The u. S. A recent gallup poll found one fourth of americans say they or a Family Member delayed treatment for a serious medical condition because they couldnt afford it. Thats where volunteer health clinics, like remote area medical or ram are stepping up to fill the gap. Ram, and its volunteer doctors, have provided more than 785 thousand patients with free medical care since 1985. And the number of individuals served has more than doubled just in the last six years. At a recent twoday clinic in suitland, maryland, near washington, d. C. , people lined up outside in the cold waiting for care and once inside, they were grateful for the help. At least somebody cares. With the big government, they dont care. Especially if you cant afford it. You go to a hospital, which ive had many times, and i get these outrageous bills. But i have to go to the hospital. I dont have a choice. Soledad jeff eastman is the ceo of remote area medical. Thanks for joining me. Walk me through how it works. Ho
Weve done quite a few shows on census 2020 because so much is riding on the results, especially for the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. To talk about whats at stake and how the community can help is tim olson, associate director for Field Operations for the us census bureau, and the agencys hiring manager, salvador noble. Welcome to the show. Both thank you. Thank you. Robert now, you know people all think they know what the census is and we know that its kind of the population count, but give us sort of an overview in terms of what the census is so people understand what were talking about. Tim robert, thank you for having us. So the census, we conduct it once every 10 years. We started it in 1790 at the very founding of the country. Its in the us constitution. And the reason we do the census is to make sure that the us house of representatives fairly represents each state based on their population. So today when we conduct the census, whats critical is that every per
that does it for us, thank you so much for watching. remember, if your friends are busy tonight. you got a hot date. you and they can watch the night cap again tomorrow night at saturday, 11:00 p.m. eastern on msnbc. i m signing off and i wish you a very good night. from all of our colleagues across the networks of news news, thanks for staying up late with me. see you at the end of tomorrow. it has been a terrible, horrible, no good very bad week for conspiracy theorists. normally there would be no reason to show you a clip of alex jones, but this was really something. i m literally here watching a family die. 30 years on air. 37 years in operation. 15 years in this building and i m literally. when i leave tonight. they will shut us down. maybe it is tomorrow, the next day. i want people to know, i love you, i believe in you, humanity, my grandparents grandparents and parents. i believe in humanity. they got to be stopped. you got to stop them. so, at the end of 2 day, w
88th anniversary. this was really something. i m literally here watching a family member die. 30 years on air, 27 years operation, 50 years this building. i literally when i know i leave tonight they re going to shut us down. either tonight, today. i believe in my grandparents, i believe in my parents. i believe in humanity. i just want to [bleep ] these people. they have to be stopped. we have to stop them. so, al at the end of the day we re going to beat these people. i m not trying to be dramatic here but it s been a hard fight. reporter: that was alex jones one of the country s biggest conspiracy theorists crying, at least we think it was crying on his show last weekend about the fact that his program info wars might finally be coming to an end. for a decade, jones and into wars has pushed insane conspiracy theories like 9/11 was an inside job. and the u.s. government controls the weather. but perhaps jones most disturbing conspiracy was his claim that the sandy ho
Happen to have a lot of exciting exhibitions and Public Programs going all through the seasons. You know the museum. Yes. In the beautiful jesse square. It is a building designed, originally it was a power station that gave light to all of San Francisco. It was to become a contemporary Jewish Museum and the roof line actually says in hebrew, hi, meaning life. We think of it as culture, history, life and ideas. Our museum is for everybody, not just for jewish people. It is for everybody from every walk of life. We have a number of great shows and exhibitions coming up. I wanted to share with everyone the beautiful lamp of the covenant which is by dave lane. Hes a sacramento based artist. He made this chandelier for our museum that hangs from our ceiling that is a reflection on relationship between human beings and greater powers out there, the great unknown. In some respects rumination on ethical mono theism, what is written on our door. It is a very inspired sculpture. When you look at