years and years and she never said thing and he never said a thing. i mean this is i cannot imagine keeping that in. i would have been all over somebody at some point expressing my displeasure with their with their comments, their behavior. well, okay she did actually she fired her had had enough in 1847. there's really only years after she got here to lancaster was a democrat aligned newspaper here. so they were particularly vitriolic, stephens and smith, they just have much time for abolition and trying to put an end to slavery. so. lydia and so they published all kinds, really ugly things. and lydia finally, finally said, that's and and she, she was, she would actually tell when she got there she'd tell them my my friends told me i should come ca
steven and they hated her too. and some of them thought that she she was the reason stephens was pushing for the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments because she was black and she wanted her people to run the south. i mean, just unbelievable and but this goes on for years and years and years and she never said thing and he never said a thing. i mean this is i cannot imagine keeping that in. i would have been all over somebody at some point expressing my displeasure with their with their comments,...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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steven and they hated her too. and some of them thought that she she was the reason stephens was pushing for the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments because she was black and she wanted herpeople to run the south. i mean, just unbelievable and but this goes on for years and years and years and she never said thing and he never said a thing. i mean this is i cannot imagine keeping thatwould have been all over somebody at some point expressing my displeasure with their with their comments, their behavior. well okay she did actually she fired her had had enough in 1847. ther she got here to lancaster was a democrat aligned newspaper here. so they were particularly vitriolic, stephens and smith, they just have much time for abolition and trying to put an end to slavery. so. lydia and so they published all kinds, really ugly things. and lydia finally, finally said that's and and she, she was, she would actually tell when she got there she'd tell them my my friends told me i should come call you out on this and the newspaper
steven and they hated her too. and some of them thought that she she was the reason stephens was pushing for the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments because she was black and she wanted herpeople to run the south. i mean, just unbelievable and but this goes on for years and years and years and she never said thing and he never said a thing. i mean this is i cannot imagine keeping thatwould have been all over somebody at some point expressing my displeasure with their with their comments, their...
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Jun 2, 2024
06/24
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steven had kept an audio diary. he was documenting all the issues that were going on between he and kathleen. andrea canning: stephen made this recording about three weeks before his murder. it's one of those few homicide cases that, when you really want to get into that victim's head and know exactly what's going on, steven left it for us. [ominous music] andrea canning: investigators also heard stevens standing up for his rights. he recorded one exchange with kathleen as he was picking up the baby for a short visit. kathleen was planning to take elizabeth for a weekend trip out of state against his wishes. [baby cooing] andrea canning: investigators could hear kathleen digging at steven in front of their daughter. and what it was was ugly and bitter. but a lot of custody fights are like that, and they don't end in murder. the mystery of who killed steven moore was still a puzzle, but the pieces were about to come together. craig melvin: coming up-- she offered us food, a drink. craig melvin: police pay another vis
steven had kept an audio diary. he was documenting all the issues that were going on between he and kathleen. andrea canning: stephen made this recording about three weeks before his murder. it's one of those few homicide cases that, when you really want to get into that victim's head and know exactly what's going on, steven left it for us. [ominous music] andrea canning: investigators also heard stevens standing up for his rights. he recorded one exchange with kathleen as he was picking up the...
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you love steven? >> yes, i do. >> i think he probably loves you too, and if he did something horrible, generally we do tell somebody close to us what we did. >> right. trust me. i would love for her to be found. i mean, we both would love for her to be found. this is a nightmare in both of our accounts. >> did steven tell you anything as far as he done, they got into a fight or anything like that? >> no, not at all. >> i don't care if you inspect my car. i don't care if you come inspect my home. i don't care if you look through my phone and my emails, or my computer. i don't care. that's fine. do that. like, if that helps clear me, fine. >> his demeanor stayed the same. he was always very calm, very cooperative. >> he wanted to help. he was trying to be helpful to us. >> i cared about her. i feel bad that i can't do anything. i can't be down there searching. >> laura seemed to be really on his side. >> you're asking me why he wouldn't do it? >> yeah. >> i mean, honestly, he enjoys being a part-time da
you love steven? >> yes, i do. >> i think he probably loves you too, and if he did something horrible, generally we do tell somebody close to us what we did. >> right. trust me. i would love for her to be found. i mean, we both would love for her to be found. this is a nightmare in both of our accounts. >> did steven tell you anything as far as he done, they got into a fight or anything like that? >> no, not at all. >> i don't care if you inspect my car. i...
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Apr 15, 2024
04/24
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steven: yes. again, when you scratch the surface of this, you discover there are measurable indices of decline and change that go way back. people were shocked when census data of 1910 revealed that lots of rural counties, especially in that agricultural midsection of the country, were losing population. during world war i, there was a famous song, what are you going to do to keep them down on the farm once they have seen gay perry -- paris, there was this sense that the boys would not come back. but people were already leaving. you roll through places like kansas, missouri, the dakotas, you discover that some of the towns at the peak of their population in the census of 1910, 1920, they have been on a slow and steady decline since. lots of reasons for that. one major reason is what is happening simultaneously is agriculture in this country is industrializing furiously. i think that is another misconception we carry with us, is that somehow agriculture is an older, simpler form of economic life an
steven: yes. again, when you scratch the surface of this, you discover there are measurable indices of decline and change that go way back. people were shocked when census data of 1910 revealed that lots of rural counties, especially in that agricultural midsection of the country, were losing population. during world war i, there was a famous song, what are you going to do to keep them down on the farm once they have seen gay perry -- paris, there was this sense that the boys would not come...
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Jan 19, 2024
01/24
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do you think the lord has a plan for steven wright? >> steven: no. no. [laughs] >> stephen: not that you know of. >> steven: not that i know of. >> stephen: would you want to know if the lord had a plan for you? >> steven: oh, my god, no. >> stephen: what's your process for writing jokes? are they always sort of coming in or do you sit down, i'm going to write for a couple hours? >> steven: what i do is i drink coffee. are you a coffee drinker? >> stephen: i'm a coffee achiever. >> steven: i think coffee is one of the best things about being alive. >> stephen: sure. [applause] to the turks. >> steven: yes. to the turks. i mean, my mind goes crazy on coffee. so i do is i exercised the morning and then i go somewhere and i drink coffee. and then i just, i'm like a receptionist for my mind. i just write down things to come into my head. jokes, whatever they are. i just write jokes. may i tell you a joke from the other day? >> stephen: i would be very grateful. >> steven: my friend jimmy bought an electric car. he was very excited about it and he bought an e
do you think the lord has a plan for steven wright? >> steven: no. no. [laughs] >> stephen: not that you know of. >> steven: not that i know of. >> stephen: would you want to know if the lord had a plan for you? >> steven: oh, my god, no. >> stephen: what's your process for writing jokes? are they always sort of coming in or do you sit down, i'm going to write for a couple hours? >> steven: what i do is i drink coffee. are you a coffee drinker? >>...
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Mar 27, 2024
03/24
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steven: right. dr. trister: but that does not necessarily apply in the same equitable way as other conditions like alzheimer's or gop ones. and we talked about how is it as both regulators and payers, wham ensuring there is access and that it is equitable for full to be able to get these new innovations. who in the health care continuum should bear those costs? there are going to be some health-care systems tha able to invest in ai and new technologies, and some, particularly smaller or rural how do you bridge those divides? dr. trister: right now, u.s., which we saw over the last four years, actually on the anniversary of the global pandemic being declared march 11, that in that time, what were little fissures, and we recognize there were socialss and carrier delivery, those became massive chasms. art of that was the misinformation and disinformation we heard about earlier, but imathink the infra, the underlying technology that allows things to flow from a patient in their home, in care,o be a public g
steven: right. dr. trister: but that does not necessarily apply in the same equitable way as other conditions like alzheimer's or gop ones. and we talked about how is it as both regulators and payers, wham ensuring there is access and that it is equitable for full to be able to get these new innovations. who in the health care continuum should bear those costs? there are going to be some health-care systems tha able to invest in ai and new technologies, and some, particularly smaller or rural...
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Jan 15, 2024
01/24
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steven's house. and now the josh seemed in danger of losing custody of the kids permanently, chuck said he worried not about the boys so much, but about the social worker who took them to see josh. >> i was concerned that if she confronted josh in any way that he might hurt her. >> which brings us inexorably to that sunday. the first time the kids would visit josh after he was ordered to take a polygraph. >> i got a bad feeling about this, and i didn't get a bad feeling until saturday. i was thinking, you know, maybe i should ask somebody to have a little bit more security this time or maybe we should skip this visit. >> the kids were having fun, playing, didn't want to go. but of course, there wasn't a choice. they had to go. >> i thought, i have to get them to go or i'm breaking a law. and we will get in trouble for it. >> and so, she jollied them into it. >> i said you will do something fun, you know daddy will have a project. you will get to eat with daddy, you will have fun. >> no idea, of cours
steven's house. and now the josh seemed in danger of losing custody of the kids permanently, chuck said he worried not about the boys so much, but about the social worker who took them to see josh. >> i was concerned that if she confronted josh in any way that he might hurt her. >> which brings us inexorably to that sunday. the first time the kids would visit josh after he was ordered to take a polygraph. >> i got a bad feeling about this, and i didn't get a bad feeling until...
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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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steven: the vision we are working towards. andrew: right, but to get there we have to understand where people feel comfortable today and understanding what data could they contribute, what data can they■ generate, and what is done already within th health systemre and what they can do to have control over the data. that is not enshrined in data like hepa even though it did not anticipate the data revolution but i think there are opportunities to update demonstrate what is good for the society and how we still protect individual rights around control particularly what data and what its used for. steven: how much of the responsibility is to come up with those rules like a company that discloses how the data used in that sort of thing? andrew: everybody would like to see regulations are clear. we want to take steps -- sensitive data about a person so disclose a consent with the process of informing a person this is how the data can be used and how we will not use it. we will never sell it as a■on example. those are reasonable
steven: the vision we are working towards. andrew: right, but to get there we have to understand where people feel comfortable today and understanding what data could they contribute, what data can they■ generate, and what is done already within th health systemre and what they can do to have control over the data. that is not enshrined in data like hepa even though it did not anticipate the data revolution but i think there are opportunities to update demonstrate what is good for the society...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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i mean, steven wanted to be the primary caregiver. narrator: but steven was seen driving away in his own vehicle, not the family truck, right after he gave heather the baby. he wouldn't have had time to double back and commit the murder. perhaps most important, he was 6 feet tall, much taller than all the descriptions of the shooter. steven could not have been the one that actually pulled the trigger. narrator: detectives turned back to their key witness, the truck driver who got a good look at the shooter and the shooter's truck, an f-150. we did ask this person, this witness, if he would be willing to ride with us to take a look at a pickup truck and see if it looked like the pickup truck he'd saw. narrator: the witness took one look at the strube family truck and made a positive identification. he was 100% confident that that was the same vehicle that he saw in the motel parking lot behind the shopping center. narrator: this was enough for police to get a search warrant. whitehead: being an older-model truck like that, you would ex
i mean, steven wanted to be the primary caregiver. narrator: but steven was seen driving away in his own vehicle, not the family truck, right after he gave heather the baby. he wouldn't have had time to double back and commit the murder. perhaps most important, he was 6 feet tall, much taller than all the descriptions of the shooter. steven could not have been the one that actually pulled the trigger. narrator: detectives turned back to their key witness, the truck driver who got a good look at...
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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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steven: i think it should be. if you look at the numbers we posted, we just beat our previous record high in 2019 of 702. in the core business, revenues were at record high levels, cash flows were at record high levels. we did have some recovery in terms of the insurance settlements for the aircraft that were stuck in russia. i think what we are seeing in the industry now, as you just talked about, is that we are seeing record demand for aircraft. haslinda: are your number is a reflection of the aviation sector? is it back to a healthy level or are there still pockets of distress? steven: globally, we are definitely back. global traffic is now back above 2019 levels. we are seeing even this week, the airport reported traffic back over 2019 levels. cathay pacific announced strong profits this week. i think most parts of the world now are back where we would have seen them pre-pandemic. the only trailing piece i think is that cross-border china market. china domestic is well ahead of where was in 2019, but we are se
steven: i think it should be. if you look at the numbers we posted, we just beat our previous record high in 2019 of 702. in the core business, revenues were at record high levels, cash flows were at record high levels. we did have some recovery in terms of the insurance settlements for the aircraft that were stuck in russia. i think what we are seeing in the industry now, as you just talked about, is that we are seeing record demand for aircraft. haslinda: are your number is a reflection of...
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Apr 6, 2024
04/24
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noel stevens. >> he said he knew shauna and did yard work and handiwork for george and knew everyone in the neighborhood. >> someone that shauna knew. >> reporter: someone that george the do-gooder tried to help and not out of character for george. but he was adamant he had nothing to do with the murder of shauna. he agreed to show detectives's campsite in the desert. >> reporter: what did you find? >> swimsuit bottoms that in our search of shauna's house it appeared to match the top i had seen in her bedroom . so so greyhound was the burglar poking round shauna's personal things. in fact her friends recalled that shauna had grown uncomfortable with this particular charity case that had been doing work around the house. >> she did not want him around the house anymore and said you better get out of this house or i'm calling the police on you. >> reporter: was he the killer? out at the campsite detectives did not find any evidence linking him to the murder so they kept looking. >> one other thing th
noel stevens. >> he said he knew shauna and did yard work and handiwork for george and knew everyone in the neighborhood. >> someone that shauna knew. >> reporter: someone that george the do-gooder tried to help and not out of character for george. but he was adamant he had nothing to do with the murder of shauna. he agreed to show detectives's campsite in the desert. >> reporter: what did you find? >> swimsuit bottoms that in our search of shauna's house it...
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May 12, 2024
05/24
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maureen stevens. she gave us a love story, a remarkable love story of this man that she just adored and the children they had. he liked to fish and hike, he ate all kinds of different things, he worked at ami, the national enquirer, and the star, and mirror. these tabloids that you see when you're checking out at the supermarket, and bob stevens was a photo editor. his job was to take photos and add them to the stories. the first set of symptoms was that he felt awful, and it seems like the flu. in the middle of the night, early morning hours, he's gasping for breath. maureen drove him up to the emergency room. when he was brought to the emergency room at jfk hospital, he was not breathing properly and he had to be intubated and ventilated. so no one ever spoke to him. they go through all the battery of the tests and dr. larry bush is looking at bob stevens' spinal fluid and he's not liking what he's seeing. when that doctor saw the microscope appearance of what was going on in the spinal fluid of the
maureen stevens. she gave us a love story, a remarkable love story of this man that she just adored and the children they had. he liked to fish and hike, he ate all kinds of different things, he worked at ami, the national enquirer, and the star, and mirror. these tabloids that you see when you're checking out at the supermarket, and bob stevens was a photo editor. his job was to take photos and add them to the stories. the first set of symptoms was that he felt awful, and it seems like the...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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steven: just a couple steven: steven: of observations on that point that i think is the important one. i disagree that iran support for hamas being essential for the attack they carried out october 7. i did not see a relationship at all. the ambiguity and plausible died -- deniability is crucially important for iran's adversaries, seeing it in their interest as attacking ron at home. nobody wants to do that. united states has never attacked iran mainland even after they have drawn considerable quantities of american blood. a full-scale war with iran seems income as a writ with whatever benefit the u.s. could extract from the conflict so they are happy about the plausible deniability because it relieves them the need to justify not attacking iran at home, on the mainland, something that countries simply do not wish to do. certainly the united states. >> a follow-up question on the houthis. some scholars [indiscernible] iran said this is the perfect opportunity and let's make yemen saudi arabia's vietnam, and make them spend a lot of money. yes or no? do you agree or not? steven: poor y
steven: just a couple steven: steven: of observations on that point that i think is the important one. i disagree that iran support for hamas being essential for the attack they carried out october 7. i did not see a relationship at all. the ambiguity and plausible died -- deniability is crucially important for iran's adversaries, seeing it in their interest as attacking ron at home. nobody wants to do that. united states has never attacked iran mainland even after they have drawn considerable...
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Feb 9, 2024
02/24
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steven: get closer to the microphone, please. questioner: a question about government reference architectures. can you elaborate what you've been doing to bring in allies and partners in cooperation there and are there steps -- you mentioned industry investment, are there steps allies can take to win on ramps and the like? andrew: yeah, i'd be happy to talk about it. it can sound like somewhere there's a set of like blue paper with lines and drawings on it. it's much more concrete than that. in fact, it's mostly software-based and so we can, we have and we will share the necessary tools and the necessary code with partners and allies for them to participate actively in developing and implementing these, a sentencingtures in their own system -- these architectures in their own systems. they can architect their own system to match the structure. it's the nature of the global defense industry that a lot of it resides in the united states, inevitably the vast majority of them are going to require capability from u.s. firms as part of
steven: get closer to the microphone, please. questioner: a question about government reference architectures. can you elaborate what you've been doing to bring in allies and partners in cooperation there and are there steps -- you mentioned industry investment, are there steps allies can take to win on ramps and the like? andrew: yeah, i'd be happy to talk about it. it can sound like somewhere there's a set of like blue paper with lines and drawings on it. it's much more concrete than that. in...
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Mar 8, 2024
03/24
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lord stevens, who has been a great- stevens, who has been a great supporter— stevens, who has been a great supporter of _ stevens, who has been a great supporter of this— stevens, who has been a greatj supporter of this investigation, first introduced _ supporter of this investigation, first introduced that _ supporter of this investigation, first introduced that term, - supporter of this investigation, first introduced that term, i. supporter of this investigation, . first introduced that term, i think predominantly— first introduced that term, i think predominantly through— first introduced that term, i think| predominantly through frustration because _ predominantly through frustration because he — predominantly through frustration because he was _ predominantly through frustration because he was lying _ predominantly through frustration because he was lying to, - predominantly through frustration i because he was lying to, information that you _ because he was lying to, information that you should — because he was lying to, information that you should have _ because he
lord stevens, who has been a great- stevens, who has been a great supporter— stevens, who has been a great supporter of _ stevens, who has been a great supporter of this— stevens, who has been a greatj supporter of this investigation, first introduced _ supporter of this investigation, first introduced that _ supporter of this investigation, first introduced that term, - supporter of this investigation, first introduced that term, i. supporter of this investigation, . first introduced that...
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Jan 15, 2024
01/24
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steven miller first legal founder a fantastic group. old confession here my wife worked there at one point spewed have to confess to the sinks the most absurd thing o in the worl. but none the less just fairly quickly speak of the voters of iowa and the voters in the future. why this should remain i front f mind when they vote when they go to caucuses. quick simply put because you cannot fix any other problem unless you first fix the border. you cannot have a functioning healthcare system with an open border. you cannot have a functioning education system with an open border. you cannot have safe communities which is the basis for economic opportunity and thriving and economic development you cannot have any of those things without a secure border you certainly cannot have national security without border security. so unless we fix this we are just living in a fantasy world if we think we are going to get healthcare right in texas right in education policy right on any other public policy right until you first establish and reestablish
steven miller first legal founder a fantastic group. old confession here my wife worked there at one point spewed have to confess to the sinks the most absurd thing o in the worl. but none the less just fairly quickly speak of the voters of iowa and the voters in the future. why this should remain i front f mind when they vote when they go to caucuses. quick simply put because you cannot fix any other problem unless you first fix the border. you cannot have a functioning healthcare system with...
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May 2, 2024
05/24
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steven: there is a correction i would like to make. everyone is saying there is a restrictive monetary policy. monetary policy is not as are stick to as 525 to 550 basis points worth of rate hikes. that is based on the belief that the new normal period, the period after the financial crisis prior to covid, was normal. that was an anomaly. that low level of nominal interest rates is anomalous. the economy is transiting back to a higher level. so therefore the monetary policy is not as restrictive. in addition to that, fiscal policy remains enormously stimulative. the treasury announced on monday that they are going to borrow an extra $1 trillion between april and september of this year. $1 trillion more. they are showing you they are spending money aggressively. internet environment where fiscal policy is very loose, monetary policy is really not restrictive. it explains why this economy is so resilient it is resilient because it is fundamentally healthy from a balance sheet perspective and getting the benefit of fiscal stimulus that is
steven: there is a correction i would like to make. everyone is saying there is a restrictive monetary policy. monetary policy is not as are stick to as 525 to 550 basis points worth of rate hikes. that is based on the belief that the new normal period, the period after the financial crisis prior to covid, was normal. that was an anomaly. that low level of nominal interest rates is anomalous. the economy is transiting back to a higher level. so therefore the monetary policy is not as...
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Feb 14, 2024
02/24
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steven: get closer to the microphone, please. questioner: a question about government reference architectures. can you elaborate what you've been doing to bring in allies and partners in cooperation there and are there steps -- you mentioned industry investment, are there steps allies can take to win on ramps and the like? andrew: yeah, i'd be happy to talk about it. it can sound like somewhere there's a set of like blue paper with lines and drawings on it. it's much more concrete than that. in fact, it's mostly software-based and so we can, we have and we will share the necessary tools and the necessary code with partners and allies for them to participate actively in developing and implementing these, a sentencingtures in their own system -- these architectures in their own systems. they can architect their own system to match the structure. it's the nature of the global defense industry that a lot of it resides in the united states, inevitably the vast majority of them are going to require capability from u.s. firms as part of
steven: get closer to the microphone, please. questioner: a question about government reference architectures. can you elaborate what you've been doing to bring in allies and partners in cooperation there and are there steps -- you mentioned industry investment, are there steps allies can take to win on ramps and the like? andrew: yeah, i'd be happy to talk about it. it can sound like somewhere there's a set of like blue paper with lines and drawings on it. it's much more concrete than that. in...
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Apr 11, 2024
04/24
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that's what we'll edit out. >> i think steven seagal was probably bored steven siegel. [laughter] >> so the photographer steven siegel, the images were all taken in what he described as a subway graveyard. all the cars were overturned. he took these real surreal pictures of the gritty, '80s new york subway cars. it was such a good image. i kept thinking, where's the "vampire weekend" going to go? why ruin this image? the only text on screen is the newspaper, which is a daily news headline. "only god was above us." at first, i kind of thought, that works. but then, as time went on, i started to feel like this is the perfect title actually. >> michael: i also love when a band doesn't need to plaster its name all over the place. there is a confidence with that and it is your fifth album, you know, maybe that played into it, i don't know. the song you are going to sing for us, "mary boone," can you describe a little bit about what, who is mary boone, where did this come from? >> mary boone is a very important figure in the downtown new york art world. came to prominence in
that's what we'll edit out. >> i think steven seagal was probably bored steven siegel. [laughter] >> so the photographer steven siegel, the images were all taken in what he described as a subway graveyard. all the cars were overturned. he took these real surreal pictures of the gritty, '80s new york subway cars. it was such a good image. i kept thinking, where's the "vampire weekend" going to go? why ruin this image? the only text on screen is the newspaper, which is a...
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Jan 16, 2024
01/24
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for the "pbs newshour," i'm steven potter in brookfield, wisconsin. geoff: and that's the "newshour" for tonight. i'm geoff bennett. amna: and i'm amna nawaz. on behalf of the entire "newshour" team, thank you for joining us. >> major funding for the "pbs newshour" has beenrovided by -- >> how may i help you? this is a pocket dial. i thought i would let you know that with consumer cellular, you get nationwide coverage with no contract. that is kind of our thing. have a nice day. ♪ >> carnegie corporation of new york, supporting at ovations in education, democratic engagement and the enhancement of international peace and security. at carnegie.org. and the ongoing support of these institutions. this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy.] ♪ >>> hello, everyone, and welcome to "amanpour & company." here's what's coming up. from g
for the "pbs newshour," i'm steven potter in brookfield, wisconsin. geoff: and that's the "newshour" for tonight. i'm geoff bennett. amna: and i'm amna nawaz. on behalf of the entire "newshour" team, thank you for joining us. >> major funding for the "pbs newshour" has beenrovided by -- >> how may i help you? this is a pocket dial. i thought i would let you know that with consumer cellular, you get nationwide coverage with no contract. that is...
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May 26, 2024
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steven: thanks for the tip. gerrad hall: family ties is a reversal in many ways of all in the family, except now you have the liberal parents and the conservative child. elyse: this morning i found a copy of the wall street journal under his bed. steven: you think maybe he was switched at birth and the rockefellers have our kid? meredith baxter: michael was just wonderful. he was young and energetic and he had such good timing. alex: who did this? michael gross: we started rather slowly, nbc was moving us around a little bit, trying to find the right place for us. jim colucci: family ties pumped a little bit of life into the family sitcom, but the sitcom in general had been pronounced dead. there were very few on the air. and then all of a sudden comes the cosby show in '84. theo: dad, can i have an advance on my allowance? cliff: son, you're already backed up to your 50th birthday. tim allen: the cosby show was a game changer to me. this is just a family i adored. present history has tainted that a little bit.
steven: thanks for the tip. gerrad hall: family ties is a reversal in many ways of all in the family, except now you have the liberal parents and the conservative child. elyse: this morning i found a copy of the wall street journal under his bed. steven: you think maybe he was switched at birth and the rockefellers have our kid? meredith baxter: michael was just wonderful. he was young and energetic and he had such good timing. alex: who did this? michael gross: we started rather slowly, nbc...
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Mar 18, 2024
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steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government won the west published 2013 and the presidency and the american state. stephens has been very, as you can tell, i'm also thrilled to have with one of the finest of the new generation of presidential historian lindsay chervinsky. lindsay is a senior fellow at the center for presidential history at southern methodist university. she is also the of the award winning book, the cabinet. george washington and the creation of the american institution and. the coeditor of morning the president's loss and legacy in american culture. and she's working on a new book that will be coming out. published by oxford university press titled making the presidents john adams and the pr
steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government won the west published 2013 and the presidency and the american state. stephens has been very, as you can...
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Mar 25, 2024
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steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government won the west published 2013 and the presidency and the american state. stephens has been very, as you can tell, i'm also thrilled to have with one of the finest of the new generation of presidential historian lindsay chervinsky. lindsay is a senior fellow at the center for presidential history at southern methodist university. she is also the of the award winning book, the cabinet. george washington and the creation of the american institution and. the coeditor of morning the president's loss and legacy in american culture. and she's working on a new book that will be coming out. published by oxford university press titled making the presidents john adams and the pr
steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government won the west published 2013 and the presidency and the american state. stephens has been very, as you can...