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Transcripts For WHUT Tavis Smiley 20131113

believes in for whatever reason and produce it, in your case, even if one believes that it might not be broadly seen, what is the point of doing work if you do not believe it will be broadly seen? you must believe in it. yes, i do. i believe passionately in what i do, or i cannot do it. we are going to die. everybody is going to die. nobody gets out of this alive, and 100 years ago, they will take a look and say, have you ever heard about this guy? these are some of the things that he did. they will be able to go into my body of work and see the passion that i had. there have been very few pieces that i have done passionately, and this is the one, i was surprised, i was shocked when i read it, because lisa and i will both tell you, and everybody, it was all on the page. and you start to realize, my god. here is six feet, six inches, caucasian kid, writing for us, and writing for us like i have never been written for, and it is a very compelling story. you talk about how com

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Transcripts For WHUT Democracy Now 20131112

the syrian air force of using incendiary weapons dozens of times. one alleged attack killed 37 people at a school in aleppo. a doctor who treated those who were attacked described the scene. as i was tending to one patient, it was difficult to work out what was cain and what was fabric, the way that it was hanging. august,aw in syria, in stands alone, in terms of the cruelty, the extent of the devastation, the severity of the injuries. also, the tragedy of the lack of infrastructure to deal with these kinds of casualties. another report today details the plight of asylum seekers who flee abuses in their home country to seek shelter in the united states. , theding to the report united states is the only country in the developed world that denies work authorization and government aid to asylum seekers. one rape survivor from wanda said she was unable to work for four years while her situation was pending. reports street journal fewer than 50,000 people have successfully enr

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Transcripts For BLOOMBERG Charlie Rose 20140628

from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. issuedinvestment corp. several anticipated rulings. affecting everything from how we watch television to when the police can search euro cell phone. joining us from washington to talk about the high court s ruling is adam liptak. characterize this day and these decisions. on one level the supreme court confronted two big technological issues and you would not think they would be particularly good at this but they were fairly savvy in both cases. the bigger, more surprising one was a sweeping privacy ruling saying the police have to get a warrant before they search the cell phones of anyone they arrest. 12 million people are arrested and the search is a routine so that is a big pushback from a court that is not often sympathetic to arrested people and criminal defendants but they seem to think that the digital age is different and we need different fourth amendment rules in the air of big data. a 9-0 decision? 9-0

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Transcripts For BLOOMBERG Charlie Rose 20140628

from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. the supreme court issued several anticipated rulings. affecting everything from how we watch television to when the police can search your cell phone. joining us from washington to talk about the high court s ruling is adam liptak. characterize this day and these decisions. on one level the supreme court confronted two big technological issues and you would not think they would be particularly good at this but they were fairly savvy in both cases. the bigger, more surprising one was a sweeping privacy ruling saying the police have to get a warrant before they search the cell phones of anyone they arrest. 12 million people are arrested and the search is a routine so that is a big pushback from a court that is not often sympathetic to arrested people and criminal defendants but they seem to think that the digital age is different and we need different fourth amendment rules in the era of big data. it was a 9-0 dec

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Transcripts For BLOOMBERG Charlie Rose 20140629

from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. the supreme court issued several anticipated rulings. affecting everything from how we watch television to when the police can search your cell phone. joining us from washington to talk about the high court s ruling is adam liptak. he is supreme court correspondent for the new york times. welcome. characterize this day and these decisions. on one level the supreme court confronted two big technological issues and you would not think they would be particularly good at this but they were fairly savvy in both cases. the bigger, more surprising one was a sweeping privacy ruling saying the police have to get a warrant before they search the cell phones of anyone they arrest. 12 million people are arrested and the search is a routine so that is a big pushback from a court that is not often sympathetic to arrested people and criminal defendants but they seem to think that the digital age is different and we need diff

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