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Oct 16, 2010
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>> glenn: back now with cal beistner, cornwall alliance and david barton of wall builder.here be stuff. turn it over to david. spooky dude george soros. you have to watch, i think it's episode six of the "star wars" movies, where the emperor is like -- remember he is in the spooky chair and turns around? it's george soros. anyway, this is the latest from the tides foundation. this is for kids and synagogues and it will now be found in your churches. warning. i warned you about a year ago they are coming for your church and faith. they are doing it now, let there be stuff. make sure you keep this episode op d.v.r. and spread it around and tell your friends. nobody is talking about this. david, take us from here. >> talking about creation. talking about within the church and synagogue. there is creation. there is really two general views of creation together. the more traditional view is the one that most americans hold. 84% of americans to this day, recent polling believes that god made the heaven and the earth. despite all the stuff we talked for 40 years with evolution, 8
>> glenn: back now with cal beistner, cornwall alliance and david barton of wall builder.here be stuff. turn it over to david. spooky dude george soros. you have to watch, i think it's episode six of the "star wars" movies, where the emperor is like -- remember he is in the spooky chair and turns around? it's george soros. anyway, this is the latest from the tides foundation. this is for kids and synagogues and it will now be found in your churches. warning. i warned you about a...
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Oct 16, 2010
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we're back with cal beidner from the cornwall alliance and david barton of wall builders.pend one more segment on what is being done, the story of stuff. green faith project. it is going in to your churches. and your synagogues. watch for it carefully. some of it sounds great. some of it is, you know, it's true mixed with evil stuff. to be real frank with you. i want to spend a break here talking about how scientists see the world differently than those who believe in god and what it leads to. when we come back, i want to give you action plan. what do you do about it? what do you do? >> i was called to testify on global warming. i'm an expert on that stuff. in that, i can look at scientific data and reach different conclusion than others. same data. it's explained with the clash of religion and science. 7% of scientists are convinced there is a god. their philosophy is there is no god so they get interpretation data. i can look at the same data and get different interpretation because i have a different paradigm on it. going back to the grid work where the earth is supreme
we're back with cal beidner from the cornwall alliance and david barton of wall builders.pend one more segment on what is being done, the story of stuff. green faith project. it is going in to your churches. and your synagogues. watch for it carefully. some of it sounds great. some of it is, you know, it's true mixed with evil stuff. to be real frank with you. i want to spend a break here talking about how scientists see the world differently than those who believe in god and what it leads to....
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Oct 11, 2010
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so there were quite a number of personalities who were new to him --or cornwallis who he had not met before. >> who decided that he should be the commander-in-chief? >> washington was -- the second continental congress appointed him by a unanimous vote. it was the first of four significant unanimous votes. ok, washington is unanimously appointed commander-in-chief. he was unanimously appointed president of the constitutional convention. and then both times that he ran for president, he was unanimously elected by the electoral college. so that's a record that i think we can safely say no one will ever duplicate. >> how obvious was it when you were doing your research that he was the choice for all of this? >> you know i don't think in a certain way that he had a lot of competition. as i was saying during the first part, they needed a southerner because the continental army at that point was all the new england militiamen gathered in cambridge, massachusetts. washington had been very involved in the house of burgesses in protesting the stamp act and all of these other things. washingto
so there were quite a number of personalities who were new to him --or cornwallis who he had not met before. >> who decided that he should be the commander-in-chief? >> washington was -- the second continental congress appointed him by a unanimous vote. it was the first of four significant unanimous votes. ok, washington is unanimously appointed commander-in-chief. he was unanimously appointed president of the constitutional convention. and then both times that he ran for president,...
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Oct 11, 2010
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the french were indispensable, not only in terms of having that navy that traps and surrounds cornwallis, but it was an old- fashioned european siege were you are building trenches and the parallels keep getting closer to the enemy, and that was the work of french engineers. we need also a french military know-how. >> 900 pages. we talked about how you broke down the different sections. how long did it take you before you began writing the book? >> i do the research before i start writing it. i spent six weeks. i did not write a word until i spend at least four years. i like to know what i am going to say before i sit down and start writing. >> the you follow chronologically? >> i knew it was going to be a long boat. -- book i break it down to 67 chapters, which gives the sense of forward motion. each of those is broken down to three or four different scenes. if proceeds more or less chronologically, and i hope has a kaleidoscopic property, and i tried to give it a fast pacing, because i felt washington was a man of action. it is wall-to-wall adventure, and i felt the boat should have so
the french were indispensable, not only in terms of having that navy that traps and surrounds cornwallis, but it was an old- fashioned european siege were you are building trenches and the parallels keep getting closer to the enemy, and that was the work of french engineers. we need also a french military know-how. >> 900 pages. we talked about how you broke down the different sections. how long did it take you before you began writing the book? >> i do the research before i start...
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Oct 12, 2010
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[laughter] >> so close to yourself on the cliffs of cornwall or wherever you happen to be, it is thatrtant part of your -- >> yes. for some books i have traveled a lot. i was very much driven by -- if your reporting on human misery, you do well to share it. that was a principle that came to meet late. i started writing books and really thought although the thought horrified me and i have no natural courage whatsoever, i should see war, so i went off to cambodia. i became the protected child of the war correspondents. i was fortunate about that. i travel, by talking, by listing above all come in the places where i'd go, the east condo or wherever books take me, then i would fill up my backpack. i like to take everything, all my scraps of paper down to cornwell in salt the amount -- and sort them out. engagement estate. engagement the state. escape. it is very similar to journalism, but nobody checks my story out. >> john le carre, the pen name for david cornwell. that does it for our broadcast. the grace finalist has just published his 22nd book called "our kind of traitor scrimp it is
[laughter] >> so close to yourself on the cliffs of cornwall or wherever you happen to be, it is thatrtant part of your -- >> yes. for some books i have traveled a lot. i was very much driven by -- if your reporting on human misery, you do well to share it. that was a principle that came to meet late. i started writing books and really thought although the thought horrified me and i have no natural courage whatsoever, i should see war, so i went off to cambodia. i became the...