Draw attention to. We heard a lot about the moment in our interviews and i talked talk about two things briefly, dignity and death. Its really upon us to treat the client as much dignity as possible. Youve got heavy competition from h. And r. Block and liberty taxes because they know how to treat people as customers. Part of the reason people go to h. And r. Block is because they feel so good to be there. So we need to make sure from the moment people enter the door from how the office looks but this is a dignity enhancing moment because in corporations are so profoundly attached to how they are treated when they come in the door. The second, people want to clean up their desk so they can move ahead. They dont know how to. They have ideas about how they should be prioritized. Counseling and help with understanding and what really counts for the credit score would be really thankful. Considering the political incorporation what does it allow people the opportunity to vote is that standa
Because there were not looking for evidence of a legislative intent to create a right to judicial review. Your position is thats already there under the apa. Unless there is evidence of a judicial intent, of a congressional intention to preclude judicial review . Thats exactly right. Thats the presumption created by the apa. The way that your honor articulated it is the way the Supreme Court has articulated it time and again. Thats the governments burden to show by clear and convincing evidence that congress intended to preclude our claims, not our burden to demonstrate that congress intended to create them. If i may, ill move on to the merits of our statutory claim. As i said before, our first claim is that section 215 simply does not apply to call records. In the same statute that congress enacted section 215, in 2001, it added a provision to the stored Communications Act prohibiting the government from acquiring phone records. It created i exceptions to that prohibition. But section
The dots of innovation to patients. Its an exciting time because we have the opportunity to make the most advanced clinical decisions available to every cancer patient regardless of where they live and what their socioeconomic background is. And regardless of what practical resources they may have available to them. Expectation. N all things are taking place right now. , and imng, Research Going to go someplace thats going to be innovative. Overall, one of the goals of Cancer Innovation is to improve the outcome. Personalized medicine, advanced diagnostics. Cancer. S can we afford innovations . We cant afford not to innovate. The status quo gets more expensive year after year. Think we are on the cusp of an information revolution. It is a few months, a year of survival. It has been amazing. We continue with the research to e cancer a disease it is on the edge of revolution. We will feature and target treatment for problems that cause cancer. Therapyres the targeted and the development
We shouldve been coming to the conversation the table along time ago. We stood down with police. This is what is happening. This is where we are having the problem. This is where we want it to stop. We also got together and started looking at the lessons of putting these people into office. Talking about the situation down there. Going to be our last collar on todays washington journal. We will see you right back here tomorrow morning. Hope you have a great monday. All this week highlighting books during the authors series. Tomorrow Cheryl Atkinson on her water her book, stonewalled. On wednesday shane harris and out war the rise of the military internet complex. Day as friday, clarence page. Columnist 1904 to 1918. This year q1 day turns 10 years old. To mark a decade of conversations, we are featuring one interview over the holiday season. Today kenneth feinberg, special master of the 911 fund and what his life is like. That will be at 7 00 eastern here on cspan. The nih onrector of
Young black men in their backyard, or do you want to wait until the go to the graveyard . Until they go to the graveyard . [applause] good morning. Good morning. Hello . All right, talk louder. Thank you. I would like to thank nbcsl for the opportunity to be here today and be on this panel that is an issue dear to me. I get too emotional we talk about criminal justice, and the disproportionate impact on immunities of color. Or just any kind of injustice, a kind of gets me stirred up. Im going to try to be a lady appear, and really get to the point of some things. As representative cobbhunter talked about, and me being involved in aid to mr. Violence bill a Domestic Violence bill that had to do with protective orders if anyone had a temporary protective order or a permanent protective order, the judge, the courts could say that you there was a big issue. Representative miller, when i dollars my cali down there too. That i want to ignore knowledge my colleague down there too. That bill w