35 Burst results for "One Department"

What Peter Kirsanow Expects in 2023 From the GOP Majority

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:37 min | 3 months ago

What Peter Kirsanow Expects in 2023 From the GOP Majority

"To spend the last four minutes on 2023. Republicans are taking over. Again, not a large majority in the House, and they don't have a majority at all in the Senate, but they have some power and they have some opportunities. I don't think to do much legislating. I don't think they're going to be able to pass a lot of laws. They're going to be a lot of stalemates, a lot of gridlock with the Senate, but they can do a lot of things with respect to oversight and investigation on what has been going on in these last two years. What do you expect in 2023 out of the GOP majority? Well, the first thing I expect is what we just talked about, that is that they really do need to look at the institutional corruption predominantly in the FBI and DoJ because those are the most serious right now. Twitter is just the tip of the iceberg. The weaponization of the FBI going after ordinary Americans, such as people praying in front of abortion, like simply praying, but they will forget about threats to individuals made from the left or damage to the right to life clinics, anything of that nature, they just, you know, who cares. Nobody cares. It's that weaponization that's a real problem. And I expect that the oversight committees are going to be looking at that. I also think they're going to be looking generally at overall institutional and competence. It's widespread so they're going to have a lot on their plate. But look at transportation. We just saw so many debacles emanating from the transportation department. And that's just one matter. I mean, one department. There are so many of these things, but I think justice FBI under justice is the first order of business. And they've got to look at all of the other corruption that's been allowed to fester. Mainly because the media will turn a blind eye. They are not a separate watchdog identity at all when it comes to Democrats. They

Senate FBI DOJ GOP House Transportation Department Twitter
"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:06 min | 1 year ago

"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Guys make But how long does it take You know because a different everything in-house regarding the movement So that's one department Then it goes to finish So we have over a hundred people that do Polishing decoration engraving and then these little parts they go to either pre assembly or they go to the watchmaker who is very specific and complicated which is just one watchmaker And the most complicated what it takes in a year or here And on average I would say a month Wow two weeks to a month And we do something which is very German and some people would say very weird and inefficient but we just love it and we believe it's for a great customer purpose We produce or assemble every watch twice So what we do is we assemble it then it goes through an extensive test to see whether everything is working And when we know it does work we disassemble it again We clean it We put the final decoration on lubricated in case it and then it goes through the next test cycle Oh my God So it sounds a lot but therefore our return quote If there is a mistake and as I said it's watchmaker and engraver and finishes human beings and they have good days and they have bad days So we just want to avoid that a bit they watch ends up and you wrist What was the saying that you never wanted to buy like a car or something that was made in the factory on a Monday 'cause everybody's like and after the weekend No there's like rules Pretty incredible Sit tight we've got to do a little bit of news but we want to come back and we're going to continue with Wilhelm Schmidt He's a chief executive officer of Alain and zuna Did I say it Wonderful A European ancestry coming very impressive Sweat in there a little bit We couldn't continue Because what I am curious and we'll talk about 'cause you sell around the globe You have boutiques all around I want to get an idea of demand and who is buying at this point You're listening to Bloomberg businessweek Carol master Tim stanev Let's get a check on world of.

Wilhelm Schmidt Alain Bloomberg businessweek Tim stanev
Mandatory Employee Vaccines: The Government Does Not Own Private Companies

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:51 min | 1 year ago

Mandatory Employee Vaccines: The Government Does Not Own Private Companies

"Eighty-one department of labor is developing emergency rule to require that all employers of one hundred more employees. I said this. Hear it for yourself eighty-one tonight. I'm announcing that the department of labor is developing an emergency rule to require all employers with one hundred or more employees that together employees over at eighty million workers to ensure workforce's are fully vaccinated. So that is joe biden intervening and saying hey all this new competitive labor market which again we as free market people. We love competition. So we see all these mandates and we're like okay. Well an employers that don't mandate the vaccine you're gonna get the pick of the litter you're going to get great workers that don't want to take the vaccine not anymore all of a sudden these big companies. They don't have to make adjustments maybe in wages or accommodations exceptions or exemptions you see the more mandates that come down all of a sudden this kind of other economy that was being created gets eliminated almost immediately and so now companies like ours at turning point. Usa and you know the best were. We have amazing. People that work for us honestly phenomenal and we have no lack of people. That wanna work for us. I can tell you. We're not going to comply with garbage. And we will sue in federal court if we have to. I got a message from somebody. Hey charlie run. A testing company really sweet guy from florida. I said yeah. We're not going to comply said okay. God bless you. It's like if you need the testing. I at yeah. We're not going to do this. Thanks and this idea of who owns your company. Is your company on loan from the federal government. Is it yours or is it. The states

Department Of Labor Joe Biden USA Charlie Florida Federal Government
Markie Post, TV veteran actor of 'Night Court,' dies at 70

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

Markie Post, TV veteran actor of 'Night Court,' dies at 70

"After market post has died in Los Angeles after dealing with cancer for years according to her manager post was seventy I margins are a letter with a look at post career all my clients plead innocent you're honor what grounds well they claim to be victims of a mind meld the post was probably best known for playing public defender Christine Sullivan for seven seasons on the TV show night court post also portrayed Elliott reed's mother on the show scrubs and Cameron Diaz's mother in the film there's something about Mary her husband TV producer Michael A. Ross says post family remembers her also as a person who made elaborate cakes for friends so the curtains for first departments and showed us how to be kind loving and forgiving and in often harsh world

Christine Sullivan Elliott Reed Los Angeles Cancer Michael A. Ross Cameron Diaz Scrubs Mary
"one department" Discussed on KGO 810

KGO 810

05:18 min | 1 year ago

"one department" Discussed on KGO 810

"Welcome back to the Rick government show. We're talking about Blockchain, Bitcoin and digital assets and just finished telling you that a big huge Cryptocurrency exchange was just kicked out of England. As well as Japan and Thailand. And then there's the news in China. They have just banned Bitcoin mining. That's a big deal because 74% of all the Bitcoin mining in the world, 3/4 of it occurs in China. And China just told all the miners to get out of the country, saying that they don't want their operations to continue. Well, what do you do? If you're a Bitcoin miner and you're operating in China, we'll take a look at the example of Zhang's Our He is 36 years old, a multi millionaire who is a Bitcoin miner in China. He owns 300,000 computers. They operate 24 7 in 20 warehouses in northern China. His computers cost him hundreds of millions of dollars, and China just told him to shut down his operations and get out of the country. So he is and guess where he's going. Texas and Tennessee. What's bad news for China is great news for the U. S new jobs and new operations supporting this incredibly innovative technology. But the fact that you have governments around the world beginning to suggest that they don't want anything to do with some of the stuff. Well, that's caused Goldman Sachs to issue a report last month. Their investment strategy group, in a research report said quote We do not believe that Bitcoin is a long term store of value. Or an investable asset class for diversified portfolios. We do not recommend investing in Cryptocurrencies as an asset class. That is not to say that it cannot be an ideal asset for speculation or for active traders. We do not have a view on whether prices will rise or fall from current levels. That was a research report from the investment strategy group at Goldman Sachs just last month. Well, apparently the investment strategy group at Goldman Sachs didn't get the memo. Matthew McDermott, the head of digital assets at Goldman Sachs, this week announced that Goldman Sachs is expanding its activities in digital assets, not just Bitcoin but also now expanding into either they're going to offer options and futures trading in coming months. The Goldman Sachs Digital Assets team now has 17 staff. They've invested $5 million into a Blockchain company. And last month they raised $15 million from Guess who. Investors for Coin Metrics, a Blockchain data provider for institutional clients, and McDermitt is now on their board. Goldman found that 10% of its institutional clients are trading digital assets and 20% more are interested. Matthew McDermott says, quote institutional adoption will continue. We continue to see a significant amount of interest in this space. I don't know about you, but I found this fascinating. One department within Goldman Sachs says Don't do it and another department of Goldman Sachs says We're doing it an awful lot. So it looks like the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing, and it further illustrates. The challenges you have as an investor to decide whether to buy Bitcoin or not when you have Wall Street firms themselves divided internally. Well how to individual investors and their client's supposed to figure all this out. Meanwhile, Wall Street continues to get engaged elsewhere. NI DIG has filed paperwork for a Bitcoin investment fund. Morgan Stanley says they're going to sell it to their clients. Citigroup has announced they formed a digital assets group. They're going to help their clients invest in coins, stable coins, N F. T S and CBD. CS Goldman Sachs already doing all of that. And hedge funds are planning to significantly increase their exposure to digital assets over the next five years. Marshall Waste of $55 Billion Hedge fund announced this week that it's going to invest in digital assets buying Blockchain technology and payment systems. A new report says that hedge funds over the next five years will hold on average 7% of their assets. In Bitcoin and other Digital assets. If that proves true, that's over $300 billion that will be invested into Bitcoin, another digital assets. Well, how do you know what digital assets to buy? Well, MSC. I is coming along to help you. They're launching indexes for Cryptocurrency Assets Standard and Poor's Dow Jones already does. There's the S and P Bitcoin Index, the S and P Ethereum Index, the S and P crypto mega capped index. According to JP Morgan 10% of institutional Investment firms are now trading digital assets, but half of institutions still call it rat poison and 80% say they are no intention of starting to investor trade. Meanwhile, Fidelity is continuing to help institutional investors. They just unpeeled Sherlock. Digital dashboard that gives advisors data on 80 digital.

Matthew McDermott Goldman Sachs 300,000 computers Citigroup $5 million Goldman JP Morgan 74% $15 million Morgan Stanley 80% $55 Billion Texas Tennessee 17 staff Zhang northern China 10% China 7%
"one department" Discussed on The Python Podcast.__init__

The Python Podcast.__init__

05:34 min | 1 year ago

"one department" Discussed on The Python Podcast.__init__

"So we're on a very very large scale and no matter how you train the mock with data you've got is pretty much guaranteed that the distribution of your training data won't be exactly the same. As the distribution let the model season the real world and so from a statistical point of view where season real world is a population. Okay what you're training long is on some sub population of that population and on top. Like you don't have every example not subpopulations so a sampling distribution of that sub population. My real challenges not to try to get more data. But how can i train in the way that given this population i'm training. It will still generalize into that differential between the sub population and the population that the model watch and then within that distribution of the sub population. You also have the problem of trying to counteract any potential bias in that randomized sub sample of the population. Yeah you know we kind of you know a few years ago kinds of techniques tried. That would fail. Or miss detecting. I mean i i give you a classic example ideas how it's done. When when we started a i make x ray classification models the inadvertently were biased on. What's called the view. Okay here's a scenario you know. Most of the data was coming from big hospital groups and big hospital. Groups are very cost billing conscious. Okay so at any one of these big hospitals. You're going to have more than one x ray department so you can have one department. That's low cost more basic x ray equipment and you have another department has very say costly x ray equipment. That's high cost now. You're a doctor. And the patient comes right and as a doctor you try to a prediction of the likelihood. This person has the moment. If you think it's low likelihood you would send them to go. Low cost department thought that there was high likelihood you'd send him to a high cost. The problem is these departments use different. You know models of the x ray machines so when you get your data it turns out that. Almost every instance from the low cost one is a negative not pneumonia and almost every instance from the high cost. One is pneumonia says totally skew. And of course they take the images is not identical. That sort of framing. That's your view and what happens in early days is online learning the view. Not the x-ray ray came in sosa known as an unseen variant came. You know we have all kinds of ways of trying to deal at first you have to detect the existence of that too. We might use a surrogate model. Okay so we have. Suspicion that say feature. X is is a bias or an unseen. kobe bryant. Okay so you have your regular mal..

one department more than one few years ago one kobe bryant every instance
"one department" Discussed on The Indigo Podcast

The Indigo Podcast

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on The Indigo Podcast

"Me that report by tuesday at two. Because i have to do this piece. You're creating your own bureaucracy. Knit exists everywhere and yes we shape at it. 'cause sometimes you know what you just can't i don't know ben. Have you ever gotten into work one day. And just say gosh. I just cannot get my noggin in the game. I'm not talking about everything no for you. I believe for happened. Mr hundred milliliters of alcohol on last thursday the fourth or whatever but this is the thing and so people who in our country in our society and i've met some of these guys some of them identify as say libertarians. or something. say throw it all out complete freedom. But eventually they're like oh man maybe we do need a speed limit and so they come together and you'll find out that most of the times lots of the times they'll reinvent the same bureaucracy that they burned to the ground and throughout and so i would encourage our listeners. That are really anti doolittle heart check. Is this just your egner. Chimpanzee throwing some feces. Because you just don't like to be focused one day. Maybe it is. Get rid of all the rules right. And i've oftentimes heard it said in this kind of referring to political thought but sometimes people say well you know we should have. We have the statue of liberty but it needs to be balanced by the statue of responsibility. And i think that the same thing applies in our organizations. There's this balance that we have to seek and continually hone between complete autonomy and having structure. So that's a little bit about. We're talking about here. You know we look at any organization there there a lot of bureaucracy. You have functional divisions for example you have the. It folks you have the hr folks. You have the accounting and finance opposite sales. Whatever always different parts of the organization that are bureaucratic in terms of them being specialized areas of expertise and there are benefits to that now. Are there drawbacks. Yeah you could very easily start to get these silos in the organization so you know where maybe one department stop talking to another and all those types of things but it is prevalent and there is a reason for it It can be helpful then..

tuesday at two one day one department hundred milliliters of alcohol last thursday the fourth
"one department" Discussed on The Road To A Billion

The Road To A Billion

02:35 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on The Road To A Billion

"Or did you have to fight for that position or interview for how. How did that come about. I wanna hear about that. And we'll talk a little about the time of ceo and some of the lessons learned there. Is you know it's interesting because never had the goal of advancing in the company. I never had the goal Going from one department to the next. I just did things it usually you know. I like to tell people that. It's really good. If you can get into a big organization this disorganized too much because it is a. There's so much opportunity in when there's problems all around. I believe that the number one quality of a leader is your ability to solve a problem. And you know because you can't lead unless you know how solve problems. And i. I was a really good problem solve. I just refused to let you know so often it would come to meetings and they would talk about a problem and you know and then they come to the meeting next week and they talk about the same problem and so many times. I would just cross apartments. If i saw a problem recurring. I would come up with a solution. I would bring the proposal to the meeting. I'd say maybe we did this. You know very often was in the form about this spreadsheet or a form of tracking the way we would lay out agendas or or details around product reduction. So for me. I never had the goal of being. Ceo it kinda happened. Because i was tenacious about solving problems my entire career was there a succession ads. The time comes me. How did it come about that. You became ceo. Was it that one. Someone co stepping down like you know we need someone to replace our ceo of. Yeah no no it you know. Every every accompany aneri industry goes through a life. Cycle and nightingale was launched in the sixties. And you know they did real well early on then things faltered in you know and they had to reinvent themselves and so that had happened at nightingale a couple times during my tenure at nightingale. And any time that happened. That was always okay. Here's the problem outta resolve it. And so i became the cto. After we got involved with a gentleman..

next week sixties one department times one
Use-of-force cases prompt state debates over officer records

AP News Radio

00:46 sec | 2 years ago

Use-of-force cases prompt state debates over officer records

"I'm Julie Walker lawmakers in more than twenty states have considered bills this year to make the disciplinary records of police officers public the push comes amid high profile deaths at the hands of law enforcement one of those was in Elizabeth city North Carolina where another night of protest took place after the fatal shooting of Andrew brown junior by sheriff's deputies meanwhile police disciplinary records are shielded from the media and public in about twenty states at least sixteen of contemplated making the records public supporters say it could help improve police accountability build community trust and prevent officers with disciplinary problems leave one department from being hired by another opponent say it could harm the reputations of officers with only minor infractions or even put them in danger I'm Julie Walker

Julie Walker Elizabeth City Andrew Brown North Carolina
"one department" Discussed on The Payroll Podcast

The Payroll Podcast

05:23 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on The Payroll Podcast

"Who are shaping the industry for tomorrow. Okay colo listen and local to the first payroll question time of the new twenty twenty one twenty two financial year this. I think it's so. I'm excited to be hosting the show. Today we've got some great conversations ahead of us just say as well happy one year anniversary to us. Yes that's right a very one year today so we've got a new financial year. We've got a new year peaky a new host in me. And if i can give my two pence worth so to speak. I have to say before inched. Use this wonderful penalty. You all how impressed i am with the payroll industry which has been able to pivots almost instantly to be able to work and posters pao's accurately from. How many said they couldn't do it before. This pandemic was the one department that could never work from remote location. Well you've done it industry you've proven everybody wrong. You've proven the doubters. You can run an accurate payroll service from her. When actually is the one. Huge transitional piece that we've seen is more and more employers in fact over sixty five percent of new vacancies. We take now offering the flexibility to process manage payrolls from both home and office locations. Transformational shift really exciting..

Today tomorrow two pence over sixty five percent today one year first payroll one year anniversary one department both home twenty two twenty twenty one
"one department" Discussed on Voices of the Community

Voices of the Community

03:45 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Voices of the Community

"Episode fifty we feature the voices of local government leaders rebecca woodbury and kelly permanently along with civic innovator judie brown to provide insights into the pandemic impact on our local government. We wanted to do a deeper dive into how the pandemic an economic crash has impacted the city of san francisco's ability to provide services to our community members. In this special hour long episode. We wanted to focus on the city and county of san francisco's office of economic and workforce development. The office of economic and workforce development is one of the city government departments that has a unique mission of working across multiple sectors in our community from economic and community development to work for training community benefits and housing to accomplish our goal of this deep dive. In this episode. We feature the voice of joaquin torres who over the past decade plus has been working in the center of all the intersections of the office of economic and workforce development. I'm joined remotely by joaquin torres. The former director of the san francisco of economic and workforce development who is appointed in january of twenty twenty one by mayor breed as the new assessor recorder of the san francisco office of the assessor recorder. Okay and welcome to voices of the community george. I really wanted to have you on the show. Because you've been working in economic and workforce development along with affordable housing for a while now and these are the three big areas that have been impacted the most by covid nineteen. So i think it would be really wonderful if you could just provide the audience as we were talking before we came on. Just i've known you for a while in the background. But i think it would be great if you can talk a little bit about your background working with the housing authority and then moving over into the hall invest in our neighborhoods program. And then. Of course i wanna ask you about your love of the arts community as well. Yeah extra While my name is joaquin torres. And i'm the second quarter for the city and county san francisco. I was very very fortunate to be appointed as you mentioned by maryland and grape sworn in on february. Eight and i've been diving into the world of of assessing recording in taking a very intricate series of steps away from about a eleven year career primarily in one department in the city and county and that was the office of economic and workforce development. A place that had always attracted me since i joined the city back in a two thousand nine working first for mayor gavin newsom as a district liaison to the latino community native american communities and districts. Nine eight and eleven supervisorial districts in the city for the perspective of people today. That means a supervisor management's district from today or supervisor hillary ronen district today and supervisor ultra soft i-it's district today. When i joined the city that david compost. Who's now chief of staff to jesup. Leading district attorney brooding as well as the head of a democratic county central committee. Then of course john lewis Eleven embedded duffy at the time in district agonized started so a lot has changed but so many of the issues. We were talking about back then that might have been considered on. The fringe are front and center in every single discussion. Every single article every single news clipping story arts programming lectures webinars that we see today. I think that's been very interesting for overtime. Moving through those years of working for gavin newsom than beginning the invested neighborhoods initiative under mayor li after serving his director of neighborhood services that constituent direct service work that. I was doing that. Tyrod restarted than i was tasked with leading that invested neighborhoods initiative really focusing on during that time and.

joaquin torres february Tyrod judie brown rebecca woodbury john lewis kelly two thousand Eight january of twenty twenty george maryland today san francisco one department one eleven Eleven second quarter Episode fifty
A Brief History of Neuroscience

Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast

01:56 min | 2 years ago

A Brief History of Neuroscience

"So neuroscience. The study of the nervous system has had an interesting history of being both extremely old and extremely new Ancient greeks and egyptians went back and forth whether the brain or the heart was the center of intelligence and hippocrates argued that the brain was the center though this wouldn't gain traction until the roman physician galen proposed it It took until an understanding of electricity. In the nineteenth century before we could really understand the brain the experiments of luigi gala vanni and the electrical activity of the body pave the way for research in the nervous system for awhile. Neuroscience research was divided into different fields such as physiology anatomy zulu psychiatry etc David roche helped integrate these fields creating the neuroscience research program at mit in nineteen sixty two. james mcgowan established the first department of neuroscience at university of california irvine in nineteen sixty four and later major neuroscience organizations were created including the international brain research organization. Or i bro. because it's a bunch of bros. Working on brains at that could be like your pneumonic for it That was established in nineteen sixty one and the society for neuroscience was established in nineteen sixty which is known for its annual meeting. One of the largest scientific conferences in the world so we're gonna start with neurons aka the small stuff so adam is and again. This is all adams words. I i am not the data scientist or the neuro scientists in this situation. I am just. I am the female voice of adam. Large in this specific instance. Everyone so all my words are his words. Except when i do inside you'll know when that happens on many less syllables. Yeah it would be those. Those observations will be much

Center Of Intelligence And Hip Luigi Gala Vanni David Roche James Mcgowan Department Of Neuroscience University Of California Irvin Galen International Brain Research O MIT Society For Neuroscience Adam Adams
"one department" Discussed on Exponential Podcast

Exponential Podcast

03:25 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Exponential Podcast

"So let's say that you're wanting to move a wall it's a structure once again you've gotta to find out. Is this a load bearing wall in a lot of times when we go into change structures and affects Structures in our church. They are load bearing and we just start going in with chain saws and hammers and start tearing stuff out and then when the roof caved in with what happened well we have to take a little slower to build a partition wall that holds up that wall. You're gonna take down and so one of these these tools that everyone's mentioning here. It's really important. Just kind of start feathering some of this in and just have fun with it and enjoy it and it's kind of becomes kind of like a skunks work skunkworks top of a of a practice and so a lot of times. We'll talk about doing an alternative track in inviting some people that come in as kind of a practice group start experimenting with some of these things. So that's kinda putting up the fault. The wall that holds up the structure that you're eventually gonna remove in but you just doing it with some patients. Quick example of that share so are ordained prevailing model churches. Most my life. So in the last one i worked in They gave me an office and then the team. That reported to me had cubicles so i didn't want the office. I made a co working space for the team. And then we began to assess around eight past training in the tools and created a new culture within one department of the church basically taking the starfish principles and what happened is within a couple of years of a couple. Other teams are like. Wow i wanna be on that team. That's a really. They have a different vibe. There's a different culture. They're having did you see their their co working spaces cool so other teams started like what are you guys doing. How's that work and so as a yeast in the dose strategy. Like i'd have to go in and go. We're changing everything here. It's a new day. There's a new sheriff in town. Just slowly gradually implement this kind of new culture and it starts infecting the rest of the organization without being a threat is actually very fruitful. They saw the impact in terms of. What's the product coming out. Which is sometimes what this you know. The hierarchy is looking for which is great change management tactics in general right ear. You're building the new pier. You're casting the new vision before you're taking anything away. You're introducing them to a better way and then there's such little resistance because they're seeing the fruits from that already right and they're drawn to that instead of being aware of what they're letting go of and this brings into into play a tool that a lot of lot of us all of us is the diffusion of innovation in that whole bell curve the starts out right with the innovators early adopters. And and we get so overwhelmed. Because we think we gotta change. Everybody's mind and you really don't you really do not have to change everybody's mind only about sixteen percent of the people's mind needs to be changed but the problem is so many of us typically the early adopters. The innovators early adopters a lot of times are the apostles prophets. And they're very gung ho..

one about sixteen percent one department these a couple of years couple eight
"one department" Discussed on CCC Talks

CCC Talks

02:47 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on CCC Talks

"Basically should offer something. new Am my competitive analysis. They're just going for it or any other companies and that is important for the companies realize that you know. There's something happening out there. There are companies in my industry. That are doing some some new intelligent thinks there. What do they do that. They do that through the data in our gathering the test but they are not in a locked in their room and just realizing okay. I know all the solution. This is what the customer needs or someone told me that the customer neither reports so they are not out there. You know trying new things out and all these big companies. They have problems that they launched and then they failed and that they bought the company something. They closed it. Because you know that's that's the way it is it's not on the market anymore but with that presentation back then it was about starts thinking about what is coming and not just you know. Lock yourself in in in the room. And say i want and didn't didn't work out tried as you said yourself to learn from it you know i. I've seen some companies who have started kind of failure nights or failures festivals and and. Some of them are really large companies here in in australia. It's not that they are. You know going out and celebrating failure that they do. But they're encouraging these transparency pens and being being open acknowledging. Okay if we're doing something we're trying something out. We are making progress. And let's acknowledged this and let let's share share this with the bigger audience with the other departments that they know what we are what we are working out. Because it's it's it's a collective collective it's not like one department is super successful. We don't care we just enjoy our success and the others are just like yeah. Look at nokia so we all talk about. Nokia is is an example. Today the morning. I had a workshop but there was a lot of talk about nookie especially you know the phone part where they went from the. It'll being over over sixty percent of the market share too. You know less than ten years. They went to less than one percent and now nobody knows about them so it can go really really fast. Yeah unless the changing today as you said the big players just doing it now. They're well-funded they can afford to just do. They're doing it without this fear of failure. I think order organizations need to try do things and try things as you said. Even these fail festivals are interested.

australia Nokia Today nokia less than one percent less than ten years today nookie over sixty percent one department over
"one department" Discussed on Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

05:02 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

"In strategy in getting the daily behaviors decisions altogether and the reason i say that and it doesn't even matter if you just run one department and you have your own vision mission strategy for your department if you go back to earlier podcast. When i talked about that that you know creating the vision they all come from one another so it starts with the vision but then your mission statement becomes key ingredients of your vision statement. That actually makes it true. So you say this is how we take care of customer crater product or tweet each other a team. That's from the vision. But now it's just a core belief and a core value. The strategy comes from the mission statement. Were you basically take some some key identities in your mission statement and say this is who we are that we turn them into action behavior. We do each and every day that supports that where you start bringing the team together because that doesn't have anything to do with how somebody thinks of things or if introvert extrovert they can all rally around that. So there's a couple of podcasts. That i've already had. That can really help you with a lot of these things so when you think about the first thing you need to do is really build. The culture table really set the expectations. So the vision mission in strategy was our second podcast. You can go back and listen to that. A number six was setting the culture table. Like really explaining to your teen. How you're gonna in what they expect. You know if you think about going to a five star restaurant in making the reservation to getting their to being seated two appetizers main course how you're treated the desert all that kind of stuff and then later on leaving a great review for the restaurant which you wanna think about. You know you as a leader. Are you getting feedback from your team. Telling you how you're doing. How the.

five star second podcast two appetizers first thing one department six each strategy podcasts mission
"one department" Discussed on The Cities of Refuge Podcast

The Cities of Refuge Podcast

05:08 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on The Cities of Refuge Podcast

"What most of the of the municipalities shot. that's all those systems. People were at the end. much more. Oldest process was a learning process for the municipalities and when they come together with refugees with all the people was possible for them to is with the people. And it's really made a difference in insurgent policies butts unfortunately it was not sustainable because of the economic crisis. Pumpkin need the the resources. is decreasing lots and this is the main problem for increasing xenophobia. Antuna supposed resistance so right now. It's also quite difficult for. Add municipalities as well to provide services. Invisible vay say because they are quite a trade off. The reaction of people still the citizens of their wolters. Let's say because he will have the elections the next elections in three years time but there is a quite the full. I have to say it's become quite difficult. Within the ap specialties as well. Has anybody scraped their project or change. They are focus area from refugees to something else. No actually. that's doesn't happen. At least officially none of them is penalties. Made such an official change but whatever we are discussing with them they are quite hesitant to to make the activities at the popular level. They don't want to be on the stage with services for refugees. I won't emphasize another point. I mean the older services and all the practices so far produced by municipalities was actually based on the more. It's much more for charity of those poor. People's what can we provide for them if human rights space reports that stay have certain rights and those ride says to be But i can say that the human rights city project could also be helpful in giving a new in other perspectives todo cities. Who are having problems takes this to the citizens to to the people. The voters like joey Disadvantage in caused by Crisis could also be seen as an advantage to change the mentality from charity bays to a human rights based approach perspectives. So the think that sounds absolutely wonderful you you seem to be very capable of taking positive perspectives upon a negative observation. So that's something that is admirable for all of us. I would like to ask you. Do you observe in general any factors than have made the process more easier more sustainable within particular municipality. So you said that's in some municipalities. There has been a lot of enthusiasm and more ownership and in some not that much. Can you offer perhaps without severi. Detailed analysis backing up perhaps but as an anecdotal observation. What do you think are the factors that make a human rights city initiative that is coming from outside the municipality and outside the citizenship substation -able holistic approach would be the most beneficial way in providing the sustainable dan ownership in the pouty. What i mean by that is of all you have to have. The political will and political motivation at the maze levels. Different than many european countries on local authorities systems be having turkey. Local torch systems aware and strong mayor in strong leadership is therefore if you have the political and and if it has expressed directly by the mayor so at the municipal level it's much easier to go on with different departments and it's also important to work with different departments within the polity. It's usually the projects are implemented only with one department level. I think you have to work at horizontal level with different departments to in mall. Everyone almost everyone on the other hand. Of course you have to find ways to cooperate with this we'll society the municipalities should be able to make the connection right connection and open Mechanisms for to seal society in stu citizen engagement. I can say to. Three crucial elements are important for sustainable too. So deposed ical mail a holistic approach ford municipal municipality and is engagement are three most important factors for success..

joey Disadvantage Crisis turkey Three crucial elements three three years one department level european bays
"one department" Discussed on Reel Talk: The Customer Insights Show

Reel Talk: The Customer Insights Show

05:49 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Reel Talk: The Customer Insights Show

"I can't answer those questions without getting information on them. But at the end of the day i need to be able to get what i need from an analytics perspective to me serious decisions but the frontline staff also needs to be able to say we're going to do a rewards and recognition program for staff. How do we make sure that we're measuring staff fairly like. How do we make sure that they're not getting tattooed for the negative experiences. That management convicts right forty percent of contact center agents. The thing they hate most about their jobs is being measured on oversimplified metrics that don't they don't feel reflective performance right so when you think about whether it's performance management or customer understanding or filling knowledge gaps or exploration whatever the purpose is of purposes of your program. Are you know we have to be very clear about like the value that they bring. And i think it's i think it's the same type of manage marketing at fifteen years ago. It's like you know they're used to just be marketing right. Now you've got you've got seo you've got blah you got you got twelve different flavors of marketing. All in one department customer experience an experienced management. Generally i think is now at that place. Where we're saying. It's not a one-size-fits-all tool. It's actually a pretty complex web of activity but when you look at it on a map is actually quite harmonized to three to five goals. That we've set for ourselves right of like. How do we create great experiences right when we have a gift of an opportunity to talk to a customer. How do we make our products more attractive to get them to renew. How do we turn customers into word of mouth. You know positive word of mouth advocates for us on all the channels that matter like there's two to three other financial goals in there but that's what the companies companies always come back to the same five goals. The question is how does customer experience meaningfully change with the company would do as a result of.

two three forty percent fifteen years ago five goals one department one twelve different flavors
"one department" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

03:48 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on WGN Radio

"Shoulder. Inbound Stevenson at LaGrange Road. We're under a winter weather advisory from midnight till noon Sunday. While the snow expected in our area has stopped for now, even colder air will follow with dangerous windchills. WGN's Rob Steed was outside earlier tonight. The wind is coming in ways one minute is hitting hard. The next minute is kind of blowing softly right now is blowing softly on the full forecast. Coming up later, and latest tour coronavirus numbers are in the other one Department of Public Health Saturday reported 3062 new confirmed cases of cover 19 Eleanor now has 1,144,281 total cases. DPH is also reporting 60 additional deaths from the Corona virus, which brings the number of total fatalities. 2 19,585 90,295 covert tests have been conducted within the last day. 1,294,000 born in 98 vaccines have been administered thus far, while 2271 other residents are hospitalized with the virus. The positivity rate is 3.4% gave Salgado WGN news ranks just 45th out of all 50 states when it comes to distributing the cupboard 19 vaccine that's created a lot of frustration for people who are We didn't get their shot. Dr. Vishnu Chandi of the Chicago Medical Society, says that the current distribution process isn't working. I hate to criticize folks, but you know clearly today I had an 80 year old friend of mine who's a retired physician who's been searching for weeks to try to get vaccinated. So the folks that really need it or not getting the vaccine and we need to make their for faster, better and easier. We don't have a single uniforms system that could sign up everybody in the state and direct them to areas. Illinois Department of Public Health says that over a million residents have already been vaccinate. That Chicago students and K through eight, who opted to return to classrooms last Monday are still in limbo as Chicago school officials and Chicago teachers union continued to negotiate terms for teachers and students to return to in class instruction. The debate is over. Covert 19 safety precautions and vaccinations for teachers, labor and environmental groups are teaming up against Wal Mart, claiming the company is not supporting American products as it claims to Union workers and members of the Greenpeace USA demonstrated outside the Lakeview store today, Protesters cilia Cody says jobs were being taken from an led light bulb plant in Ohio and being outsourced to China. We think the public who shopped here should know that the company that is trying to make you feel good about buying things made in the U. S. Is actually participating in moving work out of the U. S. To China so increasing the environmental footprint and taking way good American job warmer responded, saying it was G Lighting's decision on where to manufacture their products. Gun sales in Illinois continue set new records. Those sales have started drop off some because of the lack of supply for gun dealerships. Illinois State police say January set the fourth highest sales number and state history was nearly 56,500 guns sold. Gun sales in the state hit a record high last July it just over 65,000 shooting at the Indian Lakes Hotel on West suburban Bloomingdale Saturday morning killed one person injured several others while police are searching for the suspect. Village is pushing to revoke the hotel's business license. Bloomingdale's director of public safety Frank Jean Marie, See says crime on the hotel grounds has seen a dramatic increase recently had crimes involving drug use fights. We've taken guns off of people within the hotel and outside the hotel. We have had a drastic spike in crime in any lakes at the hotel itself. We conveyed our concerns to the hotel management to the ownership. Hotel security was.

Indian Lakes Hotel Chicago Illinois Department of Public WGN Salgado WGN LaGrange Road Illinois State Department of Public Health Dr. Vishnu Chandi DPH Wal Mart Illinois Rob Steed Bloomingdale Chicago Medical Society China Eleanor Greenpeace USA U. S. To China
"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:54 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

"To live our domestic values at home our democratic values at home within hours of taking office. I signed an executive order overturning. The hateful discriminatory muslim ban reverse the ban on transgender individuals serving in our military as part of our commitment to truth transparency accountability. We stated on day one. We started today one with daily briefings or the press from the white house we've raised we've reinstituted briefs here at state and the pentagon we believe a free. Press isn't an adversary. A free press is essential to the health of damarcus. we've restored our commitment to science and to create policies grounded in facts and evidence. I suspect bent. Franken would approve. We've taken steps to acknowledge and address systemic racism and the scourge of white supremacy in our own country racial. Just be an issue for one department administration and has to be the business of the whole of government and all our federal policies institutions. All this matters to foreign policy because when we host the summit of democracies early in my administration to rally the nation's role to defend democracy globally to push back the authority terrorism's vans will be much more credible partner because of these efforts to show up our own foundations a bright line between foreign and domestic policy every action we take in our conduct abroad. We must take with american working families in mind vasina foreign..

today day one white house muslim one one department Franken american
"one department" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

06:12 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on KQED Radio

"7 P.m.. The rain may be heavy at times after midnight tonight. This is all things considered from NPR news. I'm also Chang in Los Angeles and I'm Ari Shapiro in Washington. President Biden has said racial justice is one of his top priorities, and today he signed four executive actions, He says they're some of his first steps to addressing systemic racism. We need to open the promise America that every American That means we need to make the issue of racial equity, not just a knish you for any one department of government. It has to be the business of the whole of government. Even before he signed those orders today, some advocates for racial justice were saying they worry the actions don't go far enough. Joining us now is NPR. White House correspondent Aisha Roscoe. Hi Asia. Hello to begin with described what the president signed today. Today's announcement. It is somewhat limited in scope. It's not as expensive as some were expecting. The one that may have some impact on mass incarceration is that Biden is directing the Justice Department to not renew contracts with private prisons. This is something that the Obama administration was going to do. In the Trump administration reversed it. So the Biden White House is going back to that plan. Also, he's directing her the Department of Housing and Urban Development to advance fact fair housing laws, and there is an action about respecting tribal sovereignty and infighting, a rise in anti Asian discrimination that we've seen in this past year. The president talked about how George Floyd's death at the hands of police this summer marked a turning point in attitudes toward racial justice. But today's actions don't address police and why not? So that's obviously a top of mine issue, especially for activists and today's announcements Don't address that at all, but but prep the president's top adviser on domestic issues, Susan Rice, told reporters that there are more things in the works, She said there will be actions on criminal justice issues, including policing in coming weeks. We have 14 154 more days left in President Biden's first term. On, so give us a little something to do over the next few days. Rice is also leading a broad review of all federal programs to find ways to address these sorts of issues. You've been talking with advocates about what they want The Biden administration to do what they're pushing for. What do you hearing from them? Part of would buy them promised to do on the campaign trail was a new commission on policing. We haven't heard the details on that yet, but advocates are already concerned about this approach. I talked about this yesterday with Bree on Wales. He's a political, a political strategist focused on ending mass incarceration, He said. It's too soon to pass judgment. But he pointed out that the Obama White House already had a commission. Has studied policing. Here's more from him. So for us the commission is not a solution on a new commission is not a solution. For us. It's time to very much start to move forward in some of the things that we do know. Wells wants clear accountability for officers who engage in misconduct. Hey also said that, while ending contracts with privately run prisons is a step in the right direction, he said the administration needs to also in privately run detention centers for people facing deportation. Those detention centers run by the Department of Homeland Security are not addressed by these actions, and in the weeks ahead beyond the possible commission on policing. What else do you expect my becoming The administration is expected to take action on demilitarizing the police, you know, ending those programs that give local departments seriously military equipment that we see at these protests and there's some advocates are hoping that the White House will push for legislation that would go further and dealing with sentencing and standards for police policing. NPR White House correspondent Isha Roscoe. Thank you. Thank you. And the Corona virus. Pandemic vaccines will have to be distributed around the world. For most countries. The vaccines available in the U. S right now are simply too expensive and too difficult to transport. As NPR's Joe Parker reports that is making vaccines made in Russia and China look attractive. There's a good reason China could play a key role in ending the global Corona virus pandemic. China has an enormous vaccine production capacity. Deborah Seligson is a China watcher at Villanova University. That enormous capacity is at least in part because China is an enormous country. And since public health measures have largely kept the virus in check in China, that means some of that capacity can be used to send vaccines around the world. There are going to be huge advantages to these Chinese vaccines once they're, you know, fully tested, and if they turn out to be a fact, if for one thing they don't require special refrigeration, and for another, they'll be cheap. But there's still that question of if they turn out to be effective. We just haven't seen the full trial results published yet. Abigail Copeland is on the faculty of Vassar College. She keeps her eye on Chinese biotech companies. The technology behind the two leading Chinese vaccines is decades old. It's an approach that was used successfully in the 19 fifties to make a polio vaccine. It involves growing the virus in a lab than in activating it with a chemical like formaldehyde and using that in a vaccine there inactivated viral vaccine as they saw on research that they had conducted to develop a vaccine for SARS. So that actually gave them a head start. SARS was a deadly outbreak in the early two thousands in China caused by a close relative of the covert 19 corona virus, But the virus causing stars disappeared so that vaccine got shelved. Opened, sees nothing nefarious about the delays and learning the results of trials of the Chinese vaccines..

Biden president China NPR White House correspondent Biden White House Susan Rice polio vaccine Obama White House Obama administration Ari Shapiro Department of Housing and Urba America White House Justice Department Los Angeles Washington Chang
"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:37 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Listening to Bloomberg Sound on with Kevin surly on Bloomberg Radio, and I'm Jeannie Shan Xeno in for Kevin. So, really this afternoon, and here with me is Rick Davis as well as Joe Carly, former congressman from the state of New York. And we were listening. Just moments ago is Charlie mentioned to President Biden, speaking from the state dining room in terms of his steps to address the covert 19 crisis, amongst other things, ordering more than 100 million more doses of each of the five adviser and Madonna. Vaccines as well, a speeding up shipments to the states. Earlier this afternoon, however, the president was addressing another crisis that he's talked about throughout his campaign and his first few days in office. And that is the fight against racial equity. The president early this afternoon had a signing of executive orders, which he said are particularly necessary in light of the killing of George Floyd and the attack on the Capitol, which included members of white supremacist groups. And in the context of that he signed executive actions about racial discrimination and federal housing, as well as condemned condemning racism against Asian Americans and Pacific violators. And I think we have some sound on that. We need to open the promise America that every American That means we need to make the issue of racial equity, not just an issue for any one department of government. It has to be the business of the whole of government. And while the president was speaking on the other end of Washington, D C on Capitol Hill, we had 45 Republican senators vote against the prospect of even holding an impeachment trial, which we know is coming up in about two weeks, starting the week of February ace Prior to that we heard from the White House press secretary Jen Psaki. On the fact that the senators were getting sworn in today just before they made that vote, And I believe we have sound on that. He's going to allow them to move forward at the pace and manner that the leaders in the Senate determined on I can promise you that we will leave the vote counting two leaders in the Senate from now on. So Rick and Joe Rick, let me get you in here And then Joe your view on this vote of these 45 Republican senators against even holding a trial that's scheduled to start in about two weeks. Yeah. I mean, I don't think it's a surprise that Republicans would just assume not preside over another trial for impeachment of Donald Trump. The last one resulted in empowering Donald Trump to an even larger degree. It was a Bit of Ah parliamentary trick that Rand Paul used to even have this vote. Democrats didn't want to have a pre Try Alvaro count, which is basically what this resulted in the five GOP members who voted to go forward with the With the impeachment trial aren't surprises. They are mostly from the centrist wing Borkowski Collins, Romney sass and to me to me not running for re election. So these air these air the core of what you expect, But you know, we've heard from Mitch McConnell, who voted with the other GOP members to go ahead and try and stop it. But he's basically said Donald Trump did commit Insurrection. And so we'll see what the final vote count is this We now know where the Republicans are today, but you need 12 more votes to make this thing an impeachment. So, Joe, do you think they can get the votes? They need to even get close to that 17. Or is this you know just a new attempt by the Democrats to do something. That cannot possibly done they're not going to get to that 17. And that vote today just insured that I think the 17 is a steep, clawing time where I was disappointed was that well, Portman, who just announces that he will not run for re election, voted with the 45. I think there was some speculation and I know about her. Almost 25 years, and I think he's a fine person. Um But that was kind of little bit disappointing. I want a shocking entirely the little disappointing, but I do think that this is more than a performer, you know, do the senators themselves are witnesses to the events of that day? The videotape. The amount of of discovery that will go on even now, before the trial begins is enormous, and I think there's such overwhelming evidence. Really, really have to the American people to decide as well. And all those senators who have voted with their party right now have to keep in mind that when referee election there are a lot of other non Republican members are non Trump supporters. Who don't see, don't see this sort of the same way that they do. Yeah, Gel, and I'm curious Or there any Democrats at all that would potentially Vote for acquittal. If if that case isn't made, my guess is not, But I'm kind of curious what you think. Probably not, Rick, but I I don't anticipate it. But I think from my vantage point again and trying to be a subjective as possible, you know, having served in that house. I know you know it well. Building two and everything that went on that day that the effects of that day what took place was just so beyond the pale. And the evidence there is overwhelming. I'd be surprised if any Democrat did not vote for impeachment. Even Joe mention has already said that he would He favors impeachment. He favors impeachment. He is the most important man in the United States Senate today. That's there's no question about that. Yeah, And I think you're right, Joe. I think that obviously there's a case to be made here and you worry about the sights and events that happened on January 6th. Losing their impact as each day goes by, so they'll they'll be an important, uh, effect that the media has, and the prosecutors have to make the case at the time to remind everybody These horrific events that you just aptly described and before the president spoke about Cove it earlier today, our colleague David Westin had a chance to talk to Governor, Phil Murphy of New Jersey. And so we're looking forward to hearing what he had.

president Joe Donald Trump Joe Rick United States Senate GOP Kevin surly Rick Davis President Biden executive Joe Carly Bloomberg Bloomberg Radio Jeannie Shan Xeno Mitch McConnell Rand Paul Charlie congressman George Floyd Jen Psaki
"one department" Discussed on Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

05:39 min | 2 years ago

"one department" Discussed on Leadership Lifestyle Podcast

"This place was made for them. That's the kind of visit on talking about. It is not just just putting some words on the wall is how you create senses incites and sounded if if whatever it is you're trying to come up with if you can picture what the most perfect version of that that's was on your vision that you've created at the you've created those feelings and it's not just your job to create the vision you also have to drive the vision and won't be pulling some key phrases from this vision that will become your action items for your mission statement and that's where we'll start to create some action for your vision Turn into a reality. It has to take action because simply you can't just have something on a wall in. Just look at it from time to time. You're getting ready to actually go on a jury so another example for creating vision is a personal vision in this process. Works for personal goals as well regardless of money ear which you might have now how you live your life. What kind diversity. One of the is totally up to you. So here's a little personal vision. Might look like it will be as Examples when you talk about was imported to you things like morning workouts before anybody else gets up or maybe you get up and do some meditation or journal how you prepare for the day. What is your commitment to your profession. How do you connect to your friends and most importantly your personal vision. Does it reflect what you want to be known for. So lastly you know. How do you have a visit. Establish company already has on. So i use it absolutely support. Your current company's vision after you work there and they are paying. You might be a good idea to support him. But think about your gold. Cabbie staff your circle. Vince laments versus your concern. What you do in that space. Oh great example this is the vote gung ho by ken blanchard in sheldon bowles. But a great book. That's a perfect example of vision where the organization they work for. This manufacturing plant was just a nightmare. Disaster by this one department was absolutely running perfectly and they did it on their own. Made him do it. They just decided this is how they were going to run. Wander ticket that in putting that through the rest of the plane in turning everything around so even in your own space for the majority of us that do work larger corporations when you really think about it. They really really isn't much holding you back from doing something like this. You can't do it on your own so look for things that you can actually create a in order to do that so looking at what our vision was we can pull some key phrases from their season about things like comforting aroma. Fresh ground coffee baking items fresh from the other variety holiday known throughout the community known not have good stuff is everybody knows it. That's a huge difference person. Happy to see them caused by. He can't wait to help them. truly enjoys creating amazing products. And how each team member interacts with each other than this place was made for them..

ken blanchard each team member Vince gung ho each one department sheldon One
Boston - Governor Baker announces tighter mask mandate, other Covid-19 restrictions

WBZ Overnight News

01:06 min | 2 years ago

Boston - Governor Baker announces tighter mask mandate, other Covid-19 restrictions

"Baker announces new restrictions to curb the rising number of covert 19 cases in the state first Department of Public Health will once again issue a stay at home advisory. This time, the advisor will be in fact, from 10 P.m. to 5 A.m.. Residents should stay home between these hours with exceptions, like going to work into the grocery store. I've also signed an executive order that will require indoor recreation facilities, theaters, casinos. And virtually anything else that's open. That's an entertainment venue to close at 9 30. I will also require restaurants to stop providing table service at 9 30, but they continue to provide carry out Will also shut down liquor sales in restaurants and grocery stores and package stories and convenience stores at 9:30 P.m.. We've also updated the gatherings order to reduce the gathering limit of private homes to 10 people for indoor gatherings and 25 people for outdoor gatherings. These will go into effect at 12:01 A.m. Friday morning. W. B C's

Department Of Public Health Baker W. B C's
Massachusetts issues new restrictions and a stay-at-home advisory

Nightside with Dan Rea

00:50 sec | 2 years ago

Massachusetts issues new restrictions and a stay-at-home advisory

"Charlie Baker calling Oppa's money gets 1000 members of the National Guard to make sure the state's position to maintain public safety in the aftermath of the election. Keep it right here on BBC news radio for continuing coverage. The governor, also announcing some new restrictions to curb the rising tide of covert 19 in the state first Department of Public Health will once again issue a stay at home advisory. This time, the advisor will be in fact, from 10 P.m. to 5 A.m.. Residents should stay home between these hours with exceptions, like going to work into the grocery store. I've also signed an executive order that will require indoor recreation facilities, theaters, casinos. And virtually anything else that's open. That's an entertainment venue to close at 9 30

Oppa Charlie Baker Department Of Public Health National Guard BBC
The Answer is The 5 Minute Pickup

A Slob Comes Clean

05:15 min | 2 years ago

The Answer is The 5 Minute Pickup

"So I'd asked in their four questions because my brain is just a little bit like. Lately and so I needed some questions to answer for the PODCAST and I'm. Calling this episode you know the answer is the five minute pickup or something like that because that was the answer to at least four different questions within this thing. So I wanted to make sure that you know as I was answering all this different things, I, was putting him into a word doc. I'll do another podcast right answer some more questions but I thought you know there's like four different times in here where in my notes I've said we'll interested pick up. Well, the answer is a five minute pick up and I thought okay. Well, what what are some different questions where the answer is the five minute pickup all right. So here we go. Do. You have any tips for making sure you get completely unpacked from a trip in a timely manner. Are you curious how the answer to this question is GonNa be the five minute pickup So the real answer to this is by the way. Sometimes, when I asked for questions and people start giving me questions I started to feel like wait I feel like these questions make it seem like I, know all the answers to everything and I really don't this is mostly me just going from my experience and also having thought about these things and laid out different strategies in my home over the past eleven years and written about it like I feel like if i. Even, if I had lived for the eleven years working on my own house, getting it to the point where it is now, I wouldn't necessarily be able to answer these questions except for the fact that I've written about it, which means I have like laid out steps I have put together actual strategies and strategies into words, and that's the only reason. I feel like I can answer these questions but sometimes questions like this. Make me panic and go I'm not perfect I don't know everything in my house is not perfect but whatever here So the question was, do you have any tips for making sure making sure No there's no way to make sure of anything you can get complete or you get completely unpacked from a trip in a timely manner. So that the number one way that I manage this is having a designated place for my suitcases. Okay because. which I mean, there's probably people listening going how would you not have a designated place but the reality is sometimes suitcases are these weird things because you don't use them all that often you pull them out. And it's like, Oh, where should I the suitcases but when I I have a designated place, there's a in my bedroom I think I had talked about at different times on the blog. But when my mother in law passed away and we cleaned out her assisted living apartment, she had a little wardrobe that was really kind of her her pride and joy and really was so useful in her little apartment shit. Close, more than confident her closet and they were important to her so there was a little. I. Forget what kind of what it is, but she always called it. Bites what type of what it was, but might be I. Don't know anyway this little wardrobe and and she loved that thing like it was something that she and my father in law had purchased when they first got married in their first department and it really is it's pretty and and so when it came down to it. You know getting rid of stuff I was like Oh. This is one of those things I really hate to get rid of, but I? I made sure I had an actual spot and purpose for it in my home before I brought it home and so what we ended up doing was we have this little space. It's perfectly I measured it to make sure. In our bedroom that used to be, where are my husband's stereo system went which you know stereo systems are not really the thing anymore, which is Kinda. Funny. But like as far as big speakers and things like that but he did keep his turntable. Well, there was a little shelf at the top where we used to have our TV. Like our big boxy TV. There was a little shelf at the top, and it's kind of like this cutout section of the wall, and so it's kind of a weird place. Anyway, we'll the top shelf he put the turntable from hysteria system and that's all he kept. Their. And then our CDs are up there and then this would wardrobe thing fits right in there. Okay. Because I had had some stuff that was kind of putting in that spot anyway that looked a key but once we that wardrobe in there, then those things can go in there. So that's like my camera and lighting equipment for youtube videos and things like that. Where do y'all put your stuff, your youtube videos I know a lot of extra probably duty to. But anyway. So that is there but also had room for. Most. Of Our suitcases if I put my smaller suitcases inside of my larger suitcases. Okay. So it Kinda takes a little bit of finagling but I'm willing to do that because suitcases or something that I want to have easily accessible. Not that we've travelled much in twenty twenty but in general, I travel on it somewhat decently regular basis except for twenty twenty. And if my suitcases are in the attic, it just makes it too much of

Youtube Twenty Twenty
The Answer is The 5 Minute Pickup

A Slob Comes Clean

06:15 min | 2 years ago

The Answer is The 5 Minute Pickup

"So in I've been working on a project. Oh, I WANNA make sure to go ahead and tell you guys that we're having plumbing work done. I think I've mentioned it. It's really expensive. Crazy expensive. and. They are doing something and I'm I'm trying to not think about what they're doing, but it involves some major digging and it's basically a pipe that is messed up under our house. We have a slab and we're in Texas and all that kind of stuff. So. which means that the Way The slab works is different. I don't know I. Don't know our ground. We can't have basements here. Does that make? Does it help at all in the understanding but like nobody has a basement I live 'cause they can't do basement in our kind of grown I. Think it's like rock or something I don't know. Any way they are doing things into basically for the last week and a half they've been digging and most the time. It's not that big of a deal and then every once in a while it's like this. Sound and so in case you hear any of that. It's not my stomach. It's the digging and thanks for listening to the podcast and supporting our sponsors so that we can pay for this plumbing. Whatever anyway. Here we go. We are talking about various questions. So I had asked the people in the Patriot on facebook group if you'd like to know more about being a patron of the show at the five dollar level you get to. Become a part of the super secret facebook group. But if you'd like to find out more about that, go to Patriotdepot dot com slash asleep comes clean. That's P. T. R. E. O. N. DOT COM slash quince clean and I always put that in the show notes as well a link to that but so I'd asked in their four questions because my brain is just a little bit like. Lately and so I needed some questions to answer for the PODCAST and I'm. Calling this episode you know the answer is the five minute pickup or something like that because that was the answer to at least four different questions within this thing. So I wanted to make sure that you know as I was answering all this different things, I, was putting him into a word doc. I'll do another podcast right answer some more questions but I thought you know there's like four different times in here where in my notes I've said we'll interested pick up. Well, the answer is a five minute pick up and I thought okay. Well, what what are some different questions where the answer is the five minute pickup all right. So here we go. Do. You have any tips for making sure you get completely unpacked from a trip in a timely manner. Are you curious how the answer to this question is GonNa be the five minute pickup So the real answer to this is by the way. Sometimes, when I asked for questions and people start giving me questions I started to feel like wait I feel like these questions make it seem like I, know all the answers to everything and I really don't this is mostly me just going from my experience and also having thought about these things and laid out different strategies in my home over the past eleven years and written about it like I feel like if i. Even, if I had lived for the eleven years working on my own house, getting it to the point where it is now, I wouldn't necessarily be able to answer these questions except for the fact that I've written about it, which means I have like laid out steps I have put together actual strategies and strategies into words, and that's the only reason. I feel like I can answer these questions but sometimes questions like this. Make me panic and go I'm not perfect I don't know everything in my house is not perfect but whatever here So the question was, do you have any tips for making sure making sure No there's no way to make sure of anything you can get complete or you get completely unpacked from a trip in a timely manner. So that the number one way that I manage this is having a designated place for my suitcases. Okay because. which I mean, there's probably people listening going how would you not have a designated place but the reality is sometimes suitcases are these weird things because you don't use them all that often you pull them out. And it's like, Oh, where should I the suitcases but when I I have a designated place, there's a in my bedroom I think I had talked about at different times on the blog. But when my mother in law passed away and we cleaned out her assisted living apartment, she had a little wardrobe that was really kind of her her pride and joy and really was so useful in her little apartment shit. Close, more than confident her closet and they were important to her so there was a little. I. Forget what kind of what it is, but she always called it. Bites what type of what it was, but might be I. Don't know anyway this little wardrobe and and she loved that thing like it was something that she and my father in law had purchased when they first got married in their first department and it really is it's pretty and and so when it came down to it. You know getting rid of stuff I was like Oh. This is one of those things I really hate to get rid of, but I? I made sure I had an actual spot and purpose for it in my home before I brought it home and so what we ended up doing was we have this little space. It's perfectly I measured it to make sure. In our bedroom that used to be, where are my husband's stereo system went which you know stereo systems are not really the thing anymore, which is Kinda. Funny. But like as far as big speakers and things like that but he did keep his turntable. Well, there was a little shelf at the top where we used to have our TV. Like our big boxy TV. There was a little shelf at the top, and it's kind of like this cutout section of the wall, and so it's kind of a weird place. Anyway, we'll the top shelf he put the turntable from hysteria system and that's all he kept. Their. And then our CDs are up there and then this would wardrobe thing fits right in there. Okay. Because I had had some stuff that was kind of putting in that spot anyway that looked a key but once we that wardrobe in there, then those things can go in there. So that's like my camera and lighting equipment for youtube videos and things

P. T. R. E. O. Facebook Texas Youtube
The Latest: British PM to announce new social restrictions

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 2 years ago

The Latest: British PM to announce new social restrictions

"Federal more than two buildings hundred thousand in downtown people Louisville in America Kentucky have now are closed died and of covert officers nineteen are standing according by to as numbers a city compiled awaits a possible by Johns decision Hopkins University about charges and Brianna which has Taylor's been tracking police the shooting virus from the start Louisville Kentucky is getting the ready first for the coronavirus state attorney general's case announcement in the U. S. about was reported whether he'll charge on police January officers twenty and first Brianna Taylor's of this shooting year death by on late Monday may the the Louisville country metro had hit police one department hundred canceled thousand officers deaths vacations and while the numbers police have say gone for public down safety since the the peak restricting of the pandemic vehicle traffic in downtown the spring the and corona placing barricades virus still around claims Jefferson the square lives park of where hundreds many previous each protests day have been held yesterday Brianna in Taylor the US was shot there eight were three times hundred on March and thirteenth fifty six by officers deaths who entered with her home fifty using a two no thousand knock warrant seventy during a narcotics new cases investigation reported large protests I'm over Julie her death Walker erupted in late may Taylor's family and many celebrities and activists have been pushing Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron to criminally charge officers involved in the raid I'm Jennifer king

Hopkins University Kentucky Louisville Corona Jefferson United States Julie Walker Daniel Cameron Jennifer King America Kentucky Johns Attorney Brianna Taylor
A Look at Police Body Cam Technologies, and Where They Fall Short

The 3:59

08:10 min | 2 years ago

A Look at Police Body Cam Technologies, and Where They Fall Short

"The nationwide protests over the killing of George, Floyd brought many things alight from racial inequality to police brutality. One issue that's come back to the forefront is whether or not police body cams are effective tools to hold officers accountable. I'm Roger Jiang. This is your daily charge with me senior video producer Butch Kerry who was a video out today discussing this various you welcome bridget. Thanks for having me. So body cameras really spiked popularity with the police back between fourteen talk about what really sparked this move answer where we are today yeah. It really began with Michael Brown because when he was shot by a white police officer in two thousand fourteen, there was no video footage to show it happened in the officer didn't face charges. So the family came out and Please request thought you know there's a movement that police can wear body cameras that was pushed even further by President Obama also saying that this should be the change for the future. Then there were federal grant setup to help departments pay for them. So you did have this big increase in police departments trying to help their relationship with the community and saying, Hey, we're going to have body cameras now but I mean that was present fourteen and I feel like we're still at the same place which. Is why I wanted to do this report and look into how do they work and why are we still at the same place and it really comes down to how different departments are using the cameras zero zillion talk a little bit about that and just to give our listeners a sense of how broadly there used. I, know you mentioned those grants to the Justice Department awarded place apartments in thirty states more than twenty three, million dollars for body Cam. So how many police officers actually use them? That the data right now, when you look at the statistics, it's looking like about half of our nation right now has officer some way or another obviously is hard to be exactly of small apartments, large departments but right now the idea looks like about half the country has law enforcement wearing some kind of camera or has tested out cameras some. In some way I, mean issues basic the you have officers wear cameras people will change their behavior when they know they're being recorded right there's more trust now when they're when there's a cameras more accountability these really lofty goals for one piece attack at there have been a few snags along the way. Of them being cost of storage because you have all these officers recording when they come into a situation every day. So figure, every officer has maybe three or four hours of recording everyday they have to store in the cloud. Well, how long are they storing that and how much is needing to be saved It's all different depending on every single up police department. So sometimes, it's months sometimes years and you're looking at costs in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. One department only had five police officers in the little town of Nebraska, and they were looking at something around fifteen grand. A year and this is like not folk is not feasible for every department to pay this because those those grants we talked about they don't cover ongoing storage costs. So some departments have been pulled out of using them because they don't see it's it's useful for them to be paying for it because the storage storage is definitely issued cost is an issue. These unforeseen costs are a real. Red Flag but bring it back to you know the ultimate idea that these cameras were supposed to bring accountability and to prove relations with the community was twenty and we're still protesting about police brutality Take things are worse than they ever are they have been. So what happened how did they fail to accomplish that goal? I wouldn't call them an outright failure, but it certainly is a failure in A. Couple of aspects one It goes back to how these tools are being used for one A officers have the ability for the most part right now to start and stop the recording on their own because they they really feel like you should have that kind of freedom. Do you really want a camera to be always turned on in every instance? No not when you're visiting someone at the hospital Having a private conversation or just you know having your lunch that said, what are the punishments if you don't hit that record button when you were supposed to or finding that there isn't a lot of incentive to do the right thing or I should say you know punishment if you miss a recording when you're supposed to at least that's what a lot of the researchers I talked to were saying that. If if you don't activate your camera, you know what's the consequence for that That's that's one area that's missing. Other area that that's missing is how can the public get access to this footage to be accountable? You countless studies have been done, and most recently they looked at all the studies and said, all right. What's the data we're seeing that there are fewer complaints against police officers. That's a good thing. We're seeing that police officers have footage to say, Hey, look I was justified that this was a false complaint against me. Great cameras are showing the truth in different aspects but a cameras show every angle of the story that happened and the cameras only as good as being able to release the footage. So some researchers I talked to said. We WanNA. See more data on can the public access when they want to receive some change now in New York City the mayor said that anytime now there is an incident where someone killed or seriously injured they will release footage but for a while there was this law that said, they don't have to release anything. We'll as a camera that you know. So so that's really the problem. I it comes down to not having a uniformed a set of rules or standards on win. This footage can be released in how it can be used. To the point of consistency, you mentioned New York City Mayor de Blasio a changes law he's fairly alone. He's he's sort of serve an isolated case right? Because the the rules are very greatly I don't think there's any kind of national mandate to be more transparent about when they released this footage ride, we're starting to see changes win the public points, their camera at a situation and out that officers didn't have their cameras turned on over in. Louisville when there was a shooting at the restaurant owner those officers who did not activate. Their cameras were put on leave a might my questions are okay they're put on leave but they're suspended. Where are you know the the more serious deterrence there? You know what's happening people are losing their jobs over it out win when government realized that the spotlight's on them you know but we have to look at what's going on in terms of using them. There is some technology though that is kind of starting to change that part of it like having a camera automatically turn on when it senses something's happening it could be win a Taser guns pulled out of a holster. It could be also not so serious like when it detects a police vehicle going at a certain speed or detects other kind of check marks author software so that Way If an officer is in the heat of the moment and can't remember to turn on their camera. It does it for them There's also talk about live streaming. So some of the cameras are able to have a superior back at home base tap into what that officer is seen in real time. That is a great advantage. When something serious is going down, they get a real time feedback. But. It's something that they're also can be push back with with police unions going wait a second I don't want someone seeing what I'm doing all times I don't live streaming only a few departments really have started to use livestream I. Think Cincinnati was one of the first that used the teaser brand of version of livestream on their cameras, and that was just February so very early for that technology but there's a lot of talk about that.

Officer New York City Roger Jiang Butch Kerry Producer Red Flag George Bridget Justice Department President Obama Nebraska Michael Brown Floyd Louisville Cincinnati
`That 70s Show' actor Danny Masterson charged in 3 rapes

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 3 years ago

`That 70s Show' actor Danny Masterson charged in 3 rapes

"Hi there an Mike actor is and new Rossi a former information you're TV reporting show the about is trump facing what administration may have caused rape the seeks charges helicopter to roll crash back protections that killed Kobe prosecutors for tech Bryant companies in his Los daughter Angeles the say trump and that administration seven seventies others show wants actor Congress Danny to take Masterson away the information some legal has is been protections in charged the seventeen with for the online rape hundred of platforms three page women report such as Facebook the from actor the national was Google charged transportation and with Twitter three counts safety long of rape board held protections by force it have says or generally the fear pilot shielded of the the helicopter the charges companies come that from after crashed legal a responsibility three in thick year fog investigation for what reported of the users actor who he post is was forty climbing on four their sites years old when the in justice fact one department count involves he proposes was an assault descending rolling on the twenty back three the liability report year old says woman protections the pilot in two thousand told granted air under traffic one the nineteen controllers ninety one six of the twenty communications he was climbing eight year decency to four old thousand in act two thousand feet the treated three to get the above companies clouds and as platforms eight on January twenty three twenty rather year than six old publishers woman but later in which reality can in two be thousand the sued chopper over three content was plunging the allegations last month first toward president came a hillside out Donald when prosecutors Trump southwest signed announced an executive of Los them in twenty Angeles order seventeen where challenging crashed the Masterson protections killing from all denied the aboard nineteen the ninety allegations six the report telecommunications at does that not time offer law a conclusion I'm Mike Oscar about Crossey what wells caused Gabriel up the Washington crash rather to compilation of factual reports that we gathered about the case a final report on the calls will come later I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Rossi Rape Congress Danny Masterson Facebook Google Assault President Trump Donald Trump Executive Mike Oscar Angeles Twitter Washington Oscar Wells Gabriel
`That 70s Show' actor Danny Masterson charged in 3 rapes

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 3 years ago

`That 70s Show' actor Danny Masterson charged in 3 rapes

"Hi there an Mike actor is and new Rossi a former information you're TV reporting show the about is trump facing what administration may have caused rape the seeks charges helicopter to roll crash back protections that killed Kobe prosecutors for tech Bryant companies in his Los daughter Angeles the say trump and that administration seven seventies others show wants actor Congress Danny to take Masterson away the information some legal has is been protections in charged the seventeen with for the online rape hundred of platforms three page women report such as Facebook the from actor the national was Google charged transportation and with Twitter three counts safety long of rape board held protections by force it have says or generally the fear pilot shielded of the the helicopter the charges companies come that from after crashed legal a responsibility three in thick year fog investigation for what reported of the users actor who he post is was forty climbing on four their sites years old when the in justice fact one department count involves he proposes was an assault descending rolling on the twenty back three the liability report year old says woman protections the pilot in two thousand told granted air under traffic one the nineteen controllers ninety one six of the twenty communications he was climbing eight year decency to four old thousand in act two thousand feet the treated three to get the above companies clouds and as platforms eight on January twenty three twenty rather year than six old publishers woman but later in which reality can in two be thousand the sued chopper over three content was plunging the allegations last month first toward president came a hillside out Donald when prosecutors Trump southwest signed announced an executive of Los them in twenty Angeles order seventeen where challenging crashed the Masterson protections killing from all denied the aboard nineteen the ninety allegations six the report telecommunications at does that not time offer law a conclusion I'm Mike Oscar about Crossey what wells caused Gabriel up the Washington crash rather to compilation of factual reports that we gathered about the case a final report on the calls will come later I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Rossi Rape Congress Danny Masterson Facebook Google Assault President Trump Donald Trump Executive Mike Oscar Angeles Twitter Washington Oscar Wells Gabriel
Senate GOP to restrict police chokeholds in emerging bill

AP News Radio

00:49 sec | 3 years ago

Senate GOP to restrict police chokeholds in emerging bill

"As Congress rushes to respond to mass protests over the killings of black Americans by police president trump's ready to unveil his own changes the president says he will sign an executive order on police reforms today we want to order and we want it done fairly justly we wanted done safely to administration officials say the order will include establishing a database to track officers accused of excessive force to keep them from being able to simply hop from one department to another his move comes with Senate Republicans ready to roll out their own reform proposal it does not go as far as one the Democrat led house will vote on next week Democrats say the GOP is not going far enough to match public demand for bold change Sager mag ani Washington

Congress Donald Trump President Trump GOP Executive Senate Sager Ani Washington
Propping up your partner

Ladies, We Need To Talk

06:37 min | 3 years ago

Propping up your partner

"I have thought about leaving. He's never said, but I know that if I did leave and I, took the kids away on, either he would be dead. Within a few years. I honestly fell. The rug had been pulled out from underneath saying. Hey, kind of went to bed saying. I do love you and I feel better than having told you. All each. Glad you feel better because I feel I absolute crap. Going into a romantic partnership, we make some assumptions. That will share work US strengths communicate kindly and be more or less equal. So, what happens when life? Chuck's YOU NASTY SURPRISE? The balanced gets let of Wack and your original dynamic ends up totally lopsided. I do think that women are more prone to take on the partners problems. They will get much more emotionally enmeshed oven. They partners problem and almost lose if it's the problem. This is not a design fault of women. We ask socialized and acted to manage the emotions of people around us, and it is a given that in any relationship they will be times when one person is up and one person's down, and maybe you get to take turns being bit awesome and sometimes being a bit lousy. But in opinion this. You one side of Aleta your partner is the other the wrongs in between at a life. You've built together. Kids harm life. What if instead of being your reliable half? Your partner has collapsed. That other beam is gone and now the entire thing. Is counting on you. If that's. How do you summon the strength to be everything? Is it possible to care for your loved one and not take it along. And when you compensate for their deficiencies. You actually helping or just enabling hopeless pot to remain heartless forever. I'm you me Stein's ladies? We need to talk about propping up your partner. Of course is always a need to support one another. And one would hope that over the ebbs and flows is sort of some degree of mutuality. Clinical psychologist and psychotherapist Dr Jackie Wind ship. In this episode, we're going to hear from two women one supporting her partner through A. And One, his partner has depression, and we're going to break one of our own hard and fast rules that when you've held sacred for over forty episodes and four seasons of this podcast the first time ever we'll hear from a man that's coming up. I though to kick us off. Dr He's going to help us understand how to support our partners through the most trying of times. Says women are particularly prone to letting out boundaries. Sleep when someone needs us. Propping up can also mean that you somehow. Hard that you're actually doing too much and I think that is a pitfall that women in particular need to watch out for just because we're socialized to be self sacrifice and put a need second, and I think it's very easy to then get into quite dysfunctional patterns in trying to prop up a partner that. Are Harmful for the woman and also actually don't really help. Resolve the problem. More help the partner. Do you commonly see being the woman propping up her partner? I think it can go both ways, but I do think that women are more prone to take on the partners problems whereas men tend to be able to hold a little bit more of a distance I'm over generalizing but. That would be my impression. Boundaries a really important in human relationships, so if your supporting or propping up a partner why boundaries especially important then. Because otherwise you become so enmeshed. That it's almost like you lose your identity completely and you become. Them and the problem that they are dealing with, and it also deprives the person's got the problem of being able to have their own self identity in that as well. The two of you kind of mood in a particular way, we say in psychology you know that when there's a merger, only one person said entity can survive. Only one person's reality can survive in a way. It's bad for the person who's doing the caring up. Because they lose their sense of self and become completely consumed by the issue of the problem, but it's also bad for the other person that you're trying to help. Because they experienced their identity, their agency gets somehow taken away. I mean with every relationship is a bit of a balance in a to and fro, and one person may have skills in one department, which the other doesn't. It fits almost like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle is. How do you know if you're crossing over into over functioning? I think when you find that you're doing. More to fix the problem. Your partner is definitely over functioning I think when you start finding yourself feeling angry and resentful. You're over functioning. I think when you find that you keep offering solutions and your partner keeps knocking them back and saying yes, but that won't work because of XYZ. Differently over functioning it's okay to try and help and particularly to help them to help themselves such OSCO partner. What can I do to help? Rather than assuming that you know what the right thing is for them to support positive actions that they're taking, but not to be the one to be trying to make all the positive actions happen and your partners dragging along in your wake. You WanNa be your partners. Cheerleader and you want to say I've got your back. Support You I. Believe in you. You've got this. You can do it,

Partner United States Aleta Dr Jackie Wind Dr He Chuck Depression Stein
Garcetti makes nomination for director of civil and human rights department

Leo Laporte

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Garcetti makes nomination for director of civil and human rights department

"Los Angeles mayor Garcetti is launching the city's first department of civil and human rights to address issues of social and racial injustice is a department that will have a civil and Human Rights Commission we can brand discrimination and find justice in this city instead of it going on answered set to begin July first it will address disparities in areas like business and education for people of color in addition the department will include the office of racial equality to conduct research and policy development for how to spend public dollars as protests continue in southern California the mayor said the inspector general of the police commission will review any recorded footage showing harsh tactics used by police action kit could be taken including the removal of an

Garcetti Human Rights Commission California Los Angeles
Gresham man accused of smuggling misbranded chloroquine

Rush Limbaugh

00:39 sec | 3 years ago

Gresham man accused of smuggling misbranded chloroquine

"Is good our top story aggression man is facing federal charges accused of trying to profit from the covert nineteen pandemic eleven ninety K. exes Gail Cunningham explains forty two year old Matthew Owens is accused of illegally buying and importing misbranded Cllr Quinn from China for attempted resale in the west Cork when the active ingredient in prescription drugs used to treat malaria has also been used in some coronavirus cases the investigation began April thirteenth when a package from China containing white powder addressed one department was intercepted at a FedEx facility in Memphis the substance labeled ammonium phosphate turned out to be Clark when Owens made his first court appearance Monday a conviction could be the twenty three year federal

Gail Cunningham Matthew Owens Cllr Quinn China Cork Malaria Memphis Clark Fedex
A Complete List of Trump’s Pardons and Commutations

All In with Chris Hayes

12:14 min | 3 years ago

A Complete List of Trump’s Pardons and Commutations

"Today. Donald Trump continued his full on assault. On the rule of law pardoning and commuting the sentences of several high profile criminals he notably included former Illinois governor. Rod Blagojevich was convicted of trying to sell Barack Obama's Senate seat vacated because he was elected president in exchange for campaign contributions. Begovic had served eight years of a fourteen year prison sentence. You may also remember the governor from the apprentice where he messed up the Harry Potter Challenge and got fired Donald Trump. We'll technically by the apprentice producers today the President Communities Sentence Response Members of the Illinois House Republican delegation released a saying quote. We're disappointed by the president's commutation of Robert Mugabe of federal sentence. Begovic is the face of public corruption in Illinois. And not once has he shown any remorse for his clear undocumented. Record of egregious crimes that undermined the trust placed in him by the voters. Nbc News Correspondent. Tom Winter reminds us are eating. A jury found him guilty of trying to extort the CEO of Children's Memorial Hospital for a donation in exchange for increasing the payments to doctors. Who took care of Specialty Care Kids? Oh but Donald Trump was not done there he also pardoned former New York police department. Commissioner Bernard Kerik pleaded guilty to eight felony charges including tax fraud and lying to White House officials. Carrick was nominated by George W Bush to be the Secretary of Homeland Security before withdrawing that nomination just a week later. The judge gave a longer sentence than agreed to the plea deal saying quote. I think the damage caused by Mr Carrick is in some ways. Immeasurable trump also pardoned bond. Trader Michael Milkin. So guy considered to be the face of insider trading in the nineteen eighty S. Milton was originally charged with ninety eight. Federal counts including racketeering. He pleaded guilty to six felony charges of securities fraud conspiracy. He was sentenced to ten years in prison. He also paid six hundred million dollars in fines and restitution at sentencing. The judge said quote when a man of your power in the financial world repeatedly conspires to violate and violate securities and tax laws in order to achieve more power and wealth for himself and his wealthy clients. A significant president prison term is required in order to deter others others receive clemency from trump today glued former San Francisco Forty niners owner Edward debartolo junior. Who pleaded guilty in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight two concealing an extortion attempt involving the governor of Louisiana David Savvy and the former Bush administration official who was sentenced to a year in prison for lying about his association with Jack? Abramov June grown the owner of a Mental Health Care Company. Who was serving a thirty five year prison sentence for running? A two hundred. Five million dollar Medicare fraud scheme to be clear. This is the president who spent the last six months arguing. He so pose corruption. He had to make sure. Ukrainian president was to by withholding credit grudgingly approved military aid unless you launch fake investigation into the Biden's and route around Kremlin source conspiracy theory tourist findings but somehow this group of liars an extortionist and swindlers is the group of people. Trump felt deserve clemency. Maybe it's just a coincidence. That trump is pardoning these felons as the sentencing yet. Another one of his criminal pals looms earlier today. Trump tweeted about the judge in the trial of his longtime friend and advisor. Roger Stone suggesting stone deserved a new trial. Not long after the judge ruled stone. Sentencing hearing we'll go on that's planned on Thursday. Although she did say Roger. Stone's sentence will not begin until after she rules on his request for a new trial. Trump's interference with the stone cases. Troubled the Federal Judges Association so much that they called an emergency meeting tomorrow to address it and joining me now. For more on the president's pardoning spree. Today's Walter Dellinger. He was formerly formerly the acting. Solicitor General and also the head of the office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice under president. Bill Clinton Mr Dellinger. What do these pardons say to you as somebody who worked in in at high levels in justice in the United States? Well I think the show that we're really at the at the end of being a country that believes in equal justice under law there was no process to see how these crimes and these sentences compared with others who remain in prison. It's the president's own whim when a president acts by Wim and says he did of the Goya Vich. I wanted wife on television that that is an assault on the rule of law. But it goes much deeper than that. This is part of a three pronged assault on low as we know it. It involves threats of criminal prosecution of political opponents. Those investigate you. It involves promises that the president will intervene on behalf of those who commit crimes on his behalf and it. The third leg of this assault is his attack on judges and jurors in cases in which he's involved there is there's a banana republic aspect to it as you said that if you're friends with the president or on his TV show you get a pardon no matter what you've done and if you cross him in any way you might end up being prosecuted and we know that William Bar doesn't seem to be opposed to doing that but they're also does seem to be kind of a sort of Ross statement of power that Donald Trump is saying that if you commit these particular kinds of crimes that are against the Public. Trust that our financial in nature that are about corruption when he himself was impeached for corruption. It almost as sort of I don't know it almost feels like a message about that too about the fact that he's saying no no. I'm going to use of dive into corruption and revel in it. That's a good point Jordan. He treats he treats very high status people as if they're high status is a mitigation of their crops. When in fact it is an exacerbation that makes him so much worse. When you're a privileged person take for example. The fact that he has intervened on behalf of someone who was this got to be the national security adviser and lied about an investigation not just any investigation an investigation into a foreign military powers intervention. Our election. He intervened on behalf of someone who has been a prominent associated with President. Said is Roger Stone Who who committed five categories of lies and engaged in what the first department memo said was a relentless multi year attempt to again and obstruct justice in terms of an investigation into the corruption and the election and then finally the sympathy for someone. Who had the Honora being governor of one of our largest states? And who is thoroughly corrupt? And who sold a position in the United States Senate? Now that's he treats those because high status people as mitigation of their crops. And would it surprise you if the after to the things that Donald Trump does as well when it surprised if he's setting up there's been a lot of questions about whether he might try to part himself like if he's ever found to have committed some crime and that would certainly make himself the biggest part of the mall. I think he would undoubtedly attempt to pardon himself and everyone around him. He certainly let it be known that if a if he's re-elected or or even in the period after he was defeated he is GonNa take care of Of of everyone he knows including himself. I think the courts would reject hisself pardon but you know no presents ever tried that before so we can't be sure and the way in which he he seems to revel in the fact that he could take someone like sheriff. Joe Arpaio a law enforcement officer who is targeting Latinos for harassment and using the power of the police deliberately against a minority group and he pardoned him of criminal contempt of court that the way in which he plays with this. I think Dolly Elliptic who some times on this show referred to the `constitutionalisation of narcissism is what we face in this country. Yeah IT DONALD. Trump wants credit of also doing first step back kinds of criminal justice reform. He wants credit for that. But but do you sense in the pardons that he's doing especially today that the real message here is his own power right that he's essentially saying if you're powerful and you're my friend that is actually how you get a justice not by being somebody who was falsely accused of a crime or got too long of a sentence for having marijuana or something like that. That's why there's absolutely the absolute absence of any sense that the people pardoned held they compared with the culpability and the sentences of the tens and tens of thousands who remain in federal prison. The idea that he can act on on Mir welcome. I think something we've never seen the president before you know. Some people are going to raise the a Bill Clinton's pardon of financier and fugitive Bark Rich. And that was the worst thing. Bill Clinton did in eight years and an office is unjustified pardon but Donald Trump is taking it to a very different level where he's using the levers of the of the power of his office in order to corrupt law threatening opponents rewarding those who would commit crimes on his behalf going after judges and jurors in. I don't know where we go from here. I think we two thousand former prosecutors not just signed a letter but perhaps to think about blocking the willing to be arrested blocking the entrance of the Justice Department out. You have to use your imagination where we go from here Walter Dellinger. Thank you very much really appreciate your time and joining me now. For more. On the president's pardoning Spree Matthew Miller former chief spokesperson for the Department of Justice who's down MSNBC Justice analyst and Betsy Woodruff Swan Politics reporter at the daily beast and she's also an MSNBC contributor. So let's talk about sort of where where he could go from here and where and what it means and I'll start with where he could go from here. Betsy because is there any reporting on how much more of this because it does appear that there is a pattern? Somebody is either you know his friend or was on the apprentice goes on Fox News and pleads for his help he immediately responds to his friends and gives them a pardon. Who's who might be next on the list. I spent the afternoon talking to people who identify or describe themselves as allies of Roger Stone and they said that they saw the spate of clemencies that came down today as very comforting to them. Because they believe it's a signal. The President is sending that Roger. Stone may be next in line for this type of executive action. I thought your use of the phrase Banana Republic was really interesting because a federal judge. Us that exact same phrase in a transcript that was recently released from a closed door hearing regarding the investigation. That's now closed into Andrew McCabe and the judge literally said that the fact that trump was tweeting about McCabe so often the fact that he appeared to be interfering in that process created the appearance of a Banana Republic. So the thing to keep an eye on both the president of course granting clemency to people who he views as his political allies in part because he sees them on Fox News and the inverse of that which is the president encouraging DOJ to weaponize itself against people who he sees as his foes. And I'm glad also that Mister Diligent Joe Arpaio because they're also sort of symbolic arden's of people who are hurting the People Donald Trump's base wants to see hurt.

Donald Trump President Trump Roger Stone Walter Dellinger Assault United States Joe Arpaio Senate Department Of Justice Illinois Fraud NBC Bill Clinton Mr Dellinger Rod Blagojevich Begovic Robert Mugabe Barack Obama Commissioner Bernard Kerik Banana Republic Tom Winter