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Apr 15, 2024
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when we settled in england, people would ask, how long are you staying? when we settled in, people would ask, when are you going to a citizen? and the fact that our our separate area of state was relating the story, her, her life's experiences is truly remarkable and a testament to our country. so one last question before we go to the audience. as i walked around the there's many themes that that struck me. but one of them and we touched upon it here in various answers is the role of resistance. so i'll just ask a simple question when is resistance justified to secure rights in a democracy democracy? it's toughie. well, for me, i like. i think it often is when there's no other option that you see resistance taking hold. but resistance has not always been success before, but it's often the last option in terms it being acceptable. the last option i'm for resistance. i'm a veteran marcher. i see you. but but it's resistance. resistance against oppression. resistance to expand rights not. resistance not. and i wouldn't even call it resistance. i'd call it in
when we settled in england, people would ask, how long are you staying? when we settled in, people would ask, when are you going to a citizen? and the fact that our our separate area of state was relating the story, her, her life's experiences is truly remarkable and a testament to our country. so one last question before we go to the audience. as i walked around the there's many themes that that struck me. but one of them and we touched upon it here in various answers is the role of...
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Apr 15, 2024
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the deceased woman had just last summer come here from england. the master of the furnace respectfully attended the service house with all his people. so very intriguing and tree first of all that master in this case was john. he was the master at that point with all his people all came to this funeral and her lead. you're right. her diet and her lead levels are so different. so one of the things i'd like to explore and perhaps to a graduate student here who wants to take this up, is could she be fact her could her lead be related to her life in england and in bristol or london and where lead in the pipes, you know, was, you know, that's how you got your water right? and yes. and it could be also, as you pointed out, pewter. but could there be a connection here? we have a definite connection between our oldest, who is. you know, was bent double from his compression of his vertebrae. and he, in fact, were sure or i'm sure put this way that i have his burial or his mention, because he's described by the moravian. so just intriguing sort of how you c
the deceased woman had just last summer come here from england. the master of the furnace respectfully attended the service house with all his people. so very intriguing and tree first of all that master in this case was john. he was the master at that point with all his people all came to this funeral and her lead. you're right. her diet and her lead levels are so different. so one of the things i'd like to explore and perhaps to a graduate student here who wants to take this up, is could she...
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Apr 15, 2024
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people will say that's certainly not the case in england or or i think in canada. so. so one thing that i sort notice is first, we can't really prove was a difference in consumption. what we do know, what really mattered in terms of a difference was that in terms of formal serving in a polite formal setting, a woman would usually be in charge of serving the tea a table, hence the the british expression and who will be mother who will pour the tea. right. but that's that suggests female leadership, not necessarily female like demographic dominance of tea drinking. so this reflects female leadership in the domestic space of the household at home. this reflects a woman's decision making to about what consumer goods to buy at the shop. and so you will find if you look at merchant ledgers, very rarely do women's names appear as the consumer of goods because they're buying it under their husband's accounts. and so, you know, you wouldn't have your name would appear if your your spouse goes and buys the tea. okay. so actually, women are making all these consumer decisions. an
people will say that's certainly not the case in england or or i think in canada. so. so one thing that i sort notice is first, we can't really prove was a difference in consumption. what we do know, what really mattered in terms of a difference was that in terms of formal serving in a polite formal setting, a woman would usually be in charge of serving the tea a table, hence the the british expression and who will be mother who will pour the tea. right. but that's that suggests female...
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Apr 14, 2024
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presbyterians and and that's why we've got like, for example the episcopalian church, the anglican church in england just this week announced, a $1.27 billion reparations fund for their role in the transatlantic slave trade. right. and how they profited as a church for the transatlantic slave trade. right. so and this is the anglican the episcopal church in the u.s. have been doing $27 million so far in similar of reparations because they were after all jefferson davis, robert e lee episcopalians right now, baptist. so know. and so i think i want i want to say is like it's a broader question then i think just as we often think of of church and state as you know, just this kind of establishment of a church or but i think it's a much it's seeped the dna of christianity in ways i think we all all of us claim that tradition have got some real soul searching to do. yeah. so i. am. oh, there we go. so i'm going to ask for a policy a policy prescription kind of tag. on to the last question is there would you recommend we oppose as in like from the left could we actually basically some of the tax breaks tha
presbyterians and and that's why we've got like, for example the episcopalian church, the anglican church in england just this week announced, a $1.27 billion reparations fund for their role in the transatlantic slave trade. right. and how they profited as a church for the transatlantic slave trade. right. so and this is the anglican the episcopal church in the u.s. have been doing $27 million so far in similar of reparations because they were after all jefferson davis, robert e lee...
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Apr 14, 2024
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this is before the protestant reformation, as before the break of the church of england with the roman catholic church. so this is essentially the closest thing international law and moral legitimization as you're going to get. and he essentially gets this set of things that called him, culminating in one in 1493 that basically give the blessing of the church to the entire colonial project, including the kind of genocidal and displacement of indigenous people and the transatlantic slave trade. it's all there. and in fact spells it out in black and white. there's actually great website called the doctrine of discovery dot org. if you read these documents in latin or in english or in spanish, i think they're in three different languages there. but it spells it out in black and white. it literally says like this from the you know, it's a papal bull. right. so from the office of the pope literally says, you know, that you in the question that he asked people, he says here, here's the question you have to ask yourself about whether these people have rights that ought to be respected by euro
this is before the protestant reformation, as before the break of the church of england with the roman catholic church. so this is essentially the closest thing international law and moral legitimization as you're going to get. and he essentially gets this set of things that called him, culminating in one in 1493 that basically give the blessing of the church to the entire colonial project, including the kind of genocidal and displacement of indigenous people and the transatlantic slave trade....
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Apr 14, 2024
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it was funny for me saying that because tyndall was he was like the main scientist in england of his time and he proved which which elements of the atmosphere were keeping the heat in. he learned that it was carbon dioxide and it was water vapor. and then years later, a swedish scientist named 70 are haney us who later directed the nobel labs. so this was always established. it wasn't mavericks, it was people who were leading the parade. he thought, okay, we now carbon dioxide is roughly thermostat, although he wouldn't have used that metaphor because there were no thermostats. but but he said, okay, would happen. let me just do the math. if we lowered carbon dioxide, what would happen it would re trigger the ice ages and we raised it temperatures would up if we doubled it, they'd go up about 4 to 9 degrees fahrenheit. and he, as a swede, very happy because sweden is very, very cold. and so some of his friends what they wanted to do was take abandoned coal mines and light all the coal on fire so they could speed the process up by. the 1920s, people were noticing things were really, r
it was funny for me saying that because tyndall was he was like the main scientist in england of his time and he proved which which elements of the atmosphere were keeping the heat in. he learned that it was carbon dioxide and it was water vapor. and then years later, a swedish scientist named 70 are haney us who later directed the nobel labs. so this was always established. it wasn't mavericks, it was people who were leading the parade. he thought, okay, we now carbon dioxide is roughly...
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Apr 14, 2024
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it's so nice to be somewhere where nobody is wearing red sox stuff or new england patriots gear in boston. like even the dogs on the are wearing like red sox hats. and so but in all seriousness i'm really glad to be back here i began my book i began my research here in oregon in washington for obvious reasons there is just such a rich history of of bigfoot here and i mean some of the oldest indigenous legends in the world deep from here and and also i'm ashamed to say had never been here before. i you know, i'm from the midwest and when i started doing some early research and kind of cold calling bigfoot ears and asking them know, getting some opinions of where i should go, a couple of them said to me, you know, you don't have to come all the way out here. you can go to ohio as maybe you guys might know. but ohio a is a particular hot spot, right? just about a half an hour as the crow flies from columbus, ohio, is one of the big, big in spots. and and no offense to ohio, but i'm from the midwest, i was like, i know what it looks like i don't want to go to ohio. i want to go to the pacific
it's so nice to be somewhere where nobody is wearing red sox stuff or new england patriots gear in boston. like even the dogs on the are wearing like red sox hats. and so but in all seriousness i'm really glad to be back here i began my book i began my research here in oregon in washington for obvious reasons there is just such a rich history of of bigfoot here and i mean some of the oldest indigenous legends in the world deep from here and and also i'm ashamed to say had never been here...
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Apr 14, 2024
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other signatories moved a little slowly, but still, england, france and netherlands all had passed similar prohibition laws by the end of world war one, although only effective, the metropole colonies. they still had legal and profitable for the european countries. the opium prohibition was extended the rest of the world because any countries signing the treaty of paris ending world war one also automatically signed the opium convention. so this became the most at the most basic level international law. by 1919, the league of nations contained an opium advisory committee tasked with implementing this prohibitionist stance. u.s. representatives who of course, represented themselves not the u.s. government, played powerful roles on this committee throughout, the interwar years, and pushed the choice of prohibition at the internation final level. u.s. leadership promoting a prohibitionist source control approach continued world war two. harry anslinger, who was the notorious head, the federal bureau of narcotics, promoted the 1953 opium protocol in the united nations against wishes of pretty
other signatories moved a little slowly, but still, england, france and netherlands all had passed similar prohibition laws by the end of world war one, although only effective, the metropole colonies. they still had legal and profitable for the european countries. the opium prohibition was extended the rest of the world because any countries signing the treaty of paris ending world war one also automatically signed the opium convention. so this became the most at the most basic level...
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Apr 11, 2024
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biggest takedowns i think in new england history involving mountains of fentanyl. so, that is really where we are seeing it. but, the actual traffic across the border and the ports of entry is, you know, dhs' lane. i know they have a heck of a challenge on their hands, to put it calmly. >> thank you, director. i yield back. >> mr. klein? >> thank you, mr. chairman. thank you, director, for being here. i wanted to continue to ask about the border. and your involvement at the border, in assisting with identification of individuals. you would agree that it is a national security risk, to allow individuals into the country, who are not properly identified, correct? >> that does raise national security concerns, yes. >> the fbi has been engaged in dna testing for several years, of individuals crossing the border. in fact, dhs recently, or within the past few years, mandated that this identification occur, correct? >> yes. >> and when dhs ruled out that program, authorities found that about 19% of family units crossing were fraudulent. does that sound about right? >> tha
biggest takedowns i think in new england history involving mountains of fentanyl. so, that is really where we are seeing it. but, the actual traffic across the border and the ports of entry is, you know, dhs' lane. i know they have a heck of a challenge on their hands, to put it calmly. >> thank you, director. i yield back. >> mr. klein? >> thank you, mr. chairman. thank you, director, for being here. i wanted to continue to ask about the border. and your involvement at the...
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Apr 11, 2024
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abbey's mural, the spirit of religious liberty, shows penn's ships leaving england, in search of freedom and a new home. penn had a vision of a place that would be an example to the nations, a place of tolerance, peace, and prosperity. where leaders would make wise and just decisions in service to all people. penn's vision was of a commonwealth that would welcome people of all backgrounds. a commonwealth where everyone would have the freedom to chart their own course and the opportunity to succeed. a commonwealth where the government is responsive to the needs of the people and works together to get stuff done. i'm mindful that we're all part of that lineage. a long tradition that stretches back nearly 343 years, to previous governors and leaders of this commonwealth and general assembly who have all worked together to make progress and build a more just, inclusive society. a century after that mural was painted, penn's promise still rings true in these hallways, and it's on us to carry it forward. my own faith teaches me that no one is required to complete the task, but neither are we f
abbey's mural, the spirit of religious liberty, shows penn's ships leaving england, in search of freedom and a new home. penn had a vision of a place that would be an example to the nations, a place of tolerance, peace, and prosperity. where leaders would make wise and just decisions in service to all people. penn's vision was of a commonwealth that would welcome people of all backgrounds. a commonwealth where everyone would have the freedom to chart their own course and the opportunity to...
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Apr 10, 2024
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let me talk about connecticut, across new england, historic flooding point of these affect people's livelihood and their lives really at risk and create public health and public safety crises. i'd like to focus on prevention and predisaster mitigation point the sad reality is disasters are going to happen so can we speak to the 2025 request for fema, how you envision it should be focused on preparedness, protection and mitigation. where are increasing methods needed in order for you to support this work? what kind of policy changes should be congress be considering? because yes indeed it's about homeland security. these are homeland security issues. >> congresswoman, i look forward to working with you on assessing what legislative changes are needed to better address the increasing impact of climate change, the increasing frequency and gravity of extreme weather events. i have spoken with mayors around the country about the need to meet building codes. something as basic as that, because the building codes are addressing the weather of yesterday and not the weather of today or tomorrow. i beli
let me talk about connecticut, across new england, historic flooding point of these affect people's livelihood and their lives really at risk and create public health and public safety crises. i'd like to focus on prevention and predisaster mitigation point the sad reality is disasters are going to happen so can we speak to the 2025 request for fema, how you envision it should be focused on preparedness, protection and mitigation. where are increasing methods needed in order for you to support...
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Apr 10, 2024
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as you look at which regions are consistently running above, new england and the west are consistently showing wage increase above average. the west south central texas oklahoma are consistent. going back to july of 2022, consistently seeing wage growth below average. i appreciate your not in a way into a political question here but those were all right to work states. it's harder to unionize, organize. and what i'm wondering, without asking you with policy, have you all done any analysis that says gains in labor product activity, is more likely to accrue to workers in those states are for labor as opposed to capital. >> there's plenty of research around that area. we'll take a look and come back to you. >> thank you. >> the time is expired. gentleman from south carolina, recognized for five minutes. >> thank you for being here today. we continue to appreciate your work and the work of the federal reserve on the half of american people. in august of 2023, the federal reserve fdic, and released requiring of long-term debt for category 2, 3, and 4. my colleagues after the letter expressi
as you look at which regions are consistently running above, new england and the west are consistently showing wage increase above average. the west south central texas oklahoma are consistent. going back to july of 2022, consistently seeing wage growth below average. i appreciate your not in a way into a political question here but those were all right to work states. it's harder to unionize, organize. and what i'm wondering, without asking you with policy, have you all done any analysis that...
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Apr 9, 2024
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long time, he is taking over and thank you to colby braun, he spent time last year in dickinson in new england, he knows the system and is fantastic. let's give them a hand and say, thank you. and of course, we have a small but mighty governor's office team. we are not a big agency but we pack a wall up and get a lot done because that is the team that we have. they work around the clock and i know that every one of them will be running through the tape december 14th, not coasting to the finish line. get ready for things that will be announced this year that are not being announced today. we will keep driving the agenda forward. we did make historic progress working with all of you across so many things, some of the things that we have accomplished have been long- standing issues. we have a commonsense solution where none could be found before. these are benefiting our citizens in a huge way. some of you in a big way helped with that. one where we did not talk about the session at all, we solved it. we have been protecting over 25% of k-12 students in the entire university that the state owns,
long time, he is taking over and thank you to colby braun, he spent time last year in dickinson in new england, he knows the system and is fantastic. let's give them a hand and say, thank you. and of course, we have a small but mighty governor's office team. we are not a big agency but we pack a wall up and get a lot done because that is the team that we have. they work around the clock and i know that every one of them will be running through the tape december 14th, not coasting to the finish...
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Apr 9, 2024
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i would also not want england and sweden to be a part of nato and they are. the reason that they are is because putin. without justification. that is why we are where we are. instead of making things better for himself, in large, he had the effect of. which obviously create worse conditions for him. >> do we have in ukraine? >> cia basis? >> i got this out of the new york times which i don't read very often. i will deter that question to. >> okay, thank you. general brown, just a quick question. i have the opportunity to travel places all over the world since i have had this job three years. our morale is not very good. our recruiting has really dropped. what are you doing to help solve that album? we need a strong military. a lot of them tell me basically coach, listen. we are taking all these classes that have nothing to do with killing adversary. it is about getting along with each other. we are also in need of a killing machine. what is your answer for that? >> as i stated my opening statement, war fighting skills. and part of that war fighting team is be
i would also not want england and sweden to be a part of nato and they are. the reason that they are is because putin. without justification. that is why we are where we are. instead of making things better for himself, in large, he had the effect of. which obviously create worse conditions for him. >> do we have in ukraine? >> cia basis? >> i got this out of the new york times which i don't read very often. i will deter that question to. >> okay, thank you. general...