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30
Jul 27, 2018
07/18
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KQED
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grover cleveland wouldn't allow reporters into the white house. let's not forget president nixon, let us play the sound byte. >> i have never heard or seen such outrageous reporting in 27 years of public life. >> i mean, he didn't like the press. >> no. he goes back to so far we haven't if we want to cheer ourselves up. it's hard these days. we are not at the point of president john adam, the second president who made opposition a punishable crime. that's where we are in turkey and in other places. >> russia. >> absolutely. exactly. we are nowhere near that and oddly we feel those of us really, the lib tards feel upset about all that and feel the president and the right wing live in their own echo chamber. it's heartening. fox news and some of the best things that happened for a while, it did actually ex-tress solidarity. the modern world of social media allows all the people to live in an echo chamber and it does not allow the president really to have so much control or potential control over the press as might have been the case before the disbu
grover cleveland wouldn't allow reporters into the white house. let's not forget president nixon, let us play the sound byte. >> i have never heard or seen such outrageous reporting in 27 years of public life. >> i mean, he didn't like the press. >> no. he goes back to so far we haven't if we want to cheer ourselves up. it's hard these days. we are not at the point of president john adam, the second president who made opposition a punishable crime. that's where we are in...
53
53
Jul 4, 2018
07/18
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CSPAN
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cleveland or chester arthur. at the latterack part of the 19th century we go back 150 years or so. we will talk about the steam engine and electricity and germ theory and all the things that drove fundamental and political change. the forcesargues that are going to matter going forward are artificial intelligence. the ongoing digital revolution. he believes we have not seen the beginning of these effects on politics and economics and geopolitics and thinks 50 years or 100 years from now that would be the essential change talk about. host: we want to hear from our viewers. is it the realist world, the liberal world, tribal worldview, marxist, a tech world, or a warming world. how would you define foreign policy?michael is a forced up first. turn down your television and listen through your phone. caller: i'm on mute on tv. host: go for it. caller: i have a bit of a problem. i'm a democrat. i think i'm going to switch to independent. the gentleman was asking what kind of world i live in. i live in an american world
cleveland or chester arthur. at the latterack part of the 19th century we go back 150 years or so. we will talk about the steam engine and electricity and germ theory and all the things that drove fundamental and political change. the forcesargues that are going to matter going forward are artificial intelligence. the ongoing digital revolution. he believes we have not seen the beginning of these effects on politics and economics and geopolitics and thinks 50 years or 100 years from now that...
46
46
Jul 1, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 46
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for a while republicans actually try to use it against grover cleveland and found themselves absolutely stymied and other -- utterly embarrassed. it has not been on the books now for about 125 years. >> i believe the naming of andrew johnson as vice president was the last time in american history that a party picked as their candidate for that office a member of the opposing party. is this a coincidence or one lesson that has somehow seeped into the minds of people who make the decision of who would be vice president? mark: that is a very fair question. except, wasn't joe lieberman nominated for vice president on the republican ticket? that was my impression. mccain wanted him there, ok that's my mistake. a tempting kind of thing. i knew there was some reason i dislike lieberman but i couldn't remember what it was. [laughter] let's use another issue out there. back in the 1860's, 1870's, 1880's, presidents don't generally pick the vice president's, they left that to the party. and johnson and lincoln were essentially in the same party, that is to say they were both unionists, supporters
for a while republicans actually try to use it against grover cleveland and found themselves absolutely stymied and other -- utterly embarrassed. it has not been on the books now for about 125 years. >> i believe the naming of andrew johnson as vice president was the last time in american history that a party picked as their candidate for that office a member of the opposing party. is this a coincidence or one lesson that has somehow seeped into the minds of people who make the decision...
137
137
Jul 24, 2018
07/18
by
KPIX
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eye 137
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( audience reacts ) ( booing ) sir, i know grover cleveland did nothing wrong. i'm a bit of a cleve-head. yeah. only two-term non-consecutive president. let's get back to my least favorite president. according to stormy daniels' lawyer and future stanley tucci role, michael avenatti, this tape is only the beginning. >> this is not the only tape. i can tell you that for a fact there's multiple tapes. >> you don't know that there are more tapes of president trump, though? >> no, i do know there's more tapes of president trump. there's multiple tapes of president trump. >> stephen: yes, multiple tapes. of trump, and they're all available on the new compilation: "now that's what i call porn star payoffs!" ( laughter ) ( cheers and applause ) you get all the hits! you get all thei and guess what? avenatti was right. because today we found out that the feds actually have 12 michael cohen audio recordings. ( audience reacts ) yes, 12 michael cohen tapes. "on the first michael cohen tape, donald said to me: pay off the hookers who i watched pee." ( cheers and applause )
( audience reacts ) ( booing ) sir, i know grover cleveland did nothing wrong. i'm a bit of a cleve-head. yeah. only two-term non-consecutive president. let's get back to my least favorite president. according to stormy daniels' lawyer and future stanley tucci role, michael avenatti, this tape is only the beginning. >> this is not the only tape. i can tell you that for a fact there's multiple tapes. >> you don't know that there are more tapes of president trump, though? >> no,...
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229
Jul 28, 2018
07/18
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KPIX
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eye 229
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. >> reporter: grover cleveland has certified more than 300 working lifeguards in the past decade. >> some kids travel on buses for like two hours to get to this school. >> reporter: the training -- >> see your victim. >> reporter: -- is tough. it's rigorous. >> it's hard. it's very hard. that's what you have to do in order to save a life. vo to putz yours to do it. one of the trickest things was getting a brick from the deep end and having to carry it and swim o the other end. that was pretty hard. >> reporter: students must learn cpr and how to perform a variety of rescues to become a red cross certified lifeguard. >> i think a lot of them are just moderate swimmers at first, and for them to get to the level of becoming a life gard can be intense, and they work hard and they get there. >> reporter: making cut is a milestone. how much of it was i want to make some murngs oh, i want to become more confident. >> for merks i guess it was more of both. i wanted to be more responsible. i wanted to help my mom because now it's my mom and me. >> fernando's father passed away a few months ag
. >> reporter: grover cleveland has certified more than 300 working lifeguards in the past decade. >> some kids travel on buses for like two hours to get to this school. >> reporter: the training -- >> see your victim. >> reporter: -- is tough. it's rigorous. >> it's hard. it's very hard. that's what you have to do in order to save a life. vo to putz yours to do it. one of the trickest things was getting a brick from the deep end and having to carry it and...
128
128
Jul 2, 2018
07/18
by
MSNBCW
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eye 128
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what do calvin cool ij and grover cleveland and johnson have in common? they were all presidents at one point but there's something else we're going for here. before they were all president, at some point in their rise to power, they were all mayors of cities. and these days, maybe that's the answer for democrats who want to make a name for themselves in the national arena. that would be a departure from reason -- let me show you why this is something we may be talking about. has to do with this. they call this donald trump's favorite map. he had copies of this -- this is the county map of the 2016 election. hillary clinton blue, donald trump red. more than 3100 counties and lion's share overwhelmingly red. you look at the map and say my god, america is overwhelmingly republican and what you see is that the democratic support really is concentrated in these metropolitan areas in cities and immediately surrounding suburbs and then almost everything else just an ocean of red. so when you look at it that way, you say the democratic support it really seems to
what do calvin cool ij and grover cleveland and johnson have in common? they were all presidents at one point but there's something else we're going for here. before they were all president, at some point in their rise to power, they were all mayors of cities. and these days, maybe that's the answer for democrats who want to make a name for themselves in the national arena. that would be a departure from reason -- let me show you why this is something we may be talking about. has to do with...
77
77
Jul 3, 2018
07/18
by
CSPAN
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eye 77
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cleveland or chester arthur. at the latterack part of the 19th century we go back 150 years or so. we will talk about the steam engine and electricity and germ theory and all the things that drove fundamental and political change. the forcesargues that are going to matter going forward are artificial intelligence. the ongoing digital revolution. he believes we have not seen the beginning of these effects on politics and economics and geopolitics and thinks 50 years or 100 years from now that would be the essential change talk about. host: we want to hear from our viewers. is it the realist world, the liberal world, tribal worldview, marxist, a tech world, or a warming world. how would you define foreign policy?michael is a forced up first. turn down your television and listen through your phone. caller: i'm on mute on tv. host: go for it. caller: i have a bit of a problem. i'm a democrat. i think i'm going to switch to independent. the gentleman was asking what kind of world i live in. i live in an american world
cleveland or chester arthur. at the latterack part of the 19th century we go back 150 years or so. we will talk about the steam engine and electricity and germ theory and all the things that drove fundamental and political change. the forcesargues that are going to matter going forward are artificial intelligence. the ongoing digital revolution. he believes we have not seen the beginning of these effects on politics and economics and geopolitics and thinks 50 years or 100 years from now that...