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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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. >> next, eri hotta examines the attack on pearl harbor and entry into world war ii from the japanese perspective. this is about an hour. >> thank you for coming. it is always a somewhat artificial situation of two people who know each other well, husband and wife fall into that category and to do an interview in public like this, why i asked questions i could ask over the breakfast table and done the other hand one doesn't normally discuss japanese naval strategy in 1941 over the breakfast table. so it is as good an opportunity as any to discuss this little bit further and one of the things i find most interesting about the book and revealing for many readers in this country is it tackles certain myths about pearl harbor, one of the myths which was of course very much encouraged in the postwar period not only by the japanese themselves but by the american administration is japan had been hijacked by the militarists, by the military and civilians were not to blame for what happened. it was a kind of militarist coup and the japanese people and the emperor himself were sort of do by the
. >> next, eri hotta examines the attack on pearl harbor and entry into world war ii from the japanese perspective. this is about an hour. >> thank you for coming. it is always a somewhat artificial situation of two people who know each other well, husband and wife fall into that category and to do an interview in public like this, why i asked questions i could ask over the breakfast table and done the other hand one doesn't normally discuss japanese naval strategy in 1941 over the...
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Feb 16, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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started than it was tojo hideki who was prime minister when japan bombed pearl harbor.the only civilian among the 20 classy defendants as an ideologue and a writer named o. pala shoot me --. this is okawa here. okawa is considered to be a good civilian brain trust. he was kind divine that directed the military might. even if you didn't know that okawa was the lone civilian trial that day, you would have immediately realized from the first day of the trial that he didn't quite fit in with the rest of the crew. they described as rather eccentric entrants of the first day of the trial of the first page of the book. okawa shuemi arrived looking every bit the madman. mayfair company to 46. the best for% drop that the defendant could have had 3:00 in the morning. okawa entered the courtroom wearing traditional japanese cacti, with clouds and a wrinkled light blue shirt that looks pajama top. he took his place at the center back up to two row prisoner talk to face the international panel of judges and a front of them was the former general who recognize the road over for his b
started than it was tojo hideki who was prime minister when japan bombed pearl harbor.the only civilian among the 20 classy defendants as an ideologue and a writer named o. pala shoot me --. this is okawa here. okawa is considered to be a good civilian brain trust. he was kind divine that directed the military might. even if you didn't know that okawa was the lone civilian trial that day, you would have immediately realized from the first day of the trial that he didn't quite fit in with the...
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Feb 16, 2014
02/14
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the two of them were quail hunting the day they found out about pearl harbor. but that's just another's dory of the many that we have in this great book. all seriousness aside, so hap got in touch with don douglas and could this idea for research and development entity. what are we going to call it? will call the grand research and development. this was the rand organization that was initially douglas in santa monica. and eventually became the independent rand corporation, which still exists, which i'm sure you have heard. so the first project that ran dead and this was initiated when hap was the chief of the u.s. aas in his retirement in 1946. the first paper they did was a feasibility study for a world circling spaceship. this is more than a decade before sputnik. the organization that hap arnold started it designing a sputnik 10 years ahead of sputnik. so this is a little bit about how hap looked at the feature. a lot of people ask me, what would hap think now? what would he think about cyberwarfare? i usually respond to that. well, the time he was around he
the two of them were quail hunting the day they found out about pearl harbor. but that's just another's dory of the many that we have in this great book. all seriousness aside, so hap got in touch with don douglas and could this idea for research and development entity. what are we going to call it? will call the grand research and development. this was the rand organization that was initially douglas in santa monica. and eventually became the independent rand corporation, which still exists,...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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none of those millions of a tax what they thought when he said it of a digital pearl harbor or cyber9/11. for example, digital pearl harbor has steadily been used in major government speeches been reported in the media over half a million times. so essentially when people talk about cyberattacks is a bundle together the various things simply because they involve the internet and related technology. the parallel would be like saying a group of teenagers with firecrackers or protesters with a smoke bomb a terrorist with a roadside bomb, a james bond with his pistol and a russian cruise missile. they all involve the technology and chemistry of gun powder but we would never do that but somehow it is acceptable in this space. take the organization's. a senior u.s. military official argued with me that anonymous and al qaeda were the same thing. where every stand with anonymous i figured out i am probably more empathetic to anybody with the d.c. security establishment but wherever you stand, they differ from al qaeda from the organization, personnel, a profile, their means the only thing th
none of those millions of a tax what they thought when he said it of a digital pearl harbor or cyber9/11. for example, digital pearl harbor has steadily been used in major government speeches been reported in the media over half a million times. so essentially when people talk about cyberattacks is a bundle together the various things simply because they involve the internet and related technology. the parallel would be like saying a group of teenagers with firecrackers or protesters with a...
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Feb 8, 2014
02/14
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and that came into being in june of 1941, of half a year before pearl harbor. and it became the united states army air forces, that's forces plural because there were 16 numbered air forces. and hap became the chief of that and because-autonomous -- it was autonomous, this earned hap a seat on the joint chiefs of staff. so for the first time, the joint chiefs of staff which is actually a newly-created organization because they recognized the need for coordination between these various services that had been -- army and navy had been at each other's throats for centuries at that time. so you had, you had the army, the navy and the u.s. army air forces. those z three seats on the -- those three seats on the joint chiefs. and that was part of hap lobbying marshall. so what happened with this u.s. army air forces that used to be the u.s. army air corps? well, in six years hap built this thing up. he built it up from 1700 obsolete airplanes, most of which had to be thrown away, to 17,000 airplanes. it didn't stop there, it didn't stop at 34,000. within six years it
and that came into being in june of 1941, of half a year before pearl harbor. and it became the united states army air forces, that's forces plural because there were 16 numbered air forces. and hap became the chief of that and because-autonomous -- it was autonomous, this earned hap a seat on the joint chiefs of staff. so for the first time, the joint chiefs of staff which is actually a newly-created organization because they recognized the need for coordination between these various services...
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Feb 27, 2014
02/14
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LINKTV
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we simply happen to look like people from pearl harbor.but without charges, without trial, without due process, the fundamental pillar of our justice system from a we were summarily rounded up. love the japanese-americans on the west coast -- all of the japanese-americans on the west coast, primarily, were sent off to 10 barb wire prison camps with machine guns, since regards. it was in some of the most desolate places in the country. blistering hot desert of arizona, of all places. our family was sent two thirds of the way across the country, the farthest east and the swans of arkansas. --is from this experience when i was a teenager, my father told me our democracy is very fragile, but it is a true people's democracy -- both as strong and as great as the people can be. but it is also as fallible as people are. that is why good people had to be actively engaged in the process, sometimes holding democracy's feet to the fire in order to make it a better, truer democracy. >> if i'm not mistaken, the governor of california actor in the interm
we simply happen to look like people from pearl harbor.but without charges, without trial, without due process, the fundamental pillar of our justice system from a we were summarily rounded up. love the japanese-americans on the west coast -- all of the japanese-americans on the west coast, primarily, were sent off to 10 barb wire prison camps with machine guns, since regards. it was in some of the most desolate places in the country. blistering hot desert of arizona, of all places. our family...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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LINKTV
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roosevelt was using them to study american and allied military demands when the japanese attacked pearl harbore united states was at war. the ability to convert the american economy using the gnp information would be critical for our survival. our war program for the coming fiscal year will cost $56 billion or, in other words, more than half of the estimated annual national income. we shall produce 60,000 planes. we shall produce 45,000 tanks. we shall produce 55,000 anti-aircraft guns. we must convert every plant and tool to war production. when roosevelt led the country into world war ii, he depended heavily on the gnp framework to predict our military strength. the economy exploded during those four years. 17 million new jobs were created. the index of industrial production doubled. the gnp grew $75 billion. richard gill points out that estimates of gnp were helpful during the war. without knowing our real gnp, we could not have judged how much war production was possible. we needed to know how many goods would be left over for civilian consumption and what taxes the government would have t
roosevelt was using them to study american and allied military demands when the japanese attacked pearl harbore united states was at war. the ability to convert the american economy using the gnp information would be critical for our survival. our war program for the coming fiscal year will cost $56 billion or, in other words, more than half of the estimated annual national income. we shall produce 60,000 planes. we shall produce 45,000 tanks. we shall produce 55,000 anti-aircraft guns. we must...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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MSNBCW
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but we were there only because we happened to look like the people that bombed pearl harbor.ternment, the government realized there was a wartime manpower shortage. and when the military was opened up for service by japanese-americans, thousands of young japanese-americans went from those internment camps to fight for this country. they were put into a segregated unit, fought on those bloody battlefields in europe and came back the most decorated unit of the entire world war ii. they exercised something that was very important. they did it for their families, certainly. because they loved america. they sacrificed themselves and many, many perished on those fields. >> i've driven by northern california, one of the internment camps and there's really nothing there except you have to know on the map. >> they were all in the most desolate places. >> yes. completely desolate place. it's an astonishing thing to ponder. you know, i've pulled over and i look at the little identifier, that tells us this is where it is. it's shown to my daughter and talked about it. driven by a couple
but we were there only because we happened to look like the people that bombed pearl harbor.ternment, the government realized there was a wartime manpower shortage. and when the military was opened up for service by japanese-americans, thousands of young japanese-americans went from those internment camps to fight for this country. they were put into a segregated unit, fought on those bloody battlefields in europe and came back the most decorated unit of the entire world war ii. they exercised...
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Feb 19, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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right after the bombing of pearl harbor, president roosevelt on february 19th signed scuff order 966 which ordered all japanese americans on the west coast to be rounded up. >> how old were you? >> i was five years old. >> did you understand what was happening? >> i didn't understand what was happening. my is parents were very tense. there was one morning that i still remember, they got us, my siblings and me, my younger brother and our baby sister, up early in the morning, got us dressed hurriedly and my brother and i were in the living room looking out the front window. and i saw two soldiers come master planning up the driveway. bayonets on their rifle. i saw it flashing. stomped up there on the front porch, banged on the door. my father answered it, and they ordered us out of our home. >> when you got older, what did your parents tell you about what had happened? >> well, i initiated that. because i started as a teenager reading history books and civics books. and i didn't find anything about what i needed to be my -- away i knew to be my childhood imprisonment. after dinner i en
right after the bombing of pearl harbor, president roosevelt on february 19th signed scuff order 966 which ordered all japanese americans on the west coast to be rounded up. >> how old were you? >> i was five years old. >> did you understand what was happening? >> i didn't understand what was happening. my is parents were very tense. there was one morning that i still remember, they got us, my siblings and me, my younger brother and our baby sister, up early in the...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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. >> was it over when sherman bombed pearl harbor?er: tasteful and not. >> i'm a zit, get it? >> when i turn in a script, i'm not even sure it's professional. i'm afraid people will read it and go, ew, what makes this guy think he can write. this is so amateurish. >> reporter: a chicago native, the midwestern and sensibility leaves a body of work likely to leave them laughing for generations to come. bill whitaker cbs news. >> his friends and co-stars are remembering harold ramis. dan aykroyd said he's deeply saddened to hear the passing of my brilliant, gifted, funny friend. may he now get the answers he was always seeking. and bill murray said he earned his keep on his planet. god bless him. >> for several years, ramis suffered from an autoimmune disease. he died monday at home in suburban chicago. harold ramis was 69 years old. >>> coming up on your local news on "cbs this morning," more bitter cold. and a look at new technology meant to keep your smartphone secure. i'm anne-marie green. this is the "cbs morning news." anne-marie.
. >> was it over when sherman bombed pearl harbor?er: tasteful and not. >> i'm a zit, get it? >> when i turn in a script, i'm not even sure it's professional. i'm afraid people will read it and go, ew, what makes this guy think he can write. this is so amateurish. >> reporter: a chicago native, the midwestern and sensibility leaves a body of work likely to leave them laughing for generations to come. bill whitaker cbs news. >> his friends and co-stars are...
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Feb 8, 2014
02/14
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c-span: so if you had gotten married around pearl harbor, where did you go to school? >> guest: what was i doing in between there? i went to undergraduate school at brooklyn college. as i said, my family was poor and this was a free college. then i did graduate work at the university of chicago. c-span: how about dr. kristol? where did he go? >> guest: he went into the army at that point. i was married in my last year at brooklyn college and then he was already out of college and he was working in the brooklyn navy yard, would you believe. this was, as i say, the very beginning of the war years and prepared to go into the army. at that point i then, when i was graduating, after spending a year in new york, decided to go to graduate school and i chose the university of chicago because it had the reputation of being the most intellectual of all of the universities. this was the great day of -- i don't know if the name means anything to you or to people today -- robert maynard hutchins, who was the president of the university at that time, and there was a great books prog
c-span: so if you had gotten married around pearl harbor, where did you go to school? >> guest: what was i doing in between there? i went to undergraduate school at brooklyn college. as i said, my family was poor and this was a free college. then i did graduate work at the university of chicago. c-span: how about dr. kristol? where did he go? >> guest: he went into the army at that point. i was married in my last year at brooklyn college and then he was already out of college and he...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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remember from animal house, was it over when the germans bombed pearl harbor. remember that?ng. >> i have one. i want you to guess the movie and the actor. the quote is, and this is your grandson, huh? now i know why tigers eat their young. >> caddie shack.of the drinks ue cigarette butt in it? remember that? he still drank it any way. natalie is under the weather so we send her the very best and i appreciate my gopher, my co-host, helping me out this morning. "way too early" is every. "morning joe" is next. ♪ >> thank you, jimmy fallon, for take over "the tonight show" at 11:30 so i could take over "late night" at 12:30. i promise to treat it with respect and dignity and to only use it to do completely original comedy pieces. starting now. ♪
remember from animal house, was it over when the germans bombed pearl harbor. remember that?ng. >> i have one. i want you to guess the movie and the actor. the quote is, and this is your grandson, huh? now i know why tigers eat their young. >> caddie shack.of the drinks ue cigarette butt in it? remember that? he still drank it any way. natalie is under the weather so we send her the very best and i appreciate my gopher, my co-host, helping me out this morning. "way too...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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soil sups pearl harbor -- since pearl harbor, the united states invaded afghanistan. the very act of toppling the taliban regime was both strategically and technologically astounding. in three months' time, america and her allies knocked down a regime 7,000 miles away in landlocked, mountainous terrain. we dropped soldiers into a combat zone with a brutal climate, with no support other than by air and a tough, determined enemy fighting on his home turf. we asked them to establish supply lines that any logistics officer would call impossible. we asked them to fight a war they hadn't been trained for many in a land that had -- in a land that had buried the most powerful empires in the world. but not only did they succeed, thaw kicked the taliban down in three months. that's less than a semester to their college friends back at home. then we asked them to do something even harder. make no mistake, an insurgency is the hardest type of war a democracy can fight. holding a new country steady with insurgents hiding among innocents can take years. it took the british 12 years
soil sups pearl harbor -- since pearl harbor, the united states invaded afghanistan. the very act of toppling the taliban regime was both strategically and technologically astounding. in three months' time, america and her allies knocked down a regime 7,000 miles away in landlocked, mountainous terrain. we dropped soldiers into a combat zone with a brutal climate, with no support other than by air and a tough, determined enemy fighting on his home turf. we asked them to establish supply lines...
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three years on tear gas but tons and torture fail to halt bahraini pearl harbor active as they stand defiant we take a look at what the future holds for the country. migration concerns afflicting several eve countries knocking on norway's door the country increasingly worried about how to control the influx without infuriating brussels.
three years on tear gas but tons and torture fail to halt bahraini pearl harbor active as they stand defiant we take a look at what the future holds for the country. migration concerns afflicting several eve countries knocking on norway's door the country increasingly worried about how to control the influx without infuriating brussels.
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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. >> was it over when the germans bombed pearl harbor?: tasteful and not. >> i'm a zit, get it? >> when i turn in a script i'm not even sure if it's professional. i mean i'm afraid people are going to read it and go, "geez what makes this guy think he can write this?" it is so amateur. >> reporter: a chicago native, a midwestern and mid 20th century sensibility tapped a generation's funny bone. >> he slimed me. >> he leaves a body of work out by transforming the baya architecture. >>> now at 6:00, deploying some new tricks to handle the homeless, squeezing them out by transforming the bay area architecture. good evening, i'm ken bastida. >> i'm elizabeth cook. some might find it cold or harsh but using deseen tactics to keep homeless away. it's subtle and unless you know where to look, you may miss these new features. new at 6:00, phil ma tier said the idea is like keeping the birds off the ledges of buildings. phil? >> reporter: that's right. everybody knows pigeons and how we keep them off the building with stuff. that's coming down to
. >> was it over when the germans bombed pearl harbor?: tasteful and not. >> i'm a zit, get it? >> when i turn in a script i'm not even sure if it's professional. i mean i'm afraid people are going to read it and go, "geez what makes this guy think he can write this?" it is so amateur. >> reporter: a chicago native, a midwestern and mid 20th century sensibility tapped a generation's funny bone. >> he slimed me. >> he leaves a body of work out by...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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the army, an economist air force, and that came into being in jiewj of 1941, a half year before pearl harbor, and it was the united states army air forces. there were some 15 numbered outports, and hap was the chief of that, and because it was a time, they earned half a seat on the joint chiefs of staff so for the first time, u.s. chief of staff was loutly clear action they reck niced the need for coordination and various services that army and navy are bad on each other too. you have the army. the navy. the u.s. army air forests, those threads seeds on the expwroin chiefs, and that was part of half lobbying mar shall. what happened with thissist army our force? used to be the u.s. army airplane corp.. well, in six qers, built it up from 1700 obsolete airplanes that had to be bone away, to 17,000 air r airplanes. there was. en stuff there, some stuff sold for -- 34,000, and in six years, it was nearing 80,000, 20,000 men p mushroom to 2.4 million. hap arnold built the largest air force in the world. it's the largest air force in world history. what did he do with this air force? a lot of thi
the army, an economist air force, and that came into being in jiewj of 1941, a half year before pearl harbor, and it was the united states army air forces. there were some 15 numbered outports, and hap was the chief of that, and because it was a time, they earned half a seat on the joint chiefs of staff so for the first time, u.s. chief of staff was loutly clear action they reck niced the need for coordination and various services that army and navy are bad on each other too. you have the army....
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Feb 14, 2014
02/14
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we just read full of activity as an attack on pearl harbor. with political sensitivities not the issue. molly really trying to show to be chatted up with a wakeup call. this might be very good for consumers who could benefit more from competition in the market. okay that's all we have time for today's episode of china press watch your neck until later in the cost of living in china until then you can never have it all lined up. un deputy from joplin. sis. here to tell you from afar and finds nothing and no one are what or who they see. not distinguished looking on the way. now police officers not only has nine children or even old fisherman eleven. it's just the other mom don't answer that determined to see the need for sunsets its inspector frank the stunningly whose laid back manner belies his drive to get the truth. i knew i would. the is growing so fast says salome is that the chain. the team the team is from kaiser groups and earnings. too soon some areas ability to uncover the truth may be his greatest strength but also gets him in const
we just read full of activity as an attack on pearl harbor. with political sensitivities not the issue. molly really trying to show to be chatted up with a wakeup call. this might be very good for consumers who could benefit more from competition in the market. okay that's all we have time for today's episode of china press watch your neck until later in the cost of living in china until then you can never have it all lined up. un deputy from joplin. sis. here to tell you from afar and finds...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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on december 8, 1942, the first anniversary of the president's date of infamy speech about pearl harbor, for american jewish representatives entered the oval office at me and. -- at noon. he greeted rabbi stephen wise, the only one whom he knew personally, and wise introduced the others, an orthodox rabbi named rosenberg, led a brief prayer. and then everyone was seated. wise read a portion of a memorandum, very detailed memorandum that the world jewish congress had prepared about the evidence on the nazi policy of genocide. he appealed to the president to bring this to the world's attention and to make an effort to stop it. one of the participants in this meeting later wrote a detailed reconstruction, which is the only firsthand account, and that's what i'm quoting from. roosevelt responded, the government of the united states is a very well acquainted with most of the facts you are now bringing to our attention. unfortunately, we have received confirmation from many sources. we cannot treat these matters in normal ways. we are dealing with and in same man, hitler -- insane man, hitler
on december 8, 1942, the first anniversary of the president's date of infamy speech about pearl harbor, for american jewish representatives entered the oval office at me and. -- at noon. he greeted rabbi stephen wise, the only one whom he knew personally, and wise introduced the others, an orthodox rabbi named rosenberg, led a brief prayer. and then everyone was seated. wise read a portion of a memorandum, very detailed memorandum that the world jewish congress had prepared about the evidence...
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Feb 4, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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therefore if you are in there and there are all of these wonderful images coming in, it is a pearl harbor for your sip sip -- synapsis. >> i disagree. it is more dangerous to live with somebody who is backed up. they have a, how do you say, a full cargo. you know how tense your roommate has to be when you keep busting him for rying to watch porn? >> that has to be a problem. >> paperer towels! steve is way too tense. >> i don't know. do you think this film could help people? >> greg, i went to college. i had a roommate. i have to tread carefully here. we are about to play a show in idaho and i want to sell tickets. i want to make sure i have the right answer. >> well then let's focus on porn. is porn harmful or helpful? >> it is a lot like the movie you showed. that's how i approach it. i go back to the hotel and it is like that. >> that's interesting. >> so are you wounded on the battlefield? >> i am wounded every night. >> joanne, one thing i noticed here is the video focused only on men and their war. not talking about women and their war. is that sexist? >> it is sexist. the most sexi
therefore if you are in there and there are all of these wonderful images coming in, it is a pearl harbor for your sip sip -- synapsis. >> i disagree. it is more dangerous to live with somebody who is backed up. they have a, how do you say, a full cargo. you know how tense your roommate has to be when you keep busting him for rying to watch porn? >> that has to be a problem. >> paperer towels! steve is way too tense. >> i don't know. do you think this film could help...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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somebody said it is like the japanese person to run for congress just after pearl harbor you could imagine they would see the person but just a member of a group but i think that is why people got excited and afraid period even abusive at some point. >> host: manchin day the million man march the organizers were of the list verified you are very critical of both have a and the nation of islam. tell us why. >> because people who come out of prison or drugs who are benefited by tradition. i've got to be acknowledged that is a true fact we should not taken the credit away but i was really looking for greater direction in and involvement after the march. after the march if you had 2 million men on the of all you had many more better perhaps ready for action right after that. but will there was policy prescriptions that did carry them on, from that crude it was like nothing. i found it disappointing but nobody's perfect. i thought that plus of missed opportunity. i tend to believe we need to draw people into action. the you want to talk about action, that is like talking directly to the people
somebody said it is like the japanese person to run for congress just after pearl harbor you could imagine they would see the person but just a member of a group but i think that is why people got excited and afraid period even abusive at some point. >> host: manchin day the million man march the organizers were of the list verified you are very critical of both have a and the nation of islam. tell us why. >> because people who come out of prison or drugs who are benefited by...
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Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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you not just focus on the sexy cyber per harvell -- cyber pearl harbor scenarios.ther aspect is one of the things we have learned from regular terrorism is that it is not just the incident, not just the attack that matters in history, it is all of the ripple effects, including how we respond. one area that i am worried about is what is hitting that core value that makes the internet work of trust. trust is being attacked. the trust is being hit by other activities. one of the repercussions of the is a loss offfair trust in american technology companies. why silicon valley is so upset is according to at least one study, they will lose about $180 billion worth of revenue. this was activities designed to go after one kind of terrorism, but it ripple effect out or -- more widely. attempts by authoritarian governments to leverage this, to change the underlying structure, the underlying governance of the internet itself. a push by china and russia to put more state controls in. if you like the chinese internet wall or the blacklisted websites in russia, watch out. this m
you not just focus on the sexy cyber per harvell -- cyber pearl harbor scenarios.ther aspect is one of the things we have learned from regular terrorism is that it is not just the incident, not just the attack that matters in history, it is all of the ripple effects, including how we respond. one area that i am worried about is what is hitting that core value that makes the internet work of trust. trust is being attacked. the trust is being hit by other activities. one of the repercussions of...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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me, you know, it's like if a japanese person were running for congress, just a few years after pearl harbor. you might imagine that some people wouldn't see the person for the person. he would see just as a for a. that is why some people really dig that excited and afraid. and even abusive at some points. >> host: in your, you mentioned the great movement in your life. one of the organizers of that event. you are very critical of the nation of islam in the book. tell us why. guess i want to acknowledge there's a lot of people who come out of prison, are on drugs, who are benefited by that nation. i want to acknowledge that as a true factor. we should never take any credit away. but you know, i guess i was really looking for a greater amount of direction and involvement after the march. i mean, if you had 2 million i'm not mall, you have many, many more millions of people, african-americans and others perhaps ready for action right after that. and yet, while there were some policy prescriptions and while individuals who participated did kerry, it just seemed like the standpoint of the call t
me, you know, it's like if a japanese person were running for congress, just a few years after pearl harbor. you might imagine that some people wouldn't see the person for the person. he would see just as a for a. that is why some people really dig that excited and afraid. and even abusive at some points. >> host: in your, you mentioned the great movement in your life. one of the organizers of that event. you are very critical of the nation of islam in the book. tell us why. guess i want...
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Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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who has come first in the surveys, eleanor roosevelt talking to the nation after the bombing of pearl harbor. we are putting this under the category of political partnerships. , the knowledgeow of something of this kind might happen has been hanging over our heads. yet it seems impossible to believe, impossible to drop the everyday things and see the result one thing that was important -- preparation to meet anatomy the matter where he strikes. that is all over now and there is no more uncertainty. we know what we have to face and we know that we are ready to face it. i should like to say just a word to the women in the country tonight. know, my boy may be on his way to the pacific. two of my children are on coast cities on the pacific. many of you all over this country have boys and service will now be called upon to go into action. you have friends and family and what a suddenly become a danger zone. you cannot escape the anxiety. you cannot escape the clutches fear at your heart and yet i hope that the certainty of what we have to meet will make you rise above. we must go about our daily
who has come first in the surveys, eleanor roosevelt talking to the nation after the bombing of pearl harbor. we are putting this under the category of political partnerships. , the knowledgeow of something of this kind might happen has been hanging over our heads. yet it seems impossible to believe, impossible to drop the everyday things and see the result one thing that was important -- preparation to meet anatomy the matter where he strikes. that is all over now and there is no more...
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Feb 16, 2014
02/14
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CNNW
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been over a half million references in government speeches and in the media to cyber 9/11, cyber pearl harborwe constantly talk about that, we're not paying enough attention to the largest theft in all of human history which is playing out right now which is this massive campaign of intellectual property theft emanating mostly back to china. if you think about the real impact of that, as opposed to the fictional "die hard 4" scenarios the power grids going down, this is something real happening now, happening in economic security impact by some measures as much as a trillion dollars worth of value being lost and it also has a national security impact. >> you've been a consultant to a lot of hollywood movies. do you look at something like "die hard 4" the idea being that you can take down the critical infrastructure, transportation, energy, of the united states, pretty easily? >> this is one of those areas where it's not just hollywood that describes it pretty easy and often in hollywood it's the one guy breaking into the system and there's the one computer that controls everything, whether it
been over a half million references in government speeches and in the media to cyber 9/11, cyber pearl harborwe constantly talk about that, we're not paying enough attention to the largest theft in all of human history which is playing out right now which is this massive campaign of intellectual property theft emanating mostly back to china. if you think about the real impact of that, as opposed to the fictional "die hard 4" scenarios the power grids going down, this is something real...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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know, keith, it is like if a japanese person was to run from a congress just a few years after pearl harbor. you might imagine some people wa wouldn't see the person for the person but see you as a member of a group. and yni think that is why peopl were excited and afraid and even abusive at some point. >> host: you mention the million man march. >> guest: that is a great moment in my life. >> host: and one of the organizers of that event was lewis fair con. you are very critical of him and the nation of islam in the book. tell us why? >> guest: there are a lot of people who come out of prison on drugs or whatever who are benefited by that nation. so we should never take credit away from that. but i was really looking for a greater mount of direction and involvement after the march. after the march, if you had two million men on the mall, you had many, many more millions of people, african-americans and others ready for action right after that. and yet, while there were policy prescriptions and individuals who participated did care -- carry -- them on. it seemed like nothing from the group
know, keith, it is like if a japanese person was to run from a congress just a few years after pearl harbor. you might imagine some people wa wouldn't see the person for the person but see you as a member of a group. and yni think that is why peopl were excited and afraid and even abusive at some point. >> host: you mention the million man march. >> guest: that is a great moment in my life. >> host: and one of the organizers of that event was lewis fair con. you are very...
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Feb 19, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> do you think it cheapened the oval office when he made that brief cameo in the movie "pearl harbor"? >> no, it may have put more focus on washington, d.c.. >> was it weird how slap stick his role was, falling out of the wheelchair? >> no, i think that adds to that, makes it seem like he has a sense of humor? >> you say you don't think it's real? >> how many interviews did they do and pull out -- >> they could have done that 15 years ago or 40 years ago. >> jaly leno did jay walking fo many years, same kind of thing. >> i think there are many people that are oblivious. >> i think we're wealthy enough that we don't have to know those things. we're not at each other's throats like they are in the ukraine. >> it's not the fault of the american people, it's the fault of leadership. >> you know how many times i've asked them who the vice president is, they don't know? >> are you blaming america? you're blaming the americans? >> i'm blaming some people, they have a civic responsibility to know who the vice president is. >> you know what's going on in your society. >> leaders, please. >> y
. >> do you think it cheapened the oval office when he made that brief cameo in the movie "pearl harbor"? >> no, it may have put more focus on washington, d.c.. >> was it weird how slap stick his role was, falling out of the wheelchair? >> no, i think that adds to that, makes it seem like he has a sense of humor? >> you say you don't think it's real? >> how many interviews did they do and pull out -- >> they could have done that 15 years ago...
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Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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KGO
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. >> do you think it cheapened the oval office when he made that brief cameo in the movie "pearl harborng? >> it may have put, you know, more focus on washington, d.c. >> was it weird how slapstick his role was? like falling out of the wheelchair. >> no. i think that adds -- that makes him look like he has a sense of humor. and as americans we want to know that somebody who's in our office has got a sense of humor. on and off camera. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: those people don't deserve the day off. tonight on the show -- oh, all three "sports illustrated" swimsuit cover models are here tonight. we'll have music from silversun pickups. and we'll be right back with will arnett. so stick around. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> portioned of "jimmy kimmel live" are brought to you by sony. artists ask the impossible. engineers make the impossible possible. learn more at sony.com/bemoved. to deal with split ends? new split-end bandage from garnier fructis. reconstructs strength right to the splits. then helps stop new ones from starting. new fructis split-end bandage. i can download anyth
. >> do you think it cheapened the oval office when he made that brief cameo in the movie "pearl harborng? >> it may have put, you know, more focus on washington, d.c. >> was it weird how slapstick his role was? like falling out of the wheelchair. >> no. i think that adds -- that makes him look like he has a sense of humor. and as americans we want to know that somebody who's in our office has got a sense of humor. on and off camera. [ cheers and applause ] >>...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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. >> george herbert walker bush met barbara pierce after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> and george asked someone there do you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl -- >> no, he didn't say that. he said yeah, george said go cut in on her, in those days we did that. and you can bring her over. which he did do. they played a waltz, and waltzing matilda didn't waltz. and he said do you mind if we sit down for a minute, and i did, and we talked. then i went over to the andover dance, and he kissed me. i almost fainted from excitement. 16, 17 -- you were 17? >> you were 16. >> 18 the next day. he was. that is like a song, you were 16. >> i don't think -- >> two teenagers in love with wars in europe and the pacific, the future did not look bright. bush joined his fellow americans and enlisted as soon as he turned 18. he earned his wings and became the youngest pilot in the navy. >> his mother and father were wonderful. and i had a brother who was overseas. i had a brother-in-law who was overseas. but it was different, different times. >> lieutenant junior
. >> george herbert walker bush met barbara pierce after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> and george asked someone there do you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl -- >> no, he didn't say that. he said yeah, george said go cut in on her, in those days we did that. and you can bring her over. which he did do. they played a waltz, and waltzing matilda didn't waltz. and he said do you mind if we sit down for a minute, and i did, and we...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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met barbara pierce at a high school dance in 1941 a few weeks after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> george asked someone there, you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl. >> he didn't say that. yeah, i grew up with her. go cut in on her. then you can bring her over to introduce me to her. they played a waltz. waltzing matilda didn't waltz. i said do you mind if we sit down for a minute? we did and we talked. then i went over to the andover dance with him. first person that ever kissed me. kissed me in front of 15 people who didn't seem to notice. i almost fainted. 16, 17 -- you were 17 then. >> 17. you were 16. >> 18 the next day. it's like a song. you were 16 i was 17. >> i don't think they are interested. >> two teenagers in love with wars in europe and the pacific, the future did not look bright. bush joined his fellow americans and enlisted as soon as he turned 18. he earned his wings, became the youngest pilot in the navy at the time. >> we wouldn't hear from him forever. his mother and father were wonderful. i had a brother who was overseas i had a br
met barbara pierce at a high school dance in 1941 a few weeks after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> george asked someone there, you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl. >> he didn't say that. yeah, i grew up with her. go cut in on her. then you can bring her over to introduce me to her. they played a waltz. waltzing matilda didn't waltz. i said do you mind if we sit down for a minute? we did and we talked. then i went over to the andover...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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in 2001 after the worst attack soil since pearl harbor, the united states invaded afghanistan. act of toppling the taliban was stroo teejicly and technologically astounding. three months time america and her allies knocked down a regime in land lockedy mountainous terrain. we dropped soldiers into a combat zone with a brutal climate, with no support, other and a toughen my turf.ng on his home we asked them to establish logisticses that any officer would call impossible. we asked them to fight a war for indn't been trained a land that has burried the most world.l empires in the but not only did they succeed, iny kicked the taliban down three months. tot's less than a semester their colleagues back home. then we asked them to do even harder. make no mistake. insurgency is the hardest type of war a democracy can fight. holding a new country steady with insurgents hiding among innocents can take years. the british 12 years to put down the millennium communists. the insurgency in northern ireland took decades to resolve. last week i visited our colombian friend who have fought narco
in 2001 after the worst attack soil since pearl harbor, the united states invaded afghanistan. act of toppling the taliban was stroo teejicly and technologically astounding. three months time america and her allies knocked down a regime in land lockedy mountainous terrain. we dropped soldiers into a combat zone with a brutal climate, with no support, other and a toughen my turf.ng on his home we asked them to establish logisticses that any officer would call impossible. we asked them to fight a...
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Feb 4, 2014
02/14
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we never had anything on our homeland like that, except for pearl harbor. and that seemed remote to us because ite -- then was world war ii, a long time ago. that is the big adjustment for all of us in our country, to imagine that that could happen to us. >> you talked about stamina. were their days at the white house when you are so tired that you wanted to quit, you wanted to say no more? >> no. there really were not many. there were days when i was physically and emotionally tired many of thoseter occasions, the times when we met with the families of the fallen, the troops who had died. we met them over and over for the whole time we lived in the white house. i never thought i wanted to quit. i wanted to thought quit. i know george did not either. also, we go to bed early. intuitively have known how to take care of our health. we love to go to bed early and get up early, we worked out. george exercises. we do all of the things that i think are what you need to do for emotional health as well as for your physical health. >> did you work out in the white h
we never had anything on our homeland like that, except for pearl harbor. and that seemed remote to us because ite -- then was world war ii, a long time ago. that is the big adjustment for all of us in our country, to imagine that that could happen to us. >> you talked about stamina. were their days at the white house when you are so tired that you wanted to quit, you wanted to say no more? >> no. there really were not many. there were days when i was physically and emotionally...
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Feb 27, 2014
02/14
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just as we cannot ignore what happened at pearl harbor, just as we cannot ignore what happened on 9/11, we cannot ignore many of the thing this is a happened in the history of african-americans. with frank m. johnson having athroid marchers to move rward by signing this order, later on, the same president, lyndon johnson, signed the voting rights act of 1965. i am probably in congress because of the voting rights act of 1965. because it provided a means by which districts could be drawn with consideration given to population as opposed to geography. that voting rights act, section 5, is what allowed a good many people who are right here in this congress today to be here. the voting rights act of 1965 and section 5 of it and as you know, section 5 has been made impotent by the evisceration of section 4. section 4 was declared unconstitutional. one of the things i have learned in my years on the planet is that while i don't always agree with the judiciary, i do respect the judiciary. i didn't agree with the decision to declare section 4 unconstitutional. but i respect the opinion and as
just as we cannot ignore what happened at pearl harbor, just as we cannot ignore what happened on 9/11, we cannot ignore many of the thing this is a happened in the history of african-americans. with frank m. johnson having athroid marchers to move rward by signing this order, later on, the same president, lyndon johnson, signed the voting rights act of 1965. i am probably in congress because of the voting rights act of 1965. because it provided a means by which districts could be drawn with...
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Feb 15, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> george herbert walker bush met barbara pierce after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> and george asked someone there do you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl -- >> no, he didn't say that. he said yeah, george said go cut in on her, in those days we did that. and you can bring her over. which he did do. they played a waltz, and waltzing matilda didn't waltz. and he said do you mind if we sit down for a minute, and i did, and we talked. then i went over to the andover dance, and he kissed me. i almost fainted from excitement. 16, 17 -- you were 17? >> you were 16. >> 18 the next day. he was. that is like a song, you were 16. >> i don't think -- >> two teenagers in love with wars in europe and the pacific, the future did not look bright. bush joined his fellow americans and enlisted as soon as he turned 18. he earned his wings and became the youngest pilot in the navy. >> his mother and father were wonderful. and i had a brother who was overseas. i had a brother-in-law who was overseas. but it was different, different times. >> lieutenant junior
. >> george herbert walker bush met barbara pierce after the december 7th attack on pearl harbor. >> and george asked someone there do you know the girl in the red and green dress. >> beautiful girl -- >> no, he didn't say that. he said yeah, george said go cut in on her, in those days we did that. and you can bring her over. which he did do. they played a waltz, and waltzing matilda didn't waltz. and he said do you mind if we sit down for a minute, and i did, and we...
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Feb 21, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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the united states had a console in berlin up until pearl harbor who was sending back dispatches sayingyou shouldn't be too hard on hitler and mussolini couldn't provide and they couldn't find the left press couldn't find it but the state department could. going back to bring airy with the proposed was that in spain itself the popular forces should fight a guerrilla war. that is a old spanish tradition to fight a guerrilla war and in morocco call for support the moroccan liberation forces that were trying to free themselves from french and british and spanish imperial control. that was the base of franklin's army. they were moorish troops so his idea was to fight a revolutionary war and support them in their efforts to overthrow imperialist control they thought what he wrote the end fascist armies just as in spain itself the popular forces were fighting until they were crushed. well if you read the scholarship on the matter and up until today that is kind of dismissed as a sort of romantic joke is the whole anarchist movement is but i don't think it was. that was my initial exposure to
the united states had a console in berlin up until pearl harbor who was sending back dispatches sayingyou shouldn't be too hard on hitler and mussolini couldn't provide and they couldn't find the left press couldn't find it but the state department could. going back to bring airy with the proposed was that in spain itself the popular forces should fight a guerrilla war. that is a old spanish tradition to fight a guerrilla war and in morocco call for support the moroccan liberation forces that...
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Feb 10, 2014
02/14
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my god, i think they would say pearl harbor was a success. >> i wouldn't go that far. >> these are people get up in the face of what, telling the american people to their face that they're idiots. >> i think back on '08 when senator obama was running. and he kept talking, he wanted to be a transformational president. and this thing that was just announced by the head of the congressional budget office, is the transformation, which is it's a good thing that people are choosing not to work and we're subsidizing them not to work. from obama's point of view, that's what he wants. i don't think the majority of americans want that. >> by the way, what does it say about the leading economy in the world when its drive and when the american drive is disappearing. part time work, don't work, stay home, become europe. >> it wasn't that they lost 2 million jobs. it was that 2 million people are not going to work because they're getting subsidized health care and don't need to work. that's different. jobs are also getting lost. >> the other part, some of the democrat response to this on the sunday sho
my god, i think they would say pearl harbor was a success. >> i wouldn't go that far. >> these are people get up in the face of what, telling the american people to their face that they're idiots. >> i think back on '08 when senator obama was running. and he kept talking, he wanted to be a transformational president. and this thing that was just announced by the head of the congressional budget office, is the transformation, which is it's a good thing that people are choosing...
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Feb 26, 2014
02/14
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MSNBCW
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and back in 1940, right before pearl harbor, we were the 17th in terms of military spending and the size of the force. so we're still way, way ahead. the army and the marines grew to fight the land wars in iraq and afghanistan and after every war, you bring them back down. and what vice president cheney doesn't mention is two things. when he was secretary of defense, he actually cut it more than what has been cut under the budget control act, and this was not obama's idea. in fact, as you mentioned, he's asking for $26 billion more than the sequestration allows, and another $100 billion over the next couple of years so they can get relief from sequestration. he's not cutting it. he's asking for more than the congress. >> larry, i'm glad you mentioned that. when it comes to dick cheney on these issues, the fact check takes a lot longer than the original lie. i have to tell you, i don't have a high standard for him, but this was pretty outrageous what he is saying both for, as you mentioned, the context of military spending and when he was, you know, for it before he was against it. second
and back in 1940, right before pearl harbor, we were the 17th in terms of military spending and the size of the force. so we're still way, way ahead. the army and the marines grew to fight the land wars in iraq and afghanistan and after every war, you bring them back down. and what vice president cheney doesn't mention is two things. when he was secretary of defense, he actually cut it more than what has been cut under the budget control act, and this was not obama's idea. in fact, as you...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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KNTV
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president franklin roosevelt signed that order on february 19th, 1942, shortly after the attack on pearl harbor. the day of remembrance will take place at the kabuki theater at 2:00 this afternoon. >>> the park superintendent who let lady gaga film her music video at hearst castle may have been on the edge of glory then, but now he's on administrative leave. she was filming her music video around neptune pool which had been drained because it was leaking and gaga picked up the cost of filling it but because california is in a drought, it's not sitting well. it interrupted the vacation plans for "wolf of wall street" star who was going to vacation there. sometimes it's not the right thing. it's how it looks, right? thank you so much for making us a part of your morning. the next news is at 6:30. our olympic coverage starts at 2:30 so you know what we'll be doing then. thanks for watching. have a great day and we'll see you tomorrow. - if you've come lookin' for some fun or a chance to be most anyone there's a little shop i know you'll find it on the chica show follow me and step inside imaginati
president franklin roosevelt signed that order on february 19th, 1942, shortly after the attack on pearl harbor. the day of remembrance will take place at the kabuki theater at 2:00 this afternoon. >>> the park superintendent who let lady gaga film her music video at hearst castle may have been on the edge of glory then, but now he's on administrative leave. she was filming her music video around neptune pool which had been drained because it was leaking and gaga picked up the cost of...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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it took the bombing of pearl harbor. self-interest. that self-interest got rid of nazi germany and japanese imperialism. we fought the cold war for self-interest, sure, but who would deny that the end of it, the world is much better and freer? the russians have all types of problems but no one wants to restore the old communist party. american power has been, ultimately, a great boon for the world. in a way, it kept the world ecure. why? for this reason. what america invented is the idea of wealth creation as an alternative to conquest. frankly, most people in the rest of the world believe in both. if china today or russia had america's power, they would be using it for wealth creation. we taught them that. they would also be using it for conquest. what america can do for the world now is show the importance of transitioning from the one to the other. it is another way of saying that american foreign-policy is not about acquiring real estate. people tell me, if american -- america invaded grenada and iraq and afghanistan. if america in
it took the bombing of pearl harbor. self-interest. that self-interest got rid of nazi germany and japanese imperialism. we fought the cold war for self-interest, sure, but who would deny that the end of it, the world is much better and freer? the russians have all types of problems but no one wants to restore the old communist party. american power has been, ultimately, a great boon for the world. in a way, it kept the world ecure. why? for this reason. what america invented is the idea of...
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Feb 9, 2014
02/14
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we never had anything on our homeland like that, except for pearl harbor.nd that seemed remote to us then because it was world war ii, a long time ago. that is the big adjustment for all of us in our country, to imagine that that could happen to us. >> you talked about stamina. were their days at the white house when you are so tired that you wanted to quit, you wanted to say no more? >> no. there really were not many. there were days when i was physically and emotionally tired and drained after many of those occasions, the times when we met with the families of the fallen, the troops who had died. we met them over and over for the whole time we lived in the white house. i never thought i wanted to quit. i never once thought i wanted to quit. i know george did not either. also, we go to bed early. we always just intuitively have known how to take care of our health. we love to go to bed early and get up early, we worked out. george exercises. we do all of the things that i think are what you need to do for emotional health as well as for your physical healt
we never had anything on our homeland like that, except for pearl harbor.nd that seemed remote to us then because it was world war ii, a long time ago. that is the big adjustment for all of us in our country, to imagine that that could happen to us. >> you talked about stamina. were their days at the white house when you are so tired that you wanted to quit, you wanted to say no more? >> no. there really were not many. there were days when i was physically and emotionally tired and...