Were always keeping an eye on tech. For example, apple share, can they stem what has been a sevenday slide . Chip stocks, though, continue to outperform. And the other big story, that weight loss boom and novo nordisk overtakes the market. Market reaction to the jobs number, not just the headline and the unemployment at 3. 9 but revisions taking about a third away the last couple of months. I think those of us who are used to the precision of Artificial Intelligence and generative a. I. Are just in shock that there could be a number thats this far off. This is the kind of thing that jensen huang could solve with his eyes closed. Why its so important, this takes away what was the hot number that made us a great threat and took away a spring rate cut. 3. 9. We know they remind me of the dow jones average. Very interesting headline, but its not really whats at the guts of this, but in a political year, what that says is, hey, look, the economy is slowing and maybe the fed should have pres
Reporter since that first robbery agents say same guy has rob nine other banks across bucks and montgomery counties as far west as limerick. He answered wearing surgical gloves and small black semiautomatic handgun drawn. Fbi says he operates very carefully, they believe he watches Bank Locations and does research before pulling off a robbery. Once inside allegedly tells bank workers to be quiet and if they give him money they wont hurt him. Whitpain Township Police drew this sketch after a witness saw him removing his mask after a robbery in january 2014. Agents caution while nobody was hurt. He is armed, dangerous. He could be violent but most of the things are very professional, very calm, and quiet, give me money, i just want the money that kind of thing. Never i will kill you. But the gun has been out and brandished a few times. Reporter now again, fbi says that over the last four years there have been ten bank hits. He usually strikes late on a friday right before the bank closes
, who is married, in fact, to one of my employees, dr. Glen robins, he says and i agree completely, generally, you can either talk about andersonville or the other military prisons of war. It becomes emotionally difficult to try to do both. And i will explore that. And i am going to weave in between the two a little bit. A note on semantics before i start any further. I hesitate to use the acronym p. O. W. In a civil war context. Because its a 20th century term. Like to talk a lot. Prisoner of war slows me down a little bit. Civil war prisons and prisoners of war fall outside of the traditional heroic narrative of the war. And looking into this story, in a sense, that requires one to dive deeply into the wreckage of the war, the consequences of the war. And, again, you lose objectivity very quickly the longer you stay down in the wreckage of the war. Andersonville is the most famous of the military prisons. Its a long way from the rest of the civil war world, both literally and figurat
And i like to talk a lot. Prisoner of war slows me down a little bit. Civil war prisons and prisoners of war fall outside of the traditional heroic narrative of the war. And looking into this story, in a sense, that requires one to dive deeply into the wreckage of the war, the consequences of the war. And, again, you lose objectivity very quickly the longer you stay down in the wreckage of the war. Andersonville is the most famous of the military prisons. Its a long way from the rest of the civil war world, both literally and figuratively. The prison site was chosen on purpose 150 years ago to be as remote and as insulated a place in the confederacy, far from perceived locations of battle. And 150 years later, this prisoner of war story remains distant from the rest of the narrative. We have the tendency to talk about prisoner of war camps, and andersonville, off to the side of the main narrative of the war. Its, you know, as we talk about battles and campaigns, oh, by the way, theres
Inauguration, the Washington Post announces the campaign to impeach the president has begun. Finish the whistleblowers attorney was tweeting about impeachment years ago, and the fbi agents were texting about impeachment and the insurance policy way, way back. The fw fbi used Intelligence Briefings to spy on him. They wiretapped his staff, they leaked and had stings. Trump caught wind of it and fired comey. A twoyear witch hunt when mueller already knew there was no collusion, what was he doing that whole time . He was just building an obstruction case against the president x that dark cloud cost republicans the house. Bill barr finally got there and called their bluff. No collusion, no obstruction. And then the same week the mueller hearing bombed, adam schiff hatched the whistleblower plot. So trump called their bluff again and releases the transcript. No bribe on the call, no pressure. Here are the facts on shifty schiff, dishonest guy, makes up standards. He said the president of uk