0
0.0
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm across wisconsin together. well, i know we have maybe one or two kennedy stories, but we want to share a quick moment. i want to make sure there's time for that. note. i want to share now. people are thinking, well, please tell me afterward if you do, because i love to hear those stories. yes. one last question. yes. having been a child in what became sort of a kennedy campaign. yeah. a dormitory gave me my parents home. my father was packed. so we lived in madison hills and and with us throughout much of the campaign was a prep school classmate of kennedy named lloyd billings, who was one of one of the kennedy friends who took whatever task assigned to him. and one one note we had bobby kennedy sleeping with. and so i would i would always say it's five, seven, eight year old kid in those years beginning up early, for example, to see william proxmire make morning breakfast of a raw egg, sugar, egg, throwing it straight down and make one for me. but also to get up. also see bobby kennedy dressed. i learned to tr
i'm across wisconsin together. well, i know we have maybe one or two kennedy stories, but we want to share a quick moment. i want to make sure there's time for that. note. i want to share now. people are thinking, well, please tell me afterward if you do, because i love to hear those stories. yes. one last question. yes. having been a child in what became sort of a kennedy campaign. yeah. a dormitory gave me my parents home. my father was packed. so we lived in madison hills and and with us...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in my own state, they even had the national guard out on the of wisconsin campus. and as i was going up, flying to berkeley, was reading this article about the vietnam the anti war, vietnam ins and suddenly it popped into my head, well, why not have a nationwide in environmental teach in and so at berkeley i gave a speech talked with a bunch of students and at the reception and they all thought it was wonderful idea. so i went back to the came back to washington and. set up a nonprofit organization and made all the preparations and plans an earth day, then announced the eddy conservation speech in early september in seattle, and it made front in a lot of newspapers and the way it went, it just took off really a remarkable grassroots response it so big in after three months that i couldn't run it anymore out of my office and. i opened the national office. and so all the telephone calls and stuff could be referred to as ups. and so the last three months it just kept it didn't we really didn't have to do an awful lot. it just grew on its own in those in the late sixti
in my own state, they even had the national guard out on the of wisconsin campus. and as i was going up, flying to berkeley, was reading this article about the vietnam the anti war, vietnam ins and suddenly it popped into my head, well, why not have a nationwide in environmental teach in and so at berkeley i gave a speech talked with a bunch of students and at the reception and they all thought it was wonderful idea. so i went back to the came back to washington and. set up a nonprofit...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i saw photos from wisconsin of a guy sugaring, tapping his trees. and there's just dry leaves on the ground. there's no snow. so we're at this in the second half of an el nino cycle that's, you know, typically hotter and drier than the previous year. we've also had now decades steady heating, which, you know, generates greater evaporation. so all that all as you know, this named dennis cotillo from alberta said to me when i interviewed him about the fort mcmurray fire, he said the curves are all going one way and i think for wisconsin they're they're going toward a more flammable deciduous forest and i would keep head up and be watching the smoke this thank you okay sir this is a question for john you tell the story of this disaster in fort mcmurray i'm wondering what the cultural and governance wisdom learned from this experience was i how how has the government of canada reacted that they down fossil fuel production something like that. no doubled down they doubled down. so as i said at the beginning, alberta is the texas of canada so they don't t
i saw photos from wisconsin of a guy sugaring, tapping his trees. and there's just dry leaves on the ground. there's no snow. so we're at this in the second half of an el nino cycle that's, you know, typically hotter and drier than the previous year. we've also had now decades steady heating, which, you know, generates greater evaporation. so all that all as you know, this named dennis cotillo from alberta said to me when i interviewed him about the fort mcmurray fire, he said the curves are...
0
0.0
Apr 24, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
what is happening in my home state of wisconsin when it comes to legal yeah beaver futures. well you know wisconsin is one of those states that has is really the light bulb is coming on a slow way because there's been this myth about beavers that because they slow down the water, they warm it too much for trout and therefore trout lobby has been taking out beaver dams in the midwest. trout unlimited. well, actually, trout and ducks unlimited are now very much working with pro beaver. okay. because and i read about this in the chesapeake some of the farmers down there are realizing maybe these beavers are flooding a half acre of corn, but that beaver pond they have created i can sell a duck hunting lease there for a lot more than i could ever sell corn. so, you know, i think, you know, farmers tend to be practical people they have to pay bills and there's like, okay, now we'd rather have some beaver ponds than than corn right there, which is probably what should have always happened, because they in low lying areas. but in wisconsin, i think historically, beaver, beaver dams
what is happening in my home state of wisconsin when it comes to legal yeah beaver futures. well you know wisconsin is one of those states that has is really the light bulb is coming on a slow way because there's been this myth about beavers that because they slow down the water, they warm it too much for trout and therefore trout lobby has been taking out beaver dams in the midwest. trout unlimited. well, actually, trout and ducks unlimited are now very much working with pro beaver. okay....
0
0.0
Apr 26, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
never once did she go to wisconsin. she did not step foot in wisconsin. 2016 presidential election campaign because they were so sure that they would win. chuck also had said the general democratic strategy, which was for every voter we lose in the rust belt, will gain to in the affluent. right. which is a direct statement of we're going to pick up more fancy pants, rich white people, then we're going to lose a downwardly mobile rural white people. and we're that's why we're going to win the election. and it didn't really work out for chuck or for any of us. right. if you in winning elections so that you can do things like appointing supreme court justices that will protect a woman's right to an abortion in this country. right. you have to say, okay why did michigan in wisconsin, the democratic agenda? and i would argue that the reason that they did is because for, i don't know, 20 plus years the democratic agenda for people in the decaying rust belt was in pardon me -- you. right. because the democratic did not have an
never once did she go to wisconsin. she did not step foot in wisconsin. 2016 presidential election campaign because they were so sure that they would win. chuck also had said the general democratic strategy, which was for every voter we lose in the rust belt, will gain to in the affluent. right. which is a direct statement of we're going to pick up more fancy pants, rich white people, then we're going to lose a downwardly mobile rural white people. and we're that's why we're going to win the...
0
0.0
Apr 29, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and the junior senator from wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly. his primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind as between the internal and the external threats of communism. we must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. we must remember always that accusation is not proof, and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. jim townsend of the 11 center housing nif account was this broadcast that edward r murrow did. it was a really significant broadcast. it, you know, a lot of people have pointed to that broadcast as a as a watershed moment. there are scholar who who say that, well, as important as it was, it didn't change history. it was part of a series of events that started to damage the credibility of senator mccarthy. but one important thing to remember is and this is hard for us, you know, in the 21st century to imagine any any media member having the kind of reach that edward r murrow will have, the kind of influence he had. he was the most influential broadcast journalist at the time with an incredible audienc
and the junior senator from wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly. his primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind as between the internal and the external threats of communism. we must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. we must remember always that accusation is not proof, and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. jim townsend of the 11 center housing nif account was this broadcast that edward r murrow did. it was a really significant broadcast. it,...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and the junior senator from wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly. his primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind as between the internal and the external threats of communism. we must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. we must remember always that accusation is not proof, and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. jim townsend of the 11 center housing nif account was this broadcast that edward r murrow did. it was a really significant broadcast. it, you know, a lot of people have pointed to that broadcast as a as a watershed moment. there are scholar who who say that, well, as important as it was, it didn't change history. it was part of a series of events that started to damage the credibility of senator mccarthy. but one important thing to remember is and this is hard for us, you know, in the 21st century to imagine any any media member having the kind of reach that edward r murrow will have, the kind of influence he had. he was the most influential broadcast journalist at the time with an incredible audienc
and the junior senator from wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly. his primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind as between the internal and the external threats of communism. we must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. we must remember always that accusation is not proof, and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. jim townsend of the 11 center housing nif account was this broadcast that edward r murrow did. it was a really significant broadcast. it,...
0
0.0
Apr 29, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
beautiful islands, the north shore of wisconsin into, the park system and the st white river i grew up on. it's one of the great and beautiful rivers in the midwest that comes down from up in northern wisconsin and finally joins in to mississippi river. i've got that in the wild river system happy about that because those are two resources i grew up with. but i would say that earth day, i'm probably the happiest with good morning. welcome to the nixon presidential library and museum. my name is joe lopez, vice president of marketing communications for the richard nixon foundation. we're pleased to have you here today in yorba linda and a greeting to those of you watching on c-span and youtube today. today's legacy forum is co-presented by the richard foundation and the nixon presidential library, national archives and administration. we've done more than 30 of these nixon legacy forums over the past ten years, and you can find all of them on our website. nixon foundation dot org. i'd like to start by introducing geoff shepard. jeff served as, associate director of the domestic counc
beautiful islands, the north shore of wisconsin into, the park system and the st white river i grew up on. it's one of the great and beautiful rivers in the midwest that comes down from up in northern wisconsin and finally joins in to mississippi river. i've got that in the wild river system happy about that because those are two resources i grew up with. but i would say that earth day, i'm probably the happiest with good morning. welcome to the nixon presidential library and museum. my name is...
0
0.0
Apr 29, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
lincoln did well in indiana and wisconsin and know that he appreciated german support. what did he do in the interregnum between election day and inauguration day? he appointed as germans to ambassadorial posts as he could call shirts and i'm going to say, ambassador, it's they called it minister then, but it's a little confusing. karl schertz is appointed ambassador to madrid, one of the key diplomatic offerings in the world of patronage. german editors get to consulates, including the editor who had managed the german newspaper in springfield, lincoln wants them out of town. i mean, they don't want anybody to about this newspaper. so gives dr. theodore canisius a consular job and then has the illinois state legislature by up every extant copy this newspaper. so any of you who are collectors have a copy of the illinois starts on cigar in your basement or your attic. you can pay for all of our dinners tonight with ease. lincoln's chief of staff john nicolay is from germany. when the president elect passes through cincinnati, the germans greet him and volunteer or to joi
lincoln did well in indiana and wisconsin and know that he appreciated german support. what did he do in the interregnum between election day and inauguration day? he appointed as germans to ambassadorial posts as he could call shirts and i'm going to say, ambassador, it's they called it minister then, but it's a little confusing. karl schertz is appointed ambassador to madrid, one of the key diplomatic offerings in the world of patronage. german editors get to consulates, including the editor...
0
0.0
Apr 29, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the first one will come from organic lobby located in lafarge wisconsin. it is not some left coast thing, it is from the middle of my district and what here's what they want to ask you. secretary vilsack, the upper midwest provides nutrition formillions of americans and were glad the house passed the healthy kids act which is awesome . we make sure that they can have homework if they choose to, i'm interested in solving the problems to make investments in derry. one of the efforts usda offers is that business innovation initiative and these can be in farmers, industrial partners, processing, marketing and the dairy industry specific to each initiative coverage area focused on enhancing capacity and vitality of the dairy industry . programs offer grants to participants and would like to know how strong is the demand for ddi's and can you tell us how many projects are funded, that's the first part, how many applications are received the second part, how much funding is requested by companies farmers are supplying and how we are measuring effectiveness of eac
the first one will come from organic lobby located in lafarge wisconsin. it is not some left coast thing, it is from the middle of my district and what here's what they want to ask you. secretary vilsack, the upper midwest provides nutrition formillions of americans and were glad the house passed the healthy kids act which is awesome . we make sure that they can have homework if they choose to, i'm interested in solving the problems to make investments in derry. one of the efforts usda offers...
0
0.0
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
guest: georgia, arizona, nevada, wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania. host: in point pleasant beach, good morning to you. caller: i have seen you on tv. there is nothing you can say about the seven states you are talking about, they changed their laws unconstitutionally. you cannot tell me that is not right. rudy giuliani had affidavits from poll workers and the judges didn't take them up, they said they lacked standing. you keep cutting the same foods, to get the same number. they were questioning the validity of the votes. that is what happened. host: please hang on the line and listen to the response. guest: this is an important point. my work was all tasked specifically to creating finding the fraud that would survive legal scrutiny. when you bring it to court and the defense attorneys are going to come at you with everything they have two show you messed up, that you were wrong, it is a very high bar. a light of what you're talking about is not data evidence, especially the rudy giuliani thing. it is hearsay evidence and hearsay evidence is almost
guest: georgia, arizona, nevada, wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania. host: in point pleasant beach, good morning to you. caller: i have seen you on tv. there is nothing you can say about the seven states you are talking about, they changed their laws unconstitutionally. you cannot tell me that is not right. rudy giuliani had affidavits from poll workers and the judges didn't take them up, they said they lacked standing. you keep cutting the same foods, to get the same number. they were...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
his title, was placing me at places like the daily caller and these other publications in madison, wisconsin and in colorado, where their editors were asking me specifically to ignore facts in order to report on something that would make the left or the democrats look bad and occasionally lead it would be a worthwhile question. but most of the time the justification for the story was, well, no one's paying to the democrat we have to attack the democrat and if i brought up something saying, look, the republicans doing the same thing, the i literally got from one editor was no, the point is hypocrisy. we need to attack the democrat just leave the republican attack the democrat. and then when you start that, these editors actually don't have experience in journalism at all. and are actually former coke out of coke network employees. you start realizing, wait, no, what the point of this network, why did i enter this world? i thought i was going be a journalist. it turns out that am now a chess piece in someone else's game and whatever those beliefs that i had that let me in here to begin with, t
his title, was placing me at places like the daily caller and these other publications in madison, wisconsin and in colorado, where their editors were asking me specifically to ignore facts in order to report on something that would make the left or the democrats look bad and occasionally lead it would be a worthwhile question. but most of the time the justification for the story was, well, no one's paying to the democrat we have to attack the democrat and if i brought up something saying,...
0
0.0
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the two republicans, alexander wiley of wisconsin, and charles tobey of new hampshire, just five members. that seems awfully small in today's numbers. yes. yes. and in some cases, you know, because there was so much travel involved, sometimes the hearings were not held with all five of those members. sometimes it was just one member. they would essentially travel to a city and kefauver would sit as the calling himself a subcommittee of one. it's interesting because those five really worked ultimately, they worked well together. the two republicans were the ranking members of the house. i'm sorry, of the senate judiciary committee and the the commerce committee and so they had a personal stake in this, as i said earlier, because they were looking for an issue that they could campaign on. hunt and o'connor had been former governors, and they had been in the senate since the late 1930s. and i think all five of them took the job very seriously. and were, you know, for something that became quite sensational. i think they comported themselves with a certain level of seriousness and diligence
the two republicans, alexander wiley of wisconsin, and charles tobey of new hampshire, just five members. that seems awfully small in today's numbers. yes. yes. and in some cases, you know, because there was so much travel involved, sometimes the hearings were not held with all five of those members. sometimes it was just one member. they would essentially travel to a city and kefauver would sit as the calling himself a subcommittee of one. it's interesting because those five really worked...
0
0.0
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the two republicans, alexander wiley of wisconsin, and charles tobey of new hampshire, just five members. that seems awfully small in today's numbers. yes. yes. and in some cases, you know, because there was so much travel involved, sometimes the hearings were not held with all five of those members. sometimes it was just one member. they would essentially travel to a city and kefauver would sit as the calling himself a subcommittee of one. it's interesting because those five really worked ultimately, they worked well together. the two republicans were the ranking members of the house. i'm sorry, of the senate judiciary committee and the the commerce committee and so they had a personal stake in this, as i said earlier, because they were looking for an issue that they could campaign on. hunt and o'connor had been former governors, and they had been in the senate since the late 1930s. and i think all five of them took the job very seriously. and were, you know, for something that became quite sensational. i think they comported themselves with a certain level of seriousness and diligence
the two republicans, alexander wiley of wisconsin, and charles tobey of new hampshire, just five members. that seems awfully small in today's numbers. yes. yes. and in some cases, you know, because there was so much travel involved, sometimes the hearings were not held with all five of those members. sometimes it was just one member. they would essentially travel to a city and kefauver would sit as the calling himself a subcommittee of one. it's interesting because those five really worked...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
different orbit from you know these white working class voters in places like michigan, pennsylvania and wisconsin. but less appreciation for the fact that though those nonwhite working class voters were also not on board with a democrat party that was seemed to be moving a direction that was more, let's say, simpatico, the white college educated liberal elite that, you know, really was focused, this sort of existential threat to democracy, existential threat of donald trump, where for of those voters, actually donald trump was a better version, a republican than a mitt romney would be than john mccain would have been for those growing segments, the electorate. so you had a starting in 2012 where, you know, barack obama actually won a decisive i mean, just won 80% of nonwhite voters in america. and republicans freaked out about this. you know, i mean, they conduct an autopsy. there's an unusually public process to self-refer in that in post 2012. and they come to the conclusion that we need to support things like comprehensive immigration to not -- and alienate latino. and initially you had somebo
different orbit from you know these white working class voters in places like michigan, pennsylvania and wisconsin. but less appreciation for the fact that though those nonwhite working class voters were also not on board with a democrat party that was seemed to be moving a direction that was more, let's say, simpatico, the white college educated liberal elite that, you know, really was focused, this sort of existential threat to democracy, existential threat of donald trump, where for of those...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
now, i was at a rally and i think it's in the book in wisconsin right before the 2016 campaign. and a rally that i was at which i didn't see the t-shirt when i was there, i saw the coverage of it later, and i was on a plane with a guy with a gun, and i was thinking to myself, should i say something? i'm thinking, you know, i'm thinking, okay, if he had, you know, something that identified as part of a different group and it was like pilot tree, would they let him on the plane but i'm thinking but is anyway. and it was i have to say it was such a shift. were you scared? i mean, i was scared. the crowds would get really angry. and they seemed to get angrier. closer. we got to the election. and, you know, there were some incidents of violence. there was one that was pretty high profile in chicago in 2016 at a trump rally. i wasn't at one, but, you know, you kind of never knew when the temperature was going to shift and the movie was going to turn. and it was such a know it was really such a shock for me in many ways, as you kind of thought, some of these are my people. yes. and, yo
now, i was at a rally and i think it's in the book in wisconsin right before the 2016 campaign. and a rally that i was at which i didn't see the t-shirt when i was there, i saw the coverage of it later, and i was on a plane with a guy with a gun, and i was thinking to myself, should i say something? i'm thinking, you know, i'm thinking, okay, if he had, you know, something that identified as part of a different group and it was like pilot tree, would they let him on the plane but i'm thinking...
0
0.0
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
states came so the late seventies was the turning point really place in 1969 i went to my professor in wisconsin and i was had read ralph hilbert book structure. the european -- and that was for me that was the conversion experience. i had an academic conversion. this is a topic too important not to study and so i went back to my my professor and said i would like to change focus, would like to do something. we didn't use the word holocaust. i did something on the nazi persecution of -- and i what topic it was, which was look into of these mid-level of bureaucratic groups who were so essential for they this bureaucratic administrative persecution. and his answer was, well, that's a very good topic, but i should warn you that no professional future. so in 1970, if you tried to look at any college catalog, any campus in our states, and you cannot course on the history, the holocaust, i think ralph hilbert, vermont, taught it in 1972 for the first time. i taught my first course on it at the christian university in 75 and only in the eighties and nineties did this begin to pick up. and it was in the
states came so the late seventies was the turning point really place in 1969 i went to my professor in wisconsin and i was had read ralph hilbert book structure. the european -- and that was for me that was the conversion experience. i had an academic conversion. this is a topic too important not to study and so i went back to my my professor and said i would like to change focus, would like to do something. we didn't use the word holocaust. i did something on the nazi persecution of -- and i...