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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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monticello decided to negotiate with princeton, and worked at a great deal where princeton will just continue working in the period that they were working on, through the presidency, and we will take on about half of the remaining documents which was the retirement period. so, we were responsible for, like i said, 1809 to 1826. which we think is going to take about 24 volumes just for that period. overall, it is going to take something like 90 volumes to gets from start to finish and get everything that we want include included. next question. >> can you tell us a little bit more about this retirement series that you're working on? >> well, it is a period that in some ways we think -- we would think that we think that is the best period to work on of all because it's a period where jefferson finally is released from what he called a shackles of public office. he was able to come back to monticello and just look down, settle down and work on everything that interested him. right about everything that he was interested him. everything doesn't trust him, so, on any given day, he might b
monticello decided to negotiate with princeton, and worked at a great deal where princeton will just continue working in the period that they were working on, through the presidency, and we will take on about half of the remaining documents which was the retirement period. so, we were responsible for, like i said, 1809 to 1826. which we think is going to take about 24 volumes just for that period. overall, it is going to take something like 90 volumes to gets from start to finish and get...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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university's history department and princeton humanities council.y put this on tonight and they were a great help in a getting the word out. and then i want to point out two important buttons on the bottom of your screen. along one the green long one is the link to buy a copy of the gun, the ship and the pen and if you enter colley at checkout you will get 10% off on your entire order. if you try to order over the phone or send us an e-mail and put that information in the check. and then there is an ask thes question button and you will see that someone has already found that and it is just of that. it is a place to put your questions as you think of them and then i will be taking the chat down and join the conversation so please use that button and feel encouraged to put your questions in the queue as you think of them and that will help us make sure that we leave enough time for the q and a. so now, onto our guest. i just mentioned jill lepore's glowing review of linda colley's new book from which i will quote only a sentence. if there were a nobl
university's history department and princeton humanities council.y put this on tonight and they were a great help in a getting the word out. and then i want to point out two important buttons on the bottom of your screen. along one the green long one is the link to buy a copy of the gun, the ship and the pen and if you enter colley at checkout you will get 10% off on your entire order. if you try to order over the phone or send us an e-mail and put that information in the check. and then there...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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started in princeton. they are still working in princeton doing wonderful work up there. they are roughly halfway into his presidency. what brought us here to monticello was the realization in the 1990s that they had been doing it for almost 50 years and jefferson wasn't president yet. monticello decided to figure out a way to get the job done sooner in people's foreseeable lifetime. monticello decided -- negotiated with princeton. we worked out a great deal where princeton would work in the period they were working on through the presidency. we would take on about half of the remaining documents, which was the retirement period. we are responsible for, as i said, 1809 to 1826, which we think is going to take about 24 volumes just for that period. overall, it's going to take something like 90 volumes to get from start to finish and include all the material we want to include. next question. >> can you tell us a little bit more about this retirement series that you are working on? >> well, it's a period that in some ways -- of course, we would think that. we think it's the
started in princeton. they are still working in princeton doing wonderful work up there. they are roughly halfway into his presidency. what brought us here to monticello was the realization in the 1990s that they had been doing it for almost 50 years and jefferson wasn't president yet. monticello decided to figure out a way to get the job done sooner in people's foreseeable lifetime. monticello decided -- negotiated with princeton. we worked out a great deal where princeton would work in the...
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we had to go and separate cars from princeton. and i noticed in one of the cars in the back seat was jim peebles, jim p was going up and i thought, oh, i'll take my chance and ask jim, why don't cause mortgages? think of all these complicated cars, a single axis that you get in the future. we know many solutions of the onsite equations and they are very complicated and you cause of ologist don't seem to talk about them. and he looked at me and he said, because the universe is not like that either. my gosh, it's not. is it? because the microwave background is, oh, very, very irregular all over the sky toes is the big bang. was very, very smooth and regular and not like the sink of that she's in the future. they're very different. so if we are to have a theory of quantum gravity which explains the singularities, it's a very, very, very strange theory, which has to be different in the future from in the past. and that's lot like the quantum mechanics. we know all the theories, the physics apart from a statistical theory. this is the
we had to go and separate cars from princeton. and i noticed in one of the cars in the back seat was jim peebles, jim p was going up and i thought, oh, i'll take my chance and ask jim, why don't cause mortgages? think of all these complicated cars, a single axis that you get in the future. we know many solutions of the onsite equations and they are very complicated and you cause of ologist don't seem to talk about them. and he looked at me and he said, because the universe is not like that...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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and princeton.n of hunts full of puzzles that rely on logic and obscure knowledge, science. oh, in ours we would just run around town looking for a store that would sell us beer. so, uh, who's in? i think it sounds fun. yeah, me, too. i'm in. let's do it. i'm sorry. are we really doing this or are we tricking koothrappali again like with the dinner party? ♪ our whole universe was in a hot, dense state ♪ ♪ then nearly 14 billion years ago expansion started... wait! ♪ ♪ the earth began to cool ♪ ♪ the autotrophs began to drool, neanderthals developed tools ♪ ♪ we built the wall ♪ ♪ we built the pyramids ♪
and princeton.n of hunts full of puzzles that rely on logic and obscure knowledge, science. oh, in ours we would just run around town looking for a store that would sell us beer. so, uh, who's in? i think it sounds fun. yeah, me, too. i'm in. let's do it. i'm sorry. are we really doing this or are we tricking koothrappali again like with the dinner party? ♪ our whole universe was in a hot, dense state ♪ ♪ then nearly 14 billion years ago expansion started... wait! ♪ ♪ the earth began...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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stephen kotkin is professor of history and international affairs at princeton university and maria murillo is a professor of science at columbia and is also serving as director for the institute of latin american studies. without further ado i will hand it over to tim to talk about his book before. >> thanks a lot. it's really a pleasure to be here and i want to thank you in the palace for taking time out of your busy schedules particularly during a pandemic. i really appreciate your effort and hearing what you have to say about the book. the simplest way to describe "weak strongman" the limits of power in putin's russia is that it's explainable. translate what i think is the best academic research over the last decade for a general audience on a host of interesting questions. spuyten really popular? do you elections matter? the's propaganda ineffective cliques why are relations with the left so fraught. the book should have something for you whether you identify as a russian or is someone who has russian experience. there's no shortage of books on russia so why should you read this one? t
stephen kotkin is professor of history and international affairs at princeton university and maria murillo is a professor of science at columbia and is also serving as director for the institute of latin american studies. without further ado i will hand it over to tim to talk about his book before. >> thanks a lot. it's really a pleasure to be here and i want to thank you in the palace for taking time out of your busy schedules particularly during a pandemic. i really appreciate your...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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in an hour, princeton university history professor examines the history of written constitutions from the 18th century to today. >> good evening. one of the leading historians his work focused on the self examining economic social system that shaped southern life. his books include the ruling class the radical and republican and triumph of antislavery politics and freedom national. they later won the prize and annual award for the scholarly work in english on abraham lincoln or the civil war era and from california berkeley he's been on the faculty of the university of new york graduate center since 1997 and the holder of the graduate school of humanities chair since 98. he teaches courses on contracts with criminal law and regulations. he attended princeton university, oxford university and yale law school and served as a law clerk for the judge of the united states court of appeals. he was awarded for his book race, crime and the law and recent books include race, affirmative action and the law, the persistence of the color line, radical politics and the racial politics and the poli
in an hour, princeton university history professor examines the history of written constitutions from the 18th century to today. >> good evening. one of the leading historians his work focused on the self examining economic social system that shaped southern life. his books include the ruling class the radical and republican and triumph of antislavery politics and freedom national. they later won the prize and annual award for the scholarly work in english on abraham lincoln or the civil...
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. >> seconds later, the "uss princeton" picked up the object on radar 60 miles away. skeptics claim they could be some advanced drones developed by russia on china. others say the videos are just cameras playing tricks on us. >> alex dietrich said she drew a diagram back in the day. where is that now? there were contemporary accounts, and now they've vanished, and we're left with these stories, these recountings of what they kind of remember happening. >> but even former president obama said something unexplained is out there. >> what is true, and i'm actually being serious here is that there are -- there's footage and records of objects in the skies that we don't know exactly what they are. >> and according to the "new york times," the ufo report, which is due to be submitted by june 25th, will present few conclusions. >>> soldiers are trained to face down the enemy, but troops in ft. carson, colorado were not prepared for this adversary. they were chased out of their armored vehicle by, yeah, a raccoon. you could hear them screaming as they sprinted out of the way.
. >> seconds later, the "uss princeton" picked up the object on radar 60 miles away. skeptics claim they could be some advanced drones developed by russia on china. others say the videos are just cameras playing tricks on us. >> alex dietrich said she drew a diagram back in the day. where is that now? there were contemporary accounts, and now they've vanished, and we're left with these stories, these recountings of what they kind of remember happening. >> but even...
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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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this idea of the public good becomes most clear around princeton university.the introduction on page 12. as the critical moment forces us to reckon with influence over cities, we cannot keep discussing how the university is truly educational in terms the universe cities are all around us that we failed to examine the consequences of schools embracing an increasingly for-profit approach to their urban surroundings. our blind spot largely comes from the assumption that higher education is an inherent public good most clearly marked by the status to provide services that would otherwise come from the government it appears a critical paradox has emerged. this is precisely what allows for an easier transfer of public dollars for private developments. city colleges and universities pay no taxes on their increasingly prominent real estate footprints. even public universities use their public goods status and for-profit research with the financial security of private developers and investors sitting on campus land. school reaps the benefits of police and trash removal
this idea of the public good becomes most clear around princeton university.the introduction on page 12. as the critical moment forces us to reckon with influence over cities, we cannot keep discussing how the university is truly educational in terms the universe cities are all around us that we failed to examine the consequences of schools embracing an increasingly for-profit approach to their urban surroundings. our blind spot largely comes from the assumption that higher education is an...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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this decisive battle because i think by that a time, by early 1777 especially after trenton and princeton, i think he realized that washington and washington's army was the american center of gravity and he could destroy washington and washington's army that that would end the rebellion. he obviously wasn't able to accomplish that. he's not able to get his decisive victory. he can't get that -- that final big decisive victory. after that, i really think the war goes into that different stage where ultimately it goes to the south and then you really have a much more of a counter insurgency like conflict and i think by that point, again, only the americans could have beaten themselves at that point. that's my personal assessment of that. and when you look at -- when you look at how the saratoga campaign played out, one of the optionsam that does present whih he presents in sort of a after-thought manner is, well, one thing that we could do to use the navy, load up the troops who were up in canada, sail them back around to new york and then now to reinforce how, immense army and that army wo
this decisive battle because i think by that a time, by early 1777 especially after trenton and princeton, i think he realized that washington and washington's army was the american center of gravity and he could destroy washington and washington's army that that would end the rebellion. he obviously wasn't able to accomplish that. he's not able to get his decisive victory. he can't get that -- that final big decisive victory. after that, i really think the war goes into that different stage...
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Jun 25, 2021
06/21
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he is actually brilliant, he is a princeton grad, world class athlete at princeton, hockey player.ncredibly brave. he was involved with shootouts armed with a pistol. he is actually wildly respected -- he has had a long-standing military career in combat. so that fox tv interview is like a world timed upside down. i was very proud of him, he was very -- by the way he is one of the blunt is people i've ever seen in uniform. he does not suffer fools lightly. and i think he's done a remarkable job just speaking directly to the challenge. we do have institutional racism baked into americas dna. we have to address it. we have a army post named after confederate generals who fought to preserve slavery. so we have to get into this subject, we will work it out. in many ways, the armed forces, it is the least racist institution in this country. but we have a long way to go, and he is the guy to get us there. >> general, in my experience in my 30 years, fox news is on the lion's share of the televisions in the mess halls rating rooms and key -- foreign and domestic. what would it do to the r
he is actually brilliant, he is a princeton grad, world class athlete at princeton, hockey player.ncredibly brave. he was involved with shootouts armed with a pistol. he is actually wildly respected -- he has had a long-standing military career in combat. so that fox tv interview is like a world timed upside down. i was very proud of him, he was very -- by the way he is one of the blunt is people i've ever seen in uniform. he does not suffer fools lightly. and i think he's done a remarkable job...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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and he graduated from princeton and the phd from johns hopkins. as a freshman at princeton dr. berlin game took the civil war course. dot book taught by somebody we all know
and he graduated from princeton and the phd from johns hopkins. as a freshman at princeton dr. berlin game took the civil war course. dot book taught by somebody we all know
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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it doesn't work for him. , taught at princeton for 35 years saying it is an authoritarian on - - authoritative country but the leadership matters so he set them up as mutually exclusive rather than complementary so that causes him to go to the back door phrases like the kgb background is not relevant and on it goes. so there is talk and strategy but i wonder if it advances the social science argument. so what is the question we try to explain? what is the question that puzzles us that we don't understand? that professor fry helps us understand? you might think the question is how does this fit into others? but that is not what the book says. it says there ises one like that but in fact it gives a lot of examples on russia being different. in fact russia just isn't that a personal autocracy today but yesterday and the day before yesterday in the 100 years before that and 300 years before that and 700 years before that. russia is on a 700 year plus transition not a lot of countries are on that trajectory. and those that are like llexplaining why russia is still russia and not for example germany
it doesn't work for him. , taught at princeton for 35 years saying it is an authoritarian on - - authoritative country but the leadership matters so he set them up as mutually exclusive rather than complementary so that causes him to go to the back door phrases like the kgb background is not relevant and on it goes. so there is talk and strategy but i wonder if it advances the social science argument. so what is the question we try to explain? what is the question that puzzles us that we don't...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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with a professor of history here at princeton will list all of her claims that but really it is still at work with her new book. but then the ordeal elizabeth marsh we know her as an expert explorer >> i should mention. this is a book that is truly global. but between the covers are the history of the islands and japan and russia and the united states and south america and nigeria. these are poor white males. but democracy but why word i want to? so the idea that constitutions. they can't be. because most states outside of the americas. and many of these already have forms of that constitution. they are using those. napoleon use that with a calculation. and not writing and what they hope to do by issuing and sometimes writing the constitution and is quite happy to get that mail democracy. communication but in addition, you've got various pressures to do often with war as i say at one level in those and one to raise more taxes. and the constitution isn't trying to contrast very often. we will give you more religious toleration, but in the terms you will expect [inaudible] but also you'
with a professor of history here at princeton will list all of her claims that but really it is still at work with her new book. but then the ordeal elizabeth marsh we know her as an expert explorer >> i should mention. this is a book that is truly global. but between the covers are the history of the islands and japan and russia and the united states and south america and nigeria. these are poor white males. but democracy but why word i want to? so the idea that constitutions. they can't...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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he attended princeton and a naval aviator before running for congress. he won at 30 years old. congress. amid the vietnam war. went on to serve as an aide to president nixon before being appointed ambassador to nato. he became president ford's chief of staff. ford moves rumsfeld out of the white house and in to the pentagon as the youngest secretary of defense in u.s. history. >> it was a simpler world. we had one major problem, the soviet union was expanding. >> after president ford lord the election, he spent some years in the private sector as a top ceo. president reagan asked him to be the mideast envoy. a position that even brought rumsfeld face to face with saddam hussein, the man that would become his biggest foe two decades later. a rumsfeld biographer said he sounded early alarm bells on terrorism and threats to the u.s. homeland. >> he was trying to alert the american public to the idea that this is a new threat. it's a new kind of threat. he went so far to say we would have to hit the terrorists where they are. in order not to be hit by them where we are. >> that fea
he attended princeton and a naval aviator before running for congress. he won at 30 years old. congress. amid the vietnam war. went on to serve as an aide to president nixon before being appointed ambassador to nato. he became president ford's chief of staff. ford moves rumsfeld out of the white house and in to the pentagon as the youngest secretary of defense in u.s. history. >> it was a simpler world. we had one major problem, the soviet union was expanding. >> after president...
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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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in the words of the mythical professor pearson of princeton, our commentator, i remember, he said, writingn his journal when the thing was put together again in the world was in business, i remember wandering through manhattan, standing alone on times square and catching sight of a lien dog running down 7th avenue with a piece of -- -- lean dog running down 7th avenue with a piece of meat in its mouth. i walked up broadway past shop windows and suddenly caught sight of a martian machine. and then come across columbus circle, i could see standing in a silent row, 19 of those great metal titans, their cobbles empty, their steel arms hanging listlessly by their sides. and i looked for the monsters that inhabit those machines and then before my eyes, i saw them, stark and silent, the martians themselves were the flock of hungry birds -- with a flock of hungry birds tearing flesh from their dead bodies. later, when their bodies were examined in laboratories, it was found that they had been killed by disease bacteria, against which their systems were unprepared, slain after all man's defenses ha
in the words of the mythical professor pearson of princeton, our commentator, i remember, he said, writingn his journal when the thing was put together again in the world was in business, i remember wandering through manhattan, standing alone on times square and catching sight of a lien dog running down 7th avenue with a piece of -- -- lean dog running down 7th avenue with a piece of meat in its mouth. i walked up broadway past shop windows and suddenly caught sight of a martian machine. and...
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. >> reporter: seconds later, the uss princeton picked up the object on radar 60 miles away.ptics claim the unidentified sightings could be advanced drones developed by russia or china. others say the videos are just cameras playing tricks on us. >> alex dietrich said she drew a diagram back in the day. but where is that diagram now? there were contemporary accounts and they've vanished. and now we're left with these stories that they tell, these recounts of what they kind of remember happening. >> reporter: but even former president obama recently said something unexplained is out there. >> what is true, and i'm actually being serious here, is that there are -- there is footage and records of objects in the skies that we don't know exactly what they are. >> reporter: "the new york times" says thefoort whichisueu w concsis. >>> jus ahead, story of a lost wallet found 46 years later, and what was inside. >>> first, we talk to the high school valedictorian who changed the subject of her speech without telling the school and shocked everyone. people everywhere living with type 2
. >> reporter: seconds later, the uss princeton picked up the object on radar 60 miles away.ptics claim the unidentified sightings could be advanced drones developed by russia or china. others say the videos are just cameras playing tricks on us. >> alex dietrich said she drew a diagram back in the day. but where is that diagram now? there were contemporary accounts and they've vanished. and now we're left with these stories that they tell, these recounts of what they kind of...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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and he graduated from princeton and the phd from johns hopkins. as a freshman at princeton dr. berlin game took the civil war course. dot book taught by somebody we all know in the lincoln group david donald david herbert donald who took and took him under his wing and made him a research assistant in 1968. he then joined the history department at connecticut college in new london. where he taught in the may buckley sadowski, he was the may buckley sandowski professor of history emeritus. he retired in 2001. he retirement didn't agree with him apparently because he joined the faculty of the university of illinois at springfield in 2009. of course. he's the author of numerous books in publications including abraham lincoln a life the two volume green monster that he referred to in the inner world of abraham lincoln. so it grace gives me great pleasure to introduce to everyone dr. michael burlingame. well, thank you very much. john's good to see you again and always an honor to be invited to speak to a group like yours or you're both of yours, but it's a space and and but it's a
and he graduated from princeton and the phd from johns hopkins. as a freshman at princeton dr. berlin game took the civil war course. dot book taught by somebody we all know in the lincoln group david donald david herbert donald who took and took him under his wing and made him a research assistant in 1968. he then joined the history department at connecticut college in new london. where he taught in the may buckley sadowski, he was the may buckley sandowski professor of history emeritus. he...
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you know, you're not giving dna, princeton, dna vaccines which could integrate into into house cells. so they're relatively short lived, easily adaptive so you can change the sequence of the r n a to produce specific antigens. if a virus changes are, if you take you kind of depth of axioms relatively easily and they're relatively cheap and easy to produce, allison phase far more complex than for example, the koran of ours. that causes covered 19. what other main obstacles when it comes to applying this to it's well, there are many differences. h r b infection is a chronic infection. once you have it, you have it forever in except for the couple of cases that have been killed by bone marrow transplant. but, but a time b is a very, although it's also an r n a r is like they have a 19 virus, it tastes extremely rapidly, they replicate very quickly. and so we, in fact, in any one, in fact, it's not going to be constrained that the virus and so finding a vaccine that will, that prevent all of those different strains and all the different genic variation is extremely difficult. and of cours
you know, you're not giving dna, princeton, dna vaccines which could integrate into into house cells. so they're relatively short lived, easily adaptive so you can change the sequence of the r n a to produce specific antigens. if a virus changes are, if you take you kind of depth of axioms relatively easily and they're relatively cheap and easy to produce, allison phase far more complex than for example, the koran of ours. that causes covered 19. what other main obstacles when it comes to...
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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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stephen kotkin they professor of history at at international affairs at princeton university. >> thank you and thank you for the opportunity to be here today. congratulations on the book timothy frye. from my point of view as an obligated reader there are far too many books on russia but we have far too few good looks on russia and her fester fries book call -- falls into the latter category which makes it a pleasurable experience. a long time ago in the late 80s and early 90s the russians were saying that they wanted to be a normal country and this was true of the vast majority people even in the provinces who were far away like myself. professor frye's argument is that russia is a marmol country. it has become a normal country. it is a normal autocracy but it is normal. putin kills journalists and autocracies killed journalists. that's what attackers to do. they emasculate limits on executive power. this regime is corrupt yeah well all personal autocracies are corrupt so we are dealing with another normal country. it's not a normal country in the way that folks in the late 80s and 90
stephen kotkin they professor of history at at international affairs at princeton university. >> thank you and thank you for the opportunity to be here today. congratulations on the book timothy frye. from my point of view as an obligated reader there are far too many books on russia but we have far too few good looks on russia and her fester fries book call -- falls into the latter category which makes it a pleasurable experience. a long time ago in the late 80s and early 90s the...
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Jun 25, 2021
06/21
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what else we are going to do rated we have one coming back to is just finished her first year at princetonback helping our communities. and she is working to get shots in the arms. and when i see students like her stepping up, it makes me know the north carolina is what you get through this even stronger than before. and i'm excited about that so let me introduce to you our very own ivy jones is going to introduce to you, the president of the united states of america, joe biden. [applause and cheering]. [applause and cheering]. [inaudible]. [applause and cheering]. [applause and cheering]. >> thank you governor cooper and thank you all for being here this afternoon. like many college freshman, i was eagerly awaiting the opportunity to go to my door must follow when the extent that the clinton university like many of us is across our country will be shifting to a virtual format. i was disappointed at this less than typical start my college career, he did not undo the devastation brought about by the pandemic. and someone with a father in the army another one serious respiratory condition, i
what else we are going to do rated we have one coming back to is just finished her first year at princetonback helping our communities. and she is working to get shots in the arms. and when i see students like her stepping up, it makes me know the north carolina is what you get through this even stronger than before. and i'm excited about that so let me introduce to you our very own ivy jones is going to introduce to you, the president of the united states of america, joe biden. [applause and...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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clinton and washington were brave, courageous man under fire and i'm always amazed at the battle of princeton and washington was riding on horseback riding to the british soldiers firing at him and they were no further away from him within a picture is from a batter on the baseball diamond and that is pretty close. as i said clinton earned a reputation of the war before this and during the revolution as somebody that was courageous under fire but both of them i think they stay somewhat similar problem during the war in that both had problems with supply and lack of money and troops. both clinton and washington endured considerable criticism during the war. i'm not sure how many people remember today but there was a great deal of criticism on washington after he made several mistakes in the campaign and 76 and then after the campaign even more and open criticism congress cut off or could have ditched washington but fortunately didn't take that step and new that it would bring on political chaos and would probably ruin the war effort and after that, congress cuts off the open criticism of washi
clinton and washington were brave, courageous man under fire and i'm always amazed at the battle of princeton and washington was riding on horseback riding to the british soldiers firing at him and they were no further away from him within a picture is from a batter on the baseball diamond and that is pretty close. as i said clinton earned a reputation of the war before this and during the revolution as somebody that was courageous under fire but both of them i think they stay somewhat similar...
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Jun 10, 2021
06/21
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hi me. megan leery, i'm currently in princeton, new jersey, united states. i am in 20162021 pin. scheduled had to tokyo and just a few weeks to compete of the game. like and i am looking at team usa, the rowing team here. they looking fine for me. are you freaking out about tokyo? you know, i think as athletes, we at this point sort of put the blinders on. right. there's a lot of support staff around us that are meant to try and take on all of the noise around us. but i, you know, i have concerns. i, i was in real obviously we all remember a lot of the conversation as we headed into the real games about, you know, the water quality of the, you know, i'm rover. i was on that body of water. and so, you know, it's, it's not foreign to me in terms of this conversation or that head into the games. but this is something different. this is definitely something different. this time you heard the most senior member of the i see just at the top of our program. was he reassuring for you as an athlete? and you know, yes and no. i think that's coming from a place of i do
hi me. megan leery, i'm currently in princeton, new jersey, united states. i am in 20162021 pin. scheduled had to tokyo and just a few weeks to compete of the game. like and i am looking at team usa, the rowing team here. they looking fine for me. are you freaking out about tokyo? you know, i think as athletes, we at this point sort of put the blinders on. right. there's a lot of support staff around us that are meant to try and take on all of the noise around us. but i, you know, i have...
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Jun 23, 2021
06/21
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. >> this is andy calling from princeton junction new jersey. >> just a few general questions for this gentleman. so he never conceived and it would turn out that he actuallywe one. do you really feel there was widespread voter fraud? do you think this is helping our country to tell all the people that there was a big lie? everything that comes from trump and that site is. said by putin. don't you think we fought not for this craziness to go one? it hurts my family even. but then also the fact from the january 6 investigation i would just like to have a dialogue with you to have your comments. >> i don't think the postelection line arizona or other states will show a dramatic shift. the reason i say that is even having i recap when in doubt if you get past the first few days to make sure we have all the polling places and numbers correct they tend not to change the vote five very much with georgia and arizona to look att the ballot and in this case today most states had paper ballots what you can go back to i don't think that will change by much i'm not opposed to taking a look at what
. >> this is andy calling from princeton junction new jersey. >> just a few general questions for this gentleman. so he never conceived and it would turn out that he actuallywe one. do you really feel there was widespread voter fraud? do you think this is helping our country to tell all the people that there was a big lie? everything that comes from trump and that site is. said by putin. don't you think we fought not for this craziness to go one? it hurts my family even. but then...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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wilson bay educated, had been president of princeton government of new jersey, but he played the move in the birth of a nation in the oval office and said it was lightening in a bible and the kind of history that we needed to teach in that movie to celebrate the claim and celebrated the claim, massacring communities. it also happened right. doing a pandemic when the president had lab about the pandemic and tried to blame it 100 years ago on spanish people revenue call it was, it was the swine flu. so it's area how you have the similarities. there is so much more. you got wilmington in 1898. you have spring fear. let us not forget that in the early 19, hundreds or late 800 early 190-0100 right after the place versus burgundy decision . and when many black soldiers came back from war one, you have a whole series of massacres. you had massive because you know, the stop the slave revolt. this is america. can history is not just black history. it's american history. and you had white in 1921 to help black people. and you had certain white supremacy that wanted to do more damage than they d
wilson bay educated, had been president of princeton government of new jersey, but he played the move in the birth of a nation in the oval office and said it was lightening in a bible and the kind of history that we needed to teach in that movie to celebrate the claim and celebrated the claim, massacring communities. it also happened right. doing a pandemic when the president had lab about the pandemic and tried to blame it 100 years ago on spanish people revenue call it was, it was the swine...
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Jun 5, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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when i was stationed on the uss princeton we spent a few days coordinating ships efforts to find thesed all blinked out individually. there seem to correspond to the data we were receiving on the radar. no screen to something called the tick tack. can you explain that? , ., _, tick tack. can you explain that? , ., ., that? yes, what you are probably _ that? yes, what you are probably looking - that? yes, what you are probably looking at - that? yes, what you are| probably looking at right that? yes, what you are - probably looking at right now with the gun camera footage which was returned. what you are seeing there is a craft that had no control surfaces, no wings, no obvious means of propulsion and were showing cold on the infrared. all of these things don't match with these things don't match with the aircraft that we utilise in our arsenal and then there were witness to utilise instantaneous acceleration and hypersonic velocity while proceeding. 50 hypersonic velocity while proceeding-— hypersonic velocity while ”roceedin. , ., proceeding. so yes in some odd thins. proceeding. so y
when i was stationed on the uss princeton we spent a few days coordinating ships efforts to find thesed all blinked out individually. there seem to correspond to the data we were receiving on the radar. no screen to something called the tick tack. can you explain that? , ., _, tick tack. can you explain that? , ., ., that? yes, what you are probably _ that? yes, what you are probably looking - that? yes, what you are probably looking at - that? yes, what you are| probably looking at right that?...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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he attended princeton university, oxford university and yale law school and served as a law clerk for the judge of the united states court of appeals. he was awarded for his book race, crime and the law and recent books include race, affirmative action and the law, the persistence of the color line, radical politics and the racial politics and the politics of racial be a trail. abraham lincoln and the antislavery constitution that explores how the party adhered to the strategy founded in the constitution itself. so without more from me we look forward to a wonderful conversation. >> thank you so much for that gracious introduction and i would like to get the conversation started. i am delighted to be in conversation with james oakes whose work i've used in courses and my own written work and we are going to discuss this book abraham lincoln and the antislavery constitution. and my question there are thousands of books on lincoln. why did you feel you needed to write this one? >> i didn't feel i needed to write this one. i never expected to write another book on lincoln. it's not a boo
he attended princeton university, oxford university and yale law school and served as a law clerk for the judge of the united states court of appeals. he was awarded for his book race, crime and the law and recent books include race, affirmative action and the law, the persistence of the color line, radical politics and the racial politics and the politics of racial be a trail. abraham lincoln and the antislavery constitution that explores how the party adhered to the strategy founded in the...
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Jun 2, 2021
06/21
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carol swain of vanderbilt and princeton professor and author of the people to recall america's faith and promise, victor davis hanson, author of the dennis desousa podcast. what message are we sending to young african-american boys and girls is biden's message today? >> it is a message of hopelessness and it really encourages them to think of themselves as victims and the millions of blacks like myself came out of poverty who been successful, we weren't successful because we believed in america, the american dream, i watched systemic racism in america the road with the passage of three major civil rights bills and i was able to take advantage of the opportunities created. what we have today is a narrative that weakens america, our foreign enemies must celebrate what is taking place because we are destroying ourselves from within and for black america that is nothing but more empty promises. people will get their hopes up and the focus on critical race theories detracting from the fact that the democratic party promising over the past 60 years have all failed and because they failed t
carol swain of vanderbilt and princeton professor and author of the people to recall america's faith and promise, victor davis hanson, author of the dennis desousa podcast. what message are we sending to young african-american boys and girls is biden's message today? >> it is a message of hopelessness and it really encourages them to think of themselves as victims and the millions of blacks like myself came out of poverty who been successful, we weren't successful because we believed in...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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. >> a profession or african-american studies at princeton and i'm so excited to talk about this wonderful book. how are you doing? >> i'm great, this is quite another to work anywaysb look . it's a great time to read and the hunters in conversation with me. >> but get into it. so i want to start with kind of a long question. i have quote that i want you to sort of talk about in line you wrote this book. but i want to start with what was his birthday as a federal holiday in 1983. siemens the civil rights movement as part of our narrative as an ongoing journey towards a more perfect union as part of that , the tactics of the civil rights movement, the peaceful nonviolence struggle and yet we rarely ask about particularly the kind of short lifespan of the civil rights movement in the 1960s and the tactics of peaceful nonviolent protest. the fact is you point out in your book what you describe as violence in black process begins as early as 1964 in harlem, in philadelphia and of other cities. the turn towards violence was of course universally condemned in its own period when violence broke o
. >> a profession or african-american studies at princeton and i'm so excited to talk about this wonderful book. how are you doing? >> i'm great, this is quite another to work anywaysb look . it's a great time to read and the hunters in conversation with me. >> but get into it. so i want to start with kind of a long question. i have quote that i want you to sort of talk about in line you wrote this book. but i want to start with what was his birthday as a federal holiday in...
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Jun 5, 2021
06/21
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and in 177040 has been with the continental congress which involves joining against princeton, and the eventually it is a single that federalist argument for the constitution. we have to hang together, otherwise britain is going to cut us to pieces. it is a geostrategic argument and, my god, franklin is seeing a version of that, a more british version of that, as early his earliest 1754 he puts it in the double picture that ordinary people can understand, and three simple words that make a powerful and political argument. join or die. he is imagining -- it's just how many characters. it's instagram, it is amazing. it is snapchat. >> he could've said could have said a lot more, but he's smart enough to stop his ahead. obviously we want to get back to george washington. and i think this is one of the most striking point that you have made, which is the american constitutional development of conversation is not just entirely within our own forces, it's also the impact, over and over again, made by the world. so talk to us more about that. what is our position in the world have to do with
and in 177040 has been with the continental congress which involves joining against princeton, and the eventually it is a single that federalist argument for the constitution. we have to hang together, otherwise britain is going to cut us to pieces. it is a geostrategic argument and, my god, franklin is seeing a version of that, a more british version of that, as early his earliest 1754 he puts it in the double picture that ordinary people can understand, and three simple words that make a...
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we also know that safe, you're not injecting, allow you organism like you're not giving d n a princeton dna vaccines which could integrate into into house cells. so they're relatively short lived, easily adaptive. so you can change the sequence of the r n a to produce specific huntington. if a virus changes, if you types, you can adapt a vac seems relatively easily and relatively cheap and easy to produce. and then i have a far more complex than for example, but koran of ours that causes covered 19 what other main obstacles when it comes to applying this to well, there are many differences that a, b infection is a chronic infection. once you have it, you have it for every except for the cases that have been killed by bone marrow transplant. but, but a time be a very, although it's also an r n a r is like, can they have a 19 virus, you tapes, extremely rapidly replicates very quickly. and so in fact, in any one, in fact, it's not going to be lots of different strains of ours. and so finding vaccine that will let prevent all of these different strains and all the different active genic va
we also know that safe, you're not injecting, allow you organism like you're not giving d n a princeton dna vaccines which could integrate into into house cells. so they're relatively short lived, easily adaptive. so you can change the sequence of the r n a to produce specific huntington. if a virus changes, if you types, you can adapt a vac seems relatively easily and relatively cheap and easy to produce. and then i have a far more complex than for example, but koran of ours that causes...
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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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the indignant generation, history of african-american writers and critics published by princeton, 2010, and my father's name, a black virginia family after the civil war, published byni
the indignant generation, history of african-american writers and critics published by princeton, 2010, and my father's name, a black virginia family after the civil war, published byni
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Jun 22, 2021
06/21
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FOXNEWSW
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researchers at the university of pennsylvania and princeton found that game takedowns by cops explainy a quarter of all gun violence in the housing projects in new york city after 2011. you go after the people you know are committing the crimes and then you've got a lot less crime. the gangs are committing the city, particularly in chicago so joe biden is serious about protecting children from being murdered on the street or at the puerto rican day parade. go after the gangs. but he's probably not going to do that on wednesday. he's not going to say a word about prosecutors like larry krasner funded by his friend george soros calling them to enforce the law, no. we also don't think he's goingng to call on criminals to stop twerking on ambulances or leased cars. they're going to target on wednesday are the ones who don't support him and live far from the collapsing cities. it's your fault. you watch. radio host in the city of chicago, happy to have him on with us. thank you so much for coming on. it seems like and i don't live in chicago, but it's true in almost every city that the ove
researchers at the university of pennsylvania and princeton found that game takedowns by cops explainy a quarter of all gun violence in the housing projects in new york city after 2011. you go after the people you know are committing the crimes and then you've got a lot less crime. the gangs are committing the city, particularly in chicago so joe biden is serious about protecting children from being murdered on the street or at the puerto rican day parade. go after the gangs. but he's probably...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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. >> reporter: born in chicago in 1932, he was both a college wrestler at princeton and a navy pilot.that served him well, perhaps, in later life in government office. grappling with and navigating through a complicated political landscape. r rumsfeld legacy began to take shape after become president ford's white house chief of staff and ultimately secretary of defense. while defense chief under ford, r rumsfeld worked closely with dick chaney forming a relationship that would last a lifetime. >> some regard him as the best secretary of defense we ever had. i would say he's one of the best. >> reporter: for many at the pentagon that terrible 9/11 day, the most important legacy even as the building was in flames, donald rumsfeld stayed. refusing to leave for a safer location. he was indeed a controversial public ser vants but he never retreat retreated. >> thanks to barbara starr for that reporting. your thoughts on this news. >> as barbara said, i think what we remember a lot about donald rumsfeld for now is what happened post- 9/11. the very unpopular war in iraq. right now we have w
. >> reporter: born in chicago in 1932, he was both a college wrestler at princeton and a navy pilot.that served him well, perhaps, in later life in government office. grappling with and navigating through a complicated political landscape. r rumsfeld legacy began to take shape after become president ford's white house chief of staff and ultimately secretary of defense. while defense chief under ford, r rumsfeld worked closely with dick chaney forming a relationship that would last a...
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Jun 2, 2021
06/21
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todd: former professor at princeton vanderbilt university, doctor carol swain joins us to discuss.ur program. that statement getting a lot of pushback on social media for being pretty clunky. what was your reaction to this comments yesterday. >> it is consistent with his record. almost every time he has a history of opening his mouth and showing that he does not respect the black community. he talks about white supremacy but his record is one that espouses white supremacy and a belief that blacks are inferior and incapable. it is ridiculous to say that blacks don't have lawyers and don't have access to accountants. i am an entrepreneur. i have always had access to those things. todd: seems like you do that once, a slip of the tongue, but when you do it consistently during and after your campaign for 47 years you were in government before then seems like there might be something else there. the white house plan for fixing the racial wealth gap, there is a racial wealth gap. we need to acknowledge that. the white house plan for fixing it, $10 billion to community revitalization fund
todd: former professor at princeton vanderbilt university, doctor carol swain joins us to discuss.ur program. that statement getting a lot of pushback on social media for being pretty clunky. what was your reaction to this comments yesterday. >> it is consistent with his record. almost every time he has a history of opening his mouth and showing that he does not respect the black community. he talks about white supremacy but his record is one that espouses white supremacy and a belief...