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Nov 29, 2015
11/15
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franklin roosevelt did this as well. he understood the media of his time, typically radio, which was a coming medium of the time you have fireside chats. repelling his agenda to new heights of popularity. he had a distinctive voice. whenever he gave the fireside chats he was designed to speak like to the country and people would have him on and through many accounts people walking down the street in the city or in town or wherever and people had their windows open and he would not miss a word of roosevelt fireside chat because everyone was listening and you could hear it from inside the buildings and be on the windows and these were tremendously popular. he understood the importance of communicating directly with the country. this is roosevelt as he moved on in his presidency and he was elected to four terms. his fourth term he did not serve out because he passed away, but he was such a celebrity at the time and was able to convince the people to accept the new deal. now, when he died there was tremendous grief around th
franklin roosevelt did this as well. he understood the media of his time, typically radio, which was a coming medium of the time you have fireside chats. repelling his agenda to new heights of popularity. he had a distinctive voice. whenever he gave the fireside chats he was designed to speak like to the country and people would have him on and through many accounts people walking down the street in the city or in town or wherever and people had their windows open and he would not miss a word...
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Nov 8, 2015
11/15
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george marshall went to franklin roosevelt and said to the --sident >> he has been with the national warble to -- national world war museum. tom is joining us from malden, massachusetts. go ahead, please. you do a great job. i read a lot on the internet about an alliance between hitler and the muslims in the middle east. is there any truth to that, and also i read that the muslims encouraged hitler to exterminate the juice -- the jews. any truth to that keith: i don't think hitler needed much encouragement. i know this has been in the news recently with prime minister netanyahu. visit with the a in 1941fti in jerusalem where they discussed the issue, oblem" as hitler referred to it. nazis had a long history of to this point of looking for solutions on what to do with the including things like sending them all off to zanzibar, was the idea. the final solution really comes desirehrough hitler's for this big empire in eastern europe. i don't think he needed much encouragement on the idea of eliminating the jews. also gypsies, homosexuals, and a number of others. god help you if you were
george marshall went to franklin roosevelt and said to the --sident >> he has been with the national warble to -- national world war museum. tom is joining us from malden, massachusetts. go ahead, please. you do a great job. i read a lot on the internet about an alliance between hitler and the muslims in the middle east. is there any truth to that, and also i read that the muslims encouraged hitler to exterminate the juice -- the jews. any truth to that keith: i don't think hitler needed...
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Nov 7, 2015
11/15
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from a political standpoint, franklin roosevelt understood this. imagine if we tried to launch across channel invasion from 1943, when we2 or knew that we do not have the economic resources or the military resources doubt a to have al -- successful commission. imagine if we got pushed back into the ocean, and it was a failure. it was understood that a lot of democratic support would fade away. people would say, it is too hard to defeat hitler, let's leave him with his foils. there was a lot riding on that invasion. we had to get right. that dictates our strategy. we realize we cannot invade and 1942. in 1943, we realize, it will take another year before we are ready to launch and operation that will be successful. in the meantime, we do have to try to take some pressure off of our soviet allies. the soviets were in a struggle on the eastern front with nazi germany, and basically we have to relieve some structure on them. we find some stress point in africa, and then sicily and italy. host: let me welcome our viewers and listeners, and remind them t
from a political standpoint, franklin roosevelt understood this. imagine if we tried to launch across channel invasion from 1943, when we2 or knew that we do not have the economic resources or the military resources doubt a to have al -- successful commission. imagine if we got pushed back into the ocean, and it was a failure. it was understood that a lot of democratic support would fade away. people would say, it is too hard to defeat hitler, let's leave him with his foils. there was a lot...
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Nov 26, 2015
11/15
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the great presidents of all had that power of communication, lincoln, theodore roosevelt, franklin roosevelt, jack roosevelt, jack kennedy, words matter. words in dewar and they carry on into the following generation. we still quote them. as did martin luther king without the power of his words. that is why it is so important that we all learn to use the english language. one of the startling, marvelous aspects of the wright brothers was the quality of the letters they wrote. it wasn't just that they were correct grammatically, they are powerful, they were effective, they were clear, they could be very funny, they could be very touching. they were incapable at the correction of library of congress proves, there are incapable of writing a short letter or a boring one. if you want to get inside their lives, which is what i wanted to do, as, as a human being, that is where it is. what they put down on paper in the english language. i would have wanted to written a book about the wright brothers even if they had not succeeded in their mission to fly. so much is there to learn from their attitude
the great presidents of all had that power of communication, lincoln, theodore roosevelt, franklin roosevelt, jack roosevelt, jack kennedy, words matter. words in dewar and they carry on into the following generation. we still quote them. as did martin luther king without the power of his words. that is why it is so important that we all learn to use the english language. one of the startling, marvelous aspects of the wright brothers was the quality of the letters they wrote. it wasn't just...
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Nov 2, 2015
11/15
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george bush passed more domestic legislation than any president except lyndon johnson and franklin roosevelt, little known fact. little-known fact. and if george bush passed more good conservative legislation than any president in history. he's a foreign-policy president and not a domestic policy president and i think that's because the domestic policy achievements are sort of overshadowed by the amazing things he did in foreign-policy. so let's put up a collapse of the soviet union and where george bush was instrumental in not. george bush was the vice president. he watched as reagan did the most important thing for those years. it was the military strength. he rebuilt the army and navy and marines. and the soviet union was watching. and gorbachev who came into power in the soviet union in the middle 80s began to understand that the soviets really could not catch up. and gorbachev came to the conclusion that he ought to try to figure out how to bring the soviet union into this family of nations so that there could be economic prosperity and the soviet union. ronald reagan built up the defen
george bush passed more domestic legislation than any president except lyndon johnson and franklin roosevelt, little known fact. little-known fact. and if george bush passed more good conservative legislation than any president in history. he's a foreign-policy president and not a domestic policy president and i think that's because the domestic policy achievements are sort of overshadowed by the amazing things he did in foreign-policy. so let's put up a collapse of the soviet union and where...
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Nov 30, 2015
11/15
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but on february 15, 1933, president-elect franklin d. roosevelt is in miami, florida at bay front park at a democratic party gathering. there are thousands of people there to meet and greet him. he is in the crowd, a short little guy only about five feet tall. he gets up on a chair and aims s weapon at f.d.r. and unfortunately he mortally wounds mayor cermak of chicago who is there. and mayor cermak is famous for his statement bet mere than you to f.d.r. as he is on the way to the hospital. i think that is very patriotic to say that when you're being shot. better me than you. but because of franklin d. roosevelt being the president-elect. had he been killed, john garner one of the 15 might have beens, vice president elect, former speaker of the house, would have been president. most likely the new deal would never have occurred. >> we have video of an interview with zangara in 1933. it's only 30 seconds. let's see what he looks like. >> sure. >> no, sir. >> you like mr. roosevelt as a man? > i like him as -- >> would you shoot me? >> you're not pr
but on february 15, 1933, president-elect franklin d. roosevelt is in miami, florida at bay front park at a democratic party gathering. there are thousands of people there to meet and greet him. he is in the crowd, a short little guy only about five feet tall. he gets up on a chair and aims s weapon at f.d.r. and unfortunately he mortally wounds mayor cermak of chicago who is there. and mayor cermak is famous for his statement bet mere than you to f.d.r. as he is on the way to the hospital. i...
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Nov 29, 2015
11/15
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franklin roosevelt issued executive order 88 banning discrimination and defense industries. appointmentn practices committee to monitor hiring client. legal strategyng segregation culminated in the brown versus the only decision in 19 54. we have here representing the case one of the original briefs for the case. this is for the argument in inring that occurred december 1952. then featured in this case are items from the reservoir collection. it's on a ten-year loan from the foundation to the library. center thesee instructions that rosa parks problemshelp alleviate that were occurring between drivers and riders that were support the help montgomery bus boycott. boardarks served on the of the montgomery improvement toociation which established direct the boycott for about a month she served as a dispatcher and it was her job calls from writers looking for pickups. and to coordinate those with the drivers of private cars and station wagons. we also have from the rosa parks theection is date on from montgomery fair department store to date but for 1955. keep notesed it to abou
franklin roosevelt issued executive order 88 banning discrimination and defense industries. appointmentn practices committee to monitor hiring client. legal strategyng segregation culminated in the brown versus the only decision in 19 54. we have here representing the case one of the original briefs for the case. this is for the argument in inring that occurred december 1952. then featured in this case are items from the reservoir collection. it's on a ten-year loan from the foundation to the...
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Nov 25, 2015
11/15
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it means building on what franklin roosevelt said when they fought for guaranteed economic rights and for all americans. and this country has socialism for the rich and then the poor. end of quote. my view of democratic socialism builds on the success of men other countries around the world who have done a far better job than we have. in protecting the needs of their working families, their elderly citizens, their children, their sick and their poor. democratic socialism means that we must reform a political system which is corrupt, that we must create an economy that works for all, not just the very wealthy. democratic socialism to my mind speaks to a system which for example, during the 1980s, i want you to hear this. allowed wall street to spend $5 billion over a ten-year period, in lobbying and campaign contributes in order to get deregulated. they wanted the government off of their backs, they wanted to do whatever they wanted to do. spent $5 billion over a ten-year period on lobbying and campaign contributions. then ten years later after the greed and recklessness and illegal be
it means building on what franklin roosevelt said when they fought for guaranteed economic rights and for all americans. and this country has socialism for the rich and then the poor. end of quote. my view of democratic socialism builds on the success of men other countries around the world who have done a far better job than we have. in protecting the needs of their working families, their elderly citizens, their children, their sick and their poor. democratic socialism means that we must...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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as much of theat new deal as he did adopt, for some of the reasons as franklin roosevelt, he was extreme the critical of the new deal and new dealer types. in one cabinet meeting he did sh, bute is new deali he did have a troubled relationship. >> my question, completely separate from that, is about the civil war. the loved novels and grew up in a place dominated by the history of the conquest of the west. his favorite history reading was the civil war. >> he did love it. >> he read a lot about that. stephen ambrose's famously told a call from him, he comes he had written the biography of the chief of staff of the general at the beginning of the civil war. and,iked his biography ambroise famously thought it was a joke, that he got a call from the retired president of the united states asking to write his biography. i wonder if his view of the civil war had an influence on a led toe of reading, that a view of the west, a conquest of the west. and his general view of american history. >> certainly to his general view of american history. a lot of these references to the frontier and free l
as much of theat new deal as he did adopt, for some of the reasons as franklin roosevelt, he was extreme the critical of the new deal and new dealer types. in one cabinet meeting he did sh, bute is new deali he did have a troubled relationship. >> my question, completely separate from that, is about the civil war. the loved novels and grew up in a place dominated by the history of the conquest of the west. his favorite history reading was the civil war. >> he did love it. >>...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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FBC
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he won the heart of franklin roosevelt. >> how had jackson been chosen? >> he was a good looking man. hitler started talking to him. >> how did you go about collecting the evidence presented in these trials? >> the germans had a history of writing things up, making notes the amount of documents we found was amazing..o cf1 o we were able to rely on memos themselves as prepared. >> interestingly the nazis did very little about destroying records. there was a death camp, an outhouse in austria. they kept death books where they recorded every person who was murdered. so and so died at 12:01. so and so died at 12:02. they all died of heart attacks. >> as the court takes shape, the war still rages in the pacific. japanese watched the fate of >> oliver: summer, 1945, wars still >>> summer 1945, war still raged in the pacific. after an epic battle for okay -pfor final invasionnof japan. nazi leaders sat behind bars in a prison, japanese war were well aware they could suffer the same fate. the center holds thousands of documents a a testing to japanese war crimes.
he won the heart of franklin roosevelt. >> how had jackson been chosen? >> he was a good looking man. hitler started talking to him. >> how did you go about collecting the evidence presented in these trials? >> the germans had a history of writing things up, making notes the amount of documents we found was amazing..o cf1 o we were able to rely on memos themselves as prepared. >> interestingly the nazis did very little about destroying records. there was a death...
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Nov 9, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN2
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two months later, franklin roosevelt is next to the mayor of chicago and an assassin ss shoots mrs. roosevelt and arthud wasn't sure's question is what would have happened if churchill and roosevelt had died.use we just deal with the words butr on the other hand we see in the 30s and also in the '90s thee 't readershiphe counts. le bill clinton shaped his times but he was also lucky. barack obama wasn't as lucky.n i remember in 2009 when you look at barack obama and you realize it is one thing to launch my wae campaign when everything lookeda like peace and prosperity and if you knew that it was going to crash but you realize all of a sudden that i've got work to do and bill clinton was blessed by god eight years of peace and prosperity. >> in some ways more portrait of clinton is that of a greek tragedy hero or antihero so here is what you wrote in the book. this is directly out of the buck. tal the ambition and triumphs. economically unbalanced, too vulnerable to the evil plans of os osama bin laden and politically colorized.e bl hi you blame him for the polarization?? i'm surpris
two months later, franklin roosevelt is next to the mayor of chicago and an assassin ss shoots mrs. roosevelt and arthud wasn't sure's question is what would have happened if churchill and roosevelt had died.use we just deal with the words butr on the other hand we see in the 30s and also in the '90s thee 't readershiphe counts. le bill clinton shaped his times but he was also lucky. barack obama wasn't as lucky.n i remember in 2009 when you look at barack obama and you realize it is one thing...
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Nov 30, 2015
11/15
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he kept attacking franklin d. roosevelt. he declared that he was going to run. he had not actually announced -- but he was on his way to run a for president in 1936 when he is assassinated by a medical doctor. he dies on september 10. the surgery about him is controversial. the way he was mistreated as far as medical care, there is a lot of conspiracy theories that there were maybe people who just wanted him dead. some say dr. rice did not actually shoot him. his son spent his life trying to defend his father. we never had a chance to find out because the guards around long opened fire on rice and pumped and full of 61 bullets in baton rouge. there are still questions about what really happened. whether it could be by accident or not by accident. it is very controversial. brian: dr. rice was 25? prof. feinman: yes. brian: we have some video of his son and you will see -- this is from 2014. >> my mother had always been a very vague about it. she told me that my father was killed in an accidental shooting. half a time, they are thinking he is the son of an assassi
he kept attacking franklin d. roosevelt. he declared that he was going to run. he had not actually announced -- but he was on his way to run a for president in 1936 when he is assassinated by a medical doctor. he dies on september 10. the surgery about him is controversial. the way he was mistreated as far as medical care, there is a lot of conspiracy theories that there were maybe people who just wanted him dead. some say dr. rice did not actually shoot him. his son spent his life trying to...
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Nov 30, 2015
11/15
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the new leadership in the party of frank -- the new leadership and the party of john kennedy, franklin roosevelt, and barack obama. will leave you with this final thought. , iple sometimes say to me know it is shocking in new hampshire that people can walk up to presidential candidates and tell them exactly what is on their mind, but that is what you do, isn't it? sometimes people come up to me and they say, governor o'malley, you have a tough fight. these are really some tough's. you know what? i kind of like the tough fight. i didn't run for mayor of baltimore in 1999 because things were going well in baltimore. i didn't take on the job of the governor of one of these great states at a time when things , leaving my state well this nation was going through a recession, but i thought to save every house i could come every job i could. we made progress together. for those who say to me that i have a tough job, there are lots of people who live you in the eye and say to you that you have a tough fight. giving your children a future with more opportunities and you have enjoyed. ishink the tops of t
the new leadership in the party of frank -- the new leadership and the party of john kennedy, franklin roosevelt, and barack obama. will leave you with this final thought. , iple sometimes say to me know it is shocking in new hampshire that people can walk up to presidential candidates and tell them exactly what is on their mind, but that is what you do, isn't it? sometimes people come up to me and they say, governor o'malley, you have a tough fight. these are really some tough's. you know...
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Nov 9, 2015
11/15
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CNNW
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franklin roosevelt told people he wanted to be president when he was in college. ink teddy roosevelt did the same thing. may be lots and lots of people think they're going to be president. many are called. few are chosen. >> absolutely. >> so i think that destiny in this case is really about what's built into the family. and it's -- i just -- the ties in this family are so strong and they push people forward. you know, and just as joe kennedy wanted his oldest son to run and then when he died in the war, they turned to jack kennedy and helped him to become president. families have these kind of traditions. and there have been a few families in american life starting with the adams family, going to john adams and john quincy adams. i do want to two back to one point, if i might, poppy. >> sure. >> that is how remarkable it is we have just learned about all these diaries. >> right. >> and john meacham has been in there having interviews since 2006. this has been a nine-year-long project. this is a big, big deal. who knew that he kept all these audio diaries? i think
franklin roosevelt told people he wanted to be president when he was in college. ink teddy roosevelt did the same thing. may be lots and lots of people think they're going to be president. many are called. few are chosen. >> absolutely. >> so i think that destiny in this case is really about what's built into the family. and it's -- i just -- the ties in this family are so strong and they push people forward. you know, and just as joe kennedy wanted his oldest son to run and then...
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Nov 8, 2015
11/15
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WNYW
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the guy asked me, the headmaster, asked me who my said franklin roosevelt. roosevelt?" and i said yes, he got us out of world war ii. that he was shocked. my father almost lost his temper, he said he was elected by the american people four times. the guy had served with very conservative people who hated roosevelt during the war and the only supposed roosevelt was hated by the american people. far from it, but i suppose i don' t think i would use the term role model, but he was a kind of hero for me. i grew up interested in policy, i did end up going to that school because my mother successfully restrained my father. anthony: do you think you have lived the american dream, sir? sec. summers: i think i have been incredibly lucky, and i lived in america, and that sense i suppose i kind of lived the american dream. i grew up very fortunate. i grew up in a wonderful, wonderful household. i hadad a wonderful family, and so i would hardly call myself a rags to riches story. in that sense, i' m not sure i' m i feel incredibly lucky to have had the set of opportunities that i h
the guy asked me, the headmaster, asked me who my said franklin roosevelt. roosevelt?" and i said yes, he got us out of world war ii. that he was shocked. my father almost lost his temper, he said he was elected by the american people four times. the guy had served with very conservative people who hated roosevelt during the war and the only supposed roosevelt was hated by the american people. far from it, but i suppose i don' t think i would use the term role model, but he was a kind of...
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Nov 26, 2015
11/15
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in march of 1941, president franklin roosevelt dedicated the national gallery of art just down the mall the finest art of europe and ransacked the property of jewish families, a vast program of theft and destruction. with the war -- world at war, as the president -- president roos svel roosevelt opened a new home for the world's master works, the president spoke the truth at the heart of what the monument men's miss was. he said this. whatever these paintings may have been to men -- and women -- who looked at them generations back, today they are not only works of art, today they are the symbols of the human spirit, symbols of the world, the freedom of the human spirit has made. as we saw in the film president eisenhower said, these are the ideals for which the war was fought. thank you ann eisenhower for honoring us with your presence today as well. [ applause ] the men and women of the monuments, fine arts and archive section were charged with a staggering responsibility by general -- then general eisenhower. across a world set ablaze by war's destruction, against the lost thrashes of
in march of 1941, president franklin roosevelt dedicated the national gallery of art just down the mall the finest art of europe and ransacked the property of jewish families, a vast program of theft and destruction. with the war -- world at war, as the president -- president roos svel roosevelt opened a new home for the world's master works, the president spoke the truth at the heart of what the monument men's miss was. he said this. whatever these paintings may have been to men -- and women...
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Nov 30, 2015
11/15
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to halt the march, president franklin roosevelt issued executive order 8802 banning discrimination in defense industries receiving government contracts and setting up the committee to monitor hiring and compliance. we are moving into the civil rights era section. strategy's long legal segregation culminated in the brown versus the board of education decision in 1954. we have here representing the case one of the original briefs for the case. this is for the argument, the hearing that occurred december 9, 1952. featured in this case are items from the rosa parks collection which the library received on loan from the howard buffett foundation in september of 2014. it is on loan from the foundation to the library. we have in the center instructions rosa parks wrote to help alleviate problems andrring between drivers pick up riders organized in the carpool to help support the montgomery bus boycott. rosa parks served on the board of the montgomery improvement association, which was the organization established to -- to directthat the bus boycott. for about a month, she served as dispatche
to halt the march, president franklin roosevelt issued executive order 8802 banning discrimination in defense industries receiving government contracts and setting up the committee to monitor hiring and compliance. we are moving into the civil rights era section. strategy's long legal segregation culminated in the brown versus the board of education decision in 1954. we have here representing the case one of the original briefs for the case. this is for the argument, the hearing that occurred...
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141
Nov 11, 2015
11/15
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KQED
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rose: which won a pulitzer prize. >> and he size me afterwards because i had written about franklin roosevelt, andrew jackson an he told me, i remember sitting on the porch on kennebunkport, he said i am not fdr, i am not churchill, i am not a lion, and what he was is a unique american odyssey, we shall not see his like again, and he was -- part of his appeal is that he didn't think he was -- he doesn't understand -- even to this hour i think he doesn't fully appreciate the impact he had on the country. >> rose: and the impact was? >> well, he ended the cold car without gierg a shot. he without firing a shot. >> rose: and also navigate add sense that the russians did not .. feel he was jumping all over them in his own victory celebration? >> for those who think the personal doesn't matter in the political, our friend henry kissinger sometimes say it doesn't matter whether with they like you, it doesn't matter, characters of nations are not the characters of people, not true at all. >> rose: in his belief? >> in kissinger's belief. >> rose: in kissinger. >> in bush's matter he believed that. >
rose: which won a pulitzer prize. >> and he size me afterwards because i had written about franklin roosevelt, andrew jackson an he told me, i remember sitting on the porch on kennebunkport, he said i am not fdr, i am not churchill, i am not a lion, and what he was is a unique american odyssey, we shall not see his like again, and he was -- part of his appeal is that he didn't think he was -- he doesn't understand -- even to this hour i think he doesn't fully appreciate the impact he had...
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Nov 7, 2015
11/15
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KRON
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self-esteem, you might also want to keep in mind a quote from eleanor roosevelt, wife of president franklin roosevelte said, "no one can make you feel inferior without your consent." definitely, words to live by. for "teen kids news," i'm amelia. ♪ >> most american students choose to learn spanish or french. but another language is catching up fast. >> it's the most widely spoken language in the world, and yet, for many years, few schools in the u.s. offered it. but as ellie reports, that's now changing. >> fireworks... paper... the compass. these are just some of the many inventions to come from china. here's another one: mandarin. in a country that's said to have more than 2,000 dialects, mandarin is china's official language. [ speaking chinese ] when rong rong le started teaching mandarin to american students back in the 1980s, scenes like this were rare. but as china has become a major economic power, interest in its language has grown dramatically. [ speaking chinese ] >> i think their ability to converse fluently in mandarin will serve them incredibly well, in a variety of ways going forward.
self-esteem, you might also want to keep in mind a quote from eleanor roosevelt, wife of president franklin roosevelte said, "no one can make you feel inferior without your consent." definitely, words to live by. for "teen kids news," i'm amelia. ♪ >> most american students choose to learn spanish or french. but another language is catching up fast. >> it's the most widely spoken language in the world, and yet, for many years, few schools in the u.s. offered...
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Nov 7, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN3
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franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin, pleading for a different front. where do we fight? we decided we would land in north africa. and so we tell the story in this north african farm house that we are spending in of that decision and its consequences. the problem we are greater face after we decide to go into north africa is: can our troops actually fight the battle hardened nazi army and win? behind me over here is our weapons case. featured are handguns, rifles, shotguns, mortars, other weapons that we are going to use to fight in europe. included in this case is the m-1 garand rifle. we also have the m-11 a1 pistol in this case. it was designed by john browning, and it is going to become the standard issue, very popular pistol that is going to be issued to many u.s. army personnel. in the museum, we try to build in environmental challenges that the u.s. faced, our forces faced around the world and world war ii. and so in north africa, of course, the desert is as big of a challenge as the enemy at times. and so, what we have her
franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin, pleading for a different front. where do we fight? we decided we would land in north africa. and so we tell the story in this north african farm house that we are spending in of that decision and its consequences. the problem we are greater face after we decide to go into north africa is: can our troops actually fight the battle hardened nazi army and win? behind me over here is our weapons case....
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Nov 2, 2015
11/15
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the meantime, the soviet union was taking a terrible pounding on the eastern front, and so franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin's pleading for a second front, but it would not be in france. so where would we fight? we decided we would land in north africa. so we tell the story of this north african farmhouse we are standing and that decision and its consequences. the problem we will face is, can our troops, green, young citizen soldiers, fight the battle hardened nazi army and win? we are now entering the north african gallery here at the museum. behind me over here is our weapons case. featured are handguns, rifles, shotguns, mortars, other weapons that we are going to use to fight in europe. included is this in one grand grand rifle, which became the standard rifle for infantrymen in the united states army. we also have the a-11 pistol in this case. it was designed by john browning, and it will become the standard issue pistol, a very popular pistol, that will be issued to many u.s. army personnel. in the museum, we tried to build
the meantime, the soviet union was taking a terrible pounding on the eastern front, and so franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin's pleading for a second front, but it would not be in france. so where would we fight? we decided we would land in north africa. so we tell the story of this north african farmhouse we are standing and that decision and its consequences. the problem we will face is, can our troops, green, young citizen...
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Nov 22, 2015
11/15
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WPVI
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franklin delano roosevelt made that decision, as well.n 1988, the united states repudiated that decision. we not only apologized to japanese-americans, we paid reparations to japanese-americans because that was the wrong decision based on polling. >> let me get renee. i want to know what you think about this. >> my concern is that people are really nervous about this whole process. it's not what you say, it's how you say it, and that's a big thing, and i think -- and i'm going with senator toomey. i think we have to look at the process. 47 democrats went against the president and said we have to wait and look at this whole process and make sure that we have everything in order, everything in place, and i think that's what needs to happen. >> but my fear is that they went against the president out of their own political calculation because of the polls, because those democrats who switched are not in safe seats. >> and it works. >> you know i know. >> yeah, yeah. >> you know i know. >> it works -- the strategy. >> that's right. well, we kn
franklin delano roosevelt made that decision, as well.n 1988, the united states repudiated that decision. we not only apologized to japanese-americans, we paid reparations to japanese-americans because that was the wrong decision based on polling. >> let me get renee. i want to know what you think about this. >> my concern is that people are really nervous about this whole process. it's not what you say, it's how you say it, and that's a big thing, and i think -- and i'm going with...
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Nov 26, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN3
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and so franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin's pleading for a second front, but it wasn't going to be in france. so where do we fight? they decided that we would land in north africa. and so we tell the story in this north african farmhouse that we're standing in, of that decision and its consequences. the problem that we're going to face after we decide to go into north africa is, can our troops, green, young citizen soldiers aptly fight the battle hardened nazi army and win? so we're now entering the north african gallery here at the museum. and behind me over here is our weapons case. featured in this weapon are handguns, rifles, shot guns, mortars, other weapons that we are going to use to fight in europe, included in this case is the m 1 grand rifle which became the standard rifle for infantrymen in the united states army. we also have the m 11 a 1 pistol in this case, designed by john brunning, and it's going to become the standard issue, very popular pistol that's going to be issued to many u.s. army personnel. in the museu
and so franklin roosevelt and winston churchill realized they had to do something to meet joseph stalin's pleading for a second front, but it wasn't going to be in france. so where do we fight? they decided that we would land in north africa. and so we tell the story in this north african farmhouse that we're standing in, of that decision and its consequences. the problem that we're going to face after we decide to go into north africa is, can our troops, green, young citizen soldiers aptly...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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FBC
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he won the heart of franklin roosevelt. >> how had jackson been chosen? >> he was a good looking man. hitler started talking to him. >> how did you go about collecting the evidence presented in these trials? >> the germans had a history of writing things up, making notes the amount of documents we found was amazing..o cf1 o we were able to rely on memos themselves as prepared. >> interestingly the nazis did very little about destroying records. there was a death camp, an outhouse in austria. they kept death books where they recorded every person who was murdered. so and so died at 12:01. so and so died at 12:02. they all died of heart attacks. >> as the court takes shape, the war still rages in the pacific. japanese watched the fate of >> oliver: summer, 1945, wars still >>> summer 1945, war still raged in the pacific. after an epic battle for okay -pfor final invasionnof japan. nazi leaders sat behind bars in a prison, japanese war were well aware they could suffer the same fate. the center holds thousands of documents a a testing to japanese war crimes.
he won the heart of franklin roosevelt. >> how had jackson been chosen? >> he was a good looking man. hitler started talking to him. >> how did you go about collecting the evidence presented in these trials? >> the germans had a history of writing things up, making notes the amount of documents we found was amazing..o cf1 o we were able to rely on memos themselves as prepared. >> interestingly the nazis did very little about destroying records. there was a death...
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Nov 25, 2015
11/15
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FOXNEWSW
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but it doesn't hold up franklin roosevelt did not intern irish americans and german. japanese americans and let's emphasize they were americans because they weren't white. it was racism and that was irrational roosevelt wasn't concerned that the nazis were trying to sneak nazis into this country along with jewish children during the war. it's that we didn't want' jews in this country. america was largely anti-semitic country in the 40s and that's what that was about. that was irrational. but it is not irrational to be concerned about isis sneaking terrorists in to this country along with the refugees. it is not crazy. it's a legitimate concern so i personally -- look, the aanalogy is weak. >> -- comparison what they say in philosophy class. >> intellectually lame. and in my personal view it's obscene also. >> why is it obscene. harry smith is a liberal man but is he not a bomb thrower. why would you say it would be obscene? >> i was based in california in the 70's. i interviewed these people and i interviewed their children and i have been to the camps. what we did to
but it doesn't hold up franklin roosevelt did not intern irish americans and german. japanese americans and let's emphasize they were americans because they weren't white. it was racism and that was irrational roosevelt wasn't concerned that the nazis were trying to sneak nazis into this country along with jewish children during the war. it's that we didn't want' jews in this country. america was largely anti-semitic country in the 40s and that's what that was about. that was irrational. but...
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Nov 14, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN3
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here we are at the franklin roosevelt library. before i launch into how i wrote a graphic novel with a brilliant artist, i thought i would give you president roosevelt and ask you how do you think -- how many of you think he is to mean in this picture? did our artist do that? raise your hand if you think he's too mean? no one thinks so? anyone thinks he's too nice? does anyone have an objection to the cigarette? [laughter] >> did we get the cigarette wrong? some people said we drew the wrong kind of cigarette holder. did we get it wrong? so when we first drew this picture, he had no pupils in his eyes. it was sort of more blank. unknowable because he couldn't see anything behind the glasses. genius, andwho is a i spoke back and forth. i kind of had the impression that to make him have no eyes was to make him too creepy. i didn't like it. my aim with this book is to convey knowledge, not just opinion. i don't think roosevelt was a creep. when you have a creepy looking somedent, that attracts readers, right? readers like violence, se
here we are at the franklin roosevelt library. before i launch into how i wrote a graphic novel with a brilliant artist, i thought i would give you president roosevelt and ask you how do you think -- how many of you think he is to mean in this picture? did our artist do that? raise your hand if you think he's too mean? no one thinks so? anyone thinks he's too nice? does anyone have an objection to the cigarette? [laughter] >> did we get the cigarette wrong? some people said we drew the...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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i actually think that culturally and temperamental your father has more in common with franklin roosevelttheodore roosevelt, and even the founding fathers that he does with people in his own time. i really do. the public service was an extension of yourself, it was expected of you. if you could get to the top it was fabulous, but at any level. walking across and passes cochran chapel finds out the news broke over the radio about to 20 in the afternoon he immediately decides that he wants to serve. he immediately knows he wants to be inan aviator, and he told me command i think it's the 1st time that he even considered at that point joining the royal canadian air force. he did not have to be 18 and they were already mobilized obviously. the existing situation with the war in europe. he hits june 12, 1942. he is already written letters to the navy to get signed up. he -- henry stimson, sec. of work war gives an impromptu speech at the end of her graduation saying i think many of you should go on and get a couple of years of college. it is a long war and you will be more useful. their grandf
i actually think that culturally and temperamental your father has more in common with franklin roosevelttheodore roosevelt, and even the founding fathers that he does with people in his own time. i really do. the public service was an extension of yourself, it was expected of you. if you could get to the top it was fabulous, but at any level. walking across and passes cochran chapel finds out the news broke over the radio about to 20 in the afternoon he immediately decides that he wants to...
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Nov 26, 2015
11/15
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the germans surrendered gathered across the world chanting long live the great americans the franklin roosevelt, the american president they danced s. churchill put it so eloquently the greatest outburst of joy of mankind. roosevelt had one though war and it was one of the triumphant fruits of 1944 but then roosevelt after all he had done had his emancipationist of proclamation moment. think of abraham lincoln for a second. and despite opposition n in the north in his own cabinet of the emancipation in proclamation not just keeping the union together but to be more profound about freedom and liberation but roosevelt never quite did that with the final solution. sometimes what we see as a result that leaves the gate being hole in history. so what is "1944"? a story of her awake actions of the story of magnificent leadership the most profound for the american at ever fought and a story of leadership and decisions made. it is also a story of a tragedy whose lips to our vendors it is the greatest of years that we can imagine but also one of the saddest. thank you very much. [applause] i will take q
the germans surrendered gathered across the world chanting long live the great americans the franklin roosevelt, the american president they danced s. churchill put it so eloquently the greatest outburst of joy of mankind. roosevelt had one though war and it was one of the triumphant fruits of 1944 but then roosevelt after all he had done had his emancipationist of proclamation moment. think of abraham lincoln for a second. and despite opposition n in the north in his own cabinet of the...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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this, i actually think that culturally and temperamentally your father has more in common with franklin rooseveltdore roosevelt, and even the founding fathers than he does with many people in his own time. >> really? >> i really do. where public service was an extension of yourself, it was expected of you. if you could get to the very top it was fabulous, but at any level he always, we all know the story but it's worth telling again. its december 7, 1941 families walking across the campus at andover. the chaplain, find out the news about pearl harbor, that sunday. eating you decide he wants to serve. he really knows he wants to be an aviator and he told me, and i think this was the first time, i had never heard it, couldn't find, had even considered at the point joining the royal canadian air force because you didn't have to be 18 and they were already mobilized because of the war, because of the existing situation with the war in europe. he gets to june 12, 1942. he has already written letters to the navy to get signed up. henrik stenson from the sector of four, gives an impromptu speech at ando
this, i actually think that culturally and temperamentally your father has more in common with franklin rooseveltdore roosevelt, and even the founding fathers than he does with many people in his own time. >> really? >> i really do. where public service was an extension of yourself, it was expected of you. if you could get to the very top it was fabulous, but at any level he always, we all know the story but it's worth telling again. its december 7, 1941 families walking across the...
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Nov 19, 2015
11/15
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LINKTV
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biden, because mum's the word, the democrats have decided that franklin delano roosevelt, one of hisachievements--the 1938 federal minimum wage law--was never to be discussed in this campaign. elizabeth warren is not allowed to discuss it. joe biden is not allowed to discussed it. george miller doesn't discuss it publicly. he put in a bill under our stress just for pro forma. never had a press conference. nancy pelosi doesn't discuss it. richard trumka of the afl doesn't discuss it. and the minimum wage today adjusted for inflation, as i mentioned, would put tens of billions of dollars at ten bucks an hour--tens of billions of dollars in people's hands to jump-start for the recessionary economy. biden could have skewered ryan, and he was muzzled because obama doesn't want to discuss this because he might be accused of being against small business, who he's given 18 tax breaks by his own admission on the first debate. 18 tax breaks, and 2/3 of all low-income workers are employed by 50 large corporations, like wal-mart and mcdonald's, whose ceos get an average of $10 million a year. an
biden, because mum's the word, the democrats have decided that franklin delano roosevelt, one of hisachievements--the 1938 federal minimum wage law--was never to be discussed in this campaign. elizabeth warren is not allowed to discuss it. joe biden is not allowed to discussed it. george miller doesn't discuss it publicly. he put in a bill under our stress just for pro forma. never had a press conference. nancy pelosi doesn't discuss it. richard trumka of the afl doesn't discuss it. and the...
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Nov 15, 2015
11/15
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political reality or expedience, he shared a progressive interpretation of the american past with franklin roosevelt and other comment administration fulfills, which led him to include federal welfare programs as part of his "middle way. the significance of the frontier in eisenhower history. is the point at which i was going to end my remarks until i learned that after he left the white house, eisenhower became a big supporter of planned parenthood. i don't say this in order to flow fuel on the fire raging as if it needed any help. i just wanted to show how views colored his view on other important questions. eisenhower had rejected a role for the state in providing birth control and information of birth a december 1959 press conference when he was asked of the united states should provide family planning information as part of economic aid packages. anything thatne not more emphatically a subject that is not a proper political or governmental activity or function of responsibility. the government has not and will not so long as i am here have a positive clinical doctrine in this program that has t
political reality or expedience, he shared a progressive interpretation of the american past with franklin roosevelt and other comment administration fulfills, which led him to include federal welfare programs as part of his "middle way. the significance of the frontier in eisenhower history. is the point at which i was going to end my remarks until i learned that after he left the white house, eisenhower became a big supporter of planned parenthood. i don't say this in order to flow fuel...
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Nov 30, 2015
11/15
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FOXNEWSW
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we have had great leaders, whether it's franklin roosevelt, you know, all the way through.his is ridiculous. >> pat can't bring himself to say reagan but he was great. >> no, i could cite them, harry truman, others, you know, eisenhower. this is not what we are used to, and it is an outrage and it's scary and everyone has a right to be scared. >> john, you're going to do the interviewing for a second. >> well, doug and i have talked for a long time. the gop establishment stories keep coming out, packs, attacks on trump. will the establishment let trump win the nomination? >> see, i think the answer to that is no. they won't let trump win. they'll change the rules. >> why? >> because they are scared that trump jeopardizes their political franchise. >> isn't this up to the voters, up to the people? >> it is but we've seen the republican elites and democratic elites -- >> a real quick question quickly, from randy boulais. do republicans with the super delegates who could effectively tilt the nomination. >> no. >> i'm curious how do you stop what people want? >> if i could just
we have had great leaders, whether it's franklin roosevelt, you know, all the way through.his is ridiculous. >> pat can't bring himself to say reagan but he was great. >> no, i could cite them, harry truman, others, you know, eisenhower. this is not what we are used to, and it is an outrage and it's scary and everyone has a right to be scared. >> john, you're going to do the interviewing for a second. >> well, doug and i have talked for a long time. the gop establishment...
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Nov 7, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN3
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tohristmas card was sent president franklin d roosevelt and mrs. eleanor roosevelt. this is the christmas card. as we look at how she starts the christmas card, she says "dear president and mrs. roosevelt, christmases ago, we were shocked and deeply hurt to know it was japan who started the war and left the record of shame for history. we were one of the 120 thousand americans of japanese ancestry living on the west coast. frightened and angry, we were eager to do our part to protect these press -- to protect the precious chores of our america. unbelievably, things developed, and by may, we left our beautiful great binary and left friends to live in a camp. in january, 1945, eleanor roosevelt. she says "dear mr. and mrs. suk letter withd your much interest and i appreciate your writing. i am glad all is going well. with best wishes, i am sincerely eleanor roosevelt." we are looking at some of the arts and crafts made in the relocation centers. working in arts and crafts and other activities were key to keeping the sanity of the internees. tule lake was on a dried sea
tohristmas card was sent president franklin d roosevelt and mrs. eleanor roosevelt. this is the christmas card. as we look at how she starts the christmas card, she says "dear president and mrs. roosevelt, christmases ago, we were shocked and deeply hurt to know it was japan who started the war and left the record of shame for history. we were one of the 120 thousand americans of japanese ancestry living on the west coast. frightened and angry, we were eager to do our part to protect these...
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50
Nov 28, 2015
11/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 50
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after a while there was talk about franklin roosevelt and his connection organized crime and someone security backed away, but he had a lot of popularity in the entertainment community in the country the growing entertainment culture. medicines where garden in 1962. had to be sewn into it. so again, it cemented him into this notion that he was the celebrity president because he was perfectly a part of mass culture. very good team president enhancing that way. wanted to see them. the wit and exuberance. a lot of humor, very entertaining. so this became an important part of his presidency, using the mass media at the time. i use the word used is that is,, particularly when jackie and his wife is away a lovely child. he had trouble in his marriage as we now know. hehe was a good father command he wanted people to see that. at the white house sometimes elected in the white house not to have that. this is the famous picture of president kennedy. a little trap door in the front. got wide circulation. was not really obsessed with the issue. very effective for rejecting president kennedy as
after a while there was talk about franklin roosevelt and his connection organized crime and someone security backed away, but he had a lot of popularity in the entertainment community in the country the growing entertainment culture. medicines where garden in 1962. had to be sewn into it. so again, it cemented him into this notion that he was the celebrity president because he was perfectly a part of mass culture. very good team president enhancing that way. wanted to see them. the wit and...
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Nov 24, 2015
11/15
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ALJAZAM
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franklin roosevelt set up a program to help those with mental health disorders.hat happened to those programs? >> they were pilot programs, and after the president died the programs went away. >>> 22 veterans commit suicide a day, and many are vets approaching 60 years old. >> more veterans have killed themselves by suicide than they have been killed in action in all previous wars since world war ii. and, again, it has to do just with the state of chronic neglect. >> commander you spoke out about this, and you didn't necessarily a great response from the military. why? >> well, one the military doesn't look upon favorably those that speak out. >> why not? it's hard to understand that. >> that's a very good point, because our core values of integrity and courage would ties to speak out for the benefit of others. but in this case it was viewed as an embarrassment to the military that they were not prepared to deal with mental health needs and here is a commander telling the commander he wasn't have any clothes on. >> is this partly a macho thing. step up and have a
franklin roosevelt set up a program to help those with mental health disorders.hat happened to those programs? >> they were pilot programs, and after the president died the programs went away. >>> 22 veterans commit suicide a day, and many are vets approaching 60 years old. >> more veterans have killed themselves by suicide than they have been killed in action in all previous wars since world war ii. and, again, it has to do just with the state of chronic neglect. >>...