0
0.0
Jul 17, 2024
07/24
by
BELARUSTV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and taken by walter friends and the famous german photographer.ccompanied himmler on trips to photograph history of his great deeds in the name of greater germany. smiles. touching care for children in the new german lands. eyewitness accounts, documents, facts about the atrocities that the nazis committed on belarusian soil indicate the opposite. in relation to children in the territory occupied by the nazis, a plan for their total destruction was implemented, along with the adult population. general prosecutor's office of the republic of belarus. a criminal case on the fact of genocide of the population of belarus during the great patriotic war and the post-war period. damashchevsky orphanage. from the testimony of andrey mikhalenko. i learned about this tragedy as a child from my grandmother. what a tragedy took place there in the autumn of '42. of the children placed in the car, tosya shekhmetova, 9 years old, got off the car and ran away, all the other 54 children , teacher grokholskaya, were taken in the direction of dubitsa station. a car c
and taken by walter friends and the famous german photographer.ccompanied himmler on trips to photograph history of his great deeds in the name of greater germany. smiles. touching care for children in the new german lands. eyewitness accounts, documents, facts about the atrocities that the nazis committed on belarusian soil indicate the opposite. in relation to children in the territory occupied by the nazis, a plan for their total destruction was implemented, along with the adult population....
0
0.0
Jul 9, 2024
07/24
by
KQED
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the cook political report with amy walter, friend of the newshour of course, came out and said becausethe environment now, they are predicting more states are leaning republican. moving more towards trump that includes three battleground states that were tossup's they now say will lean republican. arizona, georgia and nevada. at is something democrats i talked to just now are hearing and listening and worried about in terms of how they see president biden. >> lisa desjardins live from capitol hill. >> let's turn now to democratic congresswoman jasmine crockett of texas who has defended president biden amid concerns about his age and calls he withdrawal from the race. i spoke with her earlier today. congresswoman, welcome to the news hour. >> thank you so much for having me. >> when you hear your democratic colleagues like congressman mike quigley say president biden has to step down because he cannot win or congressman adam smith say the president is an ineffective messenger as smith said on this program last night, what is your response? >> my reaction is president biden is the democr
the cook political report with amy walter, friend of the newshour of course, came out and said becausethe environment now, they are predicting more states are leaning republican. moving more towards trump that includes three battleground states that were tossup's they now say will lean republican. arizona, georgia and nevada. at is something democrats i talked to just now are hearing and listening and worried about in terms of how they see president biden. >> lisa desjardins live from...
0
0.0
Jul 5, 2024
07/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
, walter.s a little bit different, like socially awkward. lester holt: tom decided he'd heard enough doubt that he needed to meet ogrod himself. what were your initial impressions of him? it was a tiny bit like talking to rain man. you know, he couldn't express feelings to me, but he knew all the facts. and i thought, he's like the asperger's kids that my friend works with. lester holt: for tom, meeting ogrod in person changed everything. because the man sitting across from him seemed incapable of conveying the words and emotions that detective devlin claimed he did in the confession. that's supposedly verbatim admission-- yeah. --just didn't match up with the guy you had been-- tom lowenstein: yeah. --face to face with. yeah. the story that the detectives tell about walter's confession, is that they never interrupted him. he just poured out his heart to them and started crying and said to them, officers, give me a moment, you don't know how hard this is for me, i never meant to kill that littl
, walter.s a little bit different, like socially awkward. lester holt: tom decided he'd heard enough doubt that he needed to meet ogrod himself. what were your initial impressions of him? it was a tiny bit like talking to rain man. you know, he couldn't express feelings to me, but he knew all the facts. and i thought, he's like the asperger's kids that my friend works with. lester holt: for tom, meeting ogrod in person changed everything. because the man sitting across from him seemed incapable...
0
0.0
Jul 31, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i i asked aquila more or dear friend. i always asking wasn't wilson correct that the idea of state sovereign immunity was repudiated by the constitutional embrace of national sovereignty and and in that sense wasn't the fact that the decision was overturned by the 11th amendment unfortunate repeatation of wilson's vision. well, jeffrey, i agree with you wilson and his colleagues were absolutely correct. and even iredell who is always. said to be a dissenter was not dissenting on the question. of whether a state could be sued he was dissenting on a procedural question whether congress should say something first to set the procedure for suing a state. how do you do it? who do you sue? do you sue the governor? do you see the secretary? you know the whoever is an official of the state. that's what iredell was upset about. but chisholm v, georgia was decided. in favor of the national government georgia could be sued in a federal court. and they all agreed on that and then you get this whole business as well the profound shock.
i i asked aquila more or dear friend. i always asking wasn't wilson correct that the idea of state sovereign immunity was repudiated by the constitutional embrace of national sovereignty and and in that sense wasn't the fact that the decision was overturned by the 11th amendment unfortunate repeatation of wilson's vision. well, jeffrey, i agree with you wilson and his colleagues were absolutely correct. and even iredell who is always. said to be a dissenter was not dissenting on the question....
0
0.0
Jul 18, 2024
07/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> greg: walter. well done, my friend. up next, drums pick's iconic and they are whining chronic.dad's razor, dad. ay watch it! it's from gillettelabs. this green bar releases trapped hairs from my face... gamechanga! ...while the flexdisc contours to it. so the five blades can get virtually every hair in one stroke. for the ultimate gillette shaving experience. the best a man can get is gillettelabs. ♪ ♪ have you always had trouble losing weight and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪ and i'm keeping the weight off. wegovy® helps you lose weight and keep it off. i'm reducing my risk. wegovy® is the only fda-approved weight-management medicine that's proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with known heart disease and with either obesity or overweight. wegovy® shouldn't be used with semaglutide or glp-1 medicines. don't take wegovy® if you or your family had medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop wegovy® and get m
. >> greg: walter. well done, my friend. up next, drums pick's iconic and they are whining chronic.dad's razor, dad. ay watch it! it's from gillettelabs. this green bar releases trapped hairs from my face... gamechanga! ...while the flexdisc contours to it. so the five blades can get virtually every hair in one stroke. for the ultimate gillette shaving experience. the best a man can get is gillettelabs. ♪ ♪ have you always had trouble losing weight and keeping it off? same. discover...
0
0.0
Jul 25, 2024
07/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
our friend, friend of the show, amy walter, put on social media that she has been hearing for a long time, that the word freedom works a whole lot better and reaching voters. than the word democracy, fighting for freedom works better than fighting for democracy. >> it's clear, it's their strategy and i can tell you from being out on the ground that it seems to be working with the voters that we're looking for inspiration i was with her during that milwaukee rally in they told me that while they were grateful for president biden's service, their relieved now that they have someone who can really fight fire with fire, who can really make the case for this administration in a clear and concise way so she can use freedom not only to talk about reproductive choice, but she's also using it in the lens of talking about gun violence some people say that they don't know much about her record, but having that this sort of an anchor allows her to talk about all of the policy issues that she's been involved with in the white house during her tenure so that's really interesting on the freedom ver
our friend, friend of the show, amy walter, put on social media that she has been hearing for a long time, that the word freedom works a whole lot better and reaching voters. than the word democracy, fighting for freedom works better than fighting for democracy. >> it's clear, it's their strategy and i can tell you from being out on the ground that it seems to be working with the voters that we're looking for inspiration i was with her during that milwaukee rally in they told me that...
0
0.0
Jul 10, 2024
07/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
, thinks that joe biden should go up to walter reed, have a complete neurological exam, released. the results and let the chips fall. now, i don't think that friend has said this out loud to joe biden because that's a hard thing even for a close friend to tell him but i don't think he's going there without a major bush. >> i have to just it's a little bit surprising, a little stunning that someone in your writing a biography of the president, and he wouldn't talk to you over the phone on zoom, anything like that? i mean, was part of the reporting that you did for the book did it delve into this question of whether or not he had the stamina to be president? >> well, yeah. >> when you got to that point, did you feel like well, how am i supposed to gauge that? >> well, by all accounts, the people i spoke to including his closest friends his inner circle. they all said that biden was fined it cognitively. he obviously walks like a zombie because he has arthritis and all the rest of it, but no, i didn't get any indication that he was cognitively impaired and everybody insisted otherwis
, thinks that joe biden should go up to walter reed, have a complete neurological exam, released. the results and let the chips fall. now, i don't think that friend has said this out loud to joe biden because that's a hard thing even for a close friend to tell him but i don't think he's going there without a major bush. >> i have to just it's a little bit surprising, a little stunning that someone in your writing a biography of the president, and he wouldn't talk to you over the phone on...
0
0.0
Jul 30, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
walter, same question to you. john j is better known perhaps then bushrod washington as a diplomat and founding father, but why did you choose to write about john j and why should our friends be interested? >> i was a practicing lawyer for a couple of decades and i was living and working in hong kong when it kind of hit me that i wanted to write a book. i fished around for a subject and was originally thinking about governor morris and other founding father. i thought let's find the biographies of his friends. alexander hamilton, robert livingston, john j. i was shocked to learn the most recent biography of john j was from the 30s. i bought a used copy and read it and it wasn't that good. i thought even i can do better than this. so, i started researching and writing. jay has this amazing career in state, federal and international. most people today kind of know him for his role in writing the federalist papers or his role as first chief justice. he's basically the author of new york's first state constitution, he
walter, same question to you. john j is better known perhaps then bushrod washington as a diplomat and founding father, but why did you choose to write about john j and why should our friends be interested? >> i was a practicing lawyer for a couple of decades and i was living and working in hong kong when it kind of hit me that i wanted to write a book. i fished around for a subject and was originally thinking about governor morris and other founding father. i thought let's find the...
0
0.0
Jul 10, 2024
07/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i will tell you one of the president's closest friends thinks that joe biden should go up to walter released the results and let the chips fall. >> jessie: let the chips fall, you think that's a good idea? >> jeanine: yeah. we've got the most scripted white house in history, we've got the most scripted fascist totalitarian white house in history. the truth is everyone has washed with the decline in the white house and all they have done is we know they send the questions, we know they identify the reporters who are going to be called on they tell the president how to go in and out -- shame on all of them. the question is how are they going to redeem themselves after all of this? it is so awful, the american people recognize it. this president trashed 73 million americans and he said that they are maga and this and that and they allowed him to do all of that and they still cheered him on, it's pathetic. >> jessie: what do you think the president has a better chance of accomplishing? playing an 18 hole match against trump or passing a neurological exam? >> harold: is there another ans
. >> i will tell you one of the president's closest friends thinks that joe biden should go up to walter released the results and let the chips fall. >> jessie: let the chips fall, you think that's a good idea? >> jeanine: yeah. we've got the most scripted white house in history, we've got the most scripted fascist totalitarian white house in history. the truth is everyone has washed with the decline in the white house and all they have done is we know they send the questions,...
0
0.0
Jul 30, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i will geek out too much by summarizing the debate for our friends, except to say, a simple question constitutional law, as walter said, the majority in slaughterhouse read the clause is a federally protected rights that were pre-existing in the federal constitution. where's the dissenter said, it includes all of these natural rights that are recognized in slaughterhouse. and in that sense, basically a wide the bill of rights against the state because the right to make and enforce contract to sue, be sued, and engage in rights that are fundamental between state to state is protected by amenities. >> is your friend, for professor, almost all legal scholars today, left right and center, agree with the dissenters and not the majority in slaughterhouse. >> that the crucial question. the core and others recognize that essentially slaughterhouse is wrong and there are vigorous intensity of the supreme court overturn it. justice thomas has expressed that it might be too late. it's one of those cases where the original understanding is clearly inconsistent with the majority decision. maeva,
i will geek out too much by summarizing the debate for our friends, except to say, a simple question constitutional law, as walter said, the majority in slaughterhouse read the clause is a federally protected rights that were pre-existing in the federal constitution. where's the dissenter said, it includes all of these natural rights that are recognized in slaughterhouse. and in that sense, basically a wide the bill of rights against the state because the right to make and enforce contract to...
0
0.0
Jul 5, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and that was barbara walters. so a white house official got on the bus and said to sam donaldson, also worked for abc and was a good friend of barbara's where's barbara? and he said in my my brother's and declined to say where barbara. i don't actually think he knew where she was they finally. so they wouldn't let the press go until they found. barbara so they launched a search of camp david and they find her hiding in a bathroom stall and her place, she said, was when the busses pulled away, she would somehow sneak out and convince these newsmakers to talk to her, which ludicrous. on the other hand, who knows what a scoop that would have been. but they then hustled her on the bus and she left. you know what she didn't do? she didn't apologize as and that's why she's a rule breaker. and gentlemen, that's the perfect title, this book. and she also seemed to be very comfortable with powerful i don't know if she was putting some of her feminine wiles out or. perhaps it had something to do with the family of origin. t
and that was barbara walters. so a white house official got on the bus and said to sam donaldson, also worked for abc and was a good friend of barbara's where's barbara? and he said in my my brother's and declined to say where barbara. i don't actually think he knew where she was they finally. so they wouldn't let the press go until they found. barbara so they launched a search of camp david and they find her hiding in a bathroom stall and her place, she said, was when the busses pulled away,...
0
0.0
Jul 3, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
you know what what walter lippmann calls the acids of modernity have worn. it's it's a huge challenge for me personally. i am able to find some meaning to my life in my family and friends and in my community and, in the values of freedom and in the idea that. you know, maybe it's because i grew up india where whenever, you know, you think about this, a very hierarchical, very, you know, there is a certain sense in which i can still see the magic of freedom and liberty, but it's hard for free to want to go to that. we got great questions from the audience. i want to pick out a couple. one is when i first started watching you on your great show, foreign exchange, you talked lot about your mentor, sam huntington, who offered the clash of civilizations as an explanation of the sort of dominant world system. now we talk of the great power competition is the clash of civilizations oceans over? aren't these just labels used to policy preferences? it's a very good question. no i think sam huntington, who was my dissertation advisor and who actually given me that art
you know what what walter lippmann calls the acids of modernity have worn. it's it's a huge challenge for me personally. i am able to find some meaning to my life in my family and friends and in my community and, in the values of freedom and in the idea that. you know, maybe it's because i grew up india where whenever, you know, you think about this, a very hierarchical, very, you know, there is a certain sense in which i can still see the magic of freedom and liberty, but it's hard for free to...
0
0.0
Jul 4, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
as walter and other alice authors know, she would hate that we are doing this and talking about her.t would be the most disturbing event. and. but i think we really owe it to her and to the country set of tough added thing. alice was a tough cop i remember. 1973 so this is more than 50 years ago carl bernstein and had signed up to do a book simon and schuster about watergate. the only problem was that was the point at which burst open and there were literally almost every four or five front page stories in washington post about. so we had an adams morgan and a latin rest grant with alice. we sat down with her and she what are you going to do. and we said, well, you know, this story's getting out of control. and we hemmed and hawed and she pushed. and then she finally said, there's an important rule in writing. and that is write what you know best. and then she said, what you two know best is covering this story. carl. and i said, no, no. we want to write about criminals in the nixon white. all of these people. and she said, no, you have no choice. you must write about yourselves and
as walter and other alice authors know, she would hate that we are doing this and talking about her.t would be the most disturbing event. and. but i think we really owe it to her and to the country set of tough added thing. alice was a tough cop i remember. 1973 so this is more than 50 years ago carl bernstein and had signed up to do a book simon and schuster about watergate. the only problem was that was the point at which burst open and there were literally almost every four or five front...