0
0.0
Aug 15, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
wilson but the publicity matters are about woodrow wilson. and so what? so what you have is wilson had warned one of the reasons wilson was so reluctant to go to war was that wilson understood the culture of hysteria that grows up in wartime and, what and this is a phenomenon of american history of the i think americans who don't know their own past will say what happened in the oppression in 1918 was uniquely a uniquely harsh. and that's not true. that's not true. what what happened? it was very much in line with what happened during the civil war. it very much in line with the even worse domestic repression that happened during the american revolution, which histories were written by the winners and the super winners. so i spent my summers on a road called loyalist parkway in ontario, and they remember. but. but the the the level wilson knew that this repression coming and he dreaded it. and many of the incidents in the book are entirely about state and local officials or corporate corporations unleashing violence on union leaders. it has n
wilson but the publicity matters are about woodrow wilson. and so what? so what you have is wilson had warned one of the reasons wilson was so reluctant to go to war was that wilson understood the culture of hysteria that grows up in wartime and, what and this is a phenomenon of american history of the i think americans who don't know their own past will say what happened in the oppression in 1918 was uniquely a uniquely harsh. and that's not true. that's not true. what what happened? it was...
0
0.0
Aug 3, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
this is what woodrow said. it matters what is uttered. of course, you're woodrow wilson. you can't say said or preach has to be whatever is uttered in the pulpits. so you want do that and i'll talk about how hard that you would want to think. how did christians worship? did they in any different way during the war? did they sing different and there were there were hymns added to the hymn books during world war one for the sake of war mobilization in britain, in america battle hymn of the republic added to the church of england's book during the war, added to the presbyter here in hamburg here and the united states. so would there be patriotic songs? would there special music that was patriotic god bless america yet hadn't been written yet? america beautiful. how about flags in churches churches now this is this where this is where people get really nervous and they think aha, i knew you were going to do something un-american eventually. if you even raise this question, why are there united states flags and churches? people get very nervous. like, what are you up to? you c
this is what woodrow said. it matters what is uttered. of course, you're woodrow wilson. you can't say said or preach has to be whatever is uttered in the pulpits. so you want do that and i'll talk about how hard that you would want to think. how did christians worship? did they in any different way during the war? did they sing different and there were there were hymns added to the hymn books during world war one for the sake of war mobilization in britain, in america battle hymn of the...
0
0.0
Aug 18, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i have a lot of nice things to say about woodrow wilson. when you think about how this era is taught in schools. when i grew up, the big wars, the big depression, the big things that that shook and shaped american do the suffragists, the credit deserve not even a little bit. i'm hoping that's changing. i mean, i think that the sort of white hot spotlight of the centennial will certainly change it right minute but in terms of ongoing curriculum i mean i think if you asked an average american who would take american history to name a suffragist that, come up with susan anthony and. susan g. anthony was terrific pick, but she was dead the time it actually passed. and i don't think people learn history anywhere near well enough. and it's not even just, you know, that we should learn more women's history and we should have these role models for girls and all of that. it's you're actually learning it wrong if you don't learn the history you know, it's actually inaccurate. american history. if you don't understand the biggest political movement of
i have a lot of nice things to say about woodrow wilson. when you think about how this era is taught in schools. when i grew up, the big wars, the big depression, the big things that that shook and shaped american do the suffragists, the credit deserve not even a little bit. i'm hoping that's changing. i mean, i think that the sort of white hot spotlight of the centennial will certainly change it right minute but in terms of ongoing curriculum i mean i think if you asked an average american who...
0
0.0
Aug 25, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
so woodrow wilson not he this column here. mobs at capital defy block suffge parade ards powerless before bars hoodlums caustic remarks at marchers and then thisaragraph down. the lea like 17 crowd the widest street, the angriest mob, most all through and it is terrific press. but alsoat the cartoon right th liklittle pencil neck woodrow wilson thinking he gets the spotlight theay of his iuguration but total there's a suffragists jut ofright eyed right there, literally stealing the spotlight from him. so the 1913 march was sort of the turning point for the final to actually get the amendment through congress. and in addition being a great publicity ploy it was a reintroduction of the federal amendment as a strategy. so i got to race through a little bit of political history here. again, feel free to ask questions about it later because i'm going to go really fast. the original suffragists and you know their names, elizabeth cady stanton, susan b, anthony lucretia mott, lucy stone. they were abolitionists and some of them came
so woodrow wilson not he this column here. mobs at capital defy block suffge parade ards powerless before bars hoodlums caustic remarks at marchers and then thisaragraph down. the lea like 17 crowd the widest street, the angriest mob, most all through and it is terrific press. but alsoat the cartoon right th liklittle pencil neck woodrow wilson thinking he gets the spotlight theay of his iuguration but total there's a suffragists jut ofright eyed right there, literally stealing the spotlight...
0
0.0
Aug 18, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and you lay a lot of this at the feet of woodrow wilson. why? well, woodrow wilson did many great and wonderful things, but he also had great skeptics ism for our three branches of government. he believed that kind of the madison union's structure of our government, you know, separation of powers. we have three branches supposed to be three third of americans can't name them. 60% of americans are estimated that they would fail the citizenship exam that my wife took. it's not hard now filling out the paperwork to become a citizen is very hard. i know because i tried and it got sent back. all right. think about that. i'll never live that one down at home either. well, at any rate, you know, woodrow wilson believed that the ideal thing we should do is allow experts to govern us. instead of democracy. right. and he his ideal was the prussian bureaucracy. now, think about that prussian bureaucracy as your model for government. right. and i don't doubt experts have a very important role to play in increasing complex world. they do. but one thing our f
and you lay a lot of this at the feet of woodrow wilson. why? well, woodrow wilson did many great and wonderful things, but he also had great skeptics ism for our three branches of government. he believed that kind of the madison union's structure of our government, you know, separation of powers. we have three branches supposed to be three third of americans can't name them. 60% of americans are estimated that they would fail the citizenship exam that my wife took. it's not hard now filling...
0
0.0
Aug 16, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
so ellen wilson and woodrow wilson had very different views on racial equality. do we know if that caused any friction between them? i don't know about friction now. ellen, as i said, was not the most progressive on this issue. but her ally, bill, was one area where she did do something. she was a southerner. she had come from a family that historically had enslaved other humans. and we know woodrow was not progressive on this issue. so other than that particular bill, she didn't speak out on anything else. and to and from what we know, she really did approach him and tried to get him to do anything, especially about the jim crow laws. she remained silent and didn't talk about that. okay. so we have a question from genevieve, who's actually a peace corps volunteer in belize. thanks for tuning in, genevieve. how many first ladies besides mrs. obama have ancestry that includes african-american heritage, to your knowledge, no one else to my knowledge. don't. michelle obama was such a you know, like i said, huge leap forward from where we were before. but not only wa
so ellen wilson and woodrow wilson had very different views on racial equality. do we know if that caused any friction between them? i don't know about friction now. ellen, as i said, was not the most progressive on this issue. but her ally, bill, was one area where she did do something. she was a southerner. she had come from a family that historically had enslaved other humans. and we know woodrow was not progressive on this issue. so other than that particular bill, she didn't speak out on...
0
0.0
Aug 1, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
wilson into the 14 points for the armistice. the women of the hague congress formed the international committee of women permanent peace, which in 1919, officially known as the women's international for peace and freedom. still shocked the massive destruction of world war one. people to organize and mobilize, looking for ways to keep the peace and investigate new methods for resolving conflicts. from 1931 to 1934, scores liberal, radical and pacifist groups sponsored a series of no more war parades, which grew from 300 participants to more than thousand. oh, i remember very vividly. it was quite a hot summer, and it was when the germans conference in washington was failing. and after the war. and there's quite a lot of material about that. why that was very they were about to break up the women's international league international. she felt that something should be done to rescue it. so they asked the sections to do what they could in a way of influencing. their governments and collecting signatures. so we had our annual meeting
wilson into the 14 points for the armistice. the women of the hague congress formed the international committee of women permanent peace, which in 1919, officially known as the women's international for peace and freedom. still shocked the massive destruction of world war one. people to organize and mobilize, looking for ways to keep the peace and investigate new methods for resolving conflicts. from 1931 to 1934, scores liberal, radical and pacifist groups sponsored a series of no more war...
0
0.0
Aug 19, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
you mentioned woodrow wilson's vice president when woodrow wilson had the stroke and. that was not 25th amendment yet. and yet the vice president was not brought into this spray. it was left to his wife. yeah, that's an excellent question. and my friend rebecca roberts recently wrote a biography of ella wilson, who if wilson, who was wilson's first lady and you're right, basically didn't like thomas marshall, she didn't think much of him. and she basically kept him out of the room. he tried to visit wilson because, of course, he's vice president, because, of course, it would be his job to try to take over. but we had not had at that point a president who was lived that was not fit for the office. we had no president at that point. so he didn't have anything to do as you rightly said, there was no 25th amendment. and he basically took our you know, it took a backseat. he was very passive about it. and he just allowed things to to go the way they went. and that's something i think that everybody recognizes is not a healthy, you know, healthy system for the government. th
you mentioned woodrow wilson's vice president when woodrow wilson had the stroke and. that was not 25th amendment yet. and yet the vice president was not brought into this spray. it was left to his wife. yeah, that's an excellent question. and my friend rebecca roberts recently wrote a biography of ella wilson, who if wilson, who was wilson's first lady and you're right, basically didn't like thomas marshall, she didn't think much of him. and she basically kept him out of the room. he tried to...
0
0.0
Aug 23, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the progressive presidents, primarily teddy roosevelt and woodrow wilson, who brought the effervescence of the progressive movement from the local level up to the national level. and then, of course, roosevelt, who dramatically presidential power to fight the depression and world war two. but you're telling me, is that everything been saying is wrong. so so fill me in. help me understand why why that wrong and why we really should be looking at john quincy adams ulysses grant and william. all right, i'll try. thanks for the question. i don't think presidential power has expanded. i know those the regular touchstones, but put more positively. my main argument in the book is that an active, independent and influential presidency has been a core element of american governance since the george washington administration and throughout 19th century. and what i wanted to do with this book was to link presidency studies with the now robust on american state development and american political development. we now know thanks to a lot of recent research that the federal government is doing much mo
the progressive presidents, primarily teddy roosevelt and woodrow wilson, who brought the effervescence of the progressive movement from the local level up to the national level. and then, of course, roosevelt, who dramatically presidential power to fight the depression and world war two. but you're telling me, is that everything been saying is wrong. so so fill me in. help me understand why why that wrong and why we really should be looking at john quincy adams ulysses grant and william. all...
0
0.0
Aug 21, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
woodrow wilson who said th -- were exalted. how they doing on time were exalted. the states from his governance whites who were real citizense got control again. he actually screened the birth the nat the white house this horrific celebrating the ku klux klan. and how did they manage to work that out? well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historuld say william, dunning. he promoted the view that black people incapable o governing themselves and reconstruction was reversion toa natural order, the same fact of racial inequality that slavery encoded the natural order, is black people to be enslaved. that's from this vantage point. it's kind of hard to get in touch with the okay, so let's go the next group, just the housekeeper, you know, and then, you know, tear her down or anything but but they also they didn't want to give her a whole lot of credit for anything. judge charles landis, a noted jurist in lancaster county b
woodrow wilson who said th -- were exalted. how they doing on time were exalted. the states from his governance whites who were real citizense got control again. he actually screened the birth the nat the white house this horrific celebrating the ku klux klan. and how did they manage to work that out? well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historuld...
0
0.0
Aug 3, 2024
08/24
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives and, not without mistakes, tries to promote the idea of a free world system. systems of rules, systems in which smaller countries are protected from aggression by larger ones. we simply know what ended for the whole world what in the united states... did not ratify either the league of nations constitution or the corresponding changes on the european continent as a result of america's policy of isolationism. hitler came to europe 15 years later. well, now hitler in one or another incarnation came much earlier, so we in ukraine are trying to stop him. mr. ambassador frith, at the same time there are other stories about a possible second peace summit. some or other plans are being heard, in particular those announced by former secretary mike pompeo and so on and so forth, that is, a certain process is underway in russia the federations, for example, are waiting for the most, of course, the american elections, in which trump would win, and then they would start playing four-eyed, yes, vladimir vladimirovich with donald fridrikhovich and so
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives and, not without mistakes, tries to promote the idea of a free world system. systems of rules, systems in which smaller countries are protected from aggression by larger ones. we simply know what ended for the whole world what in the united states... did not ratify either the league of nations constitution or the corresponding changes on the european continent as a result of america's policy of isolationism. hitler came to europe 15 years...
0
0.0
Aug 12, 2024
08/24
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives. and not without mistakes, try to promote the idea of orld system, a system of rules, a system in which smaller countries are protected from aggression by larger ones. we simply know how it ended for the whole world that the united states did not ratify either the league of nations charter or the corresponding changes on the european continent, as a result of the american policy of isolationism, 15 years later in europe. hitler came, well, now hitler in one or another of his incarnations came much earlier, and we in ukraine are trying to stop him, mr. ambassador, frit, at the same time there are other stories about a possible second peace summit, there are various plans, in particular voiced by former secretary mike pompeo and so on and so forth, that is, a certain process is underway in the russian federation, for example, what are they waiting for the most? of course, the american elections, in which trump would win, and then they would start playing four-eyed, yes, vladimir vladimirovich, with donald fridrikhovich and so on, and we are
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives. and not without mistakes, try to promote the idea of orld system, a system of rules, a system in which smaller countries are protected from aggression by larger ones. we simply know how it ended for the whole world that the united states did not ratify either the league of nations charter or the corresponding changes on the european continent, as a result of the american policy of isolationism, 15 years later in europe. hitler came, well,...
0
0.0
Aug 5, 2024
08/24
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives and not without mistakes, tries to promote the idea of a free world system, a system of rules, a system in which smaller countries are protected. we simply know how it ended for the whole world that the united states did not ratify either the league of nations constitution or the corresponding changes on the european continent, as a result of the american policy of isolationism, hitler came to europe 15 years later, well, now hitler in one or another incarnation came much earlier, so we in ukraine are trying to stop him. mr. ambassador frit, at the same time, there are other stories about a possible second peace summit, there are some plans, in particular those announced by former secretary mike pompeo, and so on and so forth, that is, a certain process is underway, in the russian federation, for example, they are waiting for the most, of course, the american elections, in which trump would win, and then he would they started playing four eyes, yes, vladimir vladimirov. with donald fridvikhovich and so on, and we are also extremely worr
the usa, starting with woodrow wilson, strives and not without mistakes, tries to promote the idea of a free world system, a system of rules, a system in which smaller countries are protected. we simply know how it ended for the whole world that the united states did not ratify either the league of nations constitution or the corresponding changes on the european continent, as a result of the american policy of isolationism, hitler came to europe 15 years later, well, now hitler in one or...
0
0.0
Aug 3, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
it wasn't until woodrow wilson, fdr died in office, eisenhower had a number of health scares, that this became a regular topic in elections and when considering candidates. host: before joe biden, where was the previous president where it had a good amount of focus, ronald reagan? guest: ronald ragan was the last time that we as an american people were talking about the president's age, both in his reelection campaign, when he had that amazingquip in his sec. debate, that he wouldn't hold his opponent's youth and experience against them. there were a number of reports of people around him, suggestions that he was starting to show signs of alzheimer's. i should say that his family has denied that, about others around him said that was the case. the challenge with a disease like alzheimer's, you cannot actually dig into the brain, so you don't know until later. so these conversations are difficult, they can depend on the person, the day, and are really tricky. host: less than 10 minutes left with lindsay chervinsky with the george washington presidential library. for viewers that have nev
it wasn't until woodrow wilson, fdr died in office, eisenhower had a number of health scares, that this became a regular topic in elections and when considering candidates. host: before joe biden, where was the previous president where it had a good amount of focus, ronald reagan? guest: ronald ragan was the last time that we as an american people were talking about the president's age, both in his reelection campaign, when he had that amazingquip in his sec. debate, that he wouldn't hold his...
0
0.0
Aug 11, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
it wasn't until woodrow wilson, fdr died in office, eisenhower had a number of health scares, that this became a regular topic in elections and when considering candidates. host: before joe biden, where was the previous president where it had a good amount of focus, ronald reagan? guest: ronald ragan was the last time that we as an american people were talking about the president's age, both in his reelection campaign, when he had that amazingquip in his sec. debate, that he wouldn't hold his opponent's youth and experience against them. there were a number of reports of people around him, suggestions that he was starting to show signs of alzheimer's. i should say that his family has denied that, about others around him said that was the case. the challenge with a disease like alzheimer's, you cannot actually dig into the brain, so you don't know until later. so these conversations are difficult, they can depend on the person, the day, and are really tricky. host: less than 10 minutes left with lindsay chervinsky with the george washington presidential library. for viewers that have nev
it wasn't until woodrow wilson, fdr died in office, eisenhower had a number of health scares, that this became a regular topic in elections and when considering candidates. host: before joe biden, where was the previous president where it had a good amount of focus, ronald reagan? guest: ronald ragan was the last time that we as an american people were talking about the president's age, both in his reelection campaign, when he had that amazingquip in his sec. debate, that he wouldn't hold his...