35 Burst results for "Hartmann"

Surprising and Shocking Facts About President Ford You Never Knew

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

00:50 sec | 7 months ago

Surprising and Shocking Facts About President Ford You Never Knew

"Well, I didn't know the story about RN being in his office and I spent a lot of time in that office in San Clemente. I spent a lot of time at the San Clemente and which makes a cameo in this book. And I didn't know that he looks so bad when was it Hartman who went out to see him? I can't remember that detail. It's not my outline. Someone was sent by Jerry Ford to talk to him about this. And RN looked like he was not going to make it. Oh gosh, her name escapes me. Yeah, I know. He would never have said harmony. Happened was a real contentious figure. The White House was divided, basically. And the people who thought Hartmann was a useful counterbalance to the president's inclination to see the good and everyone, because Hartmann saw the opposite. And you need to have something like that.

Jerry Ford Hartman Hartmann San Clemente White House RN
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

04:20 min | 1 year ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"Parents divorce. This is amazing, Tom. They can predict all that stuff just based on hitting the like button. That's it. You know, not based on your profile or anything else. And down at the bottom there's one about how, you know, now because aji pai and Donald Trump blew up net privacy. They call it net neutrality, but it's really privacy. Your Internet service provider can now track absolutely everything you do. As can most of the online services where when you go online, you're actually basically connecting your processor to their processor. And so by seeing how rapidly you type or how slowly your type or at what words you pause or hesitate, you know, the kind of words that you use, but mostly you're just your typing. I don't have the book in front of me, but you've got the list there across the bottom. There's those things that they can predict based on how you type, whether you're confident, whether you're assertive, whether you're sad. I mean, these are the states. And if you're sad, they can throw something at you that'll make you sadder or something that'll get you out of it, whichever they think is going to be more effective in getting you to pay attention to the next ad that's coming along. My God, this is so interesting. Gonzo, Tom, can we be living in a world with too much information or at least too easy to access? I see a lot of pros, but I see a lot of cons too. Yeah, I mean, you know, there's a trade out. There are a lot of conveniences that come with this. Like I said, I use Facebook. I want to stay up with my family. I would, though, like to see their algorithm made public. I think that we should know how we're being manipulated basically. And not just Facebook. I mean, you know, right across the board and all social media. I think section two 30 of the telecommunications act needs to be changed. I agree with Josh hawley and Ron white on that. I think that the end of net neutrality, I think the end of net privacy, we're the only developed country in the world where your Internet service provider, the company that brings the Internet into your home, can sit there and watch everything you do..

aji pai Donald Trump Tom Gonzo Facebook Josh hawley Ron white
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:19 min | 1 year ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"So, I mean, the thing with bar, though, he, you know, he was responding like he didn't do anything to reprimand Trump. Like, so now he's like on this apology tour. So are you buying this guy or not? I'm not buying him one little bit. I mean, yeah, I mean, if you went back, if you go back to, I mean, I think he was a junior junior attorney on Reagan staff, and I know he was Bush 41. He was the attorney general for Bush 41. One of Bush 41s attorney general. I don't maybe not the whole term. But yeah, no, I don't buy him one bit. No, he's just trying to, he's trying to rewrite history and make himself look better and make himself look like he was standing up to Trump. He didn't stand up to Trump. I mean, I mean, you could say that when did he resign? Like right around Christmas or right before Christmas, a few days before the January 6th, you know, maybe a week or two before the January 6th, I don't remember the exact date. But he could get wind of that and said, I don't want to be on board for this because you know if the ship is sinking, I'm going to jump forward and theoretically he could have, he could have done some good by not being there by not being in power by not being Trump's attorney general in those last few days. Yeah, he could have, but that doesn't mean that he was looking after his own skin. Yeah, and this book tour, you know, I don't know anyone that would buy the book. What's the name of the book? The real lame name. One damn. Damn it, somebody will tell you. One damn thing after another, something like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, it's like, dude, you are on board for that. You know, like you were part of the fire, you know? Yeah, you know, and in the midst of, you know, you got COVID, you got rising fascism, you got a war that might spin up to a nuclear war, you know? Trying to rewrite his own personal history and trying to make him look like he was, he was one of the stop gaps, one of the guardrails, you know, he wasn't a guardrail. He wasn't a guardrail. He enabled it. Yeah, he was in the neighborhood. Yeah, he was a co-conspirator enabler. And of course, you know, his earlier attorney generals, you know, Trump, they stood up to him more, Bill Barr didn't Bill Barr, he was an enabler, absolutely. So yeah, I don't buy that one little bit. Not from the body language we're saying, but not from the obvious historical references, body language aside..

Bush Trump Reagan Bill Barr
"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

Discussions of Truth

08:46 min | 1 year ago

"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

"Dot com. So that's what's up on in my world. Fantastic Tom. I'm going to throw a couple of people your way. You can look at them see if you're interested. If you like, I'll make the introduction that's going to be more heat and fix, so look for that coming down the pipeline. I'll send that along to your assistant assistant. And I look forward to the next outreach on your next installment, Tom. Thank you. Thank you, Ian. Thanks so much for having me. Ladies and gentlemen, Tom Hartman and Tom is Tom has been a guest here well, I think that's the 5th time and this series that he's doing, really, really digs in. Again, folks. I exhort you to not get caught up in the political battles. You know, people will want to bring you into the bring into the right side, bring in the left side, and if you go left and you don't go right, you're a traitor. Let me insert this for you. And if we look back at the course of the past few hundred years, these nations that we see today simply are a product of this is just the way it is, folks. They are product and let's look at the United States, for example, the United States was founded and is a product of religious freedom. It just is. There's no argument in that. The Mayflower says sale, what was it from Dartmouth to land on Dartmouth was the second or third stop? I think it was the Landon what they renamed Plymouth rock. Massachusetts and those were those pilgrims folks. Those were religious freedom. Seekers. That's what they wanted was freedom of religion. In a time, at that age where massive militaries were conquering large spoils of land. In the name of religion. This is a fact. This is simply a fact. If we go back to 1630s, that's what the world was living. Has this world changed that much? Well, I recommend you look at a listen to a guy and look at a guy named Eric John Phelps, a past guest on this program. And he certainly comes at his argument as to the various tumultuous elements of life that we are witnessing experiencing. He comes at it from a religious standpoint. And one of the things, this is why Eric John Phelps was somebody that I recommend you listen to. Listen to where he's coming from. Because folks, the one constant that the past 2000 years of mankind and look, you'll probably live a life of what 70 80, 90 years, maybe less, maybe more. Yeah, I think with the average life expectancy of a human being today is somewhere within that range or would think. Me, myself, the same. And we have a very small limited time on this planet to give society or the societies that we live in. Our contributions. So you make a decision as to what you want to leave the world. And whether you're leaving the world a beautiful children that are highly functional, in the society, or you're leaving the world books or you're leaving the world political decisions, whatever it may be. Artwork, whatever, whatever your contribution is to the world, that's between you and your time on the planet. But if we take 2000 years, whereas your time and my time is a mere mere mere fraction, here's one constant. So we look back and we say, okay, people have through ancient times. 5. For freedoms, one of those constants is religious freedom. And so then we insert Rome. Well, now go to Eric Sean Phelps because Eric John Phelps, folks. We'll dig into Rome and he will dig into the power structures within Rome. Primarily the present day Pope that is a Jesuit. His name is Pope Francis. And if you're a Catholic, this isn't a knock on Catholicism. I'm not a knock on any religion, per se. But it is a suggestion that you merely consider some of these constant powers that remain in power and how they might influence. Various political decisions, today, now big brother net surveillance mass surveillance over the information that you put into Facebook or Twitter or Google. Again, those are your decisions. And frankly, I don't care. I don't personally care. What is being stored and as Tom has just said, you must know that everything you do put in is being stored. And it's being assigned. To you. So that so that nothing, nothing is held without record. Now, it has its pros, and it has its cons, but it does seem that we are allowing this development of technology to outgrow our ability to contain the power within the government. And as Tom just said, Europe is much more. Advanced. Than we are. We have a lot of work to cut out for us in the United States, folks. And again, let me end. Me and my stating where I basically began. And that is, do not get caught up. This is my advice. Do not get caught up in the political melee. Of your local governance, your state governance to your federal government's D.C., get caught up in the attacks on your constitutional rights, be proud to be an American. Regardless of where that family came from, mine personally came from France and England. And if yours came from Venezuela or it came from Africa or it came from China, regardless of where it came from, it is here in this country and you should be proud that you live within this country and you live within the boundaries in the context of its inherent constitution. Do not get caught up in the political divides because this isn't about a political party. The political parties are all controlled by big money. And if you had listened to me before, you will know that the United States Federal Reserve bank folks that finance is basically finances. The United States government, it is a very corrupt machine that is controlled by and large by European entities. It's not controllable by the American entities. In fact, in fact, the United States flag. You look at and see as The Star-Spangled Banner. That was developed. Out of the adoption by Benjamin Franklin, and George Washington at Cambridge Massachusetts in 17 75, the adapted what was called the British East Indies flag. A trading company flag. That's who financed. The development. Of their war, the American Revolution. That's a Rothschild controlled entity. Ultimately, controlled by Rome. You can trace those books back. You can trace these back in books. I've got them listed, Eric John, Eric John Phelps, based in Philadelphia, that helps trace that back. So The Star-Spangled Banner vote. It was eventually became the United States flag, but it didn't start that way. The first flag of the United States Continental Congress representing what became the United States was the British East in east flag. And it had in its upper left corner, the very union Jack consisting of the flag, excuse me, the crosses of Saint Andrew, saint George and Saint Patrick. The three patrons patron saints of the United Kingdom. Again, we go back to the pilgrims, don't we? We go back to the pilgrimage, go out to Plymouth rock. Well, those people fled England because essentially they were fleeing.

Eric John Phelps Tom Tom Hartman Dartmouth United States Rome Eric Sean Phelps Plymouth rock Pope Francis Landon Tom just Ian Massachusetts United States Federal Reserve British East Indies Twitter Facebook Venezuela Google D.C.
"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

Discussions of Truth

04:52 min | 1 year ago

"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

"200 million Americans. Awesome Facebook and used your own preferences to customize ads that went to you on the day of the third presidential debate on the couple of weeks before the election. And the Trump campaign ran over a 150,000 different variations of one hand and each little tiny tweak of those 150,000 variations. They had their running four year 50,000 variations a day. Was they would tweak the ads slightly. So the, you know, if you had a particular preference or a particular aversion to something or from something, they would build that into the air. You know, a motorcycle or blue jeans or an attractive person of a gender that you're attracted to or whatever it may be. Particular brand of cigarette needs smoke. This is. Micro targeting. Super micro targeting. And it was extraordinarily effective in 2016. It put Donald Trump in The White House in my opinion. Between Facebook and the Russian intervention. So I think if it wasn't for those two things, he would have a way behind in the dust. Let me ask you this question. And it goes off of the title of the last chapter in your book, Tom. Are we doomed to live under big brother's watchful eye? Well, to the certain extent, yeah. I mean, we always thank these tradeoffs. Do you want a smart TV? Right. You want to spark TV, then it's got an Android operating system, Google allows everything you've watched. And it does keep track. Do you want to use it as smartphone if you want a smartphone, either Google or apple is, you know, is going to know everything that basically that you do. And you want to have a thermostat in your house that's smart. You're going to have to give up your information to somebody or a smart value or a smart lighting system or whatever. So we all make these tradeoffs. My argument isn't that the tradeoffs are bad or that are giving our information is necessary. It's that when we do it and we're not informed about what's going on or what the potential consequences are, that's bad. I've got next hour here Harvey wasserman joining the show. Are you familiar with Harvey? Oh, I feel Harvey for years. This is a great guy. And Tommy called me, he called me on top of the hour just for this bird brought you on. And he says, can you, can you go a little early? I said, no, I got Tom harman's sketchbook. Oh, Tom Hardman, he's a friend of mine. Tell him I said hi. That's great. I'll tell Arby's. So Harvey's going to talk, of course, the nuclear nuclear health, I suppose is the way I'll phrase it. Right now in the world we've got, do you want to, do you want to thread any of this big brother surveillance? Tom into what's happening right now in Europe and in regards to this Russian Russian invasion of Ukraine, which I'm like completely appalled at this guy. This guy's doing this, but here he is. It's what we're living. Russia has now invaded Ukraine and people are dying. Do you want to thread any big tech into that? Well, I think the thing that would tie back to my book is the fact that Russia has now blocked Facebook in their country. And they were very happy to use Facebook to tell Donald Trump to become president, but now that Facebook is outing what they're doing, you know, the war crimes that many of Ukraine suddenly Facebook you just not available in Russia. A friend of mine has family and Russia we were talking about it for two days. He's been absolutely unable to communicate with them. You know, it's just like the country has shut down. This is the dystopia that we want to avoid. You know, government, like I said, like the NFL, you know, they should be setting reasonable rules with reasonable penalties when people are breaking the rules so that we all know how the game is played and everything's out front. But when you, when you let corporations operate in a lawless environment or when governments operate in a lawless environment where they're accountable to nobody, the outcome is never good. Yeah, absolutely. Tom, as we wind down, I want you to please update listeners as to how your program's going and what's the next. This isn't the final and starboard installment in this series or is it? There's one more book it'll be coming out in September. It's called the hidden history of neoliberalism, reaganism got an America. And that'll be the 8th and the last book in the series. And the show is doing fine. I got a new project. I'm already done op-ed every day 5 days a week. It's free. There's no advertising as over at Harvard or torque dot com. And in addition to doing the radio and TV show, you can find it on our.

Facebook Harvey Donald Trump Tom harman Tom Hardman Russia Ukraine Tom Trump Google Harvey wasserman White House Arby Tommy apple Europe NFL ed every America Harvard
"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

Discussions of Truth

07:21 min | 1 year ago

"hartmann" Discussed on Discussions of Truth

"Trachea here. Oh, hi, I've been waiting for you to call me on Skype. I was attempting to call you on Skype. It didn't go through. Let me try again, or is this a good line for you? You know, we can use the phone like this that it's just fine. Fantastic. Ladies and gentlemen, Tom Hartman, Tom, I have a copy of your most recent book in front of me, the hidden history of big brother in America and ladies and gentlemen, this talks about how the death of privacy and the rise of surveillance threaten the United States and our democracy, Tom, how are things going? It's been, let's see. We talk about once a year I suppose. How have things going since we last spoke? So far so good. Although, you know, everybody in the world is trying to get your personal information so that they can sell it monetize that are using the way you behave. Tom, are you familiar with the guy named Zach Voorhees? You ever heard that name? No. Zack for he's worked for Google for 7 years. And he blew the whistle because they were manipulating search results to favor political searches and query and so he blew the whistle. The DoJ, scoffed at him and so he released 950 so pages through project veritas that might be somebody that you might be interested in looking in to Zack for he's. He's a friend of mine. Be happy to make the intro. So tell us, tell us about tell us about what's happening online. I mean, you know, things have changed so dramatically in the last 20 years and certainly in the last ten, but everything we everything we put into the Internet is basically being stored and tracked. Yeah, it is. It's far more granular than most people realize. Because the Trump administration, how do you buy specifically the former Verizon lawyer and the Trump church the FCC? Ended net neutrality in the United States. We are the only country in the developed world now where the company that brings the Internet into your home. Can literally look at every single keystroke, everything you do, how you do it. There are companies that actually use this data and determine your state of mind, your emotional well-being based on how quickly you type certain words. They know when you look at individual web pages, how long you spend looking at the pictures, how what text you read. Where you go from where you go, literally that read every single email you get, every single email you send. The company is bringing it into your home. What's so ironic is that we form a blow up net neutrality. This is illegal. It was covered under the same laws that cover your phone company. And in fact, right now, your phone company, if they want to listen in on your phone calls, because again, those laws go back to the 1930s, it's called title two and the telecommunications act is they want to look at your phone calls. They have to get a warrant, you know? It requires a warrant from a police agency. But if they want to monitor what you're doing on the browser on your smartphone, they can just take absolutely everything you do. And compile that data and sell it to anybody they want. So we have, we have voluntarily, we are voluntarily giving this information in the guys of connecting with high school friends or connecting with family members, over social media. Is that right? Yeah. And way beyond that, you know, we also voluntarily gave up our right to that privacy. Well, actually, we didn't Donald Trump and I think I did that on our behalf. You know, like I said, we're the only country in the developed world where that's the case. Europe, tightly regulates their Internet service providers. And they have good competition. I mean, you know, in France, you can get high security Internet a hundred beds up and down. Plus a cell phone plus a hundred camp in a channel is the cable TV for about $30 a month. You try that in the United States, but in France you've got literally over a hundred companies competing as to be your Internet service provider, whereas in most of America, there's only one or two companies available. So there's no competition. That's what I was going to say. It's total antitrust issue. What can you say, what can you say about section two 30, you know, this is a law that was written by, I believe, an Oregon senator and a California senator, the laws, a couple decades old, but it's very vaguely written. What can you say about section two 30? Anything that the listeners should be concerned about? Sure, yeah. Let me give you an analogy. If you Ian were to invite, you know, random strangers in your neighborhood, but I'm excited in front of your house. This is, come on in, we're having a party all day, Saturday. And in the back room, there's a bunch of people smoking crack in the front room. There's some guy beating up another guy with a broken bottle and need another back room. There's somebody raping somebody. And the plan and over on the garage, they're showing Punic corn or something. It's a police came in to your house. They would hold a few accountable for all the crimes that you were observing and allowing to happen in your own home. I mean, we all understand that, right? I mean, this is a lot that goes back to the 18 1700s. That probably goes back to British comic book. So up until 1990, I up until, yeah, 1996. This was the law for the Internet as well. If you built a home on the Internet and you invited people in and they committed crimes, you were totally in most crimes, particularly if you had a knowledge of it and still allowed it to happen. And from 1981 until 1996, Nigel peacock and I don't front of mine. We're running from coffee surgery. And they paid us to do this because we had to check every single message we had a whole house of people that worked for us. Then check every single message to make sure that it wasn't, you know, committing a crime, essentially, before it could be released. And or we had to verify where people were so that we could, you know, we have to trust the people who could post. In 96 of us in August, section two 30 is law passed. It basically said, you can invite people into your house. You can have a party. They can be selling drugs. They can be they can be, you know, if you and trafficking, it doesn't matter. You will not be held accountable. And that set off a boom with the 8 park Zuckerberg that was just one other part of the racist man on the planet. And, you know, to this day continues to haunt us from regard to social media. So, you know, and this is, by the way, not just a partisan issue. Yeah, a lot of white hair and Oregon wants to do something about it. He's a Democrat, but Josh Holly wrote a book about this. I mean, the second half of the book is kind of a rant about how liberals want to destroy America or something. But the first third of the book is exactly about this issue. And he does a pretty good job of laying it out. So I think there's a bipartisan consensus that we need to do something about this. But the devil's in the details and since the Supreme Court said that it's perfectly legal for a corporation on politicians. You've got these are now multi $100 billion $1 trillion companies that.

America Tom Hartman Tom Zach Voorhees No. Zack Skype Trump administration Trump church Trachea DoJ Zack FCC France Verizon Donald Trump Google Nigel peacock Oregon Europe
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

01:50 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"All they do is lie about me. And Cardiff electric felt the need to constantly DM me and tell me things that are going on on these sites after I told them don't. So I blocked them from my Twitter accounts because I've asked them on numerous occasions. I don't want to know. Why do you tell me these things? I don't care what these people say. They know where I am every day. Pickwick pub, I'll be there today right after I vote, no who on the recall, you have a problem with me, come there. So all I have to say want to be a tough guy come see me in. Okay. So, I'll be there. I'll be there. Pick with pub. I'll be there. You have a problem. But as far as that, doctor Steve, yeah, I don't want to know this stuff and, you know, and Cardiff just keeps on telling me and I've asked him not to. I have no problem with the man. I don't dislike the guy. So, you know, and I didn't block him from here. But, you know, let's see. Area 51 Republicans don't hang out at the capitol club of D.C.. How do you know that's where I'm going? But anyway, if you have a better idea or where they do hang out, please DM me, if anybody knows, where the G two P hangs out in D.C., please let me know. Because, you know, I'll find them. I'll do my best to find them. Only on with a microphone and a and a bunch of pages of questions. Nothing violent, just doing what I do best interviewing. All right, everybody, I'll see you here on Thursday at noon PST. This is stuttering John seeing.

Cardiff capitol club of D.C. Twitter Steve D.C. John
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

04:18 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"I spent some money yesterday paying a comedian and writer to come up with some great questions from Marjorie trailer green, Lauren boebert, Mitch McConnell, Matt's Jim Jordan, I mean, you know, you name it. We were writing and writing a ton of generics. So your money is going to a good cause. And I will be going to Washington. And I will be hiring a crew. So every dollar helps and, you know, I will soon be booking my flight to D.C., I'm not going to say exactly when I'm going, but I think you all have figured it out. I gotta wait till Congress gets back in session. And I got to order a flag. I think my flag is going to say CNN because I don't get it. It's so me if they want. But either way, you know, you know, I might change a lettuce, so it looks like, either way, it'll be stuttering, John two. And I will be going to D.C. and I will be raising havoc and I'll be calling out these Jack coons for the hypocrisy that they are. And yeah, it's going to be a lot of fun. I hope to get these people. I think army may just say Senate original he to tell him exactly where they hang out. And I look forward to face to face confronting these obstructionist pricks. So S jn, thank you, kinky streets. So I will make up to be on the balcony on this Thursday. That'll make up for last week. And then we'll have another one on Tuesday. So do not feel gypped. I'll always make it up and don't forget Patreon members at Patreon dot com slash stuttering John and YouTube members don't forget that when I start doing these interviews, they will first be uploaded to my Patreon and YouTube members. You will get them first. And then eventually you'll get over to YouTube. And then I'll do a special show from D.C.. Airing all of the interviews in its entirety. So that's what we got planned for the coming months. I will like to plug, I am going to be at the dime bar on Tuesday, September 21st. That's next week. Doing stand up as I prepare and then I'll be at the social and sun valley on the 24th headlining a show there for my buddy comedian travels, Travis tapley. Then I'm off Torino for I'll be headlining the laugh factory at the silver legacy hotel and casino on September 28th through October 3rd. So we have a lot of stand up shows that are coming up and thank you there. My moderator, Benny loco for the $3. Keep those super chats coming, keep the Patreon. Keep those coming as well. And I promise you, I am looking forward to what looks like a great guest on Thursday. And I ain't saying who it is. But it'll be fun and you guys are gonna love it. So I will see you here. On Thursday. Thank you, doctor Steve. Thank John, please unblock heart of electric. He's very hurt and always promotes stuttering John army where every goes. I didn't block him. Lock him from where here? I didn't block him. I don't know. If he's blocked, it wasn't me. I have no idea. You know, you know, I even said hello to him. You know, you know, I blocked him from Twitter because he keeps on telling me shit that's on Reddit. And I don't care about that. I don't want to know anything that's on Reddit. I don't want to know anything that's on any of these social media sites. There are a bunch of losers. There are hateful trolls who have no lives who are relentlessly obsessed with me. And

Lauren boebert D.C. Jack coons Jim Jordan Patreon Mitch McConnell YouTube Marjorie John Travis tapley silver legacy hotel Matt CNN Benny loco Congress Washington Senate army John army
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"And so here in Oregon is called the Oregon healthcare planet thing. It's something like that. When I lived in Vermont, they had it was doctor dinosaur, I think, you know, Howard dean Brandon Medicaid for kids as doctor dinosaur program. Medical in California. It varies from state to state, but it's just Medicaid. Okay, because I mean, I don't know, it just seems like California is like way in head of the rest of the country. Well, generally speaking, that's true. On most things. But y'all don't have single payer healthcare yet. You do have there are two here in the United States. We've got all three, right? We've got the crazy quilts, patchwork, for profit system, that we uniquely have among the rest of the world. We've got socialized medicine in our veterans administration system. And we've got single payer through both Medicare and Medicaid. Those are both single payer systems. And that's why, you know, the easiest solution to all this is get rid of that 20% gap in Medicare. Just close that up. And we don't need it. You know, we put there for bad purposes in the first place. And then drop the eligibility age from 65 down to zero. And poof, you've got Denmark. But then what happens to companies like are you now? A united health. I know you listed all the top ten. And anthem and do they go out of business or are they able to stay in business with a single payer plan? You know, it's hard to say. And frankly, that's not my concern. But I can see their lobbyists hiding out the Republican Party. Oh yeah. Well, every year there are thousands of companies that go out of business..

Howard dean Brandon Oregon California Vermont Medicare united health United States Denmark Republican Party
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:24 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"Never was able to get it through. Went back to Saskatchewan, which is, you know, it's a geographically, it's a big state or a big province, but it's like Vermont. You know, it's got a very small population. So you can do retail politics really, really easily. When we used to live in Vermont and somebody made a joke to me once that everybody in Vermont, shaken Bernie Sanders hand at least three times. I think it's probably ten times as more accurate. I kept bumping into him wherever I went around the state. He was always doing a gig someplace. And so that's what Tommy Douglas did. He went back to Saskatchewan. He did this retail politics, one on one, all over the state for a couple of years. Got elected governor or prime minister or whatever the title is. It's neither, but a premier premier of Saskatchewan. And push through a single payer healthcare system. And Saskatchewan loved it. It was cheaper. It was more effective. The doctors loved it. They were getting paid all the time and so many a lot of poverty and Saskatchewan, a lot of doctors were just doing charity work. Everybody loved it. And pretty soon, you know, British Columbia and Alberta, they were like, hey, we want this. And so they were cloning it and then Ontario did, and then Newfoundland did. And, you know, by the end of the decade, the federal government of Canada jumped in so that they could create kind of a back backend system where if somebody from Saskatchewan got sick and Toronto, the Toronto system or the Ontario system would pay the bill and then they could recover the money from the Saskatchewan system via the federal system. And so that's how that worked..

Saskatchewan Vermont Bernie Sanders Tommy Douglas British Columbia Ontario Alberta Newfoundland Toronto federal government Canada
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:20 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"And as a consequence of that, and then they also started a lottery for third world countries, which are mostly countries filled with people of color. And so as a consequence of that, there has been a really substantial amount of immigration into the United States since the 60s since the mid 60s of people who are not white. And white immigration into the United States also went down substantially starting in the 80s with Reagan revolution because white people in Europe are looking at the United States going. You guys don't even have a healthcare system. Why would I want to go there? And so, you know, we just and so immigration really drove it and now we're in the second and third generation of that and those second and third generation immigrants are having children. And so the racial balance of America is changing. And in about 15, 20 years, it's going to whites are going to become a minority overall. And that's driving some of the hysteria in the Republican Party. In fact, I think that's probably driving a lot of the history and the Republican Party. Sure. But then Tom, you know, because people were asking me about your thoughts on the, you know, on the recall, I'm in California. Yeah. Are you in California? No, I'm in Portland, Oregon. Okay, that's what my oldest is. Okay. But yeah, yeah. But okay, I don't then understand that maybe you can explain to me, how could an African American like Larry elder be a trumper? I don't understand that. Trump is a notorious racist. How and why? The answer that comes to mind is one that probably I shouldn't say..

United States Republican Party Reagan Europe California Tom Portland Oregon Larry elder Trump
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

04:39 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"And then like the rest of them, it's sort of like, oh, you know, it's like a day at the park and nothing's really happening. They should be hearing from us, a sense of urgency. They need to hear from their constituents, you need to get to D.C. and stay in D.C. and cast things and there needs to be a sense of urgency. And just like dynamin, a lot of people are saying this. Yes. Republicans are other minority, but act like they are still in charge because we let them. Exactly. Yeah. I mean, I hear more from McConnell being quoted in the press, then, Schumer. It's freaking ridiculous. And just like balloons. Like, you know, to Pelosi's credit, she's throwing these bombs. And, you know, she not only did she get it done, but she knows like McConnell to throw the bombs. But you know what? When Klobuchar went down and she said, I'm going to taking the battle where it is. I'm going to go down to Georgia and hold an open session for my committee. I'm voting rights. All Schumer could say was a little one sentence to dismiss her because all the media went down the recovered her. They fear her. They do not fear Schumer. He's a nice guy. Yeah, his headlines are, you know, like, nice, nice headlines. Oh, bubble. No. And all you hear about is freaking McConnell. All right now. Well, you know, Amy just to, you know, I met with I met with a writer yesterday because you know, I'm going to D.C..

dynamin D.C. McConnell Schumer Klobuchar Pelosi Georgia Amy
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:04 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"It's a real battle for us in states. But what are we going to run on or what did you expect us to do? We have to run on things that we pass. Yes. People, what are you going to run on in 2022? What am I going to tell all those people that donated to you in 2020? And we lost all those seats in the Senate that we thought we could take. What are we going to tell them? Like, we have to have issues that we have to say. We got this done. We got that done. We got the other thing done in the stub. And that's why you should try. But isn't that in essence the problem with, you know, our political system right now? Because the Republicans know that if we get things done, then they're going to run on it. So they obstruct so we don't get things done. And the cycle continues and continues. And then America, the American people of the ones who suffer because of it. Yeah, I agree with you. And the sun I just right now, I mean, there's a few of them that have a real sense of urgency and then two thirds just seem to be out to lunch and not care. The Republicans obviously don't care the running out the clock. But there's enough Democrats that don't have a sense of urgency with our time. I mean, same thing happened in 2008, year two years. And then we, you know, we're in gridlock again. So we have this ability to not be in gridlock and as far as I'm concerned, these people should take a week or two in August and the rest of the time, they should be in D.C..

Senate America D.C.
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:43 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"And I think the best way to move on from it, again, is to pass things is to get inflation done to remind people that the government does work for you because that's the whole thing with authoritarianism. It's saying that the government doesn't work. And the government is bad. So I think our job for Biden as well as getting our members of Congress back is to pass things to show them that government actually does work. Yeah, and have you noticed, and I've talked to several guests about this. The coverage by CNN and MSNBC has slowly become like Fox News. They were beaten up Biden every single chance they got. And I'm saying to myself, why are they gonna now take the anti Democrat position when we already have Fox News doing that? And they're the number one news station as far as ratings. Why is CNN following this? Yeah. I got to be honest with you. I've stopped watching. I just, you know, I had to watch during the Trump era for my list. But I just, I don't find much of anything interesting on those stations anymore. Up tune in once in a while at the top of the hour just if there's breaking news. But most of my news I get online..

Biden Fox News CNN MSNBC Congress government
"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

05:13 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"And that's a lot thanks to him. And, you know, Amy at what point are people gonna wake up and realize that the Democrats are the party that actually care about you and the Republicans only care about the wealthy? You know, I mean, when are they gonna finally realize this? Well, you know, the thing that Trump was successful at during his four years is setting up this sort of vast disinformation network and that's something that I focused on in my work with tracking authoritarianism. And it existed before. I mean, we had Fox News, but it's Fox News has been amped up to a whole new level of, you know, at some point, before Trump, they were reporting. They were conservative, a different point of view, but they were somewhat of a news show. That is so long gone. That is just now a station that is basically propaganda. I mean, you have three hosts at night, all of whom are fully vaccinated, telling people not to wear masks or get vaccinated. You know, it's spreading disinformation. And not only not only Fox News now you have that whole ecosystem that was developed under Trump's time that is just spreading lies and disinformation..

Fox News Amy Trump
Jessica Chastain Is Riveting in 'The Eyes of Tammy Faye'

Filmspotting

02:06 min | 2 years ago

Jessica Chastain Is Riveting in 'The Eyes of Tammy Faye'

"Mother. This is jim baker. My husband jessica chastain there as tammy faye bakker in the eyes of tammy faye which opens nationwide this weekend. Andrew garfield co stars as jim baker. Tammy's husband who people of a certain age like us josh. Remember as one of the most prominent televangelists of nineteen eighty and nineteen eighty. Nine baker was sentenced to forty five years in prison for fraud. This movie is directed by michael showalter. Who made the very good two. Seventeen rom com. The big sick. The eyes of tammy faye came up a couple of weeks ago. During our fall movie preview. You have seen the movie and as i alluded to. We lived through the eighties. The bakers were inescapable in popular culture. At seem does the movie convinced that there is more there was more to jim. Tammy faye than we remember or what we saw in parodies from the time i mean it had to for me because my only point of reference was jan hooks portraying. Tammy faye bakker. On saturday night. Live visiting the church lady. I think phil hartmann was was jim baker. Actually so i didn't really know much beyond that of the story. I mean would have been a little kid at that time. And so yeah this was interesting to get some of the background info a lot of it drawn from the two thousand or two thousand two documentary of the same name. The eyes of tammy faye haven't seen that one. But from what. I understand both at end this i can attest to very much rehabilitation projects. You know to to say that there was more and of course there was more to to this woman than what we saw on saturday night. Live or in news. Reports jessica chastain as tammy faye is going to make you believe that no matter what. She is the powerhouse force in this film. The reason why i liked it. I think overall as a movie. It's it's a little strange. It's both really obvious like hitting its themes and points very underlying them like she on like her makeup his underlying. You know

Tammy Faye Jim Baker Jessica Chastain Andrew Garfield Michael Showalter Jan Hooks Phil Hartmann Tammy Josh Baker JIM
"hartmann" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

The Nicole Sandler Show

08:08 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

"Well michael from. I think from the bronx right. It's been a long time All right so. I mentioned thom. Hartmann was going to be a long today and and he is here. Tom always great to see you. And thank you so much for joining us. Welcome colds grit to see her. So i need to be here with you. Thank you for inviting me. Oh it's my pleasure and thank you for always joining us. You released new book. It seems like about every six months. I may be exaggerating it. I just think you don't sleep. You just go read four or five hours a day and you do a three hour radio. Show a day until you don't you. I don't know how you do it. 'cause i understand i got you so. The new book is the hidden history of american healthcare. Why sickness bankrupts you and makes others insanely rich and this one. Obviously i was. I mean i'm interested in all your books. 'cause they're all fascinating but this one affects us all in in in more personal ways than some of the others. I mean monopolies are important but healthcare we all have skin in this game And so i read it with great interest now so much of this is recent history. We lived through it just tanu eleven years ago. We were both you know on the air. At the time on air america when the the affordable care act was being written in a number of different committees and it was a year long process and it was painful and it finally passed and it wasn't what we had hoped it would be throughout the entire negotiations. But you actually start further back and we'll get to that But but the introduction. I always enjoy reading author introductions. 'cause i it's it's sort of a little addendum to the book and in your introduction. You're you're talking about cova here. We are and the introduction titled how a single payer healthcare system helped stop kovic nineteen. And you tell the story of taiwan and how taiwan navigated this pandemic and while infections are are blowing up everywhere. Taiwan held it down to almost single digits for for most of that time Screw the impact of day before yesterday. Taiwan has had a total of eight hundred thirty seven dots for the entire year. And a half right now. I gotta show you because i pulled up some Some graphs so this is interesting. All the daily new cases here total corona virus cases in taiwan. Look at this graph up until a. My eyes are not good up until april of this year. They really had nothing. Can you see that. It's like a blip and then very and that's when the delta variant came in and all of these graphs that i pulled. It's all the same thing. This daily new cases in taiwan. They had a big spike. But it looks like it's back down again to almost nothing and active cases in taiwan. Same thing i mean they all they you know. They all came into the country. I mean there's a lot of air. Traffic throws to taiwan. It's an island nation. These mostly not endogenous carey. In an internal cases. These are visitors rioting bring delta cova. So so tom. How were they able to do that. How were they able to hold it off for so long. While the rest of the world was exploding in in this pandemic and we were all locked down and and yet cases where just a replicating exponentially. How did taiwan do it. They have what is probably the cleanest most efficient single payer system in the world and and in part because it's relatively new In the last forty forty years. Or so i had to go back and look at my own book and see when they put it into place but there was an american professor from princeton. Who went over there. After the as the country was making the transition from a military dictatorship into a democracy and gave a speech about You know single payer healthcare and they hired him to write their system he did. They put into place and boom. That was it off to the racist. So when you're born in taiwan you are given a kind of a an. Id card number like our social security number that you can get a earth here in the united states. You're giving a an id card that You can use to access to medical records too many computer anywhere in the world you can use it to pay for our to check yourself into a hospital visit a doctor to pay for your pharmaceuticals it is complete and so because they had this national database and everybody was in a medical history was in it and everything was going on with there and it's a very they're very technologically advanced nation You know one of the major developers of microchips around the world and stuff they were able to put into place. We got our first. Kobe case a year and a half a little more than a year and a half go january twentieth through the twenty and they got their first day later january twenty first at the end of the year. We have a half a million dead people and they had media does Because they were able to put into place within a matter of weeks a testing and contact tracing system was so efficient that they could isolate the client every single case. They were able to isolated. Let it die out. Let these people recover Go back into society and And keep their island should disease-free for year. Mazel it's amazing. And they had this big spike when when the delta of the orient hit but it looks like they got it under control fairly quickly to now the the graph is down to where it was before and we have nothing of the sort over here. I know there are a lot more people in the us than in taiwan. But it just shows that when you have a system in place that takes care of people it can work. You can take care of people on the other thing that has shows. Is that in in the united states. We always have Treated individual health and family health at it as kind of one category and we have one kind of professional doctors and like that and then public health as a completely separate category. you can get 'em ph degree masters of public health You know if you're gonna work in public health And my son was a public health officer for county in washington state. And it's like these. Are we treat them as their separate things in taiwan the same thing. It's all one thing and that's the case in most of the other developed countries in the world And single payer systems make that. Just seamless may a very easy and so therefore they're super resilient when it comes to dealing with something like a pandemic. Wow i'm before we move on. I wanna i wanna read a paragraph from the book. It's on page fifty three. And it's under the heading of america. The land of the sick and you write america's the only developed country in the world that doesn't recognize healthcare as a human right the only country with more than two thirds of its population lacking access to affordable healthcare. And the only country in the developed world that has since its founding continuously. Enslaved and legally oppressed and disenfranchised a large minority of its population because of their because of their race This says so much read. This is this is the problem. That's endemic here and and it didn't have to be this way so you could do go back you start with the history of you know healthcare in the united states and i didn't realize i learned so much from you all the time with thom hartmann that there's always been this battle. There are those who wanted a single payer medicare for all system although it wasn't called that back then and there are those who who fought against it and they they still they even use the old tropes of or its government control they..

taiwan Taiwan Hartmann united states thom cova Tom michael carey princeton tom Kobe washington thom hartmann medicare
"hartmann" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

The Nicole Sandler Show

08:40 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

"You know the emotions go from one extreme to another. I used to do stuff with music. So i mixed the audio over the music. Because that's how i could express myself. Obviously i can't do that now but again all post that. But that's the that's what i'm going back to is feeling that and You know. I know. I wanna watch some of these shows because i need to understand as much as we can understand what happened And i thought well. I remember it so well. I don't need to relive it but the way watching that last night the way i felt it in the pitcher my stomach it just brought back all those horrible feelings so i got something else i want to share with you to maybe make you feel a little better. There is a book and a mad at myself that i didn't think about this until now but there is a book written by my former colleague at winz. In miami. jim. Defeaty who was a major florida journalists. These days he works for cbs four. He's their main political guy. He just facing south florida every friday morning but back in two thousand one he saw he read about all the planes were diverted to nova scotia and he wrote but he went up there. He met the people and he wrote an amazing book called the day. The world came to town now. When i got the book years later after i started working with jim i couldn't put it down. I read it in literally. Twenty four hours. I could not put it down and it renewed my faith in humanity seriously. It was just heartwarming and wonderful on the true story of the people whose planes they were in the air when the towers were hit and their planes were diverted to gander newfoundland and they were stuck there for a few weeks and the town of gander newfoundland took took in these people and the stories that jim told in this book. Stay with me. Well there's a broadway musical called a damn come now. I can't think of the name of it not come. Fly away Oh come away from. Come away from here. I'll i'll get it. I can't believe i'm drawing a blank on it. Come from away. it's called come from away. Big broadway musical. That is not i. I made the mistake of saying it was inspired by jim's book. No obviously it was inspired by the events of nine eleven but Jim was You know they used some of his stories and so now there's a new updated version of the book. The day the world came to town. That's just out. I think last week. So i spoke to jim today. you know of course meet the space cadet. He's going to join us a week from monday. So on the twentieth. So we'll talk about and a lot of other things but the other thing. I wanna tell you as one read the book. It will renew your faith in humanity really at a time when you might be down about people. Hello i know. i am This book will just restore your faith. And i've heard only amazing things about the play. Come from away well apple. Tv has a televised version of it. That they premier tonight or today maybe live already. So that's something you can do this weekend if you can't i mean a lot of people are feeling like ptsd from watching the video again. I mean remember. In the immediate aftermath the the planes hitting the world trade center were played over and over and over again on the television a rolex stopping already. Because if it's it doesn't help so you know we don't we're bringing it's bringing back floods of memories and bad memories and so it just a different perspective on nine eleven how these people in the town of gander newfoundland open their homes in their lives to strangers. Who were stranded there. I'm telling you if you need something to pull you out of the depression of reliving. Nine eleven read The day the world came to town and watch come from away. I know i'm going to watch it probably tonight. All right Thom hartmann's can be joining us few minutes but i think we have time for call and we've got one coming in Hi who's this. Oh i didn't mean to hit the clause button new york city. Hey michael from new york city. It's been a long time. It has been a long time right now screaming. I'm up in cape cod massachusetts on small vacation with the wife and we had like a fan. A small family reunion at family. Living in take causes nothing like family. I'm telling you especially. I was so moved by your recollecting of what happened. Nine eleven how it affected. Everyone and i thought i had to call because i was watching. Msnbc earlier today and they were doing a compare contrast between nine eleven then and nine eleven now in terms of republicans now back in back twenty years ago. We were off shaken by what took place in new york city. Yeah i mean my life. And i saw it on television planes hitting the towers and the towers and admiral was in cooperation as to getting down to the. How the hell something like that abbott. And then we saw the deal some republicans the only wanted to go up to a certain point of investigating and getting to the truth and then they started getting into the cover ups. If you wanna call it and when you look at what occurred earlier this year january sick. yeah now. One regular republican wants to touch on. What the hell happened if assists are leading mister forty five off the hook after we have audio and video showing him inciting that every crowds that berry mile to do what they did to. Us capitol attacking police so saying police that republicans have now on record and have been called out for using cox as proxy as vowed demings from florida who alise officer herself calling out these republicans right so we are at the point. We are at the point of really putting our foot down and the miami truth and justice. That's what happened then. The vaccinations that's affecting. I shouldn't say back the the virus. Kobe viruses still affecting us. Republicans are ones that wants to hurt this nation. I don't know what the hell the problem is is despicable and this anti-vice civil anti americans and we say never forget nine eleven right. Yeah never forget passed off but no forget of lessons supposed to be taught to us. Michael no you know you are correct and things. It seems like things have just steamrolled since then unfortunately everything changed i think on nine eleven and bin laden when you look back on it got what he wanted. I mean our society was affected in a big way things. Nothing has been the same sense. And so i don't know. I don't know that you can connect today's republican party to that although certainly can because it's all interconnected Look they're the ones who are got into that now. still around. now. I think about what would have happened. If if al gore had rightfully take the oval office because he didn't win the popular vote in two thousand things. I think would be so wholly different. Both on nine eleven. Who knows what would have i there. We can't go back and say that wouldn't have happened. Although there's a good chance that wouldn't have happened. We don't know i just know. I think the world would be very different. Now but i do the woulda coulda should as all the time doesn't help at all so you've got to figure out how to get past it. We gotta figure out what to do about. Today's republican party because this is nothing i imagined even twenty years ago. Hey michael. I'm going to run. Because i got tom hartman. Standing by it's nice year from you. Thank you to all right. You take care bye-bye all right..

gander newfoundland jim new york city miami south florida nova scotia newfoundland cbs florida tom hartman world trade center Jim cape cod Msnbc apple depression massachusetts abbott michael Kobe
Accuser at R. Kelly Sex-Trafficking Trial Resumes Testimony

Thom Hartmann Program

00:14 sec | 2 years ago

Accuser at R. Kelly Sex-Trafficking Trial Resumes Testimony

"New York. A key accuser R. Kelly, sex trafficking trial resume testimony, Describing in more detail how she says she was abused by the singer during their relationship. Kelly has denied accusations he preyed on your Honda pace and others.

R. Kelly New York Kelly Honda
"hartmann" Discussed on #digitalsuccess - Social Media Marketing Podcast by TheAngryTeddy.com

#digitalsuccess - Social Media Marketing Podcast by TheAngryTeddy.com

05:31 min | 2 years ago

"hartmann" Discussed on #digitalsuccess - Social Media Marketing Podcast by TheAngryTeddy.com

"Skipped alfano antonin sport shaft on otani imports with yet as mountain areas option magazine or the business inborn On how does this to alabama says the mice nor time Msac maga levant doing disney. Susan at Gets the house often. Two main path leaning keeps all immobile. Tips county snakes tune us to powerplant by the Pops batting From these influence of best not only the problem soymeal being the whole the name of time gibson gaza in mp's orleans often authentic authentic In is does not really can't beasley is on some the light damn the Influence on its its ability. Rash of from from teddy podcast seen loitering in loyalties h index scenes only hinge on sin era market. All shalt be to twits yemen. They are unkindness. Guichet tough life..

alfano antonin Tips county alabama Susan disney gaza beasley orleans Guichet
Serial stowaway Marilyn Hartman arrested yet again

Bob Sirott

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

Serial stowaway Marilyn Hartman arrested yet again

"Stowaway is at it again. Maryland. Hartman was arrested for trespassing at O'Hare yesterday investigators tractor with a GPS on her ankle bracelet. After she left the residential facility where she's being held. Hartmann has a history of sneaking past airport security and boarding planes illegally. She's been arrested at O'Hare and midway several times. 69 year old is expected to be sent to Cook County Jail and the Cook County Sheriff's Department plans to seek approval for a felony escape charge. Some state

Hartman Maryland Hartmann Cook County Sheriff's Departme Cook County Jail
After nearing a deal for probation, ‘serial stowaway’ is arrested again at Chicago O’Hare

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona

01:03 min | 2 years ago

After nearing a deal for probation, ‘serial stowaway’ is arrested again at Chicago O’Hare

"You might remember the serial stowaway Maryland Hartman. She was notorious for getting past security and onto airplanes with no ticket. It's happened time and time again. She managed to escape the residential facility, where she was ordered held and make her way back to O'Hare to Ewing has the rest from Chicago. Hartmann has been living in a residential facility her Russ comes two weeks after a plea deal for a pending case. She was had to get 18 months of probation and court ordered mental health treatment. At noon Tuesday, Her ankle monitor outfitted with GPS was tracked, leaving that same residential facility and showed her heading for O'Hare International Airport Terminal one Device even has a phone built into it. It was called, but Maryland Hartmann didn't answer. An alarm went off after it was activated on Hartmann's ankle monitor. She was taken into custody by the Chicago Police Department. Hartmann did not enter any secure areas this time, but she's admitted to doing this at least 30 times. Hartman is reported to suffer from bipolar

Hartmann Hartman Maryland Ewing O'hare International Airport T Russ Chicago Chicago Police Department Bipolar
How Police Violence Could Impact The Health Of Black Infants

Travis Holcombe

06:58 min | 3 years ago

How Police Violence Could Impact The Health Of Black Infants

"Floyd's killing in Minneapolis placed police violence again in the national limelight, with protests erupting. But black and Brown communities say the effective police violence is felt long after demonstrations died down. In fact, research shows trauma from racism and violence can leave imprints on a community's health, including on pregnant women. Here's NPR's Yuki Noguchi. Outside the corner store where George Floyd died. Murals, stuffed animals and origami cranes filled the street. So I'm Rachel Heart of men. I am on the faculty. Rachel Hardman grew up nearby and it's a public health professor at the University of Minnesota. We walk in a field where there's a memorial for victims of police violence. It looks like a replica of a cemetery with about 200 grave markers like Ralph Bell, right? Hard del Cheryl over here. Many of these people were local and died at the hands of police. Travis Jordan in Minneapolis. He's actually it was a friend of one of my dear friends, Hardman surveys to makeshift cemetery. My first thought, is it This isn't even all of the names. And that breaks my heart. This scene, she says, doesn't capture the whole of the problem that police violence leaves marks across a community of survivors, their families and neighbors. Hardiman studies racial disparities in health, focusing on a longstanding problem. Black mothers die in childbirth of 3 to 4 Times The rate of whites That holds true regardless of wealth or education. Black babies are more than twice as likely to die in their first year. Research suggests racial discrimination is a likely cause of both preterm birth and infant mortality. Weighing factors like obesity, smoking or poor prenatal care. Hartmann's latest research looks at how police violence in particular might affect that. She studied women in and around Minneapolis after police shot Philando Castille in 2016, and two years later, Thurman Blevins Thurman Blevins had just been killed in North Minneapolis. And we asked folks do you feel like this is impacting your current pregnancy and Over half of the women in our study said Yes, nearly 60% of those women gave birth to pre term babies who were underweight or died at route, she says. It's about stress. Ah, lifetime of struggles of her housing, education and safety. Large body research shows that that stress across pregnancy can have an impact on low birth weight and preterm birth in particular. Then in the start of life is so important, because if we can't get that, right, you know we're setting someone up for a lifetime of pain and a struggle and disadvantage. Examining these struggles, Hardman says, might help doctors better understand challenges for women like Raven Cane. I meet cane and her three week old daughter, Remmy. Okay. Prior to Remmy Kane had five miscarriages with no medical explanation about what caused them. I had gotten an ultrasound and had seen a baby in a strong heartbeat. Literally had come back the next day, and there was nothing there. So I just had this really high anxiety anxiety about losing her pregnancy with Remmy, too. She was about four months pregnant when the pandemic hit. Then George Floyd died blocks from her parent's home. You know, During that time, it was constant sirens when they were saying that the KKK was supposedly in town, and it's just stressful. It's like and then you're trying to Carry life and then you're thinking about them being a black person in this world and the things that they might encounter, Kane tried to distract herself by hosting a family party to reveal she was having a girl. My dad was jumping open down like he was so heavy, he said. He was in the garage and cried a little bit, cried partly out of relief. He told her the world wasn't safe for black boys. Midwife Rebecca Polston. Here's that often. Holsten started roots community birth center five years ago to offer women more support than a traditional hospital. Clinic defied the odds in five years on Lee. One client has had a preterm birth, she says. That's because the clinic addresses trauma. Some of the things that we explore is not finding out the sex. Of their baby because the stress that it brings when you find out that you're having a black sun. That kind of stress, she says, is palpable all around her. After George Floyd's death, Colston says she confronted a group of white men flying Confederate flags three blocks away. She closed the birthing center for a week. But the threat, she says, isn't just from outsiders. Once an elderly neighbor fainted nearby, Polston and her staff rushed to help and the police came up with their hands on their guns saying, What are you doing to us while we're taking blood pressure clearly healthcare providers those Interactions where those who you call for help. May not come to help you but come to harm you shadows every aspect of one's life and it becomes especially acute when you're in your birthing phase of your life. That rings true for coming Love Valenzuela. I don't know how to explain it, but I feel like that trauma is just in my body balance way Low is a doula. Originally from Chile Four years ago, she went into early labor. On her way to the hospital. Police pulled her over for driving with high beams on she told him. him. I I have have an an emergency. emergency. I'm I'm pregnant pregnant and and he he stops stops me. me. I I need need to to see see your your driver's driver's license license and and registration. registration. So So I'm I'm scrambling, scrambling, shaking. shaking. Just remembering makes like my heart beagle so fast. She was scared and her contractions intensified. She says he'd be raided her ticketed her and insisted she keep the windows rolled down its frigid cold. I'm crying my tears or freezing as they're coming down because it's so cold. Her baby survived. But this spring, Valenzuela nearly died giving birth to her second child. She blames her earlier encounter with police because my uterus had worked so hard, potentially from this previous Drama. I actually had an acute hemorrhage. Two months later, George Floyd died about a mile away. She's still haunted that he called out for his mother as he died. So, too, is researcher Rachel Hardiman. You know, when George plaids yelled for his mama and summon all mothers, Hardman stands just a few feet from where he was killed. It's just so painful. You know, this'd why do the work that I do is so that every mom gets to have a healthy baby and Have a good life. She's expanding her research nationally to keep digging into the connections between police violence and its impact on mothers and their babies.

George Floyd Thurman Blevins Minneapolis Yuki Noguchi Rachel Heart Rachel Hardman Ralph Bell Del Cheryl Hardman Travis Jordan Philando Castille North Minneapolis Raven Cane Remmy Kane Hardiman University Of Minnesota Floyd Rebecca Polston
Modest Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition

Classics for Kids

05:18 min | 3 years ago

Modest Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition

"I'm Naomi Lewin welcome to classics for kids. Viktor Hartmann was a nineteenth century, Russian artist and architect and a good friend of composer mode as his ski. When Hartman died suddenly at the age of thirty nine was dark ski was devastated. Hartman's friends organized a memorial exhibit of his work, and then resort ski created his own tribute to Hartman a piano piece that portrayed ten artworks from the show called pictures at an exhibition. Quite, a few people have made orchestra versions of pictures at an exhibition. The best known one is by Maurice, Richard. Pictures at an exhibition starts off with that promenade which pops up several more times. Zarzusky meant it as strolling music to lead you through the gallery from one picture to the next. The first picture in Zork Skis Exhibition is a gnome actually it's a sketch for a nutcracker shaped like gnome sort of a Goblin who lives under the earth. then. The promenade leads to a painting of a very old castle from medieval times with a troubadour traveling singer outside it in reveals orchestration the saxophone is the instrument that plays the part of the troubadour. From there we promenade onto a picture of a nanny taking care of some kids playing in the twee gardens in Paris. Doesn't it sound like they're teasing each other and? Yeah Yeah. No promenade before the next picture, which is of a wagon with huge wheels the kind of wagon that was pulled by oxen. The title of the picture is bid low, which is Polish for Oscar. After the last of the promenades we come to the ballet of the unhatched chicks. Victor Hartman's designed for some ballet costumes in his sketch to people where egg outfits with bird head helmets but I think the music sounds more like they're running around like chickens with their heads cut off. Next to that picture repair of Pencil sketches of a rich man and a poor man, the rich one sounds pretty snooty. Roll. Along. In the poor man sounds like he's crying. Back to France for the next. Women Gossiping in the marketplace in the town of Moses. Then a couple of very creepy scenes I some catacombs, underground tombs full of old bones. It almost sounds like they're about to get up and walk around to the promenade tune doesn't it? The next bit creepy nece is a sketch for clock based on an old Russian fairy tale about a witch named Baba Yoga who supposedly lives in a scary hut that's perched on fouls or chickens legs. The very last picture in the exhibition is the designed Viktor. Hartmann entered in a competition to build a gate that would be the grand entrance to the city, of Kiev. If, the great gate of Kiev theme reminds you of the promenade. Now, you know where that strolling music was edited all along.

Victor Hartman Viktor Hartmann Zork Skis Exhibition Naomi Lewin Kiev Paris Maurice Oscar Zarzusky Baba Yoga Moses France Earth.
Drew Barrymore confirms rumor that her grandfather's corpse was 'stolen'

Colleen and Bradley

00:54 sec | 3 years ago

Drew Barrymore confirms rumor that her grandfather's corpse was 'stolen'

"Drew Carey lore has confirmed that her late grandfather, John Berry, more fit one final party into his social schedule after its 1942 death, thanks to some of his friends, So during a Q and a session, Drew was asked the following. Is it true that your grandfather's body was stolen from the morgue by W. C fields, Errol Flynn? And Sada Kichi Hartmann so that they could prop him up against a poker table and throw one last party. Are you kidding? And did she say Yes to that, Colleen. I'm here to say she said yes, And she said not only yes, but there have been cinematic interpretations of that, she said. Related Bernie's. Well, yeah, and also the Blake Edwards film S O B. That's the movie where Julie Andrews takes her top off, she said. That's just brilliant and fun Toe. Oh, my goodness.

Sada Kichi Hartmann Errol Flynn Drew Carey Colleen Julie Andrews Blake Edwards John Berry TOE Bernie
Cereal brands reevaluate mascots to fit the modern day

Morning Edition

03:11 min | 3 years ago

Cereal brands reevaluate mascots to fit the modern day

"Been rethinking their outdated corporate mascots and Jemima uncle Ben Mrs Butterworth. At the same time, a group of young entrepreneurs have set out to create new breakfast cereal characters that reflect this moment. NPR's Mandali del Barco reports. Emily. At least, Miller says the new cereal she and her team created off limits has brand mascots, unlike any other dash is a high strung, high achieving female bunny in an eighties style power suit with sneakers. She's a K pop fan. A workaholic, and she says Dash has a lot of anxiety to deal with. So her cereal turns the milk to cold brew and has coffee and chocolate zombie is just the opposite. A lazy dude who looks like he just rolled out of bed to eat his mellow cereal. There's adapted Jin's Pond on Vanilla, so everything you need to mellow out. Miller, 29 year old food writer is all about breakfast. In fact, she wrote breakfast a cookbook, and she created the breakfast club walking tours of New York restaurants. Her latest venture off limits. Serial also seems to appeal to millennials. Miller's hoping they might relate to zombie who has a bit of Bart Simpson or dash more of Ah, Lisa Simpson. The whole brand is really run by these emotionally unstable and extreme cartoon characters. Dashing zombie are a far cry from the buff, confident cereal mascot Tony the Tiger. Cash is not the first female serial character in the early 19 fifties. Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes was rep. For a short time by Katie the Kangaroo who wore a bandanna and carried her baby in her pouch. I'm Katie, the kangaroo I have been given bound around you guy within that takes all night, just like an attending. Do you like Kellogg's ultimately bounced Katie The kangaroo for Tony. The Tiger, also dropping sugar from its name Fast forward to 2020 where cold and hot cereals are more than $20 billion industry in the U. S. According to market data firm statistic, with sales expected to grow To succeed. Cereal brands have to be nostalgic, healthy or have more modern mascot, says analyst Melissa Abbott. There's a demand for something completely different that isn't no masculine 20. The Tiger Macho Abbott is vice president of culinary insights at the Hartmann Group. She says cereal is not just a breakfast food. New brands are pro mode on podcasts and purchased online, Abbott says off Limits and another new cereal brand magic spoon appealed to a different aesthetic. These characters that are going to win essentially today and particularly in the breakfast category, they have Tio contain more of this multi dimensional take on the on the human personality. The flaws and all, Abbott says consumers might like that off limits. Characters were designed by artist Shepard Fairey's studio. Now the question is, Will they go for coffee flavored cereal repped by a stressed out bunny in a power suit? Handle it. Al Barco

Melissa Abbott Miller Dash Ben Mrs Butterworth Tiger Katie JIN Kellogg Shepard Fairey NPR Al Barco Emily Bart Simpson Lisa Simpson New York TIO Analyst Writer Vice President Hartmann Group
A Cardinal Hired by Pope Francis Comes to Aid of Trans Sex Workers

Thom Hartmann

01:16 min | 3 years ago

A Cardinal Hired by Pope Francis Comes to Aid of Trans Sex Workers

"The poll has a guy works for me is a cardinals names Konrad Krajewski worsen the Vatican and his title is papal almoner which is a fancy way of saying distributor of all means of donations on behalf of the pope personally and there is there is no interest in but this is really one of those really wonderful stories there is a a group I mean it's kind of sad subtext but there's a group of transgender sex workers in a beach town near Rome who couldn't get work and because they were sex workers didn't qualify for for assistance from the state I don't know if that's because being a sex worker is illegal or because they were contractor I you know I I don't know the details that but they were they were available it was available to them so they went to a local Catholic priest for help to buy food food and eat his resources his parish resources were already wiped out with regular members of the parish so he called up the pope and the pope wired money to the parish fail them via cardinal Conrad crews Jyske Saul was the I in this is so sweet

Konrad Krajewski Rome Jyske Saul Cardinal Conrad
Trump Campaign Sues Wisconsin TV Station Over Critical Ad

Thom Hartmann

00:32 sec | 3 years ago

Trump Campaign Sues Wisconsin TV Station Over Critical Ad

"American bridge which is put put together some of the most hard hitting ads using Donald trump's only own words to indict him and the Biden campaign the trump campaign has now or Donald Trump has now filed lawsuits against television stations in one case a small station as a recall a northern Wisconsin or Minnesota complaining that about this American bridge and there also now apparently suing to stop a a Joe Biden ad so apparently we're getting under their skin which is a good thing so you know

American Bridge Donald Trump Wisconsin Minnesota Joe Biden
Why did Trump delay his response to the COVID-19 outbreak?

Thom Hartmann

04:25 min | 4 years ago

Why did Trump delay his response to the COVID-19 outbreak?

"But the Associated Press recently did a good round up story about how the trump administration basically procrastinated for months before acknowledging you know the gravity of the situation that we're facing as a nation and the article and I'm gonna share that with you in just a moment it answers a lot of the what questions you know how they blew it and how trump kept saying no there's no problem in the going going to play golf at all there's no problem in going to playing golf and there's no problem and then going and playing golf and until finally I was like oh my god there's a problem and suddenly fox news does a pivot so fast that Sean and entities head is spinning so dancers all those what questions you know what trump was doing what the trump administration was doing that article doesn't talk about about others talk about how the U. S. chamber of commerce was lobbying trump not to do anything essentially certainly not to use the defense per talksport production aggregate a bunch of democratic senators writing it just a rip them a new one letter to the chamber of commerce saying what's going on here so we know what's what we don't know where the why is why would the trump administration B. this callous in their disregard for the lives of Americans why I you know I I just I I don't know the answer the question and maybe we can crowdsource the answer I mean you know why did trump procrastinate for two months was he trying to squeeze a few months of extra revenue out of his hotels was it that he was watching fox news and they were saying there's no problem and so he was saying there was no problems of products was quoting him saying there's no problem and then he was hearing himself being quoted on fox and so we really thought there was no problem in other words and evil dead leave feedback loop between trump and fox news had they had opened up at it and they just like you know like I did other like a giant whirlpool huge war tax into the Bermuda triangle I it just sucked the whole thing down into a black hole is that what happened where is he creating a deadly right wing media and feedback loop that we even went beyond fox news you've you've got all these right wing radius shows and hosts you know up until last week Rush Limbaugh was saying that this was a hoax and that it was being promoted by the Democrats to take down trump I was a server is billionaire bodies so that Wilbur Ross and the guys in this cabinet Betsy device they're billionaires Wilbur Wilbur Ross were three billion budget was worth five billion they have a lot of money in the stock market was he tried to give his billionaire buddies time to unload their stocks you know like Richard Byrd did R. Kelly a lot for the the two Republican senators who attended a a security briefing that said this is going to get really really bad really really fast and they sold all their defense stocks and a killer lawyer you know the the wife of the president in York Stock Exchange actually well according to some reports of what stocks like Citrix that would be good for you know working from home and perhaps Richard Burr did as well I mean these these reports are all kind of scattered right now we're just we're just starting to get the information but was it to help his billionaire buddies was it because he knew that it would hit it hit the economy I had to cut it to the economy that that it would hurt his reelection chances any thought maybe just maybe could just lost bluster is way through this I mean he's done that his whole entire life right it is lies and B. S.'s way through things eventually they work out because people around him we don't pick up the pieces and do things right or he just declares bankruptcy and walks away I mean basically that's been with the the two ways that trump has succeeded through life to the extent that you can say that he's a success is declared bankruptcy six times it doesn't sound like a success to me is a serial failure his father gave him four hundred you know that for a million dollars in the bank because that all away I mean it's just but the question that I'm asking is why did trump delay I mean this his delay is going to cost tens of thousands of lives possibly hundreds of thousands maybe even millions of American lives debts that are completely unnecessary that are wreaking havoc on our health care

Associated Press
Norway's PM Holds Coronavirus Press Conference For Kids

Thom Hartmann

02:02 min | 4 years ago

Norway's PM Holds Coronavirus Press Conference For Kids

"Meanwhile the prime minister of Norway this was two days ago I believe it was three days ago held a children only cover nineteen press conference this is just beautiful this is from a S. P. S. dot com dot a you with the the the one of the Australian newspapers and a Norwegian prime minister Erna Solberg on Monday held a children only press conference on the coronavirus Norway has closed everything private institutions schools kindergartens everything and the prime minister of Norway said it's been special days many children think it's scary this is what she said to the kids at the beginning of the press conference she said it's okay she said it's been special days and many of the children for think it is scary it's okay to be scared when so many things happen at the same time but let's you know let's just answer all your questions and so they took questions from the children who were watching things like can I have a birthday party can I visit my grandparents after I went to the shopping center how long does it take to make a vaccine what can I do to help other people she gave answers like by being home you're helping other people not to be contaminated and get sick it's important for those who already have a disease or who are old so you know we we need to help those people she said if somebody has a birthday in the class everybody should ring them others call them and sing Happy Birthday the press conference was held by the world health organization's director general as a quote great initiative he said educating children and responding to their questions and covert nineteen can help reduce their anxiety and address their uncertainty during this difficult time he said just because you are in school the she said this is the prime minister of Norway she she ended the press conference by telling the kids just because you're in school doesn't mean you shouldn't learn things and it's a good thing to learn but the the uncertainty thing is the big thing you know people can deal with with crisis but it's much harder to deal with

Prime Minister Norway Erna Solberg Director General
An Internal Pandemic Document Shows the Coronavirus Gives Trump Extraordinary Powers

Thom Hartmann

08:47 min | 4 years ago

An Internal Pandemic Document Shows the Coronavirus Gives Trump Extraordinary Powers

"You were a brilliant piece for the nation title and internal pandemic document shows the coronavirus gives trump extraordinary powers explained so many people that I realized about and then exit is that under the conditions of one executive branch and the president actually games as I mentioned in that article external powers to respond to that crisis and while I'm not opposed in principle to which is a good thing and yeah I don't think it's necessarily that most experts will tell you that emergency powers are necessary to meet emergencies with the question becomes how does Paris our pride and sort of how they are pursued and when you look at the agency said a lot of the powers on one of the questions and protection which includes most recognizable among its components the border patrol on their money EDG said will receive the most power and when you look at you know the current and how hard line immigration policies then you can see what you no one can one can imagine needs power is being used to pursue you know the administration's political goals as opposed to you know just meeting the crest of the epidemic and that really I think with the crux of the concern for from the end of the story right the Hey it was maybe two months ago I did a I did a whole riff about it here on this program I don't believe we have the author of the article on probably should have but there was a fascinating article in one of the you know more larger and credible publications you know something like the Atlantic or the New Yorker or or possibly a nation and and frankly I don't remember I'm sorry that that pointed out that the customs and border patrol isn't part of or is only peripherally part of the normal chain of command within the executive branch and has been in some ways modified in some way is just you know outside of the normal procedures adapted itself to become basically trump's private little police force is version of you know what what is it yeah I know I I I realize the the weakness of **** analogies but it we saw Hitler do this with the SS you know he had his own basically you know a a military or a a clause I military full police power agency that answer directly to the executive to what extent if that is the case or if that becomes the case and customs and border patrol or specifically ice I believe this article is about how ice is becoming basically try trump's shock troops and has the potential to and he's throwing money at them like there's no tomorrow has the potential to become his own private militant military that that could even behave beyond their own statutory mandate to what extent is that a can a concern or is that something you didn't encounter in writing this so I was concerned if you want to go ahead we can made from an individual the Pentagon document detailing border patrols coordination with in military because recalled that trump declared a national emergency over the undocumented immigration that that exists at the southern border and so now not only is birth control operating with you know from the research is in that I've had before and you know essentially a lot more freedom to sort of pursuing more aggressive response integration and then under any preceding the ministrations we're also working with the military on U. S. soil which of course there are certain legal limitations on the military to do doesn't hasta comitatus prevent that or does that simply prevent them from arresting Americans it is generally it's very hard to get necessary like Republicans but when you declare a national emergency as trump at over I documented the conditions that can use anything about so if you look at the documents that were provided to me what they show is that our teams class support role with border patrol center certain things allowed to do and there's certain things or not I think it's a bit of you know miss languages that are there purely support when you have essentially you know marines and National Guard and things like that you know operating with guns and just say that they won't you know they're not going to actually do anything directly I think you're gonna see a sort of mission creep in the same way that you do with any sort of deployment where you know the armed forces more power and then at the expense of the power of the domestic one agency's response and everything Sir but despite all that he's never really seen the immigration authorities become supercharged in terms of hours after getting in much the passion that you were just describing this as trump other pursued we're talking to Ken Klippenstein his the DC correspondent for the nation the nation dot com is the website his Twitter handle is at Ken Klippenstein can are there indications specific indications I mean that what we're talking about here has moved beyond the abstract into the real that that customs and border patrol or ice or both are beginning to behave in ways that would indicate that they are not responsive to control by the department of homeland security or the justice department or whatever agency might theoretically be in charge of them but instead are beginning to simply do what trump wants I I know that we've seen situations where trump goes down to the border and meets these guys are meets ice guys and they're all wearing Magda hats and stuff like that which is generally prohibited under under you know for federal employees under the normal rules certainly they felt free to ignore those kinds of things but at do we have empirical evidence that it's going to be on that one that I have is based on your money expenses or scheduling department humble journey and what they described to me as a lot of frustration over the inability on that hard to do their jobs when all the money's going on to this particular strategy the customs and border protection edition that there appears to be a live dissension within the ranks among people that you know one would not consider liberal or progressive by any means I'm just thinking that P. P. sort of getting out of control respectively I'm interested in and resources that they now enjoy but the article I think was largely cautionary or at least that was my intention doing it because we don't know yet how they're going to be deployed in response I mean what I got was that internet response plan which describes what they could do you pursuant to an emergency authority at Navistar consolidated under the bush administration a lot of people don't know the history after going in either yeah that's right under the bush administration after nine eleven on the issue the number of executive orders that you know it is it according to circle the team is at least for were aimed at shoring up national plans well again with the wind all kinds of special privileges to be able to respond to an epidemic in today and is very much reflected sort of you know shift away from kind of that single responsible that I'd been sort of how the sacrosanct one time in two words concerning more power in the federal government generally and again I want to stress you know what I mean here I don't think that's necessarily the worst thing I mean are there any such thing as a national emergency and and in some cases the credit thanks to you know respond to that and I feel more comfortable with Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden or president than Donald Trump exactly we have a president here whose you know not just his own personal political orientation the database which she quickly depends on actually over in that question real actually need that is a recipe for trouble and and potentially you know your deployment on board in a way that national security person and maybe putting politics in this direction yeah more than half of Republicans polled and said that bring out the army to restore order in America finally now is months ago right I mean that's that's amazing and Kevin Stein and his pieces in the nation's titled an internal pandemic document shows the corona virus gives trump

President Trump Executive
Coronavirus: Japan confirms first case of person being reinfected with COVID-19

Thom Hartmann

00:33 sec | 4 years ago

Coronavirus: Japan confirms first case of person being reinfected with COVID-19

"Is this this is from Reuters in other news agency this is dateline Tokyo a woman working as a tour bus guide Japan tested positive for the C. code red painting virus for the second time she's the first person in the country to be re infected she hadn't February first she was discharged from the hospital after fully recovering and testing negative and now here we are February twenty sixth four weeks later she got sick again and they tested there and sure enough it was corona virus she got it all over again

Reuters Tokyo Japan
Richard Sherman On Shutting Down Mahomes

After Hours With Amy Lawrence

05:00 min | 4 years ago

Richard Sherman On Shutting Down Mahomes

"Last night the guys who are assembled to discuss the various topics that they were asked about regarding the Superbowl they they included forty Niners cornerback Richard Sherman who is going to have probably one of the biggest test of his career biggest test of the season trying to cover the chiefs receivers trying to anticipate what Pat Mahoney can do with a football and a part of the discussion included Sherman being told them homes won't shy away from your side of the field are you ready I would be quite was our main thing I got some of the most dynamic playmakers in as we got a ton of us speak of the tunnel on telling you can get the ball where everyone see when he wants it on the more out of pocket you know we got it we gotta find a way to to get that soul you know they have a great offense in and obviously a ton of playmakers that's what it does what here to forty minutes or so the challenge is very simple for the forty Niners defense they need to get pressure on Patrick homes to force him to get rid of the football before those guys get open because those guys eventually will crack that Seattle defense that cover three zone one of those guys will get open Tyree killed to Marcus Robinson Michael Hartmann Travis Kelsey Sami watched in somebody's getting open if you give Patrick homes enough time and if he can buy enough time that's the thing he can buy time we played yesterday on NBCSN that Fran Tarkenton play from Patrick homes week three of twenty eighteen season the nine second play that started the four yard line where he goes to laugh to completely reverse course runs across the field full speed throws it on the fly and gets touchdown made scored twenty one to seven big difference though Nick Bosa was at Ohio state at the time the Ford was playing for the chiefs at the time this time around patron homes has to try to deal with them and we talk all the time about inside information that someone may have the fords got a full season actually to of seeing Patrick homes in practice and I remember one Padma homes as a rookie Travis Kelsey was on the program and he was raving about the things that my homes was doing in practice I mean do you four has studied this guy if anybody has any ideas on what to do to stop Pat homes within the forty Niners organizations gonna be D. for now his input maybe I don't know what the hell we do I've seen this guy have you not seen him he's unstoppable that's gonna be the big challenge the forty Niners defense and Sims are talking yesterday about maybe the wisdom of dropping everybody deep and forcing the chiefs to go slowly and methodically and frustrate any effort to get that big fifty yard bomb the becomes a backbreaker force them to be patient patois homes going into the season I was aware that that was one of the changes he was gonna have to be ready for defenses making him be more patient and methodical with the ball taking away that big chunk play that big spectacular touchdown that fuels a game that turned the game around even though it only counts for seven points on the scoreboard it's kind of thing that psychologically can destroy an opponent just like that twenty seven yard touchdown run through the sideline and cut back in an inside the five and guys were flailing in a play like that can end the game as a practical matter there was discussion last night from some forty Niners defensive players about what to do if in one patch my homes it runs the football force Buckner Fred Warner drink green law they all address the situation Drake Greenlaw said that in discussing the twenty seven yard touchdown run exactly what that what I said last week the the the point that still has chiefs fans on reasonably air rationally and grossly incorrectly up in arms the twenty seven yard touchdown run Greenlaw said fear of a penalty for a late hit may have contributed to the flailing and the failure of the Titans to try to tackle patch my homes Greenlaw said he's gonna hit my homes if he's in the green without worrying about judgment calls and that you know and I said yes them done talking about building a and talk about a little bit more that was the point you can't fear the gray area with the Super Bowl on the line you have to embrace the gray area once you commit to making that tackle if the guy decides he's going to start to slide and maybe you hit him at the beginning of the slide because it's too late for you to do you commit you can't not approach the got to make the tackle for fear that he's going to end up taking you to the gray area see the quarterback has figured out how to exploit the gray area how to get guys to lower their guard how to get guys to pull up how to get guys to think the plays over and then off they go they keep going Greenlaw is gonna go and try to bring him down

Richard Sherman On Shutting Down Mahomes

After Hours With Amy Lawrence

05:00 min | 4 years ago

Richard Sherman On Shutting Down Mahomes

"Last night the guys who are assembled to discuss the various topics that they were asked about regarding the Superbowl they they included forty Niners cornerback Richard Sherman who is going to have probably one of the biggest test of his career biggest test of the season trying to cover the chiefs receivers trying to anticipate what Pat Mahoney can do with a football and a part of the discussion included Sherman being told them homes won't shy away from your side of the field are you ready I would be quite was our main thing I got some of the most dynamic playmakers in as we got a ton of us speak of the tunnel on telling you can get the ball where everyone see when he wants it on the more out of pocket you know we got it we gotta find a way to to get that soul you know they have a great offense in and obviously a ton of playmakers that's what it does what here to forty minutes or so the challenge is very simple for the forty Niners defense they need to get pressure on Patrick homes to force him to get rid of the football before those guys get open because those guys eventually will crack that Seattle defense that cover three zone one of those guys will get open Tyree killed to Marcus Robinson Michael Hartmann Travis Kelsey Sami watched in somebody's getting open if you give Patrick homes enough time and if he can buy enough time that's the thing he can buy time we played yesterday on NBCSN that Fran Tarkenton play from Patrick homes week three of twenty eighteen season the nine second play that started the four yard line where he goes to laugh to completely reverse course runs across the field full speed throws it on the fly and gets touchdown made scored twenty one to seven big difference though Nick Bosa was at Ohio state at the time the Ford was playing for the chiefs at the time this time around patron homes has to try to deal with them and we talk all the time about inside information that someone may have the fords got a full season actually to of seeing Patrick homes in practice and I remember one Padma homes as a rookie Travis Kelsey was on the program and he was raving about the things that my homes was doing in practice I mean do you four has studied this guy if anybody has any ideas on what to do to stop Pat homes within the forty Niners organizations gonna be D. for now his input maybe I don't know what the hell we do I've seen this guy have you not seen him he's unstoppable that's gonna be the big challenge the forty Niners defense and Sims are talking yesterday about maybe the wisdom of dropping everybody deep and forcing the chiefs to go slowly and methodically and frustrate any effort to get that big fifty yard bomb the becomes a backbreaker force them to be patient patois homes going into the season I was aware that that was one of the changes he was gonna have to be ready for defenses making him be more patient and methodical with the ball taking away that big chunk play that big spectacular touchdown that fuels a game that turned the game around even though it only counts for seven points on the scoreboard it's kind of thing that psychologically can destroy an opponent just like that twenty seven yard touchdown run through the sideline and cut back in an inside the five and guys were flailing in a play like that can end the game as a practical matter there was discussion last night from some forty Niners defensive players about what to do if in one patch my homes it runs the football force Buckner Fred Warner drink green law they all address the situation Drake Greenlaw said that in discussing the twenty seven yard touchdown run exactly what that what I said last week the the the point that still has chiefs fans on reasonably air rationally and grossly incorrectly up in arms the twenty seven yard touchdown run Greenlaw said fear of a penalty for a late hit may have contributed to the flailing and the failure of the Titans to try to tackle patch my homes Greenlaw said he's gonna hit my homes if he's in the green without worrying about judgment calls and that you know and I said yes them done talking about building a and talk about a little bit more that was the point you can't fear the gray area with the Super Bowl on the line you have to embrace the gray area once you commit to making that tackle if the guy decides he's going to start to slide and maybe you hit him at the beginning of the slide because it's too late for you to do you commit you can't not approach the got to make the tackle for fear that he's going to end up taking you to the gray area see the quarterback has figured out how to exploit the gray area how to get guys to lower their guard how to get guys to pull up how to get guys to think the plays over and then off they go they keep going Greenlaw is gonna go and try to bring him down

Death toll rises from coronavirus in China

Thom Hartmann

00:49 sec | 4 years ago

Death toll rises from coronavirus in China

"I get in China it's the lunar new year it's will actually will be tomorrow and N. F. and China's having a real problem right now with this Wuhan coronavirus outbreak they've now extended yesterday you know I told you that twenty million people were quarantined essentially now is thirty six million and the death toll has just about doubled in the latest death that is being widely publicized I I mentioned yesterday was mostly older men who are in bad health this was a young man in his thirties who is in excellent health and he just died of it so the the other world is starting to take notice and there's even concern there's a fascinating piece in the Financial Times today that you know it's it's already affecting the Chinese stock market and it might start affecting world stock markets in fact I may have already started yesterday or the

China N. F. Wuhan Financial Times