tv BOOK TV CSPAN September 20, 2015 8:50am-9:01am EDT
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>> back in the states, you know, i was in my mid-20s, late 20s. as is. so i thought it might be funny to hang out while he tries to overthrow the democracy and stop this islamic state. is called to give them my friend thought it was successful movie director. and secondly spending here with you and he said okay. we went to his house and the first thing we did was watch the lion king. he said they call me the great
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warrior. he needed to get collection books. so he went to the local wholesale warehouse and if they had in stock were these giant novelty plastic bustles. so i said isn't it funny that you overthrow the last and he was like yeah. i didn't want to engage. and then, we spent a few months in the cash and carry chauffeuring him to office world where he got his islam future of britain and flips because that's the world special press promise that if you find a copy to service it is cheaper and they will give you double the difference or something.
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one time he was getting some leaflets that said crush the pilot state of israel and a couple feet up there wasn't hasidic getting sheet music been almost taken to the side with glances and all my turn to me and said there's a sensitive moment. and it let you in my life. i would like something in return. i said why. he said can you drive me to the speech in birmingham. i drove to what was basically a terrorist meeting, but it was definitely a secret radical islam meeting. they wouldn't let us then.
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we had to wait in the parking lot. we said yes, please. and it was sort of this house in birmingham. and then, he outed me. he said they had it trading camp which is near the airport. he said after a year i never discuss my religion. but he said in a sad look at with the infidel trainees. he said look at me. and i said an atheist and someone in the crowd --
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[inaudible] and they all surrounded me. one of them said they never met -- [inaudible] this is all in 1996, 1997. i remember the board of deputies, the anti-defamation league. he said britain, but i think he meant me as well hasn't woken up . and four years later in 2001, owner of people and acts of
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terrorism. there's been a number of occasions by the suicide bombers have blown themselves up and stored in its mobile phone have been on a number of occasions. one of the drivers ended up and is now imprisoned in beirut. so a few people have said were you naïve that this is happening and they could make in a comic story. this is like a burgeoning to in the middle of it, but she presented this as a comics dory. and i guess it happened. all of the comedy happened. and we were there.
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>> all persons having business before the honorable supreme court of the united states give their attention. >> 759. petitioner versus arizona. >> arguments number eight team, broke the way. >> madison is the most famous case this court never decided. >> judge here it existed as of late people here on my end where slavery was not legally recognized. >> putting the decision into effect would take presidential orders in the presence of federal troops and marshals and the courage of children. >> we wanted to pick cases that
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change the direction and import of the court and society can also change society. ♪ >> so she told them they would have to have a search and mrs. snape demanded to see the paper into reader. which they refuse to do, so she grabbed it out of his hand to look out of and thereafter the police officer handcuffed her. >> i can imagine a better way to bring the constitution to lay the natal in the human stories behind gray supreme court cases. >> great core monster boldly opposed the internment of japanese-americans during world war ii after being convicted for failing to report for relocation, mr. kana to take his case all the way to the supreme
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court. >> in her most famous decisions are one the court took that were quite unpopular. >> if you had to pick one freedom that was the most essential to the functioning of the democracy, it has to be freedom of speech. >> let's go through a few cases that illustrate dramatically and visually what it means to live in a society that 310 million different people who helped stick together because they believe in the rule of law. do --
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