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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190217:02:46:00

islamism that demonizes judaism as a central cosmic enemy. she is use her political post to do that. it seems she is unfit for her role in congress and needs to be ejected from the house foreign affairs committee where she may be influencing u.s. policy into an anti-israeli position. judge jeanine: have you heard that anyone is going to remove her? >> no. they have a liability in this congresswoman. she is showing the marriage of left-wing politics in the democrats with islamism. bernie sanders congratulated her and said he stands with his muslim brothers and sisters. to me he stands with islamists and they do not distinguish between the two. islamism only thrives by

Congress , Role , Post , Demonizes-judaism , Central-cosmic-enemy , Judge , Jeanine-pirro , Anyone , American , Position , Policy , House-foreign-affairs-committee

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190217:05:46:00

islamism that demonizes judaism as a central cosmic enemy. she is use her political post to do that. it seems she is unfit for her role in congress and needs to be ejected from the house foreign affairs committee where she may be influencing u.s. policy into an anti-israeli position. judge jeanine: have you heard that anyone is going to remove her? >> no. they have a liability in this congresswoman. she is showing the marriage of left-wing politics in the democrats with islamism. bernie sanders congratulated her and said he stands with his muslim brothers and sisters. to me he stands with islamists and they do not distinguish between the two. islamism only thrives by

Congress , Role , Post , Demonizes-judaism , Central-cosmic-enemy , Judge , Jeanine-pirro , Anyone , Us- , Position , Policy , House-foreign-affairs-committee

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190217:08:46:00

islamism that demonizes judaism as a central cosmic enemy. she is use her political post to do that. it seems she is unfit for her role in congress and needs to be ejected from the house foreign affairs committee where she may be influencing u.s. policy into an anti-israeli position. judge jeanine: have you heard that anyone is going to remove her? >> no. they have a liability in this congresswoman. she is showing the marriage of left-wing politics in the democrats with islamism. bernie sanders congratulated her and said he stands with his muslim brothers and sisters. to me he stands with islamists and they do not distinguish between the two. islamism only thrives by

Congress , Role , Post , Demonizes-judaism , Central-cosmic-enemy , Judge , Jeanine-pirro , Anyone , Us- , Position , Policy , House-foreign-affairs-committee

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20180612:21:30:00

oppression, tormentors of marginalized, responsible for evils. that's left-wing politics. detailed candidates, tell hollood, please call more people racist. accuse them of polluting the planet. everybody is morons. that wou be the hollywood blank. >> brian: the hollywood playbook. they want to talk more about abortion. >> dana: they don't have an economic plan. >> brian: hollywood knows how to market, clearly. but not the actors for the actors don't know how to do it. they know how to memorize lines. they are famous people. they have this big, massive thing. i'm sorry. you didn't call on me. >> dana: go ahead. >> brian: i don't think a democrat who studied the last election should save themselves the key is getting more celebrities involved. >> dana: i have a list here from our new handy-dandy

People , Planet , Left-wing-politics , Tell-hollood , Evils , Oppression , Candidates , Tormentors-of-marginalized , Everybody , Dana-perino , Hollywood , Plan

KKRN 88.5 FM-20170822-120000

Player. it's. The. A. This is Bertha. Prom mallards your local pond there are large dabbling dock and among ducks the most abundant species is the source of all domestic dogs except in the garden. There's a female making yourself heard but not all the brightly colored male have disappeared by now the mill ducks need for fancy feathers to attract the females past the male . Dropping the green reddish black and white feathers and replacing them with model Brown runs. Into more subdued colors for the months of summer help the male ducks protecting them from predators. The malice. And return to the colorful dandies we remember. In the meantime. Look Like. There's one way to. Look closely at the bill. While the females marked with black and watched. That the female mallard. Make more subdued. When courting or greeting when they feel threatened. Hole up in behind us and instruct him with the usual 2 segments and most will hear from Christian God see on sex and gender in the former East Bloc and the bubbly hour of the as apologists Roger Lancaster will talk about crime and punishment and the problems with the present abolition agenda I don't have a thing this week about the Russians trolls will spend 3 years and going to graduate school University of Virginia but next week I'll be talking with Jason Wilson who cover that grotesque display of fashion violence the Guardian who's been writing about the far right violence for some time. First section of former Communist world in an essay that appeared in the print edition of The New York Times' longest 13 and a longer version on the web Christian God explain why the title of both versions put it women had better sex under socialism the web version of the piece links to a charming documentary that everyone should watch after reading God's peace of course but Germany with the title The communist have better sex it's on the daily motions website I don't know why except for 2 The title is phrased the question because documentaries answer is yes. 3rd related contribution is also well worth checking out one of Gods he brings up in the interview is he Baker's 2013 piece for dissent I don't think I can say the title on the air but argues that Danish social democracy ruins the game of American pickup artist because the greater material security women enjoy and i country makes them resistant to their dubious charms I love it one of the number of macro politics gets drawn into the. The daily life of Christian God she is a professor of Russian East European Studies at the University of Pennsylvania her book Red hangover legacy of 20th century communism will be coming out from Duke University Press in October and I'll have her back on the show to talk about it Kristen Ghodsee. Up begin your piece as you point out of the beginning of your piece you know most Americans memory or most westerners memories of war fantasies about the East Bloc where they were grim approach places where our people shuffle through their daily laws as if they had weights on their shoulders whatever truth this was there was. Something I'm exceptionalism Yeah I mean well that's certainly what recent scholarship is beginning to. Since the fall of the 1st there has been a progressive opening of archives and there a new generation of young scholars who are interested in looking at every day culture every day life during the communist era or the socialist era in Eastern Europe that early on people rushed in to look at the secret police archives and the files about spies and everything but now people are actually looking at everyday life and one of the things that's been really fascinating is something that I think anybody who grew up under communism knows which is that people had ordinary lives they fell in love they went to school you know they flirted with each other they had great facts at the party you know they had a very robust social life and sociality associated with the kind of purity provided by the state and I think that what's happened in the last I would basically say 6 or 7 years is that the scholarship is really going in and looking at the intimate details of everyday life and particularly the question of sex in places like Germany and Poland and Czechoslovakia and finding that these communist governments you know for all of their many thoughts were actually quite concerned with people's personal sexual satisfaction in a way that I think is very surprising to people in the last year a friend of mine from college who went to live in the Soviet Union for a year or 2 after college in late seventy's so that she was impressed. But she was impressed by the intensity of friendships are. Since there was no hole a place or 2 people would go over each other's house and the retreat a lot of vodka but also have a very in terms of intimate friendships which I measure now fall apart but that with the market but do you have any sense of that from your own research Oh absolutely I mean that's one of the things that I hear over and over again when I'm doing research in the research the region I'm lived and worked and the area for a long time I was married at one point to a full Gary and I split also in the former Eastern Germany and one thing that people let Nancy is the time and attention and that they had for their personal relationships whether they be friendships or romantic relationships or even family connections with your parents with your children with your siblings people had a lot more time now of course it's partially because the state was right repressive there wasn't really a public sphere so people retreated to the private sphere that's the argument as a historian named Paul that's who got a great book called within walls about private life. But it's also the experience you know a lot of a lot of people have talked about the fact that there was also nothing to do in the sense that there were cinema as you couldn't really go shopping obviously there were no i Phones or i Pads or internet back then and so there were less sort of distractions personal life was something that you really Farish because it was a way in which to entertain yourself but I think the 3rd thing which is something that I was trying to get at this article is the extent to which in a capitalist country where time is money. Social relationships and romantic relationships have opportunity costs I mean a lot of my students at Bowden would talk about oh I don't have time for a boyfriend I'm soo busy or I don't have time for a relationship there's a cost to spending time with your friends and your family as we all know because the olive part is a crazy multitasking lives I think it's really interesting to imagine what those relationships are like when they're freed from these economic considerations when the opportunity costs of your time are much lower here we have the cliche that time is money and there's a lot of. Social criticism or it is not that clear should yes absolutely I mean you know it's we we are so short on time especially now and I feel like you know as as our society beat up ever more and we're inundated by information on the Internet and you know 140 character tweets and just keeping up with social media and keeping up with our work and heaping up with the bills and all of the responsibilities that we have associated with our personal and professional lives it takes time to nurture relationships we all know that those of us who have been in relationships now and those of us who have been in failed relationships also know that it's it's something that you have to you have to make room for in your life and I think that sometimes in our in our society there's a contradiction between the things that we say we value which are these wonderful intimate personal relationships and the time that we're actually willing to come to those relationships because we have so many other things competing for attention in your piece you quote a woman in her sixty's from book. 7 tell us your story yeah I mean since she was a fascinating woman unfortunately passed away at the end of 2014 you know she had lived came from a very poor family in Bulgaria and she was really in some ways educated by. By this state. Her mother could never have afforded to send her to school and so she was always on a scholarship she really kind of worked her way through the ranks he was very good at languages I think for quite a while she actually worked in a forklift factory of all things. You have because they wanted women in these male in these male positions she was driving forklifts and working with for class and at some point I believe they were extorting Bulgarian forklifts or importing Boger British forklifts or they were some kind of forklift exchange going on between Bulgaria and the United Kingdom and on out was the only person who actually not only spoke English understood English but also understood the language of forklifts so became a translator for the technical manuals and through her and then because she was very good at translation eventually he ends up working for them both carrying women's committee and through the women's committee ends up in in eastern Germany for 8 years during the eighty's working for an organization called the Women's International Democratic Federation which was kind of an umbrella and yell affiliated with the Eastern bloc that advocated for women's rights internationally and you know her life was full of that that you know according to her she had a pretty full life and she was divorced she was a single mom but felt that she really had the support of her society and never at least in our conversations I never got the impression certainly never seemed to suggest that because he didn't have a man in her life somehow her life was wrestling or she was economically suffering for the decision not to remarry so I think that was something that he was really interested in was this idea that for all of the fall. Transferees and he was very honest about those fall but that they did do so. Thing to emancipate women to make women last economically dependent on men to give them work and give them an education that that was really valuable and he very much felt that after 989 a lot of that have been lost their men are the man of her life but she says her life was full of romance right I mean she was obviously you know you do whatever he pleases you guys are serious you know pretty open about that and I think the thing was it was just didn't need to be didn't need somebody to support her and for her that was something really important that she was really truly independent that her by she was in charge of not only her life but also of her body and that's what's so interesting about that descent piece is that that ran in 2016 about these pickup artists who are failing to pick up women in Denmark because the Danish state basically provides women for with all their needs and they don't need men in the same way right they're not attracted to the objects apparently that take up artists to lure women and I think you know there's an interesting Imperial question to be asked here which is you know are women who are independent going to have healthier relationships with their you know male partners of course then women who are economically dependent on those partners it's an interesting question well to have an answer I mean I guess I certainly think that the answer is probably get. One of them the most interesting things as I mentioned earlier that has come of this article is. The incredible blowback that I have gotten from people on lots of kneejerk anti-communists reactions but also a lot of really interesting stereotypes about communists women as like Harry and ugly and smelly or you know that the communist state provided women with child care so that they could get their children in dock.

Radio-program , Political-ideologies , Economics-terminology , Sociological-terminology , Sociology-index , Interpersonal-relationships , Personal-life , Costs , Left-wing-politics , Christianity , Anthropology , Intimate-relationships

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20170406:14:24:00

minutes or so as you've been handling so defendantly from washington, we hear from devin nunes, house speaker paul ryan and adam schiff as well. the russia drip, drip, drip had been something the white house was turning back questions on or attempting to, basically constantly, really since the start of this administration. not to say the questions will go away but what this does is remove nunes from that position, sort of central role that he had been in with so many questions still about where he had gotten his information. we've been reporting those out over the last few weeks, why he came to the white house, what role the president had in that or any members of the president's team. so i think the takeaway is, of course devin nunes and the house speaker will frame this as something having to do with what you described as left wing politics. i think the republican argument would be hey we're going to move on. this shows we want to have a serious and independent investigation to put to rest any of these questions. i will tell you that we are still waiting on reaction as i think chris jansing talked about from the white house, we reached out from marmar-a-lago, in palm

Chairman-nunes , Something , Congressman-schiff , White-house , Questions , House-speaker , Washington , Paul-ryan , Russia-drip , Handling , Defendantly , Administration

KAZU 90.3 FM [NPR for the Monterey Bay Area]-20170313-100000

Today relations between the Netherlands and Turkey appear to be souring by the hour after the Dutch authorities stop Turkish politicians from holding referendum rallies in the Netherlands Turkey is now calling for an investigation into misconduct by Dutch police against Turkish protesters the Dutch authorities warn their citizens to be careful when traveling in Turkey this could be a momentous week in the u.k. Plan to exit the European Union u.k. Prime minister to resign may start the 2 year clock ticking on negotiations with Brussels if she triggers Article 50 to leave the e.u. We'll talk about Russia's campaign to persuade fans to attend its World Cup How do organizers explain that it's safe after hooligans sparked violence at the European Championships in France last year and Brazil's president has moved out of his official residence for the fact that he couldn't get a good night's sleep. Live from n.p.r. News in Culver City California I'm to Wayne Brown blizzard is expected to sweep across parts of the northeast later today and Tuesday leaving more than a foot and a half of snow in some areas road crews in Philadelphia already have begun treating streets where up to 12 inches of snow is in the forecast Boston and New York could see up to 18 inches and farther south the nation's capital is also expecting snow ahead of Wednesday's scheduled start of the National Cherry Blossom Festival diplomatic feud between Turkey and the Netherlands continues to boil N.P.R.'s Peter Kenyon says the Dutch prime minister is rejecting Turkey's demand for an apology both the Netherlands and Turkey are in campaign season and tension soared when a weekend event for Turkish ex-pats in Rotterdam was blocked scenes of debt riot police using clubs and dogs to disperse the crowd enraged Turks calls for calm have so far gone unheeded elsewhere Denmark is asking the Turkish prime minister to postpone a planned visit N.P.R.'s Peter Kenyon new figures from the United Nations Children's Agency suggest 2016 was the most deadly year yet for children caught up in the war in Syria Unicef says more than 650 children died in the fighting the b.b.c. Steve Jackson has the story this week marks the 6th anniversary of the uprising in Syria that escalated into one of the bloodiest civil wars of recent times reliable information about casualty numbers is hard to come by but these cool shoes figures from Unicef suggest that last year was the worst yet for children at least 255 of the children who died in the fighting more than a 3rd of the total were in or near schools when they were killed hundreds of others not included in these figures are thought to have died of diseases that could have been prevented with proper access to medical care the B.B.C.'s Steve Jackson the Congressional Budget Office is expected to release its projections on the impact of the proposed Republican health care plan as early as today. Hey As N.P.R.'s Merrit Kennedy reports House speaker Paul Ryan is defending the plan against what he expects to be unfavorable projections we still don't know the exact cost of the Republican panda draft health care bill that would replace Obamacare or how many people would lose coverage Paul Ryan tells c.b.s. His Face the Nation that he expects that report to say that fewer people would be covered He argues that there's no way to compete with a government mandate in terms of predicting how many people will have coverage but claims the g.o.p. Plan is ultimately better in terms of access what we are trying to achieve here is bringing down the cost of care bring down the cost of insurance not through government mandates and monopolies by having more choice and competition and by lowering the cost of health care you improve the access to health care Meanwhile on N.B.C.'s Meet the Press Health and Human Services secretary Tom Price valid that no $1.00 would suffer financially under the Republican plan Kennedy n.p.r. News Washington you are listening to n.p.r. News. Strawberry growers in Tennessee are being forced to fend off the frost this week a mild winter means an early berry season Blake Farmer a member station w p l n in Nashville reports strawberries can be killed if temperatures drop much below 30 degrees parts of Tennessee got several inches of snow over the weekend and temperatures are forecast to dip into the low twenty's this week so strawberry farmers will be working around the clock there letting their crops soak up as much warmth as possible during the day then covering every row with heavy cloth in the afternoon agriculture officials say unprotected fields will see significant losses a few other premature crops will be hit by the chill and they're harder to help fruit trees for instance like cherries and plum may already be blooming because of the early spring for n.p.r. News I'm Blake Farmer in Nashville in Massachusetts the man known as the cod father is expected to plead guilty to federal charges of evading fishing quotas and smuggling money to Portugal Carlos Raphael is the owner of $1.00 of the nation's largest commercial fishing operations with more than 30 vessels in his fleet Federal authorities say he falsely claimed his vessels caught haddock are Pollock when they had actually caught other species subject to stricter quotas He then sold the fish for cash some of which was smuggled overseas Nissan is recalling more than 54000 cars because of faulty airbags that may deploy when the door slam The recall affects the 2012 Nissan Versa vehicles the company says the problem may be caused by the wearing down of the side impact sensor This is n.p.r. News support for n.p.r. Comes from h.b.o. Documentary films presenting cries from Syria and accounts of the 5 year Syrian civil war and the story of the people affected directed by Yevgeny often you have ski cries from Syria premieres tonight at 10 pm on h.b.o. . You're listening to outside source with me. We've got stories from the u.k. And China. Of the program and the Internet. Begins its 1st mission but 1st to our story today there are signs of tensions easing between Turkey and the Netherlands the Dutch embassy is charge d'affaires was summoned to the foreign ministry in Ankara this morning Turkish president. Accused Germany and the Netherlands of Naziism after officials blocked rallies there on the weekend to Turkish ministers were barred from addressing rallies in the Dutch city of Rotterdam one of those ministers was escorted to the German border our correspondent Anna Holligan is on the line with us from Russia. Can you tell us what's the situation there now. A so dramatic events over the weekend they are. Just here in the Netherlands today on the front page of The Telegraph an image of a policeman wearing full riot gear pinning a protester covered in blood on the headline is we are the boss here. The protests are highly likely to dominate the election which is happening in just a few days' time and I'm on the road. Will be the 1st televised debate between the 2 front runners. The. Current prime minister and how do you think the election might be affected. Well. Try to. Fly a plane in the sky. Is enough. Could benefit Mark Normally he's a very mild mannered politician always pictured smiling he has been characteristically tough on turkey and I think Dr response is very much being shaped through the prism of these impending elections he has warned citizens in Turkey Dutch citizens in Turkey to take extra care and he's also said that the Netherlands be blackmailed by other countries how is the electorate responding what are we hearing from from the Dutch the descends on this on the. Hugely splinter running up to the elections and especially outside of the Netherlands everyone was talking about here builders and these questions about whether the the populist tide was going to sweep through Europe because here in the Netherlands Of course it's the 1st test it's the 1st election ahead of the German and. French votes. However the kind of populist sentiment has backfired a little bit because the voters here saw Bracks it saw how complicated it was the nuts put them off a similar next it deal and also in terms of the victory of Donald Trump here builders tried to align himself with the Us president and that took him down in the polls because voters are afraid that he is unstable or or perhaps rather he is a creator of instability which is something that doesn't go down well with the Dutch electorates and actually we've seen the fringe parties pick up votes of the green left led by the charismatic young politician yes the clever he's compared to President Obama and also on the other side a range of parties and the interesting thing actually Celia going into this vote 2 days to go and still up to 20 percent of the electorate are undecided and I was speaking to one political scientist in Amsterdam over the weekend and he was saying because of the number of party so a record 28 parties on the ballot paper it means that some there's some policy crossover so even when they're sad. In the ballot box with their pencil in their hand one in 3 voters the fight moments who they're going to play for remarkable and Ok well let's look at the wider picture in all of this we've got the B.B.C.'s Johnny diamond is sitting right next to me at this tiny little table inside the b.b.c. News room Johnny how one usual is it for an e.u. Country to to ban or to bar political campaigning by politicians from another country you know I'm thinking about a manual from France recently came to the u.k. As part of his election campaign how unusual it was this decision by Judge politicians I think it was pretty unusual as you say freedom of speech is in shrines in European tradition it is certainly in order to say it's perhaps not in order to when it comes to Turkey and this particular referendum campaign because of course local councils municipal councils in Germany stopped Turkish ministers coming in campaigning and there's clearly been a ripple of alarm about Turkish domestic politics spilling out into the wider European arena but it is a fairly old thing to do and the German decisions were local decisions not federal decisions and campaigning did happen in France over the weekend as well so it's a sign I think of discomfort one level I think there are also cynics who would say that there are elections campaigns as we just heard in in the Netherlands and there is a referendum campaign as we know in Turkey and both sides are using these events to some degree or to a greater or lesser degree to exploit divisions and to try and build up their support but it is an old situation that turkey finds itself in in Europe do we have a clash of political styles on display here what the style of politics on display in the Netherlands versus what we might see normally in Turkey yeah I think you do I mean look to. He is a nationalist country and unafraid especially in the last 10 years to assert itself and to beat its chest to a certain degree and as a leader in President heard one who is still and I don't mean this is an insult in any way shape or form but is still to some degree a street fighter you know he came up from the streets quite rough streets of Istanbul and he retains that and it's part of what his supporters love about him look at Europe Europe spent 60 years 70 years trying not to be nationalist most countries in Europe try not to be assertive trying not to forget the past but certainly change the future and make sure they don't reflect the past and to have a president heard one throw insults such as Nazi. Germany which has spent an awful lot of time not the Nazi or the Netherlands which suffered terribly under the Nazis in the 2nd world war is a terrible terrible insult for this country so yes it's a class of political style splash or political leadership at a very very tense time for both Turkey and for the Netherlands and Europe more broadly fascinating Ok Well we'll keep an eye on this diplomatic route that seems to be changing by the hour B.B.C.'s Johnny Diamond thank you to you and London and thanks to Anna Holligan coming to us from Rotterdam what's making the headlines way you want to get in touch with us on whatsapp Our number is plus 477-137-8703 extension 0 Well well it's been almost 6 years since the uprising in Syria which is led to the country and its people living through the bloodiest civil wars of recent times and despite peace talks ceasefires 2016 turned out to be the worst year yet for Syrian children more children were killed than in any other year now John Mackey is from the un children's agency Unicef at least 652 children were killed and 2016 at least 850 children were. Routed and forced to join the fighting there were at least 338 attacks on hospitals and medical staff these are only the numbers that you are able to to check and to verify and the actual figures we're concerned are most likely much higher a lot of the deaths are results of shelling of strikes of destroyed buildings there's a lot accidental deaths clearly these are children who are victims of war these are children who are living and dying the worst conditions possible they're dying under the rubble they're drawing from direct attacks they're done from from then mines life isn't necessarily easier for those who managed to leave Syria almost 5000000 refugees are in neighboring countries where conditions keep getting increasingly desperate Jamie Roberts is the director of the documentary War Child which aired on Channel 4 last night he spent the last few months following the journey of child refugees amongst them Syrian children and their families through Europe he joins us now from London Jamie we've heard the statistics but can you tell us a bit about the human stories behind those numbers. Yes So the film I made actually features a Syrian girl and her salary traveling up through Europe and the city something experiences they've gone through were terrible they were from near Aleppo I mean Rwanda girl these are 12 she would tell me about her next door neighbor who she saw blown up by a barrel bomb and the body parts flying across the house next door and all of the children and seen images like this and just previously there you mentioned some of the countries that actually are around Syria that have taken people now up into those countries to Jordan. And some of the neighboring countries and some of the conditions there are awful as child labor of the Syrian children because the adults can actually get work papers. Is there's a lot of despair desperation and there are a lot of them are waiting for relocation but this can take a long time and sometimes it never appears to come and feel very sad got the good news that you followed in your documentary Can you talk a little bit more about her why she why she felt she had to leave her home. So they were in a suburb near Aleppo. Just outside of that and actually they had I think 2 separate terrorist organizations have actually been fighting there. As well as the government troops and rebels a real hot spot their family were not you know just very young family from the ages of 3 to 1112 she's the oldest I think that they tried to hold on for as long as they could the father had a very good business there as well everyone's business is kind of fallen apart the money speciate says in the end they couldn't i think them and their local neighborhood decided that they couldn't do this anymore there was no education very little future a lot of the houses were being levelled so they decided to leave the had to go smugglers and then that took them 6 months on the way up to Germany and in that time they were kidnapped they want illegal boats they've. Been tear gassed you know they've been through the whole gamut and they were. They are you know a kind of middle class family. From good jobs from a good home in Syria and yet 6 years ago they had very normal lives and they love Syria so tell me about how this middle class family these these children are changed by their time on the road clearly they must have to become more street smart what kinds of things do they have to learn about. Yeah well I mean the language is one that quickly roll and picked up English speaking up bits of German each country they go through because the language is very quickly because that's the way that you can negotiate with smugglers were also N.G.O.s you know to get food and clothes forces work out which way buses are going how to get places. I think that always looking out for danger always concerned about that extremely although this family and specially are all and she's a lovely girl I mean she has been one of the highly traumatized by what happened in Syria books not least by what happened on the micro. They were. Kidnapped by a smuggling gang. Puts their heads. For about 5 days released. Money sent. One of his relations in Turkey so it was kind of one drama after another that was more like it was back in Greece there was a huge. Refugee camp. And. So you have you know a small number of aggressors who try to get through this 10000 people there including lots. And lots of Ok thank you very much we'll have to leave it there but thank you Jamie Roberts thank you for talking about your documentary Warchild. Life for the world the b.b.c. These skis outside so. Here's some of the headlines of being discussed in the b.b.c. News room here the diplomatic route between Turkey and the Netherlands shows no sign of abating Carlos the Jackal the Venezuelan man behind a series of attacks in France in the 1970 s. And eighty's he's going on trial again over a deadly shopping center attack legislation paving the way for Breck's it could complete its final stage in the British parliament today and Malaysia says the family of Kim Jong nam the murdered half brother of North Korea's leader has still not claimed his body. Moving on with just over a year to go until it hosts the World Cup Russia is on a charm offensive to persuade fans that it's a safe place to travel huge excitement over hosting the competition was soured after Russian hooligans were involved in violent clashes at the European football championship in France last year the B.B.C.'s Sarah Rainsford has more. They were shocking scenes of violence Russian football hooligans rampaging through the. Streets of must say last year and England fans among the targets. This was last summer and the worst football violence in years at its heart was a new 3 diffraction hooligan more athletic brutal and disciplined than the English they once modeled themselves on and in just over a year it's Russia that will host the World Cup over the battery. That's why Estelle feel a peace officer has just been visiting him good 16 extinguishes got a tour of the venue for the World Cup final but he's Britain's top football cop and he came to share notes with the Russians on known troublemakers and how to deal with them of course every saw the violence will be appalled by it was all for violence and left people seriously injured we will be working with the will she will get the information it will pass the old school says to make sure they can make sense which will if they trouble hold a child. Our hour. There is under 100 days now until the 1st real test for Russia the Confederations Cup The final countdown to that tournament was marked with fireworks and some Petersburg and a shower of cum that state. The sun's now come out here in St Petersburg and it is shining through the glass roof. Of this brand new stadium down on to the pitch below which is where the opening match in the Confederations Cup will kick off from that is just a year until the World Cup itself here in Russia and of course that's a matter of huge prestige but after the clashes in France there are questions about how safe this country is going to be for the visiting France. Mr Manchester United of such other my the idea of the Russian That's why Russia is on a major charm offensive now it is a bit of the military when Manchester United played a must off last week state t.v. . Fell over themselves to report local funds hunting out blankets demean used in Life Support the blankets were marked gentle fans come the World Cup The last thing Russia wants is the embarrassment of empty stands so the message is laying on thick now there is nothing to be scared of here. Pressure like the say that talk of hooliganism here is propaganda and stereotypes and misconceptions I just answered he says bug I asked the man running Russia's World Cup operation whether his country is taking the issue seriously here against overblowing the problem but the scenes in France but no fake So how confident is Alex a central can that the troublemakers will be under control at the World Cup Everything will be done to avoid any incidents whatsoever there has never been a single incident very major sporting event in Russia that proves that we can really organize great atmosphere and the important thing is to find the right balance between atmosphere. And complete safety for each and every one of spectators. Well it's 10 23 in the morning here in London that I'm moving on here to a story in the u.k. M.P.'s in Britain will be voting on the government's a year withdrawal bill later today if it passes prime minister Theresa May could trickle Article 50 the start of negotiations for the u.k. To leave the e.u. The soonest Tuesday are u.k. Affairs correspondent Rob Watson is watching all of this closely Rob what might happen today I think I'm fairly sure that's of my neck cusp of I say this now but I'm pretty sure that by the end of today the government will have what it wants to reason they will have what it wants which is a short bill authorizing it hurts across the starting gun. And and once that happens what are we looking forward to for the rest of the week why why do you think why is everyone predicting that Article 50 might be too. Triggered on Tuesday I think just because in a way it's because the argument is what will be the reason for delaying it I mean later in the week you've got elections in Holland later in the month you've got the celebration of the Treaty of Rome the creation of unity in Europe so in many ways the question is Well why wouldn't she got all the other thing that she'd want to avoid if she doesn't trigger it tomorrow or sometime this week should avoid all those questions what are you going to do when you going to do it what are you going to do it is does it put her in a stronger starting position for negotiations showing that she's kind of moving ahead very firmly towards this towards triggering the at the article 50 that is a fascinating question I mean of course the reason why the government wants this bill to just go through super quickly without anything any amendments is to try and send a message to the European Union hey look we're negotiating from a position of strength but of course I think a lot of the Europeans and of course plenty of people on the on the remains side here in the u.k. Think no matter what she takes that Britain is negotiating and is certainly not as strong as the government would like to give the impression Ok let's talk about these negotiations is there any sense of how soon these negotiations might start Well I've got a sense that they'll be sort of monumental anticlimax when you have that historic moment of Britain firing the starting gun I mean we'll get a sense of well I'll probably be a short letter from Theresa May saying what Britain wants is a very close trading relationship very close relations will be about it but then we'll probably have to wait I would think maybe a week 2 weeks to get the European Union's response so don't expect that right here we go this is what it's going to look like but I think I think we can already that this is going to be an immensely complicated process I mean Britain has been a member of the European Union for 40 years or more. Our lives in the u.k. Are so closely tangled with the European Union and sense of regulations. I mean this is going to be a doozy I mean even people on the side of this is the biggest peacetime challenge that faces the 2nd World War Ok Thank you Rob I have a feeling it's going to be very busy week for you as well. Moving on to a completely different story for you now it's not unusual for presidents to feel uncomfortable with their official residences and Donald Trump is spending a lot of time in Florida rather than in the White House but it's rare for a president to move out of his official residence claiming it's hunted Well that's what's happened in Brazil seriously Fernando addition to our days joins me now to tell us more represent a show term or only pretty much lived one week in the official palace in Brazil for the president was it a day over at the Palace after spending over 500000 pounds in reforms he decided to move back to the vice president residency we need to remember that the shelter was a vice president for after she was impeached he ascended to power well he claimed as something strange was happening they said that they didn't like the vibe and neither he nor his his wife Marcella could sleep properly so they moved back and he's actually come out to say that he believes it's haunted he believes there might be ghosts in this official residence quote was a something wrong was happening there and he jokingly said I thought the place was haunted. Because it is a very superstitious country and some people believe in those things but I think that the whole goal was pretty much translated freely around the world it didn't mention the go by didn't actually say he was on to what that was said that he felt . A bad vibe there Ok so what's been the reaction inside Brazil to this move to be honest people mention that President hasn't been in a good situation he's last late to prove a rate as well. The Tempest sent to Brazil. Another 3.6 in the. Same. Coast of the. Late. People didn't make as much fun as would be expected but it's. Ok thank you very much. The governor. Says an agreement has been reached with the rebels for them to evacuate. The state media. Thank you. For business is designed to simplify business. And. Protecting commercial vehicles. Designed to protect small businesses. When he was just Cheech got his nickname from the Spanish word for fried. Like. Looks like a little. More have the latest in the debate over the G.O.P.'s new health care plan that's on the next morning edition Morning Edition Monday from wake up till 9.3. Next on the b.b.c. World Service it's time for the food chain as part of the b.b.c. Wide so I can preach season the food chain explores how what we eat and how we prepare it affects how we breed from the indoor pollution generated by the way you cook your food to the wider way that farming practices affect the air that surrounds us but it's not all bad news find out how your next meal might affect your next breath it's all in the food chain after the. B.b.c. News where Jerry Smit Turkey has accused the Netherlands of breaking the Vienna Convention during violent clashes outside the Turkish consulate in Rotterdam on Saturday protested that a Turkish government minister was not allowed into the consulate then expelled from the country to stop or addressing pro-government demonstrators the man known as Carlos the Jackal for many years one of the world's most wanted fugitives is due to go on trial in France shortly elite's ramírez Sanchez denies charges that he threw a grenade in a Paris shopping center in 1974 killing 2 people. The British government billed to a draw the country from the European Union is returning to the House of Commons for approval if both houses of parliament pass the bill later today the prime minister to resign may could trigger the formal process as soon as Tuesday the author orators in Ethiopia say dozens of people are still unaccounted for after a landslide in a rubbish dump on the outskirts of Alice her birth at least 50 people are known to have died Malaysia says no one from the family of Kim Jong Nam The half brother the North Korean leader has come forward to claim his body officials will give relatives to 3 weeks before deciding what to do Mr Kim was killed with a nerve agent at Kuala Lumpur Airport a month ago. India's central bank has lifted all restrictions on cash withdrawals from banks and A.T.M.'s in the country the limits were imposed after a sudden government ban in November on using high denomination rupee notes it was designed to curb corruption because a banknote shortage a time sea turtle nicknamed bank after she swallowed nearly a 1000 coins is on the mend and having swimming lessons as a rehabilitation center in Bangkok their ads had to operate to remove the money from by visitors at a public park in Thailand who thought it would bring good luck b.b.c. News. Hello and welcome to the food chain the weekly program about the economics science and culture of food and. If you've been listening to the b.b.c. World Service this week then you've probably heard about the so I can brief season a week dedicated to looking at how to cut global air pollution here at the food chain we tend to see these things in terms of food so this week we're looking into how what we eat affects how we breathe what connections exist between the air in our lungs and the food in our stomachs. Everything you're eating farming and cooking has an effect on the air that you're breathing we're going to be covering quite a bit of ground this week so come with us our 1st stop is the kitchen probably not the 1st place you think of when you think of air pollution but according to the World Health Organization 4300000 people a year die from the effects of air pollution in their homes and some types of cooking can contribute to that. The w.h.o. Estimates around 3000000000 people use solid fuels like wood dung and charcoal for cooking and heating and this produces high levels of harmful pollutants we'll talk a bit more about that later but 1st let's go to Ghana where the B.B.C.'s Thomas Noddy is meeting some women who have some solutions to the use of this. Mine in this group of young. And how to. Knit communities. From. Pollution. Is the instructor. With open fire this one is cylindrical. This is called. Peer freight search inside there it has a regulator and I need that I loused there are mobile oxygen inside to be Quantrill the use of solid fuels like wood is very common in this part of the country and that produces high levels of household air pollution exposing the women and children will use them to see rakes. Irene. C she introduced her family to the efficient cooks to get them away you see. I was going to push to get some firewood but now I started going to define I would a game because. To save time for me Mata Bayati is preparing a mill using a wood fire it cloud of smoke house and golf tennis Despite this she tells me the traditional method of thinking is still the best option. We are used to using. It's best than cheaper than the coupe Still I don't have money to buy. It. Was like yeah I do hop from the Gonna go guys as a solution says they hope to expand the clean cooking campaign of the country they understand what the traditional stuff is doing to them but the challenge now is the cost. For now though millions of wood fires are lit up across Ghana every day. And families many. Like in India who just. Wrote a Messiah is the c.e.o. Of the Global Alliance for clean cook stoves which is funded by the un as well as various charitable public and private sources it supported the initiative in Ghana you just heard about some of the food that's cooked in various parts of the world. Acquires you to simmer the food for hours which could consume quite a bit of the electricity and could be expensive those are some of the reasons why electricity even though it's a clean fuel is not as successful or used by many so I just came back from Myanmar last week 93 percent of the households there are still cooking over solid fuel in India the numbers give or take around 80 percent of households that are still using solid fuel so in many parts of the world you still see north of 30 to 40 percent of the country's households that are cooking on solid fuel and how is the impact of using cooking fire that is made from solid fuel How do you measure that when you're using solid fuel and you're burning that solid fuel you know there's a lot of smoke that can come from it because not all of that wood is perfectly dried and some of that smoke can be quite toxic so there's been various studies done over the years and fairly consistently that show about 4000000 premature deaths annually as a result of prolonged exposure to this mark another impact is the amount of time that women spend collecting this firewood sometimes they can walk you know for several hours for several kilometers a day to be able to acquire this would and it puts themselves in harm's way in some cases is this a women's issue it is primarily a women's issue in that they are tend to be the ones who do the cooking and all of the processes that lead up to cooking if you will so gathering their fuel would as well but the pollution that comes from solid fuel affects everyone in the household and affects everyone in the community smoke very often gets released from the household and there's some really interesting statistics from India from China that show outdoor air pollution is significantly impacted by indoor air pollution in fact up to 30 percent of your air pollution comes from indoor air pollution. And I think what we've learned is that transition is not easy it will take time and you know there are certain dishes that people will still prefer to make you know over an open fire in India for example having the no dro tea or the non you know on a 10 do or stove and one that you know has a nice motif for you know all of these things play a big role now this being a programme about the economic science and culture of food let's talk money is there a financial cost to being exposed to pollution from cooking sephiroth is an assistant professor of environmental economics at the London School of Economics we see in some studies that indoor air pollution concentration can be much much higher than Door pollution and this is very very important because for example the u.s. Or the u.k. Populations ban approximately 90 percent of the time indoors and what's the biggest source of indoor air pollution in normal house I would say things like cooking appliances cleaning products to back up products and building materials you're an economist where it is the economy coming to this issue earth pollution facts health and of fact actually other aspects of human life for example in a recent study showed that air pollution also affect test scores and human capital the amount of knowledge and skills that you accumulate during your education and potentially a few other experiences and all these kind of things has a cost right so for example if it's increased the number of people that are now suffer from cancer or other condition that come with a cost in economic growth think about tradeoffs I tell my students that well we don't really want a society when we have 0 level of pollution because that actually means we don't do anything so we need to find the right balance here and potentially even morning toward the level make sure that you are always in the recommended guidelines. But I wouldn't recommend I want to completely stop using anything that can produce any form of proportion what I would like to see is a transition into to cleaner energy sources in my view dad thing will happen only when we're going to see significant price changes that will favor clean energies when you need to cook something and you don't have quite a lot of money you just can use whatever you can it gives you a very difficult conundrum basically because you have to make a choice Steve in the short term feed your family or feed yourself or do you consider the potential economic and health costs of the long term unfortunately Ortiz is correct to a certain degree lots of people do make these awful trade off I'm not sure if there were of them there are few things that we can do about it in maybe they can cook outside for example or make sure dates more ventilated or that most of the people in the household will be outside want to cook specifically people that are belong to sensitive groups young kids and the elderly the other option is that government are going to zation will start to step in and help. So can you create an economic incentive to fight indoor air pollution Let's go to India where the b.b.c. . Has been looking at potential. It's an extremely hot after. Out of the dense forest. After struggling with tuberculosis he is now starting to feel stronger. 20 years since we couldn't. Get. Better and hopefully get rid of my disease. In India at least half a 1000000000 people rely on firewood and animal dung for cooking deadly diseases like. Chronic Bronchitis and lung cancer in India. However in this remote villages. All 34 families have a reason to feel a little more cheerful and. Began to use eco friendly stores given to them by Analytics a u.s. Based company which started this pilot scheme. Religious start using them in earning money in the form of credit they begin to repay the cost of each store in installments. The new. King store still. Such as animal dung but it almost have the cooking time each store has a sensitive to it which transmits data and it can be monitored by any device it means the family carbon credits so for every 100 hours of cooking per month this group of N.G.O.s pay them $3.00 u.s. Dollars. But encouraging people to use the technology was not easy in the thick forest surrounded by mountains and one mental activist. Had his job cut out a new new technology scene with a sense of suspicion it specially when women. With looking precocious neighbors jump up and harness playing because grandchild in a cramped. It's discolored drawer from walls and layers of black smoke bear witness to the long use of traditional much torture. Initially men used to mock us after a month they realized these have reduced firewood collection time in the jungles now we own money using them and sometimes even men go into the village doctor told me how to talk to you. And he hears less complains about respiratory illnesses what would really improve air quality here would be the overall ability of clean cooking gas but that is a distant dream for the people in this village rather than taking a larger sticking a smaller step towards a better looking solution argues big snuggle is social transformation expert I wouldn't call it the solution I mean it's a transitionary sort of solution and as we adapted more and more to various localised user preferences I think it will be more accepted. You're listening to the food chain on the b.b.c. World Service this week we're looking at how the food we eat affects the air we breathe we spent the 1st part of this program looking at indoor air pollution and specifically the pollution that results from cooking what's called solid fuel but let's zoom out a band. She sent about our earlier about to me has been doing research into the air beyond our homes she's a climate scientist working at a university and the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies if you have visited a farm and you did see the gazing off the manure that is piled up in a farm you know if you look in the early morning you even see that steam is coming out of this manure so that is how we can picture how ammonia which is a goddess such just comes into the atmosphere but that doesn't stay or Gaza very long so it forms a tiny tiny particle that as the size of one tends of a hair and that forms by combining this another chemical component by trick oxide which comes from combustion processes transportation anything that is burning a few so these 2 gases meet and form this tiny tiny tiny particle that can be solid while liquid and that is what is so dangerous to our health so in a way I would call it entrepreneur Janick Lee and Hans agricultural production meaning when other manmade pollution is mixing with these agricultural emissions then we get these very very high concentrations and where in the world would we see this the most interestingly it is a problem in the United States and in Europe because what makes it is newspapers as air pollution in India and China and don't get me wrong there are cultural pollution is also very very high but what makes it so to uprising is in the eastern United States and also very widely in Europe that is such a big problem where a lot of efforts are already put in to reducing our pollution Sam a farmer and I have a bunch of chickens and these chickens are d. Gassing as he said. And while they're doing this may my farms next to a highway and. So you know these particulates are being generated by my farm What is the farthest neighbor of mine that would be affected this time of particles stay in the atmosphere between a day and a week depends on the weather if it's raining or not if it's raining it gets washed out from the atmosphere so wherever the wind can blow within a week which can blow to another country of your in Europe so that is the area affected so you should not think about this being a problem being on a farm but you should see more about a regional problem and how much does agriculture affect air pollution overall you know if we call air pollution these tiny particles that affect our health and a lot of areas this is a natural particle coming from a desert or from a forest that is naturally burning that is something we can't really change but if you look at the end areas than the eastern United States and Europe is a pretty strongly affected and in Europe it's even the dominating kind of air pollution it dominates over everything else that is here manmade like transportation energy sector other domestic or manufacturing emissions is this an inevitable process does this have to happen if you have a fire if we go back to the root and we come back to the 2 chemical that are involved which is ammonia and nitric oxide and studies have shown if you reduce one of the 2 you can solve the problem so you can I hazard tackle agricultural emissions Fred allies or livestock or you can really Turco much stronger combustion emissions from transportation and that would also really lower that problem so what's going to happen in the future the world is going to need to be able to feed more people what will happen as the world continues to increase food production food production hostel being increased in the future or we cannot feed the population that is supposed to be on this planet however we have found that if the regulations that are planned for nitric oxide are put into place that future or higher a morning I missions would not be a big problem on the surface any more Suzanne about our. If you happen to live wherever the wind can blow in a week as Susanna just mentioned you may find yourself talking to Charlie Tebbutt He's an environmental lawyer who represents people who claim they have been adversely affected from policing from farms and we tell you story about almost 20 years ago now we brought actions against. A number of large dairies in the lower Yakima Valley in in central Washington and I used to rent cars to go down to do the site inspections and gather evidence and 3 times that the rental car company charged me a smoking fee the odors are so pervasive that they permeated the car and so magine living next to that it's just putrid sort of stuff and then even just a year and a half ago the utility locator came out while we were drilling holes to find the groundwater contamination in the property and he got Nash's environment from just being around those fumes each cow produces about $120.00 pounds of manure waste a day is most of the people that live around these facilities are poor many of them are non English speaking and quite frankly a lot of them are undocumented workers how many cases do you represent a year and if I had 100 lawyers working full time and you know everyone in the United States knew about us and those 100 lawyers would be working more than full time trying to protect the interests of people who are impacted in the United States maybe one out of a 100 or a 1000 times is a case even brought. We may not be the only living organisms affected by the air quality of around us does air pollution end up in the very food where farming. Gina Mills is a professor at the Center for Ecology and hydrology at the environment center in Wales we asked her to tell us about some of her work that pollution goes in through these little paws on the leaf surface and they open and close according to the weather conditions and also how much moisture there is in the soil so when the growth conditions are optimum for plants these pause on the leaf surface are wide open and lots of air pollution gets in once it's inside the plants it causes damage to the cells and the consequences of that fall crop plants is that there's less carbon and carbohydrate moving towards the seeds of the plants and also to the roots of the plant so if it's a plant like a potato then you would have a smaller potato trooper's if it's a plant like a weak crop then it would mean there are smaller grains and the wheat and that means that we've got a lower yield one of the things we're really concerned about are the leafy crops things like lettuce and spinach and these crops develop blotches on the leaf surface and those spots affect the value of the crop because if you're buying crops or a food market or in a supermarket then you're not likely to want to buy the ones that have got these little spots on the leaf surface can you still eat them you can still eat them yes so the pollutant that I work on the most is called ozone and ozone is a pollutant at the ground level that's formed from the effects of sunlight on the chemicals that come from the backs of vehicles and from industrial process ozone causes damage to the soles but in. So during it's actually broken down itself so it's not actually toxic to humans there is evidence that some of the particular matter that falls on crops can have high lead and cadmium content These are the kind of contaminants which can impact on health but the pollution that we're working on ozone the way that it does impact on human health is that it reduces the amount of yield that's produced in the countries where you would use needed most where the population is rapidly increasing then this is one more factor that might be mean in that there's less food available for the population different crops of different sensitivity to hosen if we were looking at a crop like potato we might expect you'd losses in the 5 to 10 percent range if we're looking at a crop like wheat and other sources shown around 9 percent yield loss but in some parts of the world like India and China then we might see you know losses that are all higher in the sort of 10 to 15 and maybe even as high as 20 percent yield losses due to ozone pollution and why would the country that you are in determine the amount of crops that you would see yield loss for this in some countries the concentrations of pollution are increasing and this is because of the increase in the use of car vehicles and the increases in industrial development the crops that are the most sensitive are wheat rice maize soy or be in Bali is less sensitive than wheat although we don't fully understand the reasons for that at the moment. Sunda shows promise spreaded that we might be able to breed crops they're all resistant to pollution and we're also looking at how you manage crops for example if there is a big pollution problem particularly time perhaps if we can hope by the water that we're proud to the crops for a few days then this will close those polls on the leaf surface and less pollution be taken up and therefore the Payless of facts so far we've talked about how growing processing and cooking our food affects the air we breathe and how that air affects the crops we grow and if you're thinking at this point in the program that it would all be much better if we lived in a bubble we thought that ourselves but we have to get up go to work and live our lives and we will inevitably come into contact with some form of air pollution so we wondered if our diet is part of the problem could also be part of the solution Dr Isabel Hermia is from the International Agency for Research on Cancer and it's carried out research on honey Trish and can moderate the impact of air pollution there is now quite good you have Richard should have been shown. Or got 31 can have a beneficial effect when you're exposed to high level and so people eat risible amount of food and vegetables their increase their capacity or to protect against the effect of oxidant in particular air pollution there is in. Fluids So we know that they have these potential to increase the effect of oxidative stress and the reason a lot of the experiment in animals showing that goes by the I mean have a potential to naturalize the free radicals which are created by these chemical responds to accident so that's why we choose vitamin c. And why don't we and they also are kept in synergy so that vitamin c. Allows the rich. Generation of I mean. Nation. And then you know. It's in the green vegetables. Which is a. Huge You know. Orange and. We're reaching the end of this week's edition of the food chain and we need you to listen very closely to this part of the program because we've got some important news 1st do you have a long simmering question about the business economics or culture of food planning an upcoming program that includes your questions so send us an e-mail the food chain. At c.b.c. C o u k or find us on social media hash tag. And if your weekend listener to the food chain on the b.b.c. World Service we have a new time for March 30th you'll be able to listen to us a few days earlier starting on Thursdays and on into the weekend we're telling you now because life gets busy and will remind you again next week and yes that means our podcast will be. From producer Faria Masoud editor Emily Thomas and me. Thank you for listening and join us again on the food chain next week. Marco Werman Canada's aboriginal peoples television network can be kind of edgy nomination for best. Angry angry Indians for their single. It's become a part of our culture. Gathering Place in the broadcast world and it may soon be seen in the us our story on the world join us for the world on Monday evening at 6 on 90.3 k. You. I think you know out loud an exhibit of our work by Monterey County High School students runs now through March 24th at the coral cheery Center for the Arts 11 am to 4 pm weekdays a new day for Saturday's more information is on our community calendar at k.z. You've got a word. From California State University Monterey Bay This is listener supported 90.30 Pacific Grove Monterey Salinas Santa Cruz n.p.r. For the Monterey Bay area it's 4 o'clock Good morning here's one episode in a kind of worldwide election campaign.

Radio-program , Air-pollution , Nobel-peace-prize , Official-residences , Health , Political-science , Atmosphere , Climate-forcing-agents , G20-nations , Oxides , Hygiene , Occupational-safety-and-health

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20170121:01:56:00

own reasons, but it's real and i think we should pointed out. >> bill: the good news is, there weren't that many of them. i thought there would be more. they targeted the police, people should know that. this wasn't an anti-trump demonstration, this was an anarchy, heard the police demonstration. police commissioner said our guys were targeted, the bad guys came after us, wanting to hurt us. i think you're right. americans should know. it's not a big crew. it's 400, that's not a lot of people on inauguration day. >> that's right. the bolsheviks were pretty small group. you don't want to let this stuff, left-wing politics, get bigger. no matter who the president is, if you're breaking things and

Bill , People , Police , Reasons , There-weren-t , News , Many , Wasnt-an-anti-trump-demonstration , Guys , Us , Police-demonstration , Anarchy

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20121013:00:48:00

lowest price, guaranteed. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> laura: in the factor original section. ed as member is known for left wing politics. is he still supporting president obama? he recently sat down with bill o'reilly. >> i hear you are going to vote mitt romney coming up in november is that right? >> you said that, what? >> bill: mitt romney has your vote this november. >> i certainly don't brag about obama having my vote. i don't think he has been a strong leader. i think he has been deficient in his financial efforts in stimulating the economy. >> bill: see, let's just -- in case people don't know you. >> yeah. >> you are a socialist, right? >> yes. >> bill: you are a socialist? >> yeah. >> bill: when you hear people say barack obama is a socialist, you are a real socialist, you say. >> ha ha. >> ha ha, that's what i

Ticket , Price , Sleep-train , Sleep-laura , Bill , Mitt-romney , Barack-obama , Ed-henry , Billo-reilly , Vote , Left-wing-politics , Original-section

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20121013:03:48:00

>> laura: in the factor original section. ed as member is known for left wing politics. is he still supporting president obama? he recently sat down with bill o'reilly. >> i hear you are going to vote mitt romney coming up in november is that right? >> you said that, what? >> bill: mitt romney has your vote this november. >> i certainly don't brag about obama having my vote. i don't think he has been a strong leader. i think he has been deficient in his financial efforts in stimulating the economy. >> bill: see, let's just -- in case people don't know you. >> yeah. >> you are a socialist, right? >> yes. >> bill: you are a socialist? >> yeah. >> bill: when you hear people say barack obama is a socialist, you are a real socialist, you say. >> ha ha. >> ha ha, that's what i

Laura-ingraham , Bill , Mitt-romney , Barack-obama , Ed-henry , Vote , Billo-reilly , Left-wing-politics , Member , Original-section , Economy , Leader