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Sep 28, 2017
09/17
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the people who fought on the beaches of normandy in vietnam, afghanistan, korea, iraq. it's a symbol of unity. if you can't see the flag and the anthem as symbols of unity but political tools, then perhaps you should think again about which country you're loyal to. >> here is the problem.
the people who fought on the beaches of normandy in vietnam, afghanistan, korea, iraq. it's a symbol of unity. if you can't see the flag and the anthem as symbols of unity but political tools, then perhaps you should think again about which country you're loyal to. >> here is the problem.
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and it's also a streak of we own twenty friends draft horses when they come from normandy they're bred to get through ninety percent of this race so why have so many ten percent are back when we need new horses we tried to normandy in france but it's not always that easy to find good horses. good if you had a bit of innit. began accompanying his father when he was a young boy. just walked out of that if you know it's a lot of fun to work with horses feel the style humans have their own special charm in the procession you see them holding their heads up high and i different a stallion is much my beautiful than a man in contrast a human is with the way it is i'm not here to the animal kingdom the males are more attractive. it takes an hour every day to put on the horses splendid historical harnesses and each horse gets a hoof pedicure to. the test and his helpers have to decorate and harness ten horses every day just imagine what he used to be like every day at breweries in days gone by a lot of responsibility rests on back to his fold his shoulders but he knows his horses. every day you
and it's also a streak of we own twenty friends draft horses when they come from normandy they're bred to get through ninety percent of this race so why have so many ten percent are back when we need new horses we tried to normandy in france but it's not always that easy to find good horses. good if you had a bit of innit. began accompanying his father when he was a young boy. just walked out of that if you know it's a lot of fun to work with horses feel the style humans have their own special...
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Sep 2, 2017
09/17
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and then on d-day by a american soldiers of every color and religion who smashed across the normandyeaches and drove on through to the heart of germany. for the misguided germans who had swallowed the nazi bait, the nazi game did not pay off. the continent of europe was strewn with millions of german bodies, peer area and bodies. carl the farmer was left in the snow outside of moscow. heinrich stayed in italy. and hans, who was going to roll the world, only got a little patch of normandy that he could call his own. we must never let what happened to us to our country. willis never let ourselves be divided by race or color or religion because we all belong to minority groups. i was born in hungary. you are a mason. these are minorities. you belong to other minority groups. you are a farmer, you go to a methodist church. you are right to belong to these minorities. you have a right to be what you are and say what you think because here we have personal freedom, we have liberty, and these are not just fancy words. this is a practical and priceless way of living. we must work at it. we m
and then on d-day by a american soldiers of every color and religion who smashed across the normandyeaches and drove on through to the heart of germany. for the misguided germans who had swallowed the nazi bait, the nazi game did not pay off. the continent of europe was strewn with millions of german bodies, peer area and bodies. carl the farmer was left in the snow outside of moscow. heinrich stayed in italy. and hans, who was going to roll the world, only got a little patch of normandy that...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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it would've been a full-scale invasion the way ike innovate invaded normandy. you still might've had the missiles of october but they might abandon april 1961 instead if this had provoked a superpower confrontation. he definitely was a calmer man in 1960. not a great candidate. he lost that race for reason. he came really close and actually believed he could do one it. y >> thank you. >> you had said one of hisis most admirable traits was his resilience. there was two great comebacks. how did he go aboutco engineering these comebacks, and why did the american people largely accept them. >> the first come back none on to come back from 1960 to 1968 is a great comeback. in 1968, you can't believe the chaos that americans had been i in. what they wanted was some sort of resemblance of normalcy. you find that even the most passionate liberals, they were writing on his behalf swingable here is a seasoned steady him that may be able to get us out of vietnam. i think his ability to present himself as a moderate, as an experienced man was what worked in 1960. i think t
it would've been a full-scale invasion the way ike innovate invaded normandy. you still might've had the missiles of october but they might abandon april 1961 instead if this had provoked a superpower confrontation. he definitely was a calmer man in 1960. not a great candidate. he lost that race for reason. he came really close and actually believed he could do one it. y >> thank you. >> you had said one of hisis most admirable traits was his resilience. there was two great...
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Sep 10, 2017
09/17
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pyle arrived at normandy on the landing craft early in the morning after d-day. his columns would be the first substantive account from a reporter on scene that was published in many newspaper front pages. he strode along omaha beach for hours. hea series of columns, described what he saw to readers. "so you can know and appreciate and forever be humbly grateful to those both dead and alive to did it for you." he saw submerged tanks and overturned boats and trucks and shell-shattered jeeps. there were bodies of soldiers lying in roads covered with blankets. the toes of their shoes sticking up in a line as if on a drill. and other bodies, uncollected, still sprawled grotesquely in the sand or half hidden by the high grass beyond the beach, he wrote. there was, he said, a thin line, just like a high watermark, for miles along the beach. it was strewn with personal gear, gear that would never be needed again, of those who fought and died to give us our entrance into europe. there were soldiers packs toothbrushes, hand grenades. soap, cigarettes. it seemed a pure mir
pyle arrived at normandy on the landing craft early in the morning after d-day. his columns would be the first substantive account from a reporter on scene that was published in many newspaper front pages. he strode along omaha beach for hours. hea series of columns, described what he saw to readers. "so you can know and appreciate and forever be humbly grateful to those both dead and alive to did it for you." he saw submerged tanks and overturned boats and trucks and shell-shattered...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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it would've been gail the way isis invaded normandy. so you still might have had the missiles of october, but they might've been the missiles of april 1961 instead had this provoked a superpower confrontation. but he definitely was a calm her man in 1960. n not a great candidate. lost that race for a reason, that came really close and actually believe he actually won it. >> thank you, sir. >> you had said that one of nixon's most admirable traits was his resilience. there were two great comebacks in his career. one after leaving the presidency in 1960 and after watergate ofh course. how did he go about engineering, ask about engineering complex in light of the american americand people accept them? >> the first comeback called the greatest comeback in a would say that's true. this may be the greatest comeback in political history, from 196268. in 1968, you can't believe the chaos that americans had been in.at what they wanted was just some sort of semblance of normal fee. even the most passionate detractors of richard nixon, norman mail
it would've been gail the way isis invaded normandy. so you still might have had the missiles of october, but they might've been the missiles of april 1961 instead had this provoked a superpower confrontation. but he definitely was a calm her man in 1960. n not a great candidate. lost that race for a reason, that came really close and actually believe he actually won it. >> thank you, sir. >> you had said that one of nixon's most admirable traits was his resilience. there were two...
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Sep 7, 2017
09/17
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a house in provence and rang herfriend in sitting in a house in provence and rang her friend in normandyd be in the same storm. the problem with this story is that the british response is shameful, £32 million is absolutely nothing and it will be spread between many islands and when you consider that barbuda is 90% destroyed according to its prime minister, i knew nothing about and well before this, but it has been british since 1650 and it is strategically important, because 20% of the world's shipping passes through its waters on the way to the panama canal. we have got a lot out ofa name panama canal. we have got a lot out of a name that island, and now, in its hour of need, we are not prepared to do anything like what the french are doing for their islands. we have been ill—prepared and slow to respond. there is a difference that plays into this in how many of our territories have more autonomy than those that are french protectorates. anguilla is british, apparently and unlike some of the other countries that had independence, they say we should be treated exactly like the falkland
a house in provence and rang herfriend in sitting in a house in provence and rang her friend in normandyd be in the same storm. the problem with this story is that the british response is shameful, £32 million is absolutely nothing and it will be spread between many islands and when you consider that barbuda is 90% destroyed according to its prime minister, i knew nothing about and well before this, but it has been british since 1650 and it is strategically important, because 20% of the...
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Sep 10, 2017
09/17
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WJLA
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the american cemetery in normandy is the most visited of a better nd may be known world war ii restingce for fallen troops. died when the u.s. and allies d launched on ni in june of 19-- france. the manila will grave sites have crosses or jewish stars. >> they are laid out in rows in plots and they are beautifully placed in a way that direction they are aligned. sharyl: to me it looks likes attention.anding at >> good point and you are not the first to say that. that is so true. each marker standing row on row a name, a and and a reason to pause reflect. next week, thanks for watching. for more searching stories th >>> from washington d.c. and around the world, this is "government matters" with francis rose. >> thanks for the weekend edition of "government matters". the only show covering the latest news, trends, and topics that matter to the business of government. >> francis is off today. i'm your host colby hochmuth. >> in february, the u.s. navy established a digital warfare office to use science across the service. >> from washington d.c. and around the world, this is "government
the american cemetery in normandy is the most visited of a better nd may be known world war ii restingce for fallen troops. died when the u.s. and allies d launched on ni in june of 19-- france. the manila will grave sites have crosses or jewish stars. >> they are laid out in rows in plots and they are beautifully placed in a way that direction they are aligned. sharyl: to me it looks likes attention.anding at >> good point and you are not the first to say that. that is so true....
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Sep 25, 2017
09/17
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he was the world war ii veteran who served in normandy and fought with our troops to liberate europe from the nazis. unfortunately, mr. hunter spent his final years mostly alone in a nursing home and died without much close family. he literally outlived all the siblings, never married, nor ad any children. as a result he had no one to serve as pallbearers at his funeral, word of his passing reached the folks at winfield senior high school, a small community in rural north central louisiana that i have the privilege of representing. after learning about mr. hunter's fate, six winfield football players, matthew arrell, red jerk, justin lawson, t.j. holman, christian evans, and lee he it's stepped up to -- estes stepped up to serve as pallbearers for mr. hunter n addition the storks folks at the southern funeral home arranged for military honors along with a flag and the playing of taps. i'm so inspired by the action - to matthew, justin, t.j., christian, and lee as well as others in the community who gave mr. hunter the hero sendoff that he so deserved. they didn't know this man, but t
he was the world war ii veteran who served in normandy and fought with our troops to liberate europe from the nazis. unfortunately, mr. hunter spent his final years mostly alone in a nursing home and died without much close family. he literally outlived all the siblings, never married, nor ad any children. as a result he had no one to serve as pallbearers at his funeral, word of his passing reached the folks at winfield senior high school, a small community in rural north central louisiana that...
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belong to the established formants like like the s m m o c which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant . sanctions unfortunately do not work first they ignored secondly they have been long time fact that the certainly new set of sanctions may be both an invitation to the negotiating table but that of the new further tests we facing on the political and diplomatic solution chad in russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative on double suspension. the situation on the ground in syria is changing and then it is changing for the better you know that the process led by. the turkey has led to the separation of the three deescalation dissolves. well life is coming back to normal working with it then in a he's reaching people with the force holding the being being negotiated we can see the political horizon in the syrian crisis. jim and chancellor angela merkel has been met by angry demonstrators with tomatoes at a campaign event in the town of heidelberg merkel reacted calmly to the incident which is now being investigated by police le
belong to the established formants like like the s m m o c which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant . sanctions unfortunately do not work first they ignored secondly they have been long time fact that the certainly new set of sanctions may be both an invitation to the negotiating table but that of the new further tests we facing on the political and diplomatic solution chad in russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative on...
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the established formants like like the s m m always see which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant. sanctions unfortunately do not work first they are ignored secondly they have been a long time factor the certainly new set of sanctions may be both an invitation to the negotiating table but the other new further tests we are stressing on the political and diplomatic solution chad in russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative on double suspension. the situation on the ground in syria is changing and then it is changing for the better you know that the process led by. turkey has led to the segment of this three day escalation dissolves. where life is coming back to normal work humanitarian aid people with the forces all. being being negotiated we can see the political horizon in the syrian crisis. locals in brussels are angry with the e.u. parliament is planning to spend five hundred million euros on a new luxurious building in the heart of the city the current home of the parliament is just twenty two years old but any pays
the established formants like like the s m m always see which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant. sanctions unfortunately do not work first they are ignored secondly they have been a long time factor the certainly new set of sanctions may be both an invitation to the negotiating table but the other new further tests we are stressing on the political and diplomatic solution chad in russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative...
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established formants like like the cement always see which i mentioned or they go into group or the normandy formant. i want to move on to syria because it will be part of the discussion at the general assembly of french president emanuel met close says fighting terrorism is to priority right now so i figure it seems like the assad must go rest is not the dominant stance anymore has something changed in how your un colleagues view the situation. it can not but it made to it even the reluctantly by those who didn't want to admit that this occasion on the ground in syria is changing and then it is changing for the better. you know that the process led by. turkey has led to the establishment of this three day escalations a zones. where life is coming back to normal work humanitarian aid people with the forces old and being being negotiated. at that in that. possess in syria. with every day the situation is changing you can not to cannot deny it but we can see the political horizon in the syrian crisis we need more political life but because a solution can only put be political. i mean you that
established formants like like the cement always see which i mentioned or they go into group or the normandy formant. i want to move on to syria because it will be part of the discussion at the general assembly of french president emanuel met close says fighting terrorism is to priority right now so i figure it seems like the assad must go rest is not the dominant stance anymore has something changed in how your un colleagues view the situation. it can not but it made to it even the reluctantly...
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what isis is going to do in normandy landing in virginia and we're going to have to defend ourselves they always claim all their spondee to defend america from rome. who out there i'm asking you who out there is trying to take over america because it's not the russians putin's got enough trouble in russia it's not everybody out there trying to take us over and yet we're made to believe there's these people waiting right around the corner to come in here and change our way of life my question is who the hell could do that and they could they couldn't do it right now would give star military why do we need a military budget of over eight hundred twenty four billion dollars are you kidding for what to conduct these wars halfway around the world that accomplish nothing korea accomplished nothing vietnam accomplished nothing iraq accomplished nothing afghanistan has accomplished nothing syria has accomplished nothing all of these wars we've been involved in accomplish nothing governor and the military budget for fiscal year twenty eighteen is over eight hundred twenty four billion dollars
what isis is going to do in normandy landing in virginia and we're going to have to defend ourselves they always claim all their spondee to defend america from rome. who out there i'm asking you who out there is trying to take over america because it's not the russians putin's got enough trouble in russia it's not everybody out there trying to take us over and yet we're made to believe there's these people waiting right around the corner to come in here and change our way of life my question is...
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to the established formants like like the memories see which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant. sanctions unfortunately do not work first they ignored secondly they have been long time fact of the certainly new set of sanctions may be motivated to the negotiating table but that of the new tests we facing with a political and diplomatic solution chad and russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative on double suspension. the situation on the ground in syria is changing and then it is changing for the better you know that the process led by. turkey has led to the separate from all the three deescalation is a zones. where life is coming back to mobile work humanitarian aid people with the old. being being negotiated we can see the political crisis in the syrian crisis and you can watch that interview in full or not on friday that's it for me for the moment i'm back in thirty five minutes. how bad can it get how low can russia u.s. relations go at this point it's anyone's guess but one thing is for sure donald trump's call fo
to the established formants like like the memories see which i mentioned all the the group or the normandy formant. sanctions unfortunately do not work first they ignored secondly they have been long time fact of the certainly new set of sanctions may be motivated to the negotiating table but that of the new tests we facing with a political and diplomatic solution chad and russia has already proposed even in july an action plan to solve the crisis with an initiative on double suspension. the...
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root cause of the protracted conflict in southeastern ukraine and despite all the efforts in the normandy for format in the continent group the key for authorities to keep inventing all sorts of schemes to avoid delivering on their obligations according to the means can. complex package of measures of february twelfth twenty fifteen approved by the u.n. security council which is but rushing tends to continue with its constructive work seeking mutually acceptable ways to implement the means could greens the president putin came up with the initiative un mission to assist and guard always sea monitor is seen in the donbass area here we've sent our draft to the un security council we expect that this proposal will help settle in crisis which started after the anti-constitutional coup staged by ultra radical groups and we hope that our partners in europe and in the united states will work with us constructively with out of zero sum games here in the un headquarters we should not forget about the origins of the united nations and the decision of the nuremberg warning to us against the forgetti
root cause of the protracted conflict in southeastern ukraine and despite all the efforts in the normandy for format in the continent group the key for authorities to keep inventing all sorts of schemes to avoid delivering on their obligations according to the means can. complex package of measures of february twelfth twenty fifteen approved by the u.n. security council which is but rushing tends to continue with its constructive work seeking mutually acceptable ways to implement the means...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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really trying to prevent the panzer divisions from the south moving north to reinforce the normandy bridgehead. sas troops were amongst the first to enter bergin bell son, concentration camp. a scene of unbelievable horror greeted them there. there was a extraordinary moment, you remember red sick kings, the boxer, he began to take the law into his own hands. he beat up a german officer. he said no, we must arrest all the people. they must be put on trial. it was simple moment. the sas could have executed every single one of the ss soldiers. instead they sided they should be put on trial. it's a little spark of humanitys what was otherwise unbelievablya brutal war. sorry that photograph you saw was commandant under arrest who was then tried and executed. the sas idea expanded hugely after the war. it spread to france, to belgium, australia, new zealand and most importantly to this country. u.s. delta force was directly modeled on the sas idea and the ideas that sterling came up with back in 1941 are still really the principles on which special forces operate today and they are as important tod
really trying to prevent the panzer divisions from the south moving north to reinforce the normandy bridgehead. sas troops were amongst the first to enter bergin bell son, concentration camp. a scene of unbelievable horror greeted them there. there was a extraordinary moment, you remember red sick kings, the boxer, he began to take the law into his own hands. he beat up a german officer. he said no, we must arrest all the people. they must be put on trial. it was simple moment. the sas could...
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western audiences think about the second world war exactly know in this case you know think the normandy landing you know saving private ryan in the russians that a little bit on the other side of course one of the americans that i've heard that . you know it's already happening mr mongrel and the french president is already saying call the political structure or syria should be formed after the war instead of apologizing for basically supporting and armed insurgency in a sovereign country he's not then and now they should organize well demon is your theory list habits die hard ok well really just like mrs merkel would not like in the beginning of our program with mrs merkel to defend in serbia from russia you know. ten years or twelve years after driven you borked you would swallow that sort of bit together with other western nations. it's media coverage of the they don't there's never been a war they don't like. what right is this is it just hits i mean it's eyeballs i mean war is popular i mean because what i see in the mainstream is that it's just a p.r. arm of the neo cons you know
western audiences think about the second world war exactly know in this case you know think the normandy landing you know saving private ryan in the russians that a little bit on the other side of course one of the americans that i've heard that . you know it's already happening mr mongrel and the french president is already saying call the political structure or syria should be formed after the war instead of apologizing for basically supporting and armed insurgency in a sovereign country he's...
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western audiences think about the second world war exactly no and this is that you know think the normandy landing you know saving private ryan in the russians that a little bit on the other side of course was the americans that i've heard that. you know it's already happening mr monk or on the french president is already just saying call the political structure or syria should be formed after the war instead of apologizing for be it's basically supporting an armed insurgency in a sovereign country he's now down in there how they should organize their well demon if you appear realist habits die hard ok well really just like mrs merkel in the wake of the beginning of our program we've had mrs merkel defend in serbia from russia you know. ten years or twelve years off to do. when you board was full of it sort of it together with other western nations. it's media coverage of the they don't there's never been a war they don't like. what right is this is it just hits i mean it's eyeballs i mean war is popular i mean because what i see in the mainstream is that it's just a p.r. arm of the neo co
western audiences think about the second world war exactly no and this is that you know think the normandy landing you know saving private ryan in the russians that a little bit on the other side of course was the americans that i've heard that. you know it's already happening mr monk or on the french president is already just saying call the political structure or syria should be formed after the war instead of apologizing for be it's basically supporting an armed insurgency in a sovereign...
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Sep 2, 2017
09/17
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full-scale invasion the way iceland invaded normandy.you still might have had the missiles of october but might have been the missiles of april of 1967 if this provoked a super power confrontation. he definitely was a calmer man in 1960, not a great candidate. lost the race for a reason but came really close and actually believed that he had actually won. >> thank you, sir. >> you said that one of nixon east most admirable traits were resilience. two great come baks after losing presidency in 1960 and after watergate, of course, how did he go about engineering the comebacks and why did the american people largely accept them? >> in 1 -- the first comeback which is patrick kennedy written the book called the greatest comeback, i would say that's true to come back from 1960 to ' 68. you can't believe the chaos that americans had been in and what they wanted was some sort of resemblance of normalcy. thompson were writing, were writing on his behalf in the '68 campaign saying, here is the season steady hand that may be able to get us out of
full-scale invasion the way iceland invaded normandy.you still might have had the missiles of october but might have been the missiles of april of 1967 if this provoked a super power confrontation. he definitely was a calmer man in 1960, not a great candidate. lost the race for a reason but came really close and actually believed that he had actually won. >> thank you, sir. >> you said that one of nixon east most admirable traits were resilience. two great come baks after losing...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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lines and really trying to prevent that panzer divisions in the south moving north to reinforce the normandy bridgehead. sas troops were among the first to enter the concentration camp. athena unbelievable horror greeted them. there was an extraordinary moment. the sas idea that sterlie up with that in 1941 the principles of what special forces operate today and they are as important today as they have ever been argued the more important today than they have ever been. i mentioned the other day the u.s. defense secretary said all special forces operate in syria we want them never to know who's coming through the window next and that's a very similar description to the way that sterling approached this war. to finish many things came to me while writing this book but above all we have 19 of the second world war that is written often in black and white. there are heroes and villains in good people and bad people. there was a right-sided pian and a wrong side to be on. i'd become increasingly convinced and writing in this area that it was really peaked in shades of gray. good people do bad thin
lines and really trying to prevent that panzer divisions in the south moving north to reinforce the normandy bridgehead. sas troops were among the first to enter the concentration camp. athena unbelievable horror greeted them. there was an extraordinary moment. the sas idea that sterlie up with that in 1941 the principles of what special forces operate today and they are as important today as they have ever been argued the more important today than they have ever been. i mentioned the other day...
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Sep 17, 2017
09/17
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CNNW
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. >> reporter: he stormed the shores of normandy, survived the battle of the bulge, married a gestapogent and wrote "catcher in the rye." j.d. saling ger became famously private following his only novel about a jaded rebellious teenager. and now danny strong is bringing his life story to the screen with his film "rebel in the rye." >> this is what inspired me because i thought that that was so moving how a veteran, how someone could experience the horrors of war, could deal with it and how they were able to, you know, take that experience, that horrific experience, and channel it into this masterpiece. >> reporter: a 2013 name sake documentary gave the world new aim thi images and now strong is bringing them to life. he was a mefbt counterintelligence corps and would much of his tale while serving overseas. s dramatic echblvents of the wa doubt affected the author. >> sometimes i wake up and i'm screaming. >> reporter: but who-traumatic the 1940s? >> people didn't even know what ptsd was. they didn't discuss it. so to see the path that salinger took, how he took up meditation, yoga an
. >> reporter: he stormed the shores of normandy, survived the battle of the bulge, married a gestapogent and wrote "catcher in the rye." j.d. saling ger became famously private following his only novel about a jaded rebellious teenager. and now danny strong is bringing his life story to the screen with his film "rebel in the rye." >> this is what inspired me because i thought that that was so moving how a veteran, how someone could experience the horrors of war,...
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Sep 11, 2017
09/17
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this is normandy boulevard here in miami beach. on a normal day any hour of the day tons of cars going westbound over here towards the city of miami. there is nobody here because trees like this for a day and half have been lane and had -- lane across the road. seventy-five mile-per-hour winds. that was the impact in southeast florida. the top of the treat was all the way over to the front door of that guy's house. his whole house is covered in mud. it covered the entire area. not down the street business is trying to get back to going. grocery stores are starting to open up a little bit at a time and only a few people at a time are being allowed in to the bay supermarket that have a line of about 50 people standing in the 92-degree florida september heat. that is being worked on more on that in a second. driving around some of the storm surge remnants are still in neighborhoods still under a bit of a day lose as we found this money. one man his house was under 5 feet of water at the peak and it slowly going down. as with utilities
this is normandy boulevard here in miami beach. on a normal day any hour of the day tons of cars going westbound over here towards the city of miami. there is nobody here because trees like this for a day and half have been lane and had -- lane across the road. seventy-five mile-per-hour winds. that was the impact in southeast florida. the top of the treat was all the way over to the front door of that guy's house. his whole house is covered in mud. it covered the entire area. not down the...
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Sep 15, 2017
09/17
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he stormed the shores of normandy, survived the battle of the bulge, married a gestapo agent and wrote.d. sallinger became famously private following the success of his first and only novel about a jaded and rebellious teenager. and now danny strong is bringing his life story to the screen with "rebel in the rye." >> this is what inspired me to take the film. i thought it was so moving how a veteran, how someone could experience the horrors of war, could deal with it and how they were able to, you know, take that experience and then channel it into this masterpiece. >> a 2002 documentary gave new images to sallinger. now they're being brought to life. sallinger was a member of the army's counterintelligence corps and wrote much while serving overseas. a traumatic events of war no doubt affected the author. >> sometimes i wake up and i'm screaming. >> but who talked about post traumatic stress in the 'forts? >> this is a time when people didn't know what ptsd was. it was called battle fatigue. so to see the path sallinger took, how he took up meditation and yoga and how his writing beca
he stormed the shores of normandy, survived the battle of the bulge, married a gestapo agent and wrote.d. sallinger became famously private following the success of his first and only novel about a jaded and rebellious teenager. and now danny strong is bringing his life story to the screen with "rebel in the rye." >> this is what inspired me to take the film. i thought it was so moving how a veteran, how someone could experience the horrors of war, could deal with it and how...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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joined the army not knowing that throughout his term in the british army he would participate in normandy, in the battle of the rhine, racing bergen-belsen or occupying person belgian finishing the war as a commander in germany and one of the occupiers of -- and then going back to palestine and in joining the army going all the way up to the ranks of general and the founder the israeli military intelligence. all of his life and all of his experiences in that battleground which we have seen on the tenth of november 1975. field inning of his speech started by something which was told to my father by a famous jewish leader at the time. he was the leader of the u. ja. he was a survivor and one of the first british officers to enter bergen-belsen and he told my dad he should remember. that's how that part of the speech started with the battle towards this each lasted or over a decade. arab state in an anti-communist bloc together with the national movement which charred and 60s , they decided the way to contain an undefined israel would you by turning zionism and racism because that had an eff
joined the army not knowing that throughout his term in the british army he would participate in normandy, in the battle of the rhine, racing bergen-belsen or occupying person belgian finishing the war as a commander in germany and one of the occupiers of -- and then going back to palestine and in joining the army going all the way up to the ranks of general and the founder the israeli military intelligence. all of his life and all of his experiences in that battleground which we have seen on...
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Sep 18, 2017
09/17
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anthony: matt klein came to miami in 1945 from new york's lower east side by way of the battle of normandyather was much better for me. >> anthony: but there was a lot of gis during the war here, right? >> matt: the war made miami beach for the simple reason that people were stationed here, and they saw a world that they didn't believe. >> anthony: during world war ii, miami saw a massive influx of military personnel. hotels, which had seen a sharp drop in business, made a deal with the government to house troops at the empty resorts. >> matt: they told their parents about it, their parents came down, sons came down, they opened their businesses here, and they were basically jewish at the time and that's how it started. >> anthony: by the fall of 1942, more than 78,000 troops were living in 300 hotels in miami and miami beach. how long have you been running the deuce? >> matt: i took over in 1964. half of my life i've spent here. miami beach has turned over at least six times since i've been here. all that neon is "miami vice." they put it in there. this was their favorite bar. >> anthony:
anthony: matt klein came to miami in 1945 from new york's lower east side by way of the battle of normandyather was much better for me. >> anthony: but there was a lot of gis during the war here, right? >> matt: the war made miami beach for the simple reason that people were stationed here, and they saw a world that they didn't believe. >> anthony: during world war ii, miami saw a massive influx of military personnel. hotels, which had seen a sharp drop in business, made a...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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don, i have to tell you, the greatest generation, when we fought world war ii, when we landed in normandy, there weren't always these excuses the weather is not good. we're not sure if the community can handle it. maybe there's a couple hundred thousand nazis shooting back at us. they landed and got the job done. what you don't see is that same military way of thinking to get it done when these people were attacked by hurricane maria that are experiencing devastation. >> why is that, some lack of foreign or emergency policy experience this we have lots of airplanes and ships and helicopters and lots of resources. why do you think that is? >> i have a sign in my office in city hall in miami beach. it says the speed of the leader determines the rate of the pack. you see it in any organization. i'm sorry to say, we're seeing lack of ceo skills in the white house right now. they don't have the right people in place. they don't activate them. there's no sense of urgency. there's no one in command and control. that's really what's going on. i'm going to call it the way it is. >> mayor, thank yo
don, i have to tell you, the greatest generation, when we fought world war ii, when we landed in normandy, there weren't always these excuses the weather is not good. we're not sure if the community can handle it. maybe there's a couple hundred thousand nazis shooting back at us. they landed and got the job done. what you don't see is that same military way of thinking to get it done when these people were attacked by hurricane maria that are experiencing devastation. >> why is that, some...
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Sep 2, 2017
09/17
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. >> stephen: d-day was a direct reversal from this moment, not far from that normandy is just down the all those people left in 1940 and with your help came back four years later. we met some "dunkirk" veterans, we met about 30 last week at the u.k. premiere. >> stephen: that must have been extraordinary. >> amazing. i said, what do you think of the film? they said, the film was louder than the battle. ( laughter ) it was. which i think really tickled chris nolan. they said everything chris no land puts in the movie was as they experienced it. in that sense, it was beyond exhilarating and scary, but the noise of the bombs at "dunkirk" did fall away on the air. it's a massive stretch of beach. but trapped in chris nolan's amazing vision of this conflict, you can't get away from the sound of the bombs. >> stephen: i think in this clip, you are royal commander who? >> bolton, a naval commander. this was a piece where the tension between the navy and the army about what's the best way to get the men off this beach. >> stephen: jim? >> but it's right there. you can practically see it. >> se
. >> stephen: d-day was a direct reversal from this moment, not far from that normandy is just down the all those people left in 1940 and with your help came back four years later. we met some "dunkirk" veterans, we met about 30 last week at the u.k. premiere. >> stephen: that must have been extraordinary. >> amazing. i said, what do you think of the film? they said, the film was louder than the battle. ( laughter ) it was. which i think really tickled chris nolan....
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Sep 28, 2017
09/17
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the people who fought on the beaches of normandy in vietnam, afghanistan, korea, iraq. it's a symbol of unity. if you can't see the flag and the anthem as symbols of unity but political tools, then perhaps you should think again about which country you're loyal to. >> here is the problem. i think when people are loyal to the flag, loyal to the anthem, but people still see the injustices in the streets that still exist throughout america. we have to address that. yes, we show allegiance but we also see what's happening in police brutality and inequities that exist throughout the country. those things have to be addressed and should be addressed. >> sean: you were wrong on travon martin and ferguson. a lot of people wrong in baltimore. the cambridge police didn't ask stupidly. >> when you see the caskets come home from the battlefields with dead american soldiers and marines in them, do we think about that flag having a skin color? do we think about that flag belonging to a political party? is it the gop's flag, the democrat's flag? does it belong to the urban cities, doe
the people who fought on the beaches of normandy in vietnam, afghanistan, korea, iraq. it's a symbol of unity. if you can't see the flag and the anthem as symbols of unity but political tools, then perhaps you should think again about which country you're loyal to. >> here is the problem. i think when people are loyal to the flag, loyal to the anthem, but people still see the injustices in the streets that still exist throughout america. we have to address that. yes, we show allegiance...
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Sep 11, 2017
09/17
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this is busy normandy boulevard, busy all the time. always traffic.his tells you today is not a normal day. far from normal. most people have not gone back to work. most people are basically cleaning up. so much debris to clean up. this is a 2.5-foot diameter tree. you can see the root system. it all blew down as the winds shifted from the east going west to the south going north. it was a very rough hellacious day. we stood in it for most of the day yesterday, was driving winds, rain, driving paneling that never seem to stop. 30 hours at the southeast coast endured of hurricane irma. nobody was on this, the people who did not evacuate, hiding the other hotels and homes. plenty of neighborhoods still dealing with the effects of the 2-4-foot storm surge, in most cases it has receded, but by far not all. if you are elderly or disabled, well, as we found out today, the days or days after a hurricane can be a frustrating experience. >> first we are going to call our insurance companies for the two autos, i don't even know if the cars will start, because t
this is busy normandy boulevard, busy all the time. always traffic.his tells you today is not a normal day. far from normal. most people have not gone back to work. most people are basically cleaning up. so much debris to clean up. this is a 2.5-foot diameter tree. you can see the root system. it all blew down as the winds shifted from the east going west to the south going north. it was a very rough hellacious day. we stood in it for most of the day yesterday, was driving winds, rain, driving...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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the army not knowing that through his concern term in the british army he would par tis put a in normandy in the battle on the rhine, in a releasing bergen or occupying bergen. finishing the war as a commander in germany and one of the occupiers, and then going back to palestine and joining the army to be created, going all the way up to the rank of general in the israeli army, founder of israeli military intelligence all his life came through, all his experiences in that battle ground which we have seen at the u.n. plannery on the 10th of november 1975. the opening of this speech started by something which was told to my father by a famous jewish leader. the leader of the uja. a bergen survivor. remember my father is one to the first british officers to enter bergen, and he told my dad, you should remember, 10th november is -- that is how that part of the speech started. the battle towards the speech lasted for over a decade. the arab states and the communism block and the palestinian national movement some tart started in the '60s decided the way to contain and undermine israel would be
the army not knowing that through his concern term in the british army he would par tis put a in normandy in the battle on the rhine, in a releasing bergen or occupying bergen. finishing the war as a commander in germany and one of the occupiers, and then going back to palestine and joining the army to be created, going all the way up to the rank of general in the israeli army, founder of israeli military intelligence all his life came through, all his experiences in that battle ground which we...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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you know, the greatest generation when we landed in normandy, omaha beach, juneau beach. we covered that. you didn't hear all kinds of excuses from general eisenhower or fdr. they weren't concerned the community wasn't ready to accept them in northern france or the weather wasn't good. they did what they could to make it happen. administrator long is a capable guy. he's doing the best he can. fema is an amazing organization, but it starts at the top. there's no leadership. there's no executive skills coming out of that white house. and unfortunately the american citizens that comprise puerto rico are the ones suffering the consequences. >> it's actually the opposite, sir. we've been having -- in the first few days after this whole thing while everybody was concerned about the nfl, the president was not tweeting about puerto rico. and when he did tweet about puerto rico, his first response was about how if they hadn't -- >> how they owe wall street banks money. if i was like the mom earlier today who hasn't been able to speak to her son or the women tweeting at me about th
you know, the greatest generation when we landed in normandy, omaha beach, juneau beach. we covered that. you didn't hear all kinds of excuses from general eisenhower or fdr. they weren't concerned the community wasn't ready to accept them in northern france or the weather wasn't good. they did what they could to make it happen. administrator long is a capable guy. he's doing the best he can. fema is an amazing organization, but it starts at the top. there's no leadership. there's no executive...
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Sep 28, 2017
09/17
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there waso process during world war ii when we andlanded on d-day and normandy. we got it done.it of just getting it done. i can tell you the velvet navy, the cruise ship industry they seem to be doing it. they have rescue missing going on. i saw a royal caribbean ship helping people leave and bringing in supplies they're getting it done. where is the federal government and the leadership at the top like dwight eisenhower and fdr. this was an invasion. this is a war. our territory was attacked by a natural disaster. treat it like a war help these people. >> mayor, when you were there, i mean, san juan's mayor is calling out whenever she can on the satellite phone set up for her, what do they need most? and i don't know if that's a worthy question to answer at this point because it seems there are supplies it's actually getting it out there. that's why i >> i can tell you this. the president waited seven days to lift the jones act which he should have done within 24 hours. >> do you think that would have changed it? >> absolutely. what you are saying is with the jones act, only c
there waso process during world war ii when we andlanded on d-day and normandy. we got it done.it of just getting it done. i can tell you the velvet navy, the cruise ship industry they seem to be doing it. they have rescue missing going on. i saw a royal caribbean ship helping people leave and bringing in supplies they're getting it done. where is the federal government and the leadership at the top like dwight eisenhower and fdr. this was an invasion. this is a war. our territory was attacked...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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the roots of the lengthy conflict in ukraine despite despite the attempts of than there were three normandy format and the contact group they authorities in kiev are coming up with a new ploy so as not to implement their commitments under the minsk complex of measures of twelve february twenty fifteen which was approved by the security council of the un but even under these conditions where aiming at working constructively finding mutually acceptable ways of implementing the minsk agreements reacting to the concerns expressed as regards the state of play in the area of security president putin launched the initiative to have a un mission to help protect always see observers in the donbass and to draft resolution on this topic is with the security council we expect that the russian proposal will help settle the crisis within ukraine which erupted as a result of an under constitutional coup d'etat carried out by ultra radicals we do hope of that they will be constructive without a zero sum game interaction on this with our partners in europe and in the united states hair on the premises of th
the roots of the lengthy conflict in ukraine despite despite the attempts of than there were three normandy format and the contact group they authorities in kiev are coming up with a new ploy so as not to implement their commitments under the minsk complex of measures of twelve february twenty fifteen which was approved by the security council of the un but even under these conditions where aiming at working constructively finding mutually acceptable ways of implementing the minsk agreements...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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and later on, we heard about the normandy massacre. which i -- if you don't know what that what it was when the germans captured a unit that was on the road. and they held them prisoner for a short while. and then all of a sudden somebody opened fire from one of the german tanks and so they all opened up. and they killed the whole bunch of americans that were there. when we found out about that, i really believe the attitude -- and i think maybe the gentlemen on the end here can agree with it. i think the attitude over there changed quite a bit. all of a sudden, it was a do or die thing. i don't think anybody wanted to take anything from the germans that they didn't have to. and i don't mean material things. i'm talking about tricks. everything -- everything was on guard from then on. other than being scared as hell all the time, that was it. >> i can understand. mr. cohn, as you look back at your service what are some of the -- what are some of the emotions that you think about that hit you still today? after all these years of being
and later on, we heard about the normandy massacre. which i -- if you don't know what that what it was when the germans captured a unit that was on the road. and they held them prisoner for a short while. and then all of a sudden somebody opened fire from one of the german tanks and so they all opened up. and they killed the whole bunch of americans that were there. when we found out about that, i really believe the attitude -- and i think maybe the gentlemen on the end here can agree with it....