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Nov 29, 2013
11/13
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FBC
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. >> that was an inside of henry george, early economist. he understood that this nature, more hawks, they eat the chickens. come deplete the population. if we get numerous more chickens . that is the power of incentives. john: breed chickens. make sure we have plenty. >> uprighted to be made from growing demand taking care of them and making unhealthy and beating them. if we made it illegal to sell seconds we would be in trouble. john: profit saves things. thank you. george mason university. coming up, these animals are endangered. was the best way to save them? kill them. that's right. kill them. you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪ ♪ john: look at the buffalo roam. bison are a great example of tragedy. 30 million of them o
. >> that was an inside of henry george, early economist. he understood that this nature, more hawks, they eat the chickens. come deplete the population. if we get numerous more chickens . that is the power of incentives. john: breed chickens. make sure we have plenty. >> uprighted to be made from growing demand taking care of them and making unhealthy and beating them. if we made it illegal to sell seconds we would be in trouble. john: profit saves things. thank you. george mason...
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60
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
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FBC
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eye 60
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. >> that was an inside of henry george, early economist. he understood that this nature, more hawks, they eat the chickens. come deplete the population. if we get numerous more chickens . that is the power of incentives. john: breed chickens. make sure we have plenty. >> uprighted to be made from growing demand taki care of them and making unhealthy and beating them. if we made it illegal to sell seconds we would be in trouble. john: profit saves things. thank you. george mason university. coming up, these animals are endangered. was the best way to save them? kill them. that's right. kill them. this is the quicksilver cash back card from capital one. it's not the "fumbling around with rotating categories" card. it's not the etting blindsided by limits" card. it's the no-game-playing, no-earning-limit-having, deep-bomb-throwing, give-me-the-ball-and-i'll-take- it-to-the-house, cash back card. this is the quicksilver cash card from capital one. unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere, every sing day. so let me ask you... at's
. >> that was an inside of henry george, early economist. he understood that this nature, more hawks, they eat the chickens. come deplete the population. if we get numerous more chickens . that is the power of incentives. john: breed chickens. make sure we have plenty. >> uprighted to be made from growing demand taki care of them and making unhealthy and beating them. if we made it illegal to sell seconds we would be in trouble. john: profit saves things. thank you. george mason...
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Nov 16, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN3
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eye 95
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we started with patrick henry and george w. bush. we have a good coverage in terms of what happened. the other thing is we wanted to have things not only that were clearly there, but things that are a little less well-known. the alamo speeches in there are not as well-known. we try to do a little bit of everything to make it interesting. [ applause ] >> i never saw anything like it when i landed. there was broken equipment. there was bodies all over the place. they hadn't yet to bury anybody, even the japanese or the american marines. they were bodies without arms and heads and completely vis rated. there is a smell that you never get over to this day. when i drive by a cemetery and especially if they are using recycled water, i think i can smell the dead bodies. >> one of the reasons they took iwojima is they came in and fly 1,000 miles, bumper-to-bumper they had to go over iwojima to get to tokyo. iwojima would forewarn them by radar and they had two planes that could shoot down the injured between them when we were returning. they
we started with patrick henry and george w. bush. we have a good coverage in terms of what happened. the other thing is we wanted to have things not only that were clearly there, but things that are a little less well-known. the alamo speeches in there are not as well-known. we try to do a little bit of everything to make it interesting. [ applause ] >> i never saw anything like it when i landed. there was broken equipment. there was bodies all over the place. they hadn't yet to bury...
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Nov 21, 2013
11/13
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CNNW
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henry taft became a chief justice of the united states. george w. bush is not rewriting anything.father wrote books. last night jay leno asked george bush about his legacy. >> i'm also very comfortable with the fact that it's going to take awhile for history to judge whether the decisions i made are consequential or not. and therefore, i'm not too worried about it. in other words, i read some beographies of washington. my attitude they're still writing biographies of the first guy, the 43rd guy doesn't need to worry about it. >> mr. bush is an artist and a painter these days. his latest work a portrait of jay leno which he presented last night. he's done dogs and landscapes and himself in the shower. not expected, certainly. every ex-president is different. back with the panel to talk about this. what do you make of george w. bush as an ex-president? >> did he have a failed presidency? and there was nowhere to go afterwards but up. but that there's a reason. if you wanted to live next door to somebody who was the president of the united states, this is the guy you'd want to live n
henry taft became a chief justice of the united states. george w. bush is not rewriting anything.father wrote books. last night jay leno asked george bush about his legacy. >> i'm also very comfortable with the fact that it's going to take awhile for history to judge whether the decisions i made are consequential or not. and therefore, i'm not too worried about it. in other words, i read some beographies of washington. my attitude they're still writing biographies of the first guy, the...
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625
Nov 11, 2013
11/13
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KPIX
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eye 625
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i was speaking with george in london at his house once. he said, "henryhis is going to last?" and that was 50 years ago, before they became icons of the century. >> safer: they would meet again. but for the moment, grossman moved on, photographing, in just a few weeks time, the wedding of elizabeth taylor and richard burton in montreal; barbra streisand opening on broadway in "funny girl;" and the supremes, the other pop music phenomenon of 1964. >> grossman: huh, let's see what these are. oh, my gosh! >> safer: his archive, if you can call it that, is an archaeological dig into our collective past. why don't you just open a drawer at random and pull something out and see what surprises we'll find here. >> grossman: oh, ho, ho, ho, ho. march on washington. oh, this is eleanor roosevelt and mandela. >> safer: a hodge-podge of history. >> grossman: nixon. >> safer: he looks pretty happy. are you surprising yourself as you go through these? >> grossman: endlessly. endlessly. >> safer: there's david ben- gurion, israel's founding father, both fore and aft. >>
i was speaking with george in london at his house once. he said, "henryhis is going to last?" and that was 50 years ago, before they became icons of the century. >> safer: they would meet again. but for the moment, grossman moved on, photographing, in just a few weeks time, the wedding of elizabeth taylor and richard burton in montreal; barbra streisand opening on broadway in "funny girl;" and the supremes, the other pop music phenomenon of 1964. >> grossman:...
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could be very different to what we point to henry wallace is the franklin roosevelt the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening must see series untold history united states thank you so much. really. for our show tonight you guys thanks for watching. the book . dramas that can't be ignored. stories others the few sunoco. places change the world lights never. told picture. from a ranch the blood. dropped. to fifty. the banks really own the united states the federal reserve which is a misnomer because as nothing to do with fraud are all. private banks owned by. individuals who loan money to the united states. global radicals gristly as the world body count doubles in just a year raising questions over just what i decade of war on terror has to show. israel's warplanes bomb syria again reports which the israeli military refuses to comment on right now. they want to know it won't. but everybody knows they get it and all of this in the midst of syria'
could be very different to what we point to henry wallace is the franklin roosevelt the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening must see series untold history united states thank you so much. really. for our show tonight you guys thanks for watching. the book . dramas that can't be ignored. stories...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 5, 2013
11/13
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WHUT
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eye 208
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if roosevelt had lived a longer, it may well have, or if henry wallace had been the real vice president. are doing isd i after georgeush had been in office for two terms in 2008, we said, is he an aberration or continuation of a pattern? we went back to the 1940s and studied this whole pattern. if you look at all the chapters together quickly in 12 hours, you feel the dream, see the dream, the aggression, militarism, racism toward the third world. it doesn't and. the explication. there are good things, too. we try to point out the hopes. >> deniz project starter ronnie wanted to tell the story of henry wallace? didn't this project start out with you wanting to tell the story of henry wallace? >> is a wonderful character, but not the only character. i was born right after the atomic on. i had excepted, like i accepted the story of kennedy's assassination, i accepted we needed to drop the bomb for world war ii. we have to go back to that myth. we explored in depth. we show our use of the bomb was criminal and immoral. and we proved to the soviet union as well as to the world that we could be as barbaric as the nazis w
if roosevelt had lived a longer, it may well have, or if henry wallace had been the real vice president. are doing isd i after georgeush had been in office for two terms in 2008, we said, is he an aberration or continuation of a pattern? we went back to the 1940s and studied this whole pattern. if you look at all the chapters together quickly in 12 hours, you feel the dream, see the dream, the aggression, militarism, racism toward the third world. it doesn't and. the explication. there are good...
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very different is why we point to the henry wallace is that the franklin roosevelt and the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening a must see series untold history united states thank you so much for your really pushing us back. and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks everyone for watching have a great night. wealthy british style. sometimes splits. the market why not. come to. find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike stronger for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our. ports outside to an active camp at guantanamo where patients are forced to just come after him out on the first strike never turned the world's attention to the place that summed up job gulag of hearts minds. the fact that. they overplayed to do its job did you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioning the custard pie that's because a free and open press is critical to our dem
very different is why we point to the henry wallace is that the franklin roosevelt and the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening a must see series untold history united states thank you so much for your really pushing us back. and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks everyone for...
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be very different while we point to the henry wallace is at the franklin roosevelt at the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening must see series untold history united states thank you so much for. really pushing against. and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks for watching. so we need. your. party is it the. shoes that no one is there with to get that you deserve answers from. dramas that can't be ignored to. stories others refused to notice. faces changed the world lights never. told pictures of today's events log on to and from around the globe. up to. fifty. some of the sixteen percent imports came from illegal fishing and. the european union is ironically taking fish from some of the poorest nations on earth so this is a very serious and very urgent problem that needs immediate international action. they enter our territorial waters they fish they load this fish into the ships and leave for europe. to day illegal fishing just
be very different while we point to the henry wallace is at the franklin roosevelt at the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening must see series untold history united states thank you so much for. really pushing against. and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks for watching. so we...
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very different as well we point to the henry wallace is at the franklin roosevelt and the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening a must see series untold history united states thank you so much for. really pushing us back on and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks everyone for watching. exactly what happened i don't know. piers later is when i got arrested for. for a crime i did not do. we have numerous cases where police officers lie about polygraph results. and people to confess to police officers don't beat people anymore i mean it just doesn't happen really. in the course of interrogation why because there's been this is like no because the psychological techniques are more effective in obtaining confessions than physical abuse they were taking they could get what they wanted they can say what they wanted and there was no evidence of what they did or what they said. the. the banks really own the united states the federal reser
very different as well we point to the henry wallace is at the franklin roosevelt and the john kennedy's and the other people who saw the world differently george mcgovern had a very different vision of the world think the time is now and people are waking up you guys thank you so much for being such an integral part of the awakening a must see series untold history united states thank you so much for. really pushing us back on and that's it for our show tonight you guys thanks everyone for...
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126
Nov 6, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN
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eye 126
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the same ideals that patrick henry and james madison and thomas jefferson stood for and that george washingtonse principles are why i entered a look office, public service, they are why i entered this race for governor. to fight and preserve our -- alls for all of virginians now and into the future. they were delivered to us as a blessing and they are a burden to us to deliver it to the next generation and the one after that. i want to thank you all for your loving support. i am grateful to god for the opportunity to represent all of virginians. million nominee butublican also as your attorney general and before that in the state senate. and for all the great virginians i met traveling throughout the commonwealth. the greatestve resource we have in virginia is virginians. and no election can change that. thank you all very much. god bless you. god bless virginia and america. good night. [applause] [indiscernible] host: terry mcauliffe declared the winner and moving ahead. let's go to "the washington post" website where they have broken it down county by county. area that he did particularly we
the same ideals that patrick henry and james madison and thomas jefferson stood for and that george washingtonse principles are why i entered a look office, public service, they are why i entered this race for governor. to fight and preserve our -- alls for all of virginians now and into the future. they were delivered to us as a blessing and they are a burden to us to deliver it to the next generation and the one after that. i want to thank you all for your loving support. i am grateful to god...
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Nov 6, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 96
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with remembering our founding ideals, the same ideals that patrick henry and james madison and thomas jefferson stood for and that george washington fought for. these principles are wy i entered public office, public service. they're why i entered this race for governor to fight and preserve our freedoms for all virginians now and into the future. they were delivered to us as a blessing and they are a burden to us to deliver to the next generation and the one after that. [applause] and i want to thank you all for your loving support. i am grateful to go to represent all of you, all 8.2 attorney rginians, as general and in the senate. i still believe that the greatest resource we have in virginia is virginians. and no election can change that. thank you all very much. god bless you. god bless virginia and america. good night. [cheers and applause] >> while she got a b in english , she actually got a c minus in european history. who knew that in later years as a military wife and future first lady that she would be so well traveled and so much to do with european history. she loved charms and early on ike bought her this
with remembering our founding ideals, the same ideals that patrick henry and james madison and thomas jefferson stood for and that george washington fought for. these principles are wy i entered public office, public service. they're why i entered this race for governor to fight and preserve our freedoms for all virginians now and into the future. they were delivered to us as a blessing and they are a burden to us to deliver to the next generation and the one after that. [applause] and i want...
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Nov 20, 2013
11/13
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KQED
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eye 324
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henry's lunch counter opened and two men came in. they sat down at the counter. "what's yours?" george asked them. >> i gave him rather chance pieces to read, and those happened to be, well, shakespeare, from othello, ernest hemingway... >> (from recording): the two men at the counter read the menu. from the other end of the counter... >> narrator: titovets also interviewed oswald in mock dialogues. in one interview, lee played the part of a killer. >> (from recording): will you tell us about your last killing? >> (from recording): well, it was a young girl under a bridge. she came in carrying a loaf of bread and i just cut her throat from ear to ear. >> (from recording): what for? >> (from recording): well, i wanted the loaf of bread, of course. >> we were just having a great time, and actually, we were laughing our heads off. >> narrator: the kgb was keeping oswald under constant surveillance and had co-opted most of the people he met, including his best friend, pavel golovachev. >> (translated): i was met by one of their people and it was like this. he said, "your country asks you.
henry's lunch counter opened and two men came in. they sat down at the counter. "what's yours?" george asked them. >> i gave him rather chance pieces to read, and those happened to be, well, shakespeare, from othello, ernest hemingway... >> (from recording): the two men at the counter read the menu. from the other end of the counter... >> narrator: titovets also interviewed oswald in mock dialogues. in one interview, lee played the part of a killer. >> (from...
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118
Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN
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eye 118
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[laughter] henry hyde, as fierce a conservative as they come said of the man, i wish he were a republican. there is also this from resident georgeh, tom foley represented the very best in public service and our political .ystem one class act tipping his hat to another. tom service and record is impressive. as is the sequence of his rise. committee chairman, majority whip, majority leader and speaker. fairness, sense of his port in the storm bearing that will always stand out for me. it's how he held this institution together at a very difficult time, and it is why those who come after us who seek to know what it means when we use that phrase man of the house, or just what it means to leave something behind, should name thomas s foley. today we gather in the old hall, joined by presidents, vice presidents, speakers, so many of our colleagues and diplomats that tom served with and to reminisce about this man's service and a toast to his life. welcome and thank you all for being here. [applause] >> let us pray. god of heaven and earth, the work of your hands is made known in your bountiful creation and in the lives of those who fai
[laughter] henry hyde, as fierce a conservative as they come said of the man, i wish he were a republican. there is also this from resident georgeh, tom foley represented the very best in public service and our political .ystem one class act tipping his hat to another. tom service and record is impressive. as is the sequence of his rise. committee chairman, majority whip, majority leader and speaker. fairness, sense of his port in the storm bearing that will always stand out for me. it's how he...
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133
Nov 1, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 133
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george, i would like to turn to you. how has the threat of terrorism changed over the past decade and how have our security and -- it's changed, henry, i think a few relatively significant ways. first, it is a threat than it was ten to fifteen years ago. it's not necessarily aligned bay group by ideology and other driving factors which may be complaint about how we are conducting ourselves in their view. secondly, the threat seems to progress at time very rapidly. what may appear to be a localized threat today perhaps in some obscure part of the world could in fact be on the doorstep tomorrow. lastly, it has significantly. they don't necessarily appear based on their actions and recent actions are indicators of that. that necessarily big and complex attacks are necessarily their goal or their aim. at least in their view. to attempt to accomplish their objectives. still relatively small in comparison attacks that are relatively simple to put together. and execute seem to be a preference. and of course, they have the same tools we all have to communicate in a worldwide capacity through the internet and other social media which makes n
george, i would like to turn to you. how has the threat of terrorism changed over the past decade and how have our security and -- it's changed, henry, i think a few relatively significant ways. first, it is a threat than it was ten to fifteen years ago. it's not necessarily aligned bay group by ideology and other driving factors which may be complaint about how we are conducting ourselves in their view. secondly, the threat seems to progress at time very rapidly. what may appear to be a...