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Aug 12, 2013
08/13
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he had not expected the british to give in over czechoslovakia in 1938. so when you somebody like adolf hitler who is determined to have a war, i think it's very, very hard to avoid, particularly when one thinks that the settlement have created so many different ethnic groups that were on the wrong side of borders and so forth. i think some form of conflict was bound to happen in europe, but it only took the appalling annihilation character that he did, purely because of adolf hitler spent the versailles agreement ending world war i, in your view, did that help create the circumstances for world war ii? >> it certainly helped arthur like it certainly created the instability at the time of rising nationalism. when you have sort of states which were become nationalist then they started to stress ethnic minorities. and, of course, if the next-door state like say germany with czechoslovakia started to claim that they had the right to defend their ethnic brethren across the border, ma then you're bound to have some form of conflict i think. >> we are talking w
he had not expected the british to give in over czechoslovakia in 1938. so when you somebody like adolf hitler who is determined to have a war, i think it's very, very hard to avoid, particularly when one thinks that the settlement have created so many different ethnic groups that were on the wrong side of borders and so forth. i think some form of conflict was bound to happen in europe, but it only took the appalling annihilation character that he did, purely because of adolf hitler spent the...
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they were supposed to share czechoslovakia. it didn't work out that way. >> the tone has changed.ave one pitch for project runway. how about a challenge on an actual runway with planes taking off and landing as they comment. you could see the material move. that's often important. that's what i've learned. you want to see the fabric move. >> you know, we almost did that with our first challenge of the season. we went to an airport and had parachuters. we were close. >> john: i love the show. thank you so much john: you're fantastic in it. tim gunn, ladies and gentlemen. the magnificent tim gunn. euu)r hsq@q@,x-x >> john: that's our show. join us tomorrow night at 11:00. here it is your moment of zen. >> 50 shades of gray, according to london fire brigade they've had 1,00 calls since this book was published with household emergencies such as getting stuck with a pair of handcuffs and not being able to find key and even worse getting your captioning sponsored by comedy central captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org ♪ two... two, three... ♪ ♪ newscaster: we now go li
they were supposed to share czechoslovakia. it didn't work out that way. >> the tone has changed.ave one pitch for project runway. how about a challenge on an actual runway with planes taking off and landing as they comment. you could see the material move. that's often important. that's what i've learned. you want to see the fabric move. >> you know, we almost did that with our first challenge of the season. we went to an airport and had parachuters. we were close. >> john: i...
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as they went into afghanistan in czechoslovakia in the sixty's. and the media world where most wars are reported on from a safe distance it's no wonder that most western outlets sided with saakashvili who by the time had a live t.v. link set up in his own office. on the other hand public relations have never been russia's specialty in the days of the conflict many state institutions went into lockdown completely yielding the initiative to saakashvili. haven't been many events like this in our country for the past few decades. and if we're talking about the russian federation as an independent country i think it was the first time in its history. the struggle for global public opinion was in many ways just a theater of war i see a turn where exaggerated emotions and tree keep the public's attention i cannot even imagine i mean seeing a twelve year old go through all of this it must be but that also mentally doesn't go. about the real suffering we can blame only one person and joe lieberman i'm not going georgian people i'm going to church and gover
as they went into afghanistan in czechoslovakia in the sixty's. and the media world where most wars are reported on from a safe distance it's no wonder that most western outlets sided with saakashvili who by the time had a live t.v. link set up in his own office. on the other hand public relations have never been russia's specialty in the days of the conflict many state institutions went into lockdown completely yielding the initiative to saakashvili. haven't been many events like this in our...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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professor freed was born in prague czechoslovakia in 1935 and was educated at princeton and oxford andmbia and will become solicitor general of the end ask -- u.s. under president ronald reagan. you talk about some of her classmates and one of them is mark joseph green, liberal democrat of cornell university in great neck new york. repressor freed asks, can anyone think of an actionable nuisance we haven't touched on today? mark joseph green says, what about black people moving into a neighborhood? a thoughtful discussion ensued and sanders looks at me. we all look at each other in our faces portrayed little. in any case the privileged young white scholars are oblivious. their legal arguments to be mustard pro and con. the discussion of whether not the mere presence of blacks constitutes an inherent nuisance swirls around the five bucks. we say nothing. we cannot dignify insults with reason for a bottle in the choices between ventilated rage and silence reaches silence. >> guest: mark was running for office in new york recently and i haven't seen them since that experience but when he
professor freed was born in prague czechoslovakia in 1935 and was educated at princeton and oxford andmbia and will become solicitor general of the end ask -- u.s. under president ronald reagan. you talk about some of her classmates and one of them is mark joseph green, liberal democrat of cornell university in great neck new york. repressor freed asks, can anyone think of an actionable nuisance we haven't touched on today? mark joseph green says, what about black people moving into a...
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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i skipped czechoslovakia and i served in the u.s. army and so on and so forth. the international reaction, as i have been watching it closely -- ve the gun again and we jumped the gun in bolivia, we jumped the gun in egypt, -- we jumped the the gunibya, we jumped in egypt, the arab spring. what do we have? a mess. we need to spend more time in the diplomatic circle, and china, whether we like it or not -- but talking never hurt anybody. i don't think shooting 10, 20 tomahawk missiles into syria -- we are not going to help anybody. and as the caller before me said, why do we ask those hundreds of thousands of people that are leaving syria because they are afraid? again, we're just going to hurt innocent people, and diplomacy should work. that is my bottom line. guns -- that is in the past. please put all that stuff together, try to work together, send the missions, sort of like the dayton accord was. take all those guys and put them on the plane and put them in a room and say, talk. host: james, republican line. caller: good morning. i understand the consensus fo
i skipped czechoslovakia and i served in the u.s. army and so on and so forth. the international reaction, as i have been watching it closely -- ve the gun again and we jumped the gun in bolivia, we jumped the gun in egypt, -- we jumped the the gunibya, we jumped in egypt, the arab spring. what do we have? a mess. we need to spend more time in the diplomatic circle, and china, whether we like it or not -- but talking never hurt anybody. i don't think shooting 10, 20 tomahawk missiles into syria...
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Aug 5, 2013
08/13
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afrom plains, where i was assigned to live at a catholic mission with a priest from the former czechoslovakia was 1968, the year of the prague spring. as we listened on a shortwave radio each night my host would interpret and explain what was happening in his country. after 3 1/2 wonderful years in ghana i knew i wanted to dedicate my career to international receive and development. when i returned home from ghana i applied to work for catholic relief services. initially they turned me down but i wasn't going to give up. finally i was hired and was sent back to west africa. i spent 18 years as president and ceo of catholic relief services and 40 years at the organization. throughout those four decades i encountered many inspired and heroic people in countries around the world, whether they were lay people, clerics or religious they witnessed true faith in acts of compassion in times of hardship and often physical danger. during those years i had numerous opportunities to engage with leaders of the catholic church in countries where crs works and in many cases my work led me to the vatican. as
afrom plains, where i was assigned to live at a catholic mission with a priest from the former czechoslovakia was 1968, the year of the prague spring. as we listened on a shortwave radio each night my host would interpret and explain what was happening in his country. after 3 1/2 wonderful years in ghana i knew i wanted to dedicate my career to international receive and development. when i returned home from ghana i applied to work for catholic relief services. initially they turned me down but...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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they thought it was like the soviets invading czechoslovakia or hungary to throw out communist party rule, that this was an extension of the brezhnev doctrine. and what he didn't understand was that the soviets didn't really want to do this at all. they kind of, they felt they were forced into it by the rapid deterioration of the situation there. they were extremely reluctant to do it. when they made the decision, they didn't even have a proper paper that they all signed. it was this very vacant memorandum that didn't even say what they were going to do. >> host: just like vietnam? >> guest: just like vietnam. they slid into it. they didn't really want to be there. i'm not sure we understood the extent to which that was the case. without it's all part part of the grand soviet design. we didn't understand what a improvisation it was. >> host: that's interesting when you think about the extent to which the united states was involved of course as a significant player in all of these stories in different ways, and yet you've done some really i think commendable for book which is, you can
they thought it was like the soviets invading czechoslovakia or hungary to throw out communist party rule, that this was an extension of the brezhnev doctrine. and what he didn't understand was that the soviets didn't really want to do this at all. they kind of, they felt they were forced into it by the rapid deterioration of the situation there. they were extremely reluctant to do it. when they made the decision, they didn't even have a proper paper that they all signed. it was this very...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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czechoslovakia republican and a handful of other nations.n. not very popular with canada'slet say permanent foreign policy establishment. toronto is next -- you're on. >> caller: yes. [inaudible] the prime minister of canada -- he took the country in a financial good standing and -- [inaudible] one of the things that was regarded as -- [inaudible] >> guest: yes, after the recession in '08 and '09 there was deficit spending in canada. it's true. according to people who know out of the things has emerged in a stronger position than the other equivalent countries g8. there is a deficit there. they expect it to be gone by 2015. it should be pretty easy. they believe the previous government and entered to the protocol and joined it. the kyoto property could was not good for numbering. -- he did that. i myself consider that bold and smart. of course plenty of others squawked. and as for the keystone pipeline, i certainly not an expert. we should listen to a range of opinions and decide what sound most authorityive to us. and i believe that the key
czechoslovakia republican and a handful of other nations.n. not very popular with canada'slet say permanent foreign policy establishment. toronto is next -- you're on. >> caller: yes. [inaudible] the prime minister of canada -- he took the country in a financial good standing and -- [inaudible] one of the things that was regarded as -- [inaudible] >> guest: yes, after the recession in '08 and '09 there was deficit spending in canada. it's true. according to people who know out of...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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the thought it was like the soviets invading czechoslovakia or hungary. this was an extension. they're going back for their authority. they kind of felt there were forced into it by the rapid deterioration. when they made the decision, they didn't even have a proper paper that they all signed. this very vague memorandum that did not even say what they were going to do. just like vietnam. this led into a. to understand what an improvisation. >> host: really interesting when you think about the extent to which the united states was involved in these stories. you've done something commendable. the have not put the u.s. from the center. the province but to american history and also to decisionmakers. >> guest: i don't know. if the -- will see how the book does. is not the only catcher in the world. the united states as part of all the stores, but is not at the center. in many ways is reacting to events more than it is shaping them. we thought it was important to capture. i was trying to write a truly global book. >> host: you know, ronald reagan is not on the cover. many people say
the thought it was like the soviets invading czechoslovakia or hungary. this was an extension. they're going back for their authority. they kind of felt there were forced into it by the rapid deterioration. when they made the decision, they didn't even have a proper paper that they all signed. this very vague memorandum that did not even say what they were going to do. just like vietnam. this led into a. to understand what an improvisation. >> host: really interesting when you think about...