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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the japanese then attacked pearl harbor in america declared war on japan and then finally was americawas in the war that fdr was a war president. people often say the japanese took america into war. that is true in one sense but even deeper i freak fdr and his representatives to take america into war. by defeating isolationism in foreign enemies, they also took america as i may end with one final story that has the question commissure after pearl harbor churchill said he wants to come to washington to confer with america that was formally allied to britain. these are much less formal day so roosevelt admits his him and most of the entourage of cells were knocking around in the residence with eleanor in a lady friends and also harry hopkins. one day roosevelt had nothing to tell churchill so he wheeled himself into his bedroom and he was horrified to find churchill had set up a bathtub in the middle of the bedroom. he had unusual personal habits. he was horrified find him taking a bath midmorning. president started to feel himself felt but churchill supposedly rose like a sea monster f
the japanese then attacked pearl harbor in america declared war on japan and then finally was americawas in the war that fdr was a war president. people often say the japanese took america into war. that is true in one sense but even deeper i freak fdr and his representatives to take america into war. by defeating isolationism in foreign enemies, they also took america as i may end with one final story that has the question commissure after pearl harbor churchill said he wants to come to...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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you were talk abouting pearl harbor marginalizing the isolationist. how did fdr and the fabulous team deal with aggressive tough isolation? the people in the "chicago tribune," for example. and sneaky irishman from boston, joseph kennedy. >> well, he dealt with kennedy by marginalizing him and going around him. he didn't tell -- he didn't officially -- actually no one -- the president didn't officially tell kennedy that donnavan was on the way. kennedy was outraged to hear that donnavan was there. he said what do they want me here for? what am i doing? pouring tea. and so roosevelt played his very delicate dance with kennedy. he didn't like kennedy. roosevelt's appointment of kennedy was an unaccountable diplomatic appointment. of it madness. it was a dreadful decision. to have this eyelationallist in the incredibly important post. so what did roosevelt do? he played him, basically. and kept him sufficiently on the line that kennedy didn't come out vociferously again him. he went around wherever he could. when kennedy complained about being marginaliz
you were talk abouting pearl harbor marginalizing the isolationist. how did fdr and the fabulous team deal with aggressive tough isolation? the people in the "chicago tribune," for example. and sneaky irishman from boston, joseph kennedy. >> well, he dealt with kennedy by marginalizing him and going around him. he didn't tell -- he didn't officially -- actually no one -- the president didn't officially tell kennedy that donnavan was on the way. kennedy was outraged to hear that...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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KQEH
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eye 152
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week we are aboard the uss hornet a world war ii air carrier for a special program in honor of pearl harbor remembrance day. you will hear a dozen local pearl harbor survivors recount how their lives were changed forever on december 7, 1941, when the sea turned to flames, ships were sunk, friends were lost, and this nation was catapulted into world war ii. old men who were once young warriors recall a date which will live in infamy. and it all starts now. >>> your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald.
week we are aboard the uss hornet a world war ii air carrier for a special program in honor of pearl harbor remembrance day. you will hear a dozen local pearl harbor survivors recount how their lives were changed forever on december 7, 1941, when the sea turned to flames, ships were sunk, friends were lost, and this nation was catapulted into world war ii. old men who were once young warriors recall a date which will live in infamy. and it all starts now. >>> your realtime captioner is...
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 99
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hair relationship was really after pearl harbor. my book ends with pearl harbor. i talk about what happened briefly to everyone and it stops at pearl harbor. second question, very good question, what role did germany have in the hole isolationist movement. almost none. the germans were very aware that even though the country was isolationist early on, most americans were very anti german, very anti nazi and they knew the more overt help they gave, it would backfire. so they tried very hard to stay out of the public eye in terms of isolationists. they obviously were pulling for the isolationists because they wanted to stay out of the war but everytime they tried to do something it backfired. they had one of the most inept organizations, the british were incredibly good at what they were doing, spying, sabotaging, etc. they also sent agents to the u.s. but inevitably they would be caught and the germans sent cable after cable saying you have done it again. these guys keep getting arrested by the fbi, turning everybody against us and this idea that the administration
hair relationship was really after pearl harbor. my book ends with pearl harbor. i talk about what happened briefly to everyone and it stops at pearl harbor. second question, very good question, what role did germany have in the hole isolationist movement. almost none. the germans were very aware that even though the country was isolationist early on, most americans were very anti german, very anti nazi and they knew the more overt help they gave, it would backfire. so they tried very hard to...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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LINKTV
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the japanese attack on pearl harbor brought america into the shooting war. americans left their homes and jobs to fight overseas. still the explosive economic growth continued. everybody that could work worked. young people worked. wives moved into the labor force. older people didn't retire early. the result was that your productive capability expanded very, very rapidly. our production was so phenomenally higher by 1944 than what it had been in 1939, that the per-capita consumption was very high. still over 40% of the total production of this country, some 42-43% at peak, went totally to the military. with full employment came demand for consumer goods which had been unaffordable during the 1930s. the country was producing and consuming more. for a while, the united states increased its production of military and consumer goods. but choices had to be made. so what we did, along with setting high mobilization efforts, beginning very soon after pearl harbor, you began to cut back on the civilians. by the spring of-- early summer or late spring of 1942-- no m
the japanese attack on pearl harbor brought america into the shooting war. americans left their homes and jobs to fight overseas. still the explosive economic growth continued. everybody that could work worked. young people worked. wives moved into the labor force. older people didn't retire early. the result was that your productive capability expanded very, very rapidly. our production was so phenomenally higher by 1944 than what it had been in 1939, that the per-capita consumption was very...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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KQEH
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eye 173
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week we are aboard the uss hornet a world war ii air carrier for a special program in honor of pearl harbor remembrance day. you will hear a dozen local pearl harbor survivors recount how their lives were changed forever on december 7, 1941, when the sea turned to flames, ships were sunk, friends were lost, and this nation was catapulted into world war ii. old men who were once young warriors recall a date which will live in infamy. and it all starts now. >>> your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald.
week we are aboard the uss hornet a world war ii air carrier for a special program in honor of pearl harbor remembrance day. you will hear a dozen local pearl harbor survivors recount how their lives were changed forever on december 7, 1941, when the sea turned to flames, ships were sunk, friends were lost, and this nation was catapulted into world war ii. old men who were once young warriors recall a date which will live in infamy. and it all starts now. >>> your realtime captioner is...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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so he forced pearl harbor. when pearl harbor succeeded, and as far as the japanese were concerned it succeeded tremendously, he was a god. he could do whatever he wanted. when he came up with this idea of 18 gigantic underwater aircraft carriers and 44 place, nobody was going to stand in his way at that point. a day were factions in the staff who did not want this plan. they did not think, they just thought, they were very conservative and they thought, you know, a bridge too far so to speak. so when she died, they came out of the woodwork with a long knife and the almost killed the plan. at one point they had scaled back. another point another faction of. there was this tug-of-war just as there is in any bureaucracy. but they stayed with the plan right through the war, even though there were so many men involved in the construction of the sub links but it was like two, 3000 people involved. it's not a small operation. and at great cost. they were committed right up until the end. >> i would like your confirmat
so he forced pearl harbor. when pearl harbor succeeded, and as far as the japanese were concerned it succeeded tremendously, he was a god. he could do whatever he wanted. when he came up with this idea of 18 gigantic underwater aircraft carriers and 44 place, nobody was going to stand in his way at that point. a day were factions in the staff who did not want this plan. they did not think, they just thought, they were very conservative and they thought, you know, a bridge too far so to speak....
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Aug 9, 2013
08/13
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WBAL
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the westminster owls have been invited to play in a ceremony at pearl harbor, but getting there won't be easy and it won't be cheap. here they are, members of the westminster owls marching band, the only band in the entire date as to go to -- entire state asked to go to hawaii or a ceremony honoring world war ii veterans. >> i am excited to travel. >> i am very honored. only one school in the state gets to go, so i am really happy we were the one that worth was chosen. >> the band will represent the uss maryland, more at pearl red app pearla harbor during the attacks. quick $75,000 is what we need. we have raised over $30,000 already, but there is a lot more that needs to be funded. we need to get there. we need our instruments to get there. >> the marching band director says final approval to go only came at the end of the school year, so between 12 hour at a --ctices and him are jobs, 12-hour a day practices and summer jobs, band members are fundraising every chance they get. >> we have been working so hard. we are spending all of our free time doing it because we all want to go so
the westminster owls have been invited to play in a ceremony at pearl harbor, but getting there won't be easy and it won't be cheap. here they are, members of the westminster owls marching band, the only band in the entire date as to go to -- entire state asked to go to hawaii or a ceremony honoring world war ii veterans. >> i am excited to travel. >> i am very honored. only one school in the state gets to go, so i am really happy we were the one that worth was chosen. >> the...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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some orders transferred him to pearl harbor and he enabled this and was due for rotation.but he turned that into a formal fighting machine. his departure was like depriving the crew of their father. unfortunately the lieutenant commander, mr. johnson, was a different breed of captain. he was younger and brash or cockiness that put his crew on edge. the first time he saw captain johnson at the midway, his new skipper was shooting dice with the man. johnson did not make a good impression. he acted more like a crew member than an officer. not the kind of captain that he was used to serving under. he also had concerns about the ceo. he heard johnson say that when we get off this patrol, they will be throwing medals that are hatched. was this the kind of guy that you could respect? he was not sure. the more they worried that he was a hollywood skipper. he may have had other capabilities, but he was lacking in gravitas. it almost seemed as if he was the 29-year-old johnson's first command it was his third grade that his officers would know not, it would have worried them all the
some orders transferred him to pearl harbor and he enabled this and was due for rotation.but he turned that into a formal fighting machine. his departure was like depriving the crew of their father. unfortunately the lieutenant commander, mr. johnson, was a different breed of captain. he was younger and brash or cockiness that put his crew on edge. the first time he saw captain johnson at the midway, his new skipper was shooting dice with the man. johnson did not make a good impression. he...
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Aug 31, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the next big test came almost exactly a month after pearl harbor. america was now in the war and that was needed daddy did has been in the news a lot in recent years, the arabs spring, overthrow of hosni mubarak -- even this morning news about another massacre in cairo. in 1942 the british government determined to overthrow the king of egypt, they felt that he was an obstacle to britain's political objective in the middle east and in egypt. american officials had a very serious problem with this. they were concerned about perception again of the british overthrowing yet another arab leader. american officials led by the u.s. minister to cairo, alexander kirk, wrote to washington and said farouk is not pro axis, he is merely anti british. there is a distinction even if the british not willing to make. the americans made it clear to the british that we would be upset if he was overthrown. the british made elaborate plans to get rid of farouk. they want to his overthrow to be so a humiliating and uncomfortable that they sat around in the foreign office
the next big test came almost exactly a month after pearl harbor. america was now in the war and that was needed daddy did has been in the news a lot in recent years, the arabs spring, overthrow of hosni mubarak -- even this morning news about another massacre in cairo. in 1942 the british government determined to overthrow the king of egypt, they felt that he was an obstacle to britain's political objective in the middle east and in egypt. american officials had a very serious problem with...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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WUSA
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i haven't felt this relaxed and carefree since i was watch commander at pearl harbor.art shrieks ) sea hag! bart simpson! bart, are you crazy? you've got to get the old folks home to the old folks home. no way. they're finally having some fun. how low can i go?! ( bone cracking ) that's it. gee, bart, maybe you're right. ( beeping ) they don't even seem to care that it's medication time. medication time?! hot dog! give me! give me! give me! i want some pills! blue ones! but i've set you free. no more nap time, no more bingo. you can do whatever you want. let's play bingo. ( enthusiastic chattering ) you sunk my battleship. ( laughter ) ( sighs ) now, smithers you say you painted all your navy buddies this way? until i was discharged, sir. i don't get it, grandpa. if you guys like all that boring stuff why did you follow me out here? got to do something till bingo. ( all screaming ) how could you miss that huge boat coming right at us? oh, two glass eyes. ( pinging ) oh, it's not fair. i'm not supposed to die now. i'm supposed to die in a foolish motorcycle stunt at the
i haven't felt this relaxed and carefree since i was watch commander at pearl harbor.art shrieks ) sea hag! bart simpson! bart, are you crazy? you've got to get the old folks home to the old folks home. no way. they're finally having some fun. how low can i go?! ( bone cracking ) that's it. gee, bart, maybe you're right. ( beeping ) they don't even seem to care that it's medication time. medication time?! hot dog! give me! give me! give me! i want some pills! blue ones! but i've set you free....
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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plus, growing fears of a cyber pearl harbor, as some are calling it.etaliate with a massive cyberattack if the united states attacks their country. i'm wolf blitzer, this is "the situation room," special report, "crisis in syria." >>> some lawmakers clamoring for more information about syria's alleged chemical weapons attack are getting it right now. top administration officials including the secretaries of defense and state, they are scheduled to start briefing congressional leaders and key committee heads by phone. the conference call comes as the u.s. and its allies way a possible military strike against syria, but the debate is growing and momentum may be slowing down. we're using cnn's global resources to cover the crisis from all angles in this hour's special report. let's begin, though, with your chief congressional correspondent, dana bash. she has details of the syria conference call with members of conference -- members of congress going on right now. da dana, what do we know? >> we know that it has begun and this is good news for lawmakers,
plus, growing fears of a cyber pearl harbor, as some are calling it.etaliate with a massive cyberattack if the united states attacks their country. i'm wolf blitzer, this is "the situation room," special report, "crisis in syria." >>> some lawmakers clamoring for more information about syria's alleged chemical weapons attack are getting it right now. top administration officials including the secretaries of defense and state, they are scheduled to start briefing...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN
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it was worse than pearl harbor. killed more americans than pearl harbor did, took place in the heart of new york city and washington. if it not been for those brave passengers, they would've taken out the white house or the capitol building on flight 93. it is as bad as it gets. one of the key decisions we made in the bush administration, and we made it basically that night and the next morning after the day was over with and the president was back and address the country. lynn and i were evacuated off the south lawn of the white house and flown up to camp david, and we wanted to make sure that the president and i were not in the same location because we want to preserve the continuity of government. we were careful not to get into a situation where an attack would take us both out. i had the opportunity to watch the reruns on television on what had happened that day. people did all over the country, i am sure. we began to think about what did we have to do now, how do we make sure that never happens again and we ge
it was worse than pearl harbor. killed more americans than pearl harbor did, took place in the heart of new york city and washington. if it not been for those brave passengers, they would've taken out the white house or the capitol building on flight 93. it is as bad as it gets. one of the key decisions we made in the bush administration, and we made it basically that night and the next morning after the day was over with and the president was back and address the country. lynn and i were...
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Aug 14, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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entered the war in 1941 after japan attacked pearl harbor. the government sent 120,000 japanese americans to internment camp in deserts and swamps. hisamil was among them. he was 10. >> we were imprisoned by barb wires and armed guard watch towers and so we lost our freedom. >> reporter: after the war, the japanese americans were released. many of them found it difficult to talk about the war. they chose to be silent. it was he from the third generation that broke the silence. the civil rights movement which started in the late '50s, prompted the younger generation to speak out. >> we will have no more of this silence! >> the silence is broken. >> the silence is broken. >> reporter: finally in the 1980s, a congressional commission found the camp were not justified by -- the government said the program was a result of racial prejudice and issued an apology. >> and yet it did not devour me. >> and yet, it did not humble me. >> and yet it did not break me. [ applause ] >> reporter: there are many things i don't know. this play taught me a lot. w
entered the war in 1941 after japan attacked pearl harbor. the government sent 120,000 japanese americans to internment camp in deserts and swamps. hisamil was among them. he was 10. >> we were imprisoned by barb wires and armed guard watch towers and so we lost our freedom. >> reporter: after the war, the japanese americans were released. many of them found it difficult to talk about the war. they chose to be silent. it was he from the third generation that broke the silence. the...
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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ALJAZAM
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i was born 23 days after pearl harbor.nd the japanese-americans of that era has their collective civil rights violated. 110,000 people including my parents and all of my grand parents were moved outside of that area. so, yes, my family went to arkansas, and i spent the first three years of my life there. >> from the perspective of a japanese-american has enough been done? and if not, what needs to be done? >> perspective of the japanese-americans i think -- there are many issues, but i think the reason for us marching in 1963 was in part a memory of relocation and world war ii, when our civil rights were violated, but it's the same -- marching for jobs and freedom, which we did there, were for all groups, not just the japanese. not as much for the japanese americans or asian americans, but for all groups, that one was much more of a civil rights march. we're happy to participate. because marching for jobs and freedom is not an issue for asian americans or black americans, it's for all groups. it's a human rights issue we w
i was born 23 days after pearl harbor.nd the japanese-americans of that era has their collective civil rights violated. 110,000 people including my parents and all of my grand parents were moved outside of that area. so, yes, my family went to arkansas, and i spent the first three years of my life there. >> from the perspective of a japanese-american has enough been done? and if not, what needs to be done? >> perspective of the japanese-americans i think -- there are many issues,...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the american fleet is all in the pacific, as pearl harbor demonstrated. and as result, what would happen if in effect hitler controlled the atlantic? we would have no capacity for getting out of our own ports. and at that time we didn't have a two ocean navy. that was one of the things that have to be built up. so this is a very serious situation. how then did we meet it? we met it largely by utilizing the one thing that americans have always done best, which was mass production. we invented it. we invented it in the auto industry. this is the first wholesale mechanized war in history. and you're talking about in the country, the united states, that's basically on wheels. way more americans own cars and our drivers and europe. and as a result we have not only the scale of our productive capacity, but we have the technical know-how. all we had to do was organize it. all we had to do. and the space of what the book is about. if, in fact, we could do that, and the goal was literally the very the axis in weapons. the germans have better weapons. they had supe
the american fleet is all in the pacific, as pearl harbor demonstrated. and as result, what would happen if in effect hitler controlled the atlantic? we would have no capacity for getting out of our own ports. and at that time we didn't have a two ocean navy. that was one of the things that have to be built up. so this is a very serious situation. how then did we meet it? we met it largely by utilizing the one thing that americans have always done best, which was mass production. we invented...
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Aug 1, 2013
08/13
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KNTV
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the isolationist senators who opposed getting into world war ii before pearl harbor, it played out on the senate floor again today as rand paul fought a losing battle against john mccain to block foreign aid. >> what will they say about the bridges in northern kentucky that won't be built because we're sending the money to countries that are burning our flag. >> the debate has gone on for the heart and soul of the republican party. >> reporter: paul told nbc news tonight he lost in the senate today, but will win with the american people. >> i think we may get voters who are like reagan democrats, blue collar democrats, who say that's a guy i can vote for because that's somebody who really is talking about how we help people in america. >> both senator paul and governor christie are going to be major candidates in 2016. they're heavyweight contenders for the republican nomination. >> reporter: and there is this, in the latest issue of the new republic magazine, mccain was asked whether he would vote for hillary clinton or rand paul in 2016. mccain replied, laughingly, it is going to be
the isolationist senators who opposed getting into world war ii before pearl harbor, it played out on the senate floor again today as rand paul fought a losing battle against john mccain to block foreign aid. >> what will they say about the bridges in northern kentucky that won't be built because we're sending the money to countries that are burning our flag. >> the debate has gone on for the heart and soul of the republican party. >> reporter: paul told nbc news tonight he...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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just a few months before pearl harbor, the subcommittee hearings were a nasty side show. fortunately, wilkie provided a healthy dose of sanity and realism. he told the senators that the motion picture industry was happy to plead guilty to being a hundred percent opposed to fascism. i wish to put on the record this simple truth, wilkie declared. we make no pretense of friendliness to the ruthless dictatorship of nazi germany. we abhor everything that hitler represents. we plead guilty to sharing with our fellow citizens a horror of hitler's nazis, and the industry desires to plead guilty to doing everything within its power to help the united states defend itself and the world against fascism. so, in conclusion, i personally would like to thank americans in 1940 for voting for franklin roosevelt or for wilkie, and i thank them for having watched, and i thank you for still watching great movies like foreign correspondent and the mortal storm and casa blanca to remind us of the night fair of fascism and what was really at stake during the terrifying election year of 1940. th
just a few months before pearl harbor, the subcommittee hearings were a nasty side show. fortunately, wilkie provided a healthy dose of sanity and realism. he told the senators that the motion picture industry was happy to plead guilty to being a hundred percent opposed to fascism. i wish to put on the record this simple truth, wilkie declared. we make no pretense of friendliness to the ruthless dictatorship of nazi germany. we abhor everything that hitler represents. we plead guilty to sharing...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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MSNBCW
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. >> the day that will live in infamy, december 7, 1941 when japan attacked pearl harbor and pulled unitedought out the best of the country. everyone mobilized for an unprecedented war effort that saved the world from hitler and fascism and brought out the worst which took the form of something called executive order 9066 issued by fdr three months after pearl harbor. a preemptive measure against espionage. that's how it was billed. we know it by a different name, internme internment. 77,000 citizens, legal and illegal resident aliens, 120,000 people total, almost all of them japanese descent, were given a week to settle their affairs and then shipped off to camps in remote deserted areas and lived with barest necessities until the end of the war, in 1945, when they were sent home without jobs, without property and without ever being charged without anything. some were given limited compensation but most received nothing. that's a story you probably know about. but this month marks an important anniversary of the rest of that story. because it was in august of 1988, 25 years ago this month
. >> the day that will live in infamy, december 7, 1941 when japan attacked pearl harbor and pulled unitedought out the best of the country. everyone mobilized for an unprecedented war effort that saved the world from hitler and fascism and brought out the worst which took the form of something called executive order 9066 issued by fdr three months after pearl harbor. a preemptive measure against espionage. that's how it was billed. we know it by a different name, internme internment....
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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KNTV
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. >> yeah, this was when japan invaded pearl harbor. >> and we interred a lot of japanese americans.arecroppers with the yamaguchis. so when they were taken away, with etook over their farm, their home. at the same time our oldest children fell in love, and so it's a story of enduring love. because she was at the camp and he was going back and forth. to running the ranch. because yamaguchi made him a foreman before he left. and so he has a lot on his plate. and then they have a child who was born in the camp. >> in the interment camp. >> in the interment camp. it's a wonderful character, done very well by our actor. >> your son? >> mm-hmm. >> our son. he's from l.a. so it's very exciting production. good cast. >> what a way to tell a story of the valley of hearts. he could have taken the canneries, but this is a part of the valley's history that i don't think many people are aware of. >> as luis says, this is a story that, i guess when all of this happened, it stayed in his mind and it has been there, and he has wanted to do this. and our asian actors, who we are performing with, i w
. >> yeah, this was when japan invaded pearl harbor. >> and we interred a lot of japanese americans.arecroppers with the yamaguchis. so when they were taken away, with etook over their farm, their home. at the same time our oldest children fell in love, and so it's a story of enduring love. because she was at the camp and he was going back and forth. to running the ranch. because yamaguchi made him a foreman before he left. and so he has a lot on his plate. and then they have a...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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80
Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV
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military intelligence service that opened one month before pearl harbor in anticipation in the war against japan. and they graduate about 40 students of japanese ancestry, military of the u.s. army to secretly train in anticipation with this war, while we restored this building and this hanger, we planned to have exhibition and curriculum and small interpretive programming there and we will be working with our partners in san francisco to do so. so thank you very much and encourage you to see the medal and come by to the building in the city of san francisco. thank you very much. >> murase. >> we also vai presentation for representative from the institute. >> i also was not in the room for the vote. would you put down that i did this, thank you. >> >> okay, my name is greg martani and i have been before the board in other capacities with the japanese citizen's league. in this case i am filling in for karen who is the daughter of fred coramatzo who received the gold medal of freedom for his stand against the incarceration of japanese americans in world war ii. while this issue is something
military intelligence service that opened one month before pearl harbor in anticipation in the war against japan. and they graduate about 40 students of japanese ancestry, military of the u.s. army to secretly train in anticipation with this war, while we restored this building and this hanger, we planned to have exhibition and curriculum and small interpretive programming there and we will be working with our partners in san francisco to do so. so thank you very much and encourage you to see...
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as a secret cryptologic service that broke foreign enemy codes in wartime the attack on pearl harbor pushed america to take intelligence more seriously in world war two the agency's missions including to ciphering communications from both nazi germany and the japanese navy and to encrypt american messages but then came the cold war three people but there were two of the four. grieving there. and with the cold war the formal birth of the n.s.a. in one nine hundred fifty two president truman authorized the creation of the agency to coordinate communications intelligence the spy center was so secret at the time the joke was the initial stood for no such agency decades before the agency was collecting massive amounts of phone and internet records it was collecting telegraph records in an operation that raised similar legal issues and worries about the lack of oversight in fact its existence wasn't even publicly acknowledged by the government until the one nine hundred seventy s. watch the watergate scandal brought america's domestic spying to light what. counterintelligence object. was t
as a secret cryptologic service that broke foreign enemy codes in wartime the attack on pearl harbor pushed america to take intelligence more seriously in world war two the agency's missions including to ciphering communications from both nazi germany and the japanese navy and to encrypt american messages but then came the cold war three people but there were two of the four. grieving there. and with the cold war the formal birth of the n.s.a. in one nine hundred fifty two president truman...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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drafted (inaudible) and she actually got involved in the way and forming it because after the pearl harbor and we joined the war, she volunteered to be a front line servant and she was turned down because she was a women and that drove her nuts and so therefore, they sent years and many, many meet togs get the waves created which she did finally have a handle in. and lately, san francisco is counting on mom chung to get the job done, and the real mom chung she got the job done. she through sheer determination and hard work, became a physician. she is the eldest child of 11 kids. back then, traditionally she should have been helping mom and dad take care of all of the younger kids. but no she wanted to be a doctor and she said that i am going to be a doctor. because the thing is that she had her mother's support and that is what made everything okay. but could you imagine, 11 kids and your mom saying could you take care of them and she says no i am going to school. she was a real, and my dad once said, you know, auntie doc, she is a real, what did he call her? i can't remember, something th
drafted (inaudible) and she actually got involved in the way and forming it because after the pearl harbor and we joined the war, she volunteered to be a front line servant and she was turned down because she was a women and that drove her nuts and so therefore, they sent years and many, many meet togs get the waves created which she did finally have a handle in. and lately, san francisco is counting on mom chung to get the job done, and the real mom chung she got the job done. she through...
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mainland china and while most would say that it was japan who struck first with the attack on pearl harbor a little is said about how the us huge harsh economic sanctions in an effort to bait japan into war even allege now that u.s. cryptographers have broken japan's naval code which gave them foresight on the attack yet despite all of this three thousand americans tragically died in the us had its justification for war what then proceeded was multiple fire bombings and several japanese cities eventually japan made overtures of surrender and top u.s. military brass even acknowledged that the war could have entered ended diplomatically but it didn't because for the first and the last time in the history of the world nuclear weapons were used against the civilian population on august sixth one nine hundred forty five a nuclear bomb was dropped in the city of herat. an enormous fireball the heat of the sun. everything and everyone within a mile radius and only hours after the first bomb dropped president truman addressed the nation. a short time ago an american airplane. hiroshima destroyed i
mainland china and while most would say that it was japan who struck first with the attack on pearl harbor a little is said about how the us huge harsh economic sanctions in an effort to bait japan into war even allege now that u.s. cryptographers have broken japan's naval code which gave them foresight on the attack yet despite all of this three thousand americans tragically died in the us had its justification for war what then proceeded was multiple fire bombings and several japanese cities...
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one hundred forty one before pearl harbor roosevelt and churchill mich. a battleship of new frontier and they talked about fighting for the shared ideals of that two countries now if you think of the world in one nine hundred forty one and you look at where polly i'm intrigued i'm ocracy i'm first of all freedom were recognized they were pretty much confined to the anglosphere across almost the whole of the aeration landmass people lived under different kinds of autocracy under fascism and communism or under japanese militarism so to talk about democracy as an anglo american concept was not some rhetorical flourish it was a very immediate and accurate description of the world as it stood the fact that democracy has spread since and that countries have been liberated from tyranny a great deal to the resolve of the english speaking peoples and their readiness on occasion to deploy proportionate force in defense of their interests but mr hannan with all due respect to your allude to historical examples i agree with many of the points that he made but i'm ask
one hundred forty one before pearl harbor roosevelt and churchill mich. a battleship of new frontier and they talked about fighting for the shared ideals of that two countries now if you think of the world in one nine hundred forty one and you look at where polly i'm intrigued i'm ocracy i'm first of all freedom were recognized they were pretty much confined to the anglosphere across almost the whole of the aeration landmass people lived under different kinds of autocracy under fascism and...
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hope you and james clapper are right and that leon panetta speaking about the danger of a cyber pearl harbor was wrong. we thank you for joining us and giving us your insight. >> how much progress has america made in civil rights since the march in washington. >>> what happens when social media uncove >> tonight's data difficult looks at however america has come since the march on washington in 1963. we looked at numbers provided by the u.s. senses, population, in 1963, the total estimated number was 20,200,000. 2012, that 14 doubled to 44.5 million. on to the economy. these numbers are adjusted for inflation. the medium in come for black families in 1963 was $23,300. in 2010, that jumped to $40,500. the poverty rate for blacks first measured in 1966 was at 41.8%. today, it's down to 27.6%. still a major problem. but education is much improved. in 1964, there were 234,000 black undergraduate students in america. the numbers shot up to 2.6 million, more than 10 times the amount. more good news, the rate of blacks aged 25 and over who completed four years of high school tripled from 25 perfect
hope you and james clapper are right and that leon panetta speaking about the danger of a cyber pearl harbor was wrong. we thank you for joining us and giving us your insight. >> how much progress has america made in civil rights since the march in washington. >>> what happens when social media uncove >> tonight's data difficult looks at however america has come since the march on washington in 1963. we looked at numbers provided by the u.s. senses, population, in 1963, the...