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Middletown City Council Business Meeting, December 1, 2009

Middletown City Council Business Meeting, December 1, 2009

from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) on December 02, 2009
Duration: 5624
December 2, 2009. Includes the moment of meditation, pledge of allegiance to the flag, roll call, citizen comments, the City Manager reports (pay and benefits ordinance), City Council comments, legislation, and an executive session (Under the authority of O.R. C. 121.22(G) (1) To consider the appointment, employment, dismissal, discipline, promotion, demotion or compensation of a public employee or official) followed by adjournment. Recorded on December 1, 2009 at the Middletown City Building. Please note: audio begins during the Pledge of Allegiance.
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GRITtv: Rebooting the System: David Swanson & Mark Winston Griffith

GRITtv: Rebooting the System: David Swanson & Mark Winston Griffith

from recent posts tagged grittv - blip.tv (beta) on December 01, 2009
Duration: 1252
After the 2008 election, a cartoon was circulated of Obama sitting in the Oval Office Scotch-taping the Constitution back together. But a year later, David Swanson, author of Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union and founder of AfterDowningStreet, notes that Obama has quietly allowed many Bush-Cheney practices to stay in place--not upholding the policies, perhaps, but issuing signing statements and hanging on to the increased power of the presidency. Mark Winston Griffith, on leave from the Drum Major Institute and former candidate for New York City Council, joins Swanson and Laura to talk about the way nothing seems to change in politics. Is there a way around the machine to create a true politics of the people? These two big thinkers have some suggestions.
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Whitecap Dakota First Nations: A Success Story - Saskatchewan, Canada

Whitecap Dakota First Nations: A Success Story - Saskatchewan, Canada

from recent posts tagged nations - blip.tv (beta) on November 27, 2009
Duration: 54
Join Whitecap Dakota First Nation Chief, Darcy M. Bear, as he discusses the success behind Dakota Dunes Casino. Created as a partnership, the casino is owned by the Saskatoon Tribal Council, and run by the Saskatchewan Indian Gaming Authority. Located 20 minutes south of Saskatoon, the casino boasts 625 slot machines, over a dozen table games, and a poker room. Want to plan your trip to Canada? Visit http://www.canada.travel
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Steven Pepin, JRNL 10, 10/04/09, Assignment #6

Steven Pepin, JRNL 10, 10/04/09, Assignment #6

from recent posts tagged nations - blip.tv (beta) on October 05, 2009
Duration: 183
For this assignment, I interviewed several people for their opinions on the outcome of a recent United Nations Security Council. For more details on the source story, follow these links: BBC News Story New York Times Story Associated Press Story
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Obama Leads UN Security Council - full video

Obama Leads UN Security Council - full video

from recent posts tagged nations - blip.tv (beta) on September 29, 2009
Duration: 6203
THE PRESIDENT: The 6191st meeting of the Security Council is called to order. The provisional agenda for this meeting is before the Council in document S/Agenda/6191, which reads, "Maintenance of international peace and security, nuclear proliferation, and nuclear disarmament." Unless I hear any objection, I shall consider the agenda adopted. Agenda is adopted. I wish to warmly welcome the distinguished heads of state and government, the General -- the Secretary General, the Director General of the IAEA, ministers and other distinguished representatives present in the Security Council chamber. Your presence is an affirmation of the importance of the subject matter to be discussed. The Security Council summit will now begin its consideration of item two of the agenda. Members of the Council have before them document S/2009/473, which contains the text of a draft resolution prepared in the course of the Council's prior consultations. I wish to draw Council members' attention to document S/2009/463 containing a letter dated 16 September 2009 from the United States of America, transmitting a concept paper on the item under consideration. In accordance with the understanding reached earlier among members, the Security Council will take action on the draft resolution before it prior to hearing statements from the Secretary General and Council members. Accordingly, I shall put the draft resolution to the vote now. Will those in favor of the draft resolution contained in document S/2009/473 please raise their hand? The results of the voting is as follows: The draft resolution is received unanimously, 15 votes in favor. The draft resolution has been adopted unanimously as Resolution 1887 of 2009. I want to thank again everybody who is in attendance. I wish you all good morning. In the six-plus decades that this Security Council has been in existence, only four other meetings of this nature have been convened. I called for this one so that we may address at the highest level a fundamental threat to the security of all peoples and all nations: the spread and use of nuclear weapons. As I said yesterday, this very institution was founded at the dawn of the atomic age, in part because man's capacity to kill had to be contained. And although we averted a nuclear nightmare during the Cold War, we now face proliferation of a scope and complexity that demands new strategies and new approaches. Just one nuclear weapon exploded in a city -- be it New York or Moscow; Tokyo or Beijing; London or Paris -- could kill hundreds of thousands of people. And it would badly destabilize our security, our economies, and our very way of life. Once more, the United Nations has a pivotal role to play in preventing this crisis. The historic resolution we just adopted enshrines our shared commitment to the goal of a world without nuclear weapons. And it brings Security Council agreement on a broad framework for action to reduce nuclear dangers as we work toward that goal. It reflects the agenda I outlined in Prague, and builds on a consensus that all nations have the right to peaceful nuclear energy; that nations with nuclear weapons have the responsibility to move toward disarmament; and those without them have the responsibility to forsake them. Today, the Security Council endorsed a global effort to lock down all vulnerable nuclear materials within four years. The United States will host a summit next April to advance this goal and help all nations achieve it. This resolution will also help strengthen the institutions and initiatives that combat the smuggling, financing, and theft of proliferation-related materials. It calls on all states to freeze any financial assets that are being used for proliferation. And it calls for stronger safeguards to reduce the likelihood that peaceful nuclear weapons programs can be diverted to a weapons program -- that peaceful nuclear programs can be diverted to a weapons program. The resolution we passed today will also strengthen the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. We have made it clear that the Security Council has both the authority and the responsibility to respond to violations to this treaty. We've made it clear that the Security Council has both the authority and responsibility to determine and respond as necessary when violations of this treaty threaten international peace and security. That includes full compliance with Security Council resolutions on Iran and North Korea. Let me be clear: This is not about singling out individual nations -- it is about standing up for the rights of all nations who do live up to their responsibilities. The world must stand together. And we must demonstrate that international law is not an empty promise, and that treaties will be enforced. The next 12 months will be absolutely critical in determining whether this resolution and our overall efforts to stop the spread and use of nuclear weapons are successful. And all nations must do their part to make this work. In America, I have promised that we will pursue a new agreement with Russia to substantially reduce our strategic warheads and launchers. We will move forward with the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and open the door to deeper cuts in our own arsenal. In January, we will call upon countries to begin negotiations on a treaty to end the production of fissile material for weapons. And the Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference in May will strengthen that agreement. Now, we harbor no illusions about the difficulty of bringing about a world without nuclear weapons. We know there are plenty of cynics, and that there will be setbacks to prove their point. But there will also be days like today that push us forward -- days that tell a different story. It is the story of a world that understands that no difference or division is worth destroying all that we have built and all that we love. It is a recognition that can bring people of different nationalities and ethnicities and ideologies together. In my own country, it has brought Democrats and Republican leaders together -- leaders like George Shultz, Bill Perry, Henry Kissinger, and Sam Nunn, who are with us here today. And it was a Republican President, Ronald Reagan, who once articulated the goal we now seek in the starkest of terms. I quote: "A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought. And no matter how great the obstacles may seem, we must never stop our efforts to reduce the weapons of war. We must never stop until all -- we must never stop at all until we see the day when nuclear arms have been banished from the face of the Earth." That is our task. That can be our destiny. And we will leave this meeting with a renewed determination to achieve this shared goal. Thank you. In accordance with the understanding reached among Council members, I wish to remind all speakers to limit their statements to no more than five minutes in order to enable the Council to carry on its work expeditiously. Delegations with lengthy statements are kindly requested to circulate the text in writing and to deliver a condensed version when speaking in the chamber. I shall now invite the distinguished Secretary General, His Excellency Ban Ki-moon, to take the floor.
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Dana White needs to shut up & the Lesnar post fight was a set-up

Dana White needs to shut up & the Lesnar post fight was a set-up

from recent posts tagged loser - blip.tv (beta) on July 28, 2009
Duration: 382
Kevin Iole from Yahoo Sports is one of the best writers in the world when it comes to covering boxing and MMA. His comments here are exclusive to Stone Cold Sports .
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Folding of "Affliction" doesn't bode well for MMA

Folding of "Affliction" doesn't bode well for MMA

from recent posts tagged loser - blip.tv (beta) on July 27, 2009
Duration: 298
Kevin Iole from Yahoo Sports is one of the best writers in the world when it comes to covering boxing and MMA. His comments here are exclusive to Stone Cold Sports .
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Cotto v. Pacquiao continues a resurgent year for boxing

Cotto v. Pacquiao continues a resurgent year for boxing

from recent posts tagged loser - blip.tv (beta) on July 27, 2009
Duration: 362
Kevin Iole from Yahoo Sports is one of the best writers in the world when it comes to covering boxing and MMA. His comments here are exclusive to Stone Cold Sports .
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