19 Burst results for "Amaran"

"amaran" Discussed on Native America Calling

Native America Calling

07:09 min | 7 months ago

"amaran" Discussed on Native America Calling

"Denver, Colorado. Right? And so. What I wanted to touch on here is, you know, I was just listening briefly to the conversation and if you want to know where Colorado's history begins, you know, you talk to the shine and the arapaho tribes along with the utes and the comanches that used to be there, along with the apaches. That's where you start. Unfortunately for us, the people, the real keepers of the history, you know, when you look in regards to those things on reservations right now, a lot of the keepers of that sacred knowledge of the poor people are the people that you don't interact with outside of the Indian reorganization act governments. So I'm going to reference to go back to those reservations to reach out to those said families who still have all that knowledge with regards to treaty making. Right? You're going to look at the treaty of the little Arkansas. You're going to look at the treaty of fort why is he going to look at the 18 68 Larry treaty and how they reference an old way of life that we force the federal government to look at us as nations and human beings. Because they could not defeat us in the field of battle. The only time they could defeat us in the field of battle was in times like sand creek and that wasn't even a battle. When they forced us to destitution and food scarcity, disparity of resources such as lands and water access to water access to hunting and it took our rifles away and they said, go stay at that floor and we'll protect you. And they failed to do so. I ain't just exhibiting the methodology and how sand creek unfolds it with regards to the state militias and the California men that went and produced this said massacre. Okay. And so that's what I'm going to tell the state people within the history of Colorado to reference. Go back to these reservations, look at the poor people, man. I used to work as a travel store preservation officer for 6 years. And I consulted with the history Colorado and it was one of their people within that set organization that also was the reason I walked away from that job because they were still purporting to divide and conquer narrative because I was standing up for these beliefs. I was standing up for these things that I'm referencing. Really appreciate you calling in today. And you know, Devin, what you speak to, that's why this show is called native America calling, because we want people like you to call in with those perspectives. And sometimes it's not about having a PhD. It's not about being some tribal leader. It's about just being a regular native person, a concerned tribal member such as yourself who has opinions who has insights who has expertise to offer and really appreciate you pointing that out. And Sam, I want to let you respond because how much of an effort is there. Obviously, you know, we have chest around the show. We have also have on the show we have Fred. But other just regular people from these tribes who are invested in this issue were invested in this history to such a great degree, such as our caller Devon, how much of an effort is made to include those voices as well. Well, first, I want to say thanks to Devin, and I think Devin's exactly right. The importance of getting these histories from not from the sources, not looking at just the U.S. government sources. It's unbelievably important. And you can't, I don't think any history organization should be making exhibits only based on the U.S. government's accounts of these things. Because they're unreliable because they're biased and because for the longest time, that's the way people have said this is the history, right? And it's about the power and control that people who have been in my position have exerted over this narrative. And so my goal is to make sure that that doesn't keep happening because that's not that's not an honest history. And that doesn't show what really happened. I think the other thing to know here is that we have a really strong relationship with these travel representatives that representatives from these governments that like you said that were set up in response to the unvanquished unconquered native peoples of Colorado. And we work as a state government with the representatives and we was three years really of constant contact with these people. But they aren't the only story keepers. And a lot of our representatives said there's been a lot of recordings. There's been a lot of work done with the elders with the people that Devin is talking about who hold these stories done over the years. For the last 20, 25 years since the sand creek masker National Historic Site was developed. And we're really proud that the stories that came from those people are available to hear in the exhibit and online. Well, we have reached the end of our show. I want to thank our guests, Chester white men, Fred mosquito and sandbach for joining us to share insights regarding the exhibition. Again, it's titled the sand creek massacre, the betrayal that changed Cheyenne and arapaho people forever. I hope you'll join us again tomorrow for a conversation about the upcoming and digi pop X that's a native pop culture gathering at the first meet excuse me the first Americans museum in Oklahoma City. I'm Shawn spruce. Program support by amaran. For 35 years, Indian country has put its trust in amerind, providing insurance coverage, strengthening Native American communities, protecting tribal sovereignty and keeping dollars in Indian country are Amarin's priorities. More information on property. Liability, workers compensation, and commercial auto needs at amerind dot com. That's AME R IND dot com. This program is supported by AmeriCorps vista. You can kickstart your career by joining thousands of AmeriCorps members in the vista program serving to alleviate poverty. AmeriCorps members help organizations make change right in their own community. A service opportunity that fits your ambition can be found at AmeriCorps dot gov slash vista today. That's. Dot GOV slash VIS TA. Native America calling is produced in the annenberg national native voice studios in Albuquerque, New Mexico, by chronic broadcast corporation, a native nonprofit media organization. Funding is provided by the corporation for public broadcasting, with support from the public radio satellite service. Music is by Brent Michael Davis. Native voice one, the Native American radio network

Colorado Devin U.S. government utes Denver Arkansas Larry America fort Chester white Fred mosquito California Fred Sam Americans museum Shawn spruce amaran amerind sandbach Amarin
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:03 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Amaran horned her and says inflation has been the key issue headed to the midterms but now Now there is a serious likelihood that abortion and women's rights to choose which has been the law of the lands since 1973 is going to eclipse consumer prices rising over the past couple of months Yeah it says Democrats will talk to suburban women now who might have been inclined to vote Republican In a shift of agenda nearly ten weeks into the war with its troops only making marginal gains in Ukraine's east Russia is now focused on it seems annexation of occupied Ukraine The Kremlin is installing occupation governments ordering locals to use rubles for transactions and in some cases organizing referendums to open the way for full annexation In Beijing is deploying an increasingly hardcore playbook to try and make sure it doesn't become another Shanghai COVID It is mandating repeat testing of most residents barring access to public places without a negative test dying in at restaurants banned for the duration of the May Day holiday gym shuttered and residents urged not to leave the city as well as in person school classes suspended the 5th through the 11th and now it is saying that it's shut 40 metro stations forward from two day Beijing added 51 new local cases for Tuesday and Shanghai is reporting just shy of 5000 new local COVID cases for Tuesday And now is extending the measures that they had planned to ease today In San Francisco I'm at Baxter Wow a lot of stuff Thanks Doug All right Eddie thank you We'll check back in about 15 minutes here on daybreak Asia Our guest for the half hour is Winnie Wu China equity strategist at Bank of America securities on the line from Hong Kong When he thanks for being with us a lot of macro risk in China were well aware of that and so much stems from COVID zero and the policy that Beijing has put in place Give me your sense of how to play the market right now given a lot of the risk on the macro level on the mainland Yeah thank you so much for having me We do think 2022 for the market could be potentially more challenging than 2020 because of number of reasons Number one the 2020 lockdown was the more concentrated in one province Well this time the current lockdowns are spread across different parts of China and that's leading to more broad based disruption to transportation logistics truck traffic and that's the impact in the production and sales of many and secondly because the third year of COVID and this lingering lockdown risk has started to impact consumers behavior in terms of their more reluctant to contact offline activities and it starts to undermine business owners confidence for the long-term growth outlook because they have little visibility as to when and where the next lockdowns will be And also external 2020 China was kind of ahead of the curve right It's led to the world to contain the virus export the grocery bonded and supported the GDP but this year export grows might decline because other countries are opening up and supply chains outside of China are normalizing Also China's ability to stimulate will be constrained for fed tightening the inflation So we think market could remain volatile for the near term We might have a trading bonds in the short term but fundamentally the economic decline to earnings deceleration will probably continue for rest of this year And so then what do you expecting in terms of extra stimulus coming through from authorities to try and limit this and of course get China to that fairly ambitious growth target Yeah I mean they are maintaining the 5.5% growth which is good to hear Hopefully it means that we'll see more policy measures But really what they can do They are well expected to do more money using higher loan growth and LPR cards are cut But the monetary easing is actually constrained by a number of factors Number one it's already very high debt to GDP leverage And in fact the high leverage is already leading to high profile defaults in the past one to two years So do they really want to build up the leverage more aggressively this year And secondly I mentioned a global inflation the fed heightening appreciation by adding to the pressure of capital outflow And last but not least this year the banks are facing a problem of insufficient long event It's not that the banks don't have quota They do But credit demand is weak in light of the economic uncertainty and lockdown risk So that's what we see in monetary policy are not going to be too effective in this Diet Coke Instead the physical policy could potentially do more you know I think stimulus checks to the household that will probably be effective in terms of boosting the consumption That's an interesting thought And when we continue the conversation when I'd like to get your view on regulatory risk in China Winnie Wu.

Amaran China Beijing Ukraine Winnie Wu Bank of America securities Shanghai Kremlin Baxter Russia Eddie Doug Hong Kong San Francisco Asia
"amaran" Discussed on The Financial Guys

The Financial Guys

05:37 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on The Financial Guys

"And they were so you can put those videos up on our Facebook page. Thank you, by the way. I think it was Eileen, who sent this to me on Twitter that I couldn't find this anywhere. We have the best fans in the world. Thank you so much. I really do appreciate it. That helps us. I know, right? Well, we have it ripped now. So it'll be out there forever. But here's the thing, folks. Let's see. When was the last time our government withheld treatment for something they knew would be helpful? Well, let's see. When was it that when they invented antibiotics? Was that in the 1940s or 50s? They discovered penicillin. I think that was the first, right? A huge breakthrough. That's a huge, huge breakthrough. For me, personally, I'd probably be gone today without antibiotics because I had a blood infection from the intercostal and whatnot. And several other infections over the years that would have killed me with antibiotics. I had no question about it, right? I wouldn't be here today. Anybody actually game changers. We knew that at the time. We also knew what syphilis was. And we knew that there was a whole group of people in a community that had rampant syphilis going on. And so what they did was, they decided to experiment on African Americans by not giving them the lifesaving medicine that they knew would be able to treat it. So they withheld treatment that they knew would be effective and beneficial to help people. Our government, by the way, has done this repeatedly. Look at hydroxychloroquine, which is now accepted. Ivermectin. Is now accepted. There was a study out of Japan. They're giving this stuff in other countries, right? It's accepted. What's that sickening? We knew. We knew. We absolutely 100% knew. Florida nailed it. Did exactly what you should be doing through this, which is get people treatment, the sooner the better, the quicker the better, emergency room visits went down by 90 something percent to three weeks. We had the blueprint of how to do this. And then they suspended the communist states said, no way, not going to do it. Like, they took it away. The federal government suspended the use of monoclonal antibodies, claiming that it didn't work against omicron. Neither is a vaccine apparently, but you're not stopping that, right? Even Israel. By the way, it did work against the harsher COVID viruses, right? By the time amaran come around, it very few people got really sick from Amazon. It was very sticky. It mutated exactly how we said it was going to. It got very, very sticky, very few people actually knew they had it, or they got a mild cold, right? So when we really, truly desperately needed that treatment, which actually Florida did and immediately, again, set up the tents, got the help to the folks that they needed, very easy. All of our clients down in Florida said no problems. I had COVID immediately went to a ten, got the monoclonal antibodies, was fine within a day. Moved on with my life. Can't do that. I can't do that. The stuff that they have not told the blueprint that could have been could have been rolled out across the rest of the country..

syphilis Eileen Facebook Twitter Florida Japan federal government Israel Amazon
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:39 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"On this morning around the world It's 5 39 on Wall Street The following is an editorial from Bloomberg opinion This editorial was written by the Bloomberg editorial board since the early days of the pandemic the U.S. government has suspended payment requirements for federal student loans During the amaran wave president Joe Biden once again extended the pause the 5th such delay in less than two years He should make it the last Pausing student loan payments made sense at the height of the pandemic when much of the U.S. economy had shut down There's less justification now Some Biden allies are pushing The White House to extend the pause again or to cancel student loan debt altogether before payments are set to resume in May Biden should refuse Doing so may disappoint progressives but it would promote fairness cut the government's losses and reduce uncertainty for borrowers themselves This editorial was written by the Bloomberg editorial board for more Bloomberg opinion Please go to Bloomberg dot com slash opinion or OPI and go on the Bloomberg terminal This has been Bloomberg opinion Listen for Bloomberg opinion editorials every week this time terminal customers can read more at OPI and go S&P futures right now at 37 points now futures up 69 NASDAQ futures higher by 228 points again of one and a half percent on the heels of Google earnings shares of alphabet up almost 11% We'll talk tech next with Angelo xeno of C.

Bloomberg Biden Joe Biden U.S. government White House U.S. government Google Angelo xeno
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:57 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"All right looking at the market here we got lots of green on the screen Let's get a sense of what's going on in the world of the small cap stocks We do have a Bloomberg markets correspondent critic What do you have Yeah the rustle 2000 broadly up about 1% in line with what the S&P 500 is doing underperforming the NASDAQ though still in line with the market kind of fading those initial gains It was up as much as 2% earlier in the session underneath the hood some pretty big moves as well We'll start off with the company called stride LRN is your taker up 29% was up as much as 35% the most since October 18th with analysts positive on the technology based education company after reported second quarter results that beat estimates and bonus they raised their full year forecast This is also a BMO's favorite small cap name LRN up 29% moving on to clean energy fuel CLE is your ticker there up 15% after the company announced an agreement to build a methane capturing project at one of the largest dairy farms in the United States to make renewable natural gas which once again feeds back into its network CL and ease Your ticker up 15% And lastly you want to leave you on a down note here gatos silver GA TO down just sigh of 70% This comes after the company concluded there were errors in its technical report from July 2020 The company now estimates a potential reduction of the metal content of one of its mineral reserves ranging from 30 to 50% remaining after depletion down 69% Gato is my daughter's first word Really Yes I have a 15 month old girl at home And you'll have a wife this week Her mother is from Spain And hence speak Spanish with her So now my daughter calls every animal cat dog or horse gateau Exactly As long as she doesn't call you gato I think we're good She calls both me and her mother Dada Okay so Starting She's starting to figure out It's harder when you're bilingual you know By the way do you speak Spanish No No no No I speak Germans You had nothing for the conversation Did Craig Garrett did he reference rich Corinthian leather I think he did Is that a is that from a car commercial Right With the guy from fantasy islands Yes exactly Okay Again pretty No idea what we're talking about No she 90% of the references made on this show Completely Fantasy island No Tattoo a plane The plane Nope Nope Nothing Pretty good Thank you very much for giving us your wisdom and experience in small caps and cross asset reporting All right so all right we have rates rising coming into this year a lot of strategist fund managers said get ready for volatility And boy were they right Robert teeter head of investment policy and strategy group at silvercrest asset management joins us Robert the first two days of this week what do you make of the volatility we saw in trading in the last couple of days in these equity markets It certainly has been a very volatile time I think you're right a lot of us have been looking for that to happen It's been somewhat overdue In my view it's that we're going through a number of different transitions So I think we're transitioning out of a unit dimensional market meaning everything was all about COVID for a long while We've moved beyond that It's now a much more multifaceted story I think we're in an era of transition in some of the data as well Also partly related to amaran and a real focus on second derivative in terms of growth rate of the economy and what's going on with inflation And then lastly of course we have a big transition from the fed in terms of their policy going from very easy to prior perhaps colliding into neutral here Today or soon and then perhaps tightening a bit and being more restrictive with rates So all of that I think has gotten investors sort of back to basics in terms of exiting this sort of easy one dimensional economy and market and back to focusing on things like earnings and a lot of the more complicated stories that are going on in the market today And Bloomberg intelligence is bullish the earnings picture Gina Martin Adams yesterday Our chief equity strategist said she sees 15% earnings growth this year Did you hear that Yeah that's a lot harder than I think the consensus which is high in 8 or exactly What do you see in terms of earnings growth this year And are you concerned that the fed over Titans I talked to another economist Raphael attend Coney this morning from Ada economics She said she expects the fed tightening cycle to push us into a recession next year I don't share that fear I can see why folks have that expectation I mean I think the fed is focused on a couple of things here in the market has been laser focused on the inflation part of the fed mandate and what's going through the fed's mind But I think they're also of course focused on the economy and jobs been very clear in emphasizing wanting to get people back to work and having a supportive economy And the fed has also been very much emphasizing the need to restore some policy flexibility So I think it's not all about inflation for the fed It certainly seems like it in the heat of the moment here But I think they will be accommodative enough to keep the economy growing so that people get back to work And I think that feeds into that earnings picture that you referenced I'm also optimistic on earnings perhaps not quite as much as the double digit numbers that you were just talking about Part of that concern coming from how margins are managed but I am optimistic on the earnings front and for stocks as well One thing we haven't had to deal with just most recently in the last several years is geopolitical risk and we think about the Ukraine and Russia That really came front and center it seems like on Monday morning What are investors to do there Just have to put that on back burner and just ignore it or is that real Well I think the typical playbook is to say to put it on the back burner usually when you look back historically at these types of conflicts there is a short term negative reaction but tends to not be too disruptive over the longer haul As you mentioned it came at a very tenuous time for markets when there's a lot going on and this transition that we're going through And so I think it was more of a shock than usual So I do think that played a role here as well in terms of the downdraft that we've seen earlier this year All right Robert thanks so much for joining us Robert teeter there is a head of investment policy and strategy group Great to get your voice your insight on this as we wait for the fed meeting Hope we get you back on soon as well from silvercrest asset management We are expecting the fed decision of course as is as is normal on a Wednesday when they come out every month at 2 o'clock But at one 30 Tom Keane John farrow and Lisa braunwyn is all coming down to their special the fed decides Let's get down to Washington D.C. right now Nathan Hager Does anybody buy with your world natural in his Nathan Matt the U.S. embassy in Ukraine is now urging American citizens to consider leaving the country citing.

fed LRN Robert teeter Craig Garrett silvercrest asset management j amaran BMO gatos Bloomberg Gina Martin Adams Raphael attend Coney
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:40 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"So let's talk about the paying trade And at Bloomberg our market vision is 2020 I am shocked by the moves that we're seeing in the rights market Bloomberg radio the Bloomberg business app and Bloomberg radio dot com Business finance and the latest news evicting world markets powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts In over a 120 countries this is Bloomberg radio Now a global news update White House chief medical adviser doctor Anthony Fauci is sharing some encouraging news amid the amaran surge Things are looking good We don't want to get overconfident but they all look like they're going in the right direction right now Appearing on ABC's this week Fauci added that he hopes in the coming weeks the coronavirus will fall into the area of control and join other common respiratory infections that don't greatly impact everyday life Senator Joni Ernst is sending Russian president Vladimir Putin a very clear message Pushing back against Russia we need to show strength and not to be in a position of doctrine of appeasement Appearing on CNN State of the Union the Iowa Republican warned Putin don't do it in reference to the continuing threat of invasion in Ukraine More than half of Americans believe right-wing militia groups are a threat to the country that's according to a new poll from The Economist yugov of the polled one third believe right-wing militia groups pose an immediate and serious threat Over 80% of respondents also saw domestic terrorism as a threat That's the latest on Dina kodiak You're listening to Bloomberg businessweek with Carol matter and Bloomberg quick takes Tim steno V from Bloomberg radio Social.

Bloomberg Anthony Fauci Senator Joni Ernst Fauci White House Vladimir Putin ABC Putin Russia CNN Iowa Ukraine Dina kodiak Bloomberg businessweek Tim steno Carol Bloomberg radio Social
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:48 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Hong Kong time for chick of global news And the Biden administration says it's a monitoring real-time data about whether amaran and China is posing a risk to global supply chains it baxters got details It yeah of course it's a real concern Paul for sure and it's with the increase in COVID cases continuing in all of China's major cities if the stage with a zero case strategy is a concern closing down production could really affect supply chain Bloomberg's Ivan man reports even with this monitoring the Biden administration is still setting up more deals in production The Biden administration at this point is taking no chances They're actually mining contacts in China right now to really get a better gauge of what is going on The ground and tracking the virus is spread on the mainland What they're seeing right now is this early detection system that was put in place at the start when the delta variant emerged last year Avan says still too early to know what the outcome will be U.S. has sanctioned three groups in China for engaging in missile technology proliferation China aerospace science and technology corporate first academy and fourth academy in Polytech technologies incorporated China is saying that it's warned away U.S. warship in the South China Sea says it entered the waters near the paracel islands the U.S. Navy is denying it had been warned off The U.S. says a ship was in the area but just part of the mission and the region to defend freedom of navigation The Biden administration is effort and clarification of the U.S. policy regarding a smaller size Russian incursion into the Ukraine This question was set up yesterday with president Joe Biden talking about in quotes a minor incursion Today the president any assembled Russian units.

Biden administration amaran China Avan Hong Kong China aerospace science and te Polytech Ivan Bloomberg U.S. paracel islands Paul South China Sea U.S. Navy president Joe Biden Ukraine
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:44 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"The UK is down more than 2% The topics are similar fashion losing about that much and it's now down more than 10% putting the index entering a correction We're seeing a lot of weakness throughout the region The SX is down about 1.2% And in sold the Cosby is trading down about three quarters of 1% The first 20 days of January's exports for South Korea rose 22% year on year and imports were up 38.4% We had an interesting story with Netflix the shares down 20% in after hours The company expects to add just 2.5 million subscribers this quarter the street was looking for more than 6 million but here's what's really interesting Netflix actually signed up 8.28 million customers in the fourth quarter of last year a quarter just before this one So it does beg the question Wow what's the big difference What happened between the fourth quarter and this quarter A lot of it has to do with production and you've got to keep listening to this program all throughout our show today While a couple of other notes for you here the China developer country garden has sold $3.9 billion of convertible bonds and we see China futures up about four tenths of a percent Hanks index futures up four tenths of percent and that's with all the carnage that you see elsewhere Dalian one 1389 and the yield on the tenure now at 1.77% falling That is a check of markets Let's get to it Baxter with news in San Francisco Ed All right thank you Brian Biden administration says it's monitoring real-time data about whether amaran and China is posing a risk to global supply chains The my administration has been in full Ukraine invasion clarification mode today.

Netflix South Korea UK China Dalian Brian Biden amaran Baxter San Francisco Ukraine
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:42 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Up as the amaran variant spreads companies continue to crack down on mandates We'll discuss the overall RTO picture Next this is Bloomberg Hi fragile is the European energy complex The European energy complex has been incredibly fragile for a number of months now and it just keeps seems to just be getting hit with new crises I mentioned the 1.5 million tests That's quite a feat At the same time I've seen estimates say that'll get you through about a week or so What do you do after that Let's be smart with our resources Why not use the test strategically when you need them How are we using them A child is diagnosed with COVID in a classroom We give that entire classroom to take home test kids so that parents can test them So we can determine if we should close down the school or just a classroom or what we should do with that particular Senate area What has happened in the past you have one diagnosis you want to close the entire school This just makes no sense Instead of using our resources in a strategic fashion the science has shown just because one child has COVID in the classroom It doesn't mean the entire school of the classroom is infected We're going to be smarter and we're going to pivot and most importantly we're going to defeat COVID We have a distinctive product that is unmatched in the market We were the first to market same game parlay we just introduced same game parlay plus this year And if you look at our NFL season which has been remarkably successful consumers love those products JPMorgan.

Senate NFL JPMorgan
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:39 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Russia and the U.S. have agreed to keep talking even as the first round didn't resolve differences Let's get to it backstreet in San Francisco with the latest dead All right thank you Juliet As a matter of fact the public rhetoric ran pretty hot A Russian deputy foreign minister Sergei revoked saying that the situation is dangerous and precarious We said that with talk half promises misinterpretation of what happened at different forms of negotiations behind closed doors We do not trust the other side so to say meanwhile U.S. deputy Secretary of State and that price says a process is slow because of promises to U.S. allies And we will not make decisions about Ukraine without Ukraine about Europe without Europe or about NATO without NATO As we say to our allies and partners nothing about you without you And price says what he has seen so far is a non starter a major issue for Russia's NATO expansion to the east and for the U.S.'s troops at the Ukraine border Russian troops So what do we make of the tone Well Bloomberg political contributor Rick Davis on Bloomberg sound on says overall the talk inside the room is probably more positive than this public posture This is a kabuki theater where the more extreme and the more flamboyant you can be in your description of the situation the best you can press your case The reason it took 7 or 8 hours is probably to cover one or two topics and that's because the theater requires that Two more meetings this week Japan's coast guard says North Korea has fired off a missile that went down on the siege Japan says a ballistic missile South Korea's joint chiefs of staff confirmed the firing but haven't confirmed the kind of missile U.S. CDC has now reclassified as travel advisory for Singapore this after last week slapping the label COVID unknown and do not travel the travel advisory now after talking with Singapore officials is high Amaran has arrived in Tianjin the port city that borders Beijing and has spread inland before being detected Hong Kong is cutting government quarantine for close contact to 14 days at Japan's prime minister fumio kishida says the nation will keep its border restrictions in place until the end of February A New York's COVID infections have reached a peak after about a 6 month the first case was identified by a New Jersey across the river The mayor there Phil Murphy is saying that the highest ICU bed count and ventilator for that matter since May And in California here governor Gavin Newsom as part of his budget today has asked for funding to set up healthcare for all low income residents regardless of their immigration status In San Francisco I'm at Baxter This is Bloomberg Brian Yeah thank you Let's get to our guest Vishnu for author who's head of economics and strategy at Mizuho bank He'll be with us for this half hour Well treasuries at 3% wow Nelly I'd say because people would really sell tech or would they I want you to put your big brain on this one In our market rap story of this new we break down how sectors perform in fed rate hiking cycles and tech does the best It gains 20% Real estate number two at 12% What are you talking about And why is the market doing this That's a fair question and actually it is not as clear cut at this moment So there are two unknowns here One is exactly how high yields may or may not go The census that it could get you two to two and a half percent quite easily given the current sooner and faster mantra that's been adopted But I think the real swing factor here is quantitative tightening And I think that is the secret sauce that may change the ordering of things to come and in particular because of the liquidity drainage coming so much earlier in this cycle We recall in the last cycle that paper started part of 2014 and we only started speaking about quantitative tightening and came into force in 2017 whereas this time is coming so soon So there are two factors about it One is it needs to be done premium that's going to shake up market somewhat the other factor around it is that it's also going to drain liquidity and insofar that some parts of tech were railing on the excess cheap cash in the system They may get a bit of a shock before the growth cycle could kick in and pick that up So this is not reducing the fact that tech is the answer to get over inflation It's just the liquidity quotient that's being thought about And so a lot of your call there based on where we see yields go we're looking ahead to the U.S. CPI print Where do you see that raid come And I guess is it going to be more good news for Bond balls That's a fantastic question I mean I'll be the first one to take it on the chin to say that we've been caught off guard on a few of these counts So we think it's still going to be somewhat elevated flirting with 7% It's not going to change the narrative so I think whatever we've seen after that coming through not just in the FMC minutes and the rhetoric there is a sense that the buy is very high for CPI to give any relief on the policy direction I think the narrative that the fact is to get ahead of the curve that's very difficult to detract from I wonder if the fed answered the question on go ahead Okay go ahead Sorry So just to answer the question on the bond yield and how U.S. bond markets may react to that I think higher yield is a given but we're going to oscillate between a bear steep and a backlash mainly because we are going to be looking at both faster rate high as well as quantitative tightening Yeah I imagine a 7% print is going to make the bond bulls cry But we'll wait and see whether we get that The swaps markets are telling us between three and four interest rate hikes by the fed this year What do you think Pretty much looks baked in I think the fed will certainly not go anything.

U.S. NATO Ukraine Bloomberg sound Japan Amaran Russia fumio kishida Phil Murphy Bloomberg Brian Rick Davis Europe San Francisco Mizuho bank Singapore Sergei Juliet
Bret Baier Presses CDC Director Rochelle Walensky on COVID Hospitalizations and Death Rates

Mark Levin

01:50 min | 1 year ago

Bret Baier Presses CDC Director Rochelle Walensky on COVID Hospitalizations and Death Rates

"Because every day miss walensky seems unprepared every day Joe Elba also Biden is unprepared Nobody fact checks Joe Biden when he says things like I got hairy legs The kids they're reaching the pool They rub my leg I learned about roaches right You know you know that clip Somebody fact checks any of his stories about corn pop But yet we want to fact check everything else So I'm kudos to Bret baier for asking some of the questions that the rest of the media is for getting to ask Listen to this Speaking of statistics it seems to make a big difference if a person in the hospital is in the hospital for COVID-19 or with COVID-19 It's been almost a year since you've been running the agency We have that split on numbers What I will say is it differs by each variant So some variants first of all we're doing screening of many in many hospitals of everybody who's walking in the door What we're seeing with the oma crown variant is that it tends to be milder person by person but given how large the numbers are that we're seeing more and more cases come into the hospital In some hospitals that we've talked to up to 40% of the patients who are coming in with COVID are coming in not because they're sick with COVID but because they're coming in with something else and have had to COVID or the crime variant detected Right But I guess you know how many of the 836,000 deaths in the U.S. linked to COVID are from COVID or how many are with COVID but they had other comorbidities Do you have that breakdown Yes of course with a following that very carefully our death registry of course takes a few weeks to end it takes a few weeks to collect And of course amaran has just been with us for a few weeks but those data will be

Walensky Joe Elba Covid Bret Baier Joe Biden Biden U.S.
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:23 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Throughout the trading day on Bloomberg S&P futures are little change to hire Dow futures have 87 NASDAQ futures down 40 ten year treasury down 9 30 seconds You have 1.73% that yield on the two year .86% and IMAX crude oil is up one and a half percent Nathan Karen let's look at yesterday's sell off It saw the NASDAQ dropped 3.3% after the fed signaled a more aggressive timeline for interest rate hikes Brian levitt is a global strategist at investigo The early stages of a tightening cycle And as we know it's usually not the first rate hike that matters It's usually the last one and even though we're dealing with this today as we often do when we start to see signs for the first move for I still think we're a long ways away from that last rate hike that ends the cycle Invesco global strategist Brian levitt says he sees the sell off as a buying opportunity ten year treasury yields this morning or trading at their highest level since April And Nathan the tech sell off continued in Asia overnight Japan led a decline since then he case led 2.8% We get the details from Bloomberg Juliet Sally and Singapore good morning Juliet Good morning Karen the MSCI Asia Pacific index fell for a third session in four with a gauge of tech shares among the worst performing The hanging tech index fell for a fourth day Yield spiked with Japan's tenure at its highest since April Japanese equity suffered their worst day since June while Australia's market had its worst day in 11 months and Hong Kong reopening stocks were hit as the city imposed tighter restrictions for the first time in almost a year In Singapore Juliet Sally Bloomberg daybreak Julia thanks We're also seeing Bitcoin traded its lowest level since December's flash crash right now it's at about $42,800 Let's get the latest from Bloomberg's journey to January Nathan the third hawkish tilt saw Bitcoin fall by about $3500 other cryptos like ether and binance coin also slumped to Lowe's not seen since October Bitcoin's climb over the past few years coincided with strong stimulus measures by the fed Now the question is how will it react as the Central Bank pulls back on accommodation Since it's all time high in November Bitcoin is down about 20% We need a young Bloomberg daybreak Renee thank you turning to the pandemic now We have a new recommendation on booster shots from the CDC Agency advisers say vaccinated teens should now get a third dose of Pfizer shot Bloomberg said Baxter has the story The panel says it's important for 12 to 17 year olds to get vaccinated to keep schools open This adds 12 to 15 year olds to the advisory already in place Doctor Rochelle Walensky has final say but has said that it's important to try and cut the severity of all Macron And she says the spread of amaran has gone up in a straight line Based on CDC genomic sequencing we now estimate that oma crown represents about 95% of cases in the country Well landscape says it's important for teens to get boosted In San Francisco I'm at Baxter Bloomberg daybreak Thanks Ed we continue to see the impact of omikron on the healthcare system U.S. hospitals are facing their worst staffing shortage in a year According to the Department of Health and Human Services data about 20% of hospitals report critical staffing levels that's the most since December of 2020 Meantime Nathan tennis star Novak Djokovic is making waves off the court his chance to play for a tenth Australian open title is in limbo The country denied him entry and canceled his Visa because he failed to make requirements for an exemption to COVID vaccination rules Scott Morrison is the prime minister of Australia Rules are rules And there are no special cases Entry with a Visa requires double vaccination or a medical exemption I'm advised that such an exemption was not in place and as a result he is subject to the same rule as any one else Australian prime minister Scott Morrison denies any suggestion that Djokovic is being singled out The pandemic's impact on the labor markets also in focus Karen Today we get data on jobless claims plus trade and services activity Bloomberg's Vinny del giudice reports Economists say weekly jobless claims will probably halt in their half century lows as employers fill record job openings The labor market has scored a solid recovery since the pandemic crash at 2020 Meantime November's trade deficit could tie a record as domestic demand rebounds also today data on America's service industry signal growth though not as robust as November when the ISM 9 manufacturing index at a record If any doubt should ice Bloomberg day break All right Vinny thank you fed policy front and center but there's also other news on the Central Bank sources tell us President Biden could pick former fed governor Sarah blue morass again for the Central Bank's top regulatory post we get more from Bloomberg's Charlie pellet It's a move that would please senators demanding swift action on climate change senator Sheldon whitehouse who has been active on the climate issue tweeted that a Raskin nomination as the fed's vice chair for supervision would be good news The Rhode Island Democrat says Raskin really gets it on climate and senator Ben carden of Maryland predicts Raskin will be easily confirmed In New York Charlie Bloomberg daybreak Charlie thanks And speaking of climate we have a new entry into the electric vehicle market General Motors is introducing a battery powered pickup truck CEO Mary Barra showed off the new Chevrolet Silverado at CES in Las Vegas Meantime when.

Brian levitt Bloomberg S Nathan Karen Invesco global Bloomberg Juliet Sally Sally Bloomberg fed Nathan Singapore Rochelle Walensky Japan amaran
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:12 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"To locate a 14 year old female who was found deceased in that dressing room Now that's what we know now These are tragic and unfortunate sequence of events He adds officers shot the unidentified man after he attacked a woman LAPD chief Michael Moore said a clear and transparent investigation will take place more also said body cameras 9-1-1 calls and other videos will be released on Monday The threat of the amaran variant in California continues to intensify Nicky Macarthur's reports California health officials report the highly contagious variant is evident in 50 to 70% of new coronavirus cases in parts of the state Clinical and wastewater data show that all Macron cases are present in most regions of California indicating that there is likely community transmission The state's health department says the emergence of a emphasizes the importance of getting a COVID vaccine booster and falling safety measures to prevent the virus from spreading Today marks the 25th anniversary of one of the nation's most infamous unsolved mysteries on December 26th 1996 the body of 6 year old jombe Ramsey was found by her father in the basement of their Colorado home Her death was ruled a homicide in her parents John and Patsy Ramsey were initially considered suspects They were later cleared of suspicion Boulder police say the case remains open in authorities hope that DNA will eventually help solve the crime and Oklahoma 6th grader is being recognized for saving a classmate from choking and then rescuing a woman from a house fire all in the same day 11 year old davian Johnson was dubbed an honorary police officer honorary sheriff's deputy and a hero all in a single day as well Johnson school principal says the young boy always talked about becoming an EMT so he got to put the desire into action with his acts of heroism I'm dean Kody And under these Pellegrini in the Bloomberg news room as we've been reporting omicron cases of COVID continue to grow here in the tri state area and around the country doctor Brown university school of public health though says it is possible the pandemic could ease as the variants become increasingly less deadly And we will get to a point certainly by the end of this new year coming up We will get to a point where we'll see new waves of infection It will not have a big effect on hospitals People will go on People will not get really sick and die And we.

Nicky Macarthur California jombe Ramsey LAPD Michael Moore davian Johnson Patsy Ramsey dean Kody Johnson school Boulder COVID Colorado Oklahoma Brown university school of pub Pellegrini John Bloomberg news
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:38 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"A 14 year old female who was found deceased in that dressing room Now that's what we know now These are tragic and unfortunate sequence of events Officer shot the unidentified man after he attacked a woman police chief Michael Moore said a clear and transparent investigation will take place He also said body cameras 9-1-1 calls and other videos will be released tomorrow President Biden is marking his first Christmas in office with greetings to U.S. troops station worldwide The commander in chief was joined by First Lady Joe Biden in offering holiday wishes and thanks for their sacrifice on behalf of the nation Speaking on video link from The White House Biden called the men and women on active duty the solid steel spine of the nation Over 6000 flights have been canceled around the world over the Christmas holidays to in part to the spread of the Akron COVID virus In the U.S. bad weather is also interrupting holiday travel Flight aware says on Saturday alone more than 2800 flights were canceled worldwide over 8000 were delayed And Russian troops are withdrawing to their permanent deployment points from the Ukraine border at according to interfax news which is reporting quotes from the Russian military I'm Brad Siegel The threat of the amaran variant in California continues to intensify nika magaz reports California health officials report the highly contagious variant is evident in 50 to 70% of new coronavirus cases in parts of the state Clinical and wastewater data show that all Macron cases are present in most regions of California indicating that there is likely community transmission The state's health department.

President Biden Michael Moore Joe Biden U.S. Biden Brad Siegel White House Akron nika magaz California Ukraine
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:34 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Is imposing tougher rules on people arriving from the United Kingdom including a requirement to solve isolate to slow the spread of the COVID-19 amaran variant the measures are introduced after new daily cases in the UK rose to a record and with the spread of that amaron variant questions about the efficacy of vaccines Doctor Chris Berra is a Professor of epidemiology of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg school of public health The infection curves for uma Kron and I've seen the data for the UK for Germany and for the U.S. look even steeper than we saw in South Africa so omicron is spreading very rapidly The vaccines do appear to be holding but definitely with lower efficacy than we saw against the other variants Doctor breyer with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg school of public health which is supported by Michael R Bloomberg founder of Bloomberg LP and Bloomberg philanthropies checking some of the vaccine names that we follow on a regular basis Mix picture right now Pfizer up three and a half percent It's German partner BioNTech It's ADRs down 2.3% AstraZeneca's ADR's up 2.4% modern art down 1.3% J&J a by 1.1% Again recapping the S&P 500 Index down 40 now down 9 tenths of 1% to low of the day NASDAQ down 400 down 2.6% the Dow up barely holding onto a gain right now little changed higher by two points Ten year yield 1.42% I'm Charlie pallet.

COVID Chris Berra United Kingdom Johns Hopkins Bloomberg school uma Kron Michael R Bloomberg Bloomberg LP Bloomberg philanthropies Johns Hopkins Bloomberg school South Africa Germany U.S. Pfizer AstraZeneca
"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:11 min | 1 year ago

"amaran" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Strong durability over a long period of time And you're exactly right Your body tends to have two response at least her responses There's one There's the antibody response which think of it as the first line of defense that your body musters to take on this kind of a virus And then you have what's called T cell and B cell which are the longer term That's what really gives your body the memories that it can respond many years later that you see with other vaccines And some of the data that we've been able to pull together thus far does reflect that we have a very strong T cell and B cell response and we're studying that right now to say exactly how does that manifest itself in terms of durability and patency over time Because one thing we know for sure that this virus isn't going to go away tomorrow So it's not only important that you have a strong response immediately but that four 6 8 12 months later particularly in some of these other areas around the world with the logistics of getting multiple doses is going to be really challenged Those of us in the United States sometimes focus on the United States And of course this is a global pandemic It's not the United States Give us a sense of the Johnson Johnson role in fighting the pandemic in the rest of the world What is your position as opposed to the vaccines in for example sub Saharan Africa Well as I said earlier we knew from the very beginning that we were not going to truly have an impact with our vaccine on this pandemic unless we took a global approach So whether we looked at the way that we try to design it the way that we tested it on a very global level even the way that we're manufacturing Right now we have about ten different locations Not only here in the United States but in South Africa and India in Europe And in the overwhelming majority of our vaccines up to this point in time have really been used in the developing part of the world So we are very committed to making that possible And I think certainly something that we've learned over the last few weeks with amaran is that unless we can get people around the world vaccinated unfortunately this virus can continue to mutate and continue to adapt itself and present a danger for the rest of the world So you just made an interesting point I'm not sure I was aware of If you take the total number of doses that have been administered thus far ojas and Johnson and the United States versus.

United States Johnson Johnson Saharan amaran Africa South Africa India Europe Johnson
"amaran" Discussed on The Cinematography Podcast

The Cinematography Podcast

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"amaran" Discussed on The Cinematography Podcast

"Com. I don't update it all that often, but I think the book is on there. I went to your website. Yeah, there's a link, I think it's available on Amazon. And I don't do social media, so that's about the only way. You have like 6 extra hours in every day over all of us, so congrats for that. Well, Dan, thank you so much for coming on the show. It's great to meet you and I love your work. Thank you so much. Thank you, Ben. I've really enjoyed it. So that was Dan Addis, and I hope everyone who listened to it has had their heart warmed and is at least two or three IQ points more intelligent having listened to him. He's awesome. Hey, Ben, you know what time it is. Don't. It's time to pay the bills. I was doing a bit. I totally knew what time it was. We got to thank our sponsor, aperture, maker of fine LED lighting products. Some that are very high end professional products. Others that are more entry level. Today I want to talk about one of the more entry level products which is called a amaran P 60 C and this is like a tiny little one by one sort of panel. So like one foot by one foot, they basically took their more expensive professional nova panel and shrunk it down and don't charge all that much money for it. I think I may have mentioned it in a previous time, but it's worth mentioning again because it's $349. And one nice. I mean, there's people who are granted the go to Amazon, they'll find some cheap really low quality light, they'll spend maybe that much or less on Amazon. There is no reason to do that. This isn't a 60 to 80 watt ranges depending on how many leds are being used at one time. Color tunable RGB panel that's very small runs off the RGB. Oh, nice. Yeah. I was going to ask if it was bicolor and I was afraid that I would sound out of touch. So I'm glad you went with your RGB. It is. And it's got color gel presets and a bunch of other cool stuff. You can get it hot right cameras. I know that I think there's about 20 left. I think we've blown through about half of them this week. But yeah, but it's an inexpensive light. And I see a lot of people get these really junky video lights and use them for all kinds of things that are not very bright and they don't have a lot of functions. This is fulfilling on that promise and you might think $350, I could get almost a PlayStation with that kind of money. But no, you can't. You can't they're like 500 bucks or something these days. And I was about to say, but also I don't know. I have a choice between lighting and interview or playing Red Dead Redemption. I don't know at some point. You're so uncool that not a gamer. Anyway, I'm just saying that for less than the price of a PlayStation. You can buy a really high quality light that.

Dan Addis Amazon Ben Dan
"amaran" Discussed on The BosBabes

The BosBabes

05:34 min | 2 years ago

"amaran" Discussed on The BosBabes

"Could be hard. It could be hard situations. But are you choosing, what's your intention here? You go into the intention of this game, are you going to intend to have fun or are you intending to win? This is not your typical sports show. It's real, it's wrong. There's been top of the pie. You are now Robin with the Boston. Your intentions. And I think it's just so important, especially like your intentions are the thing that are guiding and dictating your actions behavior and how you reciprocate your emotions and thoughts. I mean, intentions are everything. And I love making wishes. And I think there's so many different ways to make wishes. I mean, you could rub a magic lamp again three. It's interesting. I was thinking about it the other day. A lot of wishes are made through the breath. It's nice to think about the things that you want for yourself and others and want to attain and want to drive for and strive for. And again, I am loving this because this is where you and I click on that whole spiritual level because I am always posting about mindfulness and positivity and how your energy reacts with others and being conscious of what you're saying and thinking and the law of attraction. So everything that you just said, I am resonating on such a level. And I think it's the first episode ever that people are going to listen to and hopefully you guys understand what we're talking about because if you don't, you're going to have to go and start learning about meditating, mindfulness and energy because our bodies are more than just our physical being. We are energy. We are energy. So definitely look into that for those of you guys that are listening. If you don't know anything about it, please feel free to learn more about the conscious mind, the subconscious mind. The unconscious mind, everything that we are talking about. So for those of you guys that do not know, are you the one was a dating reality TV show? We did that. Believe it or not, 7, 8 years ago, almost a decade ago, there was ten guys, ten girls. We all kind of just had a fun experience, living in Hawaii for about a month month and a half. The whole premise of the show was for us to try to find our perfect match. And although a lot of us didn't actually find our perfect matches in real life on that show, the only couple that actually ended up together was amaran Ethan. They are still together to this day. They have a couple kids, I believe they have two daughters, but all in all, we had a lot of good experiences on the show and some bad experiences on the show, but I have Ryan on here because I do want to ask him, essentially, what sparked his interest in wanting to go on a dating reality TV show, especially at such a young age, we were in our 20s, wanted to ask him a little bit about his experiences, some memories, what were some of his favorite challenges and so forth. So please stay tuned. We are going to be hitting upon all those points very shortly. But we'll just start with essentially what made you want to go on a TV show like are you the one in your 20s? Just like I did. I had commissioned an artist to work on one of my small business projects that I had in Colorado. It just so happened this artist was Andrew Woods. He was on real world. Andrew Woods was ended up becoming a friend of mine and you know had him working for me a little bit and he ended up.

Robin Boston amaran Ethan Hawaii Ryan Andrew Woods Colorado
Scientists study volcanic lightning

News, Traffic and Weather

02:26 min | 3 years ago

Scientists study volcanic lightning

"Opening we're just a couple days away from the fortieth anniversary of mount St Helens nineteen eighty eruption N. as como as Ryan Harris tells us all these years later the mountain is still teaching us lessons there's a lot of learning at mount Saint Helens says Dr Seth Moran the scientist in charge of the U. S. geological survey's cascades volcano observatory who tells me there's still a lot being gleaned from the main event and the eruptions that happened in the weeks and months after to understand the Russian dynamics how the cloud evolved questions right now people are getting into about the generation of volcanic lightning and there was no lighting that was observed and reported and we can see some deposits in a pretty good idea of the timing of some of those deposits relative to say when volcanic lightning was was being generated this other some interesting ideas that are starting to be developed about when volcanic lightning occurs an interruption sequence and what it means when it starts happening in terms of I'm gonna bash in the air how far to go in and things like that Moran says the big lesson though is still the lateral blast in landslide caused by the eruption which broke trees like they were matchsticks or burned everything in its path because of the hot gases that escaped not to mention burying much of the area in deep debris and sending a mud flow down the North Fork of the total river the landslide was what took the pressure off of the magma that intruded into the volcano and I generate the lateral blast and it was certainly appreciated that the bulging of the north flank that was moving out at a rate of five or six feet a day that that was producing a flank that was unstable and it was certainly understood that rockfalls landslides avalanches were in the future if nothing happens but it wasn't appreciated how big that website it wasn't how discontinuous it was gonna it was gonna be Amaran says since then geologists have learned a lot about what deposits from that kind of a landslide looks like around volcanic areas and I've taken that lesson and applied it to volcanoes around the world and it's now much more appreciated by the volcano community that landslides are part of what volcanoes can do and that that is something that in certain situations where you've gotten unstable flank that's obviously building outwards that that's a very real thing that needs to be taken into account when doing hazardous substance those hazard assessments are important because doctor Moran reminds me of something we should all keep in mind not only is mount St Helens still active but source several other cascade volcanoes including mount

Como Ryan Harris Mount Saint Helens Dr Seth Moran Scientist Cascades Volcano Observatory North Fork Amaran