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Apr 26, 2024
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that was teddy roosevelt spent, i believe he spent his last $200 to buy the bronze. and when his father found out, give me his uncle i found out that teddy wasted his money on this bronze gave him a scolding. but if you go to sagamore hill today in teddy roosevelt's personal on the mantel is copy of sheridan's right it was probably kelly's most popular work teddy roosevelt said he considered three bronzes to the typical american pride. i believe he used the words. one was the puritan by saint-gaudens, the other was bronco buster by frederic remington and kelly's shared. while interviewing general sheridan kelly says to the general in all the paintings of surrender at appomattox, you figured prominently in the room, where exactly did you stand during the surrender? it appomattox. and sheridan says. well, kelly would like to be in your picture, but i wasn't there. i arrived at the mclean on april 9th, 1865, and we shook hands all around and said to the others, gentlemen, i've been in the saddle for ten days and i am exhausted. and he went down and he laid that beneath
that was teddy roosevelt spent, i believe he spent his last $200 to buy the bronze. and when his father found out, give me his uncle i found out that teddy wasted his money on this bronze gave him a scolding. but if you go to sagamore hill today in teddy roosevelt's personal on the mantel is copy of sheridan's right it was probably kelly's most popular work teddy roosevelt said he considered three bronzes to the typical american pride. i believe he used the words. one was the puritan by...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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i don't think that if teddy if teddy roosevelt hadn't handed him the presidency, we would say i don't think that he would have really aspired for that at all. he loved being a public servant, but he didn't necessarily love the stress that came with being the president. and he was someone that really, in terms of our three branches of government, he really was a big proponent for the judicial branch and the power that lay there and how really wasn't true. checks and balances, stem but it's so interesting to think about it because so many of taft's opponents and the democratic party at the time just said that he was teddy roosevelt's puppet. and it turns out that because william howard taft was not created playing the system, it turns out he wasn't so much teddy roosevelt's puppet and he went on to make some decisions when he was elected that did not really that teddy didn't approve of so much. but what's really interesting is when you think the role that ego played not to really lay into roosevelt, but it's been said that within like three or four months of choosing taft as his success
i don't think that if teddy if teddy roosevelt hadn't handed him the presidency, we would say i don't think that he would have really aspired for that at all. he loved being a public servant, but he didn't necessarily love the stress that came with being the president. and he was someone that really, in terms of our three branches of government, he really was a big proponent for the judicial branch and the power that lay there and how really wasn't true. checks and balances, stem but it's so...
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Apr 2, 2024
04/24
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the last third-party candidate that was supposed come in second was teddy roosevelt. and that was in 1912. so not likely. >> i remember ross perot back in the day. i believe he impacted that election. could rfk impact this election?>> ross perot won 19%. and people think that's why bill clinton won. in 2000, al gore trailing by 537 votes. ralph nader got 97,000. this is how impossibly important this could be. >> if rfk jr. can impact the election, even if it is a little swing, who does he help? and who to see her? >> if you know, please tell me. most people do not know. something that could help trump because they like the idea of the conspiracy theories about vaccinations. some people think it will help joe biden because they don't like the way that trump talks about race. at the end of the day there are two or three things we want to make sure. what kind of votes will he get and what percentage. and who will lose the votes more than the other, and where will they go? if it is all in one state, does it matter? probably. >> in terms of legacy, we are talking about the
the last third-party candidate that was supposed come in second was teddy roosevelt. and that was in 1912. so not likely. >> i remember ross perot back in the day. i believe he impacted that election. could rfk impact this election?>> ross perot won 19%. and people think that's why bill clinton won. in 2000, al gore trailing by 537 votes. ralph nader got 97,000. this is how impossibly important this could be. >> if rfk jr. can impact the election, even if it is a little swing,...
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Apr 1, 2024
04/24
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by far the greatest plurality in the history of new york, more than franklin roosevelt, more than teddy roosevelt, more than mario cuomo, more than anybody. but unlike his illustrious predecessors, spitzer would only last one year in office before self-destructing in a way that absolutely no one had foreseen. so i have a theory of leadership. oftentimes, people rise to positions of power where they are able to remove anyone from their inner circle who will tell them when they're being an asshole, and that moment, when they choose to do that, often sets the course for their downfall. that may have been the case. in the fall of 2006, silda asked me not to work for eliot. -why? -she said, "you're the only sort of senior older man that he listens to, and he needs to have some advice. and if you go to work for him, he will stop listening to you." but lloyd became a senior advisor to spitzer anyway, because he still believed that his old friend was on his way up. did you notice any change in him? i had noticed the change in him prior to the election-- a kind of--of arrogance which i, you know
by far the greatest plurality in the history of new york, more than franklin roosevelt, more than teddy roosevelt, more than mario cuomo, more than anybody. but unlike his illustrious predecessors, spitzer would only last one year in office before self-destructing in a way that absolutely no one had foreseen. so i have a theory of leadership. oftentimes, people rise to positions of power where they are able to remove anyone from their inner circle who will tell them when they're being an...
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Apr 28, 2024
04/24
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excited to read the book so teddy roosevelt said when from different sections, races or religions start seeing each other as the other rather than as common american, that's when democracy will break. are we there right now and are you generally optimistic, pessimistic about the future of democracy? hard to be optimistic if you see this huge presidential leadership void, which now have and we have a congress that is concerned with gridlock, consumed with people on, the extremes, one one of my heroes is former secretary of state james baker, the man who made washington work. i'm sure you had peter baker and susan glasser here, who was able work across the aisle, make government work. and we don't have people like that much anymore, which is obviously a shame. so until something i'm not optimistic about our federal government and let's not say i'm not optimistic about the american people because i'm an optimist. i'm a happy person. i'm blessed many ways. but right now i don't feel great about our federal government or our last two presidents. thank you, anybody else. here? we got a man ma
excited to read the book so teddy roosevelt said when from different sections, races or religions start seeing each other as the other rather than as common american, that's when democracy will break. are we there right now and are you generally optimistic, pessimistic about the future of democracy? hard to be optimistic if you see this huge presidential leadership void, which now have and we have a congress that is concerned with gridlock, consumed with people on, the extremes, one one of my...
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Apr 5, 2024
04/24
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roosevelt, franklin roosevelt, reagan, obama and like i say, lincoln for the true saint. so that every 150 ears. so. and i think, you know, some it may well be right that it takes someone reagan's level. i want authenticity and that mutt eloquence and i will add one more thing about this reagan he was the best editor of his own speeches and would write first draft sometimes him in the theory that reagan was a mere actor. there is consensus among reagan's speechwriters that the best speechwriter ronald reagan ever had with ronald reagan. you know, when you have something say you don't delegated to somebody else, right? right. to do that. republicans are going to continue the trump. i think you're kind of candidates who think they're going to go. or do you think that they're going to try and find reagan? he is going to be a hero. i, i. i think this country. let me dodge that question slightly. i think this country needs a principled government party, a conservative party. and that if you had to a principled small government leader, it would be and need a principled more gov
roosevelt, franklin roosevelt, reagan, obama and like i say, lincoln for the true saint. so that every 150 ears. so. and i think, you know, some it may well be right that it takes someone reagan's level. i want authenticity and that mutt eloquence and i will add one more thing about this reagan he was the best editor of his own speeches and would write first draft sometimes him in the theory that reagan was a mere actor. there is consensus among reagan's speechwriters that the best speechwriter...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 5, 2024
04/24
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roosevelt. you exceez me for updateing the pronouns. [laughter] it is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong woman stumbles, or where the doer of deeds, could have done them better, the credit belongs to the woman who is actually in the arena. [applause] who strives valantly. who sends herself in a worthy cause. to those outside the arena watching from the side-lines, who offer only criticism, i have a message for you. san francisco is not wearing the shackles of your negativity any longer. [applause] i'll say it again, san francisco is not wearing the shackles of your negativity any longer! [applause] to the public servants who have been here during the city's most difficult time, doing the work all along, thank you. thank you for your service. we will continue to move our city forward to be the city of yes. no longer will we allow others to define us, because we know who we are. we are a city on the rise. we are a dragon taking flight. now, let's soar san francisc
roosevelt. you exceez me for updateing the pronouns. [laughter] it is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong woman stumbles, or where the doer of deeds, could have done them better, the credit belongs to the woman who is actually in the arena. [applause] who strives valantly. who sends herself in a worthy cause. to those outside the arena watching from the side-lines, who offer only criticism, i have a message for you. san francisco is not wearing the shackles of...
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Apr 25, 2024
04/24
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roosevelt. and then what happened after eleanor? so let's begin with the washingtons. if you think about the history of our first ladies in civil rights, it's a checkered past. and we have to begin to look at the washington and a precedent that they set. they brought their enslaved servants to the president's home, both in new york and philadelphia when they went to philadelphia for the second capital. they had to circumvent a philadelphia law in order to keep their enslaved workers with them. there was a law that said that any enslaved person who was in the city of philadelphia for more than six months was freed. so what washington's did was they sent their enslaved workers back and forth between mount vernon and their presidential home. and this was a way of having anyone, not having anyone there for more than six months during one of those transition periods. martha's personal oil made by these men owner, also known as on each judge, escaped. she knew when the transition was happening and she
roosevelt. and then what happened after eleanor? so let's begin with the washingtons. if you think about the history of our first ladies in civil rights, it's a checkered past. and we have to begin to look at the washington and a precedent that they set. they brought their enslaved servants to the president's home, both in new york and philadelphia when they went to philadelphia for the second capital. they had to circumvent a philadelphia law in order to keep their enslaved workers with them....
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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upton sinclair, of course, know wrote the jungle teddy roosevelt's doctor read it and told teddy roosevelt about it. and it eventually roosevelt to have pure food and drug act. it led to some of the first government regulations food safety up in sinclair by the way. whoo hoo hoo. i happened to be a socialist. it's not because he's a socialist that. we bring up upton sinclair. it's that he was attuned to these kinds of issues because he asked different questions than other people did he ask questions from the bottom? not the top? he asked questions, coming from people and workers, not owners. managers. so that you can have different views, different perspectives in the same journalistic where the public lives and and reads and shares. right. we can this too. and we think that we are in an era fact we are working on a book right now celebrating the 50th anniversary coming up of project censored. we're going to be doing a book on news that changed america, which is a follow up to carl stories that changed america. a history of in the 2020 a century. we're going be doing it with a history in t
upton sinclair, of course, know wrote the jungle teddy roosevelt's doctor read it and told teddy roosevelt about it. and it eventually roosevelt to have pure food and drug act. it led to some of the first government regulations food safety up in sinclair by the way. whoo hoo hoo. i happened to be a socialist. it's not because he's a socialist that. we bring up upton sinclair. it's that he was attuned to these kinds of issues because he asked different questions than other people did he ask...
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Apr 15, 2024
04/24
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with that in mind, when he became president, teddy roosevelt decided to create a commission from a commission, to study and offer recommendations of what is going on in rural, mostly agricultural areas, is what they focused on. they issued a report. it is filled with descriptions of what is happening in rural america, but what is implicit underneath this is that rural america is not keeping up with urban america. so here are a variety of recommendations so that country life will be just as good and rewarding as city life is. what we can deduce from that is that there was already a perception in the early 20th century that somehow urban life was accelerating faster, rural life was struggling to catch up. so it is a nice little moment in this ongoing discussion of somehow rural america being left behind. peter: in some supporting evidence you use in the 1930's it was reported that over to -- 2200 iowa towns had been found abandoned and there was a 50% drop in the number of farms between 1950 and 1970. steven: yes. again, when you scratch the surface of this, you discover there are measurable in
with that in mind, when he became president, teddy roosevelt decided to create a commission from a commission, to study and offer recommendations of what is going on in rural, mostly agricultural areas, is what they focused on. they issued a report. it is filled with descriptions of what is happening in rural america, but what is implicit underneath this is that rural america is not keeping up with urban america. so here are a variety of recommendations so that country life will be just as good...
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Apr 16, 2024
04/24
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roosevelt there was a big one. great depression 1932. 1968 was a very turbulent one. anything is that while we are living through it, we don't know how it ends to make trial is a historic fact but what really matters is how the trial and, how that affects the election. do people accept the regular trial how do they accept the election? we don't know that your. we know now that the civil war ended with the emancipation secure. know the great depression ended with a mobilization for world war ii. know the allies won world war ii so we can look happier those periods. this one is our -- >> neil: but prior chapters in prior books in america we always get threw it. someone emerges, we ourselves to someone who will -- or we ourselves emerge to our better angels. it sometimes takes a long time. sixties was that battle. >> and it's up to us, is always the citizens. you can't be looking for here use -- when lincoln was -- he said don't call me that. it was he at their slavery movement and the union soldiers that did it all >
roosevelt there was a big one. great depression 1932. 1968 was a very turbulent one. anything is that while we are living through it, we don't know how it ends to make trial is a historic fact but what really matters is how the trial and, how that affects the election. do people accept the regular trial how do they accept the election? we don't know that your. we know now that the civil war ended with the emancipation secure. know the great depression ended with a mobilization for world war ii....
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Apr 20, 2024
04/24
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roosevelt when he negotiated with the japanese prime minister on the memorandum that goes into the treaty. and he was celebrated in japan. that's eventually but leads to the cherry tree so we have a long relationship. the longest-serving ambassador to japan, john bingham was from ohio, and ohio representative, and also wrote by the way the 14th amendment, the most important amendment to the constitution and then he goes on to serve again for 12 years as the ambassador to japan. so, we have a long-standing relationship with japan. of course honda coming to the united states to ohio back in the 1980s when there was a time of economic and political tension between japan and the united states it's very significant. but it's not just honda. the japanese direct investment in ohio is almost unbelievable. almost 900 and japanese owned facilities in ohio. the 220 individual companies, more than 70,000 ohioans are employed by japanese companies. so it really is an incredible relationship it's not just honda it's also bridgestone that has a direct relationship with japan and japanese politics. i liv
roosevelt when he negotiated with the japanese prime minister on the memorandum that goes into the treaty. and he was celebrated in japan. that's eventually but leads to the cherry tree so we have a long relationship. the longest-serving ambassador to japan, john bingham was from ohio, and ohio representative, and also wrote by the way the 14th amendment, the most important amendment to the constitution and then he goes on to serve again for 12 years as the ambassador to japan. so, we have a...
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Apr 15, 2024
04/24
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>> greg: as the teddy roosevelt at fox and one who has at one with nature, i find it deplorable. i want the chair. also, guys like to push stuff down. we like to roll things over and break stuff. i can kind of see what they are doing. >> piers: as a parent, why would you want your little girl watch you do this want an stupid vandalism? >> dana: maybe they will find out that they were not sober. maybe it will be child endangerment that they could add. that's the way to deal with it. meanwhile in afghanistan, they have brought back stoning against women for offenses. they are lucky that they don't live there. >> piers: "one more thing" is up next. wait... where's the dish? there ain't one. you're tellin' me you can get directv — the good stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish? oh, i used to love doin' my business on those things! you're one sick pigeon. them dishes kept the rain off our beaks! we just have different priorities is all. satellite-free directv... never thought i'd see the day. well, our lifespans are quite short... stream directv without a satellite dish. i'm
>> greg: as the teddy roosevelt at fox and one who has at one with nature, i find it deplorable. i want the chair. also, guys like to push stuff down. we like to roll things over and break stuff. i can kind of see what they are doing. >> piers: as a parent, why would you want your little girl watch you do this want an stupid vandalism? >> dana: maybe they will find out that they were not sober. maybe it will be child endangerment that they could add. that's the way to deal...
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Apr 16, 2024
04/24
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>> g >> jesse: as teddy roosevelt and one that went out one with nature of mine a deplorable and i want the chair. but also as a guide, guys like to push stuff down. like to roll things over and break stuff, i can kind of see what they're doing. >> piers: as a parent to why would you want your little girl watching you do this act of stupid vandalism? >> dana: maybe they'll find out they were not sober, i can imagine god, not could readit child endangerment. >> greg: hiking.it >> dana: that's a way to deal with it.ac meanwhile in afghanistanagai bringing back stoning against t women fohar offences, lucky they don't live there. >> piers: "one more thing" is up next. [ ♪♪ ] stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish? oh, i used to love doin' my business on those things! you're one sick pigeon. them dishes kept the rain off our beaks! we just have different priorities is all. satellite-free directv... never thought i'd see the day. well, our lifespans are quite short... stream directv without a satellite dish. i'm going to do this thing with my neck, just for a bit. chris counahan fo
>> g >> jesse: as teddy roosevelt and one that went out one with nature of mine a deplorable and i want the chair. but also as a guide, guys like to push stuff down. like to roll things over and break stuff, i can kind of see what they're doing. >> piers: as a parent to why would you want your little girl watching you do this act of stupid vandalism? >> dana: maybe they'll find out they were not sober, i can imagine god, not could readit child endangerment. >>...
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Apr 10, 2024
04/24
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how i come to this party is relieved abraham lincoln, teddy roosevelt and reagan. he will find in d.c. i walk alll the way down to lincoln i walk up i always read the gettysburg address trip for score seven years ago our forefathers brought forth on this continent a new nation. conceived in liberty and dedicated proposition that we are all equal. in the end fleet of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish. think for one moment what lincoln was saying. we were fighting one another but he knew we would sustain ourselves with the democracy of we the people it is more powerful than anything else would he act out about democracy remember but the most important thing when he writes in their and dedicate the proposition we are all equal. name me one other nation in the world goes conceived in liberty. we strive to be a more perfect union. we are not perfect. we have an ability to do it is not pretty. so when something goes wrong we shouldn't say the whole system is wrong. we have a system that allows us to correct that to improve and that. we should be
how i come to this party is relieved abraham lincoln, teddy roosevelt and reagan. he will find in d.c. i walk alll the way down to lincoln i walk up i always read the gettysburg address trip for score seven years ago our forefathers brought forth on this continent a new nation. conceived in liberty and dedicated proposition that we are all equal. in the end fleet of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish. think for one moment what lincoln was saying. we were fighting one...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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use the teddy roosevelt option. there are too they're too powerful and that they're preventing from participating meaningfully in the public debate. we've got to be willing use power to stop them, to stop that power and to push back in the other direction. and i remember this guy came up and was a very nice suit. afterwards, he came up in his in his nice suit. and it was it was clear that he was a guy of high and good education? probably a very job. and any any said i really agree with everything that you said, but i had to push back with what you said about the technology companies as say oh, no, here we go. this is a david french critique that these are private companies. we can't do anything to the technology companies because they are private companies. we should let the market decide what is and what is part of our public debate. he said, look, why do you want to break these up? why don't we just throw all their ceos in and my is that our voters are much, much more willing to invest us with ability to do someth
use the teddy roosevelt option. there are too they're too powerful and that they're preventing from participating meaningfully in the public debate. we've got to be willing use power to stop them, to stop that power and to push back in the other direction. and i remember this guy came up and was a very nice suit. afterwards, he came up in his in his nice suit. and it was it was clear that he was a guy of high and good education? probably a very job. and any any said i really agree with...