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the dwight d. eisenhower museum hosted multiple events to mark the 70th anniversary of the d-day invasion. coming up next, deputy director of the museum talks about the night that eisenhower decided to invade the coast of norman di. what did he say? who was there? what time was it? this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk to you this morning a d-day mystery that persists despite the millions of words written about normandy. what did dwight d. eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it is puzzling to me that the most important decision of the 20th century did not deqeev to a memorable quote to mark the occasion. something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision. something iconic like douglas mccar arthur's i shall return. if the overloord operation fails the allies might never have won the war. eisenhower's decision could not agree on what he said and eisenhower could not agree with himself. he related five versions of his faithful words to journalists over
the dwight d. eisenhower museum hosted multiple events to mark the 70th anniversary of the d-day invasion. coming up next, deputy director of the museum talks about the night that eisenhower decided to invade the coast of norman di. what did he say? who was there? what time was it? this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk to you this morning a d-day mystery that persists despite the millions of words written about normandy. what did dwight d. eisenhower say when he...
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Jul 4, 2014
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. >> the dwight d. eisenhower presidential library and museum hosted multiple events to mark the 0th anniversary of the june 6th d-day invasion of nazi-be onning payed france. coming up next, timothy rives talks about the night isenhour decided to invade the coast of normandy, who was there? what time was it? mr. rives answers that this question is very hard to answer. this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk with you this morning about an elusive d-day mystery that persists despite the millions of words written about the allied invasion about normandy, june 6, 1944. what did general dwight d. eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it's puzzling to me, anyway, that perhaps the most important decision of the 20th century did not bequeath to history and posterity a quote to mark the occasion, something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision. something iconic like macarthur's vow to the people of the philippines, i shall return. the stakes of the invasion certai
. >> the dwight d. eisenhower presidential library and museum hosted multiple events to mark the 0th anniversary of the june 6th d-day invasion of nazi-be onning payed france. coming up next, timothy rives talks about the night isenhour decided to invade the coast of normandy, who was there? what time was it? mr. rives answers that this question is very hard to answer. this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk with you this morning about an elusive d-day mystery...
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Jul 13, 2014
07/14
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republican leadership under dwight eisenhower kept the peace and passed along to this the mightiest parcel the world has ever known. [applause] and i need not remind you that it was the strength and the believable will of the eisenhower years that kept the peace by using our strengths, by , and by in lebanon showing it courageously at all times. [applause] it was during those republican years that the thrust of communism and imperialism was blunted. it was during those years of republican leadership that this world moved closer, not to war, than at anyo peace other time in the last three decades. [applause] and i need not remind you, but i will, that during democratic years, our strength to declare intoas gone [indiscernible] during democratic years that we have weakly stumbled into conflict, refusing to tell our own people of our and lettingpation our finest men die on battlefields unmarked by purpose, unmarked by pride, or the prospect of victory. [applause] and letting yesterday, it was korea. tonight, it is vietnam. to sweep this under the rug. we are at war in vietnam. yet the preside
republican leadership under dwight eisenhower kept the peace and passed along to this the mightiest parcel the world has ever known. [applause] and i need not remind you that it was the strength and the believable will of the eisenhower years that kept the peace by using our strengths, by , and by in lebanon showing it courageously at all times. [applause] it was during those republican years that the thrust of communism and imperialism was blunted. it was during those years of republican...
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Jul 17, 2014
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he became the first president since world war ii hero dwight eisenhower to win 51% of the popular vote, and he did it twice. now they're going to court to try to hog tie the president, try to put a brand on him as the only president to be successfully sued while in office. anything to taint this guy, to put the asterisk on his record so they can go to bed content no one who liked barack obama was one of the republic's elected presidents of the united states. the assistant democratic leader in the house, and david is an msnbc political analyst. congressman clyburn, this thing smells. it smacks of the same thing, of birtherism, of all the attempts to delegitimize this president. they're not going to win with this suit, they just want to smear him. that's my thinking, what is yours? >> i agree with you. thank you for having me, chris. i agree with you entirely. all of this is about throwing up as much mud as they possibly can, hoping something will stick to this president. they have failed in every attempt to delegitimize him. this is another way of trying to determine that this president
he became the first president since world war ii hero dwight eisenhower to win 51% of the popular vote, and he did it twice. now they're going to court to try to hog tie the president, try to put a brand on him as the only president to be successfully sued while in office. anything to taint this guy, to put the asterisk on his record so they can go to bed content no one who liked barack obama was one of the republic's elected presidents of the united states. the assistant democratic leader in...
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dwight eisenhower, omar bradley. but two you point out in the book you wrote, alan kirk and bertrund ramsey. who are they and why are they important to the story? >> eisenhower was the supreme alide commander, he was in charge of the entire operation. and the reason he was such a good pick for that is because of his political sensitivity. we think of a general in command as being a warrior. of course, he must be that. but the political sensitivity that made him also not a bad president, allowed him to command not just british and american forces that happened to be on the same side but a genuinely allied command. and in significance of that, the significance of that is demonstrated by the fact that all three of his subordinate commanders for ground, air and naval troops are all british. montgomery commanded all ground troops. british and american on both sides. lee malorie, tafford lee malorie commanded air forces on both sides. and for the navy, sir bertrund ramsey commanded not just the royal navy ships involved in
dwight eisenhower, omar bradley. but two you point out in the book you wrote, alan kirk and bertrund ramsey. who are they and why are they important to the story? >> eisenhower was the supreme alide commander, he was in charge of the entire operation. and the reason he was such a good pick for that is because of his political sensitivity. we think of a general in command as being a warrior. of course, he must be that. but the political sensitivity that made him also not a bad president,...
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was it andrew johnson, dwight eisenhower or behindlyndon john? we'll have the answer when we get back. [ male announcer ] we know they're out there. you can't always see them. but it's our job to find them. the answers. the solutions. the innovations. all waiting to help us build something better. something more amazing. a safer, cleaner, brighter future. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. ♪ been all fun and games, here at the harrison household. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. but one dark, stormy evening... she needed a good meal and a good family. so we gave her purina cat chow complete. it's great because it has the four cornerstones of nutrition. everything a cat needs for the first step to a healthy, happy life. purina cat chow complete. share your rescue story and join us in building better lives. one rescue at a time. humans. we are beautifully imperfect creatures living in an imperfect world. that's why liberty mutual insurance has your back, offering exclusive products like opti
was it andrew johnson, dwight eisenhower or behindlyndon john? we'll have the answer when we get back. [ male announcer ] we know they're out there. you can't always see them. but it's our job to find them. the answers. the solutions. the innovations. all waiting to help us build something better. something more amazing. a safer, cleaner, brighter future. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. ♪ been all fun and games, here at the harrison household. at boeing, that's...
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what did general dwight d. eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it's puzzling to me, anyway, that perhaps the most important decision of the 20th century did not bequeath to history and posterity a quote to mark the occasion, something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision. something iconic like general douglas macarthur's vow to the people of the philippines, "i shall return." the stakes of the invasion certainly merited verbal splendor, if not eloquence, if the overlord operation had failed the allies might never have won the war and yet eyewitnesses to eisenhower's great moment of decision could not agree on what he said. and as for eisenhower, he could not even agree with himself. he related five versions of his fateful words to journalists and biographers over the years that perhaps even more mysteriously he wrote five different versions of the statement in a 1964 article commemorating the 20th anniversary of d-day. to put those words, whatever they might have been into context, the high drama of those meetings leading up to the invas
what did general dwight d. eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it's puzzling to me, anyway, that perhaps the most important decision of the 20th century did not bequeath to history and posterity a quote to mark the occasion, something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision. something iconic like general douglas macarthur's vow to the people of the philippines, "i shall return." the stakes of the invasion certainly merited verbal splendor, if not...
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Jul 1, 2014
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we'll begin with an introduction by general dwight eisenhower. ♪ >> i have been asked to be the spokesmanor this allied expeditionary force in saying a word of inintroduce ducktion to what you're about to see. it's a story of the nazi defeat on the western front. so far as important, the editors have made an account of the really important men in this campaign. i mean the enlisted soldiers, sailors and airmen that fought through every obstacle to victory. course to tell the whole story would take years. but the theme would be the same. teamwork wins wars. i mean teamwork among nations, services and men. all the way down the line from the g.i. and the tommy to west hats. our enemy in this campaign was strong, resourceful and cunning but made a few mistakes. his greatest blunder was this, he thought he could break up our partnership. but we were welded together by fighting for one great cause. in one great team, a team in which you were an indispensable and working member. that spirit of a free people working, fighting and living together in one great cause have served us well on the wester
we'll begin with an introduction by general dwight eisenhower. ♪ >> i have been asked to be the spokesmanor this allied expeditionary force in saying a word of inintroduce ducktion to what you're about to see. it's a story of the nazi defeat on the western front. so far as important, the editors have made an account of the really important men in this campaign. i mean the enlisted soldiers, sailors and airmen that fought through every obstacle to victory. course to tell the whole story...
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Jul 15, 2014
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the revenue to have the kind of responsible national transportation system of the type that dwight eisenhower once provided the lead on when there was bipartisan support for reasonable public investment. our competitors understand this. they're out there designing a 21st century transportation system that will be competitive and we're being left in the potholes. it's essential that we have a long-term bill not this type of stopgap measure. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from michigan is recognized. mr. camp: i'm prepared to close. the speaker pro tempore: does the gentleman reserve? -- amp: i yield mr. blumenauer: i yield myself the remainder of the time. i appreciate my friend from michigan putting into the record what can only be regarded as reluctant letters of support. i wish some of my colleagues had had time to look at it. it's not a ringing endorsement of what is before us, it's a reluctant acknowledgment that that's all we have time for. i've worked with those groups work the road builders, with the chamber, with the afl-cio work the contractors. with elements large and small
the revenue to have the kind of responsible national transportation system of the type that dwight eisenhower once provided the lead on when there was bipartisan support for reasonable public investment. our competitors understand this. they're out there designing a 21st century transportation system that will be competitive and we're being left in the potholes. it's essential that we have a long-term bill not this type of stopgap measure. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from michigan is...
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>> >> dwight eisenhower. >> who are you? one of the mental patients? >> fdr.that stands for? >> franklin roosevelt. >> no. i honestly did not know that. >> what is he famous for. >> isn't there a famous building? >> abraham lincoln. my favor president. >> >> few f yif you were a pres you'd be babraham lincoln. >> who's that? >> taft. >> taft. >> who's that? >> bush senior. >> that hurts, man. >> there you go again. >> this is ronald reagan. he was wonderful, yes. >> what's the first thing that comes to your mind when you hear ronald reagan? >> he was an actor. >> bonzo. >> what's his favorite line? >> the broccoli? >> i do not like broccoli. >> nixon? >> is she right? >> oh, my god. that is so embarrassing. my parents, if they see this. >> have you ever watched "the o'reilly factor?" >> all the time. >> anything you want to say to bill? keep on truckin'. >> just keep speaking the truth. >> what up. >> he's a liar. >> what did he lie about? >> it's not that he lies but he holds back on the truths. >> are you a ron paul guy? >> i like ron paul. >> i didn't know
>> >> dwight eisenhower. >> who are you? one of the mental patients? >> fdr.that stands for? >> franklin roosevelt. >> no. i honestly did not know that. >> what is he famous for. >> isn't there a famous building? >> abraham lincoln. my favor president. >> >> few f yif you were a pres you'd be babraham lincoln. >> who's that? >> taft. >> taft. >> who's that? >> bush senior. >> that hurts, man....
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so what happened to bring the land that produced dwight eisenhower the paragon of balanced budgets to these dire straits. what happened? this happened. >> what do you want to do with the state income tax? >> get it to zero. the whole thing. >> the whole thing. kansas governor sam brownback didn't actually make it all the way to zero, but he came close. in 2012, kansas passed a tax bills that cut the state's highest income tax rates and completely exempted small business income. the state general fund is now projected to be over a billion dollars in the red by 2019. at some level, none of this should be surprising. many kansas republicans ran on a platform of slashing tax revenue, the people elected them, followed through and slashed tax revenue, and now the state is broke. thanks in part to the fiscal fallout, governor brownback finds himself in trouble. it's an election year, and he trails his challenger in three out of the four most recent polls. it's not just brownback who's dealing with the tax cuts, it's the citizens of kansas. the lack of funding has some very real consequences.
so what happened to bring the land that produced dwight eisenhower the paragon of balanced budgets to these dire straits. what happened? this happened. >> what do you want to do with the state income tax? >> get it to zero. the whole thing. >> the whole thing. kansas governor sam brownback didn't actually make it all the way to zero, but he came close. in 2012, kansas passed a tax bills that cut the state's highest income tax rates and completely exempted small business...
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it was dwight eisenhower . by 1964, following the signing of the civil rights act the black vote had fallen off the vote for republicans. republicans share of the black vote remained in the single digits for decades. in 2012 the republican share was at the dismal 6%. it's interesting. you and i know this. the forfeiting of the black vote, a third of the vote, then 10% because of the way they handled the 60s. that was the party of lincoln. >> construction. >> right. but that republican party allowed the democratic party the to be the party of civil rights. democrats in my part of the country took a while. >> i wouldn't let the democrats off easy. the 1964 civil rights bill. the most important thing done by congress in our lifetime. overwhelmingly for it. the democrats had a lot of people against it. anyway. i don't have the numbers here. >> look, those democrats were dixiecrats who were against desegregation. >> 27 of 33 republicans, all but 6 voted for the civil rights act. >> kennedy and johnson had to work ha
it was dwight eisenhower . by 1964, following the signing of the civil rights act the black vote had fallen off the vote for republicans. republicans share of the black vote remained in the single digits for decades. in 2012 the republican share was at the dismal 6%. it's interesting. you and i know this. the forfeiting of the black vote, a third of the vote, then 10% because of the way they handled the 60s. that was the party of lincoln. >> construction. >> right. but that...
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>> dwight eisenhower. >> who are you? one of the mental patients? >> fdr.know what that stands for? >> franklin roosevelt. >> isn't there a famous building named after him? >> that's lincoln my boy. >> abraham lincoln. my very favorite president. >> if you were a president you'd be abraham lincoln. >> who's that right there? >> taft? >> taft. >> i have no idea. >> theodore roosevelt. >> dangerous why? >> who's that? >> bush sr. >> that hurts, man. >> there you go again. >> this is ronald reagan. he was wonderful, yes. >> what's the first thing that comes to your mind when you hear ronald reagan? >> wasn't he an actor? >> bonzo. >> he cared about this country. >> what's his most famous line? >> the broccoli? no, that's george bush. >> i do not like broccoli. >> nixon? >> is she right? >> oh, my god, that is so embarrassing. my parents if they see this? >> do you ever watch the o'reilly factor? >> all the time. >> anything you want to say to bill? >> keep on trucking. >> just keep speaking the truth. >> what up. >> i love o'reilly. >> he's a liar. >> gave you
>> dwight eisenhower. >> who are you? one of the mental patients? >> fdr.know what that stands for? >> franklin roosevelt. >> isn't there a famous building named after him? >> that's lincoln my boy. >> abraham lincoln. my very favorite president. >> if you were a president you'd be abraham lincoln. >> who's that right there? >> taft? >> taft. >> i have no idea. >> theodore roosevelt. >> dangerous why? >>...
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the first americans who died in vietnam were under president dwight eisenhower. resisted a full scale of u.s. intervention and did start what became a full scale u.s. military intervention when he deployed several hundred u.s. military advisers to not fight an american war there but advise and help with their own fight in their own country. that is how it started with the few hundred advisers. that is not how it ended up. military intervention has a way of starting small and getting bigger and hard to end. shortly after he was sworn in the new obama white house let it be known the new president and a number of advisers were reading this book guy gordon goldstein. it was a history of the war told through the lens of an adviser. the thesis of the book is that even though eisenhower had put the first few hundred military advisers in vietnam had president kennedy lived longer than he did we probably wouldn't have seen the same huge escalation as we saw under president johnson. kennedy brought the number from eisenhower levels up to 9,000 men but the thesis was that k
the first americans who died in vietnam were under president dwight eisenhower. resisted a full scale of u.s. intervention and did start what became a full scale u.s. military intervention when he deployed several hundred u.s. military advisers to not fight an american war there but advise and help with their own fight in their own country. that is how it started with the few hundred advisers. that is not how it ended up. military intervention has a way of starting small and getting bigger and...
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this is a case where dwight eisenhower built every inch of the interstate highway system which runs through every state. every inch was paid for with gas tax money. i guess it's no longer any good. i wouldn't mind if somebody came up with a different idea. we could have that debate. whoever wins, wins. there is nothing on the table. there is no proposal by the other side. that's what botherses me more than anything else. >> governor, it is not just the infrastructure. they are just refusing to move and take action in any number of issues. the president talked about it today. listen. >> so far this year, republicans in congress are have blocked or voted down every serious idea to strengthen the middle class. not ideas that are unique to me. you know, this isn't obama bridge. it's keys bridge. but the republicans said no to raisinging the minimum wage. no to fair pay. they have said no to extending unemployment insurance for over 3 million americans looking for a new job. and this obstruction keeps the system rigged for those who are doing fine, at the very are top. >> i mean, does this messa
this is a case where dwight eisenhower built every inch of the interstate highway system which runs through every state. every inch was paid for with gas tax money. i guess it's no longer any good. i wouldn't mind if somebody came up with a different idea. we could have that debate. whoever wins, wins. there is nothing on the table. there is no proposal by the other side. that's what botherses me more than anything else. >> governor, it is not just the infrastructure. they are just...
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it was started as my history reading goes by herbert hoover, then it was used for highways by dwight eisenhower, then it was raised by ronald reagan, george herbert walker bush, bill clinton. there's no reason why we can't look at this gas tax, a few cent also make a difference. there's 700,000 unemployed construction workers. those workers would fill seven super bowl stadiums. we need to put people to work, fix the highways, the bridges, fix the transit situation, it's in our control, we just need a little courage. >> some political ramificationless too would make the president look good and they don't want that to happen. the state department says their intelligence suggests that malaysia airlines flight 17 was brought down by a ukrainian separatists and they have no direct evidence that the russian government was involved. as a member of the committee on foreign relations, what do you think our response should be? >> i think you ratchet up the sanctions on putin, we know that those separatists are only in business because of vladimir putin, let's be clear, it's pretty obvious, i these the eu
it was started as my history reading goes by herbert hoover, then it was used for highways by dwight eisenhower, then it was raised by ronald reagan, george herbert walker bush, bill clinton. there's no reason why we can't look at this gas tax, a few cent also make a difference. there's 700,000 unemployed construction workers. those workers would fill seven super bowl stadiums. we need to put people to work, fix the highways, the bridges, fix the transit situation, it's in our control, we just...
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finding communists under every bed and the other side including reasonable republicans like dwight eisenhower are trying to run the country. i think the american people look at this. i'm predicting now we hold the senate 52-48. >> good for you. i hope you're right. let me go to ron. i think the governor is right are. a lot of lawmakers are sitting around reading ayn rand's "atlas shrugged" like the little red book of mao. all we have to do is deregulate which is how we got into the problem in terms of the financial crisis. everybody knows that we got into problem because of deregulation. they say the answer is deregulation. >> the sub text for all of this whether it's the affordable care act is the idea that the government can't do anything good. you can't let government do anything whether it's health care or immigration. >> don't they win that argument? >> by screwing everything up, you prove that government can't do anything good. if obama is going to do something, even something the republicans want to do like more border enforcement, no, you can't let him do it either. then his governmen
finding communists under every bed and the other side including reasonable republicans like dwight eisenhower are trying to run the country. i think the american people look at this. i'm predicting now we hold the senate 52-48. >> good for you. i hope you're right. let me go to ron. i think the governor is right are. a lot of lawmakers are sitting around reading ayn rand's "atlas shrugged" like the little red book of mao. all we have to do is deregulate which is how we got into...
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we deported family, cesar chavez, walder mondale, dwight eisenhower.hese guys are out of touch, and the fact of the matter is no country can survive an open border no economy no culture can survive it. they have closed borders for people who want do come into other countries. they don't tolerate it. only we do. >> it is auld he was coming from jerusalem, backing up a country that is aggressively defending its border, maybe very -- >> for survival. >> what do you think of the possible republican crop of presidential candidates? right now rand paul leading in a lot of polls. what do you think of him? >> i think we have some very, very good ones. you ask me this everytime. you want me to pick someone and i'm not doing it. >> i like too listen to you bash -- >> i think chris christie is a man whose principles are up for negotiation. i don't know what his principles are. he runs around talking about, we have to governor, we have to be bipartisan. i don't know what he is talking about. dot he? or jeb bush, in the face of the catastrophe on the southern borde
we deported family, cesar chavez, walder mondale, dwight eisenhower.hese guys are out of touch, and the fact of the matter is no country can survive an open border no economy no culture can survive it. they have closed borders for people who want do come into other countries. they don't tolerate it. only we do. >> it is auld he was coming from jerusalem, backing up a country that is aggressively defending its border, maybe very -- >> for survival. >> what do you think of the...
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what the president did for me was what all prior presidents other than dwight eisenhower has done on this issue, and that's to give us more empty rhetoric. i don't think we have any president since eisenhower who has ever had any intention of seriously enforcing our immigration laws. case in point, ten years ago when i launched the minuteman project, i saw very little difference now in so far as enforcing our laws internally than i did in 2004. >> but isn't that the problem, that nothing has been done for years, even though everyone says it's a political problem, that i keep pointing fingers at each other and nobody is doing anything about it? i want to get father cutie in this. >> nobody wants to talk about a fundamental issue that i always find has everything to do with what we see going on in the borders, and it's the fact that this is the result of ignoring your neighbors. our neighbors to the south is something we don't deal with in this country. we spend trillions of dollars in the middle east in a war that obviously hasn't resulted in anything positive. we're spending more mon
what the president did for me was what all prior presidents other than dwight eisenhower has done on this issue, and that's to give us more empty rhetoric. i don't think we have any president since eisenhower who has ever had any intention of seriously enforcing our immigration laws. case in point, ten years ago when i launched the minuteman project, i saw very little difference now in so far as enforcing our laws internally than i did in 2004. >> but isn't that the problem, that nothing...
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in your article, you quote a famous maxim from dwight eisenhower. if you can't solve a problem, enlarge it. don rumsfeld also liked to say that. what do you mean by that in this context for the president? >> he, first of l as i said, he needs to focus a lot of attention on that. frankly, that is part of the reason that we saw a surprise in the amount of money he's asking for. he almost doubled the amount of money, the white house itself had led people to expect was going to be asked for. i think he wanted a big splash. i think he wanted a big story and he needs a big story and a big splash in order to force a resolution of the border. he needs to get the border situation with the unaccompanied children out of the way or at least resolved to some degree, some stability there before he can turn to a lot of people who have been living in this country for a long time, and where the real pressure is from immigration activists which is stop the deportations. give people a break. like you did with deferred action for young people and students. >> of course
in your article, you quote a famous maxim from dwight eisenhower. if you can't solve a problem, enlarge it. don rumsfeld also liked to say that. what do you mean by that in this context for the president? >> he, first of l as i said, he needs to focus a lot of attention on that. frankly, that is part of the reason that we saw a surprise in the amount of money he's asking for. he almost doubled the amount of money, the white house itself had led people to expect was going to be asked for....
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the highway -- the national highway system grew out of dwight eisenhower as a young army captain in 1919ving the first convoy across the united states. it took him 6 62 days. and when i became president, said, i'm going to build this system, the biggest puth lug works project in the history of the world. it's always been a consensus. and agreement. and to not be able to on this one, on executive power, judy, democrats were very sensitive to it when george bush pushed the envelope and assumed more executive power. and then democrats seem to be less more easy and cantankerous when their own president does it. republicans who were mute when george bush was expanding the definition of executive power by power grabs now are sensitive constitutional. this is going nowhere. what it is -- >> woodruff: the lawsuit. the lawsuit. it's a base sweetener for the election of 2014. it's john boehner being able to say, look, we're going after him. we're bringing it to court. and all of a sudden, joh john boehner looks somewhat moderate because john mccain's vice presidential running mate, former governor
the highway -- the national highway system grew out of dwight eisenhower as a young army captain in 1919ving the first convoy across the united states. it took him 6 62 days. and when i became president, said, i'm going to build this system, the biggest puth lug works project in the history of the world. it's always been a consensus. and agreement. and to not be able to on this one, on executive power, judy, democrats were very sensitive to it when george bush pushed the envelope and assumed...
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Jul 7, 2014
07/14
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remember that from 1932-1974 the republicans had the presidency for eight years and that was for dwight eisenhower and they weren't sure they wanted to claim him as a republican. they have had a house of representatives hard at all. i think the course of about 60 years they have a house of representatives for for all those '60s. jude's argue was the democrats were santa claus reef were losing, we cannot santa claus. we're screwed because we weren't about deficits. we need to stop doing that. we need to cut taxes the same with the democrats increased spending. so we can be santa claus. that's we get the to santa claus but i would argue he got some ways by what he wants a first decade of the century with spending increases and tax cuts of every sort all going towards wider and wider deficits in ordeanorder of magnitude we nevd before in the history and i provide numbers in the book. we have these to santa claus operating at the same time. if you think back, it wasn't entirely wrong. he was arguing you kind of give wayside of the budget you can win budget you can win office and if you office and if y
remember that from 1932-1974 the republicans had the presidency for eight years and that was for dwight eisenhower and they weren't sure they wanted to claim him as a republican. they have had a house of representatives hard at all. i think the course of about 60 years they have a house of representatives for for all those '60s. jude's argue was the democrats were santa claus reef were losing, we cannot santa claus. we're screwed because we weren't about deficits. we need to stop doing that. we...
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Jul 13, 2014
07/14
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and dwight david eisenhower, fighter for peace, which came out in 1968, ike reviewed reader's draft inuly 1967. he made almost 180 comments on the manuscript, but he did not question the d-day quote. in fact, i found no evidence in any of our records that ike ever once commented on or corrected the different quotes he found in the work of bying on arers or former comrades. but neither did he use them in his own most detailed account of the june fifth meeting, nor did he use his own most recent statement, okay, we'll go. instead eisenhower wrote five different versions of the quote in drafts of a 1964 article for the paris match magazine. paris is in france, not texas. the article is about d-day, but it had a contemporary strategic purpose, as well. france was becoming more and more independent. nato, reminding the french of their shared sacrifice during the second world war, might strengthen their bond for the allies. i feel sure that an article by you at this moment on the landing would be politically most important. well given this importance, ike presumably put a lot of thought into
and dwight david eisenhower, fighter for peace, which came out in 1968, ike reviewed reader's draft inuly 1967. he made almost 180 comments on the manuscript, but he did not question the d-day quote. in fact, i found no evidence in any of our records that ike ever once commented on or corrected the different quotes he found in the work of bying on arers or former comrades. but neither did he use them in his own most detailed account of the june fifth meeting, nor did he use his own most recent...
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Jul 3, 2014
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dwight eisenhower and lbj and i intend to be one of those. >> but that ad never actually aired.ey reflected in his memoir, my instinct was that the finished product would make people uncomfortable. cheney wound up winning the september 12th primary with 42% in a three-way race and still calls it the toughest election of his house career. his november win was a walk compared to that primary. he won with 59%. hope you enjoyed that little trip down memory lane. >>> turning back to the june jobs report that showed a gain of 288,000 jobs, the markets have responded by surging past the 17,000 mark. all major indicators are in green this morning. so let's bring in jason furman, chair of the white house council of economic advisers and he joins me now. jason, good morning to you. let me just start with -- >> good morning. >> -- your analysis here of what happened today and the fact that it appears that you are vindicated in what you said the first quarter gdp was all about, that this contraction was a unique episode in the recent history of the american economy, that weather was so cata
dwight eisenhower and lbj and i intend to be one of those. >> but that ad never actually aired.ey reflected in his memoir, my instinct was that the finished product would make people uncomfortable. cheney wound up winning the september 12th primary with 42% in a three-way race and still calls it the toughest election of his house career. his november win was a walk compared to that primary. he won with 59%. hope you enjoyed that little trip down memory lane. >>> turning back to...
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Jul 5, 2014
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the dwight d. eisenhower museum hosted multiple events to mark the 70th anniversary of the d-day invasion. coming up next, deputy director of the museum talks about the night that eisenhower decided to invade the coast of norman di. what did he say? who was there? what time was it? this program is 30 minutes.
the dwight d. eisenhower museum hosted multiple events to mark the 70th anniversary of the d-day invasion. coming up next, deputy director of the museum talks about the night that eisenhower decided to invade the coast of norman di. what did he say? who was there? what time was it? this program is 30 minutes.
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within spitting distance of the supreme court could make him president have we ever had since dwight eisenhower a legitimately elected republican president well it's hard to say tom because you know you've had you've had elections where republicans have won by a large margin reagan obviously one broad large margin going for reelection now if you didn't win the one in eighty that obviously would have been a different case nixon won overwhelming seventy two although obviously the watergate issue was was part of that so and of course george h.w. bush became was elected in eighty eight but again to being vice president well courts i mean you're talking about peace and storage patterns that that where one thing leads to another it's hard to it's hard to dissect and say exactly what would have happened if well as it has this become i mean now they're doing voter suppression and you have students in south carolina saying what about this violation twenty six them in north carolina says will not do that not just the not just the thirteenth amendment as this is for the fifty member. this is this is the y
within spitting distance of the supreme court could make him president have we ever had since dwight eisenhower a legitimately elected republican president well it's hard to say tom because you know you've had you've had elections where republicans have won by a large margin reagan obviously one broad large margin going for reelection now if you didn't win the one in eighty that obviously would have been a different case nixon won overwhelming seventy two although obviously the watergate issue...
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Jul 30, 2014
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. >>> on this day in 1956 president dwight d. eisenhowerhe national motto. >> happy birthday to hilary swank. she's 40. "friends" actress lisa kudrow and the governor nater arnold schwarzenegger is 67. i'm frances "today in the bay." >> good morning, 4:30, i'm scott mcgrew. >> i'm kris sanchez, in for laura garcia-cannon. lots to get to this morning. first, let's check your forecast with metrologist christina loren. >> good morning. a live look at san jose. good news, san jose and everybody across the bay area, we have some significant changes coming your way. here's the deal. give and take in the weather department and for today, we're going to cut off some of the humidity but we are going to bring up temperatures. we will be flirting with the triple digits in some spots, still tracking showers on the radar as well. and i've got that weekend fo
. >>> on this day in 1956 president dwight d. eisenhowerhe national motto. >> happy birthday to hilary swank. she's 40. "friends" actress lisa kudrow and the governor nater arnold schwarzenegger is 67. i'm frances "today in the bay." >> good morning, 4:30, i'm scott mcgrew. >> i'm kris sanchez, in for laura garcia-cannon. lots to get to this morning. first, let's check your forecast with metrologist christina loren. >> good morning. a live...
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Jul 13, 2014
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what did general dwight d eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it's puzzling to me that perhaps the most important decision of the 20th century did not -- to history, to pose perrity a memorable quote to mark the occasion, something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision, something iconic like general douglas mcarthur's vow to the people of the philippines, i shall return. the steaks of the invasion merited verbal splendor. if the operation had failed the allies might never have won the war. and yet eyewitnesses to eisenhower great moment of decision could not agree on what he said. he could not even agree with himself. he related five versions of his fateful words to journalists and byinbiographers over the years, perhaps even more mysteriously he wrote five different versions of the statement in a 1964 article commemorating the 20t 20th anniversary of d-day. well, to put those words, whatever they
what did general dwight d eisenhower say when he gave the final order to launch the attack? it's puzzling to me that perhaps the most important decision of the 20th century did not -- to history, to pose perrity a memorable quote to mark the occasion, something to live up to the magnitude of ike's decision, something iconic like general douglas mcarthur's vow to the people of the philippines, i shall return. the steaks of the invasion merited verbal splendor. if the operation had failed the...
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Jul 4, 2014
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. >> the dwight d. eisenhower presidential library and museum hosted multiple events to mark the 0th anniversary of the june 6th d-day invasion of nazi-be onning payed france. coming up next, timothy rives talks about the night isenhour decided to invade the coast of normandy, who was there? what time was it? mr. rives answers that this question is very hard to answer. this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk with you this morning about an elusive d-day mystery that persists despite the millions of words written about the allied invasion about
. >> the dwight d. eisenhower presidential library and museum hosted multiple events to mark the 0th anniversary of the june 6th d-day invasion of nazi-be onning payed france. coming up next, timothy rives talks about the night isenhour decided to invade the coast of normandy, who was there? what time was it? mr. rives answers that this question is very hard to answer. this program is 30 minutes. >> thank you, carl. i want to talk with you this morning about an elusive d-day mystery...
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Jul 27, 2014
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remember from 1932 to 1974 the republicans had the presidency for eight years, and that was for dwight eisenhower and they weren't sure they wanted to claim him as a republican. and they hadn't had the house of representatives hardly at all. i think over the course of about 60 years, they had the house of representatives for four of those 60 years. the reason they're losing, we get to be santa claus, we're scrooge because we're worried about deficits. we need to stop doing that, we need to cut taxes the same way the democrats increase spending so that we can be santa claus two. and i would argue in some ways jude got what he wanted. by the first decade of the century, we had spending increases and tax cuts of every sort, all going towards wider and wider deficits in an arc of magnitude we've never had in our history. so we had these two santa clauses operating at the same time. so if you think back to jude's argument though, it wasn't entirely wrong. he was arguing if you were on the giveaway side of the budget, you can win, and if you decide how you can pay for things, you're going to be on the
remember from 1932 to 1974 the republicans had the presidency for eight years, and that was for dwight eisenhower and they weren't sure they wanted to claim him as a republican. and they hadn't had the house of representatives hardly at all. i think over the course of about 60 years, they had the house of representatives for four of those 60 years. the reason they're losing, we get to be santa claus, we're scrooge because we're worried about deficits. we need to stop doing that, we need to cut...
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Jul 25, 2014
07/14
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look at our history, we are still well below what, you know, the marginal tax rates were under dwight eisenhower or all the way up through ronald reagan. tax rates are still lower for most folks. and what that means is that we probably can make some more headway than closing loopholes that folks take advantage of as opposed to necessarily raising marginal rates. >> joining us now on the right -- or in the right -- no, it says on the right, republican political strategist joe watkins of former white house aide. i don't have any opinion either way. a former white house aide under president george h.w. bush. and on the left, someone that really is -- i don't know. we agree on so much more than we disagree on, zimmy, jimmy williams. both are cnbc contributors. jimmy is i think a little bit confused about where he stands on these things. i don't expect much of an argument here. gentlemen, did you see -- what? did you read the whole transcript, jimmy and joe? >> oh, yes. >> i did, i did. >> all right. >> i think the president -- >> well, let me just say that i'm tired of dividing and preparing for 20
look at our history, we are still well below what, you know, the marginal tax rates were under dwight eisenhower or all the way up through ronald reagan. tax rates are still lower for most folks. and what that means is that we probably can make some more headway than closing loopholes that folks take advantage of as opposed to necessarily raising marginal rates. >> joining us now on the right -- or in the right -- no, it says on the right, republican political strategist joe watkins of...
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Jul 24, 2014
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liz: ronald reagan, dwight d eisenhower. a number one question is the consumer.june the consumer spend more cautiously. what are you going to do about that? that reflect it in business? >> our launch season will be spring, all new branding, all-new marketing, super aggressive. if we deliver beautiful product we will gain market share and hopefully the consumer will appreciate what we are bringing to the market. liz: with the hat, charlie gasparino how would i look in that hat? it looks great on these guys, with a minor twist you can get an older clientele as well. >> the color is all about blue, but it is not your classic navy, fresher more modern blue, and you see it in the fabrics, the model in the middle is wearing kashmir, silken cashmer cashmere summer. in a beautiful linen and wall. so we can bring new fits the american customer. liz: thank you so much. president and chief creative officer, good luck with the rebranding. keep us posted. >> thank you very much. liz: now the dow, nasdaq and the s&p are all positive, not the russell for a moment but the s&p po
liz: ronald reagan, dwight d eisenhower. a number one question is the consumer.june the consumer spend more cautiously. what are you going to do about that? that reflect it in business? >> our launch season will be spring, all new branding, all-new marketing, super aggressive. if we deliver beautiful product we will gain market share and hopefully the consumer will appreciate what we are bringing to the market. liz: with the hat, charlie gasparino how would i look in that hat? it looks...
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Jul 1, 2014
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we'll begin with an introduction by general dwight eisenhower. ♪ >> i have been asked to be the spokesmanion to what you're about to see. it's a story of the nazi defeat on the western front. so far as important, the editors have made an account of the really important men in this campaign. i mean the enlisted soldiers, sailors and airmen that fought through every obstacle to victory. course to tell the whole story would take years. but the theme would be the same. teamwork wins wars. i mean teamwork among nations, services and men. all the way down the line from the g.i. and the tommy to west hats. our enemy in this campaign was strong, resourceful and cunning but made a few mistakes. his greatest blunder was this, he thought he could break up our partnership. but we were welded together by fighting for one great cause. in one great team, a team in which you were an indispensable and working member. that spirit of a free people working, fighting and living together in one great cause have served us well on the western front. we in the field pray that that spirit of comradeship will persi
we'll begin with an introduction by general dwight eisenhower. ♪ >> i have been asked to be the spokesmanion to what you're about to see. it's a story of the nazi defeat on the western front. so far as important, the editors have made an account of the really important men in this campaign. i mean the enlisted soldiers, sailors and airmen that fought through every obstacle to victory. course to tell the whole story would take years. but the theme would be the same. teamwork wins wars. i...
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Jul 5, 2014
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dwight eisenhower gets to show up and start the reactor up. you could actually walk up and hit the reactor -- hit the button in the reactor goes critical. the amount of the pool is -- publicity value of this was immense. what you see here is the goals of the truman administration is try toad atomic energy, get information out there. it does succeed in part. you do not get the tva's all over the world lucky and vision. the researchion of reactors, the public reactors they became, became instruments of foreign policy. we basically started giving them away to other countries for use. it comes away for bringing in and rewarding alleys by -- allies by giving them research reactors. we could not give them power reactors yet, but we could take these baby steps along the way. tool to spreada the nuclear power. that is it. thank you. [applause] >> we are running late. i will ask you to hold your questions and asked him of the speeches at one time -- lunchtime because we have pretty much exhausted our time. 2:00 is lunch, but we have another speaker. >>
dwight eisenhower gets to show up and start the reactor up. you could actually walk up and hit the reactor -- hit the button in the reactor goes critical. the amount of the pool is -- publicity value of this was immense. what you see here is the goals of the truman administration is try toad atomic energy, get information out there. it does succeed in part. you do not get the tva's all over the world lucky and vision. the researchion of reactors, the public reactors they became, became...
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our quotation of the evening , this quote from her 34th president, dwight david eisenhower as we talkbout all of the threats to this country he reminded us only americans can hurt america. back with us, lis wiehl and mercedes colwin. let's turn if e made to the benghazi terrorist suspect abu khattala. it is starting to look stupid that he is in a federal court right now. the judge ruling the case is so unusual and complex it's unreasonable. >> novel. lou: to expect the trial to proceed, but could he whine any louder about what he knew was coming down the path? >> the judges like to whine and the problem is what happened with the investigation is it was the fbi that did the investigation. lou: who dispatched the fbi to make ozzie? >> i'm trying to give you the legal analysis which is once the fbi's attached it becomes a federal court. lou: you put these in passive terms, the fbi was not attached. the fbi was ordered by the attorney general of the united states and for what reason? >> a federal civilian court and now they are dealing with this pickle that they are in because they have t
our quotation of the evening , this quote from her 34th president, dwight david eisenhower as we talkbout all of the threats to this country he reminded us only americans can hurt america. back with us, lis wiehl and mercedes colwin. let's turn if e made to the benghazi terrorist suspect abu khattala. it is starting to look stupid that he is in a federal court right now. the judge ruling the case is so unusual and complex it's unreasonable. >> novel. lou: to expect the trial to proceed,...