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Apr 21, 2014
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dr. rubin hurricane carter. you brought the book with you. thank you for joining us from vancouver. brought the book with you to read some of hurricanes words. i was wondering if you might do that now. >> ok. passageng to read a where he was asked what his legacy would be after his death. hadday a few seasons ago, just finished speaking to a group of people at a toronto high school when a young woman in the audience stood up and asked me how i wanted my life to be remembered. i had to pause a long moment because i've never given the question the moment thought. when i did think about it, i realized that the way people remember me doesn't really matter. what really matters is how i remember myself. the act of self remembering that saved me from perdition. but given the opportunity, i answered her question like this -- i was a prizefighter at one point in my life. i was a soldier at one point in my life. i was a convict and one point in my life. i was a jailhouse lawyer at one point in my life. i was executive director of aidwic the one point my life, a black angel. today, i am the ce
dr. rubin hurricane carter. you brought the book with you. thank you for joining us from vancouver. brought the book with you to read some of hurricanes words. i was wondering if you might do that now. >> ok. passageng to read a where he was asked what his legacy would be after his death. hadday a few seasons ago, just finished speaking to a group of people at a toronto high school when a young woman in the audience stood up and asked me how i wanted my life to be remembered. i had to...
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Apr 8, 2014
04/14
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dr. carter. judge? >> thank you, mr. chairman. let me congratulations the administration on the 49th consecutive month of job growth, averaging around 200,000 a month. and close to 9 million new jobs over this stretch of time. one of the questions before your department is how to protect american jobs in terms of intellectual property. and you've been doing a great deal of work in this regard, but obviously there's more work to do when we have, you know, in our -- the world economic forum, they said that the u.s. economy is innovation, is innovation based economy, that the essence of how we have created the wealthiest country in the world is through innovation and new ideas. and so protecting the intellectual property of american inventors and companies is critically important. the chairman has been focused a little aggressively on this question of cyber security. not in the sense of nsa, but entities going into american companies, particularly law firms that work in patent-related areas and so on, trying to steal secrets. to give
dr. carter. judge? >> thank you, mr. chairman. let me congratulations the administration on the 49th consecutive month of job growth, averaging around 200,000 a month. and close to 9 million new jobs over this stretch of time. one of the questions before your department is how to protect american jobs in terms of intellectual property. and you've been doing a great deal of work in this regard, but obviously there's more work to do when we have, you know, in our -- the world economic...
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Apr 5, 2014
04/14
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dr. judge carter for his comments on fort hood. >> thank you, mr. chairman. and attorney general holder, welcome, again, to the committee hearing. i sent the president and yiewrs a letter referencing the toyota settlement, which was a very -- which was announced a couple weeks ago for 1.it -- 1.2 billion dollars and just in that settlement could usher in a major opportunity in that this administration has pointed to and everyone else on the committee supported that we need to do something to lit ramly arrest the increase in the prison population. we have to do something about turning more people into positive pallets in the society, and that we are funding -- you mentioned, the chairman of health, each year, we get closer and closer to a hundred million a year, that we could take a settlement like that and similar to the bp manner, do something constructive with the support of some of the nation's most significant organizations to expand their capacity. the white house indicated that the millions of young people are not connected to any of the programs, the b
dr. judge carter for his comments on fort hood. >> thank you, mr. chairman. and attorney general holder, welcome, again, to the committee hearing. i sent the president and yiewrs a letter referencing the toyota settlement, which was a very -- which was announced a couple weeks ago for 1.it -- 1.2 billion dollars and just in that settlement could usher in a major opportunity in that this administration has pointed to and everyone else on the committee supported that we need to do something...
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Apr 5, 2014
04/14
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dr. carter, and then judge carter we'll kind of go, but i'm going to stay so we can continue that way youwon't have to -- >> thank you, mr. chairman. i was going to ask if we were going to take a break for the vote or not. >> well, i can catch you as you come back. you won't miss your time. so you can do what you think is appropriate. >> well, i have a pretty extensive question here and i would hate to miss the vote. >> okay. >> so i'd like to step out, vote and come back. >> sure. >> if anyone, mr. schiff do you want to ask your question now? you can do it. because i think there's still six minutes left. >> there's time for your final question. >> okay. >> okay. >> thank you, mr. chairman. i appreciate the candid discussion we had here just awhile ago. and i welcome mr. attorney general. appreciate your work, also. the question i have was around the immigration. and in your testimony you've referenced your work on addressing the immigration backlog. and you're applying some money to it because the cases that we have right now on adjudication by about 40%, 42% between '09 and 0 twelve but
dr. carter, and then judge carter we'll kind of go, but i'm going to stay so we can continue that way youwon't have to -- >> thank you, mr. chairman. i was going to ask if we were going to take a break for the vote or not. >> well, i can catch you as you come back. you won't miss your time. so you can do what you think is appropriate. >> well, i have a pretty extensive question here and i would hate to miss the vote. >> okay. >> so i'd like to step out, vote and...
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Apr 4, 2014
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dr. xenakis was just saying is find better ways to find these people an get them the treatment they need. >> woodruff: all right, we will leave it there phillip carter thank you. and dr. steven zen axe-- xenakis. >> ifill: what would happen if the u.s. government used social media to undermine a hostile foreign government? that may be exactly what the u.s. agency for international development tried to do in cuba with zun zuneo, a twitter-style social media platform secretly controlled by the u.s. government. an associated press investigation reveals that thousands of private cuban cell phone numbers were used to circumvent tight controls on internet communication and to gain valuable information about the users themselves. u.s.a.i.d. says that the program existed only to "create a platform for cubans to speak freely among themselves, period." joining me now to talk about this operation is jack gillum, one of the reporters on the a.p.'s story. welcome, jack, good job, tell me why would anybody, why would a government use twitter in this way? >> so we use twitter here in the united states in many different ways, he want to talk to friends, we want to
dr. xenakis was just saying is find better ways to find these people an get them the treatment they need. >> woodruff: all right, we will leave it there phillip carter thank you. and dr. steven zen axe-- xenakis. >> ifill: what would happen if the u.s. government used social media to undermine a hostile foreign government? that may be exactly what the u.s. agency for international development tried to do in cuba with zun zuneo, a twitter-style social media platform secretly...
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Apr 15, 2014
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former national security adviser for president carter dr. brzezinski.ca and the crisis of global power." dr. brzezinski, always great to see you. >> morning, joe. >> even if your daughter is -- we don't know. in the south of france again this morning. she hops around. if only she had my work ethic, dr. brzezinski. that's a joke, of course. a big joke. your daughter is the hardest working woman in show business as you glare at me. >> well, joe, i was watching you and your colleague and i thought your colleague looked a little different than mika. i was going to say mika, you look different. >> trust me, mika would never wear a suit as tacky as donnie deutsch's this morning. we had jane harman on last hour. you know jane. former congresswoman from california, also head of the wilson center. she said that barack obama can no longer lead from behind on the ukraine. this morning "the wall street journal" says vladimir putin uses russian forces to steal territory while mr. obama agonizes about what to do. are those fair characterizations? >> basically, yes. i
former national security adviser for president carter dr. brzezinski.ca and the crisis of global power." dr. brzezinski, always great to see you. >> morning, joe. >> even if your daughter is -- we don't know. in the south of france again this morning. she hops around. if only she had my work ethic, dr. brzezinski. that's a joke, of course. a big joke. your daughter is the hardest working woman in show business as you glare at me. >> well, joe, i was watching you and your...
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Apr 30, 2014
04/14
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with us to talk about it from washington, former national security adviser for president carter, dr.rica and global power" and david ignatius, who is just returning from the trip to the middle east. dr. brzezinski, i want to talk to you about the stakes over europe. but first, the peace talks in the middle east have broken down. what's the next step? >> for the united states? >> well, what's the next step for this ongoing process that you dedicated a good bit of your life to, finding peace in the middle east. >> well, if they cannot be resumed, which i assume it will still be attempted to do, we should probably go public on what our view of what a fair settlement ought to be like. i think we have views on the subject. i suspect the views we have would be supported overwhelmingly by the national security and probably by a majority of the palestinians and we shouldn't let some politicians over there paralyze the process for short, tactical objectives. >> dr. brzezinski, the president's plan to lead from behind with gadhafi seemed to work where you had the air bleed going out in front.
with us to talk about it from washington, former national security adviser for president carter, dr.rica and global power" and david ignatius, who is just returning from the trip to the middle east. dr. brzezinski, i want to talk to you about the stakes over europe. but first, the peace talks in the middle east have broken down. what's the next step? >> for the united states? >> well, what's the next step for this ongoing process that you dedicated a good bit of your life to,...
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Apr 9, 2014
04/14
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carter was saying yesterday. let's just not sit back and talk. let's do something about the problems. >> dr. bunch, i think you have a bit of a challenge here. it is supposed to be a panel discussion, but no offense, i just want to hear from all three of these people telling their stories and telling their history. of you've got john lewis, andrew young just sort of remembering from the front lines. what are you hoping to get out of them, not just talking about their experiences, but what do you hope those experiences give the audience to talk about in the future? >> i think there are two things. on one hand, what this panel will help us do is sometimes counter america's notion not to remember. so we want people to remember that these young men who were very young when they started helped to transform the country. but i think more importantly what we want is to begin to identify and point out what are the civil rights movements of today. what is the role that we as americans have to play in helping to make our country better. i think the notion that these three men bring forth is that americ
carter was saying yesterday. let's just not sit back and talk. let's do something about the problems. >> dr. bunch, i think you have a bit of a challenge here. it is supposed to be a panel discussion, but no offense, i just want to hear from all three of these people telling their stories and telling their history. of you've got john lewis, andrew young just sort of remembering from the front lines. what are you hoping to get out of them, not just talking about their experiences, but what...
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Apr 13, 2014
04/14
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nation, back to what president carter said on tape a few moments ago there is sort of a fundamental fairness fatigue that has afflicted too too many of our fellow citizens. as dr. dyson just intimated for dr. king and others in the movement the voting rights act was the starting line not the finish line so 50 years later we need to have a conversation, bob, not just about civil rights, civil, but about economic rights, economic freedom, black folks lag behind in every leading economic category 50 years later, even in the obama era and the bottom line is this, if you don't have economic freedom you really ain't free so that poverty then becomes a sort of new slavery, so the time has come for us to have a conversation again not just about civil rights and celebrating that 50 years later but how do we get on, bob talking about economic rights for all americans. >> schieffer: all right. evan wilson we will come to you in part two of this conversation, which we are going to continue about gay rights and where does that fit into all of that. up next, some personal thoughts about another anniversary. >> pro i had a chance to be at the civil rights summit in texas las
nation, back to what president carter said on tape a few moments ago there is sort of a fundamental fairness fatigue that has afflicted too too many of our fellow citizens. as dr. dyson just intimated for dr. king and others in the movement the voting rights act was the starting line not the finish line so 50 years later we need to have a conversation, bob, not just about civil rights, civil, but about economic rights, economic freedom, black folks lag behind in every leading economic category...
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Apr 9, 2014
04/14
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former president jimmy carter kicks off the civil rights summit at the lbj library by declaring the country is not making good on the era of equal opportunity that johnson and dr
former president jimmy carter kicks off the civil rights summit at the lbj library by declaring the country is not making good on the era of equal opportunity that johnson and dr