23 Burst results for "Daniel Goldman"

"daniel goldman" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:53 min | 2 weeks ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on WTOP

"Vision. But New York's Daniel Goldman wants them to walk the walk. When you have someone like George Santos, who has lied and deceived his own voters in order to become a member of this body, he does not get the benefit of the doubt. He has admitted to lying and he does not belong here. Santos faces more than a dozen felonies. The clock is ticking, but President Biden says he's confident, congressional leaders will come up with a solution to the debt limit. America is not a deadbeat nation. We pay our bills, nations never to fall on this debt, and it never will. He's cutting his trip to the G 7 summit short with just a few weeks to go to avoid default. A car chase could have been a royal disaster in New York City. CBS Michael George. Prince Harry, his wife, Megan and her mother, stepped out Tuesday night in Manhattan for the miss foundation's women of vision awards. But afterwards, they say paparazzi hounded them so much. It resulted in a quote near catastrophic car chase. No one was hurt. An Islamic extremist will spend the rest of his life in prison for killing 8 people in New York in 2017. Here's CBS's Matt piper. In court victims spoke for more than two hours about the horrors they endured and called sight full of a waste of space. 8 people were killed, 18 others hurt when he mowed them down in a truck along a Manhattan bike path steps from the World Trade Center, a judge has now sentenced the Islamic extremists to multiple life sentences at another 260 years in prison. A grand jury has indicted Brian coburger AMD stabbing deaths of four university of Idaho students. That move allows prosecutors to skip a weeklong preliminary hearing next month. A judge could also set a trial date soon or sentence him, depending on kober's plea. There's a new warning about contact lenses. CBS is Deborah Rodriguez explains. A study by the

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:37 min | 10 months ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Anchor them. We definitely want to avoid allowing that situation to develop. Minneapolis fed president Yale cash carriage said the fed must reduce inflation to 2%, please stick with Bloomberg this week for live coverage of the Jackson hole symposium, Bloomberg surveillance will be their beginning. On Thursday. And to corporate news now, Karen shares of Nordstrom or down nearly 14% following its latest earnings report in Bloomberg's we need a young has more live Anita. Nathan investors initially saw Nordstrom as insulated by its affluent consumer base, but its outlook took a different story as the retailers rack business slows on lower demand and inventory buildup. The department store operator is lowering its full year forecast just three months after raising its outlook earlier this week, Macy's also cut its full year forecast. Now both retailers are moving aggressively to clear out inventory. Live in New York, I'm renita young Bloomberg daybreak. I ready to thank you send one other political note for following this morning as President Biden's long awaited announcement on student debt relief, which is expected later today. And that's defined things that you need to know to start your day brought to you by interactive brokers. Again, futures this morning are little changed, straight ahead, your latest local headlines plus a check of sports and this is Bloomberg. All right, Karen, thanks 6 33 on Wall Street, 72° in Central Park, got an accident, southbound western spur of the New Jersey turnpike at exit 15 W more coming up in traffic, first Michael Barr, with more primary results. Michael, thank you very much, Nathan, and as we mentioned, New York ski congressional 12th district representative Jerry Nadler beat another powerful democratic committee chair Carolyn maloney 55 to 24%, the two longtime allies became opponents this year due to redistricting. In another key congressional race, Daniel Goldman and won in the tenth district over a fellow Democrat U line new 26 to 24%. Goldman faces Republican Denny hamden in November. In the 17th district, Sean Patrick maloney chair of the House Democrats campaign arm, one with 67%. He will face Republican Michael Lawler, who got 76%. Pat Ryan, a democratic county executive in New York's Hudson valley. It's one of the special House election in the contest that was seen as a litmus test of the impact that the reason Supreme Court decision on abortion might have on the midterm elections. And a special election to replace Democrat Antonio Delgado, who became New York's lieutenant governor. Democrat Ryan, with 52%, beat Republican Mark molinaro, who got 48%. Bloomberg national political correspondent Gregory courting. New York is a good barometer of the heart of the Democratic Party. It's where we've seen. For example, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a few years ago, take on the number four Democrat in the House of Representatives and beat him as a progressive. And so it really is sort of looked at as a bellwether of sort of the Democratic Party. Bloomberg's Gregory cordy. It has been 6 months since the Russian invasion began in Ukraine yesterday and emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, voice concerns over the situation at Ukraine's occupied nuclear power plant. There are major worries that nuclear disaster could take place due to the fighting. A jury and Grand Rapids, Michigan returned guilty verdicts for two men who are accused of trying to carry out a kidnapping plot against governor Gretchen Whitmer. Defense attorneys for Adam Fox and Barry Croft junior claimed that the FBI unfairly targeted their clients and had no actual kidnapping with a materialized. However, U.S. attorney Andrew burge disagrees. The verdict confirms

Bloomberg Nordstrom President Biden New York Nathan Karen Michael Barr Jerry Nadler Carolyn maloney Daniel Goldman Denny hamden Sean Patrick maloney House Democrats campaign arm Michael Lawler
"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

01:40 min | 10 months ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"While remaining committed to our principles of kindness and progressivism. Nadler and maloney have each spent nearly 30 years in Congress but were pitted against each other when the 12th district was redrawn earlier this year. Nadler now faces Republican nominee Mike zambals in the November general election. Impeachment counsel Daniel Goldman wins the democratic primary in New York, ousting U.S. representative Mandir Jones from Congress in the tenth congressional district, Goldman is an heir to the $7 billion Levi's Strauss, fortune, or Liz Kim will have more coming up at 6 o'clock. In other news now, new figures from the New York State Labor Department show the unemployment rate in the 5 barrels continues to lag behind the rest of the state, jobless rate statewide reached 4.8% in July, but in the city, unemployment rose slightly between June and July to 6.6%, The Bronx in particular continues to struggle the barrel has the highest unemployment rate in the entire state at 9.1%. COVID cases are on the decline in New York City, the city health department reports about 2800 new coronavirus cases each day about as many as before the midsummer surge, the current transmission level is technically speaking, still considered high, but hospitalizations have declined in deaths have been relatively low all summer. City and state officials are easing COVID rules for the coming school year, returning students will no longer be tested at school, and they won't need to quarantine after an exposure. Now let's

Nadler Mike zambals Daniel Goldman Mandir Jones Levi's Strauss Liz Kim New York State Labor Departmen Congress maloney city health department Goldman New York U.S. Bronx New York City
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:26 min | 10 months ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"That we no longer have a woman representing Manhattan in Congress. Last night, Nadler thanked maloney. And I will return to Congress with a mandate to fight for the causes so many of us know to be right. Nadler faced Republican Mike Zambia. And another key congressional race Daniel Goldman won in the tenth district over fellow Democrat, eula new, 26 to 24%. Goldman faces Republican Benny hampden in November. In the 17th district, Sean Patrick maloney chair of the House Democrats campaign arm, one with 67%. He will face Republican Michael Lawler who got 76%. And a special election in the 19th district to replace Democrat Antonio Delgado, who became New York's lieutenant governor, Democrat pat Ryan, with 52% beat Republican Mark molinaro, who got 48% more another New York races later. I'm Mike lebar, and now over to Bloomberg's anymore as with key results in Florida, Amy? Thank you, Michael, representative Charlie Crist has won the democratic nomination for governor of Florida beating out the state agriculture commissioner and more progressive Nikki fried with nearly 60% of the vote. Chris, a former Republican governor himself, will challenge Republican incumbent Ron DeSantis. If we work together, stand up to this bully, we will defeat him in November. Meanwhile, Val demings won the democratic primary for Senate with more than 84% of the vote and she will challenge Republican incumbent senator Marco Rubio in Florida. In Washington, I'm Amy Morris Bloomberg daybreak. Right, Amy, thank you. Well, one other state held election yesterday in Oklahoma, Trump back congressman markwayne mullin defeated former state House speaker TW Shannon and a special runoff for the Senate seat now held by retiring Republican Jim inhofe. Mellon will face former democratic congresswoman Kendra horn in November. And of course we'll have much more on the primaries throughout the morning, Karen. But another story we are following this morning, President Biden is expected to make his long awaited announcement on student debt relief later today. We get the latest from Bloomberg's head Baxter. It has been something the president has been planning for quite a while now, and The White House was keeping the cars very close to the vest. The president has been grappling with targeted relief while at the same time counteracting any fallout, such as contributing to inflation. Now, advocates and allies expect a pause on loans for an additional four months through the end of the year, as well as some form of partial forgiveness. We should know today. In San Francisco, I'm Ed Baxter, Bloomberg daybreak. All right, and thank you. Meanwhile, Minneapolis, fed president Neil kashkari is saying it's very clear that the Central Bank we're talking about the fed here needs to tighten monetary policy. With inflation this high, I'm for me, I'm in the mode of we need to air on making sure we're getting inflation down. And only relax when we see compelling evidence that inflation is well on its way back down to 2%. Minneapolis, fed president Neil kashkari and please stick with Bloomberg for complete live coverage of the Jackson hole symposium, it begins tomorrow, Bloomberg surveillance will be there beginning tomorrow. Wait, Tom Kean, Lisa abramo and Jonathan farrow. I'm looking forward to that with the fed chairman Jay Powell giving the keynote speech 10 a.m. Wall Street time on Friday. Let's turn to corporate news now, Karen. We continue to see major retailers struggle. Shares of Nordstrom are down nearly 13% following its latest earnings report. We get more live from Bloomberg's we need a young. Good morning granita. Good morning, Nathan. Investors initially saw Nordstrom as insulated by its affluent customer base. But its outlook tells a different story as the retailers rack business slows on lower demand and inventory buildup. The department store operator is lowering its full year forecast just three months after raising its outlook. Earlier this week, Macy's also cut its full year forecast and now both retailers are moving aggressively to clear out inventory. Other high end U.S. consumer companies such as Ralph Lauren and Estee Lauder have also trimmed forecasts. Live in New York, I'm renita young Bloomberg daybreak. All right, we need to thank you all on the flip side. Shares of Bed Bath & Beyond are up 14% in early trading, The Wall Street Journal is reporting the home goods retailer has selected a lender to provide financing as it seeks to boost liquidity and pare down debt. Finally, Karen tributes continue to pour in this morning for Julian Robertson, the billionaire founder of Tiger management who's died at the age of 90. Robertson became one of his generation's most successful hedge fund managers, he was a mentor to a wave of investors known as Tiger cubs. Robertson started Tiger management in 1980 with just under $9 million by the late 90s, his funds had 22 billion in assets and annual returns, averaging 32%. Well, Nathan, again, futures this morning, their little change, the ten year treasury is up 5 30 seconds yield three O 2% in the yield on the two year 3.29%, and nymex crude oil is higher at 1.4% of a dollar 33 at $95 7 cents a barrel, the Euro .9948 against the dollar. Straight ahead, your latest local headlines, plus a check of sports and this is Bloomberg. Thank you, Karen. It is 5 O 7

Nadler Bloomberg Mike Zambia Daniel Goldman Neil kashkari Benny hampden Sean Patrick maloney House Democrats campaign arm Michael Lawler Antonio Delgado Mark molinaro Mike lebar Nikki fried Ron DeSantis
"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

06:53 min | 10 months ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"State Senate primaries and in The Bronx, sitting senator faces a stiff challenge from the first time candidate, WNYC's John Campbell explains. State senator Gustavo Rivera is chatting with me on Zoom from his apartment in kingsbridge heights. I'm not asking you for anything. He's rattling off a list of things that are tough about running in an August primary, a time when many voters are tuned out. So those are the challenges and the heat that I say the heat is hot. The primary was initially supposed to be in June and Rivera had an easy path to reelection. But that was before the state court stepped in to draw dramatically different district lines and pushed the Senate races back to August. Now, Rivera is running in a district that stretches from Riverdale to van nest. He's in a heated race against fellow Democrat megalena camilo. And in some ways, they're facing a common foe. Our biggest opponent is apathy. There's people that are either not knowledgeable, they don't know that there's a primary coming up or they're like another one. What is this about? Camilo is president of The Bronx women's bar association. She launched a campaign in February when it looked like she would be running for an open seat. And when she suddenly found herself in a primary, she wasn't going to let it scare her out of the race. We continued to move forward because the work of representing the people here, all the campaigning and had been doing since February, all the work we had been doing community that didn't change. Rivera is the sitting senator, but he doesn't have the backing of Bronx democratic leaders. That belongs to his challenger who used to be the party's vice chair. But the 6th term incumbent does chair the powerful Senate health committee. He's a progressive who sponsors the bill that would create a single payer healthcare system. And he says it's his record that sets him apart. I've done the work. It's there for all to see. And ultimately, that is what I will hopefully be judged on. Camilo is more of a centrist. She supports charter schools and says lawmakers should be more supportive of law enforcement officials. I say I'm a pragmatic Democrat and senator Robert has been open about being more of a left liberal progressive. Early voting for the August 23rd primary runs through the 21st. John Campbell, WNYC news. And also on the August 23rd ballot congressional primaries, the top candidates in the race for the tenth district made their case to voters last night in a televised debate co host about WNYC and New York won for analysis of that is WNYC's people and power reporter, Elizabeth Kim, who was up last night watching the debate and joins us now live. Hi, Liz. Good morning, Michael. We had 6 candidates on the debate stage, all progressive Democrats, where exactly did the Democrats differ the most? So these candidates don't really disagree much on major policies. This is a very liberal district. It covers Lower Manhattan and parts of northwest Brooklyn, including park slope, but the debate did reveal some differences. Daniel Goldman, who's a former prosecutor, definitely came off as more centrist and small business oriented than his opponents. He expressed concerns about repeat offenders and crime and said he'd be willing to reexamine bail reform. On the other end of the spectrum, you had state assembly woman you lead new and Westchester congressman mondaire Jones, who said they believe the way to tackle crime is by making more investments in social programs. Now Daniel goleman took a volley of attacks during the debate, arguably the most of any candidate, here is Manhattan council member carlina Rivera two Goldman. You are a walking campaign finance loophole, Dan. You are essentially trying to buy this election. Does this line of questioning Liz suggested Goldman is by anyway the FrontRunner here? This is an extremely crowded race. There are 12 candidates. But recent polls show that this could boil down to Goldman new and city council member carlina Rivera. Goldman has never been elected to public office before, but he's the wealthiest candidate in the race. He recently put in $1 million of his own money into his campaign. This is an up for grab selection and candidates like Goldman who have the money to reach voters through direct mail, phone calls, and even door to door canvassing have a big edge. Well, Liz, did you get the sense that the candidates accomplish what they were trying to do in this debate? Yes, for the most part. You just heard Rivera that was probably one of the best singers of the night. The debate was however mostly civil. I think the candidates were thinking less about throwing their opponents off their game than delivering their own closing arguments. As one example, Liz holtzman, who is this trailblazer elected official who served in Congress during the Nixon era, she came into the debate considered as the sharpest and most experienced debater. Her job was to remind voters of her accomplishments as a lawmaker, and she did that by bringing up legislation that she worked on. There was a lightning round moment when the candidates were asked whether they'd support president Joe Biden's run for reelection. It was a similar question posed to candidates in New York one and WNYC's debate of the candidates for the 12th congressional district race. I'm curious, what did they say? So not entirely different to what was said in last week's debate where the two longtime members of Congress Gerald madler and Carolyn maloney refused to commit to the idea that the president is running for reelection. First off, Biden has said he wants to run again. This time, however, the candidate said that this decision was Biden's what they sound a little bit more warm to a reelection bid. That's probably due to the fact that the president has been on a bit of a hot streak. He got a big part of his climate and domestic spending plan through, and there are signs that inflation may be coming under control. But in a sign that members of his party are still concerned about his deep unpopularity, one of the candidates Julie knew argued that Democrats need to be quote strategic about who they put on the ballot. And former mayor Bill de Blasio, who last month dropped out of this race, also came up in this debate. How so? That's right. The candidates were asked whether they would want the support of the former mayor, who dropped out because he was deeply unpopular. And the responses were not too surprising. Here's what assembly member nude told WNYC's Bridget Bergen. I have not decided endorsement from Bill de Blasio. Would you accept it? No, thank you. No thank you. And the other answers were basically the same. Okay, that's WNYC's Elizabeth Kim of the people and power

Rivera WNYC John Campbell Gustavo Rivera kingsbridge heights Camilo carlina Rivera megalena camilo Bronx women's bar association Bronx Senate health committee Goldman senator Robert Senate WNYC news Elizabeth Kim Liz Daniel Goldman mondaire Jones Riverdale
"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

01:33 min | 10 months ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"9 p.m. at pier 76, open to all, more info at Hudson River park, dot org. Coming up, how the proposed merger of Penguin Random House and Simon and Schuster might impact the book industry and readers. That story coming up later this hour. It's weekend edition on WNYC. I'm David first. Democratic primary voters in New York's tenth congressional district will see 13 names listed on their ballots when they go to the polls on August 23rd. That list includes former mayor Bill de Blasio, who dropped out of the race last month. 6 of those candidates will take part in a debate, this Wednesday, doubly one by C's Bridget Bergen has the participants. City council member, carlina Rivera, assembly member, yulin knew, impeachment attorney, Daniel Goldman, assembly member, Joanne Simon, former congresswoman Elizabeth holtzman, and congressman mondaire Jones, who moved from the 17th congressional district in Westchester and rockland down to this district to run in this open seat. It promises to be extremely lively because this will be the first televised debate among these candidates who have been going to forum after forum. The debate will be co moderated by Bridget Bergen and New York one's Errol Lewis and you can listen live here on WNYC. This Wednesday at 7 p.m.. 81° now expecting a high today around 90, mostly sunny skies, a breeze as well today. There is also a chance for some rain, a chance for an afternoon thunderstorm. The heat advisory

Penguin Random House Bridget Bergen Hudson River park WNYC carlina Rivera yulin Daniel Goldman Bill de Blasio Joanne Simon Schuster Elizabeth holtzman congressman mondaire Jones Simon New York David City council rockland assembly Westchester Errol Lewis
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

04:56 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"Interesting. On a lot of levels, I'm aware of emotional intelligence. And as we were talking before, you know, none of us are really perfect at looking into it all the time, but I think especially in today's climate and moving forward, it feels like it's becoming more and more important that leaders understand not just the concept, but the practical application of the concept. Yes, that's right. And I think when Daniel Goldman first published his books in 1995 96, he bought the construct of emotional intelligence out of academia and puts it into the public arena. However, his first few books were very good at describing the what where they kind of stopped and rightly so because they're very good books as they are, but where they fell down is that they didn't describe the how and I think over the last 25 years a lot of people are actually saying, well, this is a very nice construct, but how do we use it? And through some of the conversations that we've had this afternoon, but itself afternoon here in the United Kingdom Diane. This afternoon is suggesting really that we've got to be looking at all of these components and recognizing that to even master one of them is going to be incredibly difficult, so. I liken it to being a concert pianist. You go in as a pianist, you've practiced your art. You play your piece in front of an audience. They think you are an absolute Maestro. They go out. They've been entertained. They've had a wonderful evening. Now, any pianist worth this salt would be able to look at their performance and say, oh, I didn't do particularly well there in the second movement. I was ahead of the orchestra. I didn't notice that the brass kicked in a little bit later than it should have done in the third movement..

Daniel Goldman Diane United Kingdom
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

04:56 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"Interesting. On a lot of levels, I'm aware of emotional intelligence. And as we were talking before, you know, none of us are really perfect at looking into it all the time, but I think especially in today's climate and moving forward, it feels like it's becoming more and more important that leaders understand not just the concept, but the practical application of the concept. Yes, that's right. And I think when Daniel Goldman first published his books in 1995 96, he bought the construct of emotional intelligence out of academia and puts it into the public arena. However, his first few books were very good at describing the what where they kind of stopped and rightly so because they're very good books as they are, but where they fell down is that they didn't describe the how and I think over the last 25 years a lot of people are actually saying, well, this is a very nice construct, but how do we use it? And through some of the conversations that we've had this afternoon, but itself afternoon here in the United Kingdom Diane. This afternoon is suggesting really that we've got to be looking at all of these components and recognizing that to even master one of them is going to be incredibly difficult, so. I liken it to being a concert pianist. You go in as a pianist, you've practiced your art. You play your piece in front of an audience. They think you are an absolute Maestro. They go out. They've been entertained. They've had a wonderful evening. Now, any pianist worth this salt would be able to look at their performance and say, oh, I didn't do particularly well there in the second movement. I was ahead of the orchestra. I didn't notice that the brass kicked in a little bit later than it should have done in the third movement..

Daniel Goldman Diane United Kingdom
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

05:44 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"Why? That's a good question. And it is funny, isn't it that so many leaders have an expectation that their people are going to show up a certain way, but they aren't necessarily paying attention to how they're showing up. Yes, that's right. And I think it's the leader's responsibility to decide how they go to show up. Now, look, let's be realistic about this because we're talking about business enterprises here. There are going to be times when difficult conversations need to be had because performance is under par. So how do you manage the emotions in the most appropriate way to get the performance that you need? And keep the people on your side. That is the leadership challenge. And that's why leaders are paid far more in the scheme of things in order to lead effectively. They're not managers, their leaders, and there's a big difference. Well, that is for sure. And that really is one of my questions, how can leaders work with their emotions more effectively? Well, if we start to pick emotional intelligence as it was defined by Daniel Goldman at 25 years ago, we'll find that there are effectively 5 components of the emotional intelligence. I'll take the outer world first, and that's the outer world of empathizing with other people seeing it from their viewpoint. And then the outer world of social skills and communication skills that engages people in the right way. The inner world component which is really fundamental to your question is what leaders should be aware of and leaders should be aware of what's going on inside their head. Their body, their being, so they need to develop self awareness. And it's not just a case of understanding how I'm good at this. Poor at that. It's a case of actually understanding how their behavior, how their strengths and liabilities impact upon other people..

Daniel Goldman
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

05:44 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"Why? That's a good question. And it is funny, isn't it that so many leaders have an expectation that their people are going to show up a certain way, but they aren't necessarily paying attention to how they're showing up. Yes, that's right. And I think it's the leader's responsibility to decide how they go to show up. Now, look, let's be realistic about this because we're talking about business enterprises here. There are going to be times when difficult conversations need to be had because performance is under par. So how do you manage the emotions in the most appropriate way to get the performance that you need? And keep the people on your side. That is the leadership challenge. And that's why leaders are paid far more in the scheme of things in order to lead effectively. They're not managers, their leaders, and there's a big difference. Well, that is for sure. And that really is one of my questions, how can leaders work with their emotions more effectively? Well, if we start to pick emotional intelligence as it was defined by Daniel Goldman at 25 years ago, we'll find that there are effectively 5 components of the emotional intelligence. I'll take the outer world first, and that's the outer world of empathizing with other people seeing it from their viewpoint. And then the outer world of social skills and communication skills that engages people in the right way. The inner world component which is really fundamental to your question is what leaders should be aware of and leaders should be aware of what's going on inside their head. Their body, their being, so they need to develop self awareness. And it's not just a case of understanding how I'm good at this. Poor at that. It's a case of actually understanding how their behavior, how their strengths and liabilities impact upon other people..

Daniel Goldman
"daniel goldman" Discussed on The Win-Win Effect

The Win-Win Effect

04:25 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on The Win-Win Effect

"It becomes predictable. It becomes sustainable. That's powerful. I was actually speaking with a guy that's tied into Daniel Goldman. Gallman is a domino. Yeah. Teaches a lot about obviously the human brain when an emotional intelligence when people didn't even know what that was. And my story, I'm pretty sure you know a little bit of it. I didn't, that was a muscle that I was, that was worked on my whole life. I just needed to get really clear about what I was actually going after and being a little bit more aware and it talks a lot about empathy. I'm sure that, you know, especially when you're working on yourself is once you are, you become more of a super empath. You can feel when something's off. I can walk into a tube here in London. But subway, if I go into a cab, I'll feel the energy and keep walking. And it sounds crazy to communicate that to people that aren't really open to the understanding that you can do anything with the power of your mind. But you have to understand even what's happening. Go ahead, love it. No, what I'm saying is, I think that when people recognize that the mind is a function of communication with the non physical and also the gateway of that, which is non physical making it into the physical realm, they'll start to respect that relationship with their mind a lot more. No, no, it's fun. I look at it as a filter as well. It's filtering out. And then it's going to go through your past experiences and all the events that have happened in your life. And most of them, those events and those are just based upon an opinion. You don't know all the moving parts. So if you don't know the moving parts, like, how can you actually move like operate through your day?.

Daniel Goldman Gallman London
"daniel goldman" Discussed on A New Direction

A New Direction

03:58 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on A New Direction

"Now. You have two numbers. Third number is the emotional training. We're we've been an emotional training by the we generally and emotional training every day but the last couple years during the pandemic we have been in some severe emotional training right. Daniel goldman great psychologist. Who talked about emotional intelligence. You could go on and on and on about emotional tounge We're going to break it down to just two areas i is. How were you able to control your emotions under pressure and stress and under fire right. That's the first one. The second one is how will you able to understand tap into the emotions of others. Now let me just say something. Because general gronkowski says something in the book. That really struck me about that. And i don't talk about it. When i talk about this but you know the truth is it would be very difficult to understand the emotions someone else if you really are not aware of your own emotions and if you not emotionally aware how can you expect to really be aware of someone else's emotions so we need to really tap into that so if you talk about your training emotionally. What number would you give yourself all right. And then the fourth area is the spiritual area and people. I'm not spiritual moral spiritual right. We really are. You know the truth of the matter is when things go bad we will run to something in order to try to relieve it and whatever that thing is we run too. That's our god and generally if you don't have yourself hooked up right those things go bad right. So what brings you back to place of. Centeredness what brings you back to place of peaks in the midst of chaos is. It is it. God is it. Meditation is yoga. General garage talks about prayer and meditation. Maybe some positive psychology. What brings you back to a state of centeredness and peace..

Daniel goldman gronkowski
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Just Between Us

Just Between Us

06:12 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Just Between Us

"Or isolated or beaten down by life you'll bond with something that will give you some sense of relief because that's our nature so hurry to believe that the opposite of addiction isn't sobriety. It's actually connection. I love that and how much you can speak to like the brain of it all. But i mean a program for clinical psychology. So we've talked a bit about substance use and what that does to the brain and we watch this one video that sort of just explained that like when you use it it can change your brain chemistry to make you feel like you're number. One need to survive. Is that drug and like that is something that people don't quite understand that like it. Changes your brain chemistry where you're being told. This is what i need to survive. And that's a really hard thing to just be like. Nah i'll just ignore that and and go complete sober right though i think about you know i'm not a clinical psychologist. You know thinking about how if someone is your in your life is an of. How can you help. And if you don't mind i'm just gonna after that question now because i think that relates to what. You're talking about the stigma right there. It's really not easy to overcome. A lifetime of stigma that has been compounded by intergenerational and collective trauma social policies like the war on drugs. So i just want to talk a little bit about the impact of stigma on user. Spare moment so in the tradition dictionary stigmas defined as a mark of disgrace that associated with you know a particular kind of person or circumstance or quality and social stigma disapproval or discrimination against somebody that's based on perceived characteristics that distinguish them from the rest of the byatti so social stigma is usually centered around culture gender rate socio economics right class age social it also types of what people judge as immoral behavior so for people who use drugs. The outcome of stigma is this series of diminishing return that keeps them on the outside. So this cycle of drug related stigma reinforces stereotypes. That in turn reinforces expectation that limit. What we believe about people who use drugs and what they're capable of doing and even worse that fateful reinforces internalize expectations of what they believe about them. Dopp by the way my dad was in fico right. So it's you know that their own personal agency is diminished. Every step of the way. So i spend before you know like like us like all of us. People who use drugs poverty connections with people who aren't just for their behavior belonging and purpose is really what keeps people alive so to kind of bring it back to what you were saying. Daniel goldman is this guy that wrote emotional. The emotional intelligence probably heard of it and he talked about amid the la hijack the be admitted. Party ruben but one of the oldest your brain and it's a thing that the fight light or read and so he talked about an amid the la hijack as phenomenon where are fanfest situation is often out of measure with the actual stimulus because it's triggered in our brain a much more significant emotional threat though. Like if your brain tells you the tigers in the room and the tigers nba room in your body's going to respond like there's a tiger in the room right so again you know we're sort of operating from the oldest part of our our brains in that rules are reaction without the benefit of logic or reason so our bodies still have this. You know respond with biological changes that prepares for action even though there isn't an actual threat so people with ptsd showed greater a middle activation and so handed japan. They have like increased emotional responses like really intense fear or embody. And i'm sure you're you're learning know that people with other anxiety disorders like social bindi disorder or panicky quarter might also respond more strongly in there amid the lap. But you know like we experienced so much stress in our everyday lives then. Even without a diagnosis chronic stress can also leach overacted fear and in diety in our brain. When that happen they say that it can reduce the functions of other areas. Not brain actually help inhibit here like the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex right so learning some of the basic biological functions really helped me understand why my dad and other people in my family and people that i love to right new drug. We're self soothing. You know that's the part of what we're doing is just having a lot of thoughts because i my father's a drug addict an alcoholic and he got sober. When i was seventeen for the final time he did it through alcoholics anonymous and narcotics anonymous. And i i was sold a sort of story of like he completely sober. He did it. He's amazing. now you know this is like the thing and then now he leads a meetings. He works for sobriety stuff. And so to hear you talk. It makes complete sense and you know. I've gone over with him a lot of times like there were times where he should have been arrested and he wasn't and i've been like it's because you're white like there's so much that i think is normalized or i've just like accepted as parts of my life or his story and stuff that is sort of.

Dopp Daniel goldman tigers la bindi disorder ruben nba ptsd japan
"daniel goldman" Discussed on Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS

Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS

"And you've noticed that you're thinking bring it back to. Your breasts has the whole exercise. You wanna you aware of the full in breath were of full outra once come wander to bring it back to bring it back and start with an extra and you do that for as long as you can. I i thought. I really like it. Really joy a trust. You may be shocked at how crazy your mind is different thoughts. But that's that's actually normal just noticing for the first time we have to stay with it. That's what's called mindfulness. How long do you do this. Mindfulness routine is is an an hour minute selling. Are we doing here. It depends what you have. You know If i've got a meeting early in the morning. I might get a little earlier to ten minutes half hour a day. I actually do full days of this. If i have the option But you know that. That's not as often as i'd like up and i find that keeps me pretty calm pretty focused. Today i could tell listeners. A perfect day if i could. I would spend my entire day. Just doing that kind of thing. I really enjoy solitude working on things. I enjoy that and i also like being in the company of people who share their values and their mindset. I enjoy that and one of the things that had most excited to have you on the show is. You're you're like this wealth of knowledge. You have all these books. All these crazy things you've taught over the years but if you were given one billboard that was the biggest billboard in the history of the world this billboard massive and it was like a it showed up on everyone's facebook it shut up on youtube. Everybody would see this message. Is there a certain message that you would convey. And there's no limit to the number of characters you can put on a certain message right now that you would most passionately want to communicate to our hundreds of thousands of listeners. Pay attention pay attention to what you. What would you say we're prison. We're paying attention. Pay attention that. Was it attention to the people around you. Pay attention to your own internal. Pay attention to the person front atention daniel. If if somebody's out there and they're wanting to look into a daniel goldman book you know they're to say i love i love her. I wanna learn more. You've written so much so many resources you put out there. Is there a specific book that you would recommend for all of our listeners. To to pick up my most recent book goes into each of those abilities of emotional intelligence. I told you about to set a. It's called building blocks of emotional intelligence and it's available online from a key step media and i think that if you want to really understand emotional intelligence first supposed to start now marshall and z. We have time for one more question and you go i. Their final question for daniel goldman the leading psychologist arguably on the planet earth. At least that i know about this guy is living legend. We've been chasing around for a long time. I'm so honored to have you on the show today. z. What is your final question for. Finally cottam finally cottam daniel. You could go back in time. Say twenty years. Get into the delorean to back in time and sit down with twenty years ago self self. What advice would you give to yourself. Well you know over the last twenty years things have turned out pretty fruitfully. But i actually tell myself to spend more time with my kids. Wow okay good word. Good word how old are your children now. well now they have kids themselves to spend time with your grandkids. You go perfect. Thank you all right now. My marshall you you're a big daniel goldman fan. You read his work. You quoted often. What question do you have for the man. The myth legend mr gelman. What one of the things. That's big for us. Up here is ongoing. Education and and the growth mindset daniel. And so i was hoping that you might be able to speak to the connection between the growth mindset and having emotional intelligence service in how that plays a role in business growth mindset is very important of course at stanford is promoting the concept. I talked about it for years and years under the rubric. Positive outlook seeing the possibilities and the possibilities events and basically what it means is not Not being a naysayer but being open to what can happen being open to help people develop get through shots at such as dismissing them as they are or you yourself you can grow your business. You could in other words. The world's full of potential if he pursuant good that israel is this whole thing is good. I mean the only way we can put a cherry on top of this of this kind of interviews. We like to in every show with a boom boom which technically speaking stands for big overwhelming optimistic momentum. Mr goldman that's what we believe all of our listeners to have success and so we kind of role. Play the boom here okay. Let's three to one okay. Dana are you ready to to bring the boom okay here. We go z. Are you ready to bring the book. Are you reading hundred percent here..

daniel goldman cottam cottam daniel marshall daniel mr gelman youtube facebook stanford Mr goldman israel Dana
"daniel goldman" Discussed on JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

04:34 min | 2 years ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on JuvoHub - Property Management Podcast

"I was gosh. I was just leaving the corporate side of the world and i went to a training conference and one of the sessions that i went to featured daniel goldman and for people that do not know who daniel goldman is. He's basically the guy who brought emotional intelligence to the workplace back in the nineties and he wrote a book by that title and sitting in his session and listening to him speak..

daniel goldman
"daniel goldman" Discussed on The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

02:56 min | 2 years ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

"What the president's namesake company was doing was a pattern of fraud a pattern of cheating and having that revealed whether it's because he's prosecuted or in a trial down the road where the new york attorney general and the. Da put on evidence that has come up of some sort for this. President ultimately indeed spoken like a former fed. Tonight's last word goes to peter. Baker the other great writer in the two great writer. Peter you covered donald trump for a long time. What are people about to learn about. How the trump business was run where they will see obvious and immediate parallels to how the trump west wing was run. Well look. I think there's been a long history here in a long record in the business world. That was examined before the two thousand sixteen election and obviously a lot more in the four years sets. I mean we have seen. This is a business that has been obviously successful in a lot of ways but many other ways has cut corners. This is a president who has a businessman didn't pay is contractors was sued literally thousands of times by people who said that he owed them money Who went bankrupt repeatedly who boasted that. When he went bankrupt in atlantic city we had casinos in a lot of people were hurt by his business collapsed. He came out with lots of money. We've seen over the last four years and excavation of his taxes my colleagues at the times got hold the tax returns that he's tried so hard to keep from the public and discovered a pattern of of reporting that looks like you know Evasion of taxes at the very least and perhaps even something illegal depending on how the lawyers will interpret it. And i think that you could long before today. We already knew this is a business that played it on the edge at the very least. Will we see. Today is more tangible concept you know very concrete example of that Where the rules. Don't apply the rules that apply to other businesses. That were not taken seriously at least for the last fifteen years in this one instance By the person who went on to become our president now whether the consequences will be Commensurate to that or what will lead to down the road for the president himself or other people connected with his business. Those the real questions at the moment. And i think that You know the story of course is Is not quite ended. We are indebted to these three terrific guests on a thursday night. All friends of this broadcast for explaining everything for us in great detail tonight. Peter baker daniel goldman joyce vance our. Thanks coming up for us. The man who was formerly the nation's lead lawyer before the us supreme court neil konczal standing by to weigh in on today's court decision means for the future of voting rights. And then later. Why minority leader kevin. Mccarthy is not happy about a member of his own party agreeing to join.

donald trump Baker peter atlantic city Peter new york daniel goldman joyce vance Peter baker neil konczal us supreme court Mccarthy kevin
"daniel goldman" Discussed on The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

01:38 min | 2 years ago

"daniel goldman" Discussed on The 11th Hour with Brian Williams

"Seven dollars to meddle in our twenty sixteen election and now for no cost at all a few words here and there. He has trolled biden indirectly as a career guy on the eve of their summit. I don't think he met career politician as a complement. The president vice. I mean there was no question how much more he liked president trump as a as an international coordinator and you would understand why why he helped us to russian forces of russia to help elect donald trump. The first the first time around this is going to be a real test for for for joe biden at. He's got a really warm welcome with the leaders of the g seven. This is friendly territory. They are relieved to have him back in the to have him in the white house. Replacing consent won't be the case with With putin one of the most extraordinary questions and answers from your credible interview with with putin today was i think would would cure Read the list of people who we believe have been assassinated at the order of hooton. He didn't bat an eye he didn't he also did not deny it. He had ordered them killed. He dodged the question. That was pretty chilling. Brian as i say the kgb must be proud of this particular graduate. I know it's been a long week for all of us. That's why we're so thankful for susan page for eugene. Daniel's for daniel goldman for starting us off on this friday night thanks gang coming.

Brian daniel goldman Daniel Seven dollars biden donald trump today putin joe biden friday night one first trump susan first time russian twenty sixteen election g seven russia hooton
Stop Giving Advice, Ask More Questions  with Michael Bungay Stanier

The Futur

05:38 min | 3 years ago

Stop Giving Advice, Ask More Questions with Michael Bungay Stanier

"I'm your producer Greg Gun and we have a very special episode for you today. Our guest is an Oxford Grad and author of the wildly Popular Book. The coaching habit. He's a champion of curiosity. That believes the advice. We so eagerly give is not nearly as good as we think it is. Now I had trouble writing an intro for this one. Because the conversation between he and Chris was so rich with insight and tactics. That couldn't boil it down into just one clear idea. In fact I went back and listened to it twice because Oh so captivated the first time around so I will tell you this. Grab your headphones. A pen and paper subtle into somewhere comfy. And just listen. I promise that you will come out of it. Better equipped to navigate life. And if you're smart you will have covered at least a page with useful notes. But don't take my word for it. Do yourself a favor and enjoy our fascinating conversation with Michael bungay stander. I don't have the ability. Oftentimes to read the book before. I talked to somebody on my podcast. But this is one of those moments where I'm actually able to read your book and I'm so glad that I did first of all. It's a very easy book to read recommended. One hundred people literally this morning on my coaching. Also we'll see what happens there. Thank you okay so I'm GONNA kick it off like this. I asked you very very simple question. So what's more valuable questions or answers? Well I'm going to do the classic on`sharing God well depends because it depends on the context depends on the moment. It depends on everything. I go all the way back Chris to Daniel Goldman. Who Know the name of the guy who popularized the whole idea emotional intelligence and Goldman says in an article he wrote for Harvard Business Review. Way Back in two thousand articles code leadership that gets results says look there are six different styles of leadership and great leaders. Know how to use all six at the right time at the right moment. Each style has its pros and cons. It's punishments in its prizes. But what he pointed to and I think this is interesting. He said look. Coaching is a leadership style. That is massively underutilised. It has a direct correlation to profitability. It has a direct correlation to engagement and as a direct correlation to culture which are all things that people care about but the biggest barriers is people go. I just don't have time for this thing. So part of my championing is trying to make coaching fast. And trying to make it unwed. But absolutely look if there's if you'll building is burning down and you go. What am I supposed to be doing when somebody going? Hey how do you feel about smoke? Want somebody to go. Here's an onsite the exit his. Hey leave the building. So the context is everything but I will say that unbalanced people have an ova develop muscle on giving answers and have an underdeveloped muscle on stain curious a little bit longer. Now in case people don't know who you are. Please introduce US introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about who you are. Sure so Michael Bungay Danielle. I'm best known for being the author of the coaching habit. Book about four years old came out February. The twenty ninth. Two Thousand Sixteen and it's gone on to become the best selling coaching book of the century. About eight hundred thousand copies sold bazillion five-star reviews on Amazon. And the like and I'm a champion for this simple but difficult behavior shift which is look. I want you to stay curious just a little bit longer rush to action advice giving a little bit more slowly. So there's a soundbite in store. You know a mistrial Ian Left. Australia was a Rhodes. Scholar ENDED UP AT OXFORD MARRIED AT OXFORD which that and not becoming a loya to great things at Oxford gave me and then lived in London for Awhile Boston for Awhile now. Live in Toronto founded. A company called box of crayons. And it's focuses helping organizations shift from advice. Driven to curiosity led beautiful. Now I have to ask you this question because this is very. This is unusual that you're the publisher of your own book. Yeah oh I'm good for you because when people say eight hundred thousand copies and I made four dollars on it. I'm like yeah that's the publishing model right. It is more like God. I'm just so happy for you. Man I really am well. Thank you you know. I spent had previous book published with a fancy New York publishers. It was finally did pretty well like killed. One hundred thousand copies three years trying to get them to publish this book and they kept saying. Snow quite dare. I don't quite get it. I don't know and I finally went all right. I've really honed in on the Vision for this book. Is I know it's going to be good? You know me I can. I can sell some books. Part of it's like he played the you play the person. You didn't just play the book but they're like No. We're not going to publish. It and I was gutted but then it was like okay well I can either go and find another publisher and I could probably pull that off if I worked hard enough at it or exit site. Look I'm just GONNA go for it but I'm committed that if I'm self publishing I'm GonNa do it as a professional not as an amateur so when you pick up that book you increase. It doesn't feel like a self published book. It's it it has all the cues this was published by a you know a regular printing press and. Yeah it's going from success to success so not only is the Soda Bunch. I feel smug because published. I Bet I bet on myself and played pretty well

Chris Publisher Daniel Goldman Oxford Michael Bungay Stander Michael Bungay Danielle Greg Gun Producer Amazon Harvard Business Review Toronto New York Ian Left Australia London Boston
Daniel Goleman: The Mind and Meditation

The Wisdom Podcast

09:41 min | 3 years ago

Daniel Goleman: The Mind and Meditation

"I have the pleasure of speaking with Daniel Goldman to claim psychologist and author of several books including the international bestseller emotional intelligence. Why Can Madam Molden? Iq Daniel has written extensively on the connections between human psychology science and contemplative practice and their practical applications in both leadership and in everyday life in this conversation. Daniel talks about his early years at Harvard where he earned his PhD in psychology and how encounters with great teachers such as Ramdas took Kunar remedy and many others would pave the way for his research on meditation and Non Western theories of mind unlike he studies in psychology which largely focused on the content of the mind. By-pass enough focused on the process. Which was tremendously exciting Daniel. He then discusses how mindfulness and meditation topics not will receive. Graduate advises have evolved within the United States and within American culture most profoundly. Daniel discusses his most recent work on climate change. He off is extraordinarily astute insights on how the human mind grapples with the difference between imminent verses symbolic threats and how these translates into the world of capital consumerism and personal responsibility he also shares his thoughts on how Donald Practitioners My contrbute to these calls. Especially I so much enjoyed this conversation and I hope you do too so I thought to start with awesome you so. You're a graduate student at Harvard and went to. India is that is that rushing seventy might travelling companions on the trip. Were someone known as Jeff. Cable? Who's called Krishna? Dos The devotional singer. Another friend was released for DOS. Who just lose writing books with Rhonda's because I had met Ramdas quite by accident cosmic what you would say tender auspicious coincidence or something but My Freshman Freshman Trish during graduate school. I was writing a paper suicide over the Christmas. Oh holiday and I get a knock on the door of my apartment in Cambridge in. It's a woman why never seen before. And she had run into a friend of mine who had been in a communal house in Berkeley. Who's going around the world? And he had sent a letter to me that she was the currier four and she had been in a monastery in Nepal where she met a an American. A guy named Bongolan not rundown. Yes and basically she. I have two things to do here. One is delivered this letter to you. The second is to visit this guy. The BAGUA DOS it. I really shouldn't need and the third was to go to my sister's wedding but she backed out and so that was why she came to America. So I said well I'll take you to meet this person you know. Your Christmas is writing on suicide. We ended up driving up to New Hampshire in there in this farm house. Luxuriance funhouse in a small room. Upstairs was this guy all white along there but no Julia was and he had all these weird pictures on the wall turned out to be Hindu deities and we watching remit and nobody said anything. I never been in a social situation where nobody said anything but I went along with it. And then after a while he spoke and it turned out he was Richard Alpert now. Rhonda's just come back from India and it turned out also that he had been fired from the program at Harvard that I was enrolled in a graduate student. Also I was on the graduates to school colloquium committee which meant I could invite him to come back and speak. Nice which I which was the first time he'd been back to Harvard since he was fired. And so you know he was on fire. He was really full of shocked as they say just back from India and he started. He came give a lecture started. Seven ended it too and to bribe janitor lettuce sticky two. Am to work. And I began to go to a kind of a summer camp that he was running his father's place in the Hampshire where I visited him. This was in the summer and after two rounds I found out that might fill ship to harbored included. A traveling challenge ship nice and I had a wonderful mentor at Harvard David McClellan who actually had hired fired leary and so what did he think about your little excursions to bomb. While he was a devout quaker and he was very interested in meditation so it seems glad that I was getting into this because none of it all is other graduate students. Were like all its study the need to achieve from the you know also you riding on suicide just WanNa go back to that in. What was was there any in that compelled you to write. Oh I had been at a teaching assistant in a course on death and dying talk. Guinan and I had gotten access to about several hundred suicide notes for Bailey Corner. Yeah and you know it's just a you know you study stuff in doubt. I mean I wasn't suicidal. But yet you had interesting death and dying or was that interested. Dr. Not like a personal interest but kind of academic academic India okay and so I should give it back on. My father was professor humanities and my mother was a social worker and I think I got a a kind of implicit value system. It was a very ecumenical. He taught a course called autobiography of civilization which was world literature so it a very lot instead of Sanskrit actually version Among other languages his best friend was the guy who founded the Asian Studies Department at Berkeley? No so I had this kind of view of the world which was larger than just Western yesterday so I was very interested in going to India but I found could In graduate school because Ron dos made me think oh I'd love to meet his guru yet girly Bob Him. You Know No. I'd never met anyone like him of the KARMAPA sixteenth city. Zuma Sitter Sixteenth Mama's yeah and They meant didn't see each other enough. Say met but Lama nor law whose retreat master for College Berries who was close to carmont stayed within croly Baba for two years and I think maybe he told them I never got the story of how he knew anything again. But anyway and Because this was nineteen seventy s very early. A lot of the wonderful lauman's the very shall we say far advanced llamas on the path from Tibet were still alive and Christopher Dawson and I met coup Air Fiche who is very humble. Wonderful being reviewed seem around dawn. You know mumbling all money. I when I saw going around the Stupa and people come and see him day and night and he was always happy to see. Whoever came which I contrasted with my professors at Harvard were world famous psychologist. You could see them like two to three on Tuesday office hours so anyway. Long Story Short coup. Who was wonderful and I didn't know till decades later with he was the teacher of the Dalai Lama on Compassion Chari out the time. You would certainly never say so. He had been offered the kind of the presidential suite with top sweet. And the monastery top floor didn't want he stayed in a very small room had little wooden bed. That was it was very simple. It beautiful way so I met him and kind of made it my business to look around I. I ended up studying the Pasta with Joseph Goldstein. Who was in residence of the Burmese? Mahara I think. Joseph was little horrified that other Westerners were showing up and Manindra had invited his friend going Kaji to give up his second course for Westerners and I went back and gave a talk at the conference on Yoga and Therapy Deli and told people there that there was going to be sub ten day retreat and when the people audience was named Sharon Salzberg cow and so she came to book Guy Learn how to meditate the rest is history was charged with Joseph of course so we go way way back to nineteen seventy really

Harvard India Daniel Goldman Graduate Student Ramdas Rhonda Joseph Goldstein Berkeley Madam Molden United States New Hampshire Richard Alpert Donald Trump
House Democrats expected to unveil formal charges in Trump impeachment

America in the Morning

02:38 min | 3 years ago

House Democrats expected to unveil formal charges in Trump impeachment

"After a spirited day long hearing house Democrats are set to unveil articles of impeachment against president trump following details on Capitol Hill correspondent Linda Kenny on the house committee on the judiciary will come to order without objection the chair is authorized to declare a recess is of the committee to object the tone was set as the hearing on a presentation of the facts began and almost immediately after things calm down a bit counsel for the democratic majority on the Judiciary Committee very Burke laid out the Democrats case saying president trump put his own domestic political interest above the nation's national security and foreign policy by pressuring Ukraine to meddle in the U. S. selection will putting a hold on congressionally approved foreign aid actually got some results that is impeachable offence democratic counsel for the house intelligence committee Daniel Goldman says that's not all the president did president trump launched an unprecedented campaign of obstruction of Congress ranking Republican Doug Collins downplayed Goldman's testimony and wondered why the chairman of the house intelligence committee was an offering the presentation of the facts instead of Goldman prior to the hearing Adam Schiff made it clear he would not be testifying saying he was not a fact witness and nothing new could be learned from his testimony the ranking Republican on the intelligence committee Devin newness did show at the start of the hearing but was never asked to testify things got a specially heeded when house Republicans and Democrats mishandled subpoenaed phone records as part of their impeachment inquiry here we see a clear abuse of power Republican Jim Sensenbrenner protesting the subpoenas which swept up phone calls between Devin newness and some of the president's allies were attempting to dig up dirt in Ukraine about the president's political rivals Democrat Eric Swalwell addressing the democratic staff attorneys at the facts in the Ukraine matter have been cleared for quite some time as it related to this scheme the president of the United States Donald J. trump new everything Republican Andy Biggs accused Democrats of going through the motions with the hearings because they already made up their minds this is a a sham hearing Republican staff attorney Stephen caster said Democrats have not proven their case Democrats may disagree with the president's policy decisions for their matter in which he governs but those disagreements are not enough to justify your revoke herbal action of removing him from office but it appears the Democrats are ready to move as they prepare to unveil at least two articles of impeachment abuse of power and obstruction of Congress the house Judiciary Committee could vote on those articles by week's end paving the way for the full house to vote on impeachment next week

Adam Schiff Staff Attorney United States Devin House Judiciary Committee Stephen Caster Andy Biggs Donald J. Eric Swalwell Jim Sensenbrenner Linda Kenny House Intelligence Committee Chairman Doug Collins Congress President Trump Daniel Goldman Ukraine
Trump Impeachment Inquiry: A Quick Recap

News, Traffic and Weather

02:26 min | 3 years ago

Trump Impeachment Inquiry: A Quick Recap

"More as Democrats and Republicans on the house intelligence committee ended what is likely their final impeachment hearing chairman Adam Schiff asserted president trump's conduct went beyond Watergate this president believes he is up all the law beyond accountability ranking member Devin newness called the hearings a show trial the latest attempt by Democrats to oust the president from office and their Russian dossiers and investigations fail to do the job they moved to plan B. the Ukraine helps those closing statements as this impeachment inquiry prepares to move to the house Judiciary Committee followed almost thirty three hours of witness testimony it began with ambassador bill Taylor who tried to show the importance of Ukraine to America's national security premiums or fighting Russians and counted on not only the training and weapons but also the assurance of U. S. support Taylor said in a regular policy making channel had taken over in Ukraine view reinforced by ambassador Marie Evanovich who questioned whether president trump was listening to people with interest be on national security they found Americans willing to partner with them and working together they apparently succeeded in orchestrating the removal of the US ambassador and colonel Alexander vin men raised alarms about making diplomacy personal is improper for the president of the United States to demand a foreign government investigate a US citizen and a political opponent and then came ambassador Gordon saman central assertion Mr Giuliani's requests were a quid pro hello for arranging a White House visit for presidents Lynskey and that brought us to David Holmes and Fiona hill to normally unseen players want a career foreign service officer the other a national security analyst they entered the spotlight and provided a cinematic finish to the public impeachment hearings I could hear the president's voice through the ear piece of the phone isn't voice was loud and recognizable David Holmes called it a distinctive experience to over here president trump on the phone with ambassador Gordon Solomon I dinner president trump ask so he's gonna do the investigation master Stalin replied that he's going to do it adding a presence Lynskey will do anything asked him to do when the call ended home stole democratic staff attorney Daniel Goldman he asks on then for his impression of the president's view of Ukraine what ambassador son one say to you it is it doesn't really care about Ukraine use

Officer Staff Attorney Gordon Solomon Fiona Hill White House Gordon Saman Colonel Alexander Vin Devin Chairman Daniel Goldman Lynskey Stalin Analyst Adam Schiff David Holmes Mr Giuliani United States Partner Marie Evanovich
Ex-ambassador says Trump comments "sounded like a threat"

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt

00:30 sec | 3 years ago

Ex-ambassador says Trump comments "sounded like a threat"

"The house intelligence committee conducting the second public impeachment hearings featuring ambassador Marie Evanovich who testified that she was ousted as US ambassador to Ukraine because of what she called corrupt interests that manipulated president trump using a disinformation campaign and when president trump told the president of Ukraine in their July phone call that the former ambassador was going to go through some things she told house democratic attorney Daniel Goldman it felt like a vague

Ukraine Donald Trump President Trump Daniel Goldman Marie Evanovich United States Attorney
Trump, Newman and President discussed on Rush Limbaugh

Rush Limbaugh

00:17 sec | 5 years ago

Trump, Newman and President discussed on Rush Limbaugh

"President Trump's campaign hitting Omarosa manigault Newman with legal action for, her alleged violation of. A nondisclosure agreement the arbitration being filed for the agreement that was reportedly signed in two thousand sixteen President Trump and Newman have been engaged in. A war? Of words since the former reality TV, star released to tell, all, book about her time as. A White House

Donald Trump Newman President Trump Daniel Goldman Paul Manafort White House NBC Analyst Wtvn Dublin