188
188
Jul 15, 2012
07/12
by
WJLA
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
now he is not talking abo china or oil. if we create all kinds of jobs all kinds of stu to do, he is not for that stuff anymore. h's instead listening to a lott of push- -- bush-h-er advisea isis basically c chance to regulation. -- cnt "deregulation" and free trade. >> we wille back after a break. but first -- >> when the government business married technology, the offspring becacame a language based on acronyms. 1 akrom worth noting is iem -- acronym worth noting is iem. of the past seven years a long list of domestic and f foreign governments have adopted the protocol such as the amber alert and the european inititiative to combat organized crime. it represents the best returnrn on investment for our taxpayer dollars that i know of, according to one analyst. it stands for the innovation and improved efficiency of go >> we are back with our roundtable. that includes do fruehling and missy frederick from washington buness journal and peter morici. were just speakg wi destination d.c. about encouraging tourism here and show
now he is not talking abo china or oil. if we create all kinds of jobs all kinds of stu to do, he is not for that stuff anymore. h's instead listening to a lott of push- -- bush-h-er advisea isis basically c chance to regulation. -- cnt "deregulation" and free trade. >> we wille back after a break. but first -- >> when the government business married technology, the offspring becacame a language based on acronyms. 1 akrom worth noting is iem -- acronym worth noting is iem....
32
32
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
has gone way too easy on china he thinks china is developing technologically financially and that we're giving them the green light to do so so i did speak to him though a little bit about this change this potential change with latin america here's what he said. in the any lunatic and gangster that runs his country with an iron hand can get a deal with china and you know you've got hugo chavez down in venezuela who's trying to destroy democratic government inch by inch and it was best friends of fidel castro who long ago destroyed democracy and his country. was trying to become the best friend of all all of the gangsters some people say that's just doing good business not imposing moral standards on other countries just saying you know what if i can make some money from you i'm going to help you there's some people believe and. i don't think that and that does reflect some american businessmen as well as other kind of person i am and i don't think that's the kind of person most americans are. so as i also talk to the congressman about the issue of trade certainly a lot of people in this
has gone way too easy on china he thinks china is developing technologically financially and that we're giving them the green light to do so so i did speak to him though a little bit about this change this potential change with latin america here's what he said. in the any lunatic and gangster that runs his country with an iron hand can get a deal with china and you know you've got hugo chavez down in venezuela who's trying to destroy democratic government inch by inch and it was best friends...
171
171
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
now there is fear of china. how does that compare -- how does that compare now, and secondly, is the fear and worry a good response? >> thing about japan, let me say something about that and i think two of the most interesting countries i have been in a japan and china. there are obviously some similarities in terms of their look and feel and operations. being in japan was like living inside a watch where everything is so tightly machine, you admire the precision. there is not a lot of extra room for you. where is china is living in a giant rugby scrum. i still think that the japanese were actually more threatening to the united states and china. you have these head-to-head national champions. yet toshiba and toyota and there are no counterparts for those in china. japan is still a rich country. it has had political catastrophes of its own. japan and china, i think there was reason to be more fearful of japan. on the phenomenon of fear itself, i didn't article about two years ago after moving back from china, tr
now there is fear of china. how does that compare -- how does that compare now, and secondly, is the fear and worry a good response? >> thing about japan, let me say something about that and i think two of the most interesting countries i have been in a japan and china. there are obviously some similarities in terms of their look and feel and operations. being in japan was like living inside a watch where everything is so tightly machine, you admire the precision. there is not a lot of...
203
203
Jul 21, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
quote 0
to a point about china, a question about china and a point about china and the united states. i think a fascinating question and a crucial question for china, one that really is the one that lies behind this book would even beyond the importance of this book, it's important for china too which is whether china is ever going to be something different from what it is. here is what i mean. if you look back over 30 years in china you see places on recognizably different in countless ways. i was first there in the mid-1980s when my family and circumstances that i will tell you about if you ask, it was a very different place. we went around places and we had to get visas to get in there. now of course it is different, but it is different in a way that some chinese people think is reaching a limit, that the development model based on its low-wage factories where they make the ipad i hold in my hand that cost $500 only $50 in china come is that the formula for them to get rich in in the long-run? it's one thing to assemble products for apple in a different thing to have your own apple
to a point about china, a question about china and a point about china and the united states. i think a fascinating question and a crucial question for china, one that really is the one that lies behind this book would even beyond the importance of this book, it's important for china too which is whether china is ever going to be something different from what it is. here is what i mean. if you look back over 30 years in china you see places on recognizably different in countless ways. i was...
262
262
Jul 14, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 262
favorite 0
quote 1
so, china -- let's startith od one of the biggest constraintses in china is soybeans. it is a big input for the food that is consumed there, uike any othe fd --orporation, eaoyans inghinere n able to produce adequately to supporthe demands at home. you can see here, this is percentage of world consumption and world produion. roci 2utiassive gapan this is good news for the united states in case obama and mr. romney are looking for how to create jobs. soybeans and there's a big prodti --out is a big bilthokal ass nses o t decisions for you here in the u.s., but more generally, you can see that for china, this is a very big opportunity for them to keep importing and they do. maeemnhi u c s china's falling below the world average in terms of water units. this is actually led to some very aggressive action by china. one of the big stories that has tended to hit the newspaper wires quite a t is thi speereho river out of india. and there have been some public announcements by both the prime prie ofndow india and t they'll work together but the need for fresh water in china is
so, china -- let's startith od one of the biggest constraintses in china is soybeans. it is a big input for the food that is consumed there, uike any othe fd --orporation, eaoyans inghinere n able to produce adequately to supporthe demands at home. you can see here, this is percentage of world consumption and world produion. roci 2utiassive gapan this is good news for the united states in case obama and mr. romney are looking for how to create jobs. soybeans and there's a big prodti --out is a...
154
154
Jul 12, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 154
favorite 0
quote 0
ed, what about china, for example? to we see prospects for them to experience a similar change in their internal energy picture? >> that's why robin's the -- >> two eds. >> i think it's just beginning is my perception. there are a lot of other things going on in the domestic chinese market, particularly with gas. preconditions of a shell gas revolution transferring into china such as gas pricing which they're starting to experiment with in a couple provinces. it will also potentially change their relationship with russia in a time of plenty for gas around the world, russia's need to diversify its market becomes urgent than at a time when western europe didn't have the availability of lower price ong as a substitute for russian gas. so it would make it easier for the russians and chinese to come together on the deal. something they've been working on for a long, long time but never get there. so i think there are a number of implications both for china both in terms of domestic gas production potential, both in conventi
ed, what about china, for example? to we see prospects for them to experience a similar change in their internal energy picture? >> that's why robin's the -- >> two eds. >> i think it's just beginning is my perception. there are a lot of other things going on in the domestic chinese market, particularly with gas. preconditions of a shell gas revolution transferring into china such as gas pricing which they're starting to experiment with in a couple provinces. it will also...
171
171
Jul 23, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
and there's no appeal in china. so if you go to court for one of these crimes and you're sentenced to death, they just take you out in the backyard, kneel you down and put a bullet in the back of your head. there's no appeal, you don't get to say bye to mom, it's all over. so, but where this gets, i think, particularly scary is, um, there is a -- [inaudible] in new york a few years ago where they had representatives of the beijing government meeting with some americans and some doctors who were posing as consumers of organ for transplant. and they had these representatives of china had a price list. and it was how much different organs can cost if you want to buy 'em. and they said we will shoot to order. so they were saying we -- you just tell us what you want, and we'll get it for you. and investigations that have come out since then, it's been shown that prosecutors in china and judges have a list of what is in particular demand at that time. so if someone comes before a court, the prosecutor and the judge knows
and there's no appeal in china. so if you go to court for one of these crimes and you're sentenced to death, they just take you out in the backyard, kneel you down and put a bullet in the back of your head. there's no appeal, you don't get to say bye to mom, it's all over. so, but where this gets, i think, particularly scary is, um, there is a -- [inaudible] in new york a few years ago where they had representatives of the beijing government meeting with some americans and some doctors who were...
15
15
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
a difference between china and the u.s. the u.s. had the credit bubble built on consumption in other words the level on the household sector level government level went up dramatically to finance consumption in the case of china at least the finance investments in infrastructure in research and development and so forth and that is a key difference now if you have a capital spending bubble like in china the downturn can be very severe because you're running to overcome placidus that then if you're trained to money you produce even more over capacities and the fact is simply that if you look at reliable statistics say. which countries the largest export market for taiwan and south korea it's in there and if you look at exports from korea and taiwan that all for out year only year so that is quite reliable you look at electricity production in china that's up one percent a year on the year and so force and so on so those statistics would actually suggest that the chinese economy is much weaker than what the official statistics just it
a difference between china and the u.s. the u.s. had the credit bubble built on consumption in other words the level on the household sector level government level went up dramatically to finance consumption in the case of china at least the finance investments in infrastructure in research and development and so forth and that is a key difference now if you have a capital spending bubble like in china the downturn can be very severe because you're running to overcome placidus that then if...
149
149
Jul 24, 2012
07/12
by
KQED
tv
eye 149
favorite 0
quote 0
if completed, it would be china's biggest foreign acquisition ever. nexen's energy resources stretch from oil sands in western canada to oil rigs in the north sea and the gulf of mexico. the proposed deal needs regulatory approval, including the support of american regulators. joining us with more on what this deal could mean for oil supplies, and prices, ed morse, he's managing director and head of global commodities research at citigroup global markets. so, ed, a lot of questions today about the big china deal concerns about world oil supplies and prices. is there a risk here? >> i don't think the risk is very great. they have 200,000 barrels a day production and that's a fifth of nook's production and compares to a global market of 90 billion barrels a day. it's a tiny amount of supply from the world perspective but it means a good deal more perhaps in terms of future supply. >> susie: you know, there has been resistance to china buying a big oil company. we had an issue with unical in the u.s. if this opens the way for more oil deals with china wh
if completed, it would be china's biggest foreign acquisition ever. nexen's energy resources stretch from oil sands in western canada to oil rigs in the north sea and the gulf of mexico. the proposed deal needs regulatory approval, including the support of american regulators. joining us with more on what this deal could mean for oil supplies, and prices, ed morse, he's managing director and head of global commodities research at citigroup global markets. so, ed, a lot of questions today about...
176
176
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 176
favorite 0
quote 0
right now china is a demographic time bomb. they have limited themselves to one child per family and that means they will have a lot of old people retiring on the backs of one child and because of their preference for male children there are some parts of china where there are 140 males to 100 female births. no one knows what that scientific experiment is going to be. but it's not going to be good. the united states has some demographic population growth but not much. part of the problem in the middle east is that 75% of the most of the countries in the middle east have a population under the age of 30 and they don't have jobs. that's a revolution in the making. russia has the opposite problem and so does japan. they are not reproducing at rate to sustain economic development. the united states have a good demographic ratio going forward. the next thing we have a lot of countries don't have is women. ambassador ware have been out there on the forefront of women's movements. but in a lot of countries women are educated but not a
right now china is a demographic time bomb. they have limited themselves to one child per family and that means they will have a lot of old people retiring on the backs of one child and because of their preference for male children there are some parts of china where there are 140 males to 100 female births. no one knows what that scientific experiment is going to be. but it's not going to be good. the united states has some demographic population growth but not much. part of the problem in the...
161
161
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 161
favorite 0
quote 0
now the concern is as we move to solar energy, all the solar panels come from china. it is the same with the wind turbines. to say we would get down to 25% without saying he would get there is done very effective or useful step. klutz when you talk to your middle-income -- >> when you talk to middle-income constituents -- >> have you been there? >> many times. do you say to them that they may have to sacrifice? everyone may have to sacrifice in order to make this fiscal system worked. do you say that? what is it you say to them that they may have to sacrifice? >> i do say that. i think there are some items that we need to trim. but i do not say to them though is that we will privatize social security. i do not say to them that we will privatize medicare. i do not say to them that we will block grant medicaid and ship it to the states. i do not say that we will end all support for education. in the republican bill coming out next week, they would eliminate the education opportunities, these opportunity credits. when i for -- when i ran for governor long ago, 10% of the
now the concern is as we move to solar energy, all the solar panels come from china. it is the same with the wind turbines. to say we would get down to 25% without saying he would get there is done very effective or useful step. klutz when you talk to your middle-income -- >> when you talk to middle-income constituents -- >> have you been there? >> many times. do you say to them that they may have to sacrifice? everyone may have to sacrifice in order to make this fiscal system...
225
225
Jul 11, 2012
07/12
by
KQED
tv
eye 225
favorite 0
quote 0
china is going to be there as well. and brazil >> susie: you know, you talk a lot to ceos and directors in boardrooms, what can you tell us about their level u5 confidence in this environment, and what's going on here nationally with businesses in the u.s., what they telling you about their plans for hiring. >> first of all, they are worried about europe. there is an increased worry about what's going on with china. you reported earlier we're in the single digit growth. they're looking for double digit growth. china is going to start making them nervous. and after that the political environment in the united states, very nervous about health care, and looking nf,ly about the other aspects with what's going on with the tax kutds, for example. every year, lots of talk about it. how does a ceo run a company when there's uncertainties, he or she has to stay conservative, and hold k back on investment and not helping job growth either. >> susie: wolfgang koester thank you for coming on the program. >> susie: all this week, w
china is going to be there as well. and brazil >> susie: you know, you talk a lot to ceos and directors in boardrooms, what can you tell us about their level u5 confidence in this environment, and what's going on here nationally with businesses in the u.s., what they telling you about their plans for hiring. >> first of all, they are worried about europe. there is an increased worry about what's going on with china. you reported earlier we're in the single digit growth. they're...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
government's debt and also has been driving global growth i want to talk about china because i know we i've heard you talk about china i want to differentiate here between your short and long term view because you've said before long term it's easy to say china will continue to grow but like america and the eighteen hundreds there will be bumps along the road america had recessions america had financial crises wars a depression so what's your short term outlook for china because there are a number of prominent china bears out there maybe they're some of your bear friends you mentioned like jim cheney i was in hugh hundred who point to the fact maybe the greatest credit investment boom the world has seen. were led to me. a difference between china and the us the us had the credit bubble built on consumption in other words the level on the household sector level government level went up dramatically to finance consumption in the case of china at least it financed investments in infrastructure in research and development and so forth and that is a key difference now if you have a capital
government's debt and also has been driving global growth i want to talk about china because i know we i've heard you talk about china i want to differentiate here between your short and long term view because you've said before long term it's easy to say china will continue to grow but like america and the eighteen hundreds there will be bumps along the road america had recessions america had financial crises wars a depression so what's your short term outlook for china because there are a...
185
185
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 185
favorite 0
quote 1
and that is the indebtedness we have to china. every dollar the government spends 40 cents is borrowed and half of that is to china. and hillary clinton said you don't pick a fight with your banker. it puts the united states in a position where we don't want to be. it puts us in a position that we cannot challenge what the chinese are doing. the chinese have a cybercommand dedicated to stealing military secrets from the united states. they hacked into lockheed martin. i'm sure if you represent major companies you have been hack today. what the chinese have done with that is they are able to steal with the click of a mouse something that cost us years and hundreds of billions of dollars to develop. estimates are that the chinese have stolen and had access to 1 to $2 trillion of our critical infrastructure and intellectual property and military develop. lockheed can spend years and billions to develop a new stealth bomber. the chinese click the mouse and before you know it, they've got exactly -- they look exactly like the model the
and that is the indebtedness we have to china. every dollar the government spends 40 cents is borrowed and half of that is to china. and hillary clinton said you don't pick a fight with your banker. it puts the united states in a position where we don't want to be. it puts us in a position that we cannot challenge what the chinese are doing. the chinese have a cybercommand dedicated to stealing military secrets from the united states. they hacked into lockheed martin. i'm sure if you represent...
119
119
Jul 17, 2012
07/12
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
china is just massive. and inside the enormous nation of china, there were until really recently two european colonies. hong kong, obviously, the highest profile one. it was a british colony in china until 1997. in 1997, it was handed over from british control to chinese control with great fanfare. when it got handed over, there still was one other european colony left in china. one owned by portugal of all places. two years after the british handed hong kong over to the chinese, portugal handed over control of his county, which is ma macau, while its weather and its air quality and to be frank, its scenery ranothing to write home about, it has one untouchable greatest in the world mega asset. gambling. gambling is legal in macau, and gambling is illegal in mainland china. and there are so many people in china that if you can funnel all of them who want to gamble into one nearby place, well, then that place is, well, it's the gambling capital of the world. even though it seems like macau is out in the middl
china is just massive. and inside the enormous nation of china, there were until really recently two european colonies. hong kong, obviously, the highest profile one. it was a british colony in china until 1997. in 1997, it was handed over from british control to chinese control with great fanfare. when it got handed over, there still was one other european colony left in china. one owned by portugal of all places. two years after the british handed hong kong over to the chinese, portugal...
210
210
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
KRCB
tv
eye 210
favorite 0
quote 0
the south china sea. the draft protocol has countries involved in disputes to respect international laws and create a framework to avoid conflict. it also calls for monitoring of whether countries comply with the new rules. asean plans to present the draft to china in a meeting of foreign ministers on wednesday. china's foreign ministry reacted cautiously to asean's announcement. a spokesperson said china will consider a code of conduct when the timing is appropriate. he said any new rules should not only help resolve territorial disputes, but also promote trust and strengthen cooperation among asean members. >>> afghan president hamid karzai is facing a difficult challenge. how to keep track of $16 billion in news civilian aid. karzai spoke about xating ingcombating corruption witone of his biggest donors. prime minister yoshihiko noda says japan will continue to support their development but that support comes with conditions. leaders met a day after representatives from 17 naxs gathered in tokyo to mak
the south china sea. the draft protocol has countries involved in disputes to respect international laws and create a framework to avoid conflict. it also calls for monitoring of whether countries comply with the new rules. asean plans to present the draft to china in a meeting of foreign ministers on wednesday. china's foreign ministry reacted cautiously to asean's announcement. a spokesperson said china will consider a code of conduct when the timing is appropriate. he said any new rules...
245
245
Jul 23, 2012
07/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 245
favorite 0
quote 0
china takeover? what is their next potential target? lots of questions on this front. let's get answers. erin from the u.s. china business council. daniel rosen. erin, we talk about a china takeover. i would imagine we are a long way from having all the fears about china taking over the globe. really? >> yes. i think that probably is accurate. the u.s. is the largest economy in the world. china is coming up fast. you about which would be realistic. china really -- their companies have been going out and investing in the past five to six years. we are just seeing the first part of that. based on some data we received from the china council and promotion of international trade really only 10% of chinese companies that are investing overseas are trying to use mergers and acquisitions to do that. most are doing it through greenfield investment. >> dan, we are to assume this is going to continue and outbound investment jumps 48% in the first half of the year in china. >> absolutely. china's starting point
china takeover? what is their next potential target? lots of questions on this front. let's get answers. erin from the u.s. china business council. daniel rosen. erin, we talk about a china takeover. i would imagine we are a long way from having all the fears about china taking over the globe. really? >> yes. i think that probably is accurate. the u.s. is the largest economy in the world. china is coming up fast. you about which would be realistic. china really -- their companies have...
219
219
Jul 8, 2012
07/12
by
WJLA
tv
eye 219
favorite 0
quote 0
it will be a present for u us in china,ch a placece where they will do business. has already paid for itstself and will continue to do so. >> you have knowme for a long time. i talk to a lot of people. time and again i talk to business leaders and reporteters many of f whom were skepticacal about yo election as mayor. they have l been pressed by your performance. ey alslso remain ccerned about the citity's perception problelem. investigations continue of your campaign. we have seen kwame brown have to step down. what do you say to those people who say whether or not you are doing a goodob perception is still a big problem in the city? >> i would ask them to look at ththe record. public safety, economic dedevelopment, jobs, education and fiscal sbility. we got our auditn february. a rpluss in a weak econo mai bank look at public safety. the lowest number of homicicides in 48 years in the city. i talk about the job performance earlier. 11.3% unempmployment down to 9.3%. what i am rereally proud of it is the dropops we have seen, and w we have lot of worork to do, bu
it will be a present for u us in china,ch a placece where they will do business. has already paid for itstself and will continue to do so. >> you have knowme for a long time. i talk to a lot of people. time and again i talk to business leaders and reporteters many of f whom were skepticacal about yo election as mayor. they have l been pressed by your performance. ey alslso remain ccerned about the citity's perception problelem. investigations continue of your campaign. we have seen kwame...
242
242
Jul 12, 2012
07/12
by
KCSMMHZ
tv
eye 242
favorite 0
quote 0
but china and taiwan claim the islands as their own. i ask the pilot about the sdf's competing missions when it comes to dealing with china. >> translator: i think we need to share information because we have a common interest in fighting piracy activities. >> reporter: this list shows the schedule of escort activities. the sdf coordinates with china, india and other countries in taking turns to protect ships in the area. >> translator: we share information with the militaries of china, india and the u.s. i believe that protecting japan-related ships in this area will contribute to safeguarding the japanese economy. >> reporter: china has had delicate relations with countries such as japan and india. they are at odds over territorial claims and other issues. but off the coast of africa, those countries are putting those differences aside to fight a common threat of piracy and protect civilian ships. >> nhk world's toru nakai is back in tokyo. he came by the studio to give us her insight into his report on the gulf of aden. here's his co
but china and taiwan claim the islands as their own. i ask the pilot about the sdf's competing missions when it comes to dealing with china. >> translator: i think we need to share information because we have a common interest in fighting piracy activities. >> reporter: this list shows the schedule of escort activities. the sdf coordinates with china, india and other countries in taking turns to protect ships in the area. >> translator: we share information with the militaries...
164
164
Jul 22, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 164
favorite 0
quote 0
i spent four years in china. before i went there, i had a kind of a typical, i'd say, conservative view of our relationship with beijing. and that was this idea that the u.s. relationship with china predicated on this big gamble. and the gamble is if we increase our relationship with china, trade with them more, they'll eventually become more like us. and that if we make them richer, automatically they'll become freer. and as people in china become, get more economic rights over time, they'll demand for political rights. that's a gamble on our side. one of the three cease of my -- theses of my book is that's not necessarily occurring. for one thing, there's this myth that there's this new china now where the middle class is growing fantastically, um, and things are getting better, and that's more or less not true. the middle class, they're small or than our middle class, and that's a country of 1.3 billion people. but even more significantly, the middle class there isn't as dynamic as ours because the government
i spent four years in china. before i went there, i had a kind of a typical, i'd say, conservative view of our relationship with beijing. and that was this idea that the u.s. relationship with china predicated on this big gamble. and the gamble is if we increase our relationship with china, trade with them more, they'll eventually become more like us. and that if we make them richer, automatically they'll become freer. and as people in china become, get more economic rights over time, they'll...
240
240
Jul 6, 2012
07/12
by
WBAL
tv
eye 240
favorite 0
quote 0
when it comes to getting tough with china, this is barack, lately. trying to give the president a rough road. brian mooar, nbc news, washington. >> coming up, the death penalty. that was the verdict in the murder case of his pregnant wife. a woman kidnapped and relieve rate is now overcoming all odds to become a mother. the first time i saw fios it was absolutely amazing. for years and years we had to put up with cable. once we got fios it was like somebody like took our computer and shook all the junk out of it. [ male announcer ] don't settle for the same old cable technology. switch to a verizon fios triple play and upgrade your entertainment equipment with our 100% fiber-optic network and whole home solution, including a high-speed wireless router plus a new hd set top box and new multi-room dvr free for 12 months. everything has to be fast now, and that's what fios provides us right now when we want it. [ male announcer ] and now, with new fios quantum speeds, you can enjoy internet more than twice as fast as anything you've ever seen. fios give
when it comes to getting tough with china, this is barack, lately. trying to give the president a rough road. brian mooar, nbc news, washington. >> coming up, the death penalty. that was the verdict in the murder case of his pregnant wife. a woman kidnapped and relieve rate is now overcoming all odds to become a mother. the first time i saw fios it was absolutely amazing. for years and years we had to put up with cable. once we got fios it was like somebody like took our computer and...
196
196
Jul 19, 2012
07/12
by
WZDC
tv
eye 196
favorite 0
quote 0
ve ta vetaron una decisiÓn, es la terc tercera vez que rusia y china ve tan a la onu reclacionada con siria. con esto vamos a otra pausa pero al regresar, lo que arrojÓ un estudio sobre la cirugÍa contra una enfermedad que afecta a a miles de hombres. este es mi nuevo celular de radioshack acabo de llevarme este super android... ...y tienen cámara... ...argggg... este celular es genial brother. me estoy grabando con él ahora mismo. ¿y sabes qué?, yo elijo la compañía. at&t, sprint, verizon... el plan y el celular que yo quería... un android de paquete... ...y montones de celulares. y hasta tienen apoyo técnico en español gratis. ¿esta grabando? ayuda de verdad. encontré mi celular... el que yo quería... el mejor para mi... ilo conseguí en radioshack! en temas de salud miles de hombres murieron al aÑo por cÁncer de prÓstata, cuando la enfermedad es diagnosticada los mÉdicos indican cirugÍa, pero a veces el mÉtodo no es necesario. en un estudio se le siguiÓ la pista a 731 momentos dags aÑiga cadas con cÁncer la prÓstata a unos les sacaron la glÁndula a otros lo
ve ta vetaron una decisiÓn, es la terc tercera vez que rusia y china ve tan a la onu reclacionada con siria. con esto vamos a otra pausa pero al regresar, lo que arrojÓ un estudio sobre la cirugÍa contra una enfermedad que afecta a a miles de hombres. este es mi nuevo celular de radioshack acabo de llevarme este super android... ...y tienen cámara... ...argggg... este celular es genial brother. me estoy grabando con él ahora mismo. ¿y sabes qué?, yo elijo la compañía. at&t, sprint,...
149
149
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 149
favorite 0
quote 0
america has more energy than china, saudi arabia and canada combined, and yet we're the only country in the world where we as citizens own that energy and our government refuses to allows us to use it. that has to change. [ applause ] 2012 is important. to me it's a seminal moment for our country. we always hear elections are important, but we've seen the largest, strongest move towards collectivism by this administration that has ever before been seen in this country, and we can see the failure of the chief justice, and in my opinion a failure to fully understand and comprehend the founders' intent of a limited government. and so the balance of power, if we're to change that, it depends on us. it depends on you, we, the people. and they counted on us to control washington rather than washington to control us. it is time we do it. it is time for us to move. it is time for us to sacrifice in many ways to make sure we accomplish the fact that there is a president romney, that there is a large majority of republican -- conservative republican members of the senate, and that the house is
america has more energy than china, saudi arabia and canada combined, and yet we're the only country in the world where we as citizens own that energy and our government refuses to allows us to use it. that has to change. [ applause ] 2012 is important. to me it's a seminal moment for our country. we always hear elections are important, but we've seen the largest, strongest move towards collectivism by this administration that has ever before been seen in this country, and we can see the...
14
14
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
scott thought what china for a second report recent report suggested china's crude imports are plunged to december two thousand and eleven levels your thoughts yes in deede i think china is is. definitely the economic activity is going lower there. it's not just a matter of crude also imports like copper it's the difference between financial demand and demand for consumption and i think that what we've seen is the chinese are maybe pulling back from the consumption that they actually had i think probably will find looking back that their consumption began to decline that considerable time ago but it's maybe been hidden by financial consumption and the building of strategic reserves they've been building new tanks and installations like they're going out of fashion the they stocking off again however they're looking to build literally hundreds of millions of barrels of reserves and they've been doing that and it's been i think hiding their consumption their actual physical consumption for refining right well you know that would be a big plus on the demand side and i just want to get bac
scott thought what china for a second report recent report suggested china's crude imports are plunged to december two thousand and eleven levels your thoughts yes in deede i think china is is. definitely the economic activity is going lower there. it's not just a matter of crude also imports like copper it's the difference between financial demand and demand for consumption and i think that what we've seen is the chinese are maybe pulling back from the consumption that they actually had i...
114
114
Jul 22, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 114
favorite 0
quote 0
he said, in china, there is a talent pool of 1 billion people to draw from. the united states has a town pool of 7 billion people, many everybody in the world because we are an open society unlike most societies. we invite people of talent to come, practice not take us all to higher ground. as long as we preserve that we're going to be fine. and then i talked a little bit about china in the context of the last decade. let's talk about the last decade, what we've done. we fought two wars i think the power of people that are smart. as for a tax dollars went perry has written many of our lives what. that what about the chinese? in the decade we were doing that they were laying the groundwork for economic of the 21st century out? a few things. chinese have on the books plans to have high-speed rail lines going from china down to singapore, southeast asia, across central asia, turkey, across siberia to moscow and then to berlin. once those lines are and the resources of that whole region can be brought to china. stern also rise on the books constructing dams, up t
he said, in china, there is a talent pool of 1 billion people to draw from. the united states has a town pool of 7 billion people, many everybody in the world because we are an open society unlike most societies. we invite people of talent to come, practice not take us all to higher ground. as long as we preserve that we're going to be fine. and then i talked a little bit about china in the context of the last decade. let's talk about the last decade, what we've done. we fought two wars i think...
20
20
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
well i think yes they're worried about china but china's activities are mainly commercial and that really shouldn't threaten anybody because frankly when the chinese government goes out and tries to develop well sources that are really commercially available it's just it's just a subsidy to all us consumers around the world so their state owned oil companies really don't operate necessarily on the market based principles so a lot of times that's what they're doing they're trying to lock up all these long term oil contracts but you know that really doesn't affect us security at all and i would challenge anybody to say that it does any economist will tell you that the supplies is reordering whatever i think you know in the in the larger context and what we measure people on the ground or whatever but the problem with the us military is it has all these related bills all these relationships it gets everything ready to go and then it has a swing for second sent anywhere and i think u.s. foreign policy has become very militarized across the board and just because you know if you don't have a l
well i think yes they're worried about china but china's activities are mainly commercial and that really shouldn't threaten anybody because frankly when the chinese government goes out and tries to develop well sources that are really commercially available it's just it's just a subsidy to all us consumers around the world so their state owned oil companies really don't operate necessarily on the market based principles so a lot of times that's what they're doing they're trying to lock up all...
271
271
Jul 5, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 271
favorite 0
quote 0
from china. host: we watched that segment yesterday and we saw jessica stone, an american reporter, doing that story. does the story get at the complexity and how nervous are actions them -- anxious americans feel? guest: i certainly hope we do. this is early days and i cannot emphasize that there are still developing programming. we hope to go to four hours toward the end of the year or early next year. we are refining the kind of reports and still hiring people. , the numbers of reporters that will be reporting to our news de in washington. it will be something like 35 different reporters all over. we have just taken on people in los angeles, san francisco, houston, texas and the miami so we are developing all of this. at the combination of exploring these issues and having a fair amount of time to devote to this, will eventually allied affairs. investment in the
from china. host: we watched that segment yesterday and we saw jessica stone, an american reporter, doing that story. does the story get at the complexity and how nervous are actions them -- anxious americans feel? guest: i certainly hope we do. this is early days and i cannot emphasize that there are still developing programming. we hope to go to four hours toward the end of the year or early next year. we are refining the kind of reports and still hiring people. , the numbers of reporters...
170
170
Jul 8, 2012
07/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 170
favorite 0
quote 0
china. frankly, from china's point of view, the more the west isolates iran, the more iran becomes a gift to china. and now that america has said, okay, you can go ahead and buy oil, china is off the hook. and that's happening because it is impossible for america to impose the same sanctions on chinese banks. they can impose on any other banks in the world. and that's why china can get away with it. so you're presenting china with a geopolitical gift, and china will accept it. >> we're going to take a short break. when we come back, the point about the decline of the west. we will talk about greece, the euro, but also we'll ask, as we always do on international shows in america, enough about the world. what does the world think of us? when we come back. [ male announcer ] citi turns 200 this year. in that time there've been some good days. and some difficult ones. but, through it all, we've persevered, supporting some of the biggest ideas in modern history. so why should our anniversary matt
china. frankly, from china's point of view, the more the west isolates iran, the more iran becomes a gift to china. and now that america has said, okay, you can go ahead and buy oil, china is off the hook. and that's happening because it is impossible for america to impose the same sanctions on chinese banks. they can impose on any other banks in the world. and that's why china can get away with it. so you're presenting china with a geopolitical gift, and china will accept it. >> we're...
389
389
Jul 7, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 389
favorite 0
quote 0
i knew china was going to be a iue. at iand toas try mpeotnlyrentamre i hics rorede b that is the tsa, but whether or not the country came to conceive of these problems in a different way. d ihas yhae hea ts touryoes dre tms. prident ama to fice after a decade in which threats to thenited states had minated washington's view of e wor. th cbatits h coomant t oamanol. it had distorted almost all of ourrander goals and preoccupied our leaders grr oprti. us toan prenams eehe d toury of dei. the other part was to see whether he could find a differen way, not only a diereny fr psident wheiburtht w f mke yk t miof aer one. a lot of people saying that engagement with america's adversariesas e y theeoerotust puic asa. wearesecry state who has had to go out and not implement the very policy that she went out and criticize during that time. she actually has the good sense inhi btoghuthais i d y. sise oma presidency i think is that both the left and the right feel today that they did not get what they thohthey were buying eftisuprt
i knew china was going to be a iue. at iand toas try mpeotnlyrentamre i hics rorede b that is the tsa, but whether or not the country came to conceive of these problems in a different way. d ihas yhae hea ts touryoes dre tms. prident ama to fice after a decade in which threats to thenited states had minated washington's view of e wor. th cbatits h coomant t oamanol. it had distorted almost all of ourrander goals and preoccupied our leaders grr oprti. us toan prenams eehe d toury of dei. the...
245
245
Jul 31, 2012
07/12
by
WRC
tv
eye 245
favorite 0
quote 0
and china are tied atop the leaderboard with 17 medals apiece and china has a significant lead in gold. now back to you. >> all right. a lot of action to keep track of today. a lot of tv watching to get done. a lot of different networks. >> there you go. >>> let's take the forecast now. starting off in london, what kind of weather are we supposed to have for the athletes? >> right now it's cloudy there, of course. in london, four or five hours ahead of us. it's approaching mid morning there. the live view of the calderon there at the olympic stadium under a cloudy sky. temperatures in the 50s. a cool morning there. it's going to be a cloud can day. 30% chance of a passing shower, mainly during the afternoon. by noontime, mid 60s. then near 70 there by mid afternoon. and then during the evening hours back down into the 60s. again, just a small chance of a shower there. our temperature as well undear cloudy sky. over washington and points east where the low to mid 70s. but farther west where there are breaks in the clouds, just near 70 degrees. nearly full moon sitting in the sky now. 60
and china are tied atop the leaderboard with 17 medals apiece and china has a significant lead in gold. now back to you. >> all right. a lot of action to keep track of today. a lot of tv watching to get done. a lot of different networks. >> there you go. >>> let's take the forecast now. starting off in london, what kind of weather are we supposed to have for the athletes? >> right now it's cloudy there, of course. in london, four or five hours ahead of us. it's...
95
95
Jul 3, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
donahue talked about the rare earth minerals from china just now, and you pointed out in your testimony that china's in the process of sharply reducing those exports and that they may eventually consume all of them within the country. can you talk about what the impact might be on both what the advantages of our ratification of the treaty gives us as we're competing for those rare earth minerals and then what would happen if china, in fact, did consume what it's currently exporting all within country and what impact that would have on consumers and on businesses and jobs in this country. >> yes. if i start with the latter question first. if -- if we don't ratify the treaty and businesses don't make the investments necessary to take advantage of the -- of the rare earth nodules that exist on the sea bed floor and china does use all of its rare earth materials, it would be devastating to the american economy, to manufacturing, and to jobs in this country. the bottom line, as has been stated many times on this panel, is that businesses require certainty before they make multi-billion dolla
donahue talked about the rare earth minerals from china just now, and you pointed out in your testimony that china's in the process of sharply reducing those exports and that they may eventually consume all of them within the country. can you talk about what the impact might be on both what the advantages of our ratification of the treaty gives us as we're competing for those rare earth minerals and then what would happen if china, in fact, did consume what it's currently exporting all within...
238
238
Jul 9, 2012
07/12
by
KNTV
tv
eye 238
favorite 0
quote 0
a stunt man in china is lucky to be alive after a heart-stopping a stunt man in china is lucky to be alive after a heart-stopping fall. captions paid for by nbc-universal television >>> hello and very good morning to you. welcome to our viewers across the nation, including the pacific time zone. i'm veronica de la cruz. today we begin with back to work. as lawmakers return from the holiday, president obama is reportedly getting ready to stir political fires with a call to extend bush-era tax cuts but not for everyone. this as the president's campaign turns up the heat on mitt romney over his tax history and offshore bank accounts. nbc's brian mooar joins us with details. brian, good morning to you. >> reporter: faced with bad headlines, the obama campaign wants to change the conversation. as congress returns today from its july 4th recess, president obama already has work planned for lawmakers. later today he's reportedly going to ask congress to extend bush-era tax cuts to those earning less than $250,000 a year. the obama campaign needs to quickly turn away from the feeble jobs rep
a stunt man in china is lucky to be alive after a heart-stopping a stunt man in china is lucky to be alive after a heart-stopping fall. captions paid for by nbc-universal television >>> hello and very good morning to you. welcome to our viewers across the nation, including the pacific time zone. i'm veronica de la cruz. today we begin with back to work. as lawmakers return from the holiday, president obama is reportedly getting ready to stir political fires with a call to extend...
206
206
Jul 9, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 206
favorite 0
quote 0
the biggest are china and india. but some others that would look fairly large in comparison to great powers in the past such as vietnam, russia, indonesia, brazil are all growing rapidly and becoming much bigger players in the world. 100 years ago, the rise of germany as a great power led to two catastrophically destructive wars which also spawned a number of tragedies such as nazyism and boll shifism which turned the 20th century into the bloodiest century in history. we can't afford to repeat that history with even more terrible weapons of the 21st century. so the challenge of managing emerging powers has become arguably the major challenge of our time. not that we're short on challenges. success in that effort depends on many factors of which the military is only one and perhaps not hopefully one might say not even the most important one. but it is important and it is important to recall the history of that last bloody century. it was not only the economic strength, but the way it succeeded twice in transforming e
the biggest are china and india. but some others that would look fairly large in comparison to great powers in the past such as vietnam, russia, indonesia, brazil are all growing rapidly and becoming much bigger players in the world. 100 years ago, the rise of germany as a great power led to two catastrophically destructive wars which also spawned a number of tragedies such as nazyism and boll shifism which turned the 20th century into the bloodiest century in history. we can't afford to repeat...